THE MOUNTAIN BATTLE
General Jackson and several of his
senior officers were examining the valley with glasses,
but Harry, with eyes trained to the open air and long
distances, could see clearly nearly all that was going
on below. He saw movement among the masses of
men in blue, and he saw officers on horseback, galloping
along the banks of the river. Then he saw cannon
in trenches with their muzzles elevated toward the
heights, and he knew that the Union troops must have
had warning of Jackson’s coming. And he
saw, too, that the officers below also had glasses
through which they were looking.
There was a sudden blaze from the
mouth of one of the cannon. A shell shot upward,
whistling and shrieking, and burst far above their
heads. Harry heard pieces of falling metal striking
on the rocks behind them. The mountains sent
back the cannon’s roar in a sinister echo.
A second gun flashed and again the
shell curved over their heads. But Jackson paid
no heed. He was still watching intently through
his glasses.
“The enemy is up and alert,”
whispered St. Clair to Harry. “I judge
that these are Western men used to sleeping with their
eyes open.”
“Like as not a lot of them are
mountain West Virginians,” said Harry.
“They are strong for the North, and it’s
likely, too, that they’re the men who have discovered
Jackson’s advance.”
“And they mean to make it warm
for us. Listen to those guns! It’s
hard shooting aiming at men on heights, but it shows
what they could do on level ground.”
Jackson presently retired with his
officers, and Harry, parting from his friends of the
Invincibles, went with him. Back among the ridges
all the troops were under arms, the weary ones having
risen from their blankets which were now tied in rolls
on their backs. They had not yet been able to
bring the artillery up the steeps. Harry saw
that the faces of all were eager as they heard the
thunder of the guns in the valley below. Among
the most eager was a regiment of Georgians arrived
but recently with the reinforcements.
Many of the men, speaking from the
obscurity of the crowded ranks, did not scorn to hurl
questions at their officers.
“Are we goin’ to fight the Yankees at
last?”
“I’d rather take my chances with the bullets
than march any more.”
“Lead us down an’ give us a chance at
’em.”
Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire were among the officers who had
gone with Jackson to the verge of the cliff, and now
when they heard the impertinent but eager questions
from the massed ranks they looked at each other and
smiled. It was not according to West Point,
but these were recruits and here was enthusiasm which
was a pearl beyond price.
General Jackson beckoned to Harry and three other
young staff officers.
“Take glasses,” he said,
“go back to the verge of the cliff, and watch
for movements on the part of the enemy. If any
is made be sure that you see it, and report it to
me at once.”
The words were abrupt, sharp, admitting
of no question or delay, and the four fairly ran.
Harry and his comrades lay down at the edge of the
cliff and swept the valley with their glasses.
The great guns were still firing at intervals of
about a minute. The gunners could not see the
Southern troops drawn back behind the ridges, but Harry
believed that they might be guided by signals from
men on opposite slopes. But if signalmen were
there they were hidden by the forest even from his
glasses.
The smoke from the cannon was gathering
heavily in the narrow valley, so heavily that it began
to obscure what was passing there in the Northern
army. But the four, remembering the injunction
of Jackson, a man who must be obeyed to the last and
minutest detail, still sought to pierce through the
smoke both with the naked eye and with glasses.
As a rift appeared Harry saw a moving mass of men in
blue. It was a great body of troops and the
sun shining through the rift glittered over bayonets
and rifle barrels. They were marching straight
toward a slope which led at a rather easy grade up
the side of the mountain.
“They’re not waiting to
be attacked! They’re attacking!”
cried Harry, springing to his feet and running to
the point where he knew Jackson stood. Jackson
received his news, looked for himself, and then began
to push on the troops. A shout arose as the
army pressed forward to meet the enemy who were coming
so boldly.
“We ought to beat ’em,
as we have the advantage of the heights,” exclaimed
Sherburne, who was now on foot.
But the advantage was the other way.
Those were staunch troops who were advancing, men
of Ohio and West Virginia, and while they were yet
on the lower slopes their cannon, firing over their
heads, swept the crest with shot and shell.
The eager Southern youths, as invariably happens with
those firing downward, shot too high. The Northern
regiments now opening with their rifles and taking
better aim came on in splendid order.
“What a magnificent charge!”
Harry heard Sherburne exclaim.
