WAR AND WAITING
Harry slept like one dead, but he
was awakened at dawn, and he rose yet heavy with sleep
and somewhat stiff from the severe exertions of the
day before. But it all came back in an instant,
the army, the march, and the march yet to come.
They had but a scanty breakfast, the
wagons not yet having come up, and in a half hour
they started again. They grumbled mightily at
first, because the day was bleak beyond words, heavy
with clouds, and sharp with chill. The country
seemed deserted and certainly that somber air was
charged with no omens of victory.
But in spite of everything the spirits
of the young troops began to rise. They took
a pride in this defiance of nature as well as man.
They could endure cold and hunger and weariness as
they would endure battle, when it came. They
went on thus three days, almost without food and shelter.
Higher among the hills the snow sometimes beat upon
them in a hurricane, and at night the winds howled
as if they had come down fresh from the Arctic.
The spirits of the young troops, after
rising, fell again, and their feet dragged.
Jackson, always watching, noticed it. Beckoning
to several of his staff, including Harry, he rode
back along the lines, giving a word of praise here
and two words of rebuke there. They came at last
to an entire brigade, halted by the roadside, some
of the men leaning against an old rail fence.
Jackson looked at the men and his
face darkened. It was his own Stonewall Brigade,
the one of which he was so proud, and which he had
led in person into the war. Their commander was
standing beside a tree, and riding up to him he demanded
fiercely:
“What is the meaning of this? Why have
you stopped?”
“I ordered a stop of a little
while for the men to cook their rations,” replied
General Garnett.
Jackson’s face darkened yet
further, and the blue eyes were menacing.
“There is no time for that,” he said sharply.
“But the men can’t go any farther without
them. It’s impossible.”
“I never found anything impossible with this
brigade.”
Jackson shot forth the words as if
they were so many bullets, gave Garnett a scornful
look and rode on. Harry followed him, as was
his duty, but more slowly, and looked back.
He saw a deep red flush show through Garnett’s
sunburn. But the preparations for cooking were
stopped abruptly. Within three minutes the Stonewall
Brigade was in line again, marching resolutely over
the frozen road. Garnett had recognized that
the impossible was possible—at least where
Jackson led.
Not many stragglers were found as
they rode on toward the rear, but every regiment increased
its speed at sight of the stern general. After
circling around the rear he rode back toward the front,
and he left Harry and several others to go more slowly
along the flanks and report to him later.
When Harry was left alone he was saluted
with the usual good-humored chaff by the soldiers
who again demanded his horse of him, or asked him
whether they were to fight or whether they were training
to be foot-racers. Harry merely smiled, and
he came presently to the Invincibles, who were trudging
along stubbornly, with the officers riding on their
flanks. Langdon was as cheerful as usual.
“Things have to come to their
worst before they get better,” he said to Harry,
“and I suppose we’ve about reached the
worst. A sight of the enemy would be pleasant,
even if it meant battle.”
“We’re marching on Bath,”
said Harry, “and we ought to strike it to-night,
though I’m afraid the Yankees have got warning
of our coming.”
He was thinking of Shepard, who now
loomed very large to him. The circumstances
of their meetings were always so singular that this
Northern scout and spy seemed to him to possess omniscience.
Beyond a doubt he would notify every Northern garrison
he could reach of Jackson’s coming.
Suddenly the band of South Carolinians,
who were still left in the Invincibles, struck up
a song:
“Ho, woodsmen of the
mountain-side!
Ho, dwellers in the
vales!
Ho, ye who by the chafing
tide
Have roughened in the
gales!
Leave barn and byre,
leave kin and cot,
Lay by the bloodless
spade:
Let desk and case and
counter rot,
And burn your books
of trade!”
All the Invincibles caught the swing
and rush of the verses, and regiments before them
and behind them caught the time, too, if not the words.
The chant rolled in a great thundering chorus through
the wintry forest. It was solemn and majestic,
and it quickened the blood of these youths who believed
in the cause for which they fought, just as those
on the other side believed in theirs.
“It was written by one of our
own South Carolinians,” said St. Clair, with
pride. “Now here goes the second verse!
Lead off, there, Langdon! They’ll all
catch it!”
“The despot roves your
fairest lands;
And till he flies or
fears,
Your fields must grow
but armed bands
Your sheaves be sheaves
of spears:
Give up to mildew and
to rust
The useless tools of
gain
And feed your country’s
sacred dust
With floods of crimson
rain!”
Louder and louder swelled the chorus
of ten thousand marching men. It was not possible
for the officers to have stopped them had they wished
to do so, and they did not wish it. Stonewall
Jackson, who had read and studied much, knew that
the power of simple songs was scarcely less than that
of rifle and bayonet, and he willingly let them sing
on. Now and then, a gleam came from the blue
eyes in his tanned, bearded face.
Harry, sensitive and prone to enthusiasm,
was flushed in every vein by the marching song.
He seemed to himself to be endowed with a new life
of vigor and energy. The invader trod the Southern
land and they must rush upon him at once. He
was eager for a sight of the blue masses which they
would certainly overcome.
