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- The Red Badge of Courage
-
- by Stephen Crane
-
- March, 1996 [Etext #463]
-
-
- ****The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Red Badge of Courage****
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-
- Note: I have tried to retain the inconsistent renderings of
- contractions as joined or separate, e.g., "we 'll" or "we'll."
- I have made the following changes to the text:
- PAGE PARA. LINE ORIGINAL CHANGED TO
- 18 3 3 estabiish establish
- 40 3 2 skirmish skirmish-
- 78 4 4 a air an air
- 130 2 recognzied recognized
- 130 4 12 could a' could 'a
- 139 2 4 not began not begun
- 193 2 16 illusions to allusions to
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The Red Badge of Courage
-
- by Stephen Crane
-
-
- An Episode of the
- American Civil War
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE cold passed reluctantly from the earth,
- and the retiring fogs revealed an army stretched
- out on the hills, resting. As the landscape
- changed from brown to green, the army awak-
- ened, and began to tremble with eagerness at the
- noise of rumors. It cast its eyes upon the roads,
- which were growing from long troughs of liquid
- mud to proper thoroughfares. A river, amber-
- tinted in the shadow of its banks, purled at the
- army's feet; and at night, when the stream had
- become of a sorrowful blackness, one could see
- across it the red, eyelike gleam of hostile camp-
- fires set in the low brows of distant hills.
-
- Once a certain tall soldier developed virtues
- and went resolutely to wash a shirt. He came
- flying back from a brook waving his garment
- bannerlike. He was swelled with a tale he had
- heard from a reliable friend, who had heard it
- from a truthful cavalryman, who had heard it
- from his trustworthy brother, one of the order-
- lies at division headquarters. He adopted the
- important air of a herald in red and gold.
- "We're goin' t' move t' morrah--sure," he
- said pompously to a group in the company
- street. "We're goin' 'way up the river, cut
- across, an' come around in behint 'em."
-
- To his attentive audience he drew a loud
- and elaborate plan of a very brilliant campaign.
- When he had finished, the blue-clothed men
- scattered into small arguing groups between the
- rows of squat brown huts. A negro teamster who
- had been dancing upon a cracker box with the
- hilarious encouragement of twoscore soldiers
- was deserted. He sat mournfully down. Smoke
- drifted lazily from a multitude of quaint chim-
- neys.
-
- "It's a lie! that's all it is--a thunderin' lie!"
- said another private loudly. His smooth face was
- flushed, and his hands were thrust sulkily into his
- trousers' pockets. He took the matter as an
- affront to him. "I don't believe the derned old
- army's ever going to move. We're set. I've
- got ready to move eight times in the last two
- weeks, and we ain't moved yet."
-
- The tall soldier felt called upon to defend
- the truth of a rumor he himself had intro-
- duced. He and the loud one came near to fight-
- ing over it.
-
- A corporal began to swear before the assem-
- blage. He had just put a costly board floor in
- his house, he said. During the early spring he
- had refrained from adding extensively to the
- comfort of his environment because he had felt
- that the army might start on the march at any
- moment. Of late, however, he had been im-
- pressed that they were in a sort of eternal camp.
-
- Many of the men engaged in a spirited debate.
- One outlined in a peculiarly lucid manner all the
- plans of the commanding general. He was op-
- posed by men who advocated that there were
- other plans of campaign. They clamored at each
- other, numbers making futile bids for the pop-
- ular attention. Meanwhile, the soldier who had
- fetched the rumor bustled about with much
- importance. He was continually assailed by
- questions.
-
- "What's up, Jim?"
-
- "Th' army's goin' t' move."
-
- "Ah, what yeh talkin' about? How yeh know
- it is?"
-
- "Well, yeh kin b'lieve me er not, jest as yeh
- like. I don't care a hang."
-
- There was much food for thought in the man-
- ner in which he replied. He came near to con-
- vincing them by disdaining to produce proofs.
- They grew excited over it.
-
- There was a youthful private who listened
- with eager ears to the words of the tall soldier
- and to the varied comments of his comrades.
- After receiving a fill of discussions concerning
- marches and attacks, he went to his hut and
- crawled through an intricate hole that served it
- as a door. He wished to be alone with some
- new thoughts that had lately come to him.
-
- He lay down on a wide bank that stretched
- across the end of the room. In the other end,
- cracker boxes were made to serve as furniture.
- They were grouped about the fireplace. A pic-
- ture from an illustrated weekly was upon the log
- walls, and three rifles were paralleled on pegs.
- Equipments hunt on handy projections, and some
- tin dishes lay upon a small pile of firewood. A
- folded tent was serving as a roof. The sunlight,
- without, beating upon it, made it glow a light
- yellow shade. A small window shot an oblique
- square of whiter light upon the cluttered floor.
- The smoke from the fire at times neglected the
- clay chimney and wreathed into the room, and
- this flimsy chimney of clay and sticks made end-
- less threats to set ablaze the whole establishment.
-
- The youth was in a little trance of astonish-
- ment. So they were at last going to fight. On
- the morrow, perhaps, there would be a battle, and
- he would be in it. For a time he was obliged
- to labor to make himself believe. He could not
- accept with assurance an omen that he was about
- to mingle in one of those great affairs of the earth.
-
- He had, of course, dreamed of battles all
- his life--of vague and bloody conflicts that had
- thrilled him with their sweep and fire. In visions
- he had seen himself in many struggles. He had
- imagined peoples secure in the shadow of his
- eagle-eyed prowess. But awake he had regarded
- battles as crimson blotches on the pages of the
- past. He had put them as things of the bygone
- with his thought-images of heavy crowns and
- high castles. There was a portion of the world's
- history which he had regarded as the time of
- wars, but it, he thought, had been long gone over
- the horizon and had disappeared forever.
-
- From his home his youthful eyes had looked
- upon the war in his own country with distrust.
- It must be some sort of a play affair. He had
- long despaired of witnessing a Greeklike struggle.
- Such would be no more, he had said. Men were
- better, or more timid. Secular and religious
- education had effaced the throat-grappling in-
- stinct, or else firm finance held in check the pas-
- sions.
-
- He had burned several times to enlist. Tales
- of great movements shook the land. They might
- not be distinctly Homeric, but there seemed to
- be much glory in them. He had read of marches,
- sieges, conflicts, and he had longed to see it all.
- His busy mind had drawn for him large pictures
- extravagant in color, lurid with breathless deeds.
-
- But his mother had discouraged him. She
- had affected to look with some contempt upon
- the quality of his war ardor and patriotism. She
- could calmly seat herself and with no apparent
- difficulty give him many hundreds of reasons
- why he was of vastly more importance on the
- farm than on the field of battle. She had had
- certain ways of expression that told him that her
- statements on the subject came from a deep con-
- viction. Moreover, on her side, was his belief
- that her ethical motive in the argument was
- impregnable.
-
- At last, however, he had made firm rebellion
- against this yellow light thrown upon the color of
- his ambitions. The newspapers, the gossip of the
- village, his own picturings had aroused him to
- an uncheckable degree. They were in truth
- fighting finely down there. Almost every day
- the newspapers printed accounts of a decisive
- victory.
-
- One night, as he lay in bed, the winds had
- carried to him the clangoring of the church bell
- as some enthusiast jerked the rope frantically to
- tell the twisted news of a great battle. This
- voice of the people rejoicing in the night had
- made him shiver in a prolonged ecstasy of ex-
- citement. Later, he had gone down to his
- mother's room and had spoken thus: "Ma, I'm
- going to enlist."
-
- "Henry, don't you be a fool," his mother had
- replied. She had then covered her face with the
- quilt. There was an end to the matter for that
- night.
-
- Nevertheless, the next morning he had gone
- to a town that was near his mother's farm and
- had enlisted in a company that was forming there.
- When he had returned home his mother was
- milking the brindle cow. Four others stood
- waiting. "Ma, I've enlisted," he had said to her
- diffidently. There was a short silence. "The
- Lord's will be done, Henry," she had finally
- replied, and had then continued to milk the
- brindle cow.
-
- When he had stood in the doorway with his
- soldier's clothes on his back, and with the light of
- excitement and expectancy in his eyes almost
- defeating the glow of regret for the home bonds,
- he had seen two tears leaving their trails on his
- mother's scarred cheeks.
-
- Still, she had disappointed him by saying
- nothing whatever about returning with his shield
- or on it. He had privately primed himself for a
- beautiful scene. He had prepared certain sen-
- tences which he thought could be used with
- touching effect. But her words destroyed his
- plans. She had doggedly peeled potatoes and
- addressed him as follows: "You watch out,
- Henry, an' take good care of yerself in this here
- fighting business--you watch out, an' take good
- care of yerself. Don't go a-thinkin' you can
- lick the hull rebel army at the start, because yeh
- can't. Yer jest one little feller amongst a hull lot
- of others, and yeh've got to keep quiet an' do what
- they tell yeh. I know how you are, Henry.
-
- "I've knet yeh eight pair of socks, Henry, and
- I've put in all yer best shirts, because I want my
- boy to be jest as warm and comf'able as anybody
- in the army. Whenever they get holes in 'em, I
- want yeh to send 'em right-away back to me, so's
- I kin dern 'em.
-
- "An' allus be careful an' choose yer comp'ny.
- There's lots of bad men in the army, Henry.
- The army makes 'em wild, and they like nothing
- better than the job of leading off a young feller
- like you, as ain't never been away from home
- much and has allus had a mother, an' a-learning
- 'em to drink and swear. Keep clear of them
- folks, Henry. I don't want yeh to ever do any-
- thing, Henry, that yeh would be 'shamed to let
- me know about. Jest think as if I was a-watchin'
- yeh. If yeh keep that in yer mind allus, I guess
- yeh'll come out about right.
-
- "Yeh must allus remember yer father, too,
- child, an' remember he never drunk a drop of
- licker in his life, and seldom swore a cross oath.
-
- "I don't know what else to tell yeh, Henry,
- excepting that yeh must never do no shirking,
- child, on my account. If so be a time comes when
- yeh have to be kilt or do a mean thing, why,
- Henry, don't think of anything 'cept what's right,
- because there's many a woman has to bear up
- 'ginst sech things these times, and the Lord 'll
- take keer of us all.
-
- "Don't forgit about the socks and the shirts,
- child; and I've put a cup of blackberry jam with
- yer bundle, because I know yeh like it above all
- things. Good-by, Henry. Watch out, and be a
- good boy."
-
- He had, of course, been impatient under the
- ordeal of this speech. It had not been quite what
- he expected, and he had borne it with an air of
- irritation. He departed feeling vague relief.
-
- Still, when he had looked back from the gate,
- he had seen his mother kneeling among the po-
- tato parings. Her brown face, upraised, was
- stained with tears, and her spare form was quiver-
-
-
- 10 RED BADGE OF COURAGE.
-
- ing. He bowed his head and went on, feeling
- suddenly ashamed of his purposes.
-
- From his home he had gone to the seminary
- to bid adieu to many schoolmates. They had
- thronged about him with wonder and admiration.
- He had felt the gulf now between them and had
- swelled with calm pride. He and some of his
- fellows who had donned blue were quite over-
- whelmed with privileges for all of one afternoon,
- and it had been a very delicious thing. They had
- strutted.
-
- A certain light-haired girl had made vivacious
- fun at his martial spirit, but there was another and
- darker girl whom he had gazed at steadfastly, and
- he thought she grew demure and sad at sight of
- his blue and brass. As he had walked down the
- path between the rows of oaks, he had turned his
- head and detected her at a window watching his
- departure. As he perceived her, she had im-
- mediately begun to stare up through the high
- tree branches at the sky. He had seen a good
- deal of flurry and haste in her movement as she
- changed her attitude. He often thought of it.
-
- On the way to Washington his spirit had
- soared. The regiment was fed and caressed at
- station after station until the youth had believed
- that he must be a hero. There was a lavish ex-
- penditure of bread and cold meats, coffee, and
- pickles and cheese. As he basked in the smiles
- of the girls and was patted and complimented by
- the old men, he had felt growing within him the
- strength to do mighty deeds of arms.
-
- After complicated journeyings with many
- pauses, there had come months of monotonous
- life in a camp. He had had the belief that real
- war was a series of death struggles with small
- time in between for sleep and meals; but since his
- regiment had come to the field the army had done
- little but sit still and try to keep warm.
-
- He was brought then gradually back to his old
- ideas. Greeklike struggles would be no more.
- Men were better, or more timid. Secular and
- religious education had effaced the throat-grap-
- pling instinct, or else firm finance held in check
- the passions.
-
- He had grown to regard himself merely as a
- part of a vast blue demonstration. His province
- was to look out, as far as he could, for his per-
- sonal comfort. For recreation he could twiddle
- his thumbs and speculate on the thoughts which
- must agitate the minds of the generals. Also, he
- was drilled and drilled and reviewed, and drilled
- and drilled and reviewed.
-
- The only foes he had seen were some pickets
- along the river bank. They were a sun-tanned,
- philosophical lot, who sometimes shot reflectively
- at the blue pickets. When reproached for this
- afterward, they usually expressed sorrow, and
- swore by their gods that the guns had exploded
- without their permission. The youth, on guard
- duty one night, conversed across the stream with
- one of them. He was a slightly ragged man, who
- spat skillfully between his shoes and possessed a
- great fund of bland and infantile assurance. The
- youth liked him personally.
-
- "Yank," the other had informed him, "yer a
- right dum good feller." This sentiment, floating
- to him upon the still air, had made him tempo-
- rarily regret war.
-
- Various veterans had told him tales. Some
- talked of gray, bewhiskered hordes who were
- advancing with relentless curses and chewing
- tobacco with unspeakable valor; tremendous
- bodies of fierce soldiery who were sweeping
- along like the Huns. Others spoke of tattered
- and eternally hungry men who fired despondent
- powders. "They'll charge through hell's fire an'
- brimstone t' git a holt on a haversack, an' sech
- stomachs ain't a-lastin' long," he was told. From
- the stories, the youth imagined the red, live bones
- sticking out through slits in the faded uniforms.
-
- Still, he could not put a whole faith in veter-
- ans' tales, for recruits were their prey. They
- talked much of smoke, fire, and blood, but he
- could not tell how much might be lies. They
- persistently yelled "Fresh fish!" at him, and were
- in no wise to be trusted.
-
- However, he perceived now that it did not
- greatly matter what kind of soldiers he was going
- to fight, so long as they fought, which fact no one
- disputed. There was a more serious problem. He
- lay in his bunk pondering upon it. He tried to
- mathematically prove to himself that he would
- not run from a battle.
-
- Previously he had never felt obliged to wrestle
- too seriously with this question. In his life he had
- taken certain things for granted, never challeng-
- ing his belief in ultimate success, and bothering
- little about means and roads. But here he was
- confronted with a thing of moment. It had sud-
- denly appeared to him that perhaps in a battle he
- might run. He was forced to admit that as far as
- war was concerned he knew nothing of himself.
-
- A sufficient time before he would have allowed
- the problem to kick its heels at the outer portals
- of his mind, but now he felt compelled to give
- serious attention to it.
-
- A little panic-fear grew in his mind. As his
- imagination went forward to a fight, he saw hide-
- ous possibilities. He contemplated the lurking
- menaces of the future, and failed in an effort to
- see himself standing stoutly in the midst of them.
- He recalled his visions of broken-bladed glory,
- but in the shadow of the impending tumult he
- suspected them to be impossible pictures.
-
- He sprang from the bunk and began to pace
- nervously to and fro. "Good Lord, what's th'
- matter with me?" he said aloud.
-
- He felt that in this crisis his laws of life were
- useless. Whatever he had learned of himself was
- here of no avail. He was an unknown quantity.
- He saw that he would again be obliged to experi-
- ment as he had in early youth. He must accumu-
- late information of himself, and meanwhile he re-
- solved to remain close upon his guard lest those
- qualities of which he knew nothing should ever-
- lastingly disgrace him. "Good Lord!" he re-
- peated in dismay.
-
- After a time the tall soldier slid dexterously
- through the hole. The loud private followed.
- They were wrangling.
-
- "That's all right," said the tall soldier as he
- entered. He waved his hand expressively. "You
- can believe me or not, jest as you like. All you
- got to do is to sit down and wait as quiet as you
- can. Then pretty soon you'll find out I was right."
-
- His comrade grunted stubbornly. For a mo-
- ment he seemed to be searching for a formidable
- reply. Finally he said: "Well, you don't know
- everything in the world, do you?"
-
- "Didn't say I knew everything in the world,"
- retorted the other sharply. He began to stow
- various articles snugly into his knapsack.
-
- The youth, pausing in his nervous walk, looked
- down at the busy figure. "Going to be a battle,
- sure, is there, Jim?" he asked.
-
- "Of course there is," replied the tall soldier.
- "Of course there is. You jest wait 'til to-morrow,
- and you'll see one of the biggest battles ever was.
- You jest wait."
-
- "Thunder!der!" said the youth.
-
- "Oh, you'll see fighting this time, my boy,
- what'll be regular out-and-out fighting," added
- the tall soldier, with the air of a man who is
- about to exhibit a battle for the benefit of his
- friends.
-
- "Huh!" said the loud one from a corner.
-
- "Well," remarked the youth, "like as not this
- story'll turn out jest like them others did."
-
- "Not much it won't," replied the tall soldier,
- exasperated. "Not much it won't. Didn't the
- cavalry all start this morning?" He glared about
- him. No one denied his statement. "The cav-
- alry started this morning," he continued. "They
- say there ain't hardly any cavalry left in camp.
- They're going to Richmond, or some place, while
- we fight all the Johnnies. It's some dodge like
- that. The regiment's got orders, too. A feller
- what seen 'em go to headquarters told me a little
- while ago. And they're raising blazes all over
- camp--anybody can see that."
-
- "Shucks!" said the loud one.
-
- The youth remained silent for a time. At last
- he spoke to the tall soldier. "Jim!"
-
- "What?"
-
- "How do you think the reg'ment 'll do?"
-
- "Oh, they'll fight all right, I guess, after they
- once get into it," said the other with cold judg-
- ment. He made a fine use of the third person.
- "There's been heaps of fun poked at 'em because
- they're new, of course, and all that; but they'll
- fight all right, I guess."
-
- "Think any of the boys 'll run?" persisted the
- youth.
-
- "Oh, there may be a few of 'em run, but
- there's them kind in every regiment, 'specially
- when they first goes under fire," said the other
- in a tolerant way. "Of course it might happen
- that the hull kit-and-boodle might start and run,
- if some big fighting came first-off, and then again
- they might stay and fight like fun. But you can't
- bet on nothing. Of course they ain't never been
- under fire yet, and it ain't likely they'll lick the
- hull rebel army all-to-oncet the first time; but I
- think they'll fight better than some, if worse than
- others. That's the way I figger. They call the
- reg'ment 'Fresh fish' and everything; but the
- boys come of good stock, and most of 'em 'll fight
- like sin after they oncet git shootin'," he added,
- with a mighty emphasis on the last four words.
-
- "Oh, you think you know--" began the loud
- soldier with scorn.
-
- The other turned savagely upon him. They
- had a rapid altercation, in which they fastened
- upon each other various strange epithets.
-
- The youth at last interrupted them. "Did
- you ever think you might run yourself, Jim?" he
- asked. On concluding the sentence he laughed
- as if he had meant to aim a joke. The loud sol-
- dier also giggled.
-
- The tall private waved his hand. "Well," said
- he profoundly, "I've thought it might get too hot
- for Jim Conklin in some of them scrimmages, and
- if a whole lot of boys started and run, why, I
- s'pose I'd start and run. And if I once started to
- run, I'd run like the devil, and no mistake. But
- if everybody was a-standing and a-fighting, why,
- I'd stand and fight. Be jiminey, I would. I'll
- bet on it."
-
- "Huh!" said the loud one.
-
- The youth of this tale felt gratitude for these
- words of his comrade. He had feared that all of
- the untried men possessed a great and correct
- confidence. He now was in a measure reassured.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-
- THE next morning the youth discovered that
- his tall comrade had been the fast-flying messen-
- ger of a mistake. There was much scoffing at
- the latter by those who had yesterday been firm
- adherents of his views, and there was even a lit-
- tle sneering by men who had never believed the
- rumor. The tall one fought with a man from
- Chatfield Corners and beat him severely.
-
- The youth felt, however, that his problem was
- in no wise lifted from him. There was, on the
- contrary, an irritating prolongation. The tale
- had created in him a great concern for himself.
- Now, with the newborn question in his mind, he
- was compelled to sink back into his old place as
- part of a blue demonstration.
-
- For days he made ceaseless calculations, but
- they were all wondrously unsatisfactory. He
- found that he could establish nothing. He final-
- ly concluded that the only way to prove himself
- was to go into the blaze, and then figuratively to
-
- 18
- watch his legs to discover their merits and faults.
- He reluctantly admitted that he could not sit
- still and with a mental slate and pencil derive an
- answer. To gain it, he must have blaze, blood,
- and danger, even as a chemist requires this, that,
- and the other. So he fretted for an opportunity.
-
- Meanwhile he continually tried to measure
- himself by his comrades. The tall soldier, for
- one, gave him some assurance. This man's se-
- rene unconcern dealt him a measure of con-
- fidence, for he had known him since childhood,
- and from his intimate knowledge he did not see
- how he could be capable of anything that was
- beyond him, the youth. Still, he thought that
- his comrade might be mistaken about himself.
- Or, on the other hand, he might be a man here-
- tofore doomed to peace and obscurity, but, in
- reality, made to shine in war.
-
- The youth would have liked to have discov-
- ered another who suspected himself. A sympa-
- thetic comparison of mental notes would have
- been a joy to him.
-
- He occasionally tried to fathom a comrade
- with seductive sentences. He looked about to
- find men in the proper mood. All attempts
- failed to bring forth any statement which looked
- in any way like a confession to those doubts
- which he privately acknowledged in himself.
- He was afraid to make an open declaration of
- his concern, because he dreaded to place some
- unscrupulous confidant upon the high plane of
- the unconfessed from which elevation he could
- be derided.
-
- In regard to his companions his mind wa-
- vered between two opinions, according to his
- mood. Sometimes he inclined to believing them
- all heroes. In fact, he usually admitted in secret
- the superior development of the higher qualities
- in others. He could conceive of men going very
- insignificantly about the world bearing a load of
- courage unseen, and although he had known
- many of his comrades through boyhood, he be-
- gan to fear that his judgment of them had been
- blind. Then, in other moments, he flouted these
- theories, and assured himself that his fellows
- were all privately wondering and quaking.
-
- His emotions made him feel strange in the
- presence of men who talked excitedly of a pro-
- spective battle as of a drama they were about to
- witness, with nothing but eagerness and curiosity
- apparent in their faces. It was often that he sus-
- pected them to be liars.
-
- He did not pass such thoughts without severe
- condemnation of himself. He dinned reproaches
- at times. He was convicted by himself of many
- shameful crimes against the gods of traditions.
-
- In his great anxiety his heart was continually
- clamoring at what he considered the intolerable
- slowness of the generals. They seemed content
- to perch tranquilly on the river bank, and leave
- him bowed down by the weight of a great prob-
- lem. He wanted it settled forthwith. He could
- not long bear such a load, he said. Sometimes
- his anger at the commanders reached an acute
- stage, and he grumbled about the camp like a
- veteran.
-
- One morning, however, he found himself in
- the ranks of his prepared regiment. The men
- were whispering speculations and recounting the
- old rumors. In the gloom before the break of
- the day their uniforms glowed a deep purple
- hue. From across the river the red eyes were
- still peering. In the eastern sky there was a yel-
- low patch like a rug laid for the feet of the com-
- ing sun; and against it, black and patternlike,
- loomed the gigantic figure of the colonel on a
- gigantic horse.
-
- From off in the darkness came the trampling
- of feet. The youth could occasionally see dark
- shadows that moved like monsters. The regi-
- ment stood at rest for what seemed a long time.
- The youth grew impatient. It was unendurable
- the way these affairs were managed. He won-
- dered how long they were to be kept waiting.
-
- As he looked all about him and pondered
- upon the mystic gloom, he began to believe that
- at any moment the ominous distance might be
- aflare, and the rolling crashes of an engagement
- come to his ears. Staring once at the red eyes
- across the river, he conceived them to be grow-
- ing larger, as the orbs of a row of dragons ad-
- vancing. He turned toward the colonel and saw
- him lift his gigantic arm and calmly stroke his
- mustache.
-
- At last he heard from along the road at the
- foot of the hill the clatter of a horse's galloping
- hoofs. It must be the coming of orders. He
- bent forward, scarce breathing. The exciting
- clickety-click, as it grew louder and louder,
- seemed to be beating upon his soul. Presently a
- horseman with jangling equipment drew rein be-
- fore the colonel of the regiment. The two held
- a short, sharp-worded conversation. The men in
- the foremost ranks craned their necks.
-
- As the horseman wheeled his animal and gal-
- loped away he turned to shout over his shoulder,
- "Don't forget that box of cigars!" The colonel
- mumbled in reply. The youth wondered what a
- box of cigars had to do with war.
-
- A moment later the regiment went swinging
- off into the darkness. It was now like one of
- those moving monsters wending with many feet.
- The air was heavy, and cold with dew. A mass
- of wet grass, marched upon, rustled like silk.
-
- There was an occasional flash and glimmer
- of steel from the backs of all these huge crawl-
- ing reptiles. From the road came creakings and
- grumblings as some surly guns were dragged
- away.
-
- The men stumbled along still muttering specu-
- lations. There was a subdued debate. Once a
- man fell down, and as he reached for his rifle a
- comrade, unseeing, trod upon his hand. He of
- the injured fingers swore bitterly and aloud. A
- low, tittering laugh went among his fellows.
-
- Presently they passed into a roadway and
- marched forward with easy strides. A dark
- regiment moved before them, and from behind
- also came the tinkle of equipments on the bodies
- of marching men.
-
- The rushing yellow of the developing day
- went on behind their backs. When the sunrays
- at last struck full and mellowingly upon the
- earth, the youth saw that the landscape was
- streaked with two long, thin, black columns
- which disappeared on the brow of a hill in front
- and rearward vanished in a wood. They were
- like two serpents crawling from the cavern of the
- night.
-
- The river was not in view. The tall soldier
- burst into praises of what he thought to be his
- powers of perception.
-
- Some of the tall one's companions cried with
- emphasis that they, too, had evolved the same
- thing, and they congratulated themselves upon
- it. But there were others who said that the tall
- one's plan was not the true one at all. They per-
- sisted with other theories. There was a vigorous
- discussion.
-
- The youth took no part in them. As he
- walked along in careless line he was engaged
- with his own eternal debate. He could not hin-
- der himself from dwelling upon it. He was de-
- spondent and sullen, and threw shifting glances
- about him. He looked ahead, often expecting to
- hear from the advance the rattle of firing.
-
- But the long serpents crawled slowly from
- hill to hill without bluster of smoke. A dun-col-
- ored cloud of dust floated away to the right.
- The sky overhead was of a fairy blue.
-
- The youth studied the faces of his compan-
- ions, ever on the watch to detect kindred emo-
- tions. He suffered disappointment. Some ardor
- of the air which was causing the veteran com-
- mands to move with glee--almost with song--
- had infected the new regiment. The men began
- to speak of victory as of a thing they knew.
- Also, the tall soldier received his vindication.
- They were certainly going to come around in
- behind the enemy. They expressed commisera-
- tion for that part of the army which had been
- left upon the river bank, felicitating themselves
- upon being a part of a blasting host.
-
- The youth, considering himself as separated
- from the others, was saddened by the blithe and
- merry speeches that went from rank to rank.
- The company wags all made their best endeav-
- ors. The regiment tramped to the tune of
- laughter.
-
- The blatant soldier often convulsed whole
- files by his biting sarcasms aimed at the tall one.
-
- And it was not long before all the men seemed
- to forget their mission. Whole brigades grinned
- in unison, and regiments laughed.
-
- A rather fat soldier attempted to pilfer a horse
- from a dooryard. He planned to load his knap-
- sack upon it. He was escaping with his prize
- when a young girl rushed from the house and
- grabbed the animal's mane. There followed a
- wrangle. The young girl, with pink cheeks and
- shining eyes, stood like a dauntless statue.
-
- The observant regiment, standing at rest in
- the roadway, whooped at once, and entered
- whole-souled upon the side of the maiden. The
- men became so engrossed in this affair that they
- entirely ceased to remember their own large war.
- They jeered the piratical private, and called
- attention to various defects in his personal ap-
- pearance; and they were wildly enthusiastic in
- support of the young girl.
-
- To her, from some distance, came bold advice.
- "Hit him with a stick."
-
- There were crows and catcalls showered
- upon him when he retreated without the horse.
- The regiment rejoiced at his downfall. Loud
- and vociferous congratulations were showered
- upon the maiden, who stood panting and regard-
- ing the troops with defiance.
-
- At nightfall the column broke into regimental
- pieces, and the fragments went into the fields to
- camp. Tents sprang up like strange plants.
- Camp fires, like red, peculiar blossoms, dotted
- the night.
-
- The youth kept from intercourse with his
- companions as much as circumstances would
- allow him. In the evening he wandered a few
- paces into the gloom. From this little distance
- the many fires, with the black forms of men pass-
- ing to and fro before the crimson rays, made
- weird and satanic effects.
-
- He lay down in the grass. The blades
- pressed tenderly against his cheek. The moon
- had been lighted and was hung in a treetop.
- The liquid stillness of the night enveloping him
- made him feel vast pity for himself. There was
- a caress in the soft winds; and the whole mood
- of the darkness, he thought, was one of sympathy
- for himself in his distress.
-
- He wished, without reserve, that he was at
- home again making the endless rounds from the
- house to the barn, from the barn to the fields,
- from the fields to the barn, from the barn to the
- house. He remembered he had often cursed the
- brindle cow and her mates, and had sometimes
- flung milking stools. But, from his present point
- of view, there was a halo of happiness about each
- of their heads, and he would have sacrificed all
- the brass buttons on the continent to have been
- enabled to return to them. He told himself that
- he was not formed for a soldier. And he mused
- seriously upon the radical differences between
- himself and those men who were dodging imp-
- like around the fires.
-
- As he mused thus he heard the rustle of grass,
- and, upon turning his head, discovered the loud
- soldier. He called out, "Oh, Wilson!"
-
- The latter approached and looked down.
- "Why, hello, Henry; is it you? What you do-
- ing here?"
-
- "Oh, thinking," said the youth.