The rifles by thousands were at work,
and the unceasing crash sent echoes far through the
mountains. The Southerners at the edge of the
cliff were cut down by the fire of their enemy from
below. Their loss was now far greater than that
of the North, and their officers sought to draw them
back from the verge, to a ridge where they could receive
the charge, just as it reached the crest and pour
into them their full fire. The eager young regiment
from Georgia refused to obey.
“Have we come all these hundreds
of miles from Georgia to run before Yankees?”
they cried, and stood there pulling trigger at the
enemy, while their own men fell fast before the bitter
Northern hail.
Harry, too, was forced to admire the
great resolution and courage with which the Northern
troops came upward, but he turned away to be ready
for any command that Jackson might give him.
The general stood by a rock attentively watching
the fierce battle that was going on, but not yet giving
any order. But Harry fancied that he saw his
eyes glisten as he beheld the ardor of his troops.
A detachment of Virginians, posted
in the rear, seeing a break in the first line, rushed
forward without orders, filled the gap and came face
to face with the men in blue. Harry thought he
saw Jackson’s eyes glisten again, but he was
not sure.
The crash of the battle increased
fast. The Southern troops had no artillery,
but as the Northern charge came nearer the crest their
bullets ceased to fly over the heads of their enemies,
but struck now in the ranks. The ridges were
enveloped in fire and smoke. A fresh Southern
regiment was thrown in and the valiant Northern charge
broke. The brave men of Ohio and West Virginia,
although they fought desperately and encouraged one
another to stand fast, were forced slowly back down
the slope.
Harry and a half dozen others beside
him heard Jackson say, apparently to himself, “The
battle will soon be over.” Harry knew instinctively
that it was true. He had got into the habit
of believing every thing Jackson said. The end
came in fifteen minutes more, and with it came the
night.
The soldiers in their ardor had not
noticed that the long shadows were creeping over the
mountains. The sun had already sunk in a blood-red
blur behind the ridges, and as the men in blue slowly
yielded the last slope darkness which was already
heavy in the defiles and ravines swept down over the
valley.
Jackson had won, but his men had suffered
heavily and moreover he had stood on the defense.
He could not descend into the valley in the face
of the Northern resistance which was sure to be fierce
and enduring. The Northern cannon were beginning
to send curving shells again over the cliffs, sinister
warnings of what the Virginians might expect if they
came down to attack. Harry and the other staff
officers peering over the crest saw many fires burning
along the banks of the river. Milroy seemed
to be still bidding Jackson defiance.
Harry saw no preparations for a return
assault. Jackson was inspecting the ground,
but his men were going over the field gathering up
the wounded and burying the dead. The Georgians
had suffered terribly—most of all—for
their rash bravery, and the whole army was subdued.
There was less of exuberant youth, and more of grim
and silent resolve.
Harry worked far into the night carrying
orders here and there. The moon came out and
clothed the strange and weird battlefield in a robe
of silver. The heavens were sown with starshine,
but it all seemed mystic and unreal to the excited
nerves of the boy. The mountains rose to two,
three times their real height, and the valley in which
the Northern fires burned became a mighty chasm.
It was one o’clock in the morning
before Jackson himself left the field and went to
his headquarters at a little farmhouse on the plateau.
His faithful colored servant was waiting for him with
food. He had not touched any the whole day,
but he declined it saying that he needed nothing but
sleep. He flung himself booted and clothed upon
a bed and was sound asleep in five minutes.
There was a little porch on one side
of the house, and here Harry, who had received no
instructions from his general, camped. He rolled
himself in his cavalry cloak, lay down on the hard
floor which was not hard to him, and slept like a
little child.
He was awakened at dawn as one often
is by a presence, even though that presence be noiseless.
He felt a great unwillingness to get up. That
was a good floor on which he slept, and the cavalry
cloak wrapped around him was the finest and warmest
that he had ever felt. He did not wish to abandon
either. But will triumphed. He opened his
eyes and sprang quickly to his feet.
Stonewall Jackson was standing beside
him looking intently toward the valley. The
edge of a blazing sun barely showed in the east, and
in the west all the peaks and ridges were yet in the
dusk. Morning was coming in silence. There
was no sound of battle or of the voices of men.
“I beg your pardon. I
fear that I have overslept myself!” exclaimed
Harry.
“Not at all,” said Jackson
with a slight smile. “The others of the
staff are yet asleep. You might have come inside.
A little room was left on the floor there.”
“I never had a better bed and
I never slept better.” The general smiled
again and gave Harry an approving glance.
“Soldiers, especially boys,
learn quickly to endure any kind of hardship,”
he said. “Come, we’ll see if the
enemy is still there.”
Harry fancied from his tone that he
believed Milroy gone, but knowing better than to offer
any opinion of his own he followed him toward the
edge of the valley. The pickets saluted as the
silent figures passed. The sun in the east was
rising higher over the valley, and in the west the
peaks and ridges were coming out of the dusk.
The general carried his glasses slung
over his shoulder, but he did not need them.
One glance into the valley and they saw that the army
of Milroy was gone. It had disappeared, horse,
foot and guns, and Harry now knew that the long row
of camp fires in the night had been a show, but only
a brave show, after all.
The whole Southern army awoke and
poured down the slopes. Yes, Milroy, not believing
that he was strong enough for another battle, had gone
down the valley. He had fought one good battle,
but he would reach Banks before he fought another.
The Southern troops felt that they
had won the victory, and Jackson sent a message to
Richmond announcing it. Never had news come at
a more opportune time. The fortunes of the South
seemed to be at the lowest ebb. Richmond had
heard of the great battle of Shiloh, the failure to
destroy Grant and the death of Albert Sidney Johnston.
New Orleans, the largest and richest city in the
Confederacy, had been taken by the Northern fleet—the
North was always triumphant on the water—and
the mighty army of McClellan had landed on the Peninsula
of Virginia for the advance on Richmond.
It had seemed that the South was doomed,
and the war yet scarcely a year old. But in
the mountains the strange professor of mathematics
had struck a blow and he might strike another.
Both North and South realized anew that no one could
ever tell where he was or what he might do. The
great force, advancing by land to co-operate with McClellan,
hesitated, and drew back.
But Jackson’s troops knew nothing
then of what was passing in the minds of men at Washington
and Richmond. They were following Milroy and
that commander, wily as well as brave, was pressing
his men to the utmost in order that he might escape
the enemy who, he was sure, would pursue with all
his power. He knew that he had fought with Stonewall
Jackson and he knew the character of the Southern
leader.
Sherburne brought his horses through
a defile into the valley and his men, now mounted,
led the pursuit. Jackson in his eagerness rode
with him and Harry was there, too. Behind them
came the famous foot cavalry. Thus pursuer and
pursued rolled down the valley, and Harry exulted when
he looked at the path of the fleeing army. The
traces were growing fresher and fresher. Jackson
was gaining.
But there were shrewd minds in Milroy’s
command. The Western men knew many devices of
battle and the trail, and Milroy was desperately bent
upon saving his force, which he knew would be overwhelmed,
if overtaken by Jackson’s army. Now he
had recourse to a singular device.
Harry, riding with Captain Sherburne,
noticed that the trees were dry despite the recent
rains. On the slopes of the mountains the water
ran off fast, and the thickets were dry also.
Then he saw a red light in the forest in front of
them. General Jackson saw it at the same time.
“What is that?” he exclaimed.
“It looks like a forest fire, general,”
replied Sherburne.
“You’re right, captain, and it’s
growing.”
As they galloped forward they saw
the red light expand rapidly and spread directly across
their path. The whole forest was on fire.
Great flames rose up the trunks of trees and leaped
from bough to bough. Sparks flew in millions
and vast clouds of smoke, picked up by the wind, were
whirled in their faces.
The troop of cavalry was compelled
to pause and General Jackson, brushing the smoke from
his eyes, said:
“Clever! very clever!
Milroy has put a fiery wall between us.”
The device was a complete success.
The pursuing men in gray could pass around the fire
at points, and wait at other points for it to burn
out, but they lost so much time that their cavalry
were able only to skirmish with the Northern rear
guard. Then when night came on Milroy escaped
under cover of the thick and smoky darkness.
Harry slept on the ground that night,
but the precious cloak was around him. He slept
beyond the dawn as the pursuit was now abandoned, but
when he arose smoke was still floating over the valley
and the burned forests. He was stiff and sore,
but the fierce hunger that assailed him made him forget
the aching of his bones. He had eaten nothing
for thirty-six hours. He had forgotten until
then that there was such a thing as food. But
the sight of Langdon holding a piece of frying bacon
on a stick afflicted him with a raging desire.
“Give me that bacon, Tom,”
he cried, “or I’ll set the rest of the
forest on fire!”
“No need, you old war-horse.
I was just bringing it to you. There’s
plenty more where this came from. The foot cavalry
took it at McDowell, and like the wise boys they are
brought it on with them. Come and join us.
