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<h2> Chapter 38 </h2>
<p>I worked some weeks before my regiment was sent forward. I planned to be
at home for a day, but they needed me on the staff, and I dreaded the pain
of a parting, the gravity of which my return would serve only to
accentuate. So I wrote them a cheerful letter, and kept at work. It was my
duty to interview some of the great men of that day as to the course of
the government. I remember Commodore Vanderbilt came down to see me in
shirt-sleeves and slippers that afternoon, with a handkerchief tied about
his neck in place of a collar—a blunt man, of simple manners and a
big heart, one who spoke his mind in good, plain talk, and, I suppose, he
got along with as little profanity as possible, considering his many
cares. He called me 'boy' and spoke of a certain public man as a 'big
sucker'. I soon learned that to him a 'sucker' was the lowest and meanest
thing in the world. He sent me away with nothing but a great admiration of
him. As a rule, the giants of that day were plain men of the people, with
no frills upon them, and with a way of hitting from the shoulder. They
said what they meant and meant it hard. I have heard Lincoln talk when his
words had the whiz of a bullet and his arm the jerk of a piston.</p>
<p>John Trumbull invited McClingan, of whom I had told him much, and myself
to dine with him an evening that week. I went in my new dress suit—that
mark of sinful extravagance for which Fate had brought me down to the
pounding of rocks under Boss McCormick. Trumbull's rooms were a feast for
the eye—aglow with red roses. He introduced me to Margaret Hull and
her mother, who were there to dine with us. She was a slight woman of
thirty then, with a face of no striking beauty, but of singular sweetness.
Her dark eyes had a mild and tender light in them; her voice a plaintive,
gentle tone, the like of which one may hear rarely if ever. For years she
had been a night worker in the missions of the lower city, and many an
unfortunate had been turned from the way of evil by her good offices. I
sat beside her at the table, and she told me of her work and how often she
had met Trumbull in his night walks.</p>
<p>'Found me a hopeless heathen,' he remarked.</p>
<p>'To save him I had to consent to marry him,' she said, laughing.</p>
<p>'"Who hath found love is already in Heaven,"'said McClingan. 'I have not
found it and I am in'' he hesitated, as if searching for a synonym.</p>
<p>'A boarding house on William Street,' he added.</p>
<p>The remarkable thing about Margaret Hull was her simple faith. It looked
to no glittering generality for its reward, such as the soul s 'highest
good much talked of in the philosophy of that time. She believed that, for
every soul she saved, one jewel would be added to her crown in Heaven. And
yet she wore no jewel upon her person. Her black costume was beautifully
fitted to her fine form, but was almost severely plain. It occurred to me
that she did not quite understand her own heart, and, for that matter, who
does? But she had somewhat in her soul that passeth all understanding—I
shall not try to say what, with so little knowledge of those high things,
save that I know it was of God. To what patience and unwearying effort she
had schooled herself I was soon to know.</p>
<p>'Can you not find anyone to love you?' she said, turning to McClingan.
'You know the Bible says it is not good for man to live alone.</p>
<p>'It does, Madame,' said he, 'but I have a mighty fear in me, remembering
the twenty-fourth verse of the twenty-fifth chapter of Proverbs: "It is
better to dwell in the corner of the housetops than with a brawling woman
in a wide house." We cannot all be so fortunate as our friend Trumbull.
But I have felt the great passion.</p>
<p>He smiled at her faintly as he spoke in a quiet manner, his r s coming off
his tongue with a stately roll. His environment and the company had given
him a fair degree of stimulation. There was a fine dignity in his deep
voice, and his body bristled with it, from his stiff and heavy shock of
blonde hair parted carefully on the left side, to his high-heeled boots.
The few light hairs that stood in lonely abandonment on his upper lip, the
rest of his lean visage always well shorn, had no small part in the grand
effect of McClingan.</p>
<p>'A love story!' said Miss Hull. 'I do wish I had your confidence. I like a
real, true love story.</p>
<p>'A simple stawry it is,' said McClingan, 'and Jam proud of my part in it.
