CHAPTER I
CEDAR MOUNTAIN
The first youth rode to the crest
of the hill, and, still sitting on his horse, examined
the country in the south with minute care through a
pair of powerful glasses. The other two dismounted
and waited patiently. All three were thin and
their faces were darkened by sun and wind. But
they were strong alike of body and soul. Beneath
the faded blue uniforms brave hearts beat and powerful
muscles responded at once to every command of the
will.
“What do you see, Dick?”
asked Warner, who leaned easily against his horse,
with one arm over the pommel of his saddle.
“Hills, valleys, mountains,
the August heat shimmering over all, but no human
being.”
“A fine country,” said
young Pennington, “and I like to look at it,
but just now my Nebraska prairie would be better for
us. We could at least see the advance of Stonewall
Jackson before he was right on top of us.”
Dick took another long look, searching
every point in the half circle of the south with his
glasses. Although burned by summer the country
was beautiful, and neither heat nor cold could take
away its picturesqueness. He saw valleys in which
the grass grew thick and strong, clusters of hills
dotted with trees, and then the blue loom of mountains
clothed heavily with foliage. Over everything
bent a dazzling sky of blue and gold.
The light was so intense that with
his glasses he could pick out individual trees and
rocks on the far slopes. He saw an occasional
roof, but nowhere did he see man. He knew the
reason, but he had become so used to his trade that
at the moment, he felt no sadness. All this
region had been swept by great armies. Here the
tide of battle in the mightiest of all wars had rolled
back and forth, and here it was destined to surge
again in a volume increasing always.
“I don’t find anything,”
repeated Dick, “but three pairs of eyes are
better than none. George, you take the glasses
and see what you can see and Frank will follow.”
He dismounted and stood holding the
reins of his horse while the young Vermonter looked.
He noticed that the mathematical turn of Warner’s
mind showed in every emergency. He swept the
glasses back and forth in a regular curve, not looking
here and now there, but taking his time and missing
nothing. It occurred to Dick that he was a type
of his region, slow but thorough, and sure to win
after defeat.
“What’s the result of
your examination?” asked Dick as Warner passed
the glasses in turn to Pennington.
“Let x equal what I saw, which
is nothing. Let y equal the result I draw, which
is nothing. Hence we have x + y which still equals
nothing.”
Pennington was swifter in his examination.
The blood in his veins flowed a little faster than
Warner’s.
“I find nothing but land and
water,” he said without waiting to be asked,
“and I’m disappointed. I had a hope,
Dick, that I’d see Stonewall Jackson himself
riding along a slope.”
“Even if you saw him, how would
you know it was Stonewall?”
“I hadn’t thought of that.
We’ve heard so much of him that it just seemed
to me I’d know him anywhere.”
“Same here,” said Warner.
“Remember all the tales we’ve heard about
his whiskers, his old slouch hat and his sorrel horse.”
“I’d like to see him myself,”
confessed Dick. “From all we hear he’s
the man who kept McClellan from taking Richmond.
He certainly played hob with the plans of our generals.
You know, I’ve got a cousin, Harry Kenton,
with him. I had a letter from him a week ago—passing
through the lines, and coming in a round-about way.
Writes as if he thought Stonewall Jackson was a demigod.
Says we’d better quit and go home, as we haven’t
any earthly chance to win this war.”
“He fights best who wins last,”
said Warner. “I’m thinking I won’t
see the green hills of Vermont for a long time yet,
because I mean to pay a visit to Richmond first.
Have you got your cousin’s letter with you,
Dick?”
“No, I destroyed it. I
didn’t want it bobbing up some time or other
to cause either of us trouble. A man I know
at home says he’s kept out of a lot of trouble
by ‘never writin’ nothin’ to nobody.’
And if you do write a letter the next best thing
is to burn it as quick as you can.”
“If my eyes tell the truth,
and they do,” said Pennington, “here comes
a short, thick man riding a long, thick horse and he—the
man, not the horse—bears a startling resemblance
to our friend, ally, guide and sometime mentor, Sergeant
Daniel Whitley.”
“Yes, it’s the sergeant,”
said Dick, looking down into the valley, “and
I’m glad he’s joining us. Do you
know, boys, I often think these veteran sergeants
know more than some of our generals.”
“It’s not an opinion.
It’s a fact,” said Warner. “Hi,
there, sergeant! Here are your friends!
