<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</SPAN></h3>
<div class="chapquot">
<div>
<p>Of sallies and retires; of trenches, tents,<br/>
Of palisadoes, frontiers, parapets;<br/>
Of basilisks, of cannon, culverin;<br/>
And all the currents of a heady fight.</p>
<p class="citation">King Henry IV.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">The Battle of Shiloh.</div>
<p>Simultaneously with the capture of Island Number Ten occurred the
battle of Shiloh. The first reports were very wild, stating our
loss at seventeen thousand, and asserting that the Union commander
had been disastrously surprised, and hundreds of men bayoneted in
their tents. It was even added that Grant was intoxicated during the
action. This last fiction showed the tenacity of a bad name. Years
before, Grant was intemperate; but he had abandoned the habit soon
after the beginning of the war.</p>
<p>General Albert Sydney Johnson was killed, and Beauregard ultimately
driven back, leaving his dead and wounded in our hands; but Jefferson
Davis, with the usual Rebel policy, announced in a special message to
the Confederate Congress:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"It has pleased Almighty God again to crown the Confederate
arms with a glorious and decided victory over our invaders."</p>
</div>
<p>I went up the Tennessee River by a boat crowded with
representatives—chiefly women—of the Sanitary Commissions of
Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Chicago.</p>
<div class="sidenote">The Reverend Robert Colyer.</div>
<p>One evening, religious services were held in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span>
cabin. A clergyman exhorted his hearers, when they should arrive at
the bloody field, to minister to the spiritual as well as physical
wants of the sufferers. With special infelicity, he added:</p>
<p>"Many of them have doubtless been wicked men; but you can, at least,
remind them of divine mercy, and tell them the story of the thief on
the cross."</p>
<p>The next speaker, a quiet gentleman, wearing the blouse of a private
soldier, after some remarks about practical religion, added:</p>
<p>"I can not agree with the last brother. I believe we shall best serve
the souls of our wounded soldiers by ministering, for the present,
simply to their bodies. For my own part, I feel that he who has
fallen fighting for our country—for your Cause and mine—is more of
a man than I am. He may have been wicked; but I think room will be
found for him among the many mansions above. I should be ashamed to
tell him the story of the thief on the cross."</p>
<p>Hearty, spontaneous clapping of hands through the crowded cabin
followed this sentiment—a rather unusual demonstration for a
prayer-meeting. The speaker was the Rev. Robert Colyer, of Chicago.</p>
<p>With officers who had participated in the battle, I visited every
part of the field. The ground was broken by sharp hills, deep
ravines, and dense timber, which the eye could not penetrate.</p>
<p>The reports of a surprise were substantially untrue. No man was
bayoneted in his tent, or anywhere else, according to the best
evidence I could obtain.</p>
<p>But the statements, said to come from Grant and Sherman, that they
could not have been better prepared, had they known that Beauregard
designed to attack, were also untrue. Our troops were not encamped
advantageously
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span>
for battle. Raw and unarmed regiments were on the extreme front,
which was not picketed or scouted as it should have been in the face
of an enemy.</p>
<p>Beauregard attacked on Sunday morning at daylight. The Rebels greatly
outnumbered the Unionists, and impetuously forced them back. Grant's
army was entirely western. It contained representatives of nearly
every county in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin.</p>
<p>Partially unprepared, and steadily driven back, often ill commanded
and their organizations broken, the men fought with wonderful
tenacity. It was almost a hand-to-hand conflict. Confederates and
Loyalists, from behind trees, within thirty feet of each other, kept
up a hot fire, shouting respectively, "Bull Run!" and "Donelson!"</p>
<p>Prentiss' shattered division, in that dense forest, was flanked
before its commander knew that the supporting forces—McClernand on
his right and Hurlbut on his left—had been driven back. Messengers
sent to him by those commanders were killed. During a lull in the
firing, Prentiss was lighting his cigar from the pipe of a soldier
when he learned that the enemy was on both sides of him, half a mile
in his rear. With the remnant of his command he was captured.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Union Orator Captured.</div>
<p>Remaining in Rebel hands for six months, he was enabled to indulge
in oratory to his heart's content. Southern papers announced, with
intense indignation, that Prentiss—occupying, with his officers, an
entire train—called out by the bystanders, was permitted to make
radical Union speeches at many southern railway stations. Removed
from prison to prison, the Illinois General continued to harangue the
people, and his men to sing the "Star-Spangled Banner," until at last
the Rebels were glad to exchange them. </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">Grant and Sherman in Battle.</div>
<p>Throughout the battle, Grant rode to and fro on the front, smoking
his inevitable cigar, with his usual stolidity and good fortune.
