ANTIETAM
Dick arose at the first flash of dawn.
All the men of the Winchester regiment were on their
feet. The officers had sent their horses to the
rear, knowing that they would be worse than useless
among the rocks and in the forest in front of them.
A mist arising from the two rivers
floated over everything, but Dick knew that the battle
was at hand. The Northern trumpets were calling,
and in the haze in front of them the Southern trumpets
were calling, too.
The fog lifted, and then Dick saw
the Confederate lines stretched through forest, rock
and ploughed ground. Near the front was a rail
fence with lines of skirmishers crouching behind it.
As the last bit of mist rolled away the fence became
a twisted line of flame. The fire of the Southern
skirmishers crashed in the Union ranks, and the Northern
skirmishers, pressing in on the right replied with
a fire equally swift and deadly. Then came the
roar of the Southern cannon, well aimed and tearing
gaps in the Union lines.
“Its time to charge!”
exclaimed Pennington. “It scares me, standing
still under the enemy’s fire, but I forget about
it when I’m rushing forward.”
The Winchester regiment did not move
for the present, although the battle thickened and
deepened about it. The fire of the Confederate
cannon was heavy and terrible, yet the Union masses
on either wing had begun to press forward. Hooker
hurled in two divisions, one under Meade, and one
under Doubleday, and another came up behind to support
them. The western men were here and remembering
how they had been decimated at Manassas, they fought
for revenge as well as patriotism.
At last the Winchester regiment in
the center moved forward also. They struck heavy
ploughed land, and as they struggled through it they
met a devastating fire. It seemed to Dick that
the last of the little regiment was about to be blown
away, but as he looked through the fire and smoke
he saw Warner and Pennington still by his side, and
the colonel a little ahead, waving his sword and shouting
orders that could not be heard.
Dick saw shining far before him the
white walls of the Dunkard church, and he was seized
with a frantic desire to reach it. It seemed
to him if they could get there that the victory would
be won. Yet they made little progress.
The cannon facing them fairly spouted fire, and thousands
of expert riflemen in front of them lying behind ridges
and among rocks and bushes sent shower after shower
of leaden balls that swept away the front ranks of
the charging Union lines. The shell and the shrapnel
and the grape and the round shot made a great noise,
but the little bullets coming in swarms like bees
were the true messengers of death.
Jackson and four thousand of his veterans
formed the thin line between the Dunkard church and
the Antietam. They were ragged and worn by war,
but they were the children of victory, led by a man
of genius, and they felt equal to any task.
Near Jackson stood his favorite young aide, Harry
Kenton, and on the other side was the thin regiment
of the Invincibles, led by Colonel Leonidas Talbot,
and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire.
Around the church itself were the
Texans under Hood, stalwart, sunburned men who could
ride like Comanches, some of whom when lads had been
present at San Jacinto, when the Texans struck with
such terrible might and success for liberty.
“Are we winning? Tell
me, that we are winning!” shouted Dick in Warner’s
ear.
“We’re not winning, but
we will! Confound that fog! It’s
coming up again!” Warner shouted back.
The heavy fog from the Potomac and
the Antietam which the early and burning sunrise had
driven away was drifting back, thickened by the smoke
from the cannon and rifles. The gray lines in
front disappeared and the church was hidden.
Yet the Northern artillery continued to pour a terrible
fire through the smoke toward the point where the Confederate
infantry had been posted.
Dick heard at the same time a tremendous
roar on the left, and he knew that the Union batteries
beyond the Antietam had opened a flanking fire on
the Southern army. He breathed a sigh of triumph.
McClellan, who could organize and prepare so well,
was aroused at last to such a point that he could
concentrate his full strength in battle itself, and
push home with all his might until able to snatch
the reward, victory. As the lad heard the supporting
guns across the Antietam, he suddenly found himself
shouting with all his might. His voice could
not be heard in the uproar, but he saw that the lips
of those about him were moving in like manner.
The two corps on the peninsula had
a good leader that morning. Hooker, fiery, impetuous,
scorning death, continually led his men to the attack.
The gaps in their ranks were closed up, and on they
went, infantry, cavalry and artillery. The fog
blew away again and they beheld once more the gray
lines of the Southerners, and the white wooden walls
of the church.
So fierce and overwhelming was the
Northern rush that all of Jackson’s men and
the Texans were borne back, and were driven from the
ridges and out of the woods. Exultant, the men
in blue followed, their roar of triumph swelling above
the thunder of the battle.