Come up and make the same empty report that we’ve
got ready for the colonel.”
Sergeant Daniel Whitley looked at
the three lads, and his face brightened. He
had a good intellect under his thatch of hair, and
a warm heart within his strong body. The boys,
although lieutenants, and he only a sergeant in the
ranks, treated him usually as an equal and often as
a superior.
Colonel Winchester’s regiment
and the remains of Colonel Newcomb’s Pennsylvanians
had been sent east after the defeat of the Union army
at the Seven Days, and were now with Pope’s
Army of Virginia, which was to hold the valley and
also protect Washington. Grant’s success
at Shiloh had been offset by McClellan’s failure
before Richmond, and the President and his Cabinet
at Washington were filled with justifiable alarm.
Pope was a western man, a Kentuckian, and he had insisted
upon having some of the western troops with him.
The sergeant rode his horse slowly
up the slope, and joined the lads over whom he watched
like a father.
“And what have the hundred eyes
of Argus beheld?” asked Warner.
“Argus?” said the sergeant.
“I don’t know any such man. Name
sounds queer, too.”
“He belongs to a distant and
mythical past, sergeant, but he’d be mighty
useful if we had him here. If even a single one
of his hundred eyes were to light on Stonewall Jackson,
it would be a great service.”
The sergeant shook his head and looked
reprovingly at Warner.
“It ain’t no time for jokin’,”
he said.
“I was never further from it.
It seems to me that we need a lot of Arguses more
than anything else. This is the enemy’s
country, and we hear that Stonewall Jackson is advancing.
Advancing where, from what and when? There
is no Argus to tell. The country supports a fairly
numerous population, but it hasn’t a single
kind or informing word for us. Is Stonewall Jackson
going to drop from the sky, which rumor says is his
favorite method of approach?”
“He’s usin’ the
solid ground this time, anyway,” said Sergeant
Daniel Whitley. “I’ve been eight
miles farther south, an’ if I didn’t see
cavalry comin’ along the skirt of a ridge, then
my eyes ain’t any friends of mine. Then
I came through a little place of not more’n five
houses. No men there, just women an’ children,
but when I looked back I saw them women an’
children, too, grinnin’ at me. That means
somethin’, as shore as we’re livin’
an’ breathin’. I’m bettin’
that we new fellows from the west will get acquainted
with Stonewall Jackson inside of twenty-four hours.”
“You don’t mean that?
It’s not possible!” exclaimed Dick, startled.
“Why, when we last heard of Jackson he was so
far south we can’t expect him in a week!”
“You’ve heard that they
call his men the foot cavalry,” said the sergeant
gravely, “an’ I reckon from all I’ve
learned since I come east that they’ve won the
name fair an’ true. See them woods off
to the south there. See the black line they
make ag’inst the sky. I know, the same
as if I had seen him, that Stonewall Jackson is down
in them forests, comin’ an’ comin’
fast.”
The sergeant’s tone was ominous,
and Dick felt a tingling at the roots of his hair.
The western troops were eager to meet this new Southern
phenomenon who had suddenly shot like a burning star
across the sky, but for the first time there was apprehension
in his soul. He had seen but little of the new
general, Pope, but he had read his proclamations and
he had thought them bombastic. He talked lightly
of the enemy and of the grand deeds that he was going
to do. Who was Pope to sweep away such men as
Lee and Jackson with mere words!
Dick longed for Grant, the stern,
unyielding, unbeatable Grant whom he had known at
Shiloh. In the west the Union troops had felt
the strong hand over them, and confidence had flowed
into them, but here they were in doubt. They
felt that the powerful and directing mind was absent.
Silence fell upon them all for a little
space, while the four gazed intently into the south,
strange fears assailing everyone. Dick never
doubted that the Union would win. He never doubted
it then and he never doubted it afterward, through
all the vast hecatomb when the flag of the Union fell
more than once in terrible defeat.
But their ignorance was mystifying
and oppressive. They saw before them the beautiful
country, the hills and valleys, the forest and the
blue loom of the mountains, so much that appealed
to the eye, and yet the horizon, looking so peaceful
in the distance, was barbed with spears. Jackson
was there! The sergeant’s theory had become
conviction with them. Distance had been nothing
to him. He was at hand with a great force, and
Lee with another army might fall at any time upon their
flank, while McClellan was isolated and left useless,
far away.