He returned to his place near the
head of the column with the staff of the commander.
Night was now close at hand, but Bath was still many
miles away. It was colder than ever, but the
wagons had not yet come up and there were no rations
and tents. Only a few scraps of food were left
in the knapsacks.
“Ride to Captain Sherburne,”
said General Jackson to Harry, “and tell him
to go forward with his men and reconnoiter.”
“May I go with him, sir?”
“Yes, and then report to me what he and his
men find.”
Harry galloped gladly to the vanguard,
where the gallant young captain and his troop were
leading. These Virginians preserved their fine
appearance. If they were weary they did not show
it. They sat erect in their saddles and the
last button on their uniforms was in place. Their
polished spurs gleamed in the wintry sun.
They set off at a gallop, Harry riding
by the side of Captain Sherburne. Blood again
mounted high with the rapid motion and the sense of
action. Soon they left the army behind, and,
as the road was narrow and shrouded in forest, they
could see nothing of it. Its disappearance was
as complete as if it had been swallowed up in a wilderness.
They rode straight toward Bath, but
after two or three miles they slackened speed.
Harry had told Sherburne of the presence of Shepard
the night before, and the captain knew that they must
be cautious.
Another mile, and at a signal from
the captain the whole troop stopped. They heard
hoofbeats on the road ahead of them, and the sound
was coming in their direction.
“A strong force,” said Captain Sherburne.
“Probably larger than ours, if the hoofbeats
mean anything,” said Harry.
“And Yankees, of course. Here they are!”
A strong detachment of cavalry suddenly
rounded a curve in the road and swept into full view.
Then the horsemen stopped in astonishment at the
sight of the Confederate troop.
There was no possibility of either
command mistaking the other for a friend, but Sherburne,
despite his youth, had in him the instinct for quick
perception and action which distinguished the great
cavalry leaders of the South like Jeb Stuart, Turner
Ashby and others. He drew his men back instantly
somewhat in the shelter of the trees and received the
Union fire first.
As Sherburne had expected, few of
the Northern bullets struck home. Some knocked
bark from the trees, others kicked up dirt from the
frozen road, but most of them sang vainly through
the empty air and passed far beyond. Now the
Southerners sent their fire full into the Union ranks,
and, at Sherburne’s shouted command, charged,
with their leader at their head swinging his sword
in glittering circles like some knight of old.
The Southern volley had brought down
many horses and men, but the Northern force was double
in numbers and many of the men carried new breech-loading
rifles of the best make. While unused to horses
and largely ignorant of the country, they had good
officers and they stood firm. The Southern charge,
meeting a second volley from the breech-loading rifles,
broke upon their front.
Harry, almost by the side of Sherburne,
felt the shock as they galloped into the battle smoke,
and then he felt the Virginians reel. He heard
around him the rapid crackle of rifles and pistols,
sabers clashing together, the shouts of men, the terrible
neighing of wounded horses, and then the two forces
drew apart, leaving a sprinkling of dead and wounded
between.
It was a half retreat by either, the
two drawing back sixty or seventy yards apiece and
then beginning a scattered and irregular fire from
the rifles. But Sherburne, alert always, soon
drew his men into the shelter of the woods, and attempted
an attack on his enemy’s flank.
Some destruction was created in the
Union ranks by the fire from the cover of the forest,
but the officers of the opposing force showed skill,
too. Harry had no doubt from the way the Northern
troops were handled that at least two or three West
Pointers were there. They quickly fell back
into the forest on the other side of the road, and
sent return volleys.
Harry heard the whistle and whizz
of bullets all about them. Bark was clipped
from trees and dry twigs fell. Yet little damage
was done by either. The forest, although leafless,
was dense, and trunks and low boughs afforded much
shelter. Both ceased fire presently, seeming
to realize at the same moment that nothing was being
done, and hovered among the trees, each watching for
what the other would try next.
Harry kept close to Captain Sherburne,
whose face plainly showed signs of deep disgust.
His heart was full of battle and he wished to get
at the enemy. But prudence forbade another charge
upon a force double his numbers and now sheltered
by a wood. At this moment it was the boy beside
him who was cooler than he.
“Captain Sherburne,” he
suggested mildly, “didn’t General Jackson
merely want to find out what was ahead of him?
When the army comes up it will sweep this force out
of its way.”
“That’s so,” agreed
Sherburne reluctantly, “but if we retire they’ll
claim a victory, and our men will be depressed by the
suspicion of defeat.”
“But the Yankees are retiring
already. Look, you can see them withdrawing!
They were on the same business that we were, and it’s
far more important for them to be sure that Jackson
is advancing than it is for us to know that an enemy’s
in front.”
“You’re right. We
knew already that he was there, and we were watching
to get him. It’s foolish for us to stay
here, squabbling with a lot of obstinate Yankees.
We’ll go back to Jackson as fast as we can.
You’re a bright boy, Harry.”
He dropped a hand affectionately on
Harry’s shoulder, then gave the order to the
men and they turned their horses’ heads toward
the army. At the same time they saw with their
own eyes the complete withdrawal of the Union troops,
and the proud Virginians were satisfied. It was
no defeat. It was merely a parting by mutual
consent, each moving at the same instant, that is,
if the Yankees didn’t go first.