I shall be glad to tell the stawry if you are to hear it.'</p>
<p>We assured him of our interest.</p>
<p>'Well,' said he, 'there was one Tom Douglass at Edinburgh who was my
friend and classmate. We were together a good bit of the time, and when we
had come to the end of our course we both went to engage in journalism at
Glasgow. We had a mighty conceit of ourselves—you know how it is,
Brower, with a green lad—but we were a mind to be modest, with all
our learning, so we made an agreement: I would blaw his horn and he would
blaw mine. We were not to lack appreciation. He was on one paper and I on
another, and every time he wrote an article I went up and down the office
praising him for a man o' mighty skill, and he did the same for me. If
anyone spoke of him in my hearing I said every word of flattery at my
command. "What Tom Douglass?" I would say, "the man o' the Herald that's
written those wonderful articles from the law court? A genius, sir! an
absolute genius!" Well, we were rapidly gaining reputation. One of those
days I found myself in love with as comely a lass as ever a man courted.
Her mother had a proper curiosity as to my character. I referred them to
Tom Douglass of the Herald—he was the only man there who had known
me well. The girl and her mother both went to him.</p>
<p>"Your friend was just here," said the young lady, when I called again. "He
is a very handsome man."</p>
<p>'"And a noble man!" I said.</p>
<p>'"And didn't I hear you say that he was a very skilful man, too?"</p>
<p>'"A genius!" I answered, "an absolute genius!"</p>
<p>McClingan stopped and laughed heartily as he took a sip of water.</p>
<p>'What happened then?' said Miss I-lull.</p>
<p>'She took him on my recommendation,' he answered. 'She said that, while he
had the handsomer face, I had the more eloquent tongue. And they both won
for him. And, upon me honour as a gentleman, it was the luckiest thing
that ever happened to me, for she became a brawler and a scold. My mother
says there is "no the like o' her in Scotland".</p>
<p>I shall never forget how fondly Margaret Hull patted the brown cheek of
Trumbull with her delicate white band, as we rose.</p>
<p>'We all have our love stawries,' said McClingan.</p>
<p>'Mine is better than yours,' she answered, 'but it shall never be told.'</p>
<p>'Except one little part if it,' said Trumbull, as he put his hands upon
her shoulders, and looked down into her face. 'It is the only thing that
has made my life worth living.'</p>
<p>Then she made us to know many odd things about her work for the children
of misfortune—inviting us to come and see it for ourselves. We were
to go the next evening.</p>
<p>I finished my work at nine that night and then we walked through noisome
streets and alleys—New York was then far from being so clean a city
as now—to the big mission house. As we came in at the door we saw a
group of women kneeling before the altar at the far end of the room, and
heard the voice of Margaret Hull praying' a voice so sweet and tender that
we bowed our heads at once, and listened while it quickened the life in
us. She plead for the poor creatures about her, to whom Christ gave always
the most abundant pity, seeing they were more sinned against than sinning.