Dick’s heart missed a beat or
two, as he saw the sinister picture that he had created
in his own mind. Highly imaginative, he had leaped
to the conclusion that Lee and Jackson meant to trap
the Union army, the hammer beating it out on the anvil.
He raised the glasses to his eyes, surveyed the forests
in the South once more, and then his heart missed another
beat.
He had caught the flash of steel,
the sun’s rays falling across a bayonet or a
polished rifle barrel. And then as he looked
he saw the flash again and again. He handed
the glasses to Warner and said quietly:
“George, I see troops on the
edge of that far hill to the south and the east.
Can’t you see them, too?”
“Yes, I can make them out clearly
now, as they pass across a bit of open land.
They’re Confederate cavalry, two hundred at
least, I should say.”
Dick learned long afterward that it
was the troop of Sherburne, but, for the present,
the name of Sherburne was unknown to him. He
merely felt that this was the vanguard of Jackson
riding forward to set the trap. The men were
now so near that they could be seen with the naked
eye, and the sergeant said tersely:
“At last we’ve seen what we were afraid
we would see.”
“And look to the left also,”
said Warner, who still held the glasses. “There’s
a troop of horse coming up another road, too.
By George, they’re advancing at a trot!
We’d better clear out or we may be enclosed
between the two horns of their cavalry.”
“We’ll go back to our
force at Cedar Run,” said Harry, “and report
what we’ve seen. As you say, George, there’s
no time to waste.”
The four mounted and rode fast, the
dust of the road flying in a cloud behind their horses’
heels. Dick felt that they had fulfilled their
errand, but he had his doubts how their news would
be received. The Northern generals in the east
did not seem to him to equal those of the west in
keenness and resolution, while the case was reversed
so far as the Southern generals were concerned.
But fast as they went the Southern
cavalry was coming with equal speed. They continually
saw the flash of arms in both east and west.
The force in the west was the nearer of the two.
Not only was Sherburne there, but Harry Kenton was
with him, and besides their own natural zeal they
had all the eagerness and daring infused into them
by the great spirit and brilliant successes of Jackson.
“They won’t be able to
enclose us between the two horns of their horsemen,”
said Sergeant Whitley, whose face was very grave, “and
the battle won’t be to-morrow or the next day.”
“Why not? I thought Jackson was swift,”
said Warner.
“Cause it will be fought to-day.
I thought Jackson was swift, too, but he’s
swifter than I thought. Them feet cavalry of
his don’t have to change their name. Look
into the road comin’ up that narrow valley.”
The eyes of the three boys followed
his pointing finger, and they now saw masses of infantry,
men in gray pressing forward at full speed. They
saw also batteries of cannon, and Dick almost fancied
he could hear the rumble of their wheels.
“Looks as if the sergeant was
right,” said Pennington. “Stonewall
Jackson is here.”
They increased their speed to a gallop,
making directly for Cedar Run, a cold, clear little
stream coming out of the hills. It was now about
the middle of the morning and the day was burning hot
and breathless. Their hearts began to pound with
excitement, and their breath was drawn painfully through
throats lined with dust.
A long ridge covered with forest rose
on one side of them and now they saw the flash of
many bayonets and rifle barrels along its lowest slope.
Another heavy column of infantry was advancing, and
presently they heard the far note of trumpets calling
to one another.
“Their whole army is in touch,”
said the sergeant. “The trumpets show
it. Often on the plains, when we had to divide
our little force into detachments, they’d have
bugle talk with one another. We must go faster
if we can.”
They got another ounce of strength
out of their horses, and now they saw Union cavalry
in front. In a minute or two they were among
the blue horsemen, giving the hasty news of Jackson’s
advance. Other scouts and staff officers arrived
a little later with like messages, and not long afterward
they heard shots behind them telling them that the
hostile pickets were in touch.
They watered their horses in Cedar
Run, crossed it and rejoined their own regiment under
Colonel Arthur Winchester. The colonel was thin,
bronzed and strong, and he, too, like the other new
men from the West, was eager for battle with the redoubtable
Jackson.
“What have you seen, Dick?”
he exclaimed. “Is it a mere scouting force
of cavalry, or is Jackson really at hand?”
“I think it’s Jackson
himself. We saw heavy columns coming up.