They galloped back over the frozen
road, and Captain Sherburne admitted once more to
himself the truth of Harry’s suggestion.
Already the twilight was coming, and again it was
heavy with clouds. In the east all the peaks
and ridges were wrapped about with them, and the captain
knew that they meant more snow. Heavy snow was
the worst of all things for the advance of Jackson.
Captain Sherburne gave another signal
to his men and they galloped faster. The hoofbeats
of nearly two hundred horses rang hard on the frozen
road, but with increased speed pulses throbbed faster
and spirits rose. The average age of the troops
was not over twenty, and youth thought much of action,
little of consequences.
They saw in a half hour the heads
of columns toiling up the slopes, and then Jackson
riding on Little Sorrel, his shoulders bent forward
slightly, the grave eyes showing that the great mind
behind them was still at work, planning, planning,
always planning. Their expression did not change
when Sherburne, halting his horse before him, saluted
respectfully.
“What did you find, Captain Sherburne?”
he asked.
“The enemy, sir. We ran
into a force of cavalry about four hundred strong.”
“And then?”
“We had a smart little skirmish
with them, sir, and then both sides withdrew.”
“Undoubtedly they went to report
to their people, as you have come to report to yours.
It looks as if our attempt to surprise Bath might
fail, but we’ll try to reach it to-night.
Lieutenant Kenton, ride back and give the brigade
commanders orders to hasten their march.”
He detached several others of his
staff for the same duty, and in most cases wrote brief
notes for them. Harry noticed how he took it
for granted that one was always willing to do work,
and yet more work. He himself had just ridden
back from battle, and yet he was sent immediately
on another errand. He noticed, too, how it set
a new standard for everybody. This way Jackson
had of expecting much was rapidly causing his men
to offer much as a matter of course.
While Jackson was writing the notes
to the brigadiers he looked up once or twice at the
darkening skies. The great mass of clouds, charged
with snow that had been hovering in the east, was
now directly overhead. When he had finished the
last note it was too dark for him to write any more
without help of torch. As he handed the note
to the aide who was to take it, a great flake of snow
fell upon his hand.
Harry found that the brigades could
move no faster. They were already toiling hard.
The twilight had turned to night, and the clouds covered
the whole circle of the heavens. The snow, slow
at first, was soon falling fast. The soldiers
brushed it off for a while, and then, feeling that
it was no use, let it stay. Ten thousand men,
white as if wrapped in winding sheets, marched through
the mountains. Now and then, a thin trickle
of red from a foot, encased in a shoe worn through,
stained the snow.
The wind was not blowing, and the
night, reinforced by the clouds, became very dark,
save the gleam from the white covering of snow upon
the earth. Torches began to flare along the
line, and still Jackson marched. Harry knew what
was in his mind. He wished to reach Bath that
night and fall upon the enemy when he was not expected,
even though that enemy had been told that Jackson
was coming. The commander in front, whoever he
might be, certainly would expect no attack in the middle
of the night and in a driving snowstorm.
But the fierce spirit of Jackson was
forced to yield at last. His men, already the
best marchers on the American continent, could go no
farther. The order was given to camp. Harry
more than guessed how bitter was the disappointment
of his commander, and he shared it.
The men, half starved and often stiff
with cold, sank down by the roadside. They no
longer asked for the wagons containing their food and
heavy clothing, because they no longer expected them.
They passed from high spirits to a heavy apathy,
and now they did not seem to care what happened.
But the officers roused them up as much as possible,
made them build fires with every piece of wood they
could find, and then let them wrap themselves in their
blankets and go to sleep—save for the sentinels.
All night long the snow beat on Jackson’s
army lying there among the mountains, and save for
a few Union officers not far away, both North and
South wondered what had become of it.
It was known at Washington and Richmond
that Jackson had left Winchester, and then he had
dropped into the dark. The eyes of the leaders
at both capitals were fixed upon the greater armies
of McClellan and Johnston, and Stonewall Jackson was
not yet fully understood by either. Nevertheless,
the gaunt and haggard President of the North began
to feel anxiety about this Confederate leader who
had disappeared with his army in the mountains of
Northern Virginia.
The telegraph wires were not numerous
then, but they were kept busy answering the question
about Jackson. Banks and the other Union leaders
in the valley sent reassuring replies. Jackson
would not dare to attack them. They had nearly
three times as many men as he, and it did not matter
what had become of him. If he chose to come,
the sooner he came, the sooner he would be annihilated.
McClellan himself laughed at the fears about Jackson.
He was preparing his own great army for a march on
Richmond, one that would settle everything.
But the army of Jackson, nevertheless,
rose from the snow the next morning, and marched straight
on the Union garrison. The rising was made near
Bath, and the army literally brushed the snow from
itself before eating the half of a breakfast, and
taking to the road again, Jackson, on Little Sorrel,
leading them. Harry, as usual, rode near him.