-
- The other sat down and carefully lighted his
- pipe. "You're getting blue, my boy. You're
- looking thundering peeked. What the dickens
- is wrong with you?"
-
- "Oh, nothing," said the youth.
-
- The loud soldier launched then into the sub-
- ject of the anticipated fight. "Oh, we've got
- 'em now!" As he spoke his boyish face was
- wreathed in a gleeful smile, and his voice had
- an exultant ring. "We've got 'em now. At
- last, by the eternal thunders, we'll lick 'em
- good!"
-
- "If the truth was known," he added, more
- soberly, "THEY'VE licked US about every clip up to
- now; but this time--this time--we'll lick 'em
- good!"
-
- "I thought you was objecting to this march
- a little while ago," said the youth coldly.
-
- "Oh, it wasn't that," explained the other. "I
- don't mind marching, if there's going to be fight-
- ing at the end of it. What I hate is this getting
- moved here and moved there, with no good com-
- ing of it, as far as I can see, excepting sore feet
- and damned short rations."
-
- "Well, Jim Conklin says we'll get a plenty of
- fighting this time."
-
- "He's right for once, I guess, though I can't
- see how it come. This time we're in for a big
- battle, and we've got the best end of it, certain
- sure. Gee rod! how we will thump 'em!"
-
- He arose and began to pace to and fro excit-
- edly. The thrill of his enthusiasm made him
- walk with an elastic step. He was sprightly,
- vigorous, fiery in his belief in success. He
- looked into the future with clear, proud eye, and
- he swore with the air of an old soldier.
-
- The youth watched him for a moment in
- silence. When he finally spoke his voice was as
- bitter as dregs. "Oh, you're going to do great
- things, I s'pose!"
-
- The loud soldier blew a thoughtful cloud of
- smoke from his pipe. "Oh, I don't know," he
- remarked with dignity; "I don't know. I s'pose
- I'll do as well as the rest. I'm going to try like
- thunder." He evidently complimented himself
- upon the modesty of this statement.
-
- "How do you know you won't run when the
- time comes?" asked the youth.
-
- "Run?" said the loud one; "run?--of course
- not!" He laughed.
-
- "Well," continued the youth, "lots of good-
- a-'nough men have thought they was going to do
- great things before the fight, but when the time
- come they skedaddled."
-
- "Oh, that's all true, I s'pose," replied the
- other; "but I'm not going to skedaddle. The
- man that bets on my running will lose his money,
- that's all." He nodded confidently.
-
- "Oh, shucks!" said the youth. "You ain't
- the bravest man in the world, are you?"
-
- "No, I ain't," exclaimed the loud soldier in-
- dignantly; "and I didn't say I was the bravest
- man in the world, neither. I said I was going to
- do my share of fighting--that's what I said. And
- I am, too. Who are you, anyhow. You talk as
- if you thought you was Napoleon Bonaparte."
- He glared at the youth for a moment, and then
- strode away.
-
- The youth called in a savage voice after his
- comrade: "Well, you needn't git mad about it!"
- But the other continued on his way and made no
- reply.
-
- He felt alone in space when his injured com-
- rade had disappeared. His failure to discover
- any mite of resemblance in their view points
- made him more miserable than before. No one
- seemed to be wrestling with such a terrific per-
- sonal problem. He was a mental outcast.
-
- He went slowly to his tent and stretched him-
- self on a blanket by the side of the snoring tall
- soldier. In the darkness he saw visions of a thou-
- sand-tongued fear that would babble at his back
- and cause him to flee, while others were going
- coolly about their country's business. He admit-
- ted that he would not be able to cope with this
- monster. He felt that every nerve in his body
- would be an ear to hear the voices, while other
- men would remain stolid and deaf.
-
- And as he sweated with the pain of these
- thoughts, he could hear low, serene sentences.
- "I'll bid five." "Make it six." "Seven."
- "Seven goes."
-
- He stared at the red, shivering reflection of
- a fire on the white wall of his tent until, ex-
- hausted and ill from the monotony of his suf-
- fering, he fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
-
- WHEN another night came the columns,
- changed to purple streaks, filed across two pon-
- toon bridges. A glaring fire wine-tinted the
- waters of the river. Its rays, shining upon the
- moving masses of troops, brought forth here and
- there sudden gleams of silver or gold. Upon
- the other shore a dark and mysterious range of
- hills was curved against the sky. The insect
- voices of the night sang solemnly.
-
- After this crossing the youth assured himself
- that at any moment they might be suddenly and
- fearfully assaulted from the caves of the lowering
- woods. He kept his eyes watchfully upon the
- darkness.
-
- But his regiment went unmolested to a camp-
- ing place, and its soldiers slept the brave sleep
- of wearied men. In the morning they were
- routed out with early energy, and hustled along
- a narrow road that led deep into the forest.
-
- It was during this rapid march that the regi-
-
- 32
- ment lost many of the marks of a new com-
- mand.
-
- The men had begun to count the miles upon
- their fingers, and they grew tired. "Sore feet
- an' damned short rations, that's all," said the
- loud soldier. There was perspiration and grum-
- blings. After a time they began to shed their
- knapsacks. Some tossed them unconcernedly
- down; others hid them carefully, asserting their
- plans to return for them at some convenient
- time. Men extricated themselves from thick
- shirts. Presently few carried anything but their
- necessary clothing, blankets, haversacks, canteens,
- and arms and ammunition. "You can now eat
- and shoot," said the tall soldier to the youth.
- "That's all you want to do."
-
- There was sudden change from the ponderous
- infantry of theory to the light and speedy infantry
- of practice. The regiment, relieved of a burden,
- received a new impetus. But there was much
- loss of valuable knapsacks, and, on the whole,
- very good shirts.
-
- But the regiment was not yet veteranlike in
- appearance. Veteran regiments in the army
- were likely to be very small aggregations of men.
- Once, when the command had first come to the
- field, some perambulating veterans, noting the
- length of their column, had accosted them thus:
- "Hey, fellers, what brigade is that?" And when
- the men had replied that they formed a regiment
- and not a brigade, the older soldiers had laughed,
- and said, "O Gawd!"
-
- Also, there was too great a similarity in the
- hats. The hats of a regiment should properly
- represent the history of headgear for a period of
- years. And, moreover, there were no letters of
- faded gold speaking from the colors. They were
- new and beautiful, and the color bearer habitu-
- ally oiled the pole.
-
- Presently the army again sat down to think.
- The odor of the peaceful pines was in the men's
- nostrils. The sound of monotonous axe blows
- rang through the forest, and the insects, nodding
- upon their perches, crooned like old women.
- The youth returned to his theory of a blue dem-
- onstration.
-
- One gray dawn, however, he was kicked in
- the leg by the tall soldier, and then, before he
- was entirely awake, he found himself running
- down a wood road in the midst of men who were
- panting from the first effects of speed. His can-
- teen banged rhythmically upon his thigh, and his
- haversack bobbed softly. His musket bounced
- a trifle from his shoulder at each stride and made
- his cap feel uncertain upon his head.
-
- He could hear the men whisper jerky sen-
- tences: "Say--what's all this--about?" "What
- th' thunder--we--skedaddlin' this way fer?"
- "Billie--keep off m' feet. Yeh run--like a cow."
- And the loud soldier's shrill voice could be
- heard: "What th' devil they in sich a hurry for?"
-
- The youth thought the damp fog of early
- morning moved from the rush of a great body
- of troops. From the distance came a sudden
- spatter of firing.
-
- He was bewildered. As he ran with his com-
- rades he strenuously tried to think, but all he knew
- was that if he fell down those coming behind
- would tread upon him. All his faculties seemed
- to be needed to guide him over and past obstruc-
- tions. He felt carried along by a mob.
-
- The sun spread disclosing rays, and, one by
- one, regiments burst into view like armed men
- just born of the earth. The youth perceived
- that the time had come. He was about to be
- measured. For a moment he felt in the face of
- his great trial like a babe, and the flesh over
- his heart seemed very thin. He seized time to
- look about him calculatingly.
-
- But he instantly saw that it would be impossi-
- ble for him to escape from the regiment. It in-
- closed him. And there were iron laws of tradi-
- tion and law on four sides. He was in a moving
- box.
-
- As he perceived this fact it occurred to him
- that he had never wished to come to the war.
- He had not enlisted of his free will. He had
- been dragged by the merciless government. And
- now they were taking him out to be slaughtered.
-
- The regiment slid down a bank and wallowed
- across a little stream. The mournful current
- moved slowly on, and from the water, shaded
- black, some white bubble eyes looked at the men.
-
- As they climbed the hill on the farther side
- artillery began to boom. Here the youth forgot
- many things as he felt a sudden impulse of curi-
- osity. He scrambled up the bank with a speed
- that could not be exceeded by a bloodthirsty
- man.
-
- He expected a battle scene.
-
- There were some little fields girted and
- squeezed by a forest. Spread over the grass and
- in among the tree trunks, he could see knots and
- waving lines of skirmishers who were running
- hither and thither and firing at the landscape.
- A dark battle line lay upon a sunstruck clearing
- that gleamed orange color. A flag fluttered.
-
- Other regiments floundered up the bank. The
- brigade was formed in line of battle, and after a
- pause started slowly through the woods in the
- rear of the receding skirmishers, who were con-
- tinually melting into the scene to appear again
- farther on. They were always busy as bees,
- deeply absorbed in their little combats.
-
- The youth tried to observe everything. He
- did not use care to avoid trees and branches,
- and his forgotten feet were constantly knocking
- against stones or getting entangled in briers.
- He was aware that these battalions with their
- commotions were woven red and startling into
- the gentle fabric of softened greens and browns.
- It looked to be a wrong place for a battle field.
-
- The skirmishers in advance fascinated him.
- Their shots into thickets and at distant and
- prominent trees spoke to him of tragedies--hid-
- den, mysterious, solemn.
-
- Once the line encountered the body of a dead
- soldier. He lay upon his back staring at the sky.
- He was dressed in an awkward suit of yellowish
- brown. The youth could see that the soles of his
- shoes had been worn to the thinness of writing
- paper, and from a great rent in one the dead foot
- projected piteously. And it was as if fate had
- betrayed the soldier. In death it exposed to his
- enemies that poverty which in life he had perhaps
- concealed from his friends.
-
- The ranks opened covertly to avoid the corpse.
- The invulnerable dead man forced a way for him-
- self. The youth looked keenly at the ashen face.
- The wind raised the tawny beard. It moved as
- if a hand were stroking it. He vaguely desired
- to walk around and around the body and stare;
- the impulse of the living to try to read in dead
- eyes the answer to the Question.
-
- During the march the ardor which the youth
- had acquired when out of view of the field rapidly
- faded to nothing. His curiosity was quite easily
- satisfied. If an intense scene had caught him with
- its wild swing as he came to the top of the bank,
- he might have gone roaring on. This advance
- upon Nature was too calm. He had opportunity
- to reflect. He had time in which to wonder
- about himself and to attempt to probe his sensa-
- tions.
-
- Absurd ideas took hold upon him. He
- thought that he did not relish the landscape.
- It threatened him. A coldness swept over his
- back, and it is true that his trousers felt to him
- that they were no fit for his legs at all.
-
- A house standing placidly in distant fields
- had to him an ominous look. The shadows of
- the woods were formidable. He was certain that
- in this vista there lurked fierce-eyed hosts. The
- swift thought came to him that the generals did
- not know what they were about. It was all a
- trap. Suddenly those close forests would bristle
- with rifle barrels. Ironlike brigades would ap-
- pear in the rear. They were all going to be
- sacrificed. The generals were stupids. The
- enemy would presently swallow the whole com-
- mand. He glared about him, expecting to see
- the stealthy approach of his death.
-
- He thought that he must break from the ranks
- and harangue his comrades. They must not all
- be killed like pigs; and he was sure it would
- come to pass unless they were informed of these
- dangers. The generals were idiots to send them
- marching into a regular pen. There was but one
- pair of eyes in the corps. He would step forth
- and make a speech. Shrill and passionate words
- came to his lips.
-
- The line, broken into moving fragments by the
- ground, went calmly on through fields and woods.
- The youth looked at the men nearest him, and
- saw, for the most part, expressions of deep inter-
- est, as if they were investigating something that
- had fascinated them. One or two stepped with
- overvaliant airs as if they were already plunged
- into war. Others walked as upon thin ice. The
- greater part of the untested men appeared quiet
- and absorbed. They were going to look at war,
- the red animal--war, the blood-swollen god. And
- they were deeply engrossed in this march.
-
- As he looked the youth gripped his outcry at
- his throat. He saw that even if the men were
- tottering with fear they would laugh at his warn-
- ing. They would jeer him, and, if practicable,
- pelt him with missiles. Admitting that he might
- be wrong, a frenzied declamation of the kind
- would turn him into a worm.
-
- He assumed, then, the demeanor of one who
- knows that he is doomed alone to unwritten re-
- sponsibilities. He lagged, with tragic glances at
- the sky.
-
- He was surprised presently by the young lieu-
- tenant of his company, who began heartily to
- beat him with a sword, calling out in a loud and
- insolent voice: "Come, young man, get up into
- ranks there. No skulking'll do here." He mend-
- ed his pace with suitable haste. And he hated
- the lieutenant, who had no appreciation of fine
- minds. He was a mere brute.
-
- After a time the brigade was halted in the
- cathedral light of a forest. The busy skirmish-
- ers were still popping. Through the aisles of
- the wood could be seen the floating smoke from
- their rifles. Sometimes it went up in little balls,
- white and compact.
-
- During this halt many men in the regiment
- began erecting tiny hills in front of them. They
- used stones, sticks, earth, and anything they
- thought might turn a bullet. Some built com-
- paratively large ones, while others seemed con-
- tent with little ones.
-
- This procedure caused a discussion among the
- men. Some wished to fight like duelists, believ-
- ing it to be correct to stand erect and be, from
- their feet to their foreheads, a mark. They said
- they scorned the devices of the cautious. But
- the others scoffed in reply, and pointed to the
- veterans on the flanks who were digging at the
- ground like terriers. In a short time there was
- quite a barricade along the regimental fronts.
- Directly, however, they were ordered to with-
- draw from that place.
-
- This astounded the youth. He forgot his
- stewing over the advance movement. "Well,
- then, what did they march us out here for?" he
- demanded of the tall soldier. The latter with
- calm faith began a heavy explanation, although
- he had been compelled to leave a little protection
- of stones and dirt to which he had devoted much
- care and skill.
-
- When the regiment was aligned in another
- position each man's regard for his safety caused
- another line of small intrenchments. They ate
- their noon meal behind a third one. They were
- moved from this one also. They were marched
- from place to place with apparent aimlessness.
-
- The youth had been taught that a man be-
- came another thing in a battle. He saw his sal-
- vation in such a change. Hence this waiting
- was an ordeal to him. He was in a fever of im-
- patience. He considered that there was denoted
- a lack of purpose on the part of the generals.
- He began to complain to the tall soldier. "I
- can't stand this much longer," he cried. "I
- don't see what good it does to make us wear
- out our legs for nothin'." He wished to return
- to camp, knowing that this affair was a blue
- demonstration; or else to go into a battle and
- discover that he had been a fool in his doubts,
- and was, in truth, a man of traditional courage.
- The strain of present circumstances he felt to be
- intolerable.
-
- The philosophical tall soldier measured a sand-
- wich of cracker and pork and swallowed it in a
- nonchalant manner. "Oh, I suppose we must go
- reconnoitering around the country jest to keep
- 'em from getting too close, or to develop 'em, or
- something."
-
- "Huh!" said the loud soldier.
-
- "Well," cried the youth, still fidgeting, "I'd
- rather do anything 'most than go tramping 'round
- the country all day doing no good to nobody and
- jest tiring ourselves out."
-
- "So would I," said the loud soldier. "It ain't
- right. I tell you if anybody with any sense was
- a-runnin' this army it--"
-
- "Oh, shut up!" roared the tall private. "You
- little fool. You little damn' cuss. You ain't had
- that there coat and them pants on for six months,
- and yet you talk as if--"
-
- "Well, I wanta do some fighting anyway,"
- interrupted the other. "I didn't come here to
- walk. I could 'ave walked to home--'round an'
- 'round the barn, if I jest wanted to walk."
-
- The tall one, red-faced, swallowed another
- sandwich as if taking poison in despair.
-
- But gradually, as he chewed, his face became
- again quiet and contented. He could not rage
- in fierce argument in the presence of such sand-
- wiches. During his meals he always wore an air
- of blissful contemplation of the food he had swal-
- lowed. His spirit seemed then to be communing
- with the viands.
-
- He accepted new environment and circum-
- stance with great coolness, eating from his haver-
- sack at every opportunity. On the march he
- went along with the stride of a hunter, object-
- ing to neither gait nor distance. And he had
- not raised his voice when he had been ordered
- away from three little protective piles of earth
- and stone, each of which had been an engineer-
- ing feat worthy of being made sacred to the name
- of his grandmother.
-
- In the afternoon the regiment went out over
- the same ground it had taken in the morn-
- ing. The landscape then ceased to threaten the
- youth. He had been close to it and become
- familiar with it.
-
- When, however, they began to pass into a
- new region, his old fears of stupidity and in-
- competence reassailed him, but this time he dog-
- gedly let them babble. He was occupied with
- his problem, and in his desperation he concluded
- that the stupidity did not greatly matter.
-
- Once he thought he had concluded that it
- would be better to get killed directly and end
- his troubles. Regarding death thus out of the
- corner of his eye, he conceived it to be noth-
- ing but rest, and he was filled with a momen-
- tary astonishment that he should have made an
- extraordinary commotion over the mere matter
- of getting killed. He would die; he would go
- to some place where he would be understood.
- It was useless to expect appreciation of his pro-
- found and fine senses from such men as the lieu-
- tenant. He must look to the grave for compre-
- hension.
-
- The skirmish fire increased to a long chatter-
- ing sound. With it was mingled far-away cheer-
- ing. A battery spoke.
-
- Directly the youth would see the skirmishers
- running. They were pursued by the sound of
- musketry fire. After a time the hot, dangerous
- flashes of the rifles were visible. Smoke clouds
- went slowly and insolently across the fields like
- observant phantoms. The din became crescendo,
- like the roar of an oncoming train.
-
- A brigade ahead of them and on the right
- went into action with a rending roar. It was
- as if it had exploded. And thereafter it lay
- stretched in the distance behind a long gray wall,
- that one was obliged to look twice at to make
- sure that it was smoke.
-
- The youth, forgetting his neat plan of getting
- killed, gazed spell bound. His eyes grew wide
- and busy with the action of the scene. His
- mouth was a little ways open.
-
- Of a sudden he felt a heavy and sad hand laid
- upon his shoulder. Awakening from his trance
- of observation he turned and beheld the loud
- soldier.
-
- "It's my first and last battle, old boy," said
- the latter, with intense gloom. He was quite
- pale and his girlish lip was trembling.
-
- "Eh?" murmured the youth in great aston-
- ishment.
-
- "It's my first and last battle, old boy,"
- continued the loud soldier. "Something tells
- me--"
-
- "What?"
-
- "I'm a gone coon this first time and--and I
- w-want you to take these here things--to--my--
- folks." He ended in a quavering sob of pity for
- himself. He handed the youth a little packet
- done up in a yellow envelope.
-
- "Why, what the devil--" began the youth
- again.
-
- But the other gave him a glance as from the
- depths of a tomb, and raised his limp hand in a
- prophetic manner and turned away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
-
- THE brigade was halted in the fringe of a
- grove. The men crouched among the trees and
- pointed their restless guns out at the fields.
- They tried to look beyond the smoke.
-
- Out of this haze they could see running men.
- Some shouted information and gestured as they
- hurried.
-
- The men of the new regiment watched and
- listened eagerly, while their tongues ran on in
- gossip of the battle. They mouthed rumors that
- had flown like birds out of the unknown.
-
- "They say Perry has been driven in with big
- loss."
-
- "Yes, Carrott went t' th' hospital. He said he
- was sick. That smart lieutenant is commanding
- 'G' Company. Th' boys say they won't be
- under Carrott no more if they all have t' desert.
- They allus knew he was a--"
-
- "Hannises' batt'ry is took."
-
- "It ain't either. I saw Hannises' batt'ry off on
- th' left not more'n fifteen minutes ago."
-
- 47
-
-
- "Well--"
-
- "Th' general, he ses he is goin' t' take th' hull
- cammand of th' 304th when we go inteh action,
- an' then he ses we'll do sech fightin' as never
- another one reg'ment done."
-
- "They say we're catchin' it over on th' left.
- They say th' enemy driv' our line inteh a devil of
- a swamp an' took Hannises' batt'ry."
-
- "No sech thing. Hannises' batt'ry was 'long
- here 'bout a minute ago."
-
- "That young Hasbrouck, he makes a good
- off'cer. He ain't afraid 'a nothin'."
-
- "I met one of th' 148th Maine boys an' he ses
- his brigade fit th' hull rebel army fer four hours
- over on th' turnpike road an' killed about five
- thousand of 'em. He ses one more sech fight as
- that an' th' war 'll be over."
-
- "Bill wasn't scared either. No, sir! It wasn't
- that. Bill ain't a-gittin' scared easy. He was
- jest mad, that's what he was. When that feller
- trod on his hand, he up an' sed that he was willin'
- t' give his hand t' his country, but he be dumbed
- if he was goin' t' have every dumb bushwhacker
- in th' kentry walkin' 'round on it. Se he went t'
- th' hospital disregardless of th' fight. Three
- fingers was crunched. Th' dern doctor wanted
- t' amputate 'm, an' Bill, he raised a heluva row, I
- hear. He's a funny feller."
-
- The din in front swelled to a tremendous
- chorus. The youth and his fellows were frozen
- to silence. They could see a flag that tossed in
- the smoke angrily. Near it were the blurred and
- agitated forms of troops. There came a turbulent
- stream of men across the fields. A battery chang-
- ing position at a frantic gallop scattered the
- stragglers right and left.
-
- A shell screaming like a storm banshee went
- over the huddled heads of the reserves. It landed
- in the grove, and exploding redly flung the brown
- earth. There was a little shower of pine needles.
-
- Bullets began to whistle among the branches
- and nip at the trees. Twigs and leaves came
- sailing down. It was as if a thousand axes, wee
- and invisible, were being wielded. Many of the
- men were constantly dodging and ducking their
- heads.
-
- The lieutenant of the youth's company was
- shot in the hand. He began to swear so won-
- drously that a nervous laugh went along the regi-
- mental line. The officer's profanity sounded
- conventional. It relieved the tightened senses of
- the new men. It was as if he had hit his fingers
- with a tack hammer at home.
-
- He held the wounded member carefully away
- from his side so that the blood would not drip
- upon his trousers.
-
- The captain of the company, tucking his sword
- under his arm, produced a handkerchief and
- began to bind with it the lieutenant's wound.
- And they disputed as to how the binding should
- be done.
-
- The battle flag in the distance jerked about
- madly. It seemed to be struggling to free itself
- from an agony. The billowing smoke was filled
- with horizontal flashes.
-
- Men running swiftly emerged from it. They
- grew in numbers until it was seen that the whole
- command was fleeing. The flag suddenly sank
- down as if dying. Its motion as it fell was a
- gesture of despair.
-
- Wild yells came from behind the walls of
- smoke. A sketch in gray and red dissolved into
- a moblike body of men who galloped like wild
- horses.
-
- The veteran regiments on the right and left of
- the 304th immediately began to jeer. With the
- passionate song of the bullets and the banshee
- shrieks of shells were mingled loud catcalls and
- bits of facetious advice concerning places of safety.
-
- But the new regiment was breathless with hor-
- ror. "Gawd! Saunders's got crushed!" whis-
- pered the man at the youth's elbow. They
- shrank back and crouched as if compelled to
- await a flood.
-
- The youth shot a swift glance along the blue
- ranks of the regiment. The profiles were motion-
- less, carven; and afterward he remembered that
- the color sergeant was standing with his legs
- apart, as if he expected to be pushed to the
- ground.
-
- The following throng went whirling around
- the flank. Here and there were officers carried
- along on the stream like exasperated chips. They
- were striking about them with their swords
- and with their left fists, punching every head
- they could reach. They cursed like highway-
- men.
-
- A mounted officer displayed the furious anger
- of a spoiled child. He raged with his head, his
- arms, and his legs.
-
- Another, the commander of the brigade, was
- galloping about bawling. His hat was gone and
- his clothes were awry. He resembled a man
- who has come from bed to go to a fire. The
- hoofs of his horse often threatened the heads of
- the running men, but they scampered with sin-
- gular fortune. In this rush they were apparently
- all deaf and blind. They heeded not the largest
- and longest of the oaths that were thrown at
- them from all directions.
-
- Frequently over this tumult could be heard
- the grim jokes of the critical veterans; but the
- retreating men apparently were not even con-
- scious of the presence of an audience.
-
- The battle reflection that shone for an instant
- in the faces on the mad current made the youth
- feel that forceful hands from heaven would not
- have been able to have held him in place if he
- could have got intelligent control of his legs.
-
- There was an appalling imprint upon these
- faces. The struggle in the smoke had pictured
- an exaggeration of itself on the bleached cheeks
- and in the eyes wild with one desire.
-
- The sight of this stampede exerted a floodlike
- force that seemed able to drag sticks and stones
- and men from the ground. They of the reserves
- had to hold on. They grew pale and firm, and
- red and quaking.
-
- The youth achieved one little thought in the
- midst of this chaos. The composite monster
- which had caused the other troops to flee had
- not then appeared. He resolved to get a view
- of it, and then, he thought he might very likely
- run better than the best of them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-
- THERE were moments of waiting. The youth
- thought of the village street at home before the
- arrival of the circus parade on a day in the
- spring. He remembered how he had stood, a
- small, thrillful boy, prepared to follow the dingy
- lady upon the white horse, or the band in its
- faded chariot. He saw the yellow road, the
- lines of expectant people, and the sober houses.
- He particularly remembered an old fellow who
- used to sit upon a cracker box in front of the
- store and feign to despise such exhibitions. A
- thousand details of color and form surged in his
- mind. The old fellow upon the cracker box ap-
- peared in middle prominence.
-
- Some one cried, "Here they come!"
-
- There was rustling and muttering among the
- men. They displayed a feverish desire to have
- every possible cartridge ready to their hands.
- The boxes were pulled around into various posi-
- tions, and adjusted with great care. It was as if
- seven hundred new bonnets were being tried on.
-
- 53
-
- The tall soldier, having prepared his rifle, pro-
- duced a red handkerchief of some kind. He was
- engaged in knitting it about his throat with ex-
- quisite attention to its position, when the cry was
- repeated up and down the line in a muffled roar
- of sound.
-
- "Here they come! Here they come!" Gun
- locks clicked.
-
- Across the smoke-infested fields came a brown
- swarm of running men who were giving shrill
- yells. They came on, stooping and swinging
- their rifles at all angles. A flag, tilted forward,
- sped near the front.
-
- As he caught sight of them the youth was
- momentarily startled by a thought that perhaps
- his gun was not loaded. He stood trying to
- rally his faltering intellect so that he might rec-
- ollect the moment when he had loaded, but he
- could not.
-
- A hatless general pulled his dripping horse to
- a stand near the colonel of the 304th. He shook
- his fist in the other's face. "You 've got to hold
- 'em back!" he shouted, savagely; "you 've got
- to hold 'em back!"
-
- In his agitation the colonel began to stammer.
- "A-all r-right, General, all right, by Gawd! We-
- we'll do our--we-we'll d-d-do--do our best, Gen-
- eral." The general made a passionate gesture
- and galloped away. The colonel, perchance to
- relieve his feelings, began to scold like a wet
- parrot. The youth, turning swiftly to make
- sure that the rear was unmolested, saw the com-
- mander regarding his men in a highly regretful
- manner, as if he regretted above everything his
- association with them.
-
- The man at the youth's elbow was mumbling,
- as if to himself: "Oh, we 're in for it now! oh,
- we 're in for it now!"
-
- The captain of the company had been pacing
- excitedly to and fro in the rear. He coaxed in
- schoolmistress fashion, as to a congregation of
- boys with primers. His talk was an endless
- repetition. "Reserve your fire, boys--don't
- shoot till I tell you--save your fire--wait till
- they get close up--don't be damned fools--"
-
- Perspiration streamed down the youth's face,
- which was soiled like that of a weeping urchin.
- He frequently, with a nervous movement, wiped
- his eyes with his coat sleeve. His mouth was
- still a little ways open.
-
- He got the one glance at the foe-swarming
- field in front of him, and instantly ceased to de-
- bate the question of his piece being loaded. Be-
- fore he was ready to begin--before he had an-
- nounced to himself that he was about to fight--
- he threw the obedient, well-balanced rifle into
- position and fired a first wild shot. Directly he
- was working at his weapon like an automatic
- affair.
-
- He suddenly lost concern for himself, and for-
- got to look at a menacing fate. He became not a
- man but a member. He felt that something of
- which he was a part--a regiment, an army, a
- cause, or a country--was in a crisis. He was
- welded into a common personality which was
- dominated by a single desire. For some mo-
- ments he could not flee no more than a little
- finger can commit a revolution from a hand.
-
- If he had thought the regiment was about to
- be annihilated perhaps he could have amputated
- himself from it. But its noise gave him assur-
- ance. The regiment was like a firework that,
- once ignited, proceeds superior to circumstances
- until its blazing vitality fades. It wheezed and
- banged with a mighty power. He pictured the
- ground before it as strewn with the discom-
- fited.
-
- There was a consciousness always of the pres-
- ence of his comrades about him. He felt the
- subtle battle brotherhood more potent even than
- the cause for which they were fighting. It was a
- mysterious fraternity born of the smoke and dan-
- ger of death.
-
- He was at a task. He was like a carpenter
- who has made many boxes, making still another
- box, only there was furious haste in his move-
- ments. He, in his thought, was careering off in
- other places, even as the carpenter who as he
- works whistles and thinks of his friend or his
- enemy, his home or a saloon. And these jolted
- dreams were never perfect to him afterward, but
- remained a mass of blurred shapes.
-
- Presently he began to feel the effects of the
- war atmosphere--a blistering sweat, a sensation
- that his eyeballs were about to crack like hot
- stones. A burning roar filled his ears.