They were pressing forward, too, as if they meant
to brush aside whatever got in their way.”
“Then we’ll show them!”
exclaimed Colonel Winchester. “We’ve
only seven thousand men here on Cedar Run, but Banks,
who is in immediate command, has been stung deeply
by his defeats at the hands of Jackson, and he means
a fight to the last ditch. So does everybody
else.”
Dick, at that moment, the thrill of
the gallop gone, was not so sanguine. The great
weight of Jackson’s name hung over him like a
sinister menace, and the Union troops on Cedar Run
were but seven thousand. The famous Confederate
leader must have at least three times that number.
Were the Union forces, separated into several armies,
to be beaten again in detail? Pope himself should
be present with at least fifty thousand men.
Their horses had been given to an
orderly and Dick threw himself upon the turf to rest
a little. All along the creek the Union army,
including his own regiment, was forming in line of
battle but his colonel had not yet called upon him
for any duty. Warner and Pennington were also
resting from their long and exciting ride, but the
sergeant, who seemed never to know fatigue, was already
at work with his men.
“Listen to those skirmishers,”
said Dick. “It sounds like the popping
of corn at home on winter evenings, when I was a little
boy.”
“But a lot more deadly,”
said Pennington. “I wouldn’t like
to be a skirmisher. I don’t mind firing
into the smoke and the crowd, but I’d hate to
sit down behind a stump or in the grass and pick out
the spot on a man that I meant for my bullet to hit.”
“You won’t have to do
any such work, Frank,” said Warner. “Hark
to it! The sergeant was right. We’re
going to have a battle to-day and a big one.
The popping of your corn, Dick, has become an unbroken
sound.”
Dick, from the crest of the hillock
on which they lay, gazed over the heads of the men
in blue. The skirmishers were showing a hideous
activity. A continuous line of light ran along
the front of both armies, and behind the flash of
the Southern firing he saw heavy masses of infantry
emerging from the woods. A deep thrill ran through
him. Jackson, the famous, the redoubtable, the
unbeatable, was at hand with his army. Would
he remain unbeaten? Dick said to himself, in
unspoken words, over and over again, “No!
No! No! No!” He and his comrades
had been victors in the west. They must not
fail here.
Colonel Winchester now called to them,
and mounting their horses they gathered around him
to await his orders. These officers, though mere
boys, learned fast. Dick knew enough already
of war to see that they were in a strong position.
Before them flowed the creek. On their flank
and partly in their front was a great field of Indian
corn. A quarter of a mile away was a lofty ridge
on which were posted Union guns with gunners who knew
so well how to use them. To right and left ran
the long files of infantry, their faces white but
resolute.
“I think,” said Dick to
Warner, “that if Jackson passes over this place
he will at least know that we’ve been here.”
“Yes, he’ll know it, and
besides he’ll make quite a halt before passing.
At least, that’s my way of thinking.”
There was a sudden dying of the rifle
fire. The Union skirmishers were driven in,
and they fell back on the main body which was silent,
awaiting the attack. Dick was no longer compelled
to use the glasses. He saw with unaided eye
the great Southern columns marching forward with the
utmost confidence, heavy batteries advancing between
the regiments, ready at command to sweep the Northern
ranks with shot and shell.
Dick shivered a little. He could
not help it. They were face to face with Jackson,
and he was all that the heralds of fame had promised.
He had eye enough to see that the Southern force was
much greater than their own, and, led by such a man,
how could they fail to win another triumph?
He looked around upon the army in blue, but he did
not see any sign of fear. Both the beaten and
the unbeaten were ready for a new battle.
There was a mighty crash from the
hill and the Northern batteries poured a stream of
metal into the advancing ranks of their foe.
The Confederate advance staggered,
but, recovering itself, came on again. A tremendous
cheer burst from the ranks of the lads in blue.
Stonewall Jackson with all his skill and fame was
before them, but they meant to stop him. Numbers
were against them, and Banks, their leader, had been
defeated already by Jackson, but they meant to stop
him, nevertheless.
The Southern guns replied. Posted
along the slopes of Slaughter Mountain, sinister of
name, they sent a sheet of death upon the Union ranks.
But the regiments, the new and the old, stood firm.
Those that had been beaten before by Jackson were
resolved not to be beaten again by him, and the new
regiments from the west, one or two of which had been
at Shiloh, were resolved never to be beaten at all.