Horses and men were killed all around him, but he did not receive
a scratch. On that wooded field, it was impossible for any one to
keep advised of the progress of the struggle. Grant gave few orders,
merely bidding his generals do the best they could.</p>
<p>Sherman had many hair-breadth 'scapes. His
<del>briddle</del><ins>bridle</ins>-rein was cut off by a bullet
within two inches of his fingers. As he was leaning forward in the
saddle, a ball whistled through the top and back of his hat. His
metallic shoulder-strap warded off another bullet, and a third passed
through the palm of his hand. Three horses were shot under him.
He was the hero of the day. All awarded to him the highest praise
for skill and gallantry. He was promoted to a major-generalship,
dating from the battle. His official report was a clear, vivid, and
fascinating description of the conflict.</p>
<p>Five bullets penetrated the clothing of an officer on McClernand's
staff, but did not break the skin. A ball knocked out two front teeth
of a private in the Seventeenth Illinois Infantry, but did him no
further injury. A rifle-shot passed through the head of a soldier in
the First Missouri Artillery, coming out just above the ear, but did
not prove fatal. Dr. Cornyn, of St. Louis, told me that he extracted
a ball from the brain of one soldier, who, three days afterward, was
on duty, with the bullet in his pocket.</p>
<p>More than a year afterward, at the battle of Fredericksburg, Captain
Richard Cross, of the Fifth New Hampshire Infantry, noticed one of
his men whose skull had been cut open by the fragment of a shell,
with a section of it standing upright, leaving the brain exposed.
Cross shut the piece of skull down like the lid of a teapot,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span>
tied a handkerchief around it, and sent to the rear the wounded
soldier, who ultimately recovered. The one truth, taught by field
experience to army surgeons, was that few, if any, wounds are
invariably fatal.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Gallant Feat by Sweeney.</div>
<p>At Shiloh, Brigadier-General Thomas W. Sweeney, who had lost one arm
in the Mexican War, received a Minié bullet in his remaining arm, and
another shot in his foot, while his horse fell riddled with seven
balls. Almost fainting from loss of blood, he was lifted upon another
horse, and remained on the field through the entire day. His coolness
and his marvelous escapes were talked of before many camp-fires
throughout the army.</p>
<p>Once, during the battle, he was unable to determine whether a battery
whose men were dressed in blue, was Rebel or Union. Sweeney, leaving
his command, rode at a gentle gallop directly toward the battery
until within pistol-shot, saw that it was manned by Confederates,
turned in a half circle, and rode back again at the same easy pace.