There was not a word of cant in her petition. It was full of a simple,
unconscious eloquence, a higher feeling than I dare try to define. And
when it was over she had won their love and confidence so that they clung
to her hands and kissed them and wet them with their tears. She came and
spoke to us presently, in the same sweet manner that had charmed us the
night before' there was no change in it We offered to walk home with her,
but she said Trumbull was coming at twelve.</p>
<p>'So that is "The Little Mother" of whom I have heard so often,' said
McClingan, as we came away.</p>
<p>'What do you think of her?' I enquired.</p>
<p>'Wonderful woman!' he said. 'I never heard such a voice. It gives me
visions. Every other is as the crackling of thorns under a pot.'</p>
<p>I came back to the office and went into Mr Greeley's room to bid him
goodbye. He stood by the gas jet, in a fine new suit of clothes, reading a
paper, while a boy was blacking one of his boots. I sat down, awaiting a
more favourable moment. A very young man had come into the room and stood
timidly holding his hat.</p>
<p>'I wish to see Mr Greeley,' he said.</p>
<p>'There he is,' I answered, 'go and speak to him.'</p>
<p>'Mr Greeley,' said he, 'I have called to see if you can take me on the
Tribune.'</p>
<p>The Printer continued reading as if he were the only man in the room.</p>
<p>The young man looked at him and then at me—with an expression that
moved me to a fellow feeling. He was a country boy, more green and timid
even than I had been.</p>
<p>'He did not hear you—try again,' I said.</p>
<p>'Mr Greeley,' said he, louder than before, 'I have called to see if you
can take me on the Tribune.'</p>
<p>The editor's eyes glanced off at the boy and returned to their reading.</p>
<p>'No, boy, I can't,' he drawled, shifting his eyes to another article. And
the boy, who was called to the service of the paper in time, but not until
after his pen had made him famous, went away with a look of bitter
disappointment.</p>
<p>In his attire Mr Greeley wore always the best material, that soon took on
a friendless and dejected look. The famous white overcoat had been bought
for five dollars of a man who had come by chance to the office of the New
Yorker, years before, and who considered its purchase a great favour. That
was a time when the price of a coat was a thing of no little importance to
the Printer. Tonight there was about him a great glow, such as comes of
fine tailoring and new linen.</p>
<p>He was so preoccupied with his paper that I went out into the big room and
sat down, awaiting a better time.</p>
<p>'The Printer's going to Washington to talk with the president,' said an
editor.</p>
<p>Just then Mr Greeley went running hurriedly up the spiral stair on his way
to the typeroom. Three or four compositors had gone up ahead of him. He
had risen out of sight when we heard a tremendous uproar above stairs. I
ran up, two steps at a time, while the high voice of Mr Greeley came
pouring down upon me like a flood. It had a wild, fleering tone. He stood
near the landing, swinging his arms and swearing like a boy just learning
how. In the middle of the once immaculate shirt bosom was a big, yellow
splash. Something had fallen on him and spattered as it struck We stood
well out of range, looking at it, undeniably the stain of nicotine. In a
voice that was no encouragement to confession he dared 'the drooling
idiot' to declare himself. In a moment he opened his waistcoat and
surveyed the damage.</p>
<p>'Look at that!' he went on, complainingly. 'Ugh! The reeking, filthy,
slobbering idiot! I'd rather be slain with the jaw bone of an ass.'</p>
<p>'You'll have to get another shirt,' said the pressman, who stood near.
'You can't go to Washington with such a breast pin.'</p>
<p>'I'd breast pin him if I knew who he was,' said the editor.</p>
<p>A number of us followed him downstairs and a young man went up the Bowery
for a new shirt. When it came the Printer took off the soiled garment,
flinging it into a corner, and I helped him to put himself in proper
fettle again. This finished, he ran away, hurriedly, with his carpet-bag,
and I missed the opportunity I wanted for a brief talk with him.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 39 </h2>
<p>My regiment left New York by night in a flare of torch and rocket. The
streets were lined with crowds now hardened to the sound of fife and drum
and the pomp of military preparation. I had a very high and mighty feeling
in me that wore away in the discomfort of travel. For hours after the
train started we sang and told stories, and ate peanuts and pulled and
hauled at each other in a cloud of tobacco smoke. The train was
sidetracked here and there, and dragged along at a slow pace.</p>
<p>Young men with no appreciation, as it seemed to me, of the sad business we
were off upon, went roistering up and down the aisles, drinking out of
bottles and chasing around the train as it halted. These revellers grew
quiet as the night wore on. The boys began to close their eyes and lie
back for rest. Some lay in the aisle, their heads upon their knapsacks.