“Victory!” cried Dick, but Warner shouted:
“Look out!”
The keen eyes of the young Vermonter
had seen masses of infantry and cavalry on their flank.
Hooker, fierce and impetuous, had gone too far, and
now the Southern trumpets sang the charge. Stuart,
fiery and dauntless, his saber flashing, led his charging
horsemen, and Hill threw his infantry upon the Northern
flank.
It seemed to Dick that he was in a
huge volcano of fire and smoke. Men who, in their
calm moments, did not hate one another, glared into
hostile eyes. There was often actual physical
contact, and the flash from the cannon and rifles
blazed in Dick’s face. The Southerners
in front who had been driven back returned, and as
Stuart and Hill continued to beat hard upon their
flanks, the troops of Hooker were compelled to retreat.
Once more the white church faded in the mists and
smoke.
But Hooker and his generals rallied
their men and advanced anew. The ground around
the Dunkard church became one of the most sanguinary
places in all America. One side advanced and
then the other, and they continually reeled to and
fro. Even the young soldiers knew the immensity
of the stake. This was the open ground, elsewhere
the Antietam separated the fighting armies.
But victory here would decide the whole battle, and
the war, too. The Northern troops fought for
a triumph that would end all, and the Southern troops
for salvation.
So close and obstinate was the conflict
that colonels and generals themselves were in the
thick of it. Starke and Lawton of the South were
both killed. Mansfield, who led one of the Northern
army corps fell dead in the very front line, and the
valiant Hooker, caught in the arms of his soldiers,
was borne away so severely wounded that he could no
longer give orders.
Scarcely any generals were left on
either side, but the colonels and the majors and the
captains still led the men into the thick of the conflict.
Dick felt a terrible constriction. It was as
if some one were choking him with powerful hands,
and he strove for breath. He knew that the masses
pressed upon their flank by Stuart and Hill, were riddling
them through and through.
The Union men were giving ground,
slowly, it is true, and leaving heaps of dead and
wounded behind them, but nobody could stand the terrible
rifle fire that was raking them at short range from
side to side, and they were no longer able to advance.
Now Dick heard once more that terrible and triumphant
rebel yell, and it seemed to him that they were about
to be destroyed utterly, when shell and shot began
to shriek and whistle over their heads. The
woods behind them were alive with the blaze of fire,
and the great Union batteries were driving back the
triumphant and cheering Confederates.
The Union generals on the other side
of the Antietam saw the fate that was about to overtake
Hooker’s valiant men, and Sumner, with another
army corps, had crossed the river to the rescue, coming
just in time. They moved up to Hooker’s
men and the united masses returned to the charge.
The battle grew more desperate with
the arrival of fresh troops. Again it was charge
and repulse, charge and repulse, and the continuous
swaying to and fro by two combatants, each resolved
to win. There were the Union men who had forced
the passes through the mountains to reach this field,
and they were struggling to follow up those successes
by a victory far greater, and there were the Confederates
resolved upon another glorious success.
The fire became so tremendous that
the men could no longer hear orders. Here was
a field of ripe corn, the stems and blades higher than
a man’s head, forty acres or so, nearly a quarter
of a mile each way, but the corn soon ceased to hide
the combatants from one another. The fire from
the cannon and rifles came in such close sheets that
scarcely a stalk stood upright in that whole field.
Long this mighty conflict swayed back
and forth. Dick had seen nothing like it before,
not even at the Second Manassas. It was almost
hand to hand. Cannons were lost and retaken
by each side. Stuart, finding the ground too
rough for his cavalry, dismounted them and put them
at the guns. Jackson, with an eye that missed
nothing, called up Early’s brigade and hurled
it into the battle. The North replied with fresh
troops, and the combat was as much in doubt as ever.
Every brigade commander on the Southern side had
been killed or wounded. Nearly all the colonels
had fallen, but Jackson’s men still fought with
a fire and spirit that only such a leader as he could
inspire.
It seemed to Dick that the whole world
was on fire with the flash of cannon and rifles.
The roar and crash came from not only in front and
around him, but far down the side, where the main army
of McClellan was advancing directly upon the Antietam,
and the stone bridges which the Confederates had not
found time to tear down.
There stood Lee, supremely confident
that if his lieutenant, Jackson, could not hold the
Northern opening into the peninsula nobody could.
His men, who knew the desperate nature of the crisis,
said that they had never seen him more confident than
he was that day.