Your general is already riding a bit up the valley,
and, as he didn’t call you, it follows that
he doesn’t want you.”
Harry followed him gladly. The
Invincibles had found a good place, and were cooking
a solid breakfast. They had bacon and ham and
coffee and bread in abundance, and for a while there
was a great eating and drinking.
To youth which had marched and fought
without food it was not a breakfast. It was
a banquet and a feast. Young frames which recover
quickly responded at once. Now and then, the
musical clatter of iron spoons and knives on iron
cups and plates was broken by deep sighs of satisfaction.
But they did not speak for a while. There was
lost time to be made up, and they did not know when
they would get another such chance—the
odds were always against it.
“Enough is enough,” said
Langdon at last. “It took a lot to make
enough, but it’s enough. You have to be
a soldier, Harry, to appreciate what it is to eat,
sleep and rest. I’m willing to wager my
uniform against a last winter’s snowball that
we don’t get another such meal in a month.
Old Jack won’t let us.”
“To my mind,” said St.
Clair, “we’re going right into the middle
of big things. We’ve chased the Yankees
out of the mountains into the valley, and we’ll
follow hot on their heels. We’ve already
learned enough of General Jackson to know that he
doesn’t linger.”
“Linger!” exclaimed Langdon
indignantly. “Even if there was no fighting
to be done he’d march us from one end of the
valley to the other just to keep us in practice.
Hear that bugle! Off we go! Five minutes
to get ready! Or maybe it is only three!”
It was more than five minutes, but
not much more, when the whole army was on the march
again, but the foot cavalry forgot to grumble when
they came again into their beloved valley, across
which, and up and down which, they had marched so
much.
They threw back their shoulders, their
gait became more jaunty and they burst into cheers,
at the sight of the rich rolling country, now so beautiful
in spring’s heavy green. Far off the mountains
rose, dark and blue, but they were only the setting
for the gem and made it more precious.
“It’s ours,” said
Sherburne proudly to Harry. “We left it
to the Yankees for a little while, but we’ve
come back to claim it, and if the unbidden tenant
doesn’t get out at once we’ll put him out.
Harry, haven’t you got Virginia kinfolks?
We want to adopt you and call you a Virginian.”
“Lots of them. My great-grandfather,
Governor Ware, was born in Maryland, but all the people
on my mother’s side were of Virginia origin.”
“I might have known it.
Kentucky is the daughter of Virginia though a large
part of Kentucky takes sides with the Yankees.
But that’s not your fault. Remember,
for the time being you’re a Virginian, one of
us by right of blood and deed.”
“Count me among ’em at
once,” said Harry. He felt a certain pride
in this off-hand but none the less real adoption,
because he knew that it was a great army with which
he marched, and it might immortalize itself.
“What’s the news, Harry?”
asked Sherburne. “You’re always near
Old Jack, and if he lets anything come from under
that old hat of his, which isn’t often, it’s
because he’s willing for it to be known.”
“He’s said this, and he
doesn’t mean it to be any secret. Banks
is at Strasburg with a big army, but he’s fortified
himself there and he doesn’t know just what
to do. He doesn’t for the life of him know
which way Jackson is coming, nor do I. But I do know
that Ewell with his division is going to join us at
last and we’ll have a sizable army.”
“And that means bigger things!”
exclaimed Sherburne, joyously. “Between
you and me, Harry, Banks won’t sleep soundly
again for many a night!”
As they marched on the valley people
came out joyously to meet them. Even women and
girls on horseback, galloping, reined in their horses
to tell them where the Union forces lay. Always
they had information for Jackson, never any for the
North. Here scouts and spies were scarcely needed
by the Southern army. Before night Stonewall
Jackson knew as much of his enemy as any general needed
to know.
They camped at dusk and Langdon, contrary
to his prediction, enjoyed another ample meal and
plenty of rest. Jackson allowed no tent to be
set for himself. The night was warm and beautiful
and the songs of birds came from the trees.
The general had eaten sparingly, and now he sat on
a log in deep thought. Presently he looked up
and said:
“Lieutenant Kenton, do you and
Lieutenant Dalton ride forward in that direction and
meet General Ewell. He is coming, with his staff,
to see me. Escort him to the camp.”
He pointed out the direction and in
an instant Harry and Dalton, also of the staff, were
in the camp, following the line of that pointing finger.
They had the password and as they passed a little beyond
the pickets they saw a half dozen horsemen riding
rapidly toward them in the dusk.
