2. Our camp is almost deserted.
The tents of eight regiments dot the valley; but those
of two regiments and a half only are occupied.
The Hoosiers have all gone to Cheat mountain summit.
They propose to steal upon the enemy during the night,
take him by surprise, and thrash him thoroughly.
I pray they may be successful, for since Rich mountain
our army has done nothing worthy of a paragraph.
Rosecrans’ affair at Carnifex was a barren
thing; certainly no battle and no victory, and the
operations in this vicinity have at no time risen to
the dignity of a skirmish.
Captain McDougal, with nearly one
hundred men and three days’ provisions, started
up the valley this morning, with instructions to go
in sight of the enemy, the object being to lead the
latter to suppose the advance guard of our army is
before him. By this device it is expected to
keep the enemy in our front from going to the assistance
of the rebels now threatening Kimball.
3. To-night, half an hour ago,
received a dispatch from the top of Cheat, which reads
as follows:
“All back. Made a very
interesting reconnoissance. Killed a large number
of the enemy. Very small loss on our side.
J. J. Reynolds,
Brigadier-General.”
Why, when the battle was progressing
so advantageously for our side, did they not go on?
This, then, is the result of the grand demonstration
on the other side of the mountain.
McDougal’s company returned,
and report the enemy fallen back.
The frost has touched the foliage,
and the mountain peaks look like mammoth bouquets;
green, red, yellow, and every modification of these
colors appear mingled in every possible fanciful and
tasteful way.
Another dispatch has just come from
the top of Cheat, written, I doubt not, after the
Indianians had returned to camp and drawn their whisky
ration. It sounds bigger than the first.
I copy it:
“Found the rebels drawn up in
line of battle one mile outside of their fortifications,
drove them back to their intrenchments, and continued
the fight four hours. Ten of our men wounded and
ten killed. Two or three hundred of the enemy
killed.”
If it be true that so many of the
rebels were killed, it is probable that two thousand
at least were wounded; and when three hundred are
killed and two thousand wounded, out of an army of
twelve or fifteen hundred men, the business is done
up very thoroughly. The dispatch which went to
Richmond to-night, I have no doubt, stated that “the
Federals attacked in great force, outnumbering us
two or three to one, and after a terrific engagement,
lasting five hours, they were repulsed at all points
with great slaughter. Our loss one killed and
five wounded. Federal loss, five hundred killed
and twenty-five hundred wounded.” Thus
are victories won and histories made. Verily the
pen is mightier than the sword.
4. The Indianians have been returning
from the summit all day, straggling along in squads
of from three to a full company.
The men are tired, and the camp is
quiet as a house. Six thousand are sleeping away
a small portion of their three weary years of military
service. This time stretches out before them,
a broad, unknown, and extra-hazardous sea, with promise
of some smooth sailing, but many days and nights of
heavy winds and waves, in which some how
many! will be carried down.
Their thoughts have now forced the
sentinel lines, leaped the mountains, jumped the rivers,
hastened home, and are lingering about the old fireside,
looking in at the cupboard, and hovering over faces
and places that have been growing dearer to them every
day for the last five months. Old-fashioned places,
tame and uninteresting then, but now how loved!
And as for the faces, they are those of mothers, wives,
and sweethearts, around which are entwined the tenderest
of memories. But at daybreak, when reveille is
sounded, these wanderers must come trooping back again
in time for “hard-tack” and double quick.
5. Some of the Indiana regiments
are utterly beyond discipline. The men are good,
stout, hearty, intelligent fellows, and will make excellent
soldiers; but they have now no regard for their officers,
and, as a rule, do as they please. They came
straggling back yesterday from the top of Cheat unofficered,
and in the most unsoldierly manner. As one of
these stray Indianians was coming into camp, he saw
a snake in the river and cocked his gun. He was
near the quarters of the Sixth Ohio, and many men
were on the opposite side of the stream, among them
a lieutenant, who called to the Indianian and begged
him for God’s sake not to fire; but the latter,
unmindful of what was said, blazed away. The ball,
striking the water, glanced and hit the lieutenant
in the breast, killing him almost instantly.
6. The Third and Sixth Ohio,
with Loomis’ battery, left camp at half-past
three in the afternoon, and took the Huntersville turnpike
for Big Springs, where Lee’s army has been encamped
for some months. At nine o’clock we reached
Logan’s Mill, where the column halted for the
night. It had rained heavily for some hours,
and was still raining. The boys went into camp
thoroughly wet, and very hungry and tired; but they
soon had a hundred fires kindled, and, gathering around
these, prepared and ate supper.