On the ridge just south of the village
was a huge limestone bowlder, and Lee, field glasses
in hand, stood on it. He listened a while to
the growing thunder of the battle in the north—the
Dunkard church, around which Jackson and Hooker were
fighting so desperately, was a mile away—
but he soon turned his attention to the blue masses
across the Antietam.
The Southern commander faced the Antietam
with the hard-hitting Longstreet on his right, his
left being composed of the forces of Jackson, already
in furious conflict. Nothing escaped him.
As he listened to the thunder of the dreadful battle
in the north, he never ceased to watch the great army
in front of him on the other side of the little river.
While Hooker and his men were fighting
with such desperate courage, why did not McClellan
and the main body of the Union army move forward to
the attack? Doubtless Lee asked himself this
question, and doubtless also he had gauged accurately
the mind of the Union leader, who always saw two or
even three enemies where but one stood. Relying
so strongly upon his judgment he dared to strip himself
yet further and send more men to Jackson. A
messenger brought him news that more of Jackson’s
men had come to his aid and that he was now holding
the whole line against the attacks of Meade and Hooker
and all the rest.
Lee nodded and turned his glasses
again toward the long blue line across the Antietam.
McClellan himself was there, standing on a hill and
also watching. Around him was a great division
under the command of Burnside, and his time to win
victory had come. He sent the order to Burnside
to move forward and force the Antietam. It is
said that at this moment Lee had only five thousand
men with him, all the rest having been sent to Jackson,
and, if so, time itself fought against the Union, as
it was a full two hours before Burnside carried out
his order and moved forward on the Antietam.
But Dick, on the north, did not know
that it was as yet only cannon fire, and not the charge
of troops to the south and west. In truth, he
knew little of his own part of the battle. Once
he was knocked down, but it was only the wind from
a cannon ball, and when he sprang to his feet and
drew a few long breaths he was as well as ever.
From muttered talk around him, talk
that he could hear under the thunder of the battle,
he learned that Sumner, who had come with the great
reinforcement, was now leading the battle, with Hooker
wounded and Mansfield dying.
Sumner, as brave and daring as any,
had gathered twenty thousand men, and they were advancing
in splendid order over the wreck of the dead and the
dying, apparently an irresistible force.
Jackson, standing at the edge of a
wood, saw the magnificent advance, and while the officers
around him despaired, he did not think of awaiting
the Northern attack, but prepared instead for an attack
of his own. There was word that McLaws and the
Harper’s Ferry men had come. Jackson galloped
to meet them, formed them quickly with his own, and
then the Southern drums rolled out the charge.
The weary veterans, gathering themselves anew for
another burst of strength, fell with all their might
on the Northern flank.
Dick felt the force of that charge.
Men seemed to be driven in upon him. He was
hurled down, how he knew not, but he sprang up again,
and then he saw that their advance was stopped.
Long lines of bayonets advanced upon them, and a
terrible artillery fire crashed through and through
their ranks. Two or three thousand men in blue
fell in a moment or so. Fortune in an instant
had made a terrible change of front.
Dick shouted aloud in despair as the
brigades steadily gave back. The great Union
batteries were firing over their heads again, but even
they could not arrest the Southern advance. Their
regiments were coming now across the shorn cornfield.
Dick saw the galloping horses drawing their batteries
up closer and around the flanks. And the rebel
yell of victory which he had heard too often was now
swelling from thousands of throats, as the fierce
sons of the South rushed upon their foe.
But the North refused to abandon the
battle here. These were splendid troops, so
tenacious and so much bent upon victory that they scarcely
needed leaders. Sedgwick, another of their gallant
generals, fell and was carried off the field, wounded
severely. Richardson, yet another, was killed
a little later, but heavy reinforcements arrived, and
the Southerners were driven back in their turn.
These were picked troops who met here,
veterans almost all of them, and neither would yield.
The superior weight and range of the Northern guns
gave them an advantage in artillery, and it was used
to the utmost. Dick did not see how men could
live under such a horrible fire, but there were the
gray lines replying, and wherever they yielded, yielding
but little.
Noon came and then one o’clock.
They had been fighting since dawn, and a combat so
impetuous and terrible could not be maintained forever,
particularly when the awful demon of war was eating
up men so fast. Many of the regiments on either
side had lost more than half their number and would
lose more. They were human beings, and even the
unwounded began to collapse from mere physical exhaustion.
Some dropped to the ground from sheer inability to
stand, and as they lay there, they heard to the south
and west the rolling thunder that told of Burnside’s
belated advance upon the Antietam.