The air grew chilly and soon I could hear them snoring all about me and
the chatter of frogs in the near marshes. I closed my eyes and vainly
courted sleep. A great sadness had lain hold of me. I had already given up
my life for my country—I was only going away now to get as dear a
price for it as possible in the hood of its enemies. When and where would
it be taken? I wondered. The fear had mostly gone out of me in days and
nights of solemn thinking. The feeling I had, with its flavour of
religion, is what has made the volunteer the mighty soldier he has ever
been, I take it, since Naseby and Marston Moor. The soul is the great
Captain, and with a just quarrel it will warm its sword in the enemy,
however he may be trained to thrust and parry. In my sacrifice there was
but one reservation—I hoped I should not be horribly cut with a
sword or a bayonet. I had written a long letter to Hope, who was yet at
Leipzig. I wondered if she would care what became of me. I got a sense of
comfort thinking I would show her that I was no coward, with all my
littleness. I had not been able to write to Uncle Eb or to my father or
mother in any serious tone of my feeling in this enterprise. I had treated
it as a kind of holiday from which I should return shortly to visit them.</p>
<p>All about me seemed to be sleeping—some of them were talking in
their dreams. As it grew light, one after another rose and stretched
himself, rousing his seat companion. The train halted, a man shot a musket
voice in at the car door. It was loaded with the many syllables of
'Annapolis Junction'. We were pouring out of the train shortly, to bivouac
for breakfast in the depot yard. So I began the life of a soldier, and how
it ended with me many have read in better books than this, but my story of
it is here and only here.</p>
<p>We went into camp there on the lonely flats of east Maryland for a day or
two, as we supposed, but really for quite two weeks. In the long delay
that followed, my way traversed the dead levels of routine. When Southern
sympathy had ceased to wreak its wrath upon the railroads about Baltimore
we pushed on to Washington. There I got letters from Uncle Eb and
Elizabeth Brower. The former I have now in my box of treasures—a
torn and faded remnant of that dark period.</p>
<p>DEAR SIR 'pen in hand to hat you know that we are all wel. also that we
was sorry you could not come horn. They took on terribul. Hope she wrote a
letter. Said she had not herd from you. also that somebody wrote to her
you was goin to be married. You had oughter write her a letter, Bill.
Looks to me so you hain't used her right. Shes a comm horn in July. Sowed
corn to day in the gardin. David is off byin catul. I hope God will take
care uv you, boy, so goodbye from yours truly</p>
<p>EBEN HOLDEN</p>
<p>I wrote immediately to Uncle Eb and told him of the letters I had sent to
Hope, and of my effort to see her.</p>
<p>Late in May, after Virginia had seceded, some thirty thousand of us were
sent over to the south side of the Potomac, where for weeks we tore the
flowery fields, lining the shore with long entrenchments.</p>
<p>Meantime I wrote three letters to Mr Greeley, and had the satisfaction of
seeing them in the Tribune. I took much interest in the camp drill, and
before we crossed the river I had been raised to the rank of first
lieutenant. Every day we were looking for the big army of Beauregard,
camping below Centreville, some thirty miles south.</p>
<p>Almost every night a nervous picket set the camp in uproar by challenging
a phantom of his imagination. We were all impatient as hounds in leash.
Since they would not come up and give us battle we wanted to be off and
have it out with them. And the people were tired of delay. The cry of
'ste'boy!' was ringing all over the north. They wanted to cut us loose and
be through with dallying.</p>
<p>Well, one night the order came; we were to go south in the morning—thirty
thousand of us, and put an end to the war. We did not get away until
afternoon—it was the 6th of July. When we were off, horse and foot,
so that I could see miles of the blue column before and behind me, I felt
sorry for the mistaken South. On the evening of the 18th our camp-fires on
either side of the pike at Centreville glowed like the lights of a city.
We knew the enemy was near, and began to feel a tightening of the nerves.
