Gets A letter from
bad ax, wis., And is almost
overcome with joy.
Shorty had always been conspicuously
lacking in the general interest which his comrades
had shown in the mails. Probably at some time
in his life he had had a home like the rest of them,
but for some reason home now played no part in his
thoughts. The enlistment and muster-rolls stated
that he was born in Indiana, but he was a stranger
in the neighborhood when he enrolled himself in Co.
Q.
His revelations as to his past were
confined to memories of things which happened “when
I was cuttin’ wood down the Mississippi,”
or “when I was runnin’ on an Ohio sternwheel.”
He wrote no letters and received none.
And when the joyful cry, “Mail’s come,”
would send everybody else in the regiment on a run
to the Chaplain’s tent, in eager anticipation,
to jostle one another in impatience, until the contents
of the mailpouch were distributed, Shorty would remain
indifferent in his tent, without an instant’s
interruption in his gun cleaning, mending, or whatever
task he might have in hand.
A change came over him after he sent
his letter to Bad Ax, Wis. The cry, “Mail’s
come,” would make him start, in spite of
himself, and before he could think to maintain his
old indifference. He was ashamed, lest he betray
his heart’s most secret thoughts.
The matter of the secure transmission
of the mails between camp and home began to receive
his earnest attention. He feared that the authorities
were not taking sufficient precautions. The report
that John Morgan’s guerrillas had captured a
train between Louisville and Nashville, rifled the
mail car, and carried off the letters, filled him with
burning indignation, both against Morgan and his band
and the Generals who had not long ago exterminated
that pestiferous crowd.
He had some severe strictures on the
slovenly way in which the mail was distributed from
the Division and Brigade Headquarters to the regiments.
It was a matter, he said, which could not be done too
carefully. It was a great deal more important
than the distribution of rations. A man would
much rather lose several days’ rations than a
letter from home. He could manage in some way
to get enough to live on, but nothing would replace
a lost letter.
Then, he would have fits of silent
musing, sometimes when alone, sometimes when with
Si in the company, over the personality of the fair
stocking-knitter of Wisconsin and the letter he had
sent her. He would try to recall the exact wording
of each sentence he had laboriously penned, and wonder
how it impressed her, think how it might have been
improved, and blame himself for not having been more
outspoken in his desire to hear from her again.
He would steal off into the brush, pull out the socks
and letter, which he kept carefully wrapped up in
a sheet of the heavy letter paper, and read over the
letter carefully again, although he knew every word
of it by heart. These fits alarmed Si.
“I’m af eared,”
he confided to some cronies, “that rebel bullet
hurt Shorty more’n he’ll let on.
He’s not actin’ like hisself at times.
That bullet scraped so near his thinkery that it may
have addled it. It was an awful close shave.”
“Better talk to the Surgeon,”
said they. “Glancing bullets sometimes
hurt worse’n they seem to.”
“No, the bullet didn’t
hurt Shorty, any more than make a scratch,” said
the Surgeon cheerfully when Si laid the case before
him. “I examined him carefully. That
fellow’s head is so hard that no mere scraping
is going to affect it. You’d have to bore
straight through it, and I’d want at least a
six-pounder to do it with if I was going to undertake
the job. An Indiana head may not be particularly
fine, but it is sure to be awfully solid and tough.
No; his system’s likely to be out of order.
You rapscallions will take no care of yourselves,
in spite of all that I can say, but will eat and drink
as if you were ostriches. He’s probably
a little off his feed, and a good dose of bluemass
followed up with quinine will bring him around all
right. Here, take these, and give them to him.”
The Surgeon was famous for prescribing
bluemass and quinine for every ailment presented to
him, from sore feet to “shell fever.”
Si received the medicines with a proper show of thankfulness,
saluted, and left. As he passed through the clump
if bushes he was tempted to add them to the collection
of little white papers which marked the trail from
the Surgeon’s tent, but solicitude for his comrade
restrained him. The Surgeon was probably right,
and it was Si’s duty to do all that he could
to bring Shorty around again to his normal condition.
But how in the world was he going to get his partner
to take the medicine? Shorty had the resolute
antipathy to drugs common to all healthy men.
It was so grave a problem that Si
sat down on a log to think about it. As was Si’s
way, the more he thought about it, the more determined
he became to do it, and when Si Klegg determined to
do a thing, that thing was pretty nearly as good as
done.