I never looked upon a wilder or more
interesting scene. The valley is blazing with
camp-fires; the men flit around them like shadows.
Now some indomitable spirit, determined that neither
rain nor weather shall get him down, strikes up:
“Oh! say, can you see by the
dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed
at the twilight’s last gleaming,
Whose broad stripes and bright
stars, through the perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we
watched were so gallantly streaming?”
A hundred voices join in, and the
very mountains, which loom up in the fire-light like
great walls, whose tops are lost in the darkness,
resound with a rude melody befitting so wild a night
and so wild a scene. But the songs are not all
patriotic. Love and fun make contribution also,
and a voice, which may be that of the invincible Irishman,
Corporal Casey, sings:
“’T was a windy night,
about two o’clock in the morning,
An Irish lad, so tight, all the wind and
weather scorning,
At Judy Callaghan’s door, sitting
upon the paling,
His love tale he did pour, and this is
part of his wailing:
Only say you’ll be mistress Brallaghan;
Don’t say nay, charming Judy Callaghan.”
A score of voices pick up the chorus,
and the hills and mountains seem to join in the Corporal’s
appeal to the charming Judy:
“Only say you’ll
be mistress Brallaghan;
Don’t say nay, charming Judy Callaghan.”
Lieutenant Root is in command of Loomis’
battery. Just before reaching Logan’s one
of his provision wagons tumbled down a precipice, severely
injuring three men and breaking the wagon in pieces.
7. Left Logan’s mill before
the sun was up. The rain continues, and the mud
is deep. At eleven o’clock we reached what
is known as Marshall’s store, near which, until
recently, the enemy had a pretty large camp.
Halted at the place half an hour, and then moved four
miles further on, where we found the roads impassable
for our artillery and transportation.
Learning that the enemy had abandoned
Big Springs and fallen back to Huntersville, the soldiers
were permitted to break ranks, while Colonel Marrow
and Major Keifer, with a company of cavalry, rode forward
to the Springs. Colonel Nick Anderson, Adjutant
Mitchell and I followed. We found on the road
evidence of the recent presence of a very large force.
Quite a number of wagons had been left behind.
Many tents had been ripped, cut to pieces, or burned,
so as to render them worthless. A large number
of beef hides were strung along the road. One
wagon, loaded with muskets, had been destroyed.
All of which showed, simply, that before the rebels
abandoned the place the roads had become so bad that
they could not carry off their baggage.
The object of the expedition being
now accomplished, we started back at three o’clock
in the afternoon, and encamped for the night at Marshall’s
store.
8. Resumed the march early, found
the river waist high, and current swift; but the men
all got over safely, and we reached camp at one o’clock.
The Third has been assigned to a new
brigade, to be commanded by Brigadier-General Dumont,
of Indiana.
The paymaster has come at last.
Willis, my new servant, is a colored
gentleman of much experience and varied accomplishments.
He has been a barber on a Mississippi river steamboat,
and a daguerreian artist. He knows much of the
South, and manipulates a fiddle with wonderful skill.
He is enlivening the hours now with his violin.
Oblivious to rain, mud, and the monotony
of the camp, my thoughts are carried by the music
to other and pleasanter scenes; to the cottage home,
to wife and children, to a time still further away
when we had no children, when we were making the preliminary
arrangements for starting in the world together, when
her cheeks were ruddier than now, when wealth and
fame and happiness seemed lying just before me, ready
to be gathered in, and farther away still, to a gentle,
blue-eyed mother now long gone teaching
her child to lisp his first simple prayer.
9. The day has been clear.
The mountains, decorated by the artistic fingers of
Jack Frost, loom up in the sunshine like magnificent,
highly-colored, and beautiful pictures.
The night is grand. The moon,
a crescent, now rests for a moment on the highest
peak of the Cheat, and by its light suggests, rather
than reveals, the outline of hill, valley, cove and
mountain.
The boys are wide awake and merry.
The fair weather has put new spirit in them all, and
possibly the presence of the paymaster has contributed
somewhat to the good feeling which prevails.
Hark! This from the company quarters:
“Her golden hair in ringlets
fair;
Her eyes like diamonds shining;
Her slender waist, her carriage chaste,
Left me, poor soul, a pining.
But let the night be e’er so dark,
Or e’er so wet and rainy,
I will return safe back again
To the girl I left behind me.”
From another quarter, in the rich
brogue of the Celt, we have:
“Did you hear of the
widow Malone,
Ohone!
Who lived in the town of Athlone,
Alone?
