Harry Wallbridge, awaking with a sense
of some alarming sound, listened intently in the darkness,
seeing overhead the canvas roof faintly outlined,
the darker stretch of its ridge-pole, its two thin
slanting rafters, and the gable ends of the winter
hut. He could not hear the small, fine drizzle
from an atmosphere surcharged with water, nor anything
but the drip from canvas to trench, the rustling of
hay bunched beneath his head, the regular breathing
of his “buddy,” Corporal Bader, and the
stamping of horses in stables. But when a soldier
in a neighboring tent called indistinguishably in the
accents of nightmare, Bader’s breathing quieted,
and in the lull Harry fancied the soaked air weighted
faintly with steady picket-firing. A month with
the 53d Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteer Cavalry had
not quite disabused the young recruit of his schoolboy
belief that the men of the Army of the Potomac must
live constantly within sound of the out-posts.
Harry sat up to hearken better, and
then concluded that he had mistaken for musketry the
crackle of haystalks under his poncho sheet.
Beneath him the round poles of his bed sagged as he
drew up his knees and gathered about his shoulders
the gray blanket damp from the spray of heavy rain
against the canvas earlier in the night. Soon,
with slow dawn’s approach, he could make out
the dull white of his carbine and sabre against the
mud-plastered chimney. In that drear dimness the
boy shivered, with a sense of misery rather than from
cold, and yearned as only sleepy youth can for the
ease of a true bed and dry warm swooning to slumber.
He was sustained by no mature sense that this too would
pass; it was with a certain bodily despair that he
felt chafed and compressed by his rough garments,
and pitied himself, thinking how his mother would
cry if she could see him crouched so wretchedly that
wet March morning, pressed all the more into loneliness
by the regular breathing of veteran Bader in the indifference
of deep sleep.
Harry’s vision of his mother
coming into his room, shading her candle with her
hand to see if he were asleep, passed away as a small
gust came, shaking the canvas, for he was instantly
alert with a certainty that the breeze had borne a
strong rolling of musketry.
“Bader, Bader!” he said. “Bader!”
“Can’t you shut up, you
Wallbridge?” came Orderly Sergeant Gravely’s
sharp tones from the next tent.
“What’s wrong with you,
Harry, boy?” asked Bader, turning.
“I thought I heard heavy firing
closer than the picket lines; twice now I’ve
thought I heard it.”
“Oh, I guess not, Harry.
The Johnnies won’t come out no such night as
this. Keep quiet, or you’ll have the sergeant
on top of you. Better lie down and try to sleep,
buddy; the bugles will call morning soon now.”
Again Harry fell to his revery of
home, and his vision became that of the special evening
on which his boyish wish to go to the war had, for
the family’s sake, become resolve. He saw
his mother’s spectacled and lamp-lit face as
she, leaning to the table, read in the familiar Bible;
little Fred and Mary, also facing the table’s
central lamp, bent sleepy heads over their school-books;
the father sat in the rocking-chair, with his right
hand on the paper he had laid down, and gazed gloomily
at the coals fallen below the front doors of the wood-burning
stove. Harry dreamed himself back in his own chair,
looking askance, and feeling sure his father was inwardly
groaning over the absence of Jack, the eldest son.
Then nine o’clock struck, and Fred and Mary
began to put their books away in preparation for bed.
“Wait a little, children,”
Mrs. Wallbridge said, serene in tone from her devotional
reading. “Father wants that I should tell
you something. You mustn’t feel bad about
it. It’s that we may soon go out West.
Your Uncle Ezra is doing well in Minnesota. Aunt
Elvira says so in her letter that came to-day.”
“It’s this way, children,”
said Mr. Wallbridge, ready to explain, now that the
subject was opened. “Since ever your brother
Jack went away South, the store expenses have been
too heavy. It’s near five years now he’s
been gone. There’s a sheaf of notes coming
due the third of next month; twice they’ve been
renewed, and the Philadelphia men say they’ll
close me up this time sure. If I had eight hundred
dollars but it’s no use talking; we’ll
just have to let them take what we’ve got.
