A SON OF THE GODS
A STUDY IN THE PRESENT TENSE
A breezy day and a sunny landscape.
An open country to right and left and forward; behind,
a wood. In the edge of this wood, facing the open
but not venturing into it, long lines of troops, halted.
The wood is alive with them, and full of confused
noises the occasional rattle of wheels
as a battery of artillery goes into position to cover
the advance; the hum and murmur of the soldiers talking;
a sound of innumerable feet in the dry leaves that
strew the interspaces among the trees; hoarse commands
of officers. Detached groups of horsemen are well
in front not altogether exposed many
of them intently regarding the crest of a hill a mile
away in the direction of the interrupted advance.
For this powerful army, moving in battle order through
a forest, has met with a formidable obstacle the
open country. The crest of that gentle hill a
mile away has a sinister look; it says, Beware!
Along it runs a stone wall extending to left and right
a great distance. Behind the wall is a hedge;
behind the hedge are seen the tops of trees in rather
straggling order. Among the trees what?
It is necessary to know.
Yesterday, and for many days and nights
previously, we were fighting somewhere; always there
was cannonading, with occasional keen rattlings of
musketry, mingled with cheers, our own or the enemy’s,
we seldom knew, attesting some temporary advantage.
This morning at daybreak the enemy was gone.
We have moved forward across his earthworks, across
which we have so often vainly attempted to move before,
through the debris of his abandoned camps, among the
graves of his fallen, into the woods beyond.
How curiously we had regarded everything!
how odd it all had seemed! Nothing had appeared
quite familiar; the most commonplace objects an
old saddle, a splintered wheel, a forgotten canteen everything
had related something of the mysterious personality
of those strange men who had been killing us.
The soldier never becomes wholly familiar with the
conception of his foes as men like himself; he cannot
divest himself of the feeling that they are another
order of beings, differently conditioned, in an environment
not altogether of the earth. The smallest vestiges
of them rivet his attention and engage his interest.
He thinks of them as inaccessible; and, catching an
unexpected glimpse of them, they appear farther away,
and therefore larger, than they really are
like objects in a fog. He is somewhat in awe of
them.
From the edge of the wood leading
up the acclivity are the tracks of horses and wheels the
wheels of cannon. The yellow grass is beaten down
by the feet of infantry. Clearly they have passed
this way in thousands; they have not withdrawn by
the country roads. This is significant it
is the difference between retiring and retreating.
That group of horsemen is our commander,
his staff and escort. He is facing the distant
crest, holding his field-glass against his eyes with
both hands, his elbows needlessly elevated. It
is a fashion; it seems to dignify the act; we are
all addicted to it. Suddenly he lowers the glass
and says a few words to those about him. Two or
three aides detach themselves from the group and canter
away into the woods, along the lines in each direction.
We did not hear his words, but we know them:
“Tell General X. to send forward the skirmish
line.” Those of us who have been out of
place resume our positions; the men resting at ease
straighten themselves and the ranks are re-formed without
a command. Some of us staff officers dismount
and look at our saddle girths; those already on the
ground remount.
Galloping rapidly along in the edge
of the open ground comes a young officer on a snow-white
horse. His saddle blanket is scarlet. What
a fool! No one who has ever been in action but
remembers how naturally every rifle turns toward the
man on a white horse; no one but has observed how
a bit of red enrages the bull of battle. That
such colors are fashionable in military life must
be accepted as the most astonishing of all the phenomena
of human vanity. They would seem to have been
devised to increase the death-rate.
This young officer is in full uniform,
as if on parade. He is all agleam with bullion a
blue-and-gold edition of the Poetry of War. A
wave of derisive laughter runs abreast of him all
along the line. But how handsome he is! with
what careless grace he sits his horse!
He reins up within a respectful distance
of the corps commander and salutes. The old soldier
nods familiarly; he evidently knows him. A brief
colloquy between them is going on; the young man seems
to be preferring some request which the elder one
is indisposed to grant. Let us ride a little
nearer. Ah! too late it is ended.
The young officer salutes again, wheels his horse,
and rides straight toward the crest of the hill!
A thin line of skirmishers, the men
deployed at six paces or so apart, now pushes from
the wood into the open. The commander speaks to
his bugler, who claps his instrument to his lips.