Harry, despite exertions and hardships
which would have overpowered him six months before,
did not feel particularly hungry or weary that morning.
No one in the army had caught more quickly than he
the spirit of Stonewall Jackson. He could endure
anything, and in another hour or two they would pass
out of this wilderness of forest and snow, and attack
the enemy. Bath was just ahead.
A thrill passed through the whole
army. Everybody knew that Jackson was about
to attack. While the first and reluctant sun
of dawn was trying to pierce the heavy clouds, the
regiments, spreading out to right and left to enclose
Bath, began to march. Then the sun gave up its
feeble attempts, the clouds closed in entirely, the
wind began to blow hard, and with it came a blinding
snow, and then a bitter hail.
Harry had been sent by Jackson to
the right flank with orders and he was to remain there,
unless it became necessary to inform the commander
that some regiment was not doing its duty. But
he found them all marching forward, and, falling in
with the Invincibles, he marched with them. Yet
it was impossible for the lines to retain cohesion
or regularity, so fierce was the beat of the storm.
It was an alternation of blinding
snow and of hail that fairly stung. Often the
officers could not see the men thirty yards distant,
and there was no way of knowing whether the army was
marching forward in the complete half circle as planned.
Regiments might draw apart, leaving wide gaps between,
and no one would know it in all that hurricane.
Harry rode by the side of Colonel
Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St.
Hilaire, who were leading the Invincibles in person.
Both had gray military cloaks drawn around them,
but Harry saw that they were shivering with cold as
they sat on their horses, with the snow accumulating
on their shoulders and on the saddles around them.
In truth, the foot cavalry had rather the better
of it, as the hard marching kept up the circulation.
“Not much like the roses of
Charleston,” said Colonel Talbot, faintly smiling.
“But I’m glad to be here,”
said Harry, “although I will admit, sir, that
I did not expect a campaign to the North Pole.”
“Neither did I, but I’m
prepared for anything now, under the commander that
we have. Bear in mind, my young friend, that
this is for your private ear only.”
“Of course, sir! What was that?
Wasn’t it a rifle shot?”
“The report is faint, but it
was certainly made by a rifle. And hark, there
are others! We’ve evidently come upon their
outposts! Confound this storm! It keeps
us from seeing more than twenty yards in front of
us!”
The scattered rifle fire continued,
and the weary soldiers raised their heads which they
had bent to shelter their eyes from the driving snow
and hail. Pulses leaped up again, and blood
sparkled. The whole army rushed forward.
The roofs of houses came into view, and there was
Bath.
But the firing had been merely that
of a small rear guard, skirmishers who surrendered
promptly. The garrison, warned doubtless by Shepard,
and then the scouting troop, had escaped across the
river, but Jackson’s wintry march was not wholly
in vain. The fleeing Union troops had no time
either to carry away or destroy the great stores of
supplies, accumulated there for the winter, and the
starving and freezing Southerners plunged at once
into the midst of plenty, ample compensation to the
young privates.
The population, ardently Southern,
as everywhere in these Virginia towns, welcomed the
army with wild enthusiasm. Officers and soldiers
were taken into the houses, as many as Bath could
hold, and enormous fires were built in the open spaces
for the others. They also showed the way at
once to the magazines, where the Union supplies were
heaped up.
Harry, at the direction of his general,
went with one of the detachments to seize these.
Their first prize was an old but large storehouse,
crammed full of the things they needed most.
The tall mountain youth, Seth Moore, was one of his
men, and he proved to be a prince of looters.
“Blankets! blankets!”
cried Moore. “Here they are, hundreds of
’em! An’ look at these barrels!
Bacon! Beef! Crackers! An’
look at the piles of cheese! Oh, Lieutenant
Kenton, how my mouth waters! Can’t I bite
into one o’ them cheeses?”
“Not yet,” said Harry,
whose own mouth was watering, too, “but you can,
Seth, within ten minutes at the farthest. The
whole army must bite at once.”
“That’s fa’r an’
squar’, but ain’t this richness!
Cove oysters, cans an’ cans of ’em, an’
how I love ’em! An’ sardines, too,
lots of ’em! Why, I could bite right through
the tin boxes to get at ’em. An’
rice, an’ hominy, an’ bags o’ flour.
Why, the North has been sendin’ whole train
loads of things down here for us to eat!”
“And she has been sending more
than that,” said Harry. “Here are
five or six hundred fine breech-loading rifles, and
hundreds of thousands of cartridges. She’s
been sending us arms and ammunition with which to
fight her!”
His boyish spirit burst forth.
Even though an officer, he could not control them,
and he was radiant as the looting Seth Moore himself.
He went out to report the find and to take measures
concerning it. On his way he met hundreds of
the Southern youths who had already put on heavy blue
overcoats found in the captured stores. The great
revulsion had come. They were laughing and cheering
and shaking the hands of one another. It was
a huge picnic, all the more glorious because they had
burst suddenly out of the storm and the icy wilderness.
But order was soon restored, and wrapped
in warm clothing they feasted like civilized men,
the great fires lighting up the whole town with a
cheerful glow. Harry was summoned to new duties.