-
- Following this came a red rage. He devel-
- oped the acute exasperation of a pestered animal,
- a well-meaning cow worried by dogs. He had a
- mad feeling against his rifle, which could only be
- used against one life at a time. He wished to
- rush forward and strangle with his fingers. He
- craved a power that would enable him to make a
- world-sweeping gesture and brush all back. His
- impotency appeared to him, and made his rage
- into that of a driven beast.
-
- Buried in the smoke of many rifles his anger
- was directed not so much against the men whom
- he knew were rushing toward him as against the
- swirling battle phantoms which were choking
- him, stuffing their smoke robes down his parched
- throat. He fought frantically for respite for his
- senses, for air, as a babe being smothered attacks
- the deadly blankets.
-
- There was a blare of heated rage mingled with
- a certain expression of intentness on all faces.
- Many of the men were making low-toned noises
- with their mouths, and these subdued cheers,
- snarls, imprecations, prayers, made a wild, bar-
- baric song that went as an undercurrent of sound,
- strange and chantlike with the resounding chords
- of the war march. The man at the youth's elbow
- was babbling. In it there was something soft and
- tender like the monologue of a babe. The tall
- soldier was swearing in a loud voice. From his
- lips came a black procession of curious oaths. Of
- a sudden another broke out in a querulous way
- like a man who has mislaid his hat. "Well, why
- don't they support us? Why don't they send
- supports? Do they think--"
-
- The youth in his battle sleep heard this as one
- who dozes hears.
-
- There was a singular absence of heroic poses.
- The men bending and surging in their haste and
- rage were in every impossible attitude. The steel
- ramrods clanked and clanged with incessant din
- as the men pounded them furiously into the hot
- rifle barrels. The flaps of the cartridge boxes were
- all unfastened, and bobbed idiotically with each
- movement. The rifles, once loaded, were jerked
- to the shoulder and fired without apparent aim
- into the smoke or at one of the blurred and shift-
- ing forms which upon the field before the regi-
- ment had been growing larger and larger like
- puppets under a magician's hand.
-
- The officers, at their intervals, rearward, neg-
- lected to stand in picturesque attitudes. They
- were bobbing to and fro roaring directions and
- encouragements. The dimensions of their howls
- were extraordinary. They expended their lungs
- with prodigal wills. And often they nearly stood
- upon their heads in their anxiety to observe the
- enemy on the other side of the tumbling smoke.
-
- The lieutenant of the youth's company had en-
- countered a soldier who had fled screaming at
- the first volley of his comrades. Behind the lines
- these two were acting a little isolated scene. The
- man was blubbering and staring with sheeplike
- eyes at the lieutenant, who had seized him by the
- collar and was pommeling him. He drove him
- back into the ranks with many blows. The sol-
- dier went mechanically, dully, with his animal-
- like eyes upon the officer. Perhaps there was to
- him a divinity expressed in the voice of the other
- --stern, hard, with no reflection of fear in it. He
- tried to reload his gun, but his shaking hands pre-
- vented. The lieutenant was obliged to assist him.
-
- The men dropped here and there like bundles.
- The captain of the youth's company had been
- killed in an early part of the action. His body
- lay stretched out in the position of a tired man
- resting, but upon his face there was an astonished
- and sorrowful look, as if he thought some friend
- had done him an ill turn. The babbling man was
- grazed by a shot that made the blood stream
- widely down his face. He clapped both hands
- to his head. "Oh!" he said, and ran. Another
- grunted suddenly as if he had been struck by a
- club in the stomach. He sat down and gazed
- ruefully. In his eyes there was mute, indefinite
- reproach. Farther up the line a man, standing
- behind a tree, had had his knee joint splintered
- by a ball. Immediately he had dropped his rifle
- and gripped the tree with both arms. And there
- he remained, clinging desperately and crying for
- assistance that he might withdraw his hold upon
- the tree.
-
- At last an exultant yell went along the quiver-
- ing line. The firing dwindled from an uproar to
- a last vindictive popping. As the smoke slowly
- eddied away, the youth saw that the charge had
- been repulsed. The enemy were scattered into
- reluctant groups. He saw a man climb to the
- top of the fence, straddle the rail, and fire a part-
- ing shot. The waves had receded, leaving bits of
- dark debris upon the ground.
-
- Some in the regiment began to whoop fren-
- ziedly. Many were silent. Apparently they were
- trying to contemplate themselves.
-
- After the fever had left his veins, the youth
- thought that at last he was going to suffocate.
- He became aware of the foul atmosphere in
- which he had been struggling. He was grimy
- and dripping like a laborer in a foundry. He
- grasped his canteen and took a long swallow of
- the warmed water.
-
- A sentence with variations went up and down
- the line. "Well, we 've helt 'em back. We 've
- helt 'em back; derned if we haven't." The men
- said it blissfully, leering at each other with dirty
- smiles.
-
- The youth turned to look behind him and off
- to the right and off to the left. He experienced
- the joy of a man who at last finds leisure in which
- to look about him.
-
- Under foot there were a few ghastly forms
- motionless. They lay twisted in fantastic contor-
- tions. Arms were bent and heads were turned
- in incredible ways. It seemed that the dead men
- must have fallen from some great height to get
- into such positions. They looked to be dumped
- out upon the ground from the sky.
-
- From a position in the rear of the grove a bat-
- tery was throwing shells over it. The flash of
- the guns startled the youth at first. He thought
- they were aimed directly at him. Through the
- trees he watched the black figures of the gunners
- as they worked swiftly and intently. Their labor
- seemed a complicated thing. He wondered how
- they could remember its formula in the midst of
- confusion.
-
- The guns squatted in a row like savage chiefs.
- They argued with abrupt violence. It was a
- grim pow-wow. Their busy servants ran hither
- and thither.
-
- A small procession of wounded men were go-
- ing drearily toward the rear. It was a flow of
- blood from the torn body of the brigade.
-
- To the right and to the left were the dark
- lines of other troops. Far in front he thought he
- could see lighter masses protruding in points
- from the forest. They were suggestive of un-
- numbered thousands.
-
- Once he saw a tiny battery go dashing along
- the line of the horizon. The tiny riders were
- beating the tiny horses.
-
- From a sloping hill came the sound of cheer-
- ings and clashes. Smoke welled slowly through
- the leaves.
-
- Batteries were speaking with thunderous ora-
- torical effort. Here and there were flags, the
- red in the stripes dominating. They splashed
- bits of warm color upon the dark lines of
- troops.
-
- The youth felt the old thrill at the sight of
- the emblem. They were like beautiful birds
- strangely undaunted in a storm.
-
- As he listened to the din from the hillside, to
- a deep pulsating thunder that came from afar to
- the left, and to the lesser clamors which came
- from many directions, it occurred to him that
- they were fighting, too, over there, and over
- there, and over there. Heretofore he had sup-
- posed that all the battle was directly under his
- nose.
-
- As he gazed around him the youth felt a flash
- of astonishment at the blue, pure sky and the
- sun gleamings on the trees and fields. It was
- surprising that Nature had gone tranquilly on
- with her golden process in the midst of so much
- devilment.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
-
- THE youth awakened slowly. He came grad-
- ually back to a position from which he could re-
- gard himself. For moments he had been scruti-
- nizing his person in a dazed way as if he had
- never before seen himself. Then he picked up
- his cap from the ground. He wriggled in his
- jacket to make a more comfortable fit, and kneel-
- ing relaced his shoe. He thoughtfully mopped
- his reeking features.
-
- So it was all over at last! The supreme trial
- had been passed. The red, formidable difficulties
- of war had been vanquished.
-
- He went into an ecstasy of self-satisfaction.
- He had the most delightful sensations of his life.
- Standing as if apart from himself, he viewed that
- last scene. He perceived that the man who had
- fought thus was magnificent.
-
- He felt that he was a fine fellow. He saw
- himself even with those ideals which he had con-
- sidered as far beyond him. He smiled in deep
- gratification.
-
- 64
-
- Upon his fellows he beamed tenderness and
- good will. "Gee! ain't it hot, hey?" he said
- affably to a man who was polishing his stream-
- ing face with his coat sleeves.
-
- "You bet!" said the other, grinning sociably.
- "I never seen sech dumb hotness." He sprawled
- out luxuriously on the ground. "Gee, yes! An'
- I hope we don't have no more fightin' till a week
- from Monday."
-
- There were some handshakings and deep
- speeches with men whose features were familiar,
- but with whom the youth now felt the bonds of
- tied hearts. He helped a cursing comrade to
- bind up a wound of the shin.
-
- But, of a sudden, cries of amazement broke
- out along the ranks of the new regiment. "Here
- they come ag'in! Here they come ag'in!" The
- man who had sprawled upon the ground started
- up and said, "Gosh!"
-
- The youth turned quick eyes upon the field.
- He discerned forms begin to swell in masses out
- of a distant wood. He again saw the tilted flag
- speeding forward.
-
- The shells, which had ceased to trouble the
- regiment for a time, came swirling again, and ex-
- ploded in the grass or among the leaves of the
- trees. They looked to be strange war flowers
- bursting into fierce bloom.
-
- The men groaned. The luster faded from
- their eyes. Their smudged countenances now
- expressed a profound dejection. They moved
- their stiffened bodies slowly, and watched in sul-
- len mood the frantic approach of the enemy. The
- slaves toiling in the temple of this god began to
- feel rebellion at his harsh tasks.
-
- They fretted and complained each to each.
- "Oh, say, this is too much of a good thing! Why
- can't somebody send us supports?"
-
- "We ain't never goin' to stand this second
- banging. I didn't come here to fight the hull
- damn' rebel army."
-
- There was one who raised a doleful cry. "I
- wish Bill Smithers had trod on my hand, in-
- steader me treddin' on his'n." The sore joints of
- the regiment creaked as it painfully floundered
- into position to repulse.
-
- The youth stared. Surely, he thought, this
- impossible thing was not about to happen. He
- waited as if he expected the enemy to suddenly
- stop, apologize, and retire bowing. It was all a
- mistake.
-
- But the firing began somewhere on the regi-
- mental line and ripped along in both directions.
- The level sheets of flame developed great clouds
- of smoke that tumbled and tossed in the mild
- wind near the ground for a moment, and then
- rolled through the ranks as through a gate. The
- clouds were tinged an earthlike yellow in the
- sunrays and in the shadow were a sorry blue.
- The flag was sometimes eaten and lost in this
- mass of vapor, but more often it projected, sun-
- touched, resplendent.
-
- Into the youth's eyes there came a look that
- one can see in the orbs of a jaded horse. His
- neck was quivering with nervous weakness and
- the muscles of his arms felt numb and bloodless.
- His hands, too, seemed large and awkward as if
- he was wearing invisible mittens. And there was
- a great uncertainty about his knee joints.
-
- The words that comrades had uttered previous
- to the firing began to recur to him. "Oh, say,
- this is too much of a good thing! What do they
- take us for--why don't they send supports? I
- didn't come here to fight the hull damned rebel
- army."
-
- He began to exaggerate the endurance, the
- skill, and the valor of those who were coming.
- Himself reeling from exhaustion, he was aston-
- ished beyond measure at such persistency. They
- must be machines of steel. It was very gloomy
- struggling against such affairs, wound up perhaps
- to fight until sundown.
-
- He slowly lifted his rifle and catching a
- glimpse of the thickspread field he blazed at a
- cantering cluster. He stopped then and began
- to peer as best he could through the smoke. He
- caught changing views of the ground covered
- with men who were all running like pursued
- imps, and yelling.
-
- To the youth it was an onslaught of redoubt-
- able dragons. He became like the man who lost
- his legs at the approach of the red and green
- monster. He waited in a sort of a horrified,
- listening attitude. He seemed to shut his eyes
- and wait to be gobbled.
-
- A man near him who up to this time had been
- working feverishly at his rifle suddenly stopped
- and ran with howls. A lad whose face had borne
- an expression of exalted courage, the majesty of
- he who dares give his life, was, at an instant,
- smitten abject. He blanched like one who has
- come to the edge of a cliff at midnight and is sud-
- denly made aware. There was a revelation. He,
- too, threw down his gun and fled. There was no
- shame in his face. He ran like a rabbit.
-
- Others began to scamper away through the
- smoke. The youth turned his head, shaken from
- his trance by this movement as if the regiment
- was leaving him behind. He saw the few fleeting
- forms.
-
- He yelled then with fright and swung about.
- For a moment, in the great clamor, he was like a
- proverbial chicken. He lost the direction of
- safety. Destruction threatened him from all
- points.
-
- Directly he began to speed toward the rear in
- great leaps. His rifle and cap were gone. His
- unbuttoned coat bulged in the wind. The flap of
- his cartridge box bobbed wildly, and his canteen,
- by its slender cord, swung out behind. On his
- face was all the horror of those things which he
- imagined.
-
- The lieutenant sprang forward bawling. The
- youth saw his features wrathfully red, and saw
- him make a dab with his sword. His one thought
- of the incident was that the lieutenant was a pecul-
- iar creature to feel interested in such matters
- upon this occasion.
-
- He ran like a blind man. Two or three times
- he fell down. Once he knocked his shoulder so
- heavily against a tree that he went headlong.
-
- Since he had turned his back upon the fight
- his fears had been wondrously magnified. Death
- about to thrust him between the shoulder blades
- was far more dreadful than death about to smite
- him between the eyes. When he thought of it
- later, he conceived the impression that it is better
- to view the appalling than to be merely within
- hearing. The noises of the battle were like
- stones; he believed himself liable to be crushed.
-
- As he ran he mingled with others. He
- dimly saw men on his right and on his left, and
- he heard footsteps behind him. He thought that
- all the regiment was fleeing, pursued by these
- ominous crashes.
-
- In his flight the sound of these following foot-
- steps gave him his one meager relief. He felt
- vaguely that death must make a first choice of
- the men who were nearest; the initial morsels for
- the dragons would be then those who were fol-
- lowing him. So he displayed the zeal of an insane
- sprinter in his purpose to keep them in the rear.
- There was a race.
-
- As he, leading, went across a little field, he
- found himself in a region of shells. They hurtled
- over his head with long wild screams. As he
- listened he imagined them to have rows of cruel
- teeth that grinned at him. Once one lit before
- him and the livid lightning of the explosion
- effectually barred the way in his chosen direc-
- tion. He groveled on the ground and then
- springing up went careering off through some
- bushes.
-
- He experienced a thrill of amazement when
- he came within view of a battery in action. The
- men there seemed to be in conventional moods,
- altogether unaware of the impending annihila-
- tion. The battery was disputing with a distant
- antagonist and the gunners were wrapped in
- admiration of their shooting. They were con-
- tinually bending in coaxing postures over the
- guns. They seemed to be patting them on the
- back and encouraging them with words. The
- guns, stolid and undaunted, spoke with dogged
- valor.
-
- The precise gunners were coolly enthusiastic.
- They lifted their eyes every chance to the smoke-
- wreathed hillock from whence the hostile battery
- addressed them. The youth pitied them as he
- ran. Methodical idiots! Machine-like fools! The
- refined joy of planting shells in the midst of the
- other battery's formation would appear a little
- thing when the infantry came swooping out of
- the woods.
-
- The face of a youthful rider, who was jerking
- his frantic horse with an abandon of temper
- he might display in a placid barnyard, was im-
- pressed deeply upon his mind. He knew that
- he looked upon a man who would presently be
- dead.
-
- Too, he felt a pity for the guns, standing, six
- good comrades, in a bold row.
-
- He saw a brigade going to the relief of its pes-
- tered fellows. He scrambled upon a wee hill and
- watched it sweeping finely, keeping formation in
- difficult places. The blue of the line was crusted
- with steel color, and the brilliant flags projected.
- Officers were shouting.
-
- This sight also filled him with wonder. The
- brigade was hurrying briskly to be gulped into
- the infernal mouths of the war god. What man-
- ner of men were they, anyhow? Ah, it was some
- wondrous breed! Or else they didn't compre-
- hend--the fools.
-
- A furious order caused commotion in the artil-
- lery. An officer on a bounding horse made mani-
- acal motions with his arms. The teams went
- swinging up from the rear, the guns were whirled
- about, and the battery scampered away. The
- cannon with their noses poked slantingly at the
- ground grunted and grumbled like stout men,
- brave but with objections to hurry.
-
- The youth went on, moderating his pace since
- he had left the place of noises.
-
- Later he came upon a general of division
- seated upon a horse that pricked its ears in
- an interested way at the battle. There was a
- great gleaming of yellow and patent leather
- about the saddle and bridle. The quiet man
- astride looked mouse-colored upon such a splen-
- did charger.
-
- A jingling staff was galloping hither and
- thither. Sometimes the general was surrounded
- by horsemen and at other times he was quite
- alone. He looked to be much harassed. He had
- the appearance of a business man whose market
- is swinging up and down.
-
- The youth went slinking around this spot.
- He went as near as he dared trying to overhear
- words. Perhaps the general, unable to compre-
- hend chaos, might call upon him for information.
- And he could tell him. He knew all concerning
- it. Of a surety the force was in a fix, and any
- fool could see that if they did not retreat while
- they had opportunity--why--
-
- He felt that he would like to thrash the gen-
- eral, or at least approach and tell him in plain
- words exactly what he thought him to be. It
- was criminal to stay calmly in one spot and make
- no effort to stay destruction. He loitered in a
- fever of eagerness for the division commander to
- apply to him.
-
- As he warily moved about, he heard the gen-
- eral call out irritably: "Tompkins, go over an'
- see Taylor, an' tell him not t' be in such an all-
- fired hurry; tell him t' halt his brigade in th'
- edge of th' woods; tell him t' detach a reg'ment
- --say I think th' center 'll break if we don't help
- it out some; tell him t' hurry up."
-
- A slim youth on a fine chestnut horse caught
- these swift words from the mouth of his superior.
- He made his horse bound into a gallop almost
- from a walk in his haste to go upon his mission.
- There was a cloud of dust.
-
- A moment later the youth saw the general
- bounce excitedly in his saddle.
-
- "Yes, by heavens, they have!" The officer
- leaned forward. His face was aflame with excite-
- ment. "Yes, by heavens, they 've held 'im!
- They 've held 'im!"
-
- He began to blithely roar at his staff: "We 'll
- wallop 'im now. We 'll wallop 'im now. We 've
- got 'em sure." He turned suddenly upon an aid:
- "Here--you--Jones--quick--ride after Tompkins
- --see Taylor--tell him t' go in--everlastingly--
- like blazes--anything."
-
- As another officer sped his horse after the first
- messenger, the general beamed upon the earth
- like a sun. In his eyes was a desire to chant a
- paean. He kept repeating, "They 've held 'em,
- by heavens!"
-
- His excitement made his horse plunge, and he
- merrily kicked and swore at it. He held a little
- carnival of joy on horseback.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
-
- THE youth cringed as if discovered in a crime.
- By heavens, they had won after all! The im-
- becile line had remained and become victors.
- He could hear cheering.
-
- He lifted himself upon his toes and looked in
- the direction of the fight. A yellow fog lay wal-
- lowing on the treetops. From beneath it came
- the clatter of musketry. Hoarse cries told of an
- advance.
-
- He turned away amazed and angry. He felt
- that he had been wronged.
-
- He had fled, he told himself, because annihila-
- tion approached. He had done a good part in
- saving himself, who was a little piece of the army.
- He had considered the time, he said, to be one in
- which it was the duty of every little piece to res-
- cue itself if possible. Later the officers could fit
- the little pieces together again, and make a battle
- front. If none of the little pieces were wise enough
- to save themselves from the flurry of death at such
-
- 75
- a time, why, then, where would be the army? It
- was all plain that he had proceeded according to
- very correct and commendable rules. His ac-
- tions had been sagacious things. They had been
- full of strategy. They were the work of a mas-
- ter's legs.
-
- Thoughts of his comrades came to him. The
- brittle blue line had withstood the blows and won.
- He grew bitter over it. It seemed that the blind
- ignorance and stupidity of those little pieces had
- betrayed him. He had been overturned and
- crushed by their lack of sense in holding the po-
- sition, when intelligent deliberation would have
- convinced them that it was impossible. He, the
- enlightened man who looks afar in the dark, had
- fled because of his superior perceptions and
- knowledge. He felt a great anger against his
- comrades. He knew it could be proved that
- they had been fools.
-
- He wondered what they would remark when
- later he appeared in camp. His mind heard
- howls of derision. Their density would not en-
- able them to understand his sharper point of
- view.
-
- He began to pity himself acutely. He was
- ill used. He was trodden beneath the feet of an
- iron injustice. He had proceeded with wisdom
- and from the most righteous motives under
- heaven's blue only to be frustrated by hateful
- circumstances.
-
- A dull, animal-like rebellion against his fel-
- lows, war in the abstract, and fate grew within
- him. He shambled along with bowed head, his
- brain in a tumult of agony and despair. When
- he looked loweringly up, quivering at each
- sound, his eyes had the expression of those of
- a criminal who thinks his guilt and his pun-
- ishment great, and knows that he can find no
- words.
-
- He went from the fields into a thick woods, as
- if resolved to bury himself. He wished to get
- out of hearing of the crackling shots which were
- to him like voices.
-
- The ground was cluttered with vines and
- bushes, and the trees grew close and spread out
- like bouquets. He was obliged to force his way
- with much noise. The creepers, catching against
- his legs, cried out harshly as their sprays were
- torn from the barks of trees. The swishing sap-
- lings tried to make known his presence to the
- world. He could not conciliate the forest. As
- he made his way, it was always calling out prot-
- estations. When he separated embraces of trees
- and vines the disturbed foliages waved their arms
- and turned their face leaves toward him. He
- dreaded lest these noisy motions and cries should
- bring men to look at him. So he went far, seek-
- ing dark and intricate places.
-
- After a time the sound of musketry grew faint
- and the cannon boomed in the distance. The sun,
- suddenly apparent, blazed among the trees. The
- insects were making rhythmical noises. They
- seemed to be grinding their teeth in unison. A
- woodpecker stuck his impudent head around the
- side of a tree. A bird flew on lighthearted wing.
-
- Off was the rumble of death. It seemed now
- that Nature had no ears.
-
- This landscape gave him assurance. A fair
- field holding life. It was the religion of peace.
- It would die if its timid eyes were compelled to
- see blood. He conceived Nature to be a woman
- with a deep aversion to tragedy.
-
- He threw a pine cone at a jovial squirrel, and
- he ran with chattering fear. High in a treetop
- he stopped, and, poking his head cautiously from
- behind a branch, looked down with an air of trepi-
- dation.
-
- The youth felt triumphant at this exhibition.
- There was the law, he said. Nature had given
- him a sign. The squirrel, immediately upon rec-
- ognizing danger, had taken to his legs without
- ado. He did not stand stolidly baring his furry
- belly to the missile, and die with an upward
- glance at the sympathetic heavens. On the con-
- trary, he had fled as fast as his legs could carry
- him; and he was but an ordinary squirrel, too--
- doubtless no philosopher of his race. The youth
- wended, feeling that Nature was of his mind.
- She re-enforced his argument with proofs that
- lived where the sun shone.
-
- Once he found himself almost into a swamp.
- He was obliged to walk upon bog tufts and
- watch his feet to keep from the oily mire. Paus-
- ing at one time to look about him he saw, out at
- some black water, a small animal pounce in and
- emerge directly with a gleaming fish.
-
- The youth went again into the deep thickets.
- The brushed branches made a noise that drowned
- the sounds of cannon. He walked on, going from
- obscurity into promises of a greater obscurity.
-
- At length he reached a place where the high,
- arching boughs made a chapel. He softly pushed
- the green doors aside and entered. Pine needles
- were a gentle brown carpet. There was a reli-
- gious half light.
-
- Near the threshold he stopped, horror-stricken
- at the sight of a thing.
-
- He was being looked at by a dead man who
- was seated with his back against a columnlike
- tree. The corpse was dressed in a uniform that
- once had been blue, but was now faded to a mel-
- ancholy shade of green. The eyes, staring at the
- youth, had changed to the dull hue to be seen on
- the side of a dead fish. The mouth was open.
- Its red had changed to an appalling yellow.
- Over the gray skin of the face ran little ants.
- One was trundling some sort of a bundle along
- the upper lip.
-
- The youth gave a shriek as he confronted the
- thing. He was for moments turned to stone be-
- fore it. He remained staring into the liquid-look-
- ing eyes. The dead man and the living man ex-
- changed a long look. Then the youth cautiously
- put one hand behind him and brought it against
- a tree. Leaning upon this he retreated, step by
- step, with his face still toward the thing. He
- feared that if he turned his back the body might
- spring up and stealthily pursue him.
-
- The branches, pushing against him, threat-
- ened to throw him over upon it. His unguided
- feet, too, caught aggravatingly in brambles; and
- with it all he received a subtle suggestion to
- touch the corpse. As he thought of his hand
- upon it he shuddered profoundly.
-
- At last he burst the bonds which had fastened
- him to the spot and fled, unheeding the under-
- brush. He was pursued by a sight of the black
- ants swarming greedily upon the gray face and
- venturing horribly near to the eyes.
-
- After a time he paused, and, breathless and
- panting, listened. He imagined some strange
- voice would come from the dead throat and
- squawk after him in horrible menaces.
-
- The trees about the portal of the chapel
- moved soughingly in a soft wind. A sad silence
- was upon the little guarding edifice.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
- THE trees began softly to sing a hymn of twi-
- light. The sun sank until slanted bronze rays
- struck the forest. There was a lull in the noises
- of insects as if they had bowed their beaks and
- were making a devotional pause. There was
- silence save for the chanted chorus of the trees.
-
- Then, upon this stillness, there suddenly broke
- a tremendous clangor of sounds. A crimson roar
- came from the distance.
-
- The youth stopped. He was transfixed by
- this terrific medley of all noises. It was as if
- worlds were being rended. There was the rip-
- ping sound of musketry and the breaking crash
- of the artillery.
-
- His mind flew in all directions. He conceived
- the two armies to be at each other panther
- fashion. He listened for a time. Then he began
- to run in the direction of the battle. He saw
- that it was an ironical thing for him to be run-
- ning thus toward that which he had been at such
-
- 82
- pains to avoid. But he said, in substance, to him-
- self that if the earth and the moon were about to
- clash, many persons would doubtless plan to get
- upon the roofs to witness the collision.
-
- As he ran, he became aware that the forest
- had stopped its music, as if at last becoming
- capable of hearing the foreign sounds. The trees
- hushed and stood motionless. Everything seemed
- to be listening to the crackle and clatter and ear-
- shaking thunder. The chorus pealed over the
- still earth.
-
- It suddenly occurred to the youth that the
- fight in which he had been was, after all, but
- perfunctory popping. In the hearing of this
- present din he was doubtful if he had seen real
- battle scenes. This uproar explained a celes-
- tial battle; it was tumbling hordes a-struggle in
- the air.
-
- Reflecting, he saw a sort of a humor in the
- point of view of himself and his fellows during
- the late encounter. They had taken themselves
- and the enemy very seriously and had imagined
- that they were deciding the war. Individuals
- must have supposed that they were cutting the
- letters of their names deep into everlasting tablets
- of brass, or enshrining their reputations forever in
- the hearts of their countrymen, while, as to fact,
- the affair would appear in printed reports under a
- meek and immaterial title. But he saw that it was
- good, else, he said, in battle every one would
- surely run save forlorn hopes and their ilk.
-
- He went rapidly on. He wished to come to
- the edge of the forest that he might peer out.
-
- As he hastened, there passed through his mind
- pictures of stupendous conflicts. His accumulated
- thought upon such subjects was used to form
- scenes. The noise was as the voice of an eloquent
- being, describing.
-
- Sometimes the brambles formed chains and
- tried to hold him back. Trees, confronting him,
- stretched out their arms and forbade him to pass.
- After its previous hostility this new resistance of
- the forest filled him with a fine bitterness. It
- seemed that Nature could not be quite ready to
- kill him.
-
- But he obstinately took roundabout ways, and
- presently he was where he could see long gray
- walls of vapor where lay battle lines. The voices
- of cannon shook him. The musketry sounded in
- long irregular surges that played havoc with his
- ears. He stood regardant for a moment. His
- eyes had an awestruck expression. He gawked
- in the direction of the fight.
-
- Presently he proceeded again on his forward
- way. The battle was like the grinding of an
- immense and terrible machine to him. Its com-
- plexities and powers, its grim processes, fascinated
- him. He must go close and see it produce
- corpses.
-
- He came to a fence and clambered over it.
- On the far side, the ground was littered with
- clothes and guns. A newspaper, folded up, lay
- in the dirt. A dead soldier was stretched with
- his face hidden in his arm. Farther off there
- was a group of four or five corpses keeping
- mournful company. A hot sun had blazed upon
- the spot.
-
- In this place the youth felt that he was an
- invader. This forgotten part of the battle ground
- was owned by the dead men, and he hurried, in
- the vague apprehension that one of the swollen
- forms would rise and tell him to begone.
-
- He came finally to a road from which he
- could see in the distance dark and agitated
- bodies of troops, smoke-fringed. In the lane
- was a blood-stained crowd streaming to the rear.
- The wounded men were cursing, groaning, and
- wailing. In the air, always, was a mighty swell
- of sound that it seemed could sway the earth.
- With the courageous words of the artillery and
- the spiteful sentences of the musketry mingled
- red cheers. And from this region of noises came
- the steady current of the maimed.
-
- One of the wounded men had a shoeful of
- blood. He hopped like a schoolboy in a game.
- He was laughing hysterically.
-
- One was swearing that he had been shot in the
- arm through the commanding general's misman-
- agement of the army. One was marching with
- an air imitative of some sublime drum major.
- Upon his features was an unholy mixture of
- merriment and agony. As he marched he sang
- a bit of doggerel in a high and quavering voice:
-
-
- "Sing a song 'a vic'try,
- A pocketful 'a bullets,
- Five an' twenty dead men
- Baked in a--pie."
-
- Parts of the procession limped and staggered to
- this tune.
-
- Another had the gray seal of death already
- upon his face. His lips were curled in hard lines
- and his teeth were clinched. His hands were
- bloody from where he had pressed them upon his
- wound. He seemed to be awaiting the moment
- when he should pitch headlong. He stalked like
- the specter of a soldier, his eyes burning with the
- power of a stare into the unknown.
-
- There were some who proceeded sullenly, full
- of anger at their wounds, and ready to turn upon
- anything as an obscure cause.
-
- An officer was carried along by two privates.
- He was peevish. "Don't joggle so, Johnson, yeh
- fool," he cried. "Think m' leg is made of iron?
- If yeh can't carry me decent, put me down an'
- let some one else do it."