Not a single shot was fired at him, so much was the respect of the
Confederates excited by this daring act. I afterward met one of them,
who described with great vividness the impression which Sweeney's
gallantry made upon them.</p>
<p>The steady determination of Grant's troops during that long April
Sunday, was perhaps unequaled during the war. At night companies
were commanded by sergeants, regiments by lieutenants, and brigades
by majors. In several regiments, one-half the men were killed and
wounded; and in some entire divisions the killed and wounded exceeded
thirty-three per cent, of the numbers who went into battle.</p>
<p>I have seen no other field which gave indication of such deadly
conflict as the Shiloh ridges and ravines,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
everywhere covered with a very thick growth of timber—</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"Shot-sown and bladed thick with steel."</p>
</div>
<p>In one tree I counted sixty bullet-holes; another bore marks of
more than ninety balls within ten feet of the ground. Sometimes, for
several yards in the dense <del>shubbery</del><ins>shrubbery</ins>,
it was difficult to find a twig as large as one's finger, which had
not been cut off by balls.</p>
<p>A friend of mine counted one hundred and twenty-six dead Rebels,
lying where they fell, upon an area less than fifty yards wide and
a quarter of a mile long. One of our details buried in a single
trench one hundred and forty-seven of the enemy, including three
lieutenant-colonels and four majors.</p>
<p>But our forces, overpowered by numbers, fell farther and further
back, while the Rebels took possession of many Union camps. At
night, our line, originally three miles in length, was shortened to
three-quarters of a mile.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Buell's Opportune Arrival.</div>
<p>For weeks the inscrutable Buell had been leisurely marching through
Kentucky and Tennessee, to join Grant. He arrived at the supreme
moment. At four o'clock on that Sunday afternoon, General Nelson, of
Kentucky, who commanded Buell's advance, crossed the Tennessee, and
rode up to Grant and his staff when the battle was raging.</p>
<p>"Here we are, General," said Nelson, with the military salute,
and pointing to long files of his well-clad, athletic, admirably
disciplined fellows, already pouring on the steamboats, to be ferried
across the river. "Here we are! We are not very military in our
division. We don't know many fine points or nice evolutions; but if
you want stupidity and hard fighting, I reckon we are the men for
you." </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>That night both armies lay upon their guns, and the opposing pickets
were often within a hundred yards of each other. The groans and cries
of the dying rendered it impossible to sleep. Grant said:</p>
<p>"We must not give the enemy the moral advantage of attacking
to-morrow morning. We must fire the first gun."</p>
<p>Just at day-break, the Rebels were surprised at all points of the
line by assaults from the foe whom they had supposed vanquished.
Grant's shattered troops behaved admirably, and Buell's splendid
army won new laurels. The Confederates were forced back at all
points. Their retreat was a stampede, leaving behind great quantities
of ammunition, commissary stores, guns, caissons, small arms,
supply-wagons and ambulances. They were not vigorously followed; but
as no effective pursuit was made by either side during the entire war
(until Sheridan, in one of its closing scenes, captured Lee), perhaps
northern and southern troops were too equally matched for either to
be thoroughly routed.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Beauregard Finally Routed.</div>
<p>Beauregard withdrew to Corinth, as usual, announcing a glorious
victory. He addressed a letter to Grant, asking permission, under
flag of truce, to send a party to the battle-field to bury the
Confederate dead. He prefaced the request as follows:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"Sir, at the close of the conflict of yesterday, my forces
being exhausted by the extraordinary length of the time
during which they were engaged with yours on that and the
preceding day, and it being apparent that you had received
and were still receiving re-enforcements, I felt it my
duty to withdraw my troops from the immediate scene of the
conflict."</p>
</div>
<p>Grant was strongly tempted to assure Beauregard that no apologies for
his retreat were necessary! But
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span>
he merely replied in a courteous note, declining the request, and
stating that the dead were already interred.</p>
<div class="sidenote">The Losses on Both Sides.</div>
<p>The losses on both sides were officially reported as follows:</p>
<table summary="battle loses">
<tr><td></td><th>Killed.</th><th>Wounded.</th><th>Missing.</th><th>Total.</th></tr>
<tr><td>Union</td><td>1,614</td><td>7,721</td><td>3,963</td><td>13,298</td></tr>
<tr><td>Rebel</td><td>1,728</td><td>8,012</td><td>959</td><td>10,699</td></tr>
</table>
<p>The excess of Rebel wounded was owing to the superiority of the
muskets used by the Federal soldiers; and the excess of Union
missing, to the capture of Prentiss' division. </p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />