Determination to escape-different
plans and their merits-I
prefer the
Appalachicola route-preparations
for departure-A hot day-the
fence
passed successfully pursued by
the hounds-caught -returned
to the
stockade.
After Watt’s death, I set earnestly
about seeing what could be done in the way of escape.
Frank Harvey, of the First West Virginia Cavalry,
a boy of about my own age and disposition, joined with
me in the scheme. I was still possessed with
my original plan of making my way down the creeks
to the Flint River, down the Flint River to where it
emptied into the Appalachicola River, and down that
stream to its debauchure into the bay that connected
with the Gulf of Mexico. I was sure of finding
my way by this route, because, if nothing else offered,
I could get astride of a log and float down the current.
The way to Sherman, in the other direction, was long,
torturous and difficult, with a fearful gauntlet of
blood-hounds, patrols and the scouts of Hood’s
Army to be run. I had but little difficulty
in persuading Harvey into an acceptance of my views,
and we began arranging for a solution of the first
great problem-how to get outside of the
Hospital guards. As I have explained before,
the Hospital was surrounded by a board fence, with
guards walking their beats on the ground outside.
A small creek flowed through the southern end of
the grounds, and at its lower end was used as a sink.
The boards of the fence came down to the surface
of the water, where the Creek passed out, but we found,
by careful prodding with a stick, that the hole between
the boards and the bottom of the Creek was sufficiently
large to allow the passage of our bodies, and there
had been no stakes driven or other precautions used
to prevent egress by this channel. A guard was
posted there, and probably ordered to stand at the
edge of the stream, but it smelled so vilely in those
scorching days that he had consulted his feelings
and probably his health, by retiring to the top of
the bank, a rod or more distant. We watched
night after night, and at last were gratified to find
that none went nearer the Creak than the top of this
bank.
Then we waited for the moon to come
right, so that the first part of the night should
be dark. This took several days, but at last
we knew that the next night she would not rise until
between 9 and 10 o’clock, which would give us
nearly two hours of the dense darkness of a moonless
Summer night in the South. We had first thought
of saving up some rations for the trip, but then reflected
that these would be ruined by the filthy water into
which we must sink to go under the fence. It
was not difficult to abandon the food idea, since
it was very hard to force ourselves to lay by even
the smallest portion of our scanty rations.
As the next day wore on, our minds
were wrought up into exalted tension by the rapid
approach of the supreme moment, with all its chances
and consequences. The experience of the past
few months was not such as to mentally fit us for
such a hazard. It prepared us for sullen, uncomplaining
endurance, for calmly contemplating the worst that
could come; but it did not strengthen that fiber of
mind that leads to venturesome activity and daring
exploits. Doubtless the weakness of our bodies
reacted upon our spirits. We contemplated all
the perils that confronted us; perils that, now looming
up with impending nearness, took a clearer and more
threatening shape than they had ever done before.
We considered the desperate chances
of passing the guard unseen; or, if noticed, of escaping
his fire without death or severe wounds. But
supposing him fortunately evaded, then came the gauntlet
of the hounds and the patrols hunting deserters.
After this, a long, weary journey, with bare feet
and almost naked bodies, through an unknown country
abounding with enemies; the dangers of assassination
by the embittered populace; the risks of dying with
hunger and fatigue in the gloomy depths of a swamp;
the scanty hopes that, if we reached the seashore,
we could get to our vessels.
Not one of all these contingencies
failed to expand itself to all its alarming proportions,
and unite with its fellows to form a dreadful vista,
like the valleys filled with demons and genii, dragons
and malign enchantments, which confront the heros
of the “Arabian Nights,” when they set
out to perform their exploits.
But behind us lay more miseries and
horrors than a riotous imagination could conceive;
before us could certainly be nothing worse. We
would put life and freedom to the hazard of a touch,
and win or lose it all.
The day had been intolerably hot.
The sun’s rays seemed to sear the earth, like
heated irons, and the air that lay on the burning sand
was broken by wavy lines, such as one sees indicate
the radiation from a hot stove.
Except the wretched chain-gang plodding
torturously back and forward on the hillside, not
a soul nor an animal could be seen in motion outside
the Stockade. The hounds were panting in their
kennel; the Rebel officers, half or wholly drunken
with villainous sorgum whisky, were stretched at full
length in the shade at headquarters; the half-caked
gunners crouched under the shadow of the embankments
of the forts, the guards hung limply over the Stockade
in front of their little perches; the thirty thousand
boys inside the Stockade, prone or supine upon the
glowing sand, gasped for breath-for one
draft of sweet, cool, wholesome air that did not bear
on its wings the subtle seeds of rank corruption and
death. Everywhere was the prostration of discomfort-the
inertia of sluggishness.