Times have been bad right along around here, anyhow,
with new competition, and so many farmers gone to the
war, and more gone West. If Jack had stopped
to home but I’ve had to pay two clerks
to do his work, and then they don’t take any
interest in the business. Mind, I’m not
blaming Jack, poor fellow, he’d a
right to go where he’d get more’n his
keep, and be able to lay up something for himself, but
what’s become of him, God knows; and such a smart,
good boy as he was! He’d got fond of New
Orleans, I guess some nice girl there,
maybe, was the reason; and there he’d stay after
the war began, and now it’s two years and more
since we’ve heard from him. Dead, maybe,
or maybe they’d put him in jail, for he said
he’d never join the Confederates, nor fight
against them either he felt that way North
and South was all the same to him. And so he’s
gone; and I don’t see my way now at all.
Ma, if it wasn’t for my lame leg, I’d
take the bounty. It’d be something
for you and the children after the store’s gone.”
“Sho, pa! don’t talk that
way! You’re too down-hearted. It’ll
all come right, with the Lord’s help,”
said Harry’s mother. How clearly he, in
the damp cold tent, could see her kind looks as she
pushed up her spectacles and beamed on her husband;
how distinctly, in the still dim dawn, he heard her
soothing tones!
It was that evening’s talk which
had sent Harry, so young, to the front. Three
village boys, little older than he, had already contrived
to enlist. Every time he saw the Flag drooping,
he thought shame of himself to be absent from the
ranks of its upholders; and now, just as he was believing
himself big and old enough to serve, he conceived
that duty to his parents distinctly enjoined him to
go. So in the night, without leave-taking or
consent of his parents, he departed. The combined
Federal, State, and city bounties offered at Philadelphia
amounted to nine hundred dollars cash that dreadful
winter before Richmond fell, and Harry sent the money
home triumphantly in time to pay his father’s
notes and save the store.
While the young soldier thought it
all over, carbine and sabre came out more and more
distinctly outlined above the mud-plastered fireplace.
The drizzle had ceased, the drip into the trench was
almost finished, intense stillness ruled; Harry half
expected to hear cocks crow from out such silence.
Listening for them, his dreamy mind
brooded over both hosts, in a vision even as wide
as the vast spread of the Republic in which they lay
as two huddles of miserable men. For what were
they all about him this woful, wet night? they all
fain, as he, for home and industry and comfort.
What delusion held them? How could it be that
they could not all march away and separate, and the
cruel war be over? Harry caught his breath at
the idea, it seemed so natural, simple,
easy, and good a solution. Becoming absorbed
in the fancy, tired of listening, and soothed by the
silence, he was falling asleep as he sat, when a heavy
weight seemed to fall, far away. Another another the
fourth had the rumble of distant thunder, and seemed
followed by a concussion of the air.
“Hey Big Guns!
What’s up toward City Point?” cried Bader,
sitting up. “I tell you they’re at
it. It can’t be so far away as Butler.
What? On the left too! That was toward Hatcher’s
Run! Harry, the rebs are out in earnest!
I guess you did hear the pickets trying to stop ’em.
What a morning! Ha Fort Hell! see
that!”
The outside world was dimly lighted
up for a moment. In the intensified darkness
that followed Bader’s voice was drowned by the
crash of a great gun from the neighboring fort. Flash,
crash flash, crash flash, crash
succeeded rapidly. Then the intervals of Fort
Hell’s fire lengthened to the regular periods
for loading, and between her roars were heard the
sullen boom of more distant guns, while through all
the tumult ran a fierce undertone, the infernal
hurrying of musketry along the immediate front.
“The Johnnies must have got
in close somehow,” cried Bader. “Hey,
Sergeant?”
“Yes,” shouted Gravely.
“Scooped up the pickets and supports too in
the rain, I guess. Turn out, boys, turn out! there’ll
be a wild day. Kid! Where’s the Kid?
Kid Sylvester!”
“Here! All right, Barney;
I’ll be out in two shakes,” shouted the
bugler.
“Hurry, then! I can hear
the Colonel shouting already. Man, listen to
that!” as four of Fort Hell’s
guns crashed almost simultaneously. “Brownie!
Greasy Cook! O Brownie!”
“Here!” shouted the cook.
“Get your fire started right
away, and see what salt horse and biscuit you can
scare up. Maybe we’ll have time for a snack.”
“Turn out, Company K!”
shouted Lieutenant Bradley, running down from the
officers’ quarters. “Where’s
the commissary sergeant? There? all
right give out feed right away! Get
your oats, men, and feed instantly! We may have
time. Hullo! here’s the General’s
orderly.”