“I kin git him to take the quinine
easy enough,” he mused. “All I’ve
got to do is to put it in a bottle o’ whisky,
and he’d drink it if there wuz 40 ‘doses
o’ quinine in it. But the bluemass’s
a very different thing. He’s got to swaller
it in a lump, and what in the world kin I put it in
that he’ll swaller whole?”
Si wandered over to the Sutler’s
in hopes of seeing something there that would help
him. He was about despairing when he noticed a
boy open a can of large, yellow peaches.
“The very thing,” said
Si, slapping his thigh. “Say, young man,
gi’ me a can o’ peaches jest like them.”
Si took his can and carefully approached
his tent, that he might decide upon his plan before
Shorty could see him and his load. He discovered
that Shorty was sitting at a little distance, with
his back to him, cleaning his gun, which he had taken
apart.
“Bully,” thought Si.
“Just the thing. His hands are dirty
and greasy, and he won’t want to tech anything
to eat.”
He slipped into the tent, cut open
the can, took out a large peach with a spoon, laid
the pellet of bluemass in it, laid another slice of
peach upon it, and then came around in front of Shorty,
holding out the spoon.
“Open your mouth and shut your
eyes, Shorty,” he said. “I saw some
o’ the nicest canned peaches down at the Sutler’s,
and I suddenly got hungry for some. I bought
a can and brung ’em up to the tent. Jest
try ’em.”
He stuck the spoon out towards Shorty’s
mouth. The latter, with his gunlock in one hand
and a greasy rag in the other, looked at the tempting
morsel, opened his mouth, and the deed was done.
“Must’ve left a stone
in that peach,” he said, as he gulped it down.
“Mebbe so,” said Si, with
a guilty flush, and pretending to examine the others.
“But I don’t find none in the rest Have
another?”
Shorty swallowed two or three spoonfuls
more, and then gasped:
“They’re awful nice, Si,
but I’ve got enough. Keep the rest for
yourself.”
Si went back to the tent and finished
the can with mingled emotions of triumph at having
succeeded, and of contrition at playing a trick on
his partner. He decided to make amends for the
latter by giving Shorty an unusually large quantity
of whisky to take with his quinine.
Si was generally very rigid in his
temperance ideas, He strongly disapproved of Shorty’s
drinking, and always interposed all the obstacles
he could in the way of it. But this was an extraordinary
case-it would be “using liquor for
a medicinal purpose”-and his conscience
was quieted.
Co. Q had one of those men-to
be found in every company-who can get whisky
under apparently any and all circumstances. In
every company there is always one man who seemingly
can find something to get drunk on in the midst of
the Desert of Sahara. To Co. Q’s representative
of this class Si went, and was piloted to where, after
solemn assurances against “giving away,”
he procured a halfpint of fairly-good applejack, into
which he put his doses of quinine.
In the middle of the night Shorty woke up with a yell.
“Great Cesar’s ghost!”
he howled, “what’s the matter with me?
I’m sicker’n a dog. Must’ve
bin them dodgasted peaches. Si, don’t you
feel nothin’?”
“No,” said Si sheepishly;
“I’m all right. Didn’t you eat
nothin’ else but them?”
“Naw,” said Shorty disgustedly.
“Nothin’ but my usual load o’ hardtack
and pork. Yes, I chawed a piece o’ sassafras
root that one of the boys dug up.”
“Must’ve bin the sassafras
root,” said Si. He hated to lie, and made
a resolution that he would make a clean breast to Shorty-at
some more convenient time. It was not opportune
now. “That must’ve bin a sockdologer
of a dose the Surgeon gave me,” he muttered to
himself.
Shorty continued to writhe and howl,
and Si made a hypocritical offer of going for
the Surgeon, but Shorty vetoed that emphatically.
“No; blast old Sawbones,”
he said. “He won’t do nothin’
but give me bluemass, and quinine, and I never could
nor would take bluemass. It’s only fit
for horses and hogs.”
Toward morning Shorty grew quite weak,
and correspondingly depressed.
“Si,” said he, “I
may not git over this. This may be the breakin’
out o’ the cholera that the folks around here
say comes every seven years and kills off the strangers.