-
- He bellowed at the tottering crowd who
- blocked the quick march of his bearers. "Say,
- make way there, can't yeh? Make way, dickens
- take it all."
-
- They sulkily parted and went to the road-
- sides. As he was carried past they made pert
- remarks to him. When he raged in reply and
- threatened them, they told him to be damned.
-
- The shoulder of one of the tramping bearers
- knocked heavily against the spectral soldier who
- was staring into the unknown.
-
- The youth joined this crowd and marched
- along with it. The torn bodies expressed the
- awful machinery in which the men had been
- entangled.
-
- Orderlies and couriers occasionally broke
- through the throng in the roadway, scattering
- wounded men right and left, galloping on fol-
- lowed by howls. The melancholy march was
- continually disturbed by the messengers, and
- sometimes by bustling batteries that came swing-
- ing and thumping down upon them, the officers
- shouting orders to clear the way.
-
- There was a tattered man, fouled with dust,
- blood and powder stain from hair to shoes, who
- trudged quietly at the youth's side. He was lis-
- tening with eagerness and much humility to the
- lurid descriptions of a bearded sergeant. His
- lean features wore an expression of awe and ad-
- miration. He was like a listener in a country
- store to wondrous tales told among the sugar
- barrels. He eyed the story-teller with unspeak-
- able wonder. His mouth was agape in yokel
- fashion.
-
- The sergeant, taking note of this, gave pause
- to his elaborate history while he administered a
- sardonic comment. "Be keerful, honey, you 'll
- be a-ketchin' flies," he said.
-
- The tattered man shrank back abashed.
-
- After a time he began to sidle near to the
- youth, and in a different way try to make him a
- friend. His voice was gentle as a girl's voice
- and his eyes were pleading. The youth saw
- with surprise that the soldier had two wounds,
- one in the head, bound with a blood-soaked rag,
- and the other in the arm, making that member
- dangle like a broken bough.
-
- After they had walked together for some time
- the tattered man mustered sufficient courage to
- speak. "Was pretty good fight, wa'n't it?"
- he timidly said. The youth, deep in thought,
- glanced up at the bloody and grim figure with
- its lamblike eyes. "What?"
-
- "Was pretty good fight, wa'n't it?
-
- "Yes," said the youth shortly. He quick-
- ened his pace.
-
- But the other hobbled industriously after him.
- There was an air of apology in his manner, but
- he evidently thought that he needed only to talk
- for a time, and the youth would perceive that he
- was a good fellow.
-
- "Was pretty good fight, wa'n't it?" he began
- in a small voice, and then he achieved the forti-
- tude to continue. "Dern me if I ever see fellers
- fight so. Laws, how they did fight! I knowed
- th' boys 'd like when they onct got square at it.
- Th' boys ain't had no fair chanct up t' now, but
- this time they showed what they was. I knowed
- it 'd turn out this way. Yeh can't lick them boys.
- No, sir! They're fighters, they be."
-
- He breathed a deep breath of humble ad-
- miration. He had looked at the youth for en-
- couragement several times. He received none,
- but gradually he seemed to get absorbed in his
- subject.
-
- "I was talkin' 'cross pickets with a boy from
- Georgie, onct, an' that boy, he ses, 'Your fellers
- 'll all run like hell when they onct hearn a gun,'
- he ses. 'Mebbe they will,' I ses, 'but I don't
- b'lieve none of it,' I ses; 'an' b'jiminey,' I ses back
- t' 'um, 'mebbe your fellers 'll all run like hell
- when they onct hearn a gun,' I ses. He larfed.
- Well, they didn't run t' day, did they, hey? No,
- sir! They fit, an' fit, an' fit."
-
- His homely face was suffused with a light of
- love for the army which was to him all things
- beautiful and powerful.
-
- After a time he turned to the youth. "Where
- yeh hit, ol' boy?" he asked in a brotherly tone.
-
- The youth felt instant panic at this question,
- although at first its full import was not borne in
- upon him.
-
- "What?" he asked.
-
- "Where yeh hit?" repeated the tattered man.
-
- "Why," began the youth, "I--I--that is--
- why--I--"
-
- He turned away suddenly and slid through
- the crowd. His brow was heavily flushed, and
- his fingers were picking nervously at one of his
- buttons. He bent his head and fastened his eyes
- studiously upon the button as if it were a little
- problem.
-
- The tattered man looked after him in aston-
- ishment.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
-
- THE youth fell back in the procession until
- the tattered soldier was not in sight. Then he
- started to walk on with the others.
-
- But he was amid wounds. The mob of men
- was bleeding. Because of the tattered soldier's
- question he now felt that his shame could be
- viewed. He was continually casting sidelong
- glances to see if the men were contemplating the
- letters of guilt he felt burned into his brow.
-
- At times he regarded the wounded soldiers
- in an envious way. He conceived persons with
- torn bodies to be peculiarly happy. He wished
- that he, too, had a wound, a red badge of cour-
- age.
-
- The spectral soldier was at his side like a
- stalking reproach. The man's eyes were still
- fixed in a stare into the unknown. His gray,
- appalling face had attracted attention in the
- crowd, and men, slowing to his dreary pace, were
- walking with him. They were discussing his
- plight, questioning him and giving him advice.
-
- 91
- In a dogged way he repelled them, signing to them
- to go on and leave him alone. The shadows of
- his face were deepening and his tight lips seemed
- holding in check the moan of great despair.
- There could be seen a certain stiffness in the
- movements of his body, as if he were taking
- infinite care not to arouse the passion of his
- wounds. As he went on, he seemed always look-
- ing for a place, like one who goes to choose a
- grave.
-
- Something in the gesture of the man as he
- waved the bloody and pitying soldiers away
- made the youth start as if bitten. He yelled in
- horror. Tottering forward he laid a quivering
- hand upon the man's arm. As the latter slowly
- turned his waxlike features toward him, the
- youth screamed:
-
- "Gawd! Jim Conklin!"
-
- The tall soldier made a little commonplace
- smile. "Hello, Henry," he said.
-
- The youth swayed on his legs and glared
- strangely. He stuttered and stammered. "Oh,
- Jim--oh, Jim--oh, Jim--"
-
- The tall soldier held out his gory hand. There
- was a curious red and black combination of new
- blood and old blood upon it. "Where yeh been,
- Henry?" he asked. He continued in a monoto-
- nous voice, "I thought mebbe yeh got keeled
- over. There 's been thunder t' pay t'-day. I was
- worryin' about it a good deal."
-
- The youth still lamented. "Oh, Jim--oh, Jim
- --oh, Jim--"
-
- "Yeh know," said the tall soldier, "I was out
- there." He made a careful gesture. "An',
- Lord, what a circus! An', b'jiminey, I got shot--
- I got shot. Yes, b'jiminey, I got shot." He
- reiterated this fact in a bewildered way, as if he
- did not know how it came about.
-
- The youth put forth anxious arms to assist
- him, but the tall soldier went firmly on as if pro-
- pelled. Since the youth's arrival as a guardian
- for his friend, the other wounded men had ceased
- to display much interest. They occupied them-
- selves again in dragging their own tragedies
- toward the rear.
-
- Suddenly, as the two friends marched on, the
- tall soldier seemed to be overcome by a terror.
- His face turned to a semblance of gray paste.
- He clutched the youth's arm and looked all about
- him, as if dreading to be overheard. Then he
- began to speak in a shaking whisper:
-
- "I tell yeh what I'm 'fraid of, Henry--I 'll tell
- yeh what I 'm 'fraid of. I 'm 'fraid I 'll fall down
- --an' then yeh know--them damned artillery
- wagons--they like as not 'll run over me. That 's
- what I 'm 'fraid of--"
-
- The youth cried out to him hysterically: "I 'll
- take care of yeh, Jim! I'll take care of yeh! I
- swear t' Gawd I will!"
-
- "Sure--will yeh, Henry?" the tall soldier
- beseeched.
-
- "Yes--yes--I tell yeh--I'll take care of yeh,
- Jim!" protested the youth. He could not speak
- accurately because of the gulpings in his throat.
-
- But the tall soldier continued to beg in a
- lowly way. He now hung babelike to the
- youth's arm. His eyes rolled in the wildness of
- his terror. "I was allus a good friend t' yeh,
- wa'n't I, Henry? I 've allus been a pretty good
- feller, ain't I? An' it ain't much t' ask, is it? Jest
- t' pull me along outer th' road? I 'd do it fer you,
- Wouldn't I, Henry?"
-
- He paused in piteous anxiety to await his
- friend's reply.
-
- The youth had reached an anguish where the
- sobs scorched him. He strove to express his
- loyalty, but he could only make fantastic gestures.
-
- However, the tall soldier seemed suddenly to
- forget all those fears. He became again the
- grim, stalking specter of a soldier. He went
- stonily forward. The youth wished his friend to
- lean upon him, but the other always shook his
- head and strangely protested. "No--no--no--
- leave me be--leave me be--"
-
- His look was fixed again upon the unknown.
- He moved with mysterious purpose, and all of
- the youth's offers he brushed aside. "No--no--
- leave me be--leave me be--"
-
- The youth had to follow.
-
- Presently the latter heard a voice talking
- softly near his shoulders. Turning he saw that it
- belonged to the tattered soldier. "Ye 'd better
- take 'im outa th' road, pardner. There 's a batt'ry
- comin' helitywhoop down th' road an' he 'll git
- runned over. He 's a goner anyhow in about five
- minutes--yeh kin see that. Ye 'd better take 'im
- outa th' road. Where th' blazes does he git his
- stren'th from?"
-
- "Lord knows!" cried the youth. He was
- shaking his hands helplessly.
-
- He ran forward presently and grasped the
- tall soldier by the arm. "Jim! Jim!" he coaxed,
- "come with me."
-
- The tall soldier weakly tried to wrench himself
- free. "Huh," he said vacantly. He stared at the
- youth for a moment. At last he spoke as if dimly
- comprehending. "Oh! Inteh th' fields? Oh!"
-
- He started blindly through the grass.
-
- The youth turned once to look at the lashing
- riders and jouncing guns of the battery. He was
- startled from this view by a shrill outcry from
- the tattered man.
-
- "Gawd! He's runnin'!"
-
- Turning his head swiftly, the youth saw his
- friend running in a staggering and stumbling
- way toward a little clump of bushes. His heart
- seemed to wrench itself almost free from his
- body at this sight. He made a noise of pain.
- He and the tattered man began a pursuit. There
- was a singular race.
-
- When he overtook the tall soldier he began
- to plead with all the words he could find. "Jim
- --Jim--what are you doing--what makes you do
- this way--you 'll hurt yerself."
-
- The same purpose was in the tall soldier's face.
- He protested in a dulled way, keeping his eyes
- fastened on the mystic place of his intentions.
- "No--no--don't tech me--leave me be--leave
- me be--"
-
- The youth, aghast and filled with wonder at the
- tall soldier, began quaveringly to question him.
- "Where yeh goin', Jim? What you thinking
- about? Where you going? Tell me, won't you,
- Jim?"
-
- The tall soldier faced about as upon relentless
- pursuers. In his eyes there was a great appeal.
- "Leave me be, can't yeh? Leave me be fer a
- minnit."
-
- The youth recoiled. "Why, Jim," he said, in
- a dazed way, "what's the matter with you?"
-
- The tall soldier turned and, lurching danger-
- ously, went on. The youth and the tattered
- soldier followed, sneaking as if whipped, feeling
- unable to face the stricken man if he should again
- confront them. They began to have thoughts of
- a solemn ceremony. There was something rite-
- like in these movements of the doomed soldier.
- And there was a resemblance in him to a devotee
- of a mad religion, blood-sucking, muscle-wrench-
- ing, bone-crushing. They were awed and afraid.
- They hung back lest he have at command a
- dreadful weapon.
-
- At last, they saw him stop and stand motion-
- less. Hastening up, they perceived that his face
- wore an expression telling that he had at last
- found the place for which he had struggled. His
- spare figure was erect; his bloody hands were
- quietly at his side. He was waiting with patience
- for something that he had come to meet. He was
- at the rendezvous. They paused and stood, ex-
- pectant.
-
- There was a silence.
-
- Finally, the chest of the doomed soldier began
- to heave with a strained motion. It increased in
- violence until it was as if an animal was within
- and was kicking and tumbling furiously to be
- free.
-
- This spectacle of gradual strangulation made
- the youth writhe, and once as his friend rolled his
- eyes, he saw something in them that made him
- sink wailing to the ground. He raised his voice
- in a last supreme call.
-
- "Jim--Jim--Jim--"
-
- The tall soldier opened his lips and spoke.
- He made a gesture. "Leave me be--don't tech
- me--leave me be--"
-
- There was another silence while he waited.
-
- Suddenly, his form stiffened and straightened.
- Then it was shaken by a prolonged ague. He
- stared into space. To the two watchers there
- was a curious and profound dignity in the firm
- lines of his awful face.
-
- He was invaded by a creeping strangeness
- that slowly enveloped him. For a moment the
- tremor of his legs caused him to dance a sort of
- hideous hornpipe. His arms beat wildly about
- his head in expression of implike enthusiasm.
-
- His tall figure stretched itself to its full height.
- There was a slight rending sound. Then it began
- to swing forward, slow and straight, in the man-
- ner of a falling tree. A swift muscular contortion
- made the left shoulder strike the ground first.
-
- The body seemed to bounce a little way from
- the earth. "God!" said the tattered soldier.
-
- The youth had watched, spellbound, this
- ceremony at the place of meeting. His face
- had been twisted into an expression of every
- agony he had imagined for his friend.
-
- He now sprang to his feet and, going closer,
- gazed upon the pastelike face. The mouth was
- open and the teeth showed in a laugh.
-
- As the flap of the blue jacket fell away from
- the body, he could see that the side looked as if it
- had been chewed by wolves.
-
- The youth turned, with sudden, livid rage,
- toward the battlefield. He shook his fist. He
- seemed about to deliver a philippic.
-
- "Hell--"
-
- The red sun was pasted in the sky like a wafer.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
-
- THE tattered man stood musing.
-
- "Well, he was reg'lar jim-dandy fer nerve,
- wa'n't he," said he finally in a little awestruck
- voice. "A reg'lar jim-dandy." He thoughtfully
- poked one of the docile hands with his foot. "I
- wonner where he got 'is stren'th from? I never
- seen a man do like that before. It was a funny
- thing. Well, he was a reg'lar jim-dandy."
-
- The youth desired to screech out his grief.
- He was stabbed, but his tongue lay dead in the
- tomb of his mouth. He threw himself again
- upon the ground and began to brood.
-
- The tattered man stood musing.
-
- "Look-a-here, pardner," he said, after a time.
- He regarded the corpse as he spoke. "He 's up
- an' gone, ain't 'e, an' we might as well begin t'
- look out fer ol' number one. This here thing is
- all over. He 's up an' gone, ain't 'e? An' he 's all
- right here. Nobody won't bother 'im. An' I
- must say I ain't enjoying any great health m'self
- these days."
-
- 100
-
- The youth, awakened by the tattered soldier's
- tone, looked quickly up. He saw that he was
- swinging uncertainly on his legs and that his face
- had turned to a shade of blue.
-
- "Good Lord!" he cried, "you ain't goin' t'--
- not you, too."
-
- The tattered man waved his hand. "Nary
- die," he said. "All I want is some pea soup an'
- a good bed. Some pea soup," he repeated
- dreamfully.
-
- The youth arose from the ground. "I wonder
- where he came from. I left him over there."
- He pointed. "And now I find 'im here. And
- he was coming from over there, too." He in-
- dicated a new direction. They both turned
- toward the body as if to ask of it a question.
-
- "Well," at length spoke the tattered man,
- "there ain't no use in our stayin' here an' tryin' t'
- ask him anything."
-
- The youth nodded an assent wearily. They
- both turned to gaze for a moment at the corpse.
-
- The youth murmured something.
-
- "Well, he was a jim-dandy, wa'n't 'e?" said
- the tattered man as if in response.
-
- They turned their backs upon it and started
- away. For a time they stole softly, treading
- with their toes. It remained laughing there in
- the grass.
-
- "I'm commencin' t' feel pretty bad," said the
- tattered man, suddenly breaking one of his little
- silences. "I'm commencin' t' feel pretty damn'
- bad."
-
- The youth groaned. "O Lord!" He won-
- dered if he was to be the tortured witness of
- another grim encounter.
-
- But his companion waved his hand reassur-
- ingly. "Oh, I'm not goin' t' die yit! There too
- much dependin' on me fer me t' die yit. No, sir!
- Nary die! I CAN'T! Ye'd oughta see th' swad
- a' chil'ren I've got, an' all like that."
-
- The youth glancing at his companion could
- see by the shadow of a smile that he was making
- some kind of fun.
-
- As they plodded on the tattered soldier con-
- tinued to talk. "Besides, if I died, I wouldn't
- die th' way that feller did. That was th' funniest
- thing. I'd jest flop down, I would. I never seen
- a feller die th' way that feller did.
-
- "Yeh know Tom Jamison, he lives next door
- t' me up home. He's a nice feller, he is, an' we
- was allus good friends. Smart, too. Smart as a
- steel trap. Well, when we was a-fightin' this
- atternoon, all-of-a-sudden he begin t' rip up an'
- cuss an' beller at me. 'Yer shot, yeh blamed
- infernal!'--he swear horrible--he ses t' me. I
- put up m' hand t' m' head an' when I looked at
- m' fingers, I seen, sure 'nough, I was shot. I
- give a holler an' begin t' run, but b'fore I could
- git away another one hit me in th' arm an' whirl'
- me clean 'round. I got skeared when they was
- all a-shootin' b'hind me an' I run t' beat all,
- but I cotch it pretty bad. I've an idee I'd
- a' been fightin' yit, if t'was n't fer Tom Jami-
- son."
-
- Then he made a calm announcement: "There's
- two of 'em--little ones--but they 're beginnin' t'
- have fun with me now. I don't b'lieve I kin walk
- much furder."
-
- They went slowly on in silence. "Yeh look
- pretty peek-ed yerself," said the tattered man at
- last. "I bet yeh 've got a worser one than yeh
- think. Ye'd better take keer of yer hurt. It
- don't do t' let sech things go. It might be inside
- mostly, an' them plays thunder. Where is it
- located?" But he continued his harangue with-
- out waiting for a reply. "I see 'a feller git hit
- plum in th' head when my reg'ment was a-standin'
- at ease onct. An' everybody yelled out to 'im:
- Hurt, John? Are yeh hurt much? 'No," ses he.
- He looked kinder surprised, an' he went on tellin'
- 'em how he felt. He sed he didn't feel nothin'.
- But, by dad, th' first thing that feller knowed he
- was dead. Yes, he was dead--stone dead. So,
- yeh wanta watch out. Yeh might have some
- queer kind 'a hurt yerself. Yeh can't never tell.
- Where is your'n located?"
-
- The youth had been wriggling since the intro-
- duction of this topic. He now gave a cry of ex-
- asperation and made a furious motion with his
- hand. "Oh, don't bother me!" he said. He was
- enraged against the tattered man, and could have
- strangled him. His companions seemed ever to
- play intolerable parts. They were ever uprais-
- ing the ghost of shame on the stick of their
- curiosity. He turned toward the tattered man as
- one at bay. "Now, don't bother me," he re-
- peated with desperate menace.
-
- "Well, Lord knows I don't wanta bother any-
- body," said the other. There was a little accent
- of despair in his voice as he replied, "Lord
- knows I 've gota 'nough m' own t' tend to."
-
- The youth, who had been holding a bitter de-
- bate with himself and casting glances of hatred
- and contempt at the tattered man, here spoke in
- a hard voice. "Good-by," he said.
-
- The tattered man looked at him in gaping
- amazement. "Why--why, pardner, where yeh
- goin'?" he asked unsteadily. The youth looking
- at him, could see that he, too, like that other one,
- was beginning to act dumb and animal-like. His
- thoughts seemed to be floundering about in his
- head. "Now--now--look--a--here, you Tom
- Jamison--now--I won't have this--this here
- won't do. Where--where yeh goin'?"
-
- The youth pointed vaguely. "Over there,"
- he replied.
-
- "Well, now look--a--here--now," said the
- tattered man, rambling on in idiot fashion. His
- head was hanging forward and his words were
- slurred. "This thing won't do, now, Tom Jami-
- son. It won't do. I know yeh, yeh pig-headed
- devil. Yeh wanta go trompin' off with a bad
- hurt. It ain't right--now--Tom Jamison--it ain't.
- Yeh wanta leave me take keer of yeh, Tom Jami-
- son. It ain't--right--it ain't--fer yeh t' go--
- trompin' off--with a bad hurt--it ain't--ain't--
- ain't right--it ain't."
-
- In reply the youth climbed a fence and
- started away. He could hear the tattered man
- bleating plaintively.
-
- Once he faced about angrily. "What?"
-
- "Look--a--here, now, Tom Jamison--now--
- it ain't--"
-
- The youth went on. Turning at a distance he
- saw the tattered man wandering about helplessly
- in the field.
-
- He now thought that he wished he was dead.
- He believed that he envied those men whose
- bodies lay strewn over the grass of the fields and
- on the fallen leaves of the forest.
-
- The simple questions of the tattered man had
- been knife thrusts to him. They asserted a
- society that probes pitilessly at secrets until all is
- apparent. His late companion's chance persist-
- ency made him feel that he could not keep his
- crime concealed in his bosom. It was sure to be
- brought plain by one of those arrows which
- cloud the air and are constantly pricking, dis-
- covering, proclaiming those things which are
- willed to be forever hidden. He admitted that
- he could not defend himself against this agency.
- It was not within the power of vigilance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
-
- HE became aware that the furnace roar of the
- battle was growing louder. Great brown clouds
- had floated to the still heights of air before him.
- The noise, too, was approaching. The woods
- filtered men and the fields became dotted.
-
- As he rounded a hillock, he perceived that the
- roadway was now a crying mass of wagons,
- teams, and men. From the heaving tangle issued
- exhortations, commands, imprecations. Fear was
- sweeping it all along. The cracking whips bit
- and horses plunged and tugged. The white-
- topped wagons strained and stumbled in their
- exertions like fat sheep.
-
- The youth felt comforted in a measure by this
- sight. They were all retreating. Perhaps, then,
- he was not so bad after all. He seated himself
- and watched the terror-stricken wagons. They
- fled like soft, ungainly animals. All the roarers
- and lashers served to help him to magnify the
- dangers and horrors of the engagement that he
-
- 107
- might try to prove to himself that the thing with
- which men could charge him was in truth a
- symmetrical act. There was an amount of pleas-
- ure to him in watching the wild march of this
- vindication.
-
- Presently the calm head of a forward-going
- column of infantry appeared in the road. It
- came swiftly on. Avoiding the obstructions gave
- it the sinuous movement of a serpent. The men
- at the head butted mules with their musket
- stocks. They prodded teamsters indifferent to
- all howls. The men forced their way through
- parts of the dense mass by strength. The blunt
- head of the column pushed. The raving team-
- sters swore many strange oaths.
-
- The commands to make way had the ring of a
- great importance in them. The men were going
- forward to the heart of the din. They were to
- confront the eager rush of the enemy. They felt
- the pride of their onward movement when the
- remainder of the army seemed trying to dribble
- down this road. They tumbled teams about
- with a fine feeling that it was no matter so long
- as their column got to the front in time. This
- importance made their faces grave and stern.
- And the backs of the officers were very rigid.
-
- As the youth looked at them the black weight
- of his woe returned to him. He felt that he was
- regarding a procession of chosen beings. The
- separation was as great to him as if they had
- marched with weapons of flame and banners of
- sunlight. He could never be like them. He
- could have wept in his longings.
-
- He searched about in his mind for an ade-
- quate malediction for the indefinite cause, the
- thing upon which men turn the words of final
- blame. It--whatever it was--was responsible for
- him, he said. There lay the fault.
-
- The haste of the column to reach the battle
- seemed to the forlorn young man to be some-
- thing much finer than stout fighting. Heroes, he
- thought, could find excuses in that long seething
- lane. They could retire with perfect self-respect
- and make excuses to the stars.
-
- He wondered what those men had eaten that
- they could be in such haste to force their way to
- grim chances of death. As he watched his envy
- grew until he thought that he wished to change
- lives with one of them. He would have liked to
- have used a tremendous force, he said, throw off
- himself and become a better. Swift pictures of
- himself, apart, yet in himself, came to him--a
- blue desperate figure leading lurid charges with
- one knee forward and a broken blade high--a
- blue, determined figure standing before a crimson
- and steel assault, getting calmly killed on a high
- place before the eyes of all. He thought of the
- magnificent pathos of his dead body.
-
- These thoughts uplifted him. He felt the
- quiver of war desire. In his ears, he heard the
- ring of victory. He knew the frenzy of a rapid
- successful charge. The music of the trampling
- feet, the sharp voices, the clanking arms of the
- column near him made him soar on the red wings
- of war. For a few moments he was sublime.
-
- He thought that he was about to start for the
- front. Indeed, he saw a picture of himself, dust-
- stained, haggard, panting, flying to the front at
- the proper moment to seize and throttle the dark,
- leering witch of calamity.
-
- Then the difficulties of the thing began to
- drag at him. He hesitated, balancing awkwardly
- on one foot.
-
- He had no rifle; he could not fight with his
- hands, said he resentfully to his plan. Well,
- rifles could be had for the picking. They were
- extraordinarily profuse.
-
- Also, he continued, it would be a miracle if he
- found his regiment. Well, he could fight with
- any regiment.
-
- He started forward slowly. He stepped as if
- he expected to tread upon some explosive thing.
- Doubts and he were struggling.
-
- He would truly be a worm if any of his com-
- rades should see him returning thus, the marks of
- his flight upon him. There was a reply that the
- intent fighters did not care for what happened
- rearward saving that no hostile bayonets ap-
- peared there. In the battle-blur his face would,
- in a way be hidden, like the face of a cowled
- man.
-
- But then he said that his tireless fate would
- bring forth, when the strife lulled for a moment,
- a man to ask of him an explanation. In imagina-
- tion he felt the scrutiny of his companions as he
- painfully labored through some lies.
-
- Eventually, his courage expended itself upon
- these objections. The debates drained him of his
- fire.
-
- He was not cast down by this defeat of his
- plan, for, upon studying the affair carefully, he
- could not but admit that the objections were very
- formidable.
-
- Furthermore, various ailments had begun to
- cry out. In their presence he could not persist
- in flying high with the wings of war; they
- rendered it almost impossible for him to see him-
- self in a heroic light. He tumbled headlong.
-
- He discovered that he had a scorching thirst.
- His face was so dry and grimy that he thought
- he could feel his skin crackle. Each bone of his
- body had an ache in it, and seemingly threatened
- to break with each movement. His feet were
- like two sores. Also, his body was calling for
- food. It was more powerful than a direct hunger.
- There was a dull, weight like feeling in his stom-
- ach, and, when he tried to walk, his head swayed
- and he tottered. He could not see with distinct-
- ness. Small patches of green mist floated before
- his vision.
-
- While he had been tossed by many emotions,
- he had not been aware of ailments. Now they
- beset him and made clamor. As he was at last
- compelled to pay attention to them, his capacity
- for self-hate was multiplied. In despair, he
- declared that he was not like those others. He
- now conceded it to be impossible that he should
- ever become a hero. He was a craven loon.
- Those pictures of glory were piteous things. He
- groaned from his heart and went staggering off.
-
- A certain mothlike quality within him kept
- him in the vicinity of the battle. He had a great
- desire to see, and to get news. He wished to
- know who was winning.
-
- He told himself that, despite his unprecedented
- suffering, he had never lost his greed for a victory,
- yet, he said, in a half-apologetic manner to his
- conscience, he could not but know that a defeat
- for the army this time might mean many favor-
- able things for him. The blows of the enemy
- would splinter regiments into fragments. Thus,
- many men of courage, he considered, would be
- obliged to desert the colors and scurry like
- chickens. He would appear as one of them.
- They would be sullen brothers in distress, and he
- could then easily believe he had not run any
- farther or faster than they. And if he himself
- could believe in his virtuous perfection, he con-
- ceived that there would be small trouble in con-
- vincing all others.
-
- He said, as if in excuse for this hope, that
- previously the army had encountered great
- defeats and in a few months had shaken off all
- blood and tradition of them, emerging as bright
- and valiant as a new one; thrusting out of sight
- the memory of disaster, and appearing with the
- valor and confidence of unconquered legions.
- The shrilling voices of the people at home would
- pipe dismally for a time, but various generals
- were usually compelled to listen to these ditties.
- He of course felt no compunctions for proposing
- a general as a sacrifice. He could not tell who
- the chosen for the barbs might be, so he could
- center no direct sympathy upon him. The
- people were afar and he did not conceive public
- opinion to be accurate at long range. It was
- quite probable they would hit the wrong man
- who, after he had recovered from his amazement
- would perhaps spend the rest of his days in writ-
- ing replies to the songs of his alleged failure. It
- would be very unfortunate, no doubt, but in this
- case a general was of no consequence to the
- youth.
-
- In a defeat there would be a roundabout
- vindication of himself. He thought it would
- prove, in a manner, that he had fled early because
- of his superior powers of perception. A serious
- prophet upon predicting a flood should be the
- first man to climb a tree. This would demon-
- strate that he was indeed a seer.
-
- A moral vindication was regarded by the
- youth as a very important thing. Without salve,
- he could not, he thought, wear the sore badge of
- his dishonor through life. With his heart con-
- tinually assuring him that he was despicable, he
- could not exist without making it, through his
- actions, apparent to all men.
-
- If the army had gone gloriously on he would
- be lost. If the din meant that now his army's
- flags were tilted forward he was a condemned
- wretch. He would be compelled to doom
- himself to isolation. If the men were advancing,
- their indifferent feet were trampling upon his
- chances for a successful life.
-
- As these thoughts went rapidly through his
- mind, he turned upon them and tried to thrust
- them away. He denounced himself as a villain.
- He said that he was the most unutterably selfish
- man in existence. His mind pictured the soldiers
- who would place their defiant bodies before the
- spear of the yelling battle fiend, and as he saw
- their dripping corpses on an imagined field, he
- said that he was their murderer.
-
- Again he thought that he wished he was dead.