I wrote a letter to the folks at home for post mortem delivery, and put it
into my trousers pocket. A friend in my company called me aside after
mess.</p>
<p>'Feel of that,' he said, laying his hand on a full breast.</p>
<p>'Feathers!' he whispered significantly. 'Balls can't go through 'em, ye
know. Better n a steel breastplate! Want some?</p>
<p>'Don't know but I do,' said I.</p>
<p>We went into his tent, where he had a little sack full, and put a good wad
of them between my two shirts.</p>
<p>'I hate the idee o'bein'hit 'n the heart,' he said. 'That's too awful.</p>
<p>I nodded my assent.</p>
<p>'Shouldn't like t'have a ball in my lungs, either,' he added. ''Tain't
necessary fer a man t'die if he can only breathe. If a man gits his leg
shot off an' don't lose his head an' keeps drawin' his breath right along
smooth an even, I don't see why he can't live.</p>
<p>Taps sounded. We went asleep with our boots on, but nothing happened.</p>
<p>Three days and nights we waited. Some called it a farce, some swore, some
talked of going home. I went about quietly, my bosom under its pad of
feathers. The third day an order came from headquarters. We were to break
camp at one-thirty in the morning and go down the pike after Beauregard.
In the dead of the night the drums sounded. I rose, half-asleep, and heard
the long roll far and near. I shivered in the cold night air as I made
ready, the boys about me buckled on knapsacks, shouldered their rifles,
and fell into line. Muffled in darkness there was an odd silence in the
great caravan forming rapidly and waiting for the word to move. At each
command to move forward I could hear only the rub of leather, the click,
click of rifle rings, the stir of the stubble, the snorting of horses.
When we had marched an hour or so I could hear the faint rumble of wagons
far in the rear. As I came high on a hill top, in the bending column, the
moonlight fell upon a league of bayonets shining above a cloud of dust in
the valley—a splendid picture, fading into darkness and mystery. At
dawn we passed a bridge and halted some three minutes for a bite. After a
little march we left the turnpike, with Hunter's column bearing westward
on a crossroad that led us into thick woods. As the sunlight sank in the
high tree-tops the first great battle of the war began. Away to the left
of us a cannon shook the earth, hurling its boom into the still air. The
sound rushed over us, rattling in the timber like a fall of rocks.
Something went quivering in me. It seemed as if my vitals had gone into a
big lump of jelly that trembled every step I took. We quickened our pace;
we fretted, we complained. The weariness went out of our legs; some wanted
to run. Before and behind us men were shouting hotly, 'Run, boys! run!'
The cannon roar was now continuous. We could feel the quake of it. When we
came over a low ridge, in the open, we could see the smoke of battle in
the valley. Flashes of fire and hoods of smoke leaped out of the far
thickets, left of us, as cannon roared. Going at double quick we began
loosening blankets and haversacks, tossing them into heaps along the line
of march, without halting. In half an hour we stood waiting in battalions,
the left flank of the enemy in front. We were to charge at a run. Half-way
across the valley we were to break into companies and, advancing, spread
into platoons and squads, and at last into line of skirmishers, lying down
for cover between rushes.</p>
<p>'Forward!' was the order, and we were off, cheering as we ran. O, it was a
grand sight! our colours flying, our whole front moving, like a blue wave
on a green, immeasurable sea. And it had a voice like that of many waters.
Out of the woods ahead of us came a lightning flash. A ring of smoke
reeled upward. Then came a deafening crash of thunders—one upon
another, and the scream of shells overhead. Something stabbed into our
column right beside me. Many went headlong, crying out as they fell.
Suddenly the colours seemed to halt and sway like a tree-top in the wind.