Si, I’ll tell you a secret. A letter may
come for me. If I don’t git over this,
and the letter comes, I want you to burn it up without
reading it, and write a letter to Miss Jerusha Ellen
Briggs, Bad Ax, Wis., tellin’ her that I died
like a man and soldier, and with her socks on, defendin’
his country.”
Si whistled softly to himself.
“I’ll do it. Shorty,” he said,
and repeated the address to make sure.
The crisis soon passed, however, and
the morning found Shorty bright and cheerful, though
weak.
Si was puzzled how to get the whisky
to Shorty. It would never do to let him know
that he had gotten it especially for him. That
would have been so contrary to Si’s past as
to arouse suspicion. He finally decided to lay
it where it would seem that someone passing had dropped
it, and Shorty could not help finding it. The
plan worked all right. Shorty picked it up in
a few minutes after Si had deposited it, and made quite
an ado over his treasure trove.
“Splendid applejack,”
he said, tasting it; “little bitter, but that
probably comes from their using dogwood in the
fires when they’re ‘stilhn’.
They know that dogwood’ll make the liquor bitter,
but they’re too all-fired lazy to go after any
other kind o’ wood.” He drank, and
as he drank his spirits rose. After the first
dram he thought he would clean around the tent, and
make their grounds look neater than anybody else’s.
After the second he turned his attention to his arms
and accouterments. After the third he felt like
going out on a scout and finding some rebels to vary
the monotony of the camp-life. After the fourth,
“Groundhog,” unluckily for himself, came
along, and Shorty remembered that he had long owed
the teamster a licking, and he felt that the debt
should not be allowed to run any longer. He ordered
Groundhog to halt and receive his dues. The teamster
demurred, but Shorty was obdurate, and began preparations
to put his intention into operation, when the Orderly-Sergeant
came down through the company street distributing
mail.
“Shorty,” he said, entirely
ignoring the bellicosity of the scene, “here’s
a letter for you.”
Shorty’s first thought was to
look at the postmark. Sure enough, it was Bad
Ax, Wis. Instantly his whole demeanor changed.
Here was something a hundred times more important
than licking any teamster that ever lived.
“Git out, you scab,” he
said contemptuously. “I haint no time to
fool with you now. You’ll keep. This
won’t.”
Groundhog mistook the cause of his
escape. “O, you’re powerful anxious
to fight, ain’t you, till you find I’m
ready for you, and then you quiet down. I’ll
let you know, sir, that you mustn’t give me no
more o’ your sass. I won’t stand
it from you. You jest keep your mouth shet after
this, if you know when you’re well off.”
The temptation would have been irresistible
to Shorty at any other time, but now he must go off
somewhere where he could be alone with his letter,
and to the amazement of all the spectators he made
no reply to the teamster’s gibes, but holding
the precious envelope firmly in his hand, strode
off to the seclusion of a neighboring laurel thicket.
His first thought, as he sat down
and looked the envelope over again, was shame that
it had come to him when he was under the influence
of drink. He remembered the writer’s fervent
Christianity, and it seemed to him that it would be
a gross breach of faith for him to open and read the
letter while the fumes of whisky were on his breath.
He had a struggle with his burning desire to see the
inside of the envelope, but he conquered, and put
the letter back in his pocket until he was thoroughly
sober.
But he knew not what to do to fill
up the time till he could conscientiously open the
letter. He thought of going back and fulfilling
his long-delayed purpose of thrashing Groundhog, but
on reflection this scarcely commended itself as a
fitting prelude.
He heard voices approaching-one
sympathetic and encouraging, the other weak, pain-breathing,
almost despairing. He looked out and saw the
Chaplain helping back to the hospital a sick man who
had over-estimated his strength and tried to reach
his company. The man sat down on a rock, in utter
exhaustion.
Shorty thrust the letter back into
his blousepocket, sprang forward, picked the man up
in his strong arms, and carried him bodily to the
hospital. It taxed his strength to the utmost,
but it sobered him and cleared his brain.
He returned to his covert, took out
his letter, and again scanned its exterior carefully.
He actually feared to open it, but at last drew his
knife and carefully slit one side. He unfolded
the inclosure as carefully as if it had been
a rare flower, and with palpitating heart slowly spelled
out the words, one after another:
“Bad Ax, Wisconsin,
“April the Twenty-First,
1863.