As the trooper galloped, in a mud-storm,
across the parade ground, a group of officers ran
out behind the Colonel from the screen of pine saplings
about Regimental Headquarters. The orderly gave
the Colonel but a word, and, wheeling, was off again
as “Boot and saddle” blared from the buglers,
who had now assembled on parade.
“But leave the bits out let
your horses feed!” cried the Lieutenant, running
down again. “We’re not to march till
further orders.”
Beyond the screen of pines Harry could
see the tall canvas ridges of the officers’
cabins lighted up. Now all the tents of the regiment,
row behind row, were faintly luminous, and the renewed
drizzle of the dawn was a little lightened in every
direction by the canvas-hidden candles of infantry
regiments, the glare of numerous fires already started,
and sparks showering up from the cook-houses of company
after company.
Soon in the cloudy sky the cannonade
rolled about in broad day, which was still so gray
that long wide flashes of flame could be seen to spring
far out before every report from the guns of Fort Hell,
and in the haze but few of the rebel shells shrieking
along their high curve could be clearly seen bursting
over Hancock’s cheering men. Indistinguishably
blent were the sounds of hosts on the move, field-guns
pounding to the front, troops shouting, the clink and
rattle of metal, officers calling, bugles blaring,
drums rolling, mules screaming, all heard
as a running accompaniment to the cannon heavily punctuating
the multitudinous din.
“Fwat sinse in the ould man
bodderin’ us?” grumbled Corporal Kennedy,
a tall Fenian dragoon from the British army. “Sure,
ain’t it as plain as the sun and
faith the same’s not plain this dirthy mornin’ that
there’s no work for cavalry the day, barrin’
it’s escortin’ the doughboys’ prisoners,
if they take any? bad ’cess to the
job. Sure it’s an infantry fight, and must
be, wid the field-guns helpin’, and the siege
pieces boomin’ away over the throops in the mud
betwigst our own breastworks and the inner line of
our forts.
“Oh, by this and by that,”
the corporal grumbled on, “ould Lee’s not
the gintleman I tuk him for at all, at all, discomfortin’
us in the rain, and yesterday an illigant
day for fightin’. Couldn’t he wait,
like the dacint ould boy he’s reported, for a
dhry mornin’, instead av turnin’
his byes out in the shlush and destroyin’ me
chanst av breakfast? It’s spring chickens
I’d ordhered.”
“You may get up to spring-chicken
country soon, now,” said Bader. “I’m
thinking this is near the end; it’s the last
assault that Lee will ever deliver.”
“Faith, I dunno,” said
the corporal; “that’s what we’ve
been saying sinst last fall, but the shtay of them
Johnnies bates Banagher and the prophets. Hoo ow!
by the powers! did you hear them yell? Fwat?
The saints be wid us! who’d ‘a’
thought it possible? Byes! Bader! Harry!
luk at the Johnnies swarmin’ up the face of Hell!”
Off there Harry could dimly see, rising
over the near horizon made by tents, a straggling
rush of men up the steep slope, while the rebel yell
came shrill from a multitude behind on the level ground
that was hidden from the place occupied by the cavalry
regiment. In the next moment the force mounting
Fort Hell’s slope fell away, some lying where
shot down, some rolling, some running and stumbling
in heaps; then a tremendous musketry and field-gun
fire growled to and fro under the heavy smoke round
and about and out in front of the embrasures,
which had never ceased their regular discharge over
the heads of the fort’s defenders and immediate
assailants.
Suddenly Harry noted a slackening
of the battle; it gradually but soon dropped away
to nothing, and now no sound of small-arms in any
direction was heard in the lengthening intervals of
reports from the siege pieces far and near.
“And so that’s the end
of it,” said Kennedy. “Sure it was
hot work for a while! Faix, I thought onct the
doughboys was nappin’ too long, and ould Hell
would be bullyin’ away at ourselves. Now,
thin, can we have a bite in paice? I’ll
shtart wid a few sausages, Brownie, and you may send
in the shpring chickens wid some oyshters the second
coorse. No! Oh, by the powers, ’tis
too mane to lose a breakfast like that!” and
Corporal Kennedy shook his fist at the group of buglers
calling the regiment to parade.
In ten minutes the Fifty-third had
formed in column of companies. “Old Jimmy,”
their Colonel, had galloped down at them and once along
their front; then the command, forming fours from
the right front, moved off at a trot through the mud
in long procession.