Only the sick moved; only the pain-racked
cried out; only the dying struggled; only the agonies
of dissolution could make life assert itself against
the exhaustion of the heat.
Harvey and I, lying in the scanty
shade of the trunk of a tall pine, and with hearts
filled with solicitude as to the outcome of what the
evening would bring us, looked out over the scene
as we had done daily for long months, and remained
silent for hours, until the sun, as if weary with
torturing and slaying, began going down in the blazing
West. The groans of the thousands of sick around
us, the shrieks of the rotting ones in the gangrene
wards rang incessantly in our ears.
As the sun disappeared, and the heat
abated, the suspended activity was restored.
The Master of the Hounds came out with his yelping
pack, and started on his rounds; the Rebel officers
aroused themselves from their siesta and went lazily
about their duties; the fifer produced his cracked
fife and piped forth his unvarying “Bonnie Blue
Flag,” as a signal for dress parade, and drums
beaten by unskilled hands in the camps of the different
regiments, repeated the signal. In time Stockade
the mass of humanity became full of motion as an ant
hill, and resembled it very much from our point of
view, with the boys threading their way among the
burrows, tents and holes.
It was becoming dark quite rapidly.
The moments seemed galloping onward toward the time
when we must make the decisive step. We drew
from the dirty rag in which it was wrapped the little
piece of corn bread that we had saved for our supper,
carefully divided it into two equal parts, and each
took one and ate it in silence. This done, we
held a final consultation as to our plans, and went
over each detail carefully, that we might fully understand
each other under all possible circumstances, and act
in concert. One point we laboriously impressed
upon each other, and that was; that under no circumstances
were we to allow ourselves to be tempted to leave
the Creek until we reached its junction with the Flint
River. I then picked up two pine leaves, broke
them off to unequal lengths, rolled them in my hands
behind my back for a second, and presenting them to
Harney with their ends sticking out of my closed hand,
said:
“The one that gets the longest one goes first.”
Harvey reached forth and drew the longer one.
We made a tour of reconnaissance.
Everything seemed as usual, and wonderfully calm
compared with the tumult in our minds. The Hospital
guards were pacing their beats lazily; those on the
Stockade were drawling listlessly the first “call
around” of the evening:
“Post numbah foah! Half-past seven o’clock!
and a-l-l’s we-l-ll!”
Inside the Stockade was a Babel of
sounds, above all of which rose the melody of religious
and patriotic songs, sung in various parts of the
camp. From the headquarters came the shouts and
laughter of the Rebel officers having a little “frolic”
in the cool of the evening. The groans of the
sick around us were gradually hushing, as the abatement
of the terrible heat let all but the worst cases sink
into a brief slumber, from which they awoke before
midnight to renew their outcries. But those
in the Gangrene wards seemed to be denied even this
scanty blessing. Apparently they never slept,
for their shrieks never ceased. A multitude
of whip-poor-wills in the woods around us began their
usual dismal cry, which had never seemed so unearthly
and full of dreadful presages as now.
It was, now quite dark, and we stole
noiselessly down to the Creek and reconnoitered.
We listened. The guard was not pacing his beat,
as we could not hear his footsteps. A large,
ill-shapen lump against the trunk of one of the trees
on the bank showed that he was leaning there resting
himself. We watched him for several minutes,
but he did not move, and the thought shot into our
minds that he might be asleep; but it seemed impossible:
it was too early in the evening.
Now, if ever, was the opportunity.
Harney squeezed my hand, stepped noiselessly into
the Creek, laid himself gently down into the filthy
water, and while my heart was beating so that I was
certain it could be heard some distance from me, began
making toward the fence. He passed under easily,
and I raised my eyes toward the guard, while on my
strained ear fell the soft plashing made by Harvey
as he pulled himself cautiously forward. It
seemed as if the sentinel must hear this; he could
not help it, and every second I expected to see the
black lump address itself to motion, and the musket
flash out fiendishly. But he did not; the lump
remained motionless; the musket silent.
When I thought that Harvey had gained
a sufficient distance I followed. It seemed as
if the disgusting water would smother me as I laid
myself down into it, and such was my agitation that
it appeared almost impossible that I should escape
making such a noise as would attract the guard’s
notice. Catching hold of the roots and limbs
at the side of the stream, I pulled myself slowly
along, and as noiselessly as possible.