“The lads are steady,”
said Colonel Winchester. “It’s a
fine sign. I’ve news, too, that two thousand
men have come up. We shall now have nine thousand
with which to withstand the attack, and I don’t
believe they can drive us away. Oh, why isn’t
Pope himself here with his whole army? Then
we could wipe Jackson off the face of the earth!”
But Pope was not there. The
commander of a huge force, the man of boastful words
who was to do such great things, the man who sent such
grandiloquent dispatches from “Headquarters in
the Saddle,” to the anxious Lincoln at Washington,
had strung his numerous forces along in detachments,
just as the others had done before him, and the booming
of Jackson’s cannon attacking the Northern vanguard
with his whole army could not reach ears so far away.
The fire now became heavy along the
whole Union front. All the batteries on both
sides were coming into action, and the earth trembled
with the rolling crash. The smoke rose and hung
in clouds over the hills, the valley and the cornfield.
The hot air, surcharged with dust, smoke and burned
gunpowder, was painful and rasping to the throat.
The frightful screaming of the shells filled the
air, and then came the hissing of the bullets like
a storm of sleet.
Colonel Winchester and his staff dismounted,
giving their horses to an orderly who led them to
the rear. Horses would not be needed for the
present, at least, and they had learned to avoid needless
risk.
The attack was coming closer, and
the bullets as they swept through their ranks found
many victims. Colonel Winchester ordered his
regiment to kneel and open fire, being held hitherto
in reserve. Dick snatched up a rifle from a
soldier who had fallen almost beside him, and he saw
that Warner and Pennington had equipped themselves
in like fashion.
A strong gust of wind lifted the smoke
before them a little. Dick saw many splashes
of water on the surface of the creek where bullets
struck, and there were many tiny spurts of dust in
the road, where other bullets fell. Then he
saw beyond the dark masses of the Southern infantry.
It seemed to him that they were strangely close.
He believed that he could see their tanned faces,
one by one, and their vengeful eyes, but it was only
fancy.
The next instant the signal was given,
and the regiment fired as one. There was a long
flash of fire, a tremendous roaring in Dick’s
ears, then for an instant or two a vast cloud of smoke
hid the advancing gray mass. When it was lifted
a moment later the men in gray were advancing no longer.
Their ranks were shattered and broken, the ground
was covered with the fallen and the others were reeling
back.
“We win! We win!”
shouted Pennington, wild with enthusiasm.
“For the present, at least,”
said Warner, a deep flush blazing in either cheek.
There was no return fire just then
from that point, and the smoke lifted a little more.
Above the crash of the battle which raged fiercely
on either flank, they heard the notes of a trumpet
rising, loud, clear, and distinct from all other sounds.
Dick knew that it was a rallying call, and then he
heard Pennington utter a wild shout.
“I see him! I see him!”
he cried. “It’s old Stonewall himself!
There on the hillock, on the little horse!”
The vision was but for an instant.
Dick gazed with all his eyes, and he saw several
hundred yards away a thickset man on a sorrel horse.
He was bearded and he stooped a little, seeming to
bend an intense gaze upon the Northern lines.
There was no time for anyone to fire,
because in a few seconds the smoke came back, a huge,
impenetrable curtain, and hid the man and the hillock.
But Dick had not the slightest doubt that it was the
great Southern leader, and he was right. It
was Stonewall Jackson on the hillock, rallying his
men, and Dick’s own cousin, Harry Kenton, rode
by his side.
They reloaded, but a staff officer
galloped up and delivered a written order to Colonel
Winchester. The whole regiment left the line,
another less seasoned taking its place, and they marched
off to one flank, where a field of wheat lately cut,
and a wood on the extreme end, lay before them.
Behind them they heard the battle swelling anew, but
Dick knew that a new force of the foe was coming here,
and he felt proud that his own regiment had been moved
to meet an attack which would certainly be made with
the greatest violence.
“Who are those men down in the
wheat-field?” asked Pennington.
“Our own skirmishers,”
replied Warner. “See them running forward,
hiding behind the shocks of straw and firing!”
The riflemen were busy. They
fired from the shelter of every straw stack in the
field, and they stung the new Southern advance, which
was already showing its front. Southern guns
now began to search the wheat field. A shell
struck squarely in the center of one of the shocks
behind which three Northern skirmishers were kneeling.