“Didn’t I know it?”
said Kennedy; “it’s escortin’ the
doughboys’ prisoners, that’s all we’re
good for this outrageous day. Oh, wirra, wirrasthru!
Police duty! and this calls itself a cavalry rigiment.
Mounted Police duty, escortin’ doughboys’
prisoners! Faix, I might as well be wid Her Majesty’s
dhragoons, thramplin’ down the flesh and blood
of me in poor ould Oireland. Begor, Harry, me
bhy, it’s a mane job to be setting you at, and
this the first day ye’re mounted to save the
Union!”
“Stop coddin’ the boy,
Corporal,” said Bader, angrily. “You
can’t think how an American boy feels about
this war.”
“An Amerikin! an
Amerikin, is it? Let me insthruct ye thin, Misther
Bader, that I’m as good an Amerikin as the next
man. Och, be jabers, me that’s been in
the color you see ever since the Prisident first called
for men! It was for a three months’ dance
he axed us first. Me, that’s re-enlishted
twice, don’t know the feelin’s of an Amerikin!
What am I here for? Not poverty! sure I’d
enough of that before ever I seen Ameriky! What
am I wallopin’ through the mud for this mornin’?”
“It’s your trade, Kennedy,” said
Bader, with disgust.
“Be damned to you, man!”
said the corporal, sternly. “When I touched
fût in New York, didn’t I swear that I’d
never dhraw swoord more, barrin’ it was agin
the ould red tyrant and oprissor of me counthry?
Wasn’t I glad to be dhrivin’ me own hack
next year in Philamedink like a gintleman? Oh,
the paice and the indipindence of it! But what
cud I do when the counthry that tuk me and was good
to me wanted an ould dhragoon? An Amerikin, ye
say! Faith, the heart of me is Amerikin, if I’m
a bog throtter by the tongue. Mind that now, me
bould man!”
Harry heard without heeding as the
horses spattered on. Still wavered in his ears
the sounds of the dawn; still he saw the ghostlike
forms of Americans in gray tumbling back from their
rush against the sacred flag that had drooped so sadly
over the smoke; and still, far away beyond all this
puddled and cumbered ground the dreamy boy saw millions
of white American faces, all haggard for news of the
armies some looking South, some North, yearning
for the Peace that had so long ago been the boon of
the Nation.
Now the regiment was upon the red
clay of the dead fight, and brought to halt in open
columns. After a little they moved off again in
fours, and, dropping into single file, surrounded
some thousands of disarmed men, the remnant of the
desperate brigades that Lee had flung through the
night across three lines of breastworks at the great
fort they had so nearly stormed. Poor drenched,
shivering Johnnies! there they stood, not a few of
them in blue overcoats, but mostly in butternut, generally
tattered; some barefoot, some with feet bound in ragged
sections of blanket, many with toes and skin showing
through crazy boots lashed on with strips of cotton
or with cord; many stoutly on foot, streaming blood
from head wounds.
Some lay groaning in the mud, while
their comrades helped Union surgeons to bind or amputate.
Here and there groups huddled together in earnest
talk, or listened to comrades gesticulating and storming
as they recounted incidents of the long charge.
But far the greater number faced outward, at gaze
upon the cavalry guard, and, silently munching thick
flat cakes of corn-bread, stared into the faces of
the horsemen. Harry Wallbridge, brought to the
halt, faced half-round in the saddle, and looked with
quick beatings of pity far and wide over the disorderly
crowd of weather-worn men.
“It’s a Louisiana brigade,” said
Bader.
“Fifty-three, P. V. V. C.,”
spoke a prisoner, as if in reply, reading the letters
about the little crossed brass sabres on the Union
hats. “Say, you men from Pennsylvany?”
“Yes, Johnny; we come down to wake up Dixie.”
“I reckon we got the start at
wakin’ you this mornin’,” drawled
the Southerner. “But say, there’s
one of our boys lyin’ dyin’ over yonder;
his folks lives in Pennsylvany. Mebbe some of
you ’ud know ’em.”
“What’s his name?” asked Bader.
“Wallbridge Johnny Wallbridge.”
“Why, Harry hold
on! you ain’t the only Wallbridges
there is. What’s up?” cried Bader,
as the boy half reeled, half clambered from his saddle.
“Hold on, Harry!” cried Corporal Kennedy.
“Halt there, Wallbridge!” shouted Sergeant
Gravely.