I passed under the fence without difficulty,
and was outside, and within fifteen feet of the guard.
I had lain down into the creek upon my right side,
that my face might be toward the guard, and I could
watch him closely all the time.
As I came under the fence he was still
leaning motionless against the tree, but to my heated
imagination he appeared to have turned and be watching
me. I hardly breathed; the filthy water rippling
past me seemed to roar to attract the guard’s
attention; I reached my hand out cautiously to grasp
a root to pull myself along by, and caught instead
a dry branch, which broke with a loud crack.
My heart absolutely stood still. The guard
evidently heard the noise. The black lump separated
itself from the tree, and a straight line which I knew
to be his musket separated itself from the lump.
In a brief instant I lived a year of mortal apprehension.
So certain was I that he had discovered me, and was
leveling his piece to fire, that I could scarcely restrain
myself from springing up and dashing away to avoid
the shot. Then I heard him take a step, and
to my unutterable surprise and relief, he walked off
farther from the Creek, evidently to speak to the
man whose beat joined his.
I pulled away more swiftly, but still
with the greatest caution, until after half-an-hour’s
painful effort I had gotten fully one hundred and
fifty yards away from the Hospital fence, and found
Harney crouched on a cypress knee, close to the water’s
edge, watching for me.
We waited there a few minutes, until
I could rest, and calm my perturbed nerves down to
something nearer their normal equilibrium, and then
started on. We hoped that if we were as lucky
in our next step as in the first one we would reach
the Flint River by daylight, and have a good long
start before the morning roll-call revealed our absence.
We could hear the hounds still baying in the distance,
but this sound was too customary to give us any uneasiness.
But our progress was terribly slow.
Every step hurt fearfully. The Creek bed was
full of roots and snags, and briers, and vines trailed
across it. These caught and tore our bare feet
and legs, rendered abnormally tender by the scurvy.
It seemed as if every step was marked with blood.
The vines tripped us, and we frequently fell headlong.
We struggled on determinedly for nearly an hour,
and were perhaps a mile from the Hospital.
The moon came up, and its light showed
that the creek continued its course through a dense
jungle like that we had been traversing, while on
the high ground to our left were the open pine woods
I have previously described.
We stopped and debated for a few minutes.
We recalled our promise to keep in the Creek, the
experience of other boys who had tried to escape and
been caught by the hounds. If we staid in the
Creek we were sure the hounds would not find our trail,
but it was equally certain that at this rate we would
be exhausted and starved before we got out of sight
of the prison. It seemed that we had gone far
enough to be out of reach of the packs patrolling
immediately around the Stockade, and there could be
but little risk in trying a short walk on the dry
ground. We concluded to take the chances, and,
ascending the bank, we walked and ran as fast as we
could for about two miles further.
All at once it struck me that with
all our progress the hounds sounded as near as when
we started. I shivered at the thought, and though
nearly ready to drop with fatigue, urged myself and
Harney on.
An instant later their baying rang
out on the still night air right behind us, and with
fearful distinctness. There was no mistake now;
they had found our trail, and were running us down.
The change from fearful apprehension to the crushing
reality stopped us stock-still in our tracks.
At the next breath the hounds came
bursting through the woods in plain sight, and in
full cry. We obeyed our first impulse; rushed
back into the swamp, forced our way for a few yards
through the flesh-tearing impediments, until we gained
a large cypress, upon whose great knees we climbed-thoroughly
exhausted-just as the yelping pack reached
the edge of the water, and stopped there and bayed
at us. It was a physical impossibility for us
to go another step.
In a moment the low-browed villain
who had charge of the hounds came galloping up on
his mule, tooting signals to his dogs as he came, on
the cow-horn slung from his shoulders.
He immediately discovered us, covered
us with his revolver, and yelled out:
“Come ashore, there, quick: you -
- - -s!”
There was no help for it. We
climbed down off the knees and started towards the
land. As we neared it, the hounds became almost
frantic, and it seemed as if we would be torn to pieces
the moment they could reach us. But the master
dismounted and drove them back. He was surly
-even savage-to us, but seemed
in too much hurry to get back to waste any time annoying
us with the dogs. He ordered us to get around
in front of the mule, and start back to camp.
We moved as rapidly as our fatigue and our lacerated
feet would allow us, and before midnight were again
in the hospital, fatigued, filthy, torn, bruised and
wretched beyond description or conception.
The next morning we were turned back
into the Stockade as punishment.