He was also a new man. Warmth and food had doubled
his vitality, and he was ready for any errand on which
Jackson might send him.
While it was yet snowing, he rode
with a half dozen troopers toward the Potomac.
On the other side was a small town which also held
a Union garrison. Scouting warily along the
shores, Harry discovered that the garrison was still
there. Evidently the enemy believed in the protection
of the river, or many of their leaders could not yet
wholly believe that Jackson and his army, making a
forced march in the dead of winter, were at hand.
But he had no doubt that his general
would attend to these obstinate men, and he rode back
to Bath with the news. Jackson gave his worn
troops a little more rest. They were permitted
to spend all that day and night at Bath, luxuriating
and renewing their strength and spirits.
Harry slept, for the first time in
many nights, in a house, and he made the most of it,
because he doubted whether he would have another such
chance soon. Dawn found the army up and ready
to march away from this place of delight.
They went up and down the Potomac
three or four days, scattering or capturing small
garrisons, taking fresh supplies and spreading consternation
among the Union forces in Northern Virginia and Maryland.
It was all done in the most bitter winter weather and
amid storms of snow and hail. The roads were
slippery with sleet, and often the cavalry were compelled
to dismount and lead their horses long distances.
There was little fighting because the Northern enemy
was always in numbers too small to resist, but there
was a great deal of hard riding and many captures.
News of Jackson’s swoop began
to filter through to both Richmond and Washington.
In Richmond they wondered and rejoiced. In Washington
they wondered, but did not rejoice. They had
not expected there any blow to be struck in the dead
of winter, and Lincoln demanded of his generals why
they could not do as well. Distance and the vagueness
of the news magnified Jackson’s exploits and
doubled his numbers. Eyes were turned with intense
anxiety toward that desolate white expanse of snow
and ice, in the midst of which he was operating.
Jackson finally turned his steps toward
Romney, which had been the Union headquarters, and
his men, exhausted and half starved, once more dragged
themselves over the sleety roads. Winter offered
a fresh obstacle at every turn. Even the spirits
of Harry, who had borrowed so much from the courage
of Jackson, sank somewhat. As they pulled themselves
through the hills on their last stage toward Romney,
he was walking. His horse had fallen three times
that day on the ice, and was now too timid to carry
his owner.
So Harry led him. The boy’s
face and hands were so much chapped and cracked with
the cold that they bled at times. But he wasted
no sympathy on himself. It was the common fate
of the army. Jackson and his generals, themselves,
suffered in the same way. Jackson was walking,
too, for a while, leading his own horse.
Harry was sent back to bring up the
Invincibles, as Romney was now close at hand, and
there might be a fight. He found his old colonel
and lieutenant-colonel walking over the ice.
Both were thin, and were black under the eyes with
privation and anxiety. These were not in appearance
the men whom he had known in gay and sunny Charleston,
though in spirit the same. They gave Harry a
welcome and hoped that the enemy would wait for them
in Romney.
“I don’t think so,”
said Harry, “but I’ve orders for you from
General Jackson to bring up the Invincibles as fast
as possible.”
“Tell General Jackson that we’ll
do our best,” said Colonel Talbot, as he looked
back at his withered column.
They seemed to Harry to be withered
indeed, they were so gaunt with hardship and drawn
up so much with cold. Many wore the blue Northern
overcoats that they had captured at Bath, and more
had tied up their throats and ears in the red woolen
comforters of the day, procured at the towns through
which they passed. They, too, were gaunt of cheek
and black under the eye like their officers.
The Invincibles under urging increased
their speed, but not much. Little reserve strength
was left in them. Langdon and St. Clair, who
had been sent along the line, returned to Colonel Talbot
where Harry was still waiting.
“They’re not going as
fast as a railroad train,” said Langdon in an
aside to Harry, “but they’re doing their
best. You can’t put in a well more than
you can take out of it, and they’re marching
now not on their strength, but their courage.
Still, it might be worse. We might all be dead.”
“But we’re not dead, by
a big margin, and I think we’ll make another
haul at Romney.”
“But Old Jack won’t let
us stay and enjoy it. I never saw a man so much
in love with marching. The steeper the hills
and mountains, the colder the day, the fiercer the
sleet and snow, the better he likes it.”
“The fellow who said General
Jackson didn’t care anything about our feet
told the truth,” said St. Clair, thoughtfully.
“The general is not a cruel man, but he thinks
more of Virginia and the South, and our cause, than
he does of us. If it were necessary to do so
to win he’d sacrifice us to the last man and
himself with us.”
“And never think twice before
doing it. You’ve sized him up,” said
Harry. The army poured into Romney and found
no enemy. Again a garrison had escaped through
the mountain snows when the news reached it that Jackson
was at hand. But they found supplies of food,
filled their empty stomachs, and as Langdon had foretold,
quickly started anew in search of another enemy elsewhere.
But the men finally broke down under
the driving of the merciless Jackson. Many of
them began to murmur. They had left the bleeding
trail of their feet over many an icy road, and some
said they were ready to lie down in the snow and die
before they would march another mile. A great
depression, which was physical rather than mental,
a depression born of exhaustion and intense bodily
suffering, seized the army.