Tra-la-la! Tra-la-la! The skirmishers
halt in their tracks.
Meantime the young horseman has advanced
a hundred yards. He is riding at a walk, straight
up the long slope, with never a turn of the head.
How glorious! Gods! what would we not give to
be in his place with his soul! He
does not draw his sabre; his right hand hangs easily
at his side. The breeze catches the plume in
his hat and flutters it smartly. The sunshine
rests upon his shoulder-straps, lovingly, like a visible
benediction. Straight on he rides. Ten thousand
pairs of eyes are fixed upon him with an intensity
that he can hardly fail to feel; ten thousand hearts
keep quick time to the inaudible hoof-beats of his
snowy steed. He is not alone he draws
all souls after him. But we remember that we
laughed! On and on, straight for the hedge-lined
wall, he rides. Not a look backward. O,
if he would but turn if he could but see
the love, the adoration, the atonement!
Not a word is spoken; the populous
depths of the forest still murmur with their unseen
and unseeing swarm, but all along the fringe is silence.
The burly commander is an equestrian statue of himself.
The mounted staff officers, their field glasses up,
are motionless all. The line of battle in the
edge of the wood stands at a new kind of “attention,”
each man in the attitude in which he was caught by
the consciousness of what is going on. All these
hardened and impenitent man-killers, to whom death
in its awfulest forms is a fact familiar to their
every-day observation; who sleep on hills trembling
with the thunder of great guns, dine in the midst
of streaming missiles, and play at cards among the
dead faces of their dearest friends all
are watching with suspended breath and beating hearts
the outcome of an act involving the life of one man.
Such is the magnetism of courage and devotion.
If now you should turn your head you
would see a simultaneous movement among the spectators a
start, as if they had received an electric shock and
looking forward again to the now distant horseman you
would see that he has in that instant altered his
direction and is riding at an angle to his former
course. The spectators suppose the sudden deflection
to be caused by a shot, perhaps a wound; but take this
field-glass and you will observe that he is riding
toward a break in the wall and hedge. He means,
if not killed, to ride through and overlook the country
beyond.
You are not to forget the nature of
this man’s act; it is not permitted to you to
think of it as an instance of bravado, nor, on the
other hand, a needless sacrifice of self. If
the enemy has not retreated he is in force on that
ridge. The investigator will encounter nothing
less than a line-of-battle; there is no need of pickets,
videttes, skirmishers, to give warning of our approach;
our attacking lines will be visible, conspicuous,
exposed to an artillery fire that will shave the ground
the moment they break from cover, and for half the
distance to a sheet of rifle bullets in which nothing
can live. In short, if the enemy is there, it
would be madness to attack him in front; he must be
manoeuvred out by the immemorial plan of threatening
his line of communication, as necessary to his existence
as to the diver at the bottom of the sea his air tube.
But how ascertain if the enemy is there? There
is but one way, somebody must go and see.
The natural and customary thing to do is to send forward
a line of skirmishers. But in this case they will
answer in the affirmative with all their lives; the
enemy, crouching in double ranks behind the stone
wall and in cover of the hedge, will wait until it
is possible to count each assailant’s teeth.
At the first volley a half of the questioning line
will fall, the other half before it can accomplish
the predestined retreat. What a price to pay for
gratified curiosity! At what a dear rate an army
must sometimes purchase knowledge! “Let
me pay all,” says this gallant man this
military Christ!
There is no hope except the hope against
hope that the crest is clear. True, he might
prefer capture to death. So long as he advances,
the line will not fire why should it?
He can safely ride into the hostile ranks and become
a prisoner of war. But this would defeat his object.
It would not answer our question; it is necessary
either that he return unharmed or be shot to death
before our eyes. Only so shall we know how to
act. If captured why, that might have
been done by a half-dozen stragglers.
Now begins an extraordinary contest
of intellect between a man and an army. Our horseman,
now within a quarter of a mile of the crest, suddenly
wheels to the left and gallops in a direction parallel
to it. He has caught sight of his antagonist;
he knows all. Some slight advantage of ground
has enabled him to overlook a part of the line.