Down where Lee stood watching, the
battle blazed up with extraordinary rapidity.
The men who had been held in leash so long by McClellan
were anxious to get at the foe. Burnside’s
brigades charged directly for one of the stone bridges,
and Lee, watching from his bowlder, hurried the Southern
troops forward to meet them. Again the Northern
artillery proved its worth. The great batteries
sent a hurricane of death over the heads of the men
in blue and toward the town of Sharpsburg. Despite
all the valor of the Southern veterans, the heavy
masses of the Union men forced their way across the
bridge to the peninsula. Lee’s batteries
and infantry regiments could not hold them.
It seemed now that Lee’s own
force was to be destroyed and that victory was won,
but fortune had in store yet another of those dazzling
recoveries for the South. At the very moment
when Lee seemed overwhelmed, A. P. Hill, as valiant
and vigorous as the other Hill, arrived with the last
of the Harper’s Ferry veterans, having marched
seventeen miles, almost on a dead run. They
crossed the Potomac at a ford below the mouth of the
Antietam, then crossed the Antietam on the lowest bridge
back into the peninsula, and without waiting for orders
rushed upon the Northern flank.
The attack was so sudden and fierce
that Burnside’s entire division reeled back.
Here, as in the north, the face of the battle had
been changed in an instant. Not only could Colonel
Winchester mourn over those lost two days, but he
could mourn over every lost half hour in them.
Had Hill come a half hour later Lee’s whole
center would have been swept away.
Lee and his great lieutenants, Jackson
and Longstreet, were still confident. Despite
the disparity in numbers they had beaten back every
attack.
A. P. Hill was a man who corresponded
in fire and impetuosity to Hooker. The number
of his veterans was not so great, but their rush was
so fierce, and they struck at such a critical time
that the Northern brigades were unable to hold the
ground they had gained. More troops from the
dying battle on the north came to Lee’s aid,
and every attempt of McClellan to take Sharpsburg
failed.
Dick, fighting with his comrades on
the north, knew little of what was passing on the
peninsula in the south, but he became conscious after
a while that the appalling fury of the battle around
him was diminishing. He had not seen such a desperate
hand-to-hand battle at either Shiloh or the Second
Manassas, and they were terrible enough. But
he felt as the Confederates themselves had felt, that
the Southern army was fighting for existence.
But as the day waned, Dick believed
that they would never be able to crush Jackson.
The Union troops always returned to the attack, but
the men in gray never failed to meet it, and actual
physical exhaustion overwhelmed the combatants.
Pennington went down, and Dick dragged him to his
feet, fearing that he was wounded mortally, but found
that his comrade had merely dropped through weakness.
The long day of heat and strife neared
its close. Neither Northern tenacity nor Southern
fire could win, and the sun began to droop over the
field piled so thickly with bodies. As the twilight
crept up the battle sank in all parts of the peninsula.
McClellan, who had lost those two most precious days,
and who had finally failed to make use of all his
numbers at the same time, now, great in preparation,
as usual, made ready for the emergency of the morrow.
All the powerful and improved artillery
which McClellan had in such abundance was brought
up. The mathematical minds and the workshops
of the North bore full fruit upon this sanguinary field
of Antietam. The shattered divisions of Hooker,
with which Dick and his comrades lay, were sheltered
behind a great line of artillery. No less than
thirty rifled guns of the latest and finest make were
massed in one battery to command the road by which
the South might attack.
To the south the Northern artillery
was equally strong, and beyond the Antietam also it
was massed in battery after battery to protect its
men.
But the coming twilight found both
sides too exhausted to move. The sun was setting
upon the fiercest single day’s fighting ever
seen in America. Nearly twenty-five thousand
dead or wounded lay upon the field. More than
one fourth of the Southern army was killed or wounded,
yet it was in Lee’s mind to attack on the morrow.
After night had come the weary Southern
generals—those left alive— reported
to Lee as he sat on his horse in the road. The
shadows gathered on his face, as they told of their
awful losses, and of the long list of high officers
killed or wounded. Jackson was among the last,
and he was gloomy. The man who had always insisted
upon battle did not insist upon it now. Hood
reported that his Texans, who had fought so valiantly
for the Dunkard church, were almost destroyed.
The scene in the darkness with the
awful battlefield around them was one which not even
the greatest of painters could have reproduced.
When the last general had told his tale of slaughter
and destruction, they sat for a while in silence.