Oh! she melted the hearts
Of the swains in those parts;
So lovely the widow Malone,
Ohone!
So lovely the widow Malone.”
10. Mr. Strong, the chaplain,
has a prayer meeting in the adjoining tent. His
prayers and exhortations fill me with an almost irresistible
inclination to close my eyes and shut out the vanities,
cares, and vexations of the world. Parson
Strong is dull, but he is very industrious, and on
secular days devotes his physical and mental powers
to the work of tanning three sheepskins and a calf’s
hide. On every fair day he has the skins strung
on a pole before his tent to get the sun. He
combs the wool to get it clean, and takes especial
delight in rubbing the hides to make them soft and
pliable. I told the parson the other day that
I could not have the utmost confidence in a shepherd
who took so much pleasure in tanning hides.
While Parson Strong and a devoted
few are singing the songs of Zion, the boys are having
cotillion parties in other parts of the camp.
On the parade ground of one company Willis is officiating
as musician, and the gentlemen go through “honors
to partners” and “circle all” with
apparently as much pleasure as if their partners had
pink cheeks, white slippers, and dresses looped up
with rosettes.
There comes from the Chaplain’s
tent a sweet and solemn refrain:
“Perhaps He will admit
my plea,
Perhaps will hear my prayer;
But if I perish I will pray,
And perish only there.
I can but perish if I go.
I am resolved to try.
For if I stay away I know
I must forever die.”
While these old hymns are sounding
in our ears, we are almost tempted to go, even if
we do perish. Surely nothing has such power to
make us forget earth and its round of troubles as
these sweet old church songs, familiar from earliest
childhood, and wrought into the most tender memories,
until we come to regard them as a sort of sacred stream,
on which some day our souls will float away happily
to the better country.
12. The parson is in my tent
doing his best to extract something solemn out of
Willis’ violin. Now he stumbles on a strain
of “Sweet Home,” then a scratch of “Lang
Syne;” but the latter soon breaks its neck over
“Old Hundred,” and all three tunes finally
mix up and merge into “I would not live alway,
I ask not to stay,” which, for the purpose of
steadying his hand, the parson sings aloud. I
look at him and affect surprise that a reverend gentleman
should take any pleasure in so vain and wicked an
instrument, and express a hope that the business of
tanning skins has not utterly demoralized him.
Willis pretends to a taste in music
far superior to that of the common “nigger.”
He plays a very fine thing, and when I ask what it
is, replies: “Norma, an opera piece.”
Since the parson’s exit he has been executing
“Norma” with great spirit, and, so far
as I am able to judge, with wonderful skill.
I doubt not his thoughts are a thousand miles hence,
among brown-skinned wenches, dressed in crimson robes,
and decorated with ponderous ear-drops. In fact,
“Norma” is good, and goes far to carry
one out of the wilderness.
13. It is after tattoo.
Parson Strong’s prayer-meeting has been dismissed
an hour, and the camp is as quiet as if deserted.
The day has been a duplicate of yesterday, cold and
windy. To-night the moon is sailing through a
wilderness of clouds, now breaking out and throwing
a mellow light over valley and mountain, then plunging
into obscurity, and leaving all in thick darkness.
Major Keifer, Adjutant Mitchell, and
Private Jerroloaman have been stretching their legs
before my fire-place all the evening. The Adjutant
being hopelessly in love, naturally enough gave the
conversation a sentimental turn, and our thoughts
have been wandering among the rosy years when our
hearts throbbed under the gleam of one bright particular
star (I mean one each), and our souls alternated between
hope and fear, happiness and despair. Three of
us, however, have some experience in wedded life,
and the gallant Adjutant is reasonably confident that
he will obtain further knowledge on the subject if
this cruel war ever comes to an end and his sweetheart
survives.
14. The paymaster has been busy.
The boys are very bitter against the sutler, realizing,
for the first time, that “sutler’s chips”
cost money, and that they have wasted on jimcracks
too much of their hard earnings. Conway has taken
a solemn Irish oath that the sutler shall never get
another cent of him. But these are like the half
repentant, but resultless, mutterings of the confirmed
drunkard. The “new leaf” proposed
to be turned over is never turned.
16. Am told that some of the
boys lost in gambling every farthing of their money
half an hour after receiving it from the paymaster.
An Indiana soldier threw a bombshell
into the fire to-day, and three men were seriously
wounded by the explosion.
The writer was absent from camp from
October 21st to latter part of November, serving on
court-martial, first at Huttonville, and afterward
at Beverly.
In November the Third was transferred to Kentucky.