In the spring of the year 1862 General
Buell’s big army lay in camp, licking itself
into shape for the campaign which resulted in the
victory at Shiloh. It was a raw, untrained army,
although some of its fractions had seen hard enough
service, with a good deal of fighting, in the mountains
of Western Virginia, and in Kentucky. The war
was young and soldiering a new industry, imperfectly
understood by the young American of the period, who
found some features of it not altogether to his liking.
Chief among these was that essential part of discipline,
subordination. To one imbued from infancy with
the fascinating fallacy that all men are born equal,
unquestioning submission to authority is not easily
mastered, and the American volunteer soldier in his
“green and salad days” is among the worst
known. That is how it happened that one of Buell’s
men, Private Bennett Story Greene, committed the indiscretion
of striking his officer. Later in the war he
would not have done that; like Sir Andrew Aguecheek,
he would have “seen him damned” first.
But time for reformation of his military manners was
denied him: he was promptly arrested on complaint
of the officer, tried by court-martial and sentenced
to be shot.
“You might have thrashed me
and let it go at that,” said the condemned man
to the complaining witness; “that is what you
used to do at school, when you were plain Will Dudley
and I was as good as you. Nobody saw me strike
you; discipline would not have suffered much.”
“Ben Greene, I guess you are
right about that,” said the lieutenant.
“Will you forgive me? That is what I came
to see you about.”
There was no reply, and an officer
putting his head in at the door of the guard-tent
where the conversation had occurred, explained that
the time allowed for the interview had expired.
The next morning, when in the presence of the whole
brigade Private Greene was shot to death by a squad
of his comrades, Lieutenant Dudley turned his back
upon the sorry performance and muttered a prayer for
mercy, in which himself was included.
A few weeks afterward, as Buell’s
leading division was being ferried over the Tennessee
River to assist in succoring Grant’s beaten army,
night was coming on, black and stormy. Through
the wreck of battle the division moved, inch by inch,
in the direction of the enemy, who had withdrawn a
little to reform his lines. But for the lightning
the darkness was absolute. Never for a moment
did it cease, and ever when the thunder did not crack
and roar were heard the moans of the wounded among
whom the men felt their way with their feet, and upon
whom they stumbled in the gloom. The dead were
there, too— there were dead a-plenty.
In the first faint gray of the morning,
when the swarming advance had paused to resume something
of definition as a line of battle, and skirmishers
had been thrown forward, word was passed along to
call the roll. The first sergeant of Lieutenant
Dudley’s company stepped to the front and began
to name the men in alphabetical order. He had
no written roll, but a good memory. The men answered
to their names as he ran down the alphabet to G.
“Gorham.”
“Here!”
“Grayrock.”
“Here!”
The sergeant’s good memory was affected by habit:
“Greene.”
“Here!”
The response was clear, distinct, unmistakable!
A sudden movement, an agitation of
the entire company front, as from an electric shock,
attested the startling character of the incident.
The sergeant paled and paused. The captain strode
quickly to his side and said sharply:
“Call that name again.”
Apparently the Society for Psychical
Research is not first in the field of curiosity concerning
the Unknown.
“Bennett Greene.”
“Here!”
All faces turned in the direction
of the familiar voice; the two men between whom in
the order of stature Greene had commonly stood in
line turned and squarely confronted each other.
“Once more,” commanded
the inexorable investigator, and once more came—a
trifle tremulously—the name of the dead
man:
“Bennett Story Greene.”
“Here!”
At that instant a single rifle-shot
was heard, away to the front, beyond the skirmish-line,
followed, almost attended, by the savage hiss of an
approaching bullet which passing through the line,
struck audibly, punctuating as with a full stop the
captain’s exclamation, “What the devil
does it mean?”
Lieutenant Dudley pushed through the
ranks from his place in the rear.
“It means this,” he said,
throwing open his coat and displaying a visibly broadening
stain of crimson on his breast. His knees gave
way; he fell awkwardly and lay dead.
A little later the regiment was ordered
out of line to relieve the congested front, and through
some misplay in the game of battle was not again under
fire. Nor did Bennett Greene, expert in military
executions, ever again signify his presence at one.