They realized the smallness of their army, and the
immense extent of their losses. The light wind
that had sprung up swept over the dead faces of thousands
of the bravest men in the Southern army. They
had held their ground, but on the morrow McClellan
could bring into line three to one and an artillery
far superior alike in quality, weight and numbers
to theirs.
The strange, intense silence lasted.
Every eye was upon Lee. When the generals were
making their reports he had shown more emotion than
they had ever seen on his face before. Now he
was quiet, but he drew his lips close together, his
eyes shone with blue fire, and rising in his stirrups
he said:
“We will not cross the Potomac to-night, gentlemen.”
Then while they still waited in silence, he said:
“Go to your commands!
Reform and strengthen your lines. Collect all
your stragglers. Bring up every man who is in
the rear. If McClellan wants a battle again
in the morning, he shall have it. Now go!”
Not a general said a word in objection,
in fact, they did not speak at all, but rode slowly
away, every one to his command. Yet they were,
without exception, against the decision of their great
leader.
Even Stonewall Jackson did not want
a second battle. He had shown through the doubtful
conflict a most extraordinary calmness. While
the combat in the north, where he commanded, was at
its height, he had sat on Little Sorrel, now happily
restored to him, eating from time to time a peach
that he took from his pocket. Nothing had escaped
his observation; he watched every movement, and noticed
every rise and fall in the tide of success.
His silence now indicated that he concurred with the
others in his belief that the remains of the Confederate
army should withdraw across the Potomac, but his manner
indicated complete acquiescence in the decision of
his leader.
But in the north of the peninsula
the remnants of either side had scarce a thought to
bestow upon victory or defeat. It was a question
that did not concern them for the present, so utter
was their exhaustion. As night came and the
battle ceased they dropped where they were and sank
into sleep or a stupor that was deeper than sleep.
But Dick this time did neither.
His nervous system had been strained so severely
that it was impossible for him to keep still.
He had found that all of his friends had received
wounds, although they were too slight to put them
out of action. But the Winchester regiment had
suffered terribly again. It did not have a hundred
men left fit for service, and even at that it had
got off better than some others. In one of the
Virginia regiments under Longstreet only fourteen men
had been left unhurt.
Dick stood beside his colonel—Warner
and Pennington were lying in a stupor—and
he was appalled. The battle had been fought within
a narrow area, and the tremendous destruction was
visible in the moonlight, heaped up everywhere.
Colonel Winchester was as much shaken as he, and
the two, the man and the boy, walked toward the picket
line, drawn by a sort of hideous fascination, as they
looked upon the area of conflict.
The dead lay in windrows between the
two armies which were waiting to fight on the dawn.
Dick and the colonel walked toward the field where
the corn had been waving high that morning, and where
it was now mown by cannon and rifles to the last stalk.
In the edge of the wood the boy paused and grasping
the man suddenly by the arm pulled him back.
“Look! Look!” he
exclaimed in a sharp whisper. “The Confederate
skirmishers! The woods are full of them!
They are making ready for a night attack!”
Both he and Colonel Winchester sprang back behind
a big tree, sheltering themselves from a possible
shot. But no sound came, not even that of men
creeping forward through the undergrowth. All
they heard was the moaning of the wind through the
foliage. They waited, and then the two looked
at each other. The true reason for the extraordinary
silence had occurred to both at the same instant, and
they stepped from the shelter of the tree.
Awed and appalled, the man and the
boy gazed at the silent forms which lay row on row
in the woods and in the shorn cornfield. It seemed
as if they slept, but Dick knew that all were dead.
He and Colonel Winchester gazed again at each other
and shuddering turned away lest they disturb the sleep
of the dead.
When they returned to a position behind
the guns they heard others coming in with equally
terrible tales. A sunken lane that ran between
the hostile lines was filled to the brim with dead.
Boys, yet in their teens, with nerves completely
shattered for the time, chattered hysterically of
what they had seen. The Antietam was still running
red. Both Lee and Stonewall Jackson had been
killed and the whole Confederate army would be taken
in the morning. Some said, on the other hand,
that the Southerners still had a hundred thousand
men, and that McClellan would certainly be beaten
the next day, if he did not retreat in time.
None of the talk, either of victory
or defeat, made any impression upon Dick. His
senses were too much dulled by all through which he
had gone. Words no longer meant anything.
Although the night was warm he began to shiver, as
if he were seized with a chill.
“Lie down, Dick,” said
Colonel Winchester, who noticed him. “I
don’t think you can stand it any longer.
Here, under this tree will do.”
Dick threw himself down and Colonel
Winchester, finding a blanket, spread it over him.