Then down they went!—squad and colours—and we spread to pass
them. At the order we halted and laid down and fired volley after volley
at the grey coats in the edge of the thicket A bullet struck in the grass
ahead of me, throwing a bit of dirt into my eyes. Another brushed my hat
off and I heard a wailing death yell behind me. The colonel rode up waving
a sword.</p>
<p>'Get up an' charge!' he shouted.</p>
<p>On we went, cheering loudly, firing as we ran, Bullets went by me hissing
in my ears, and I kept trying to dodge them. We dropped again flat on our
faces.</p>
<p>A squadron of black-horse cavalry came rushing out of the woods at us, the
riders yelling as they waved their swords. Fortunately we had not time to
rise. A man near me tried to get up.</p>
<p>'Stay down!' I shouted.</p>
<p>In a moment I learned something new about horses. They went over us like a
flash. I do not think a man was trampled. Our own cavalry kept them busy
as soon as they had passed.</p>
<p>Of the many who had started there was only a ragged remnant near me. We
fired a dozen volleys lying there. The man at my elbow rolled upon me,
writhing like a worm in the fire.</p>
<p>'We shall all be killed!' a man shouted. 'Where is the colonel?'</p>
<p>'Dead,' said another.</p>
<p>'Better retreat,' said a third.</p>
<p>'Charge!' I shouted as loudly as ever I could, jumping to my feet and
waving my sabre as I rushed forward. 'Charge!'</p>
<p>It was the one thing needed—they followed me. In a moment we had
hurled ourselves upon the grey line thrusting with sword and bayonet.</p>
<p>They broke before us—some running, some fighting desperately.</p>
<p>A man threw a long knife at me out of a sling. Instinctively I caught the
weapon as if it had been a ball hot off the bat. In doing so I dropped my
sabre and was cut across the fingers. He came at me fiercely, clubbing his
gun—a raw-boned, swarthy giant, broad as a barn door. I caught the
barrel as it came down. He tried to wrench it away, but I held firmly.
Then he began to push up to me. I let him come, and in a moment we were
grappling hip and thigh. He was a powerful man, but that was my kind of
warfare. It gave me comfort when I felt the grip of his hands. I let him
tug a jiffy, and then caught him with the old hiplock, and he went under
me so hard I could hear the crack of his bones. Our support came then. We
made him prisoner, with some two hundred other men. Reserves came also and
took away the captured guns. My comrades gathered about me, cheering, but
I had no suspicion of what they meant. I thought it a tribute to my
wrestling. Men lay thick there back of the guns—some dead, some
calling faintly for help. The red puddles about them were covered with
flies; ants were crawling over their faces. I felt a kind of sickness and
turned away.</p>
<p>What was left of my regiment formed in fours to join the advancing column.
Horses were galloping riderless, rein and stirrup flying, some horribly
wounded. One hobbled near me, a front leg gone at the knee.</p>
<p>Shells were flying overhead; cannonballs were ricocheting over the level
valley, throwing turf in the air, tossing the dead and wounded that lay
thick and helpless.</p>
<p>Some were crumpled like a rag, as if the pain of death had withered them
in their clothes; some swollen to the girth of horses; some bent backward,
with arms outreaching like one trying an odd trick, some lay as if
listening eagerly, an ear close to the ground; some like a sleeper, their
heads upon their arms; one shrieked loudly, gesturing with bloody hands,
'Lord God Almighty, have mercy on me!</p>
<p>I had come suddenly to a new world, where the lives of men were cheaper
than blind puppies. I was a new sort of creature, and reckless of what
came, careless of all I saw and heard.</p>
<p>A staff officer stepped up to me as we joined the main body.</p>
<p>'You ve been shot, young man,' he said, pointing to my left hand.</p>
<p>Before he could turn I felt a rush of air and saw him fly into pieces,
some of which hit me as I fell backward. I did not know what had happened;
I know not now more than that I have written. I remember feeling something
under me, like a stick of wood, bearing hard upon my ribs. I tried to roll
off it, but somehow, it was tied to me and kept hurting. I put my hand
over my hip and felt it there behind me—my own arm! The hand was
like that of a dead man—cold and senseless. I pulled it from under
me and it lay helpless; it could not lift itself. I knew now that I, too,
had become one of the bloody horrors of the battle.</p>
<p>I struggled to my feet, weak and trembling, and sick with nausea. I must
have been lying there a long time. The firing was now at a distance: the
sun had gone half down the sky. They were picking up the wounded in the
near field. A man stood looking at me. 'Good God!' he shouted, and then
ran away like one afraid. There was a great mass of our men back of me
some twenty rods. I staggered toward them, my knees quivering.</p>
<p>'I can never get there,' I heard myself whisper.</p>
<p>I thought of my little flask of whiskey, and, pulling the cork with my
teeth, drank the half of it. That steadied me and I made better headway. I
could hear the soldiers talking as I neared them.</p>
<p>'Look a there!' I heard many saying. 'See 'em come! My God! Look at 'em on
the hill there!</p>
<p>The words went quicidy from mouth to mouth. In a moment I could hear the
murmur of thousands. I turned to see what they were looking at. Across the
valley there was a long ridge, and back of it the main position of the
Southern army. A grey host was pouring over it—thousand upon
thousand—in close order, debouching into the valley.</p>
<p>A big force of our men lay between us and them. As I looked I could see a
mighty stir in it. Every man of them seemed to be jumping up in the air.