“Mister Daniel
Elliott, Company Q, 200th Indiana Volunteer
Infantry.
“Respected Sir:
I taik my pen in hand toe inform you that I
am wel, and hoap that
you aire in joying the saim
blessing. For this,
God be prazed and magnified forever.”
“Goodness, how religious she
is,” said he, stopping to ruminate. “How
much nicer it makes a woman to be pious. It don’t
hurt a man much to be a cuss-at least while
he’s young-but I want a woman to be
awfully religious. It sets her off more’n
anything else.”
He continued his spelling exercise:
“I am verry glad
that my sox reached you all rite, that they
fell into the hands
of a braiv, pious Union soldier, and he
found them nice.”
“Brave, pious Union soldier,”
he repeated to himself, with a whistle. “Jewhilikins,
I’m glad Bad Ax, Wis., is so fur away that she
never heard me makin’ remarks when a mule-team’s
stalled. But I must git a brace on myself, and
clean up my langwidge for inspection-day.”
He resumed the spelling:
“I done the best I could on them,
and moren that no one can do. Wimmen cant
fite in this cruel war, but they ought all to
do what they can. I only wish I could do more.
But the wimmen must stay at home and watch and
wait, while the men go to the front.”
“That’s all right.
Miss Jerusha Ellen Briggs,” said he, with more
satisfaction. “You jest stay at home and
watch and wait, and I’ll try to do fightin’
enough for both of us. I’ll put in some
extra licks in future on your account, and they won’t
miss you from the front.”
The next paragraph read:
“I should like to hear more of
you and your regiment. The only time
I ever beared of the 200th Indiana regiment was
in a letter writ home by one of our Wisconsin boys
and published in the Bad Ax Grindstone, in which
he said they wuz brigaded with the 200th Indiana,
a good fighting regiment, but which would stele
even the shoes off the brigade mules if they
wuzzent watched, and sumtimes when they wuz.
Ime sorry to hear that any Union soldier is a thief.
I know that our boys from Wisconsin would rather die
than stele.”
“Steal! The 200th Injianny
steal!” Shorty flamed out in a rage. “Them
flabbergasted, knock-kneed, wall-eyed Wisconsin whelps
writin’ home that the Injiannians are thieves!
The idée o’ them longhaired, splay-footed
lumbermen, them chuckleheaded, wap-sided, white-pine
butchers talking about anybody else’s honesty.
Why, they wuz born stealin’. They never
knowed anything else. They’d steal the salt
out o’ your hardtack. They’d steal
the lids off the Bible. They talk about the 200th
Injiannny! I’d like to find the liar that
writ that letter. I’d literally pound the
head offen him.”
It was some time before he could calm
himself down sufficiently to continue his literary
exercise. Then he made out:
“Spring’s lait here,
but things is looking very well. Wheat wintered
good, and a big crop is expected. We had a fine
singing-school during the Winter, but the protracted
meeting drawed off a good many. We doant
complain, however, for the revival brought a
great many into the fold. No moar at present,
but belave me
“Sincerly Your
Friend,
“Jerusha Ellen
Briggs."
Shorty’s heart almost choked
him when he finished. It was the first time in
his hfe that he had received a letter from any woman.
It was the first time since his mother’s days
that any woman had shown the slightest interest in
his personality. And, true man like, his impulses
were to exalt this particular woman into something
above the mere mortal.
Then came a hot flush of indignation
that the Wisconsin men should malign his regiment,
which, of course, included him, to the mind of such
a being. He burned to go over and thrash the first
Wisconsin man he should meet.
“Call us thieves; say we’ll
steal,” he muttered, as he walked toward the
Wisconsin camp. “I’ll learn ’em
different.”
He did not see anybody in the camp
that he could properly administer this needed lesson
to. All the vigorous, able-bodied members seemed
to be out on drill or some other duty, leaving only
a few sick moping around the tents.
Shorty’s attention was called
to a spade lying temptingly behind one of the tents.
He and Si had badly wanted a spade for several days.
Here was an opportunity to acquire one. Shorty
sauntered carelessly around to the rear of the tent,
looked about to see that no one was observing, picked
up the implement and walked off with it with that easy,
innocent air that no one could assume with more success
than he when on a predatory expedition.