Suggestions galore “Shelbyville
only 18 miles away.”
Never was there so wild a storm
but there was a wilder one; never such a downpour
of rain but there could be a greater deluge.
“Seemed to me yesterday,”
said Si, on the morning of June 25, as he vainly tried
to peer through the dashing drench and locate some
of the other regiments of the division, “that
they was givin’ us one of Noah’s Deluge
days that they’d happened to have left over.
Seemed that it couldn’t be no worse, but this
beats it. I don’t think that standin’
under Niagara Falls could be no worse. Howsomever,
this can’t last long. There ain’t
water enough in the United States to keep this up a
great while.”
“Don’t be so sure o’
that,” said Shorty, handing Si the end of a
blanket, that he might help wring it out. “I
believe the Lord sometimes thinks that He didn’t
divide the land and water jest right in the first
place, and that He’d better ‘ve made
a big lake o’ Tennessee instead o’ these
old clay knobs for rebels and niggers to roost on,
and He starts in to carry out that idée.
I wish He’d finish the job at once, and turn
the whole blasted region over to the navy. It
looks as if He had that in mind now.”
“Well,” said the ever-hopeful
Si, “the Bible says that the rain falls on the
just and unjust alike. If it’s tough on
us, it’s jest as tough on them. Their guns
wouldn’t go off any better’n ours yesterday.
If that regiment in front of us could’ve shot
like they can on a dry day they’d ’ve
made a sick time for us.”
About 60,000 Union soldiers and 45,000
rebels struggled through the deluges of rain, the
torrential streams and fathomless mud those June days,
when it seemed that every water-gate of the heavens
was wide open as it had never been before.
The calamity that Si and Shorty had
foreseen came about. The 200th Ind. lost the
advance of the brigade and brought up the rear, which
meant a long day of muscle-straining, temper-wrecking
struggles with stalling wagons, discouraged mules
and stupid teamsters. And as Co. Q was the
left of the regiment, it caught the worst of all.
The 200th Ind. had scarcely pulled
out of camp when its troubles became acute. At
the foot of the hill which had been carried the day
before ran a brook, ordinarily quite a modest stream,
but now raging like a mill-race. The two other
regiments of the brigade and all of the 200th Ind.
but Co. Q had managed to get across by means of
trees which had been felled over the stream at various
places. Co. Q was left behind to see that
the teams got over, while the rest of the 200th Ind.
was halted on the farther bank, to watch the operation
and give help if needed. Si, with a squad in
which was Shorty, was ordered to take the first team,
which it happened Groundhog drove, down into the stream
and start it across.
“Now, be very careful with that
wagon,” called the Adjutant across the stream.
“That has the Headquarters’ things and
papers. Don’t let any water get into the
bed. Cross at the shallowest place.”
Si and Shorty found some poles, and
prodded around as well as they were able in the crossing
to find the shallowest place. If there was a part
so shallow that the bed could be kept above water it
was very narrow, and would require exceedingly skillful
driving to keep on it. The whole regiment stood
around, like a barnyard full of turkeys on a wet day,
and looked on with an air of soppy melancholy.
“Groundhog,” said Si,
approaching that function ary, “was you watchin’
carefully while me and Shorty was pickin’ out
the shallow places?”
“Naw,” answered he, insolently;
“wasn’t watchin’ nothin’ but
my mules. Got enough to do takin’ keer
o’ them, without watchin’ a couple o’
fools projeckin’ around with poles in a mud-hole.
No sense in it, nohow. We never kin git acrost
that ’ere tail-race. Only thing to do is
to go back into camp till it quits rainin’ and
the water runs out.”
“Groundhog,” said Si resolutely,
“you’re not goin’ back to camp; you’re
not goin’ to wait till it stops rainin’.
You’re goin’ right over now, as sure as
my name’s Si Klegg, or I’ll break every
bone in your karkiss.”
“I can’t go over,”
persisted Groundhog. “I ain’t no fool.
I know better what kin be done with an army wagon
and six mules than any Injianny galoot that ever wore
stripes or shoulder-straps. You simply can’t
git a wagon acrost that branch, and I ain’t
goin’ to try.”
“Groundhog,” said Shorty,
“you’ve bin itchin’ to be killed
for at least a year, that I know of probably as long
as you’ve lived. You ought’ve had
a stone tied to your neck and bin flung into the crick
as soon’s you was born. I’ve promised
myself a good many times that I’d about murder
you when ever I had time, but something’s always
made me neglect it. I’m in the killin’
mood to-day, and I’d like to begin on you.
I certainly will unless you drive that team straight
acrost, and don’t git a drop o’ water
in the bed o’ the wagon.”
“Come, hurry up, over there,”
shouted the Adjutant. “We can’t wait
all day. What’s the matter with you?
Get a move on you.”
“All right, sir; we’ll
start at once, sir,” said Si with ostentatious
alacrity.
Shorty slapped his bayonet on, and
brought the point very near Groundhog’s abdomen.
“I’ll jab this thing clean through you
in a holy minute, you pusillanimous basswood cullin’;
you pestiferous pile o’ pizen, rotten punk,”
he said savagely. “Git on your wheel-mule