“General Ewell, is it not, sir?”
said Harry, as he and Dalton gave the salute.
“I’m General Ewell,”
replied the foremost horseman. “Do you
come from General Jackson?”
“Yes, sir. His camp is
just before you. You can see the lights now.
He has directed us to meet you and escort you.”
“Then lead the way.”
The two young lieutenants, guiding
General Ewell and his staff, were soon inside Jackson’s
camp, but Harry had time to observe Ewell well.
He had already heard of him as a man of great vigor
and daring. He had made a name for judgment
and dash in the Indian wars on the border. Men
spoke of him as a soldier, prompt to obey his superior
and ready to take responsibility if his superior were
not there. Harry knew that Jackson expected
much of him.
He saw a rather slender man with wonderfully
bright eyes that smiled much, a prominent and pronounced
nose and a strong chin. When he took off his
hat at the meeting with Jackson he disclosed a round
bald head, which he held on one side when he talked.
Jackson had risen from the log as
Ewell rode up and leaped from his magnificent horse—his
horses were always of the best—and he advanced,
stretching out his hand. Ewell clasped it and
the two talked. The staffs of the two generals
had withdrawn out of ear shot, but Harry noticed that
Ewell did much the greater part of the talking, his
head cocked on one side in that queer, striking manner.
But Harry knew, too, that the mind and will of Jackson
were dominant, and that Ewell readily acknowledged
them as so.
The conference did not last long.
Then the two generals shook hands again and Ewell
sprang upon his horse. Jackson beckoned to Harry.
“Lieutenant Kenton,” he
said, “ride with General Ewell to his camp.
You will then know the way well, and he may wish to
send me some quick dispatch.”
Harry, nothing loath, was in the saddle
in an instant, and at the wish of General Ewell rode
by his side.
“You have been with him long?” said Ewell.
“From the beginning of the campaign here, sir.”
“Then you were at both Kernstown
and McDowell. A great general, young man.”
“Yes, sir. He will march anywhere and
fight anything.”
“That’s my own impression.
We’ve heard that his men are the greatest marchers
in the world. My own lads under him will acquire
the same merit.”
“We know, sir, that your men are good marchers
already.”
General Ewell laughed with satisfaction.
“It’s true,” he
said. “When I told my second in command
that we were going to march to join General Jackson
he wanted to bring tents. I told him that would
load us up with a lot of tent poles and that he must
bring only a few, for the sick, perhaps. There
must be no baggage, just food and ammunition.
I told ’em that when we joined General Jackson
we’d have nothing to do but eat and fight.”
He seemed now to be speaking to himself
rather than to Harry, and the boy said nothing.
Ewell, relapsing into silence, urged his horse to
a gallop and the staff perforce galloped, too.
Such a pace soon brought them to the camp of the
second army, and as they rode past the pickets Harry
heard the sound of stringed music.
“The Cajuns,” said one
of the staff, a captain named Morton. Harry did
not know what “Cajuns” meant, but he was
soon to learn. Meanwhile the sound of the music
was pleasant in his ear, and he saw that the camp,
despite the lateness of the hour, was vivid with life.
General Ewell gave Harry into Captain
Morton’s care, and walked away to a small tent,
where he was joined by several of his senior officers
for a conference. But after they had tethered
their horses for the night, Captain Morton took Harry
through the camp.
Harry was full of eagerness and curiosity
and he asked to see first the strange “Cajuns,”
those who made the music.
“They are Louisiana French,”
said Morton, “not the descendants or the original
French settlers in that state, but the descendants
of the French by the way of Nova Scotia.”
“Oh, I see, the Acadians, the exiles.”
“Yes, that’s it.
The name has been corrupted into Cajuns in Louisiana.
They are not like the French of New Orleans and Baton
Rouge and the other towns. They are rural and
primitive. You’ll like them. Few
of them were ever more than a dozen miles from home
before. They love music, and they’ve got
a full regimental band with them. You ought to
hear it play. Why, they’d play the heart
right out of you.”
“I like well enough the guitars
and banjos that they’re playing now. Seems
to me that kind of music is always best at night.”
They had now come within the rim of
light thrown out by the fires of the Acadians, and
Harry stood there looking for the first time at these
dark, short people, brought a thousand miles from
their homes.