- He believed that he envied a corpse. Thinking
- of the slain, he achieved a great contempt for
- some of them, as if they were guilty for thus
- becoming lifeless. They might have been killed
- by lucky chances, he said, before they had had
- opportunities to flee or before they had been
- really tested. Yet they would receive laurels
- from tradition. He cried out bitterly that their
- crowns were stolen and their robes of glori-
- ous memories were shams. However, he still
- said that it was a great pity he was not as
- they.
-
- A defeat of the army had suggested itself to
- him as a means of escape from the consequences
- of his fall. He considered, now, however, that it
- was useless to think of such a possibility. His
- education had been that success for that mighty
- blue machine was certain; that it would make
- victories as a contrivance turns out buttons. He
- presently discarded all his speculations in the
- other direction. He returned to the creed of
- soldiers.
-
- When he perceived again that it was not
- possible for the army to be defeated, he tried
- to bethink him of a fine tale which he could take
- back to his regiment, and with it turn the expected
- shafts of derision.
-
- But, as he mortally feared these shafts, it
- became impossible for him to invent a tale he felt
- he could trust. He experimented with many
- schemes, but threw them aside one by one as
- flimsy. He was quick to see vulnerable places in
- them all.
-
- Furthermore, he was much afraid that some
- arrow of scorn might lay him mentally low before
- he could raise his protecting tale.
-
- He imagined the whole regiment saying:
- "Where's Henry Fleming? He run, didn't 'e?
- Oh, my!" He recalled various persons who
- would be quite sure to leave him no peace
- about it. They would doubtless question him
- with sneers, and laugh at his stammering hesi-
- tation. In the next engagement they would
- try to keep watch of him to discover when he
- would run.
-
- Wherever he went in camp, he would en-
- counter insolent and lingeringly cruel stares. As
- he imagined himself passing near a crowd of
- comrades, he could hear some one say, "There
- he goes!"
-
- Then, as if the heads were moved by one
- muscle, all the faces were turned toward him
- with wide, derisive grins. He seemed to hear
- some one make a humorous remark in a low tone.
- At it the others all crowed and cackled. He was
- a slang phrase.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
-
- THE column that had butted stoutly at the
- obstacles in the roadway was barely out of the
- youth's sight before he saw dark waves of men
- come sweeping out of the woods and down
- through the fields. He knew at once that the
- steel fibers had been washed from their hearts.
- They were bursting from their coats and
- their equipments as from entanglements. They
- charged down upon him like terrified buffaloes.
-
- Behind them blue smoke curled and clouded
- above the treetops, and through the thickets he
- could sometimes see a distant pink glare. The
- voices of the cannon were clamoring in intermi-
- nable chorus.
-
- The youth was horrorstricken. He stared
- in agony and amazement. He forgot that he
- was engaged in combating the universe. He
- threw aside his mental pamphlets on the philoso-
- phy of the retreated and rules for the guidance
- of the damned.
-
- 118
-
- The fight was lost. The dragons were com-
- ing with invincible strides. The army, helpless
- in the matted thickets and blinded by the over-
- hanging night, was going to be swallowed. War,
- the red animal, war, the blood-swollen god, would
- have bloated fill.
-
- Within him something bade to cry out. He
- had the impulse to make a rallying speech, to sing
- a battle hymn, but he could only get his tongue to
- call into the air: "Why--why--what--what 's
- th' matter?"
-
- Soon he was in the midst of them. They
- were leaping and scampering all about him.
- Their blanched faces shone in the dusk. They
- seemed, for the most part, to be very burly men.
- The youth turned from one to another of them as
- they galloped along. His incoherent questions
- were lost. They were heedless of his appeals.
- They did not seem to see him.
-
- They sometimes gabbled insanely. One huge
- man was asking of the sky: "Say, where de
- plank road? Where de plank road!" It was as if
- he had lost a child. He wept in his pain and
- dismay.
-
- Presently, men were running hither and
- thither in all ways. The artillery booming,
- forward, rearward, and on the flanks made
- jumble of ideas of direction. Landmarks had
- vanished into the gathered gloom. The youth
- began to imagine that he had got into the
- center of the tremendous quarrel, and he could
- perceive no way out of it. From the mouths of
- the fleeing men came a thousand wild questions,
- but no one made answers.
-
- The youth, after rushing about and throwing
- interrogations at the heedless bands of retreating
- infantry, finally clutched a man by the arm. They
- swung around face to face.
-
- "Why--why--" stammered the youth strug-
- gling with his balking tongue.
-
- The man screamed: "Let go me! Let go
- me!" His face was livid and his eyes were roll-
- ing uncontrolled. He was heaving and panting.
- He still grasped his rifle, perhaps having for-
- gotten to release his hold upon it. He tugged
- frantically, and the youth being compelled to lean
- forward was dragged several paces.
-
- "Let go me! Let go me!"
-
- "Why--why--" stuttered the youth.
-
- "Well, then!" bawled the man in a lurid
- rage. He adroitly and fiercely swung his rifle.
- It crushed upon the youth's head. The man
- ran on.
-
- The youth's fingers had turned to paste upon
- the other's arm. The energy was smitten from
- his muscles. He saw the flaming wings of light-
- ning flash before his vision. There was a deaf-
- ening rumble of thunder within his head.
-
- Suddenly his legs seemed to die. He sank
- writhing to the ground. He tried to arise. In
- his efforts against the numbing pain he was like a
- man wrestling with a creature of the air.
-
- There was a sinister struggle.
-
- Sometimes he would achieve a position half
- erect, battle with the air for a moment, and
- then fall again, grabbing at the grass. His face
- was of a clammy pallor. Deep groans were
- wrenched from him.
-
- At last, with a twisting movement, he got
- upon his hands and knees, and from thence, like a
- babe trying to walk, to his feet. Pressing his
- hands to his temples he went lurching over the
- grass.
-
- He fought an intense battle with his body.
- His dulled senses wished him to swoon and he
- opposed them stubbornly, his mind portraying
- unknown dangers and mutilations if he should
- fall upon the field. He went tall soldier fashion.
- He imagined secluded spots where he could fall
- and be unmolested. To search for one he strove
- against the tide of his pain.
-
- Once he put his hand to the top of his head
- and timidly touched the wound. The scratching
- pain of the contact made him draw a long breath
- through his clinched teeth. His fingers were
- dabbled with blood. He regarded them with a
- fixed stare.
-
- Around him he could hear the grumble of
- jolted cannon as the scurrying horses were lashed
- toward the front. Once, a young officer on a
- besplashed charger nearly ran him down. He
- turned and watched the mass of guns, men, and
- horses sweeping in a wide curve toward a gap in
- a fence. The officer was making excited motions
- with a gauntleted hand. The guns followed the
- teams with an air of unwillingness, of being
- dragged by the heels.
-
- Some officers of the scattered infantry were
- cursing and railing like fishwives. Their scold-
- ing voices could be heard above the din. Into
- the unspeakable jumble in the roadway rode a
- squadron of cavalry. The faded yellow of their
- facings shone bravely. There was a mighty
- altercation.
-
- The artillery were assembling as if for a con-
- ference.
-
- The blue haze of evening was upon the field.
- The lines of forest were long purple shadows.
- One cloud lay along the western sky partly
- smothering the red.
-
- As the youth left the scene behind him, he
- heard the guns suddenly roar out. He imagined
- them shaking in black rage. They belched and
- howled like brass devils guarding a gate. The
- soft air was filled with the tremendous remon-
- strance. With it came the shattering peal of
- opposing infantry. Turning to look behind him,
- he could see sheets of orange light illumine the
- shadowy distance. There were subtle and sudden
- lightnings in the far air. At times he thought he
- could see heaving masses of men.
-
- He hurried on in the dusk. The day had
- faded until he could barely distinguish place for
- his feet. The purple darkness was filled with
- men who lectured and jabbered. Sometimes he
- could see them gesticulating against the blue and
- somber sky. There seemed to be a great ruck of
- men and munitions spread about in the forest and
- in the fields.
-
- The little narrow roadway now lay lifeless.
- There were overturned wagons like sun-dried
- bowlders. The bed of the former torrent was
- choked with the bodies of horses and splintered
- parts of war machines.
-
- It had come to pass that his wound pained him
- but little. He was afraid to move rapidly, how-
- ever, for a dread of disturbing it. He held his
- head very still and took many precautions against
- stumbling. He was filled with anxiety, and his
- face was pinched and drawn in anticipation of the
- pain of any sudden mistake of his feet in the
- gloom.
-
- His thoughts, as he walked, fixed intently
- upon his hurt. There was a cool, liquid feeling
- about it and he imagined blood moving slowly
- down under his hair. His head seemed swollen
- to a size that made him think his neck to be
- inadequate.
-
- The new silence of his wound made much
- worriment. The little blistering voices of pain
- that had called out from his scalp were, he
- thought, definite in their expression of danger.
- By them he believed that he could measure his
- plight. But when they remained ominously
- silent he became frightened and imagined ter-
- rible fingers that clutched into his brain.
-
- Amid it he began to reflect upon various
- incidents and conditions of the past. He be-
- thought him of certain meals his mother had
- cooked at home, in which those dishes of which
- he was particularly fond had occupied prominent
- positions. He saw the spread table. The pine
- walls of the kitchen were glowing in the warm
- light from the stove. Too, he remembered how
- he and his companions used to go from the school-
- house to the bank of a shaded pool. He saw his
- clothes in disorderly array upon the grass of the
- bank. He felt the swash of the fragrant water
- upon his body. The leaves of the overhanging
- maple rustled with melody in the wind of youth-
- ful summer.
-
- He was overcome presently by a dragging
- weariness. His head hung forward and his
- shoulders were stooped as if he were bearing a
- great bundle. His feet shuffled along the
- ground.
-
- He held continuous arguments as to whether
- he should lie down and sleep at some near spot,
- or force himself on until he reached a certain
- haven. He often tried to dismiss the question,
- but his body persisted in rebellion and his senses
- nagged at him like pampered babies.
-
- At last he heard a cheery voice near his
- shoulder: "Yeh seem t' be in a pretty bad way,
- boy?"
-
- The youth did not look up, but he assented
- with thick tongue. "Uh!"
-
- The owner of the cheery voice took him firmly
- by the arm. "Well," he said, with a round
- laugh, "I'm goin' your way. Th' hull gang is
- goin' your way. An' I guess I kin give yeh a
- lift." They began to walk like a drunken man
- and his friend.
-
- As they went along, the man questioned the
- youth and assisted him with the replies like one
- manipulating the mind of a child. Sometimes he
- interjected anecdotes. "What reg'ment do yeh
- b'long teh? Eh? What's that? Th' 304th N'
- York? Why, what corps is that in? Oh, it is?
- Why, I thought they wasn't engaged t'-day--
- they 're 'way over in th' center. Oh, they was,
- eh? Well, pretty nearly everybody got their
- share 'a fightin' t'-day. By dad, I give myself up
- fer dead any number 'a times. There was shootin'
- here an' shootin' there, an' hollerin' here an'
- hollerin' there, in th' damn' darkness, until I
- couldn't tell t' save m' soul which side I was on.
- Sometimes I thought I was sure 'nough from
- Ohier, an' other times I could 'a swore I was
- from th' bitter end of Florida. It was th' most
- mixed up dern thing I ever see. An' these here
- hull woods is a reg'lar mess. It'll be a miracle
- if we find our reg'ments t'-night. Pretty soon,
- though, we 'll meet a-plenty of guards an' provost-
- guards, an' one thing an' another. Ho! there they
- go with an off'cer, I guess. Look at his hand
- a-draggin'. He 's got all th' war he wants, I bet.
- He won't be talkin' so big about his reputation
- an' all when they go t' sawin' off his leg. Poor
- feller! My brother 's got whiskers jest like that.
- How did yeh git 'way over here, anyhow? Your
- reg'ment is a long way from here, ain't it? Well,
- I guess we can find it. Yeh know there was a
- boy killed in my comp'ny t'-day that I thought
- th' world an' all of. Jack was a nice feller. By
- ginger, it hurt like thunder t' see ol' Jack jest git
- knocked flat. We was a-standin' purty peaceable
- fer a spell, 'though there was men runnin' ev'ry
- way all 'round us, an' while we was a-standin'
- like that, 'long come a big fat feller. He began
- t' peck at Jack's elbow, an' he ses: 'Say, where 's
- th' road t' th' river?' An' Jack, he never paid no
- attention, an' th' feller kept on a-peckin' at his
- elbow an' sayin': 'Say, where 's th' road t' th'
- river?' Jack was a-lookin' ahead all th' time
- tryin' t' see th' Johnnies comin' through th'
- woods, an' he never paid no attention t' this big
- fat feller fer a long time, but at last he turned
- 'round an' he ses: 'Ah, go t' hell an' find th'
- road t' th' river!' An' jest then a shot slapped
- him bang on th' side th' head. He was a sergeant,
- too. Them was his last words. Thunder, I wish
- we was sure 'a findin' our reg'ments t'-night. It 's
- goin' t' be long huntin'. But I guess we kin
- do it."
-
- In the search which followed, the man of the
- cheery voice seemed to the youth to possess a
- wand of a magic kind. He threaded the mazes
- of the tangled forest with a strange fortune. In
- encounters with guards and patrols he displayed
- the keenness of a detective and the valor of a
- gamin. Obstacles fell before him and became of
- assistance. The youth, with his chin still on his
- breast, stood woodenly by while his companion
- beat ways and means out of sullen things.
-
- The forest seemed a vast hive of men buzzing
- about in frantic circles, but the cheery man con-
- ducted the youth without mistakes, until at last
- he began to chuckle with glee and self-satisfaction.
- "Ah, there yeh are! See that fire?"
-
- The youth nodded stupidly.
-
- "Well, there 's where your reg'ment is. An'
- now, good-by, ol' boy, good luck t' yeh."
-
- A warm and strong hand clasped the youth's
- languid fingers for an instant, and then he heard
- a cheerful and audacious whistling as the man
- strode away. As he who had so befriended him
- was thus passing out of his life, it suddenly oc-
- curred to the youth that he had not once seen his
- face.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
- THE youth went slowly toward the fire in-
- dicated by his departed friend. As he reeled, he
- bethought him of the welcome his comrades
- would give him. He had a conviction that he
- would soon feel in his sore heart the barbed
- missiles of ridicule. He had no strength to in-
- vent a tale; he would be a soft target.
-
- He made vague plans to go off into the deeper
- darkness and hide, but they were all destroyed
- by the voices of exhaustion and pain from his
- body. His ailments, clamoring, forced him to
- seek the place of food and rest, at whatever cost.
-
- He swung unsteadily toward the fire. He
- could see the forms of men throwing black
- shadows in the red light, and as he went nearer
- it became known to him in some way that the
- ground was strewn with sleeping men.
-
- Of a sudden he confronted a black and
- monstrous figure. A rifle barrel caught some
- glinting beams. "Halt! halt!" He was dis-
-
- 129
- mayed for a moment, but he presently thought
- that he recognized the nervous voice. As he
- stood tottering before the rifle barrel, he called
- out: "Why, hello, Wilson, you--you here?"
-
- The rifle was lowered to a position of caution
- and the loud soldier came slowly forward. He
- peered into the youth's face. "That you,
- Henry?"
-
- "Yes, it's--it's me."
-
- "Well, well, ol' boy," said the other, "by
- ginger, I'm glad t' see yeh! I give yeh up
- fer a goner. I thought yeh was dead sure
- enough." There was husky emotion in his
- voice.
-
- The youth found that now he could barely
- stand upon his feet. There was a sudden sinking
- of his forces. He thought he must hasten to pro-
- duce his tale to protect him from the missiles
- already at the lips of his redoubtable comrades.
- So, staggering before the loud soldier, he began:
- "Yes, yes. I've--I've had an awful time. I've
- been all over. Way over on th' right. Ter'ble
- fightin' over there. I had an awful time. I got
- separated from th' reg'ment. Over on th' right,
- I got shot. In th' head. I never see sech
- fightin'. Awful time. I don't see how I could 'a
- got separated from th' reg'ment. I got shot,
- too."
- His friend had stepped forward quickly.
- "What? Got shot? Why didn't yeh say so
- first? Poor ol' boy, we must--hol' on a minnit;
- what am I doin'. I'll call Simpson."
-
- Another figure at that moment loomed in the
- gloom. They could see that it was the corporal.
- "Who yeh talkin' to, Wilson?" he demanded.
- His voice was anger-toned. "Who yeh talkin'
- to? Yeh th' derndest sentinel--why--hello,
- Henry, you here? Why, I thought you was
- dead four hours ago! Great Jerusalem, they
- keep turnin' up every ten minutes or so! We
- thought we'd lost forty-two men by straight
- count, but if they keep on a-comin' this way, we'll
- git th' comp'ny all back by mornin' yit. Where
- was yeh?"
-
- "Over on th' right. I got separated"--began
- the youth with considerable glibness.
-
- But his friend had interrupted hastily. "Yes,
- an' he got shot in th' head an' he's in a fix, an' we
- must see t' him right away." He rested his rifle
- in the hollow of his left arm and his right around
- the youth's shoulder.
-
- "Gee, it must hurt like thunder!" he said.
-
- The youth leaned heavily upon his friend.
- "Yes, it hurts--hurts a good deal," he replied.
- There was a faltering in his voice.
-
- "Oh," said the corporal. He linked his arm
- in the youth's and drew him forward. "Come
- on, Henry. I'll take keer 'a yeh."
-
- As they went on together the loud private
- called out after them: "Put 'im t' sleep in my
- blanket, Simpson. An'--hol' on a minnit--here's
- my canteen. It's full 'a coffee. Look at his head
- by th' fire an' see how it looks. Maybe it's a
- pretty bad un. When I git relieved in a couple
- 'a minnits, I'll be over an' see t' him."
-
- The youth's senses were so deadened that his
- friend's voice sounded from afar and he could
- scarcely feel the pressure of the corporal's arm.
- He submitted passively to the latter's directing
- strength. His head was in the old manner hang-
- ing forward upon his breast. His knees wobbled.
-
- The corporal led him into the glare of the
- fire. "Now, Henry," he said, "let's have look at
- yer ol' head."
-
- The youth sat down obediently and the cor-
- poral, laying aside his rifle, began to fumble in the
- bushy hair of his comrade. He was obliged to
- turn the other's head so that the full flush of the
- fire light would beam upon it. He puckered his
- mouth with a critical air. He drew back his lips
- and whistled through his teeth when his fingers
- came in contact with the splashed blood and the
- rare wound.
-
- "Ah, here we are!" he said. He awkwardly
- made further investigations. "Jest as I thought,"
- he added, presently. "Yeh've been grazed by a
- ball. It's raised a queer lump jest as if some
- feller had lammed yeh on th' head with a club.
- It stopped a-bleedin' long time ago. Th' most
- about it is that in th' mornin' yeh'll feel that a
- number ten hat wouldn't fit yeh. An' your
- head'll be all het up an' feel as dry as burnt pork.
- An' yeh may git a lot 'a other sicknesses, too, by
- mornin'. Yeh can't never tell. Still, I don't
- much think so. It's jest a damn' good belt on th'
- head, an' nothin' more. Now, you jest sit here
- an' don't move, while I go rout out th' relief.
- Then I'll send Wilson t' take keer 'a yeh."
-
- The corporal went away. The youth re-
- mained on the ground like a parcel. He stared
- with a vacant look into the fire.
-
- After a time he aroused, for some part, and
- the things about him began to take form. He
- saw that the ground in the deep shadows was
- cluttered with men, sprawling in every con-
- ceivable posture. Glancing narrowly into the
- more distant darkness, he caught occasional
- glimpses of visages that loomed pallid and
- ghostly, lit with a phosphorescent glow. These
- faces expressed in their lines the deep stupor of
- the tired soldiers. They made them appear like
- men drunk with wine. This bit of forest might
- have appeared to an ethereal wanderer as a scene
- of the result of some frightful debauch.
-
- On the other side of the fire the youth
- observed an officer asleep, seated bolt upright,
- with his back against a tree. There was some-
- thing perilous in his position. Badgered by
- dreams, perhaps, he swayed with little bounces
- and starts, like an old toddy-stricken grandfather
- in a chimney corner. Dust and stains were upon
- his face. His lower jaw hung down as if lacking
- strength to assume its normal position. He was
- the picture of an exhausted soldier after a feast of
- war.
-
- He had evidently gone to sleep with his
- sword in his arms. These two had slumbered in
- an embrace, but the weapon had been allowed
- in time to fall unheeded to the ground. The
- brass-mounted hilt lay in contact with some parts
- of the fire.
-
- Within the gleam of rose and orange light
- from the burning sticks were other soldiers,
- snoring and heaving, or lying deathlike in
- slumber. A few pairs of legs were stuck forth,
- rigid and straight. The shoes displayed the mud
- or dust of marches and bits of rounded trousers,
- protruding from the blankets, showed rents and
- tears from hurried pitchings through the dense
- brambles.
-
- The fire crackled musically. From it swelled
- light smoke. Overhead the foliage moved
- softly. The leaves, with their faces turned
- toward the blaze, were colored shifting hues of
- silver, often edged with red. Far off to the right,
- through a window in the forest could be seen a
- handful of stars lying, like glittering pebbles, on
- the black level of the night.
-
- Occasionally, in this low-arched hall, a soldier
- would arouse and turn his body to a new posi-
- tion, the experience of his sleep having taught
- him of uneven and objectionable places upon the
- ground under him. Or, perhaps, he would lift
- himself to a sitting posture, blink at the fire for
- an unintelligent moment, throw a swift glance at
- his prostrate companion, and then cuddle down
- again with a grunt of sleepy content.
-
- The youth sat in a forlorn heap until his
- friend the loud young soldier came, swinging two
- canteens by their light strings. "Well, now,
- Henry, ol' boy," said the latter, "we'll have yeh
- fixed up in jest about a minnit."
-
- He had the bustling ways of an amateur
- nurse. He fussed around the fire and stirred the
- sticks to brilliant exertions. He made his patient
- drink largely from the canteen that contained the
- coffee. It was to the youth a delicious draught.
- He tilted his head afar back and held the canteen
- long to his lips. The cool mixture went caress-
- ingly down his blistered throat. Having finished,
- he sighed with comfortable delight.
-
- The loud young soldier watched his comrade
- with an air of satisfaction. He later produced
- an extensive handkerchief from his pocket. He
- folded it into a manner of bandage and soused
- water from the other canteen upon the middle of
- it. This crude arrangement he bound over the
- youth's head, tying the ends in a queer knot at
- the back of the neck.
-
- "There," he said, moving off and surveying
- his deed, "yeh look like th' devil, but I bet yeh
- feel better."
-
- The youth contemplated his friend with grate-
- ful eyes. Upon his aching and swelling head the
- cold cloth was like a tender woman's hand.
-
- "Yeh don't holler ner say nothin'," remarked
- his friend approvingly. "I know I'm a black-
- smith at takin' keer 'a sick folks, an' yeh never
- squeaked. Yer a good un, Henry. Most 'a men
- would a' been in th' hospital long ago. A shot in
- th' head ain't foolin' business."
-
- The youth made no reply, but began to fumble
- with the buttons of his jacket.
-
- "Well, come, now," continued his friend,
- "come on. I must put yeh t' bed an' see that yeh
- git a good night's rest."
-
- The other got carefully erect, and the loud
- young soldier led him among the sleeping forms
- lying in groups and rows. Presently he stooped
- and picked up his blankets. He spread the rubber
- one upon the ground and placed the woolen one
- about the youth's shoulders.
-
- "There now," he said, "lie down an' git some
- sleep."
-
- The youth, with his manner of doglike obe-
- dience, got carefully down like a crone stoop-
- ing. He stretched out with a murmur of relief
- and comfort. The ground felt like the softest
- couch.
-
- But of a sudden he ejaculated: "Hol' on a
- minnit! Where you goin' t' sleep?"
-
- His friend waved his hand impatiently.
- "Right down there by yeh."
-
- "Well, but hol' on a minnit," continued the
- youth. "What yeh goin' t' sleep in? I've got
- your--"
-
- The loud young soldier snarled: "Shet up
- an' go on t' sleep. Don't be makin' a damn' fool
- 'a yerself," he said severely.
-
- After the reproof the youth said no more.
- An exquisite drowsiness had spread through him.
- The warm comfort of the blanket enveloped him
- and made a gentle languor. His head fell for-
- ward on his crooked arm and his weighted lids
- went softly down over his eyes. Hearing a
- splatter of musketry from the distance, he
- wondered indifferently if those men sometimes
- slept. He gave a long sigh, snuggled down into
- his blanket, and in a moment was like his com-
- rades.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
- WHEN the youth awoke it seemed to him that
- he had been asleep for a thousand years, and he
- felt sure that he opened his eyes upon an unex-
- pected world. Gray mists were slowly shifting
- before the first efforts of the sun rays. An im-
- pending splendor could be seen in the eastern
- sky. An icy dew had chilled his face, and im-
- mediately upon arousing he curled farther down
- into his blanket. He stared for a while at the
- leaves overhead, moving in a heraldic wind of
- the day.
-
- The distance was splintering and blaring with
- the noise of fighting. There was in the sound
- an expression of a deadly persistency, as if it had
- not begun and was not to cease.
-
- About him were the rows and groups of men
- that he had dimly seen the previous night. They
- were getting a last draught of sleep before the
- awakening. The gaunt, careworn features and
- dusty figures were made plain by this quaint
-
- 139
- light at the dawning, but it dressed the skin of
- the men in corpselike hues and made the tangled
- limbs appear pulseless and dead. The youth
- started up with a little cry when his eyes first
- swept over this motionless mass of men, thick-
- spread upon the ground, pallid, and in strange
- postures. His disordered mind interpreted the
- hall of the forest as a charnel place. He believed
- for an instant that he was in the house of the
- dead, and he did not dare to move lest these
- corpses start up, squalling and squawking. In a
- second, however, he achieved his proper mind.
- He swore a complicated oath at himself. He
- saw that this somber picture was not a fact of
- the present, but a mere prophecy.
-
- He heard then the noise of a fire crackling
- briskly in the cold air, and, turning his head, he
- saw his friend pottering busily about a small
- blaze. A few other figures moved in the fog, and
- he heard the hard cracking of axe blows.
-
- Suddenly there was a hollow rumble of
- drums. A distant bugle sang faintly. Similar
- sounds, varying in strength, came from near and
- far over the forest. The bugles called to each
- other like brazen gamecocks. The near thunder
- of the regimental drums rolled.
-
- The body of men in the woods rustled. There
- was a general uplifting of heads. A murmuring
- of voices broke upon the air. In it there was
- much bass of grumbling oaths. Strange gods
- were addressed in condemnation of the early
- hours necessary to correct war. An officer's
- peremptory tenor rang out and quickened the
- stiffened movement of the men. The tangled
- limbs unraveled. The corpse-hued faces were
- hidden behind fists that twisted slowly in the eye
- sockets.
-
- The youth sat up and gave vent to an enormous
- yawn. "Thunder!" he remarked petulantly.
- He rubbed his eyes, and then putting up his hand
- felt carefully of the bandage over his wound.
- His friend, perceiving him to be awake, came
- from the fire. "Well, Henry, ol' man, how do
- yeh feel this mornin'?" he demanded.
-
- The youth yawned again. Then he puckered
- his mouth to a little pucker. His head, in truth,
- felt precisely like a melon, and there was an un-
- pleasant sensation at his stomach.
-
- "Oh, Lord, I feel pretty bad," he said.
-
- "Thunder!" exclaimed the other. "I hoped
- ye'd feel all right this mornin'. Let's see th'
- bandage--I guess it's slipped." He began to
- tinker at the wound in rather a clumsy way until
- the youth exploded.
-
- "Gosh-dern it!" he said in sharp irritation;
- "you're the hangdest man I ever saw! You
- wear muffs on your hands. Why in good
- thunderation can't you be more easy? I'd rather
- you'd stand off an' throw guns at it. Now, go
- slow, an' don't act as if you was nailing down
- carpet."
-
- He glared with insolent command at his
- friend, but the latter answered soothingly.
- "Well, well, come now, an' git some grub," he
- said. "Then, maybe, yeh'll feel better."
-
- At the fireside the loud young soldier
- watched over his comrade's wants with tender-
- ness and care. He was very busy marshaling
- the little black vagabonds of tin cups and pour-
- ing into them the streaming, iron colored mixture
- from a small and sooty tin pail. He had some
- fresh meat, which he roasted hurriedly upon a
- stick. He sat down then and contemplated the
- youth's appetite with glee.
-
- The youth took note of a remarkable change
- in his comrade since those days of camp life upon
- the river bank. He seemed no more to be con-
- tinually regarding the proportions of his personal
- prowess. He was not furious at small words that
- pricked his conceits. He was no more a loud
- young soldier. There was about him now a
- fine reliance. He showed a quiet belief in
- his purposes and his abilities. And this in-
- ward confidence evidently enabled him to be
- indifferent to little words of other men aimed
- at him.
-
- The youth reflected. He had been used to
- regarding his comrade as a blatant child with an
- audacity grown from his inexperience, thought-
- less, headstrong, jealous, and filled with a tinsel
- courage. A swaggering babe accustomed to strut
- in his own dooryard. The youth wondered
- where had been born these new eyes; when his
- comrade had made the great discovery that
- there were many men who would refuse to be
- subjected by him. Apparently, the other had
- now climbed a peak of wisdom from which he
- could perceive himself as a very wee thing. And
- the youth saw that ever after it would be easier
- to live in his friend's neighborhood.
-
- His comrade balanced his ebony coffee-cup on
- his knee. "Well, Henry," he said, "what d'yeh
- think th' chances are? D'yeh think we'll wal-
- lop 'em?"
-
- The youth considered for a moment. "Day-
- b'fore-yesterday," he finally replied, with boldness,
- "you would 'a' bet you'd lick the hull kit-an'-
- boodle all by yourself."
-
- His friend looked a trifle amazed. "Would
- I?" he asked. He pondered. "Well, perhaps I
- would," he decided at last. He stared humbly at
- the fire.
-
- The youth was quite disconcerted at this sur-
- prising reception of his remarks. "Oh, no, you
- wouldn't either," he said, hastily trying to re-
- trace.
-
- But the other made a deprecating gesture.
- "Oh, yeh needn't mind, Henry," he said. "I be-
- lieve I was a pretty big fool in those days." He
- spoke as after a lapse of years.
-
- There was a little pause.
-
- "All th' officers say we've got th' rebs in
- a pretty tight box," said the friend, clearing
- his throat in a commonplace way. "They all
- seem t' think we've got 'em jest where we
- want 'em."