Jackson, although with a will of steel,
was compelled to yield. Slowly and with reluctance,
he led his army back toward Winchester, leaving a
large garrison in Romney. But Harry knew what
he had done, although nothing more than skirmishes
had been fought. He had cleared a wide region
of the enemy. He had inspired enthusiasm in the
South, and he had filled the North with alarm.
The great movement of McClellan on Richmond must
beware of its right flank. A dangerous foe was
there who might sting terribly, and men had learned
already that none knew when or whence Jackson might
come.
A little more than three weeks after
their departure Harry and his friends and the army,
except the portion left in garrison at Romney, returned
to Winchester, the picturesque and neat little Virginia
city so loyal to the South. It looked very good
indeed to Harry as he drew near. He liked the
country, rolling here and there, the hills crested
with splendid groves of great trees. The Little
North Mountain a looming blue shadow to the west,
and the high Massanutton peaks to the south seemed
to guard it round. And the valley itself was
rich and warm with the fine farms spread out for many
miles. Despite the engrossing pursuit of the
enemy and of victory and glory, Harry’s heart
thrilled at the sight of the red brick houses of Winchester.
Here came a period of peace so far
as war was concerned, but of great anxiety to Harry
and the whole army. The government at Richmond
began to interfere with Jackson. It thought
him too bold, even rash, and it wanted him to withdraw
the garrison at Romney, which was apparently exposed
to an attack by the enemy in great force. It
was said that McClellan had more than two hundred
thousand men before Washington, and an overwhelming
division from it might fall at any time upon the Southern
force at Romney.
Harry, being a member of Jackson’s
staff, and having become a favorite with him, knew
well his reasons for standing firm. January,
which had furnished so fierce a month of winter, was
going. The icy country was breaking up under
swift thaws, and fields and destroyed roads were a
vast sea of mud in which the feet of infantry, the
hoofs of horses and the wheels of cannon would sink
deep.
Jackson did not believe that McClellan
had enough enterprise to order a march across such
an obstacle, but recognizing the right of his government
to expect obedience, he sent his resignation to Richmond.
Harry knew of it, his friends knew of it, and their
hearts sank like plummets in a pool.
Another portion of the Invincibles
had been drawn off to reinforce Johnston’s army
before Richmond, as they began to hear rumors now that
McClellan would come by sea instead of land, and their
places were filled with more recruits from the valley
of Virginia. Scarcely a hundred of the South
Carolinians were left, but the name, “The Invincibles”
and the chief officers, stayed behind. Jackson
had been unwilling to part with Colonel Talbot and
Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire, experienced and able
West Pointers. Langdon and St. Clair also stayed.
Harry talked over the resignation
with these friends of his, and they showed an anxiety
not less than his own. It had become evident
to the two veteran West Pointers that Jackson was
the man. Close contact with him had enabled
them to read his character and immense determination.
“I hope that our government
at Richmond will decline this resignation and give
him a free hand,” said Colonel Talbot to Harry.
“It would be a terrible loss if he were permitted
to drop out of the army. I tell you for your
own private ear that I have taken it upon me to Write
a letter of protest to President Davis himself.
I felt that I could do so, because Mr. Davis and
myself were associated closely in the Mexican War.”
The answer came in time from Richmond.
Stonewall Jackson was retained and a freer hand was
given to him. Harry and all his comrades felt
an immense relief, but he did not know until long
afterward how near the Confederacy had come to losing
the great Jackson.
Benjamin, the Secretary of War, and
President Davis both were disposed to let him go,
but the powerful intervention of Governor Letcher of
Virginia induced them to change their minds.
Moreover, hundreds of letters from leading Virginians
who knew Jackson well poured in upon him, asking him
to withdraw the resignation. So it was arranged
and Jackson remained, biding his time for the while
at Winchester, until he could launch the thunderbolt.
A pleasant month for Harry, and all
the young staff officers passed at Winchester.
The winter of intense cold had now become one of tremendous
rain. It poured and it poured, and it never ceased
to pour. Between Winchester and Washington and
McClellan’s great army was one vast flooded
area, save where the hills and mountains stood.
But in Winchester the Southern troops
were warm and comfortable. It was a snug town
within its half circle of mountains. Its brick
and wooden houses were solid and good. The young
officers when they went on errands trod on pavements
of red brick, and oaks and elms and maples shaded them
nearly all the way.
When Harry, who went oftenest on such
missions, returned to his general with the answers,
he walked up a narrow street, where the silver maples,
which would soon begin to bud under the continuous
rain, grew thickest, and came to a small building
in which other officers like himself wrote at little
tables or waited in full uniform to be sent upon like
errands. If it were yet early he would find Jackson
there, but if it were late he would cross a little
stretch of grass to the parsonage, the large and solid
house, where the Presbyterian minister, Dr. Graham,
lived, and where Jackson, with his family, who had
joined him, now made his home in this month of waiting.