Then the boy closed his eyes, and, for a while, phase
after phase of the terrible conflict passed before
him. He could see the white wall of the Dunkard
church, the Bloody Lane, and most ghastly of all,
those dead men in rows lying on their arms, like regiments
asleep, but his nerves grew quiet at last, and after
midnight he slept.
Dawn came and found the two armies
ready. Dick and the sad remnant of the Winchester
regiment rose to their feet. Although food had
been prepared for them very few in all these brigades
had touched a bite the night before, sinking into
sleep or stupor before it could be brought to them.
But now they ate hungrily while they watched for their
foes, the skirmishers of either army already being
massed in front to be ready for any movement by the
other.
As on the morning before, a mist arose
from the Potomac and the Antietam. The sun, bright
and hot, soon dispersed it. But there was no
movement by either army. Dick did not hear the
sound of a single shot. Warner and Pennington,
recovered from their stupor, stood beside him gazing
southward toward the rocks and ridges, where the Confederate
army lay.
“I’m thinking,”
said Warner, “that they’re just as much
exhausted as we are. We’re waiting for
an attack, and they’re waiting for the same.
The odds are at least ninety per cent in favor of my
theory. Their losses are something awful, and
I don’t think they can do anything against us.
Look how our batteries are massed for them.”
Dick was watching through his glasses,
and even with their aid he could see no movement within
the Southern lines. Hours passed and still neither
army stirred. McClellan counted his tremendous
losses, and he, too, preferred to await attack rather
than offer it. His old obsession that his enemy
was double his real strength seized him, and he was
not willing to risk his army in a second rush upon
Lee.
While Dick and his comrades were waiting
through the long morning hours, Lee and Jackson and
his other lieutenants were deciding whether or not
they should make an attack of their own. But
when they studied with their glasses the Northern
lines and the great batteries, they decided that it
would be better not to try it.
When noon came and still no shot had
been fired, Colonel Winchester shook his head.
“We might yet destroy the Southern
army,” he said to Dick, “but I’m
convinced that General McClellan will not move it.”
The hot afternoon passed, and then
the night came with the sound of rumbling wheels and
marching men. Dick surmised that Lee was leaving
the peninsula, and, crossing the Potomac in to Virginia,
and that therefore tactical victory would rest with
the Northern side. The noises continued all
night long, but McClellan made no advance, nor did
he do so the next day, while the whole Confederate
army was crossing the Potomac, until nearly night.
But the Winchester regiment and several
more of the same skeleton character, pushing forward
a little on the morning of that day, found that the
last Confederate soldier was gone from Sharpsburg.
Colonel Winchester and other officers were eager
for the Army of the Potomac to attack the Army of
Northern Virginia, while it dragged itself across the
wide and dangerous ford.
But McClellan delayed again, and it
was sunset when Dick saw the first sign of action.
A strong division with cannon crossed the river and
attacked the batteries which were covering the Southern
rearguard. Four guns and prisoners were taken,
but when Lee heard of it he sent back Jackson, who
beat off all pursuit.
Dick and his comrades did not see
this last fight, which was the dying echo of Antietam.
They felt that they had defeated the enemy’s
purpose, but they did not rejoice over any victory.
The sword of Antietam had turned back Lee and Jackson
for a time and perhaps had saved the Union, but Dick
was gloomy and depressed that so little had been won
when they seemed to hold so much in the hollow of
their hands.
This feeling spread through the whole
army, and the privates, even, talked of it openly.
Nobody could forget those precious two days lost
before the battle. Orders No. 191 had put all
the cards in their hands, but the commander had not
played them.
“I feel that we’ve really
failed,” said Warner, as they sat beside a camp
fire. “The Southerners certainly fought
like demons, but we ought to have been there long
before Jackson came, and we ought to have whipped
them, even after Jackson did come.”
“But we didn’t,”
said Pennington, “and so we’ve got the
job to do all over again. You know, George,
we’re bound to win.”
“Of course, Frank; but while
we’re doing it the country is being ripped to
pieces. I’ll never quit mourning over that
lost chance at Antietam.”
“At any rate we came off better
than at the Second Manassas,” said Dick.
“What’s ahead of us now?”
“I don’t know,”
replied Warner. “I saw Shepard yesterday,
and he says that the Southerners are recuperating
in Virginia. We need restoratives ourselves,
and I don’t suppose we’ll have any important
movements along this line for a while.”
“But there’ll be big fighting somewhere,”
said Dick.