-
- "I don't know about that," the youth replied.
- "What I seen over on th' right makes me think
- it was th' other way about. From where I was,
- it looked as if we was gettin' a good poundin'
- yestirday."
-
- "D'yeh think so?" inquired the friend. "I
- thought we handled 'em pretty rough yestir-
- day."
-
- "Not a bit," said the youth. "Why, lord,
- man, you didn't see nothing of the fight. Why!"
- Then a sudden thought came to him. "Oh!
- Jim Conklin's dead."
-
- His friend started. "What? Is he? Jim
- Conklin?"
-
- The youth spoke slowly. "Yes. He's dead.
- Shot in th' side."
-
- "Yeh don't say so. Jim Conklin. . . . poor
- cuss!"
-
- All about them were other small fires sur-
- rounded by men with their little black utensils.
- From one of these near came sudden sharp
- voices in a row. It appeared that two light-
- footed soldiers had been teasing a huge, bearded
- man, causing him to spill coffee upon his blue
- knees. The man had gone into a rage and had
- sworn comprehensively. Stung by his language,
- his tormentors had immediately bristled at him
- with a great show of resenting unjust oaths.
- Possibly there was going to be a fight.
-
- The friend arose and went over to them, mak-
- ing pacific motions with his arms. "Oh, here,
- now, boys, what's th' use?" he said. "We'll
- be at th' rebs in less'n an hour. What's th'
- good fightin' 'mong ourselves?"
-
- One of the light-footed soldiers turned upon
- him red-faced and violent. "Yeh needn't come
- around here with yer preachin'. I s'pose yeh
- don't approve 'a fightin' since Charley Morgan
- licked yeh; but I don't see what business this
- here is 'a yours or anybody else."
-
- "Well, it ain't," said the friend mildly. "Still
- I hate t' see--"
-
- There was a tangled argument.
-
- "Well, he--," said the two, indicating their
- opponent with accusative forefingers.
-
- The huge soldier was quite purple with rage.
- He pointed at the two soldiers with his great
- hand, extended clawlike. "Well, they--"
-
- But during this argumentative time the de-
- sire to deal blows seemed to pass, although they
- said much to each other. Finally the friend re-
- turned to his old seat. In a short while the
- three antagonists could be seen together in an
- amiable bunch.
-
- "Jimmie Rogers ses I'll have t' fight him
- after th' battle t'-day," announced the friend as
- he again seated himself. "He ses he don't
- allow no interferin' in his business. I hate t' see
- th' boys fightin' 'mong themselves."
-
- The youth laughed. "Yer changed a good
- bit. Yeh ain't at all like yeh was. I remember
- when you an' that Irish feller--" He stopped
- and laughed again.
-
- "No, I didn't use t' be that way," said his
- friend thoughtfully. "That's true 'nough."
-
- "Well, I didn't mean--" began the youth.
-
- The friend made another deprecatory gesture.
- "Oh, yeh needn't mind, Henry."
-
- There was another little pause.
-
- "Th' reg'ment lost over half th' men yestir-
- day," remarked the friend eventually. "I thought
- a course they was all dead, but, laws, they kep'
- a-comin' back last night until it seems, after all,
- we didn't lose but a few. They'd been scattered
- all over, wanderin' around in th' woods, fightin'
- with other reg'ments, an' everything. Jest like
- you done."
-
- "So?" said the youth.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
-
- THE regiment was standing at order arms at
- the side of a lane, waiting for the command to
- march, when suddenly the youth remembered
- the little packet enwrapped in a faded yellow
- envelope which the loud young soldier with lugu-
- brious words had intrusted to him. It made him
- start. He uttered an exclamation and turned
- toward his comrade.
-
- "Wilson!"
-
- "What?"
-
- His friend, at his side in the ranks, was thought-
- fully staring down the road. From some cause
- his expression was at that moment very meek.
- The youth, regarding him with sidelong glances,
- felt impelled to change his purpose. "Oh, noth-
- ing," he said.
-
- His friend turned his head in some surprise,
- "Why, what was yeh goin' t' say?"
-
- "Oh, nothing," repeated the youth.
-
- He resolved not to deal the little blow. It
-
- 148
- was sufficient that the fact made him glad. It
- was not necessary to knock his friend on the head
- with the misguided packet.
-
- He had been possessed of much fear of his
- friend, for he saw how easily questionings could
- make holes in his feelings. Lately, he had as-
- sured himself that the altered comrade would not
- tantalize him with a persistent curiosity, but he
- felt certain that during the first period of leisure
- his friend would ask him to relate his adventures
- of the previous day.
-
- He now rejoiced in the possession of a small
- weapon with which he could prostrate his com-
- rade at the first signs of a cross-examination. He
- was master. It would now be he who could
- laugh and shoot the shafts of derision.
-
- The friend had, in a weak hour, spoken with
- sobs of his own death. He had delivered a mel-
- ancholy oration previous to his funeral, and had
- doubtless in the packet of letters, presented vari-
- ous keepsakes to relatives. But he had not died,
- and thus he had delivered himself into the hands
- of the youth.
-
- The latter felt immensely superior to his
- friend, but he inclined to condescension. He
- adopted toward him an air of patronizing good
- humor.
-
- His self-pride was now entirely restored. In
- the shade of its flourishing growth he stood with
- braced and self-confident legs, and since nothing
- could now be discovered he did not shrink from
- an encounter with the eyes of judges, and allowed
- no thoughts of his own to keep him from an
- attitude of manfulness. He had performed his
- mistakes in the dark, so he was still a man.
-
- Indeed, when he remembered his fortunes of
- yesterday, and looked at them from a distance he
- began to see something fine there. He had
- license to be pompous and veteranlike.
-
- His panting agonies of the past he put out of
- his sight.
-
- In the present, he declared to himself that it
- was only the doomed and the damned who roared
- with sincerity at circumstance. Few but they
- ever did it. A man with a full stomach and the
- respect of his fellows had no business to scold
- about anything that he might think to be wrong
- in the ways of the universe, or even with the
- ways of society. Let the unfortunates rail; the
- others may play marbles.
-
- He did not give a great deal of thought to
- these battles that lay directly before him. It was
- not essential that he should plan his ways in
- regard to them. He had been taught that many
- obligations of a life were easily avoided. The
- lessons of yesterday had been that retribution
- was a laggard and blind. With these facts before
- him he did not deem it necessary that he should
- become feverish over the possibilities of the
- ensuing twenty-four hours. He could leave
- much to chance. Besides, a faith in himself had
- secretly blossomed. There was a little flower of
- confidence growing within him. He was now a
- man of experience. He had been out among the
- dragons, he said, and he assured himself that they
- were not so hideous as he had imagined them.
- Also, they were inaccurate; they did not sting
- with precision. A stout heart often defied, and
- defying, escaped.
-
- And, furthermore, how could they kill him
- who was the chosen of gods and doomed to
- greatness?
-
- He remembered how some of the men had
- run from the battle. As he recalled their terror-
- struck faces he felt a scorn for them. They had
- surely been more fleet and more wild than was
- absolutely necessary. They were weak mortals.
- As for himself, he had fled with discretion and
- dignity.
-
- He was aroused from this reverie by his
- friend, who, having hitched about nervously and
- blinked at the trees for a time, suddenly coughed
- in an introductory way, and spoke.
-
- "Fleming!"
-
- "What?"
-
- The friend put his hand up to his mouth and
- coughed again. He fidgeted in his jacket.
-
- "Well," he gulped, at last, "I guess yeh might
- as well give me back them letters." Dark, prick-
- ling blood had flushed into his cheeks and brow.
-
- "All right, Wilson," said the youth. He
- loosened two buttons of his coat, thrust in his
- hand, and brought forth the packet. As he ex-
- tended it to his friend the latter's face was turned
- from him.
-
- He had been slow in the act of producing the
- packet because during it he had been trying to
- invent a remarkable comment upon the affair.
- He could conjure nothing of sufficient point. He
- was compelled to allow his friend to escape
- unmolested with his packet. And for this he
- took unto himself considerable credit. It was a
- generous thing.
-
- His friend at his side seemed suffering great
- shame. As he contemplated him, the youth felt
- his heart grow more strong and stout. He had
- never been compelled to blush in such manner
- for his acts; he was an individual of extraordi-
- nary virtues.
-
- He reflected, with condescending pity: "Too
- bad! Too bad! The poor devil, it makes him
- feel tough!"
-
- After this incident, and as he reviewed the
- battle pictures he had seen, he felt quite com-
- petent to return home and make the hearts of
- the people glow with stories of war. He could
- see himself in a room of warm tints telling tales
- to listeners. He could exhibit laurels. They
- were insignificant; still, in a district where
- laurels were infrequent, they might shine.
-
- He saw his gaping audience picturing him as
- the central figure in blazing scenes. And he
- imagined the consternation and the ejaculations
- of his mother and the young lady at the seminary
- as they drank his recitals. Their vague feminine
- formula for beloved ones doing brave deeds on
- the field of battle without risk of life would be
- destroyed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
- A SPUTTERING of musketry was always to be
- heard. Later, the cannon had entered the dis-
- pute. In the fog-filled air their voices made a
- thudding sound. The reverberations were con-
- tinued. This part of the world led a strange,
- battleful existence.
-
- The youth's regiment was marched to relieve
- a command that had lain long in some damp
- trenches. The men took positions behind a curv-
- ing line of rifle pits that had been turned up, like
- a large furrow, along the line of woods. Before
- them was a level stretch, peopled with short,
- deformed stumps. From the woods beyond
- came the dull popping of the skirmishers and
- pickets, firing in the fog. From the right came
- the noise of a terrific fracas.
-
- The men cuddled behind the small embank-
- ment and sat in easy attitudes awaiting their
- turn. Many had their backs to the firing. The
- youth's friend lay down, buried his face in his
-
- 154
- arms, and almost instantly, it seemed, he was in a
- deep sleep.
-
- The youth leaned his breast against the
- brown dirt and peered over at the woods and up
- and down the line. Curtains of trees interfered
- with his ways of vision. He could see the low
- line of trenches but for a short distance. A few
- idle flags were perched on the dirt hills. Behind
- them were rows of dark bodies with a few heads
- sticking curiously over the top.
-
- Always the noise of skirmishers came from
- the woods on the front and left, and the din on
- the right had grown to frightful proportions.
- The guns were roaring without an instant's pause
- for breath. It seemed that the cannon had come
- from all parts and were engaged in a stupendous
- wrangle. It became impossible to make a sen-
- tence heard.
-
- The youth wished to launch a joke--a quota-
- tion from newspapers. He desired to say, "All
- quiet on the Rappahannock," but the guns refused
- to permit even a comment upon their uproar.
- He never successfully concluded the sentence.
- But at last the guns stopped, and among the
- men in the rifle pits rumors again flew, like birds,
- but they were now for the most part black
- creatures who flapped their wings drearily near
- to the ground and refused to rise on any wings of
- hope. The men's faces grew doleful from the
- interpreting of omens. Tales of hesitation and
- uncertainty on the part of those high in place and
- responsibility came to their ears. Stories of
- disaster were borne into their minds with many
- proofs. This din of musketry on the right, grow-
- ing like a released genie of sound, expressed and
- emphasized the army's plight.
-
- The men were disheartened and began to
- mutter. They made gestures expressive of the
- sentence: "Ah, what more can we do?" And it
- could always be seen that they were bewildered
- by the alleged news and could not fully compre-
- hend a defeat.
-
- Before the gray mists had been totally ob-
- literated by the sun rays, the regiment was march-
- ing in a spread column that was retiring carefully
- through the woods. The disordered, hurrying
- lines of the enemy could sometimes be seen down
- through the groves and little fields. They were
- yelling, shrill and exultant.
-
- At this sight the youth forgot many personal
- matters and became greatly enraged. He ex-
- ploded in loud sentences. "B'jiminey, we're
- generaled by a lot 'a lunkheads."
-
- "More than one feller has said that t'-day,"
- observed a man.
-
- His friend, recently aroused, was still very
- drowsy. He looked behind him until his mind
- took in the meaning of the movement. Then he
- sighed. "Oh, well, I s'pose we got licked," he
- remarked sadly.
-
- The youth had a thought that it would not be
- handsome for him to freely condemn other men.
- He made an attempt to restrain himself, but the
- words upon his tongue were too bitter. He
- presently began a long and intricate denunciation
- of the commander of the forces.
-
- "Mebbe, it wa'n't all his fault--not all to-
- gether. He did th' best he knowed. It's our
- luck t' git licked often," said his friend in a weary
- tone. He was trudging along with stooped
- shoulders and shifting eyes like a man who has
- been caned and kicked.
-
- "Well, don't we fight like the devil? Don't
- we do all that men can?" demanded the youth
- loudly.
-
- He was secretly dumfounded at this sentiment
- when it came from his lips. For a moment his
- face lost its valor and he looked guiltily about
- him. But no one questioned his right to deal in
- such words, and presently he recovered his air
- of courage. He went on to repeat a statement
- he had heard going from group to group at the
- camp that morning. "The brigadier said he
- never saw a new reg'ment fight the way we
- fought yestirday, didn't he? And we didn't do
- better than many another reg'ment, did we?
- Well, then, you can't say it's th' army's fault, can
- you?"
-
- In his reply, the friend's voice was stern. "'A
- course not," he said. "No man dare say we
- don't fight like th' devil. No man will ever dare
- say it. Th' boys fight like hell-roosters. But
- still--still, we don't have no luck."
-
- "Well, then, if we fight like the devil an'
- don't ever whip, it must be the general's fault,"
- said the youth grandly and decisively. "And I
- don't see any sense in fighting and fighting and
- fighting, yet always losing through some derned
- old lunkhead of a general."
-
- A sarcastic man who was tramping at the
- youth's side, then spoke lazily. "Mebbe yeh
- think yeh fit th' hull battle yestirday, Fleming,"
- he remarked.
-
- The speech pierced the youth. Inwardly he
- was reduced to an abject pulp by these chance
- words. His legs quaked privately. He cast a
- frightened glance at the sarcastic man.
-
- "Why, no," he hastened to say in a concili-
- ating voice, "I don't think I fought the whole
- battle yesterday."
-
- But the other seemed innocent of any deeper
- meaning. Apparently, he had no information.
- It was merely his habit. "Oh!" he replied in the
- same tone of calm derision.
-
- The youth, nevertheless, felt a threat. His
- mind shrank from going near to the danger, and
- thereafter he was silent. The significance of the
- sarcastic man's words took from him all loud
- moods that would make him appear prominent.
- He became suddenly a modest person.
-
- There was low-toned talk among the troops.
- The officers were impatient and snappy, their
- countenances clouded with the tales of misfor-
- tune. The troops, sifting through the forest,
- were sullen. In the youth's company once a
- man's laugh rang out. A dozen soldiers turned
- their faces quickly toward him and frowned with
- vague displeasure.
-
- The noise of firing dogged their footsteps.
- Sometimes, it seemed to be driven a little way,
- but it always returned again with increased
- insolence. The men muttered and cursed,
- throwing black looks in its direction.
-
- In a clear space the troops were at last halted.
- Regiments and brigades, broken and detached
- through their encounters with thickets, grew
- together again and lines were faced toward the
- pursuing bark of the enemy's infantry.
-
- This noise, following like the yellings of eager,
- metallic hounds, increased to a loud and joyous
- burst, and then, as the sun went serenely up the
- sky, throwing illuminating rays into the gloomy
- thickets, it broke forth into prolonged pealings.
- The woods began to crackle as if afire.
-
- "Whoop-a-dadee," said a man, "here we are!
- Everybody fightin'. Blood an' destruction."
-
- "I was willin' t' bet they'd attack as soon as
- th' sun got fairly up," savagely asserted the
- lieutenant who commanded the youth's company.
- He jerked without mercy at his little mustache.
- He strode to and fro with dark dignity in the
- rear of his men, who were lying down behind
- whatever protection they had collected.
-
- A battery had trundled into position in the
- rear and was thoughtfully shelling the distance.
- The regiment, unmolested as yet, awaited the
- moment when the gray shadows of the woods
- before them should be slashed by the lines of
- flame. There was much growling and swearing.
-
- "Good Gawd," the youth grumbled, "we're
- always being chased around like rats! It makes
- me sick. Nobody seems to know where we go
- or why we go. We just get fired around from
- pillar to post and get licked here and get licked
- there, and nobody knows what it's done for. It
- makes a man feel like a damn' kitten in a bag.
- Now, I'd like to know what the eternal thunders
- we was marched into these woods for anyhow,
-
-
- THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE 161
-
- unless it was to give the rebs a regular pot shot
- at us. We came in here and got our legs all
- tangled up in these cussed briers, and then we
- begin to fight and the rebs had an easy time of it.
- Don't tell me it's just luck! I know better. It's
- this derned old--"
-
- The friend seemed jaded, but he interrupted
- his comrade with a voice of calm confidence.
- "It'll turn out all right in th' end," he said.
-
- "Oh, the devil it will! You always talk like a
- dog-hanged parson. Don't tell me! I know--"
-
- At this time there was an interposition by the
- savage-minded lieutenant, who was obliged to
- vent some of his inward dissatisfaction upon his
- men. "You boys shut right up! There no
- need 'a your wastin' your breath in long-winded
- arguments about this an' that an' th' other.
- You've been jawin' like a lot 'a old hens. All
- you've got t' do is to fight, an' you'll get plenty 'a
- that t' do in about ten minutes. Less talkin' an'
- more fightin' is what's best for you boys. I never
- saw sech gabbling jackasses."
-
- He paused, ready to pounce upon any man
- who might have the temerity to reply. No words
- being said, he resumed his dignified pacing.
-
- "There's too much chin music an' too little
- fightin' in this war, anyhow," he said to them,
- turning his head for a final remark.
-
- The day had grown more white, until the sun
- shed his full radiance upon the thronged forest.
- A sort of a gust of battle came sweeping toward
- that part of the line where lay the youth's regi-
- ment. The front shifted a trifle to meet it square-
- ly. There was a wait. In this part of the field
- there passed slowly the intense moments that pre-
- cede the tempest.
-
- A single rifle flashed in a thicket before the
- regiment. In an instant it was joined by many
- others. There was a mighty song of clashes and
- crashes that went sweeping through the woods.
- The guns in the rear, aroused and enraged by
- shells that had been thrown burlike at them,
- suddenly involved themselves in a hideous alter-
- cation with another band of guns. The battle
- roar settled to a rolling thunder, which was a
- single, long explosion.
-
- In the regiment there was a peculiar kind of
- hesitation denoted in the attitudes of the men.
- They were worn, exhausted, having slept but lit-
- tle and labored much. They rolled their eyes
- toward the advancing battle as they stood await-
- ing the shock. Some shrank and flinched. They
- stood as men tied to stakes.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
- THIS advance of the enemy had seemed to the
- youth like a ruthless hunting. He began to fume
- with rage and exasperation. He beat his foot
- upon the ground, and scowled with hate at the
- swirling smoke that was approaching like a phan-
- tom flood. There was a maddening quality in
- this seeming resolution of the foe to give him no
- rest, to give him no time to sit down and think.
- Yesterday he had fought and had fled rapidly.
- There had been many adventures. For to-day he
- felt that he had earned opportunities for contem-
- plative repose. He could have enjoyed portraying
- to uninitiated listeners various scenes at which he
- had been a witness or ably discussing the pro-
- cesses of war with other proved men. Too it was
- important that he should have time for physical
- recuperation. He was sore and stiff from his ex-
- periences. He had received his fill of all exer-
- tions, and he wished to rest.
-
- But those other men seemed never to grow
- weary; they were fighting with their old speed.
-
- 163
- He had a wild hate for the relentless foe. Yester-
- day, when he had imagined the universe to be
- against him, he had hated it, little gods and big
- gods; to-day he hated the army of the foe with
- the same great hatred. He was not going to be
- badgered of his life, like a kitten chased by boys,
- he said. It was not well to drive men into final
- corners; at those moments they could all develop
- teeth and claws.
-
- He leaned and spoke into his friend's ear. He
- menaced the woods with a gesture. "If they
- keep on chasing us, by Gawd, they'd better watch
- out. Can't stand TOO much."
-
- The friend twisted his head and made a calm
- reply. "If they keep on a-chasin' us they'll drive
- us all inteh th' river."
-
- The youth cried out savagely at this state-
- ment. He crouched behind a little tree, with his
- eyes burning hatefully and his teeth set in a cur-
- like snarl. The awkward bandage was still about
- his head, and upon it, over his wound, there was
- a spot of dry blood. His hair was wondrously
- tousled, and some straggling, moving locks hung
- over the cloth of the bandage down toward his
- forehead. His jacket and shirt were open at the
- throat, and exposed his young bronzed neck.
- There could be seen spasmodic gulpings at his
- throat.
-
- His fingers twined nervously about his rifle.
- He wished that it was an engine of annihilating
- power. He felt that he and his companions were
- being taunted and derided from sincere convic-
- tions that they were poor and puny. His knowl-
- edge of his inability to take vengeance for it made
- his rage into a dark and stormy specter, that pos-
- sessed him and made him dream of abominable
- cruelties. The tormentors were flies sucking in-
- solently at his blood, and he thought that he would
- have given his life for a revenge of seeing their
- faces in pitiful plights.
-
- The winds of battle had swept all about the
- regiment, until the one rifle, instantly followed by
- others, flashed in its front. A moment later the
- regiment roared forth its sudden and valiant re-
- tort. A dense wall of smoke settled slowly down.
- It was furiously slit and slashed by the knifelike
- fire from the rifles.
-
- To the youth the fighters resembled animals
- tossed for a death struggle into a dark pit. There
- was a sensation that he and his fellows, at bay,
- were pushing back, always pushing fierce on-
- slaughts of creatures who were slippery. Their
- beams of crimson seemed to get no purchase upon
- the bodies of their foes; the latter seemed to evade
- them with ease, and come through, between,
- around, and about with unopposed skill.
-
- When, in a dream, it occurred to the youth
- that his rifle was an impotent stick, he lost sense
- of everything but his hate, his desire to smash
- into pulp the glittering smile of victory which he
- could feel upon the faces of his enemies.
-
- The blue smoke-swallowed line curled and
- writhed like a snake stepped upon. It swung its
- ends to and fro in an agony of fear and rage.
-
- The youth was not conscious that he was erect
- upon his feet. He did not know the direction of
- the ground. Indeed, once he even lost the habit
- of balance and fell heavily. He was up again
- immediately. One thought went through the
- chaos of his brain at the time. He wondered if
- he had fallen because he had been shot. But the
- suspicion flew away at once. He did not think
- more of it.
-
- He had taken up a first position behind the lit-
- tle tree, with a direct determination to hold it
- against the world. He had not deemed it possi-
- ble that his army could that day succeed, and
- from this he felt the ability to fight harder. But
- the throng had surged in all ways, until he lost
- directions and locations, save that he knew where
- lay the enemy.
-
- The flames bit him, and the hot smoke broiled
- his skin. His rifle barrel grew so hot that ordi-
- narily he could not have borne it upon his palms;
- but he kept on stuffing cartridges into it, and
- pounding them with his clanking, bending ram-
- rod. If he aimed at some changing form through
- the smoke, he pulled his trigger with a fierce
- grunt, as if he were dealing a blow of the fist with
- all his strength.
-
- When the enemy seemed falling back before
- him and his fellows, he went instantly forward,
- like a dog who, seeing his foes lagging, turns and
- insists upon being pursued. And when he was
- compelled to retire again, he did it slowly, sul-
- lenly, taking steps of wrathful despair.
-
- Once he, in his intent hate, was almost alone,
- and was firing, when all those near him had ceased.
- He was so engrossed in his occupation that he
- was not aware of a lull.
-
- He was recalled by a hoarse laugh and a sen-
- tence that came to his ears in a voice of contempt
- and amazement. "Yeh infernal fool, don't yeh
- know enough t' quit when there ain't anything t'
- shoot at? Good Gawd!"
-
- He turned then and, pausing with his rifle
- thrown half into position, looked at the blue line
- of his comrades. During this moment of leisure
- they seemed all to be engaged in staring with
- astonishment at him. They had become specta-
- tors. Turning to the front again he saw, under
- the lifted smoke, a deserted ground.
-
- He looked bewildered for a moment. Then
- there appeared upon the glazed vacancy of his
- eyes a diamond point of intelligence. "Oh," he
- said, comprehending.
-
- He returned to his comrades and threw him-
- self upon the ground. He sprawled like a man
- who had been thrashed. His flesh seemed strange-
- ly on fire, and the sounds of the battle continued
- in his ears. He groped blindly for his canteen.
-
- The lieutenant was crowing. He seemed
- drunk with fighting. He called out to the youth:
- "By heavens, if I had ten thousand wild cats like
- you I could tear th' stomach outa this war in
- less'n a week!" He puffed out his chest with
- large dignity as he said it.
-
- Some of the men muttered and looked at the
- youth in awe-struck ways. It was plain that as
- he had gone on loading and firing and cursing
- without the proper intermission, they had found
- time to regard him. And they now looked upon
- him as a war devil.
-
- The friend came staggering to him. There
- was some fright and dismay in his voice. "Are yeh
- all right, Fleming? Do yeh feel all right? There
- ain't nothin' th' matter with yeh, Henry, is there?"
-
- "No," said the youth with difficulty. His
- throat seemed full of knobs and burs.
-
- These incidents made the youth ponder. It
- was revealed to him that he had been a barbarian,
- a beast. He had fought like a pagan who de-
- fends his religion. Regarding it, he saw that it
- was fine, wild, and, in some ways, easy. He had
- been a tremendous figure, no doubt. By this
- struggle he had overcome obstacles which he
- had admitted to be mountains. They had fallen
- like paper peaks, and he was now what he called
- a hero. And he had not been aware of the pro-
- cess. He had slept and, awakening, found him-
- self a knight.
-
- He lay and basked in the occasional stares of
- his comrades. Their faces were varied in de-
- grees of blackness from the burned powder.
- Some were utterly smudged. They were reek-
- ing with perspiration, and their breaths came
- hard and wheezing. And from these soiled ex-
- panses they peered at him.
-
- "Hot work! Hot work!" cried the lieu-
- tenant deliriously. He walked up and down,
- restless and eager. Sometimes his voice could
- be heard in a wild, incomprehensible laugh.
-
- When he had a particularly profound thought
- upon the science of war he always unconsciously
- addressed himself to the youth.
-
- There was some grim rejoicing by the men.
- "By thunder, I bet this army'll never see another
- new reg'ment like us!"
- "You bet!"
-
-
- "A dog, a woman, an' a walnut tree,
- Th' more yeh beat 'em, th' better they be!
-
- That's like us."
-
- "Lost a piler men, they did. If an' ol' woman
- swep' up th' woods she'd git a dustpanful."
-
- "Yes, an' if she'll come around ag'in in 'bout
- an' hour she'll git a pile more."
-
- The forest still bore its burden of clamor.
- From off under the trees came the rolling clatter
- of the musketry. Each distant thicket seemed a
- strange porcupine with quills of flame. A cloud
- of dark smoke, as from smoldering ruins, went
- up toward the sun now bright and gay in the
- blue, enameled sky.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
- THE ragged line had respite for some min-
- utes, but during its pause the struggle in the
- forest became magnified until the trees seemed to
- quiver from the firing and the ground to shake
- from the rushing of the men. The voices of the
- cannon were mingled in a long and interminable
- row. It seemed difficult to live in such an atmos-
- phere. The chests of the men strained for a bit
- of freshness, and their throats craved water.
-
- There was one shot through the body, who
- raised a cry of bitter lamentation when came this
- lull. Perhaps he had been calling out during
- the fighting also, but at that time no one had
- heard him. But now the men turned at the woe-
- ful complaints of him upon the ground.
-
- "Who is it? Who is it?"
-
- "It's Jimmie Rogers. Jimmie Rogers."
-
- When their eyes first encountered him there
- was a sudden halt, as if they feared to go near.
- He was thrashing about in the grass, twisting his
-
- 171
- shuddering body into many strange postures.
- He was screaming loudly. This instant's hesita-
- tion seemed to fill him with a tremendous, fantas-
- tic contempt, and he damned them in shrieked
- sentences.
-
- The youth's friend had a geographical illusion
- concerning a stream, and he obtained permission
- to go for some water. Immediately canteens
- were showered upon him. "Fill mine, will
- yeh?" "Bring me some, too." "And me, too."
- He departed, ladened. The youth went with his
- friend, feeling a desire to throw his heated body
- onto the stream and, soaking there, drink quarts.
-
- They made a hurried search for the supposed
- stream, but did not find it. "No water here,"
- said the youth. They turned without delay and
- began to retrace their steps.
-
- From their position as they again faced to-
- ward the place of the fighting, they could of
- course comprehend a greater amount of the bat-
- tle than when their visions had been blurred by
- the hurling smoke of the line. They could see
- dark stretches winding along the land, and on
- one cleared space there was a row of guns mak-
- ing gray clouds, which were filled with large
- flashes of orange-colored flame. Over some foli-
- age they could see the roof of a house. One win-
- dow, glowing a deep murder red, shone squarely
- through the leaves. From the edifice a tall lean-
- ing tower of smoke went far into the sky.
-
- Looking over their own troops, they saw
- mixed masses slowly getting into regular form.
- The sunlight made twinkling points of the bright
- steel. To the rear there was a glimpse of a dis-
- tant roadway as it curved over a slope. It was
- crowded with retreating infantry. From all the
- interwoven forest arose the smoke and bluster
- of the battle. The air was always occupied by
- a blaring.
-
- Near where they stood shells were flip-flap-
- ping and hooting. Occasional bullets buzzed in
- the air and spanged into tree trunks. Wounded
- men and other stragglers were slinking through
- the woods.
-
- Looking down an aisle of the grove, the
- youth and his companion saw a jangling general
- and his staff almost ride upon a wounded man,
- who was crawling on his hands and knees. The
- general reined strongly at his charger's opened
- and foamy mouth and guided it with dexterous
- horsemanship past the man. The latter scram-
- bled in wild and torturing haste. His strength
- evidently failed him as he reached a place of
- safety. One of his arms suddenly weakened, and
- he fell, sliding over upon his back. He lay
- stretched out, breathing gently.
-
- A moment later the small, creaking cavalcade
- was directly in front of the two soldiers. An-
- other officer, riding with the skillful abandon of a
- cowboy, galloped his horse to a position directly
- before the general. The two unnoticed foot sol-
- diers made a little show of going on, but they
- lingered near in the desire to overhear the con-
- versation. Perhaps, they thought, some great
- inner historical things would be said.