It was here that Harry came one evening
late in February. It had been raining as usual,
and he wore one of the long Union overcoats captured
at Bath, blue then but a faded grayish brown now.
However, the gray Confederate uniform beneath it
was neat and looked fresh. Harry was always
careful about his clothing, and the example of St.
Clair inspired him to greater efforts. Besides,
there was a society in Winchester, including many
handsome young women of the old Virginia families,
and even a budding youth who was yet too young for
serious sentimentalism, could not ignore its existence.
It was twilight and the cold rain
was still coming down steadily, as Harry walked across
the grass, and looked out of the wet dusk at the manse.
Lights were shining from every window, and there was
warmth around his heart. The closer association
of many weeks with Jackson had not only increased
his admiration, but also had given the general a great
place in the affection that a youth often feels for
an older man whom he deems a genius or a hero.
Harry walked upon a little portico,
and taking off the overcoat shook out the rain drops.
Then he hung it on a hook against the wall of the
house. The door was open six inches or so, and
a ribbon of brilliant light from within fell across
the floor of the portico.
Harry looked at the light and smiled.
He was young and he loved gayety. He smiled
again when he heard within the sound of laughter.
Then he pushed the door farther open and entered.
Now the laughter rose to a shout, and it was accompanied
by the sound of footsteps. A man, thick of hair
and beard, was running down a stairway. Perched
high upon his shoulders was a child of three or four
years, with both hands planted firmly in the thick
hair. The small feet crossed over the man’s
neck kicked upon his chest, but he seemed to enjoy
the sport as much as the child did.
Harry paused and stood at attention
until the man saw him. Then he saluted respectfully
and said to General Jackson:
“I wish to report to you, sir,
that I delivered the order to General Garnett, as
you directed, and here, sir, is his reply.”
He handed a note to the general, who
read it, thrust it into his pocket, and said:
“That ends your labors for the
day, Lieutenant Kenton. Come in now and join
us.”
He picked up the child again, and
carrying it in his arms, led the way into an inner
room, where he gave it to a nurse. Then they
passed into the library, where Dr. Graham, several
generals and two or three of Winchester’s citizens
were gathered.
All gave Harry a welcome. He
knew them well, and he looked around with satisfaction
at the large room, with its rows and rows of books,
bound mostly in dark leather, volumes of theology,
history, essays, poetry, and of the works of Walter
Scott and Jane Austen. Jackson himself was a
rigid Presbyterian, and he and Dr. Graham had many
a long talk in this room on religion and other topics
almost equally serious.
But to-night they were in a bright
mood. A mountaineer had come in with four huge
wild turkeys, which he insisted upon giving to General
Jackson himself, and guests had been asked in to help
eat them.
Nearly twenty people sat around the
minister’s long table. The turkeys, at
least enough for present needs, were cooked beautifully,
and all the succulent dishes which the great Virginia
valleys produce so fruitfully were present.
General Jackson himself, at the request of the minister,
said grace, and he said it so devoutly and so sincerely
that it always impressed the hearers with a sense
of its reality.
It was full dusk and the rain was
beating on the windows, when the black attendants
began to serve the guests at the great board.
Several ladies, including the general’s wife,
were present. The room was lighted brilliantly,
and a big fire burned in the wide fireplace at the
end. To Harry, three seats away from General
Jackson, there was a startling contrast between the
present moment and that swift campaign of theirs through
the wintry mountains where the feet of the soldiers
left bloody trails on the ice and snow.
It was a curious fact that for a few
instants the mountain and the great cold were real
and this was but fancy. He looked more than once
at the cheerful faces and the rosy glow of the fire,
before he could convince himself that he was in truth
here in Winchester, with all this comfort, even luxury,
around him.
Sitting next to him was a lady of
middle age, Mrs. Howard, of prominence in the town
and a great friend of the Grahams. Harry realized
suddenly that while the others were talking he had
said nothing, and he felt guilty of discourtesy.
He began an apology, but Mrs. Howard, who had known
him very well since he had been in Winchester, learning
to call him by his first name, merely smiled and the
smile was at once maternal and somewhat sad.
“No apologies are needed, Harry,”
she said in a low tone that the others might not hear.
“I read your thoughts. They were away
in the mountains with a marching army. All this
around us speaks of home and peace, but it cannot
last. All of you will be going soon.”
“That’s true, Mrs. Howard,
I was thinking of march and battle, and I believe
you’re right in saying that we’ll all go
soon. That is what we’re for.”
She smiled again a little sadly.
“You’re a good boy, Harry,”
she said, “and I hope that you and all your
comrades will come back in safety to Winchester.
But that is enough croaking from an old woman and
I’m ashamed of myself. Did you ever see
a happier crowd than the one gathered here?”
“Not since I was in my father’s
house when the relatives would come to help us celebrate
Christmas.”
“When did you hear from your
father?” asked Mrs. Howard, whose warm sympathies
had caused Harry to tell her of his life and of his
people whom he had left behind in Kentucky.
“Just after the terrible disaster
at Donelson. He was in the fort, but he escaped
with Forrest’s cavalry, and he went into Mississippi
to join the army under Albert Sidney Johnston.