Dick saw the straw fly into the air as if picked
up by a whirlwind. When it settled back it lay
in scattered masses and three dark figures lay with
it, motionless and silent. He shuddered and
looked away.
The edge of the wood was now lined
with Southern infantry, and on their right flank was
a numerous body of cavalry. Officers were waving
their swords aloft, leading the men in person to the
charge.
“The attack will be heavy here,”
said Colonel Winchester. “Ah, there are
our guns firing over our heads. We need ’em.”
The Southern cannon were more numerous,
but the Northern guns, posted well on the hill, refused
to be silenced. Some of them were dismounted
and the gunners about them were killed, but the others,
served with speed and valor, sprayed the whole Southern
front with a deadly shower of steel.
It was this welcome metal that Dick
and his comrades heard over their heads, and then
the trumpets rang a shrill note of defiance along the
whole line. Banks, remembering his bitter defeats
and resolved upon victory now, was not awaiting the
attack. He would make it himself.
The whole wing lifted itself up and
rushed through the wheat field, firing as they charged.
The cannon were pushed forward and poured in volleys
as fast as the gunners could load and discharge them.
Dick felt the ground reeling beneath his feet, but
he knew that they were advancing and that the enemy
was giving way again. Stonewall Jackson and his
generals felt a certain hardening of the Northern resistance
that day. The recruits in blue were becoming
trained now. They did not break in a panic,
although their lines were raked through and through
by the Southern shells. New men stepped in the
place of the fallen, and the lines, filled up, came
on again.
The Northern wing charging through
the wheat field continued to bear back the enemy.
Jackson was not yet able to stop the fierce masses
in blue. A formidable body of men issuing from
the Northern side of the wood charged with the bayonet,
pushing the charge home with a courage and a recklessness
of death that the war had not yet seen surpassed.
The Southern rifles and cannon raked them, but they
never stopped, bursting like a tornado upon their
foe.
One of Jackson’s Virginia regiments
gave way and then another. The men in blue from
the wood and Colonel Winchester’s regiment joined,
their shouts rising above the smoke while they steadily
pushed the enemy before them.
Dick as he shouted with the rest felt
a wild exultation. They were showing Jackson
what they could do! They were proving to him
that he could not win always. His joy was warranted.
No such confusion had ever before existed in Jackson’s
army. The Northern charge was driven like a
wedge of steel into its ranks.
Jackson had able generals, valiant
lieutenants, with him, Ewell and Early, and A. P.
Hill and Winder, and they strove together to stop the
retreat. The valiant Winder was mortally wounded
and died upon the field, and Jackson, with his wonderful
ability to see what was happening and his equal power
of decision, swiftly withdrew that wing of his army,
also carrying with it every gun.
A great shout of triumph rose from
the men in blue as they saw the Southern retreat.
“We win! We win!” cried Pennington
again.
“Yes, we win!” shouted Warner, usually
so cool.
And it did seem even to older men
that the triumph was complete. The blue and
the gray were face to face in the smoke, but the gray
were driven back by the fierce and irresistible charge,
and, as their flight became swifter, the shells and
grape from the Northern batteries plunged and tore
through their ranks. Nothing stopped the blue
wave. It rolled on and on, sweeping a mass of
fugitives before it, and engulfing others.
Dick had no ordered knowledge of the
charge. He was a part of it, and he saw only
straight in front of him, but he was conscious that
all around him there was a fiery red mist, and a confused
and terrible noise of shouting and firing. But
they were winning! They were beating Stonewall
Jackson himself. His pulses throbbed so hard
that he thought his arteries would burst, and his
lips were dry and blackened from smoke, burned gunpowder
and his own hot breath issuing like steam between them.
Then came a halt so sudden and terrible
that it shook Dick as if by physical contact.
He looked around in wonder. The charge was spent,
not from its lack of strength but because they had
struck an obstacle. They had reckoned ill, because
they had not reckoned upon all the resources of Stonewall
Jackson’s mind. He had stemmed the rout
in person and now he was pushing forward the Stonewall
Brigade, five regiments, which always had but two
alternatives, to conquer or to die. Hill and
Ewell with fresh troops were coming up also on his
flanks, and now the blue and the gray, face to face
again, closed in mortal combat.
“We’ve stopped!