-
- The general, whom the boys knew as the com-
- mander of their division, looked at the other
- officer and spoke coolly, as if he were criticising
- his clothes. "Th' enemy's formin' over there for
- another charge," he said. "It'll be directed
- against Whiterside, an' I fear they'll break
- through there unless we work like thunder t' stop
- them."
-
- The other swore at his restive horse, and then
- cleared his throat. He made a gesture toward
- his cap. "It'll be hell t' pay stoppin' them," he
- said shortly.
-
- "I presume so," remarked the general. Then
- he began to talk rapidly and in a lower tone. He
- frequently illustrated his words with a pointing
- finger. The two infantrymen could hear nothing
- until finally he asked: "What troops can you
- spare?"
-
- The officer who rode like a cowboy reflected
- for an instant. "Well," he said, "I had to order
- in th' 12th to help th' 76th, an' I haven't really got
- any. But there's th' 304th. They fight like a
- lot 'a mule drivers. I can spare them best
- of any."
-
- The youth and his friend exchanged glances
- of astonishment.
-
- The general spoke sharply. "Get 'em ready,
- then. I'll watch developments from here, an'
- send you word when t' start them. It'll happen
- in five minutes."
-
- As the other officer tossed his fingers toward
- his cap and wheeling his horse, started away, the
- general called out to him in a sober voice: "I
- don't believe many of your mule drivers will get
- back."
-
- The other shouted something in reply. He
- smiled.
-
- With scared faces, the youth and his compan-
- ion hurried back to the line.
-
- These happenings had occupied an incredibly
- short time, yet the youth felt that in them he had
- been made aged. New eyes were given to him.
- And the most startling thing was to learn sud-
- denly that he was very insignificant. The officer
- spoke of the regiment as if he referred to a
- broom. Some part of the woods needed sweep-
- ing, perhaps, and he merely indicated a broom in
- a tone properly indifferent to its fate. It was
- war, no doubt, but it appeared strange.
-
- As the two boys approached the line, the lieu-
- tenant perceived them and swelled with wrath.
- "Fleming--Wilson--how long does it take yeh
- to git water, anyhow--where yeh been to."
-
- But his oration ceased as he saw their eyes,
- which were large with great tales. "We're goin'
- t' charge--we're goin' t' charge!" cried the
- youth's friend, hastening with his news.
-
- "Charge?" said the lieutenant. "Charge?
- Well, b'Gawd! Now, this is real fightin'." Over
- his soiled countenance there went a boastful
- smile. "Charge? Well, b'Gawd!"
-
- A little group of soldiers surrounded the two
- youths. "Are we, sure 'nough? Well, I'll be
- derned! Charge? What fer? What at? Wil-
- son, you're lyin'."
-
- "I hope to die," said the youth, pitching his
- tones to the key of angry remonstrance. "Sure
- as shooting, I tell you."
-
- And his friend spoke in re-enforcement. "Not
- by a blame sight, he ain't lyin'. We heard 'em
- talkin'."
-
- They caught sight of two mounted figures a
- short distance from them. One was the colonel
- of the regiment and the other was the officer who
- had received orders from the commander of the
- division. They were gesticulating at each other.
- The soldier, pointing at them, interpreted the
- scene.
-
- One man had a final objection: "How could
- yeh hear 'em talkin'?" But the men, for a large
- part, nodded, admitting that previously the two
- friends had spoken truth.
-
- They settled back into reposeful attitudes
- with airs of having accepted the matter. And
- they mused upon it, with a hundred varieties of
- expression. It was an engrossing thing to think
- about. Many tightened their belts carefully and
- hitched at their trousers.
-
- A moment later the officers began to bustle
- among the men, pushing them into a more com-
- pact mass and into a better alignment. They
- chased those that straggled and fumed at a few
- men who seemed to show by their attitudes that
- they had decided to remain at that spot. They
- were like critical shepherds struggling with sheep.
-
- Presently, the regiment seemed to draw itself
- up and heave a deep breath. None of the men's
- faces were mirrors of large thoughts. The sol-
- diers were bended and stooped like sprinters be-
- fore a signal. Many pairs of glinting eyes peered
- from the grimy faces toward the curtains of the
- deeper woods. They seemed to be engaged in
- deep calculations of time and distance.
-
- They were surrounded by the noises of the
- monstrous altercation between the two armies.
- The world was fully interested in other matters.
- Apparently, the regiment had its small affair to
- itself.
-
- The youth, turning, shot a quick, inquiring
- glance at his friend. The latter returned to him
- the same manner of look. They were the only
- ones who possessed an inner knowledge. "Mule
- drivers--hell t' pay--don't believe many will get
- back." It was an ironical secret. Still, they saw
- no hesitation in each other's faces, and they nod-
- ded a mute and unprotesting assent when a shag-
- gy man near them said in a meek voice: "We'll
- git swallowed."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
- THE youth stared at the land in front of him.
- Its foliages now seemed to veil powers and hor-
- rors. He was unaware of the machinery of orders
- that started the charge, although from the cor-
- ners of his eyes he saw an officer, who looked
- like a boy a-horseback, come galloping, waving
- his hat. Suddenly he felt a straining and heaving
- among the men. The line fell slowly forward
- like a toppling wall, and, with a convulsive gasp
- that was intended for a cheer, the regiment began
- its journey. The youth was pushed and jostled
- for a moment before he understood the move-
- ment at all, but directly he lunged ahead and
- began to run.
-
- He fixed his eye upon a distant and promi-
- nent clump of trees where he had concluded the
- enemy were to be met, and he ran toward it as
- toward a goal. He had believed throughout that
- it was a mere question of getting over an unpleas-
- ant matter as quickly as possible, and he ran
-
- 179
- desperately, as if pursued for a murder. His
- face was drawn hard and tight with the stress of
- his endeavor. His eyes were fixed in a lurid
- glare. And with his soiled and disordered dress,
- his red and inflamed features surmounted by the
- dingy rag with its spot of blood, his wildly
- swinging rifle and banging accouterments, he
- looked to be an insane soldier.
-
- As the regiment swung from its position out
- into a cleared space the woods and thickets be-
- fore it awakened. Yellow flames leaped toward
- it from many directions. The forest made a tre-
- mendous objection.
-
- The line lurched straight for a moment. Then
- the right wing swung forward; it in turn was
- surpassed by the left. Afterward the center
- careered to the front until the regiment was a
- wedge-shaped mass, but an instant later the
- opposition of the bushes, trees, and uneven places
- on the ground split the command and scattered
- it into detached clusters.
-
- The youth, light-footed, was unconsciously in
- advance. His eyes still kept note of the clump of
- trees. From all places near it the clannish yell
- of the enemy could be heard. The little flames
- of rifles leaped from it. The song of the bullets
- was in the air and shells snarled among the tree-
- tops. One tumbled directly into the middle of a
- hurrying group and exploded in crimson fury.
- There was an instant's spectacle of a man, almost
- over it, throwing up his hands to shield his eyes.
-
- Other men, punched by bullets, fell in gro-
- tesque agonies. The regiment left a coherent
- trail of bodies.
-
- They had passed into a clearer atmosphere.
- There was an effect like a revelation in the new
- appearance of the landscape. Some men work-
- ing madly at a battery were plain to them, and
- the opposing infantry's lines were defined by the
- gray walls and fringes of smoke.
-
- It seemed to the youth that he saw every-
- thing. Each blade of the green grass was bold
- and clear. He thought that he was aware of
- every change in the thin, transparent vapor that
- floated idly in sheets. The brown or gray trunks
- of the trees showed each roughness of their sur-
- faces. And the men of the regiment, with their
- starting eyes and sweating faces, running madly,
- or falling, as if thrown headlong, to queer,
- heaped-up corpses--all were comprehended. His
- mind took a mechanical but firm impression, so
- that afterward everything was pictured and ex-
- plained to him, save why he himself was there.
-
- But there was a frenzy made from this furious
- rush. The men, pitching forward insanely, had
- burst into cheerings, moblike and barbaric, but
- tuned in strange keys that can arouse the dullard
- and the stoic. It made a mad enthusiasm that, it
- seemed, would be incapable of checking itself
- before granite and brass. There was the deli-
- rium that encounters despair and death, and is
- heedless and blind to the odds. It is a temporary
- but sublime absence of selfishness. And because
- it was of this order was the reason, perhaps, why
- the youth wondered, afterward, what reasons he
- could have had for being there.
-
- Presently the straining pace ate up the ener-
- gies of the men. As if by agreement, the leaders
- began to slacken their speed. The volleys di-
- rected against them had had a seeming windlike
- effect. The regiment snorted and blew. Among
- some stolid trees it began to falter and hesitate.
- The men, staring intently, began to wait for some
- of the distant walls of smoke to move and dis-
- close to them the scene. Since much of their
- strength and their breath had vanished, they re-
- turned to caution. They were become men
- again.
-
- The youth had a vague belief that he had run
- miles, and he thought, in a way, that he was now
- in some new and unknown land.
-
- The moment the regiment ceased its advance
- the protesting splutter of musketry became a
- steadied roar. Long and accurate fringes of
- smoke spread out. From the top of a small hill
- came level belchings of yellow flame that caused
- an inhuman whistling in the air.
-
- The men, halted, had opportunity to see some
- of their comrades dropping with moans and
- shrieks. A few lay under foot, still or wailing.
- And now for an instant the men stood, their rifles
- slack in their hands, and watched the regiment
- dwindle. They appeared dazed and stupid. This
- spectacle seemed to paralyze them, overcome
- them with a fatal fascination. They stared wood-
- enly at the sights, and, lowering their eyes, looked
- from face to face. It was a strange pause, and a
- strange silence.
-
- Then, above the sounds of the outside commo-
- tion, arose the roar of the lieutenant. He strode
- suddenly forth, his infantile features black with
- rage.
-
- "Come on, yeh fools!" he bellowed. "Come
- on! Yeh can't stay here. Yeh must come on."
- He said more, but much of it could not be under-
- stood.
-
- He started rapidly forward, with his head
- turned toward the men. "Come on," he was
- shouting. The men stared with blank and yokel-
- like eyes at him. He was obliged to halt and
- retrace his steps. He stood then with his back
- to the enemy and delivered gigantic curses into
- the faces of the men. His body vibrated from
- the weight and force of his imprecations. And
- he could string oaths with the facility of a maiden
- who strings beads.
-
- The friend of the youth aroused. Lurching
- suddenly forward and dropping to his knees, he
- fired an angry shot at the persistent woods. This
- action awakened the men. They huddled no
- more like sheep. They seemed suddenly to be-
- think them of their weapons, and at once com-
- menced firing. Belabored by their officers, they
- began to move forward. The regiment, involved
- like a cart involved in mud and muddle, started
- unevenly with many jolts and jerks. The men
- stopped now every few paces to fire and load,
- and in this manner moved slowly on from trees
- to trees.
-
- The flaming opposition in their front grew
- with their advance until it seemed that all for-
- ward ways were barred by the thin leaping
- tongues, and off to the right an ominous demon-
- stration could sometimes be dimly discerned.
- The smoke lately generated was in confusing
- clouds that made it difficult for the regiment to
- proceed with intelligence. As he passed through
- each curling mass the youth wondered what
- would confront him on the farther side.
-
- The command went painfully forward until an
- open space interposed between them and the
- lurid lines. Here, crouching and cowering be-
- hind some trees, the men clung with desperation,
- as if threatened by a wave. They looked wild-
- eyed, and as if amazed at this furious disturbance
- they had stirred. In the storm there was an
- ironical expression of their importance. The
- faces of the men, too, showed a lack of a certain
- feeling of responsibility for being there. It was
- as if they had been driven. It was the dominant
- animal failing to remember in the supreme mo-
- ments the forceful causes of various superficial
- qualities. The whole affair seemed incompre-
- hensible to many of them.
-
- As they halted thus the lieutenant again be-
- gan to bellow profanely. Regardless of the vin-
- dictive threats of the bullets, he went about
- coaxing, berating, and bedamning. His lips,
- that were habitually in a soft and childlike curve,
- were now writhed into unholy contortions. He
- swore by all possible deities.
-
- Once he grabbed the youth by the arm.
- "Come on, yeh lunkhead!" he roared. "Come
- on! We'll all git killed if we stay here. We've
- on'y got t' go across that lot. An' then"--the
- remainder of his idea disappeared in a blue haze
- of curses.
-
- The youth stretched forth his arm. "Cross
- there?" His mouth was puckered in doubt and
- awe.
-
- "Certainly. Jest 'cross th' lot! We can't
- stay here," screamed the lieutenant. He poked
- his face close to the youth and waved his ban-
- daged hand. "Come on!" Presently he grap-
- pled with him as if for a wrestling bout. It was
- as if he planned to drag the youth by the ear on
- to the assault.
-
- The private felt a sudden unspeakable indig-
- nation against his officer. He wrenched fiercely
- and shook him off.
-
- "Come on herself, then," he yelled. There
- was a bitter challenge in his voice.
-
- They galloped together down the regimental
- front. The friend scrambled after them. In front
- of the colors the three men began to bawl:
- "Come on! come on!" They danced and gy-
- rated like tortured savages.
-
- The flag, obedient to these appeals, bended its
- glittering form and swept toward them. The
- men wavered in indecision for a moment, and then
- with a long, wailful cry the dilapidated regiment
- surged forward and began its new journey.
-
- Over the field went the scurrying mass. It
- was a handful of men splattered into the faces of
- the enemy. Toward it instantly sprang the yel-
- low tongues. A vast quantity of blue smoke
- hung before them. A mighty banging made ears
- valueless.
-
- The youth ran like a madman to reach the
- woods before a bullet could discover him. He
- ducked his head low, like a football player. In
- his haste his eyes almost closed, and the scene was
- a wild blur. Pulsating saliva stood at the corners
- of his mouth.
-
- Within him, as he hurled himself forward, was
- born a love, a despairing fondness for this flag
- which was near him. It was a creation of beauty
- and invulnerability. It was a goddess, radiant,
- that bended its form with an imperious gesture to
- him. It was a woman, red and white, hating and
- loving, that called him with the voice of his
- hopes. Because no harm could come to it he en-
- dowed it with power. He kept near, as if it
- could be a saver of lives, and an imploring cry
- went from his mind.
-
- In the mad scramble he was aware that the
- color sergeant flinched suddenly, as if struck by a
- bludgeon. He faltered, and then became motion-
- less, save for his quivering knees.
-
- He made a spring and a clutch at the pole.
- At the same instant his friend grabbed it from the
- other side. They jerked at it, stout and furious,
- but the color sergeant was dead, and the corpse
- would not relinquish its trust. For a moment
- there was a grim encounter. The dead man,
- swinging with bended back, seemed to be obsti-
- nately tugging, in ludicrous and awful ways, for
- the possession of the flag.
-
- It was past in an instant of time. They
- wrenched the flag furiously from the dead man,
- and, as they turned again, the corpse swayed for-
- ward with bowed head. One arm swung high,
- and the curved hand fell with heavy protest on
- the friend's unheeding shoulder.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- WHEN the two youths turned with the flag
- they saw that much of the regiment had crum-
- bled away, and the dejected remnant was coming
- slowly back. The men, having hurled themselves
- in projectile fashion, had presently expended their
- forces. They slowly retreated, with their faces
- still toward the spluttering woods, and their hot
- rifles still replying to the din. Several officers
- were giving orders, their voices keyed to screams.
-
- "Where in hell yeh goin'?" the lieutenant was
- asking in a sarcastic howl. And a red-bearded
- officer, whose voice of triple brass could plainly
- be heard, was commanding: "Shoot into 'em!
- Shoot into 'em, Gawd damn their souls!" There
- was a melee of screeches, in which the men were
- ordered to do conflicting and impossible things.
-
- The youth and his friend had a small scuffle
- over the flag. "Give it t' me!" "No, let me
- keep it!" Each felt satisfied with the other's pos-
- session of it, but each felt bound to declare, by
-
- 189
- an offer to carry the emblem, his willingness to
- further risk himself. The youth roughly pushed
- his friend away.
-
- The regiment fell back to the stolid trees.
- There it halted for a moment to blaze at some
- dark forms that had begun to steal upon its track.
- Presently it resumed its march again, curving
- among the tree trunks. By the time the depleted
- regiment had again reached the first open space
- they were receiving a fast and merciless fire.
- There seemed to be mobs all about them.
-
- The greater part of the men, discouraged,
- their spirits worn by the turmoil, acted as if
- stunned. They accepted the pelting of the bul-
- lets with bowed and weary heads. It was of no
- purpose to strive against walls. It was of no use
- to batter themselves against granite. And from
- this consciousness that they had attempted to
- conquer an unconquerable thing there seemed
- to arise a feeling that they had been betrayed.
- They glowered with bent brows, but danger-
- ously, upon some of the officers, more particu-
- larly upon the red-bearded one with the voice of
- triple brass.
-
- However, the rear of the regiment was fringed
- with men, who continued to shoot irritably at the
- advancing foes. They seemed resolved to make
- every trouble. The youthful lieutenant was per-
- haps the last man in the disordered mass. His
- forgotten back was toward the enemy. He had
- been shot in the arm. It hung straight and rigid.
- Occasionally he would cease to remember it, and
- be about to emphasize an oath with a sweeping
- gesture. The multiplied pain caused him to
- swear with incredible power.
-
- The youth went along with slipping, uncertain
- feet. He kept watchful eyes rearward. A scowl
- of mortification and rage was upon his face. He
- had thought of a fine revenge upon the officer
- who had referred to him and his fellows as mule
- drivers. But he saw that it could not come to
- pass. His dreams had collapsed when the mule
- drivers, dwindling rapidly, had wavered and hes-
- itated on the little clearing, and then had recoiled.
- And now the retreat of the mule drivers was a
- march of shame to him.
-
- A dagger-pointed gaze from without his black-
- ened face was held toward the enemy, but his
- greater hatred was riveted upon the man, who,
- not knowing him, had called him a mule driver.
-
- When he knew that he and his comrades had
- failed to do anything in successful ways that might
- bring the little pangs of a kind of remorse upon
- the officer, the youth allowed the rage of the baf-
- fled to possess him. This cold officer upon a
- monument, who dropped epithets unconcernedly
- down, would be finer as a dead man, he thought.
- So grievous did he think it that he could
- never possess the secret right to taunt truly in
- answer.
-
- He had pictured red letters of curious revenge.
- "We ARE mule drivers, are we?" And now he
- was compelled to throw them away.
-
- He presently wrapped his heart in the cloak
- of his pride and kept the flag erect. He ha-
- rangued his fellows, pushing against their chests
- with his free hand. To those he knew well he
- made frantic appeals, beseeching them by name.
- Between him and the lieutenant, scolding and
- near to losing his mind with rage, there was felt a
- subtle fellowship and equality. They supported
- each other in all manner of hoarse, howling pro-
- tests.
-
- But the regiment was a machine run down.
- The two men babbled at a forceless thing. The
- soldiers who had heart to go slowly were con-
- tinually shaken in their resolves by a knowledge
- that comrades were slipping with speed back to
- the lines. It was difficult to think of reputation
- when others were thinking of skins. Wounded
- men were left crying on this black journey.
-
- The smoke fringes and flames blustered al-
- ways. The youth, peering once through a sud-
- den rift in a cloud, saw a brown mass of troops,
- interwoven and magnified until they appeared to
- be thousands. A fierce-hued flag flashed before
- his vision.
-
- Immediately, as if the uplifting of the smoke
- had been prearranged, the discovered troops
- burst into a rasping yell, and a hundred flames
- jetted toward the retreating band. A rolling
- gray cloud again interposed as the regiment dog-
- gedly replied. The youth had to depend again
- upon his misused ears, which were trembling
- and buzzing from the melee of musketry and yells.
-
- The way seemed eternal. In the clouded haze
- men became panicstricken with the thought that
- the regiment had lost its path, and was proceed-
- ing in a perilous direction. Once the men who
- headed the wild procession turned and came push-
- ing back against their comrades, screaming that
- they were being fired upon from points which
- they had considered to be toward their own lines.
- At this cry a hysterical fear and dismay beset the
- troops. A soldier, who heretofore had been am-
- bitious to make the regiment into a wise little
- band that would proceed calmly amid the huge-
- appearing difficulties, suddenly sank down and
- buried his face in his arms with an air of bowing
- to a doom. From another a shrill lamentation
- rang out filled with profane allusions to a general.
- Men ran hither and thither, seeking with their
- eyes roads of escape. With serene regularity, as
- if controlled by a schedule, bullets buffed into
- men.
-
- The youth walked stolidly into the midst of
- the mob, and with his flag in his hands took a
- stand as if he expected an attempt to push him to
- the ground. He unconsciously assumed the atti-
- tude of the color bearer in the fight of the pre-
- ceding day. He passed over his brow a hand
- that trembled. His breath did not come freely.
- He was choking during this small wait for the
- crisis.
-
- His friend came to him. "Well, Henry, I
- guess this is good-by--John."
-
- "Oh, shut up, you damned fool!" replied the
- youth, and he would not look at the other.
-
- The officers labored like politicians to beat
- the mass into a proper circle to face the men-
- aces. The ground was uneven and torn. The
- men curled into depressions and fitted them-
- selves snugly behind whatever would frustrate
- a bullet.
-
- The youth noted with vague surprise that the
- lieutenant was standing mutely with his legs far
- apart and his sword held in the manner of a cane.
- The youth wondered what had happened to his
- vocal organs that he no more cursed.
-
- There was something curious in this little in-
- tent pause of the lieutenant. He was like a babe
- which, having wept its fill, raises its eyes and
- fixes upon a distant toy. He was engrossed in
- this contemplation, and the soft under lip quivered
- from self-whispered words.
-
- Some lazy and ignorant smoke curled slowly.
- The men, hiding from the bullets, waited anx-
- iously for it to lift and disclose the plight of the
- regiment.
-
- The silent ranks were suddenly thrilled by the
- eager voice of the youthful lieutenant bawling
- out: "Here they come! Right onto us,
- b'Gawd!" His further words were lost in a roar
- of wicked thunder from the men's rifles.
-
- The youth's eyes had instantly turned in the
- direction indicated by the awakened and agitated
- lieutenant, and he had seen the haze of treachery
- disclosing a body of soldiers of the enemy. They
- were so near that he could see their features.
- There was a recognition as he looked at the types
- of faces. Also he perceived with dim amazement
- that their uniforms were rather gay in effect,
- being light gray, accented with a brilliant-hued
- facing. Too, the clothes seemed new.
-
- These troops had apparently been going for-
- ward with caution, their rifles held in readiness,
- when the youthful lieutenant had discovered
- them and their movement had been interrupted
- by the volley from the blue regiment. From the
- moment's glimpse, it was derived that they had
- been unaware of the proximity of their dark-
- suited foes or had mistaken the direction. Al-
- most instantly they were shut utterly from the
- youth's sight by the smoke from the energetic
- rifles of his companions. He strained his vision
- to learn the accomplishment of the volley, but the
- smoke hung before him.
-
- The two bodies of troops exchanged blows in
- the manner of a pair of boxers. The fast angry
- firings went back and forth. The men in blue
- were intent with the despair of their circum-
- stances and they seized upon the revenge to be
- had at close range. Their thunder swelled loud
- and valiant. Their curving front bristled with
- flashes and the place resounded with the clangor
- of their ramrods. The youth ducked and dodged
- for a time and achieved a few unsatisfactory
- views of the enemy. There appeared to be many
- of them and they were replying swiftly. They
- seemed moving toward the blue regiment, step
- by step. He seated himself gloomily on the
- ground with his flag between his knees.
-
- As he noted the vicious, wolflike temper of
- his comrades he had a sweet thought that if the
- enemy was about to swallow the regimental
- broom as a large prisoner, it could at least have
- the consolation of going down with bristles for-
- ward.
-
- But the blows of the antagonist began to
- grow more weak. Fewer bullets ripped the air,
- and finally, when the men slackened to learn of
- the fight, they could see only dark, floating
- smoke. The regiment lay still and gazed. Pres-
- ently some chance whim came to the pestering
- blur, and it began to coil heavily away. The men
- saw a ground vacant of fighters. It would have
- been an empty stage if it were not for a few
- corpses that lay thrown and twisted into fantastic
- shapes upon the sward.
-
- At sight of this tableau, many of the men in
- blue sprang from behind their covers and made
- an ungainly dance of joy. Their eyes burned
- and a hoarse cheer of elation broke from their
- dry lips.
-
- It had begun to seem to them that events were
- trying to prove that they were impotent. These
- little battles had evidently endeavored to demon-
- strate that the men could not fight well. When
- on the verge of submission to these opinions, the
- small duel had showed them that the propor-
- tions were not impossible, and by it they had
- revenged themselves upon their misgivings and
- upon the foe.
-
- The impetus of enthusiasm was theirs again.
- They gazed about them with looks of uplifted
- pride, feeling new trust in the grim, always
- confident weapons in their hands. And they
- were men.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
-
- PRESENTLY they knew that no firing threat-
- ened them. All ways seemed once more opened
- to them. The dusty blue lines of their friends
- were disclosed a short distance away. In the
- distance there were many colossal noises, but in
- all this part of the field there was a sudden
- stillness.
-
- They perceived that they were free. The
- depleted band drew a long breath of relief
- and gathered itself into a bunch to complete
- its trip.
-
- In this last length of journey the men began
- to show strange emotions. They hurried with
- nervous fear. Some who had been dark and un-
- faltering in the grimmest moments now could not
- conceal an anxiety that made them frantic. It
- was perhaps that they dreaded to be killed in
- insignificant ways after the times for proper
- military deaths had passed. Or, perhaps, they
- thought it would be too ironical to get killed at
-
- 199
- the portals of safety. With backward looks of
- perturbation, they hastened.
-
- As they approached their own lines there was
- some sarcasm exhibited on the part of a gaunt
- and bronzed regiment that lay resting in the
- shade of trees. Questions were wafted to them.
-
- "Where th' hell yeh been?"
-
- "What yeh comin' back fer?"
-
- "Why didn't yeh stay there?"
-
- "Was it warm out there, sonny?"
-
- "Goin' home now, boys?"
-
- One shouted in taunting mimicry: "Oh,
- mother, come quick an' look at th' sojers!"
-
- There was no reply from the bruised and bat-
- tered regiment, save that one man made broad-
- cast challenges to fist fights and the red-bearded
- officer walked rather near and glared in great
- swashbuckler style at a tall captain in the other
- regiment. But the lieutenant suppressed the
- man who wished to fist fight, and the tall cap-
- tain, flushing at the little fanfare of the red-
- bearded one, was obliged to look intently at some
- trees.
-
- The youth's tender flesh was deeply stung by
- these remarks. From under his creased brows
- he glowered with hate at the mockers. He
- meditated upon a few revenges. Still, many in
- the regiment hung their heads in criminal fashion,
- so that it came to pass that the men trudged with
- sudden heaviness, as if they bore upon their
- bended shoulders the coffin of their honor. And
- the youthful lieutenant, recollecting himself, be-
- gan to mutter softly in black curses.
-
- They turned when they arrived at their old
- position to regard the ground over which they
- had charged.
-
- The youth in this contemplation was smitten
- with a large astonishment. He discovered that
- the distances, as compared with the brilliant
- measurings of his mind, were trivial and ridicu-
- lous. The stolid trees, where much had taken
- place, seemed incredibly near. The time, too,
- now that he reflected, he saw to have been short.
- He wondered at the number of emotions and
- events that had been crowded into such little
- spaces. Elfin thoughts must have exaggerated
- and enlarged everything, he said.
-
- It seemed, then, that there was bitter justice
- in the speeches of the gaunt and bronzed vet-
- erans. He veiled a glance of disdain at his fel-
- lows who strewed the ground, choking with dust,
- red from perspiration, misty-eyed, disheveled.
-
- They were gulping at their canteens, fierce to
- wring every mite of water from them, and they
- polished at their swollen and watery features
- with coat sleeves and bunches of grass.
-
- However, to the youth there was a consider-
- able joy in musing upon his performances during
- the charge. He had had very little time pre-
- viously in which to appreciate himself, so that
- there was now much satisfaction in quietly think-
- ing of his actions. He recalled bits of color that
- in the flurry had stamped themselves unawares
- upon his engaged senses.
-
- As the regiment lay heaving from its hot exer-
- tions the officer who had named them as mule
- drivers came galloping along the line. He had
- lost his cap. His tousled hair streamed wildly,
- and his face was dark with vexation and wrath.
- His temper was displayed with more clearness
- by the way in which he managed his horse. He
- jerked and wrenched savagely at his bridle, stop-
- ping the hard-breathing animal with a furious
- pull near the colonel of the regiment. He im-
- mediately exploded in reproaches which came
- unbidden to the ears of the men. They were
- suddenly alert, being always curious about black
- words between officers.
-
- "Oh, thunder, MacChesnay, what an awful
- bull you made of this thing!" began the officer.
- He attempted low tones, but his indignation
- caused certain of the men to learn the sense of
- his words. "What an awful mess you made!
- Good Lord, man, you stopped about a hun-
- dred feet this side of a very pretty success! If
- your men had gone a hundred feet farther you
- would have made a great charge, but as it is
- --what a lot of mud diggers you've got any-
- way!"
-
- The men, listening with bated breath, now
- turned their curious eyes upon the colonel.
- They had a ragamuffin interest in this affair.
-
- The colonel was seen to straighten his form
- and put one hand forth in oratorical fashion.
- He wore an injured air; it was as if a deacon
- had been accused of stealing. The men were
- wiggling in an ecstasy of excitement.
-
- But of a sudden the colonel's manner changed
- from that of a deacon to that of a Frenchman.
- He shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, well, general,
- we went as far as we could," he said calmly.
-
- "As far as you could? Did you, b'Gawd?"
- snorted the other. "Well, that wasn't very far,
- was it?" he added, with a glance of cold con-
- tempt into the other's eyes. "Not very far, I
- think. You were intended to make a diversion
- in favor of Whiterside. How well you succeeded
- your own ears can now tell you." He wheeled
- his horse and rode stiffly away.
-
- The colonel, bidden to hear the jarring noises
- of an engagement in the woods to the left, broke
- out in vague damnations.