If he were here he could tell us in words. But
that is now hopeless; he must make the best use of
the few minutes of life remaining to him, by compelling
the enemy himself to tell us as much and as plainly
as possible which, naturally, that discreet
power is reluctant to do. Not a rifleman in those
crouching ranks, not a cannoneer at those masked and
shotted guns, but knows the needs of the situation,
the imperative duty of forbearance. Besides,
there has been time enough to forbid them all to fire.
True, a single rifle-shot might drop him and be no
great disclosure. But firing is infectious and
see how rapidly he moves, with never a pause except
as he whirls his horse about to take a new direction,
never directly backward toward us, never directly forward
toward his executioners. All this is visible through
the glass; it seems occurring within pistol-shot;
we see all but the enemy, whose presence, whose thoughts,
whose motives we infer. To the unaided eye there
is nothing but a black figure on a white horse, tracing
slow zigzags against the slope of a distant
hill so slowly they seem almost to creep.
Now the glass again he
has tired of his failure, or sees his error, or has
gone mad; he is dashing directly forward at the wall,
as if to take it at a leap, hedge and all! One
moment only and he wheels right about and is speeding
like the wind straight down the slope toward
his friends, toward his death! Instantly the
wall is topped with a fierce roll of smoke for a distance
of hundreds of yards to right and left. This
is as instantly dissipated by the wind, and before
the rattle of the rifles reaches us he is down.
No, he recovers his seat; he has but pulled his horse
upon its haunches. They are up and away!
A tremendous cheer bursts from our ranks, relieving
the insupportable tension of our feelings. And
the horse and its rider? Yes, they are up and
away. Away, indeed they are making
directly to our left, parallel to the now steadily
blazing and smoking wall. The rattle of the musketry
is continuous, and every bullet’s target is
that courageous heart.
Suddenly a great bank of white smoke
pushes upward from behind the wall. Another and
another a dozen roll up before the thunder
of the explosions and the humming of the missiles
reach our ears and the missiles themselves come bounding
through clouds of dust into our covert, knocking over
here and there a man and causing a temporary distraction,
a passing thought of self.
The dust drifts away. Incredible! that
enchanted horse and rider have passed a ravine and
are climbing another slope to unveil another conspiracy
of silence, to thwart the will of another armed host.
Another moment and that crest too is in eruption.
The horse rears and strikes the air with its forefeet.
They are down at last. But look again the
man has detached himself from the dead animal.
He stands erect, motionless, holding his sabre in
his right hand straight above his head. His face
is toward us. Now he lowers his hand to a level
with his face and moves it outward, the blade of the
sabre describing a downward curve. It is a sign
to us, to the world, to posterity. It is a hero’s
salute to death and history.
Again the spell is broken; our men
attempt to cheer; they are choking with emotion; they
utter hoarse, discordant cries; they clutch their
weapons and press tumultuously forward into the open.
The skirmishers, without orders, against orders, are
going forward at a keen run, like hounds unleashed.
Our cannon speak and the enemy’s now open in
full chorus; to right and left as far as we can see,
the distant crest, seeming now so near, erects its
towers of cloud and the great shot pitch roaring down
among our moving masses. Flag after flag of ours
emerges from the wood, line after line sweeps forth,
catching the sunlight on its burnished arms.
The rear battalions alone are in obedience; they preserve
their proper distance from the insurgent front.
The commander has not moved.
He now removes his field-glass from his eyes and glances
to the right and left. He sees the human current
flowing on either side of him and his huddled escort,
like tide waves parted by a rock. Not a sign
of feeling in his face; he is thinking. Again
he directs his eyes forward; they slowly traverse that
malign and awful crest. He addresses a calm word
to his bugler. Tra-la-la! Tra-la-la! The
injunction has an imperiousness which enforces it.
It is repeated by all the bugles of all the sub-ordinate
commanders; the sharp metallic notes assert themselves
above the hum of the advance and penetrate the sound
of the cannon. To halt is to withdraw. The
colors move slowly back; the lines face about and
sullenly follow, bearing their wounded; the skirmishers
return, gathering up the dead.
Ah, those many, many needless dead!
That great soul whose beautiful body is lying over
yonder, so conspicuous against the sere hillside could
it not have been spared the bitter consciousness of
a vain devotion? Would one exception have marred
too much the pitiless perfection of the divine, eternal
plan?