From afar came the sound of bugles calling 'retreat, the shouting of men,
the rumbling of wagons. It grew louder. An officer rode by me hatless, and
halted, shading his eyes. Then he rode back hurriedly.</p>
<p>'Hell has broke loose!' he shouted, as he passed me.</p>
<p>The blue-coated host was rushing towards us like a flood' artillery,
cavalry, infantry, wagon train. There was a mighty uproar in the men
behind me—a quick stir of feet. Terror spread over them like the
travelling of fire. It shook their tongues. The crowd began caving at the
edge and jamming at the centre. Then it spread like a swarm of bees shaken
off a bush.</p>
<p>'Run! Run for your lives!' was a cry that rose to heaven.</p>
<p>'Halt, you cowards!' an officer shouted.</p>
<p>It was now past three o clock.</p>
<p>The raw army had been on its feet since midnight. For hours it had been
fighting hunger, a pain in the legs, a quivering sickness at the stomach,
a stubborn foe. It had turned the flank of Beauregard; victory was in
sight. But lo! a new enemy was coming to the fray, innumerable, unwearied,
eager for battle. The long slope bristled with his bayonets. Our army
looked and cursed and began letting go. The men near me were pausing on
the brink of awful rout In a moment they were off, pell-mell, like a flock
of sheep. The earth shook under them. Officers rode around them, cursing,
gesticulating, threatening, but nothing could stop them. Half a dozen
trees had stood in the centre of the roaring mass. Now a few men clung to
them—a remnant of the monster that had torn away. But the greater
host was now coming. The thunder of its many feet was near me; a cloud of
dust hung over it. A squadron of cavalry came rushing by and broke into
the fleeing mass. Heavy horses, cut free from artillery, came galloping
after them, straps flying over foamy flanks. Two riders clung to the back
of each, lashing with whip and rein. The nick of wagons came after them,
wheels rattling, horses running, voices shrilling in a wild hoot of
terror. It makes me tremble even now, as I think of it, though it is
muffled under the cover of nearly forty years! I saw they would go over
me. Reeling as if drunk, I ran to save myself. Zigzagging over the field I
came upon a grey-bearded soldier lying in the grass and fell headlong. I
struggled madly, but could not rise to my feet. I lay, my face upon the
ground, weeping like a woman. Save I be lost in hell, I shall never know
again the bitter pang of that moment. I thought of my country. I saw its
splendid capital in ruins; its people surrendered to God's enemies.</p>
<p>The rout of wagons had gone by I could now hear the heavy tramp of
thousands passing me, the shrill voices of terror. I worked to a sitting
posture somehow—the effort nearly smothered me. A mass of cavalry
was bearing down upon me. They were coming so thick I saw they would
trample me into jelly. In a flash I thought of what Uncle Eb had told me
once. I took my hat and covered my face quiddy, and then uncovered it as
they came near. They sheared away as I felt the foam of their nostrils. I
had split them as a rock may split the torrent. The last of them went over
me—their tails whipping my face. I shall not soon forget the look of
their bellies or the smell of their wet flanks. They had no sooner passed
than I fell back and rolled half over like a log. I could feel a warm flow
of blood trickling down my left arm. A shell, shot at the retreating army,
passed high above me, whining as it flew. Then my mind went free of its
trouble. The rain brought me to as it came pelting down upon the side of
my face. I wondered what it might be, for I knew not where I had come. I
lifted my head and looked to see a new dawn—possibly the city of God
itself. It was dark—so dark I felt as if I had no eyes. Away in the
distance I could hear the beating of a drum. It rang in a great silence—I
have never known the like of it. I could hear the fall and trickle of the
rain, but it seemed only to deepen the silence. I felt the wet grass under