“Stop that man!” roared Lieutenant Bradley.
But, calling, “He’s my
brother!” Harry, catching up his sabre as he
ran, followed the Southerner, who had instantly divined
the situation. The forlorn prisoners made ready
way for them, and closing in behind, stretched in
solid array about the scene.
“It’s not Jack,”
said the boy; but something in the look of the dying
man drew him on to kneel in the mud. “Is
it you, Jack? Oh, now I know you!
Jack, I’m Harry! don’t you know me?
I’m Harry your brother Harry.”
The Southern soldier stared rigidly
at the boy, seeming to grow paler with the recollections
that he struggled for.
“What’s your name?” he asked
very faintly.
“Harry Wallbridge I’m your
brother.”
“Harry Wallbridge! Why,
I’m John Wallbridge. Did you say
Harry? Not Harry!” he shrieked hoarsely.
“No; Harry’s only a little fellow!”
He paused, and looked meditatively into the boy’s
eyes. “It’s nearly five years I’ve
been gone, he was near twelve then.
Boys,” lifting his head painfully and casting
his look slowly round upon his comrades, “I
know him by the eyes; yes, he’s my brother!
Let me speak to him alone stand back a
bit,” and at once the men pushed backward into
the form of a wide circle.
“Put down your head, Harry.
Kiss me! Kiss me again! how’s
mother? Ah, I was afraid she might be dead don’t
tell her I’m dead, Harry.” He groaned
with the pain of the groin wound. “Closer,
Harry; I’ve got to tell you this first maybe
it’s all I’ve time to tell. Say,
Harry,” he began to gasp, “they
didn’t ought to have killed me, the Union soldiers
didn’t. I never fired high enough all
these years. They drafted me, Harry tell
mother that down in New Orleans and
I couldn’t get away. Ai aï!
how it hurts! I must die soon ’s I can
tell you. I wanted to come home and
help father how’s poor father, Harry?
Doing well now? Oh. I’m glad of that and
the baby? there’s a new baby! Ah, yes,
I’ll never see it, Harry.”
His eyes closed, the pain seemed to
leave him, and he lay almost smiling happily as his
brother’s tears fell on his muddy and blood-clotted
face. As if from a trance his eyes opened, and
he spoke anxiously but calmly.
“You’ll be sure to tell
them I was drafted conscripted, you understand.
And I never fired at any of us of you tell
all the boys that.” Again the flame
of life went down, and again flickered up in pain.
“Harry you’ll
stay by father and help him, won’t
you? This cruel war is almost over.
Don’t cry. Kiss me. Say do
you remember the old times we had fishing?
Kiss me again, Harry brother in blue youre on my side. Oh I wish I
had time to tell you. Come close put
your arms around my neck it’s
old times again.” And now the
wound tortured him for a while beyond speech.
“You’re with me, aren’t you, Harry?
“Well, there’s this,”
he gasped on, “about my chums they’ve
been as good and kind marching, us, all
wet and cold together and it wasn’t
their fault. If they had known how
I wanted to be shot for the
Union! It was so hard to be on
the wrong side! But
He lifted his head and stared wildly
at his brother, screamed rapidly, as if summoning
all his life for the effort to explain, “Drafted,
drafted, drafted Harry, tell mother
and father that. I was drafted.
O God, O God, what suffering! Both sides I
was on both sides all the time. I loved them
all, North and South, all, but the Union
most. O God, it was so hard!”
His head fell back, his eyes closed,
and Harry thought it was the end. But once more
Jack opened his blue eyes, and slowly said in a steady,
clear, anxious voice, “Mind you tell them I never
fired high enough!” Then he lay still in Harry’s
arms, breathing fainter and fainter till no motion
was on his lips, nor in his heart, nor any tremor in
the hands that lay in the hand of his brother in blue.
“Come, Harry,” said Bader,
stooping tenderly to the boy, “the order is
to march. He’s past helping now. It’s
no use; you must leave him here to God. Come,
boy, the head of the column is moving already.”
Mounting his horse, Harry looked across
to Jack’s form. For the first time in two
years the famous Louisiana brigade trudged on without
their unwilling comrade. There he lay, alone,
in the Union lines, under the rain, his marching done,
a figure of eternal peace; while Harry, looking backward
till he could no longer distinguish his brother from
the clay of the field, rode dumbly on and on beside
the downcast procession of men in gray.