We’ve stopped! Do you hear it, we’ve
stopped!” exclaimed Pennington, his face a ghastly
reek of dust and perspiration, his eyes showing amazement
and wonder how the halt could have happened.
Dick shared in the terrible surprise. The fire
in front of him deepened suddenly. Men were
struck down all about him. Heavy masses of troops
in gray showed through the smoke. The Stonewall
Brigade was charging, and regiments were charging
with it on either side.
The column in blue was struck in front
and on either flank. It not only ceased its
victorious advance, but it began to give ground.
The men could not help it, despite their most desperate
efforts. It seemed to Dick that the earth slipped
under their feet. A tremendous excitement seized
him at the thought of victory lost just when it seemed
won. He ran up and down the lines, shouting to
the men to stand firm. He saw that the senior
officers were doing the same, but there was little
order or method in his own movements. It was
the excitement and bitter humiliation that drove him
on.
He stumbled in the smoke against Sergeant
Whitley. The sergeant’s forehead had been
creased by a bullet, but so much dust and burned gunpowder
had gathered upon it that it was as black as the face
of a black man.
“Are we to lose after all?” exclaimed
Dick.
It seemed strange to him, even at
that moment, that he should hear his own voice amid
such a roar of cannon and rifles. But it was
an undernote, and he heard with equal ease the sergeant’s
reply:
“It ain’t decided yet,
Mr. Mason, but we’ve got to fight as we never
fought before.”
The Union men, both those who had
faced Jackson before and those who were now meeting
him for the first time, fought with unsurpassed valor,
but, unequal in numbers, they saw the victory wrenched
from their grasp. Jackson now had his forces
in the hollow of his hand. He saw everything
that was passing, and with the mind of a master he
read the meaning of it. He strengthened his
own weak points and increased the attack upon those
of the North.
Dick remained beside the sergeant.
He had lost sight of Colonel Winchester, Warner and
Pennington in the smoke and the dreadful confusion,
but he saw well enough that his fears were coming true.
The attack in front increased in violence,
and the Northern army was also attacked with fiery
energy on both flanks. The men had the actual
physical feeling that they were enclosed in the jaws
of a vise, and, forced to abandon all hope of victory,
they fought now to escape. Two small squadrons
of cavalry, scarce two hundred in number, sent forward
from a wood, charged the whole Southern army under
a storm of cannon and rifle fire. They equalled
the ride of the Six Hundred at Balaklava, but with
no poet to celebrate it, it remained like so many
other charges in this war, an obscure and forgotten
incident.
Dick saw the charge of the horsemen,
and the return of the few. Then he lost hope.
Above the roar of the battle the rebel yell continually
swelled afresh. The setting sun, no longer golden
but red, cast a sinister light over the trampled wheat
field, the slopes and the woods torn by cannon balls.
The dead and the wounded lay in thousands, and Banks,
brave and tenacious, but with bitter despair in his
heart, was seeking to drag the remains of his army
from that merciless vise which continued to close
down harder and harder.
Dick’s excitement and tension
seemed to abate. He had been keyed to so high
a pitch that his pulses grew gentler through very lack
of force, and with the relaxation came a clearer view.
He saw the sinking red sun through the banks of smoke,
and in fancy he already felt the cool darkness upon
his face after the hot and terrible August day.
He knew that night might save them, and he prayed
deeply and fervently for its swift coming.
He and the sergeant came suddenly
to Colonel Winchester, whose hat had been shot from
his head, but who was otherwise unharmed. Warner
and Pennington were near, Warner slightly wounded
but apparently unaware of the fact. The colonel,
by shout and by gesture, was gathering around him
the remains of his regiment. Other regiments
on either side were trying to do the same, and eventually
they formed a compact mass which, driving with all
its force back toward its old position, reached the
hills and the woods just as the jaws of Stonewall
Jackson’s vise shut down, but not upon the main
body.
Victory, won for a little while, had
been lost. Night protected their retreat, and
they fought with a valor that made Jackson and all
his generals cautious. But this knowledge was
little compensation to the Northern troops.
They knew that behind them was a great army, that Pope
might have been present with fifty thousand men, sufficient
to overwhelm Jackson. Instead of the odds being
more than two to one in their favor, they had been
two to one against them.