He sent a letter for me to my home, Pendleton, under
cover to my old teacher, Dr. Russell, who forwarded
it to me. It came only this morning.”
“How does he talk?”
“Hopefully, though he made no
direct statement. I suppose he was afraid to
do so lest the letter fall into the hands of the Yankees,
but I imagine that General Johnston’s army is
going to attack General Grant’s.”
“If General Johnston can win
a victory it will help us tremendously, but I fear
that man, Grant. They say that he had no more
men at Donelson than we, but he took the fort and
its garrison.”
“It’s true. Our
affairs have not been going well in the West.”
Harry was downcast for a few moments.
Much of their Western news had come through the filter
of Richmond, but despite the brighter color that the
Government tried to put on it, it remained black.
Forts and armies had been taken. Nothing had
been able to stop Grant. But youth again came
to Harry. He could not resist the bright light
and the happy talk about him. Bitter thoughts
fled.
General Jackson was in fine humor.
He and Dr. Graham had started to discuss a problem
in Presbyterian theology in which both were deeply
interested, but they quickly changed it in deference
to the younger and lighter spirits about them.
Harry had never before seen his general in so mellow
a vein. Perhaps it was the last blaze of the
home-loving spirit, before entering into that storm
of battle which henceforth was to be his without a
break.
The general, under urging, told of
his life as an orphan boy in his uncle’s rough
home in the Virginia wilderness, how he had been seized
once by the wanderlust, then so strong in nearly all
Americans, and how he and his brother had gone all
the way down the Ohio to the Mississippi, where they
had camped on a little swampy island, earning their
living by cutting wood for the steamers on the two
rivers.
“How old were you two then, General?”
asked Dr. Graham.
“The older of us was only twelve.
But in those rough days boys matured fast and became
self-reliant at a very early age. We did not
run away. There wasn’t much opposition
to our going. Our uncle was sure that we’d
come back alive, and though we arrived again in Virginia,
five or six hundred miles from our island in the river,
all rags and filled with fever, we were not regarded
as prodigal sons. It was what hundreds, yes,
thousands of other boys did. In our pleasant
uplands we soon got rid of both rags and fever.”
“And you did not wish to return to the wilderness?”
“The temptation was strong at
times, but it was defeated by other ambitions.
There was school and I liked sports. These soon
filled up my life.”
Harry knew much more about the life
of Jackson, which the modesty of his hero kept him
from telling. Looking at the strong, active figure
of the man so near him he knew that he had once been
delicate, doomed in childhood, as many thought, to
consumption, inherited from his mother. But a
vigorous life in the open air had killed all such germs.
He was a leader in athletic sports. He was
a great horseman, and often rode as a jockey for his
uncle in the horse races which the open-air Virginians
loved so well, and in which they indulged so much.
He could cut down a tree or run a saw-mill, or drive
four horses to a wagon, or seek deer through the mountains
with the sturdiest hunter of them all. And upon
top of this vigorous boyhood had come the long and
severe training at West Point, the most thorough and
effective military school the world has ever known.
Harry did not wonder, as he looked
at his general, that he could dare and do so much.
He might be awkward in appearance, he might wear his
clothes badly, but the boy at ten years had been a
man, doing a man’s work and with a man’s
soul. He had come into the field, no parade soldier,
but with a body and mind as tough and enduring as steel,
the whole surcharged and heated with a spirit of fire.
Both Harry and Mrs. Howard had become
silent and were watching the general. For some
reason Jackson was more moved than usual. His
manner did not depart from its habitual gravity.
He made no gestures, but the blue eyes under the
heavy brows were irradiated by a peculiar flashing
light.
The long dinner went on. It
was more of a festival than a banquet, and Harry at
last gave himself up entirely to its luxurious warmth.
The foreboding that their mellow days in the pleasant
little city were over, was gone, but it was destined
to come again. Now, after the dinner was finished,
and the great table was cleared away, they sat and
talked, some in the dining room and some in the library.
It was still raining, that cold rain
which at times turns for a moment or two to snow,
and it dashed in gusts against the window panes.
Harry was with some of the younger people in the
library, where they were playing at games. The
sport lagged presently and he went to a window, where
he stood between the curtain and the glass.
He saw the outside dimly, the drenched
lawn, and the trees beyond, under which two or three
sentinels, wrapped closely in heavy coats, walked
to and fro. He gazed at them idly, and then a
shadow passed between him and them. He thought
at first that it was a blurring of the glass by some
stronger gust of rain, but the next moment his experience
told him that it could not be so. He had seen
a shadow, and the shadow was that of a man, sliding
along against the wall of the house, in order that
he might not be seen by a sentinel.
Harry’s suspicions were up and
alive in an instant. In this border country
spies were numerous. It was easy to be a spy
where people looked alike and spoke the same language
with the same accent. His suspicions, too, centered
at once upon Shepard, whom he knew to be so daring
and skillful.
The lad was prompt to act. He
slipped unnoticed into the hall, put on his greatcoat,
felt of the pistol in his belt, opened the front door
and stepped out into the dark and the rain.