They were wholly unlike Virginians
and Kentuckians. They had black eyes and hair,
and their naturally dark faces were burned yet darker
by the sun of the Gulf. Yet the dark eyes were
bright and gay, sparkling with kindliness and the
love of pleasure. The guitars and banjos were
playing some wailing tune, with a note of sadness
in the core of it so keen and penetrating that it
made the water come to Harry’s eyes. But
it changed suddenly to something that had all the
sway and lilt of the rosy South. Men sprang to
their feet and clasping arms about one another began
to sway back and forth in the waltz and the polka.
Harry watched with mingled amazement
and pleasure. Most of the South was religious
and devout. The Virginians of the valley were
nearly all staunch Presbyterians, and Stonewall Jackson,
staunchest of them all, never wanted to fight on Sunday.
The boy himself had been reared in a stern Methodist
faith, and the lightness in this French blood of the
South was new to him. But it pleased him to see
them sing and dance, and he found no wrong in it,
although he could not have done it himself.
Captain Morton noticed Harry’s
close attention and he read his mind.
“They surprised me, too, at
first,” he said, “but they’re fine
soldiers, and they’ve put cheer into this army
many a time when it needed it most. Taylor, their
commander, is a West Pointer and he’s got them
into wonderful trim. They’re well clothed
and well shod. They never straggle and they’re
just about the best marchers we have. They’ll
soon be rated high among Jackson’s foot cavalry.”
Harry left the Acadians with reluctance,
and when he made the round of the camp General Ewell,
who had finished the conference, told him that he
would have no message to send that night to Jackson.
He might go to sleep, but the whole division would
march early in the morning. Harry wrapped himself
again in his cloak, found a place soft with moss under
a tree, and slept with the soft May wind playing over
his face and lulling him to deeper slumber.
He rode the next morning with General
Ewell and the whole division to join Jackson’s
army. It was a trim body of men, well clad, fresh
and strong, and they marched swiftly along the turnpike,
on both sides of which Jackson was encamped further
on.
Harry felt a personal pride in being
with Ewell when the junction was to be made.
He felt that, in a sense, he was leading in this great
reinforcement himself, and he looked back with intense
satisfaction at the powerful column marching so swiftly
along the turnpike.
They came late in the day to Jackson’s
pickets, and then they saw his army, scattered through
the fields on either side of the road.
Harry rejoiced once more in the grand
appearance of the new division. Every coat or
tunic sat straight. Every shoe-lace was tied,
and they marched with the beautiful, even step of
soldiers on parade. They were to encamp beyond
Jackson’s old army, and as they passed along
the turnpike it was lined on either side by Jackson’s
own men, cheering with vigor.
The colonel who was in immediate charge
of the encampment, a man who had never seen General
Jackson, asked Harry where he might find him.
Harry pointed to a man sitting on the top rail of
a fence beside the road.
“But I asked for General Jackson,” said
the colonel.
“That’s General Jackson.”
The colonel approached and saluted.
General Jackson’s clothes were soiled and dusty.
His feet, encased in cavalry boots that reached beyond
the knees, rested upon a lower rail of the fence.
A worn cap with a dented visor almost covered his
eyes. The rest of his face was concealed by
a heavy, dark beard.
“General Jackson, I believe,” said the
officer, saluting.
“Yes. How far have those
men marched?” The voice was kindly and approving.
“We’ve come twenty-six miles, sir.”
“Good. And I see no stragglers.”
“We allow no stragglers.”
“Better still. I haven’t
been able to keep my own men from straggling, and
you’ll have to teach them.”
At that moment the Acadian band began
to play, and it played the merriest waltz it knew.
Jackson gazed at it, took a lemon from his pocket
and began to suck the juice from it meditatively.
The officer stood before him in some embarrassment.
“Aren’t they rather thoughtless
for such serious work as war?” asked the Presbyterian
general.
“I am confident, sir, that their
natural gayety will not impair their value as soldiers.”
Jackson put the end of the lemon back
in his mouth and drew some juice from it. The
colonel bowed and retired. Then Jackson beckoned
to Harry, who stood by.
“Follow him and tell him,”
he said, “that the band can play as much as it
likes. I noticed, too, that it plays well.”
Jackson smiled and Harry hurried after
the officer, who flushed with gratification, when
the message was delivered to him.
“I’ll tell it to the men,”
he said, “and they’ll fight all the better
for it.”
That night it was a formidable army
that slept in the fields on either side of the turnpike,
and in the silence and the dark, Stonewall Jackson
was preparing to launch the thunderbolt.