my face and hands. Then I knew it was night and the battlefield where I
had fallen. I was alive and might see another day—thank God! I felt
something move under my feet I heard a whisper at my shoulder.</p>
<p>'Thought you were dead long ago,' it said.</p>
<p>'No, no,' I answered, 'I'm alive—I know I'm alive—this is the
battlefield.</p>
<p>''Fraid I ain't goin' t' live,' he said. 'Got a terrible wound. Wish it
was morning.'</p>
<p>'Dark long?' I asked.</p>
<p>'For hours,' he answered. 'Dunno how many.'</p>
<p>He began to groan and utter short prayers.</p>
<p>'O, my soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch for the
morning,' I heard him cry in a loud, despairing voice.</p>
<p>Then there was a bit of silence, in which I could hear him whispering of
his home and people.</p>
<p>Presently he began to sing:</p>
<p>'Guide me, O thou great Jehovah!<br/>
Pilgrim through this barren land<br/>
I am weak but thou art mighty'<br/></p>
<p>His voice broke and trembled and sank into silence.</p>
<p>I had business of my own to look after—perhaps I had no time to lose—and
I went about it calmly. I had no strength to move and began to feel the
nearing of my time. The rain was falling faster. It chilled me to the
marrow as I felt it trickling over my back. I called to the man who lay
beside me—again and again I called to him—but got no answer.
Then I knew that he was dead and I alone. Long after that in the far
distance I heard a voice calling. It rang like a trumpet in the still air.
It grew plainer as I listened. My own name! William Brower? It was
certainly calling to me, and I answered with a feeble cry. In a moment I
could hear the tramp of someone coming. He was sitting beside me
presently, whoever it might be. I could not see him for the dark. His
tongue went clucking as if he pitied me.</p>
<p>'Who are you?' I remember asking, but got no answer.</p>
<p>At first I was glad, then I began to feel a mighty horror of him.</p>
<p>In a moment he had picked me up and was making off. The jolt of his step
seemed to be breaking my arms at the shoulder. As I groaned he ran. I
could see nothing in the darkness, but he went ahead, never stopping, save
for a moment, now and then, to rest I wondered where he was taking me and
what it all meant. I called again, 'Who are you?' but he seemed not to
hear me. 'My God!' I whispered to myself, 'this is no man—this is
Death severing the soul from the body. The voice was that of the good
God.' Then I heard a man hailing near by.</p>
<p>'Help, Help!' I shouted faintly.</p>
<p>'Where are you?' came the answer, now further away. 'Can't see you.' My
mysterious bearer was now running. My heels were dragging upon the ground;
my hands were brushing the grass tops. I groaned with pain.</p>
<p>'Halt! Who comes there?' a picket called. Then I could hear voices.</p>
<p>'Did you hear that noise?' said one. 'Somebody passed me. So dark can't
see my hand before me.</p>
<p>'Darker than hell!' said another voice.</p>
<p>It must be a giant, I thought, who can pick me up and carry me as if I
were no bigger than a house cat. That was what I was thinking when I
swooned.</p>
<p>From then till I came to myself in the little church at Centreville I
remember nothing. Groaning men lay all about me; others stood between them
with lanterns. A woman was bending over me. I felt the gentle touch of her
hand upon my face and heard her speak to me so tenderly I cannot think of
it, even now, without thanking God for good women. I clung to her hand,
clung with the energy of one drowning, while I suffered the merciful
torture of the probe, the knife and the needle. And when it was all over
and the lantern lights grew pale in the dawn I fell asleep.</p>
<p>But enough of blood and horror. War is no holiday, my merry people, who
know not the mighty blessing of peace. Counting the cost, let us have war,
if necessary, but peace, peace if possible.</p>
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