-
- The lieutenant, who had listened with an air
- of impotent rage to the interview, spoke suddenly
- in firm and undaunted tones. "I don't care what
- a man is--whether he is a general or what--if
- he says th' boys didn't put up a good fight out
- there he's a damned fool."
-
- "Lieutenant," began the colonel, severely,
- "this is my own affair, and I'll trouble you--"
-
- The lieutenant made an obedient gesture.
- "All right, colonel, all right," he said. He sat
- down with an air of being content with him-
- self.
-
- The news that the regiment had been re-
- proached went along the line. For a time the
- men were bewildered by it. "Good thunder!"
- they ejaculated, staring at the vanishing form of
- the general. They conceived it to be a huge
- mistake.
-
- Presently, however, they began to believe that
- in truth their efforts had been called light. The
- youth could see this conviction weigh upon the
- entire regiment until the men were like cuffed
- and cursed animals, but withal rebellious.
-
- The friend, with a grievance in his eye,
- went to the youth. "I wonder what he does
- want," he said. "He must think we went out
- there an' played marbles! I never see sech a
- man!"
-
- The youth developed a tranquil philosophy
- for these moments of irritation. "Oh, well," he
- rejoined, "he probably didn't see nothing of it at
- all and got mad as blazes, and concluded we were
- a lot of sheep, just because we didn't do what he
- wanted done. It's a pity old Grandpa Hender-
- son got killed yestirday--he'd have known that
- we did our best and fought good. It's just our
- awful luck, that's what."
-
- "I should say so," replied the friend. He
- seemed to be deeply wounded at an injustice.
- "I should say we did have awful luck! There's
- no fun in fightin' fer people when everything
- yeh do--no matter what--ain't done right. I
- have a notion t' stay behind next time an' let
- 'em take their ol' charge an' go t' th' devil
- with it."
-
- The youth spoke soothingly to his comrade.
- "Well, we both did good. I'd like to see the
- fool what'd say we both didn't do as good as we
- could!"
-
- "Of course we did," declared the friend
- stoutly. "An' I'd break th' feller's neck if he was
- as big as a church. But we're all right, anyhow,
- for I heard one feller say that we two fit th' best
- in th' reg'ment, an' they had a great argument
- 'bout it. Another feller, 'a course, he had t' up
- an' say it was a lie--he seen all what was goin'
- on an' he never seen us from th' beginnin' t' th'
- end. An' a lot more struck in an' ses it wasn't
- a lie--we did fight like thunder, an' they give
- us quite a send-off. But this is what I can't
- stand--these everlastin' ol' soldiers, titterin' an'
- laughin', an' then that general, he's crazy."
-
- The youth exclaimed with sudden exaspera-
- tion: "He's a lunkhead! He makes me mad.
- I wish he'd come along next time. We'd show
- 'im what--"
-
- He ceased because several men had come
- hurrying up. Their faces expressed a bringing
- of great news.
-
- "O Flem, yeh jest oughta heard!" cried one,
- eagerly.
-
- "Heard what?" said the youth.
-
- "Yeh jest oughta heard!" repeated the other,
- and he arranged himself to tell his tidings. The
- others made an excited circle. "Well, sir, th'
- colonel met your lieutenant right by us--it was
- damnedest thing I ever heard--an' he ses: 'Ahem!
- ahem!' he ses. 'Mr. Hasbrouck!' he ses, 'by
- th' way, who was that lad what carried th' flag?'
- he ses. There, Flemin', what d' yeh think 'a
- that? 'Who was th' lad what carried th' flag?'
- he ses, an' th' lieutenant, he speaks up right
- away: 'That's Flemin', an' he's a jimhickey,' he
- ses, right away. What? I say he did. 'A jim-
- hickey,' he ses--those 'r his words. He did, too.
- I say he did. If you kin tell this story better
- than I kin, go ahead an' tell it. Well, then, keep
- yer mouth shet. Th' lieutenant, he ses: 'He's a
- jimhickey,' an' th' colonel, he ses: 'Ahem! ahem!
- he is, indeed, a very good man t' have, ahem! He
- kep' th' flag 'way t' th' front. I saw 'im. He's a
- good un,' ses th' colonel. 'You bet,' ses th' lieu-
- tenant, 'he an' a feller named Wilson was at th'
- head 'a th' charge, an' howlin' like Indians all th'
- time,' he ses. 'Head 'a th' charge all th' time,'
- he ses. 'A feller named Wilson,' he ses. There,
- Wilson, m'boy, put that in a letter an' send it
- hum t' yer mother, hay? 'A feller named Wil-
- son,' he ses. An' th' colonel, he ses: 'Were they,
- indeed? Ahem! ahem! My sakes!' he ses. 'At
- th' head 'a th' reg'ment?' he ses. 'They were,'
- ses th' lieutenant. 'My sakes!' ses th' colonel.
- He ses: 'Well, well, well,' he ses, 'those two
- babies?' 'They were,' ses th' lieutenant.
- 'Well, well,' ses th' colonel, 'they deserve t' be
- major generals,' he ses. 'They deserve t' be
- major-generals.'
-
- The youth and his friend had said: "Huh!"
- "Yer lyin', Thompson." "Oh, go t' blazes!"
- "He never sed it." "Oh, what a lie!" "Huh!"
- But despite these youthful scoffings and embar-
- rassments, they knew that their faces were deeply
- flushing from thrills of pleasure. They ex-
- changed a secret glance of joy and congratula-
- tion.
-
- They speedily forgot many things. The past
- held no pictures of error and disappointment.
- They were very happy, and their hearts swelled
- with grateful affection for the colonel and the
- youthful lieutenant.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
-
- WHEN the woods again began to pour forth
- the dark-hued masses of the enemy the youth felt
- serene self-confidence. He smiled briefly when
- he saw men dodge and duck at the long screech-
- ings of shells that were thrown in giant handfuls
- over them. He stood, erect and tranquil, watch-
- ing the attack begin against a part of the line
- that made a blue curve along the side of an adja-
- cent hill. His vision being unmolested by smoke
- from the rifles of his companions, he had oppor-
- tunities to see parts of the hard fight. It was a
- relief to perceive at last from whence came some
- of these noises which had been roared into his
- ears.
-
- Off a short way he saw two regiments fight-
- ing a little separate battle with two other regi-
- ments. It was in a cleared space, wearing a set-
- apart look. They were blazing as if upon a
- wager, giving and taking tremendous blows.
- The firings were incredibly fierce and rapid.
-
- 209
- These intent regiments apparently were oblivious
- of all larger purposes of war, and were slugging
- each other as if at a matched game.
-
- In another direction he saw a magnificent
- brigade going with the evident intention of driv-
- ing the enemy from a wood. They passed in out
- of sight and presently there was a most awe-in-
- spiring racket in the wood. The noise was un-
- speakable. Having stirred this prodigious up-
- roar, and, apparently, finding it too prodigious,
- the brigade, after a little time, came marching
- airily out again with its fine formation in nowise
- disturbed. There were no traces of speed in its
- movements. The brigade was jaunty and seemed
- to point a proud thumb at the yelling wood.
-
- On a slope to the left there was a long row of
- guns, gruff and maddened, denouncing the
- enemy, who, down through the woods, were
- forming for another attack in the pitiless mo-
- notony of conflicts. The round red discharges
- from the guns made a crimson flare and a high,
- thick smoke. Occasional glimpses could be
- caught of groups of the toiling artillerymen. In
- the rear of this row of guns stood a house, calm
- and white, amid bursting shells. A congregation
- of horses, tied to a long railing, were tugging
- frenziedly at their bridles. Men were running
- hither and thither.
-
- The detached battle between the four regi-
- ments lasted for some time. There chanced to
- be no interference, and they settled their dispute
- by themselves. They struck savagely and pow-
- erfully at each other for a period of minutes, and
- then the lighter-hued regiments faltered and
- drew back, leaving the dark-blue lines shouting.
- The youth could see the two flags shaking with
- laughter amid the smoke remnants.
-
- Presently there was a stillness, pregnant with
- meaning. The blue lines shifted and changed a
- trifle and stared expectantly at the silent woods
- and fields before them. The hush was solemn
- and churchlike, save for a distant battery that,
- evidently unable to remain quiet, sent a faint
- rolling thunder over the ground. It irritated,
- like the noises of unimpressed boys. The men
- imagined that it would prevent their perched
- ears from hearing the first words of the new
- battle.
-
- Of a sudden the guns on the slope roared out
- a message of warning. A spluttering sound had
- begun in the woods. It swelled with amazing
- speed to a profound clamor that involved the
- earth in noises. The splitting crashes swept
- along the lines until an interminable roar was
- developed. To those in the midst of it it became
- a din fitted to the universe. It was the whirring
- and thumping of gigantic machinery, complica-
- tions among the smaller stars. The youth's ears
- were filled up. They were incapable of hearing
- more.
-
- On an incline over which a road wound he
- saw wild and desperate rushes of men perpet-
- ually backward and forward in riotous surges.
- These parts of the opposing armies were two
- long waves that pitched upon each other madly
- at dictated points. To and fro they swelled.
- Sometimes, one side by its yells and cheers would
- proclaim decisive blows, but a moment later
- the other side would be all yells and cheers.
- Once the youth saw a spray of light forms go in
- houndlike leaps toward the waving blue lines.
- There was much howling, and presently it went
- away with a vast mouthful of prisoners. Again,
- he saw a blue wave dash with such thunderous
- force against a gray obstruction that it seemed to
- clear the earth of it and leave nothing but
- trampled sod. And always in their swift and
- deadly rushes to and fro the men screamed
- and yelled like maniacs.
-
- Particular pieces of fence or secure positions
- behind collections of trees were wrangled over,
- as gold thrones or pearl bedsteads. There were
- desperate lunges at these chosen spots seemingly
- every instant, and most of them were bandied like
- light toys between the contending forces. The
- youth could not tell from the battle flags flying
- like crimson foam in many directions which color
- of cloth was winning.
-
- His emaciated regiment bustled forth with
- undiminished fierceness when its time came.
- When assaulted again by bullets, the men burst
- out in a barbaric cry of rage and pain. They
- bent their heads in aims of intent hatred
- behind the projected hammers of their guns.
- Their ramrods clanged loud with fury as their
- eager arms pounded the cartridges into the rifle
- barrels. The front of the regiment was a smoke-
- wall penetrated by the flashing points of yellow
- and red.
-
- Wallowing in the fight, they were in an
- astonishingly short time resmudged. They
- surpassed in stain and dirt all their previous ap-
- pearances. Moving to and fro with strained
- exertion, jabbering the while, they were, with
- their swaying bodies, black faces, and glowing
- eyes, like strange and ugly friends jigging heavily
- in the smoke.
-
- The lieutenant, returning from a tour after a
- bandage, produced from a hidden receptacle of
- his mind new and portentous oaths suited to the
- emergency. Strings of expletives he swung
- lashlike over the backs of his men, and it was
- evident that his previous efforts had in nowise
- impaired his resources.
-
- The youth, still the bearer of the colors, did
- not feel his idleness. He was deeply absorbed as
- a spectator. The crash and swing of the great
- drama made him lean forward, intent-eyed, his
- face working in small contortions. Sometimes he
- prattled, words coming unconsciously from him
- in grotesque exclamations. He did not know
- that he breathed; that the flag hung silently over
- him, so absorbed was he.
-
- A formidable line of the enemy came within
- dangerous range. They could be seen plainly--
- tall, gaunt men with excited faces running with
- long strides toward a wandering fence.
-
- At sight of this danger the men suddenly
- ceased their cursing monotone. There was an
- instant of strained silence before they threw up
- their rifles and fired a plumping volley at the
- foes. There had been no order given; the men,
- upon recognizing the menace, had immedi-
- ately let drive their flock of bullets without wait-
- ing for word of command.
-
- But the enemy were quick to gain the protec-
- tion of the wandering line of fence. They slid down
- behind it with remarkable celerity, and from this
- position they began briskly to slice up the blue men.
-
- These latter braced their energies for a great
- struggle. Often, white clinched teeth shone
- from the dusky faces. Many heads surged to
- and fro, floating upon a pale sea of smoke.
- Those behind the fence frequently shouted and
- yelped in taunts and gibelike cries, but the regi-
- ment maintained a stressed silence. Perhaps, at
- this new assault the men recalled the fact that
- they had been named mud diggers, and it made
- their situation thrice bitter. They were breath-
- lessly intent upon keeping the ground and thrust-
- ing away the rejoicing body of the enemy. They
- fought swiftly and with a despairing savageness
- denoted in their expressions.
-
- The youth had resolved not to budge what-
- ever should happen. Some arrows of scorn that
- had buried themselves in his heart had generated
- strange and unspeakable hatred. It was clear
- to him that his final and absolute revenge was to
- be achieved by his dead body lying, torn and
- gluttering, upon the field. This was to be a
- poignant retaliation upon the officer who had
- said "mule drivers," and later "mud diggers,"
- for in all the wild graspings of his mind for a
- unit responsible for his sufferings and commo-
- tions he always seized upon the man who had
- dubbed him wrongly. And it was his idea,
- vaguely formulated, that his corpse would be for
- those eyes a great and salt reproach.
-
- The regiment bled extravagantly. Grunting
- bundles of blue began to drop. The orderly
- sergeant of the youth's company was shot through
- the cheeks. Its supports being injured, his jaw
- hung afar down, disclosing in the wide cavern of
- his mouth a pulsing mass of blood and teeth.
- And with it all he made attempts to cry out.
- In his endeavor there was a dreadful earnestness,
- as if he conceived that one great shriek would
- make him well.
-
- The youth saw him presently go rearward.
- His strength seemed in nowise impaired. He
- ran swiftly, casting wild glances for succor.
-
- Others fell down about the feet of their com-
- panions. Some of the wounded crawled out and
- away, but many lay still, their bodies twisted into
- impossible shapes.
-
- The youth looked once for his friend. He
- saw a vehement young man, powder-smeared and
- frowzled, whom he knew to be him. The lieu-
- tenant, also, was unscathed in his position at the
- rear. He had continued to curse, but it was now
- with the air of a man who was using his last box
- of oaths.
-
- For the fire of the regiment had begun to
- wane and drip. The robust voice, that had come
- strangely from the thin ranks, was growing
- rapidly weak.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-
- THE colonel came running along back of the
- line. There were other officers following him.
- "We must charge'm!" they shouted. "We must
- charge'm!" they cried with resentful voices, as
- if anticipating a rebellion against this plan by the
- men.
-
- The youth, upon hearing the shouts, began to
- study the distance between him and the enemy.
- He made vague calculations. He saw that to be
- firm soldiers they must go forward. It would be
- death to stay in the present place, and with all
- the circumstances to go backward would exalt
- too many others. Their hope was to push the
- galling foes away from the fence.
-
- He expected that his companions, weary and
- stiffened, would have to be driven to this assault,
- but as he turned toward them he perceived with
- a certain surprise that they were giving quick
- and unqualified expressions of assent. There was
- an ominous, clanging overture to the charge
-
- 217
- when the shafts of the bayonets rattled upon the
- rifle barrels. At the yelled words of command
- the soldiers sprang forward in eager leaps.
- There was new and unexpected force in the
- movement of the regiment. A knowledge of its
- faded and jaded condition made the charge ap-
- pear like a paroxysm, a display of the strength
- that comes before a final feebleness. The men
- scampered in insane fever of haste, racing as if to
- achieve a sudden success before an exhilarating
- fluid should leave them. It was a blind and de-
- spairing rush by the collection of men in dusty
- and tattered blue, over a green sward and under
- a sapphire sky, toward a fence, dimly outlined in
- smoke, from behind which spluttered the fierce
- rifles of enemies.
-
- The youth kept the bright colors to the front.
- He was waving his free arm in furious circles,
- the while shrieking mad calls and appeals, urging
- on those that did not need to be urged, for it
- seemed that the mob of blue men hurling them-
- selves on the dangerous group of rifles were
- again grown suddenly wild with an enthusiasm of
- unselfishness. From the many firings starting
- toward them, it looked as if they would merely
- succeed in making a great sprinkling of corpses
- on the grass between their former position and
- the fence. But they were in a state of frenzy,
- perhaps because of forgotten vanities, and it made
- an exhibition of sublime recklessness. There was
- no obvious questioning, nor figurings, nor dia-
- grams. There was, apparently, no considered
- loopholes. It appeared that the swift wings of
- their desires would have shattered against the
- iron gates of the impossible.
-
- He himself felt the daring spirit of a savage
- religion mad. He was capable of profound sacri-
- fices, a tremendous death. He had no time for
- dissections, but he knew that he thought of the
- bullets only as things that could prevent him
- from reaching the place of his endeavor. There
- were subtle flashings of joy within him that thus
- should be his mind.
-
- He strained all his strength. His eyesight
- was shaken and dazzled by the tension of thought
- and muscle. He did not see anything excepting
- the mist of smoke gashed by the little knives of
- fire, but he knew that in it lay the aged fence of a
- vanished farmer protecting the snuggled bodies
- of the gray men.
-
- As he ran a thought of the shock of contact
- gleamed in his mind. He expected a great con-
- cussion when the two bodies of troops crashed
- together. This became a part of his wild battle
- madness. He could feel the onward swing of the
- regiment about him and he conceived of a thun-
- derous, crushing blow that would prostrate the
- resistance and spread consternation and amaze-
- ment for miles. The flying regiment was going
- to have a catapultian effect. This dream made
- him run faster among his comrades, who were
- giving vent to hoarse and frantic cheers.
-
- But presently he could see that many of the
- men in gray did not intend to abide the blow.
- The smoke, rolling, disclosed men who ran, their
- faces still turned. These grew to a crowd, who
- retired stubbornly. Individuals wheeled fre-
- quently to send a bullet at the blue wave.
-
- But at one part of the line there was a grim
- and obdurate group that made no movement.
- They were settled firmly down behind posts and
- rails. A flag, ruffled and fierce, waved over them
- and their rifles dinned fiercely.
-
- The blue whirl of men got very near, until
- it seemed that in truth there would be a close
- and frightful scuffle. There was an expressed
- disdain in the opposition of the little group,
- that changed the meaning of the cheers of the
- men in blue. They became yells of wrath,
- directed, personal. The cries of the two parties
- were now in sound an interchange of scathing
- insults.
-
- They in blue showed their teeth; their eyes
- shone all white. They launched themselves as at
- the throats of those who stood resisting. The
- space between dwindled to an insignificant dis-
- tance.
-
- The youth had centered the gaze of his soul
- upon that other flag. Its possession would be
- high pride. It would express bloody minglings,
- near blows. He had a gigantic hatred for those
- who made great difficulties and complications.
- They caused it to be as a craved treasure of my-
- thology, hung amid tasks and contrivances of
- danger.
-
- He plunged like a mad horse at it. He was
- resolved it should not escape if wild blows and
- darings of blows could seize it. His own em-
- blem, quivering and aflare, was winging toward
- the other. It seemed there would shortly be
- an encounter of strange beaks and claws, as of
- eagles.
-
- The swirling body of blue men came to a
- sudden halt at close and disastrous range and
- roared a swift volley. The group in gray was
- split and broken by this fire, but its riddled body
- still fought. The men in blue yelled again and
- rushed in upon it.
-
- The youth, in his leapings, saw, as through a
- mist, a picture of four or five men stretched upon
- the ground or writhing upon their knees with
- bowed heads as if they had been stricken by bolts
- from the sky. Tottering among them was the
- rival color bearer, whom the youth saw had been
- bitten vitally by the bullets of the last formidable
- volley. He perceived this man fighting a last
- struggle, the struggle of one whose legs are
- grasped by demons. It was a ghastly battle.
- Over his face was the bleach of death, but set
- upon it was the dark and hard lines of desperate
- purpose. With this terrible grin of resolution he
- hugged his precious flag to him and was stum-
- bling and staggering in his design to go the way
- that led to safety for it.
-
- But his wounds always made it seem that his
- feet were retarded, held, and he fought a grim
- fight, as with invisible ghouls fastened greedily
- upon his limbs. Those in advance of the scam-
- pering blue men, howling cheers, leaped at the
- fence. The despair of the lost was in his eyes as
- he glanced back at them.
-
- The youth's friend went over the obstruction
- in a tumbling heap and sprang at the flag as a
- panther at prey. He pulled at it and, wrench-
- ing it free, swung up its red brilliancy with a
- mad cry of exultation even as the color bearer,
- gasping, lurched over in a final throe and, stiff-
- ening convulsively, turned his dead face to the
- ground. There was much blood upon the grass
- blades.
-
- At the place of success there began more wild
- clamorings of cheers. The men gesticulated and
- bellowed in an ecstasy. When they spoke it was
- as if they considered their listener to be a mile
- away. What hats and caps were left to them
- they often slung high in the air.
-
- At one part of the line four men had been
- swooped upon, and they now sat as prisoners.
- Some blue men were about them in an eager and
- curious circle. The soldiers had trapped strange
- birds, and there was an examination. A flurry of
- fast questions was in the air.
-
- One of the prisoners was nursing a superficial
- wound in the foot. He cuddled it, baby-wise,
- but he looked up from it often to curse with an
- astonishing utter abandon straight at the noses of
- his captors. He consigned them to red regions;
- he called upon the pestilential wrath of strange
- gods. And with it all he was singularly free
- from recognition of the finer points of the con-
- duct of prisoners of war. It was as if a clumsy
- clod had trod upon his toe and he conceived it to
- be his privilege, his duty, to use deep, resentful
- oaths.
-
- Another, who was a boy in years, took his
- plight with great calmness and apparent good
- nature. He conversed with the men in blue,
- studying their faces with his bright and keen
- eyes. They spoke of battles and conditions.
- There was an acute interest in all their faces dur-
- ing this exchange of view points. It seemed a
- great satisfaction to hear voices from where all
- had been darkness and speculation.
-
- The third captive sat with a morose counte-
- nance. He preserved a stoical and cold attitude.
- To all advances he made one reply without varia-
- tion, "Ah, go t' hell!"
-
- The last of the four was always silent and,
- for the most part, kept his face turned in un-
- molested directions. From the views the youth
- received he seemed to be in a state of absolute
- dejection. Shame was upon him, and with it
- profound regret that he was, perhaps, no more
- to be counted in the ranks of his fellows. The
- youth could detect no expression that would
- allow him to believe that the other was giving
- a thought to his narrowed future, the pictured
- dungeons, perhaps, and starvations and brutali-
- ties, liable to the imagination. All to be seen
- was shame for captivity and regret for the right
- to antagonize.
-
- After the men had celebrated sufficiently they
- settled down behind the old rail fence, on the
- opposite side to the one from which their foes
- had been driven. A few shot perfunctorily at
- distant marks.
-
- There was some long grass. The youth
- nestled in it and rested, making a convenient rail
- support the flag. His friend, jubilant and glori-
- fied, holding his treasure with vanity, came to
- him there. They sat side by side and congratu-
- lated each other.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-
- THE roarings that had stretched in a long line
- of sound across the face of the forest began to
- grow intermittent and weaker. The stentorian
- speeches of the artillery continued in some dis-
- tant encounter, but the crashes of the musketry
- had almost ceased. The youth and his friend of
- a sudden looked up, feeling a deadened form of
- distress at the waning of these noises, which had
- become a part of life. They could see changes
- going on among the troops. There were march-
- ings this way and that way. A battery wheeled
- leisurely. On the crest of a small hill was the
- thick gleam of many departing muskets.
-
- The youth arose. "Well, what now, I won-
- der?" he said. By his tone he seemed to be
- preparing to resent some new monstrosity in
- the way of dins and smashes. He shaded his
- eyes with his grimy hand and gazed over the
- field.
-
- His friend also arose and stared. "I bet
-
- 226
- we're goin' t' git along out of this an' back over
- th' river," said he.
-
- "Well, I swan!" said the youth.
-
- They waited, watching. Within a little while
- the regiment received orders to retrace its way.
- The men got up grunting from the grass, regret-
- ting the soft repose. They jerked their stiffened
- legs, and stretched their arms over their heads.
- One man swore as he rubbed his eyes. They all
- groaned "O Lord!" They had as many objec-
- tions to this change as they would have had to a
- proposal for a new battle.
-
- They trampled slowly back over the field
- across which they had run in a mad scamper.
-
- The regiment marched until it had joined its
- fellows. The reformed brigade, in column, aimed
- through a wood at the road. Directly they were
- in a mass of dust-covered troops, and were
- trudging along in a way parallel to the enemy's
- lines as these had been defined by the previous
- turmoil.
-
- They passed within view of a stolid white
- house, and saw in front of it groups of their com-
- rades lying in wait behind a neat breastwork. A
- row of guns were booming at a distant enemy.
- Shells thrown in reply were raising clouds of
- dust and splinters. Horsemen dashed along the
- line of intrenchments.
-
- At this point of its march the division curved
- away from the field and went winding off in the
- direction of the river. When the significance of
- this movement had impressed itself upon the
- youth he turned his head and looked over his
- shoulder toward the trampled and debris-strewed
- ground. He breathed a breath of new satisfac-
- tion. He finally nudged his friend. "Well, it's
- all over," he said to him.
-
- His friend gazed backward. "B'Gawd, it
- is," he assented. They mused.
-
- For a time the youth was obliged to reflect
- in a puzzled and uncertain way. His mind was
- undergoing a subtle change. It took moments
- for it to cast off its battleful ways and resume
- its accustomed course of thought. Gradually his
- brain emerged from the clogged clouds, and at
- last he was enabled to more closely compre-
- hend himself and circumstance.
-
- He understood then that the existence of shot
- and counter-shot was in the past. He had dwelt
- in a land of strange, squalling upheavals and had
- come forth. He had been where there was red
- of blood and black of passion, and he was es-
- caped. His first thoughts were given to rejoic-
- ings at this fact.
-
- Later he began to study his deeds, his fail-
- ures, and his achievements. Thus, fresh from
- scenes where many of his usual machines of re-
- flection had been idle, from where he had pro-
- ceeded sheeplike, he struggled to marshal all his
- acts.
-
- At last they marched before him clearly.
- From this present view point he was enabled
- to look upon them in spectator fashion and
- to criticise them with some correctness, for his
- new condition had already defeated certain sym-
- pathies.
-
- Regarding his procession of memory he felt
- gleeful and unregretting, for in it his public deeds
- were paraded in great and shining prominence.
- Those performances which had been witnessed
- by his fellows marched now in wide purple and
- gold, having various deflections. They went
- gayly with music. It was pleasure to watch these
- things. He spent delightful minutes viewing the
- gilded images of memory.
-
- He saw that he was good. He recalled with
- a thrill of joy the respectful comments of his fel-
- lows upon his conduct.
-
- Nevertheless, the ghost of his flight from
- the first engagement appeared to him and
- danced. There were small shoutings in his
- brain about these matters. For a moment he
- blushed, and the light of his soul flickered with
- shame.
-
- A specter of reproach came to him. There
- loomed the dogging memory of the tattered
- soldier--he who, gored by bullets and faint for
- blood, had fretted concerning an imagined wound
- in another; he who had loaned his last of strength
- and intellect for the tall soldier; he who, blind
- with weariness and pain, had been deserted in
- the field.
-
- For an instant a wretched chill of sweat was
- upon him at the thought that he might be
- detected in the thing. As he stood persistently
- before his vision, he gave vent to a cry of sharp
- irritation and agony.
-
- His friend turned. "What's the matter,
- Henry?" he demanded. The youth's reply was
- an outburst of crimson oaths.
-
- As he marched along the little branch-hung
- roadway among his prattling companions this
- vision of cruelty brooded over him. It clung
- near him always and darkened his view of these
- deeds in purple and gold. Whichever way his
- thoughts turned they were followed by the
- somber phantom of the desertion in the fields.
- He looked stealthily at his companions, feeling
- sure that they must discern in his face evidences
- of this pursuit. But they were plodding in
- ragged array, discussing with quick tongues the
- accomplishments of the late battle.
-
- "Oh, if a man should come up an' ask me, I'd
- say we got a dum good lickin'."
-
- "Lickin'--in yer eye! We ain't licked, sonny.
- We're goin' down here aways, swing aroun', an'
- come in behint 'em."
-
- "Oh, hush, with your comin' in behint 'em.
- I've seen all 'a that I wanta. Don't tell me about
- comin' in behint--"
-
- "Bill Smithers, he ses he'd rather been in
- ten hundred battles than been in that heluva
- hospital. He ses they got shootin' in th' night-
- time, an' shells dropped plum among 'em in th'
- hospital. He ses sech hollerin' he never see."
-
- "Hasbrouck? He's th' best off'cer in this
- here reg'ment. He's a whale."
-
- "Didn't I tell yeh we'd come aroun' in behint
- 'em? Didn't I tell yeh so? We--"
-
- "Oh, shet yeh mouth!"
-
- For a time this pursuing recollection of the
- tattered man took all elation from the youth's
- veins. He saw his vivid error, and he was afraid
- that it would stand before him all his life. He
- took no share in the chatter of his comrades, nor
- did he look at them or know them, save when he
- felt sudden suspicion that they were seeing his
- thoughts and scrutinizing each detail of the scene
- with the tattered soldier.
-
- Yet gradually he mustered force to put the sin
- at a distance. And at last his eyes seemed to
- open to some new ways. He found that he could
- look back upon the brass and bombast of his
- earlier gospels and see them truly. He was
- gleeful when he discovered that he now despised
- them.
-
- With this conviction came a store of assur-
- ance. He felt a quiet manhood, nonassertive but
- of sturdy and strong blood. He knew that he
- would no more quail before his guides wher-
- ever they should point. He had been to touch
- the great death, and found that, after all, it was
- but the great death. He was a man.
-
- So it came to pass that as he trudged from
- the place of blood and wrath his soul changed.
- He came from hot plowshares to prospects of
- clover tranquilly, and it was as if hot plowshares
- were not. Scars faded as flowers.
-
- It rained. The procession of weary soldiers
- became a bedraggled train, despondent and
- muttering, marching with churning effort in a
- trough of liquid brown mud under a low,
- wretched sky. Yet the youth smiled, for he saw
- that the world was a world for him, though many
- discovered it to be made of oaths and walking
- sticks. He had rid himself of the red sickness of
- battle. The sultry nightmare was in the past.
- He had been an animal blistered and sweating in
- the heat and pain of war. He turned now with a
- lover's thirst to images of tranquil skies, fresh
- meadows, cool brooks--an existence of soft and
- eternal peace.
-
- Over the river a golden ray of sun came
- through the hosts of leaden rain clouds.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Red Badge of Courage
-
-