It was a sullen army that lay in the
woods in the first hour or two of the night, gasping
for breath. These men had boasted that they were
a match for those of Jackson, and they were, if they
could only have traded generals. Dick and his
comrades from the west began to share in the awe that
the name of Stonewall Jackson inspired.
“He comes up to his advertisements.
There ain’t no doubt of it,” said Sergeant
Whitley. “I never saw anybody fight better
than our men did, an’ that charge of the little
troop of cavalry was never beat anywhere in the world.
But here we are licked, and thirty or forty thousand
men of ours not many miles away!”
He spoke the last words with a bitterness
that Dick had never heard in his voice before.
“It’s simple,” said
Warner, who was binding up his little wound with his
own hand. “It’s just a question in
mathematics. I see now how Stonewall Jackson
won so many triumphs in the Valley of Virginia.
Give Jackson, say, fifteen thousand men. We
have fifty thousand, but we divide them into five
armies of ten thousand apiece. Jackson fights
them in detail, which is five battles, of course.
His fifteen thousand defeat the ten thousand every
time. Hence Jackson with fifteen thousand men
has beaten our side. It’s simple but painful.
In time our leaders will learn.”
“After we’re all killed,” said Pennington
sadly.
“And the country is ripped apart
so that it will take half a century to put the pieces
back together again and put ’em back right,”
said Dick, with equal sadness.
“Never mind,” said Sergeant
Whitley with returning cheerfulness. “Other
countries have survived great wars and so will ours.”
Some food was obtained for the exhausted
men and they ate it nervously, paying little attention
to the crackling fire of the skirmishers which was
still going on in the darkness along their front.
Dick saw the pink flashes along the edges of the
woods and the wheat field, but his mind, deadened
for the time, took no further impressions. Skirmishers
were unpleasant people, anyway. Let them fight
down there. It did not matter what they might
do to one another. A minute or two later he was
ashamed of such thoughts.
Colonel Winchester, who had been to
see General Banks, returned presently and told them
that they would march again in half an hour.
“General Banks,” he said
with bitter irony, “is afraid that a powerful
force of the rebels will gain his rear and that we
shall be surrounded. He ought to know.
He has had enough dealings with Jackson. Outmaneuvered
and outflanked again! Why can’t we learn
something?”
But he said this to the young officers
only. He forced a cheerfulness of tone when
he spoke to the men, and they dragged themselves wearily
to their feet in order to begin the retreat.
But though the muscles were tired the spirit was
not unwilling. All the omens were sinister,
pointing to the need of withdrawal. The vicious
skirmishers were still busy and a crackling fire came
from many points in the woods. The occasional
rolling thunder of a cannon deepened the somberness
of the scene.
All the officers of the regiment had
lost their horses and they walked now with the men.
A full moon threw a silvery light over the marching
troops, who strode on in silence, the wounded suppressing
their groans. A full moon cast a silvery light
over the pallid faces.
“Do you know where we are going?”
Dick asked of the Vermonter.
“I heard that we’re bound
for a place called Culpeper Court House, six or seven
miles away. I suppose we’ll get there in
the morning, if Stonewall Jackson doesn’t insist
on another interview with us.”
“There’s enough time in
the day for fighting,” said Pennington, “without
borrowing of the night. Hear that big gun over
there on our right! Why do they want to be firing
cannon balls at such a time?”
They trudged gloomily on, following
other regiments ghostly in the moonlight, and followed
by others as ghostly. But the sinister omens,
the flash of rifle firing and the far boom of a cannon,
were always on their flanks. The impression
of Jackson’s skill and power which Dick had
gained so quickly was deepening already. He did
not have the slightest doubt now that the Southern
leader was pressing forward through the woods to cut
them off. As the sergeant had said truly, he
came up to his advertisements and more. Dick
shivered and it was a shiver of apprehension for the
army, and not for himself.
In accordance with human nature he
and the boy officers who were his good comrades talked
together, but their sentences were short and broken.
“Marching toward a court house,”
said Pennington. “What’ll we do when
we get there? Lawyers won’t help us.”
“Not so much marching toward
a court house as marching away from Jackson,”
said the Vermonter.
“We’ll march back again,” said Dick
hopefully.
“But when?” said Pennington.
“Look through the trees there on our right.
Aren’t those rebel troops?”
Dick’s startled gaze beheld
a long line of horsemen in gray on their flank and
only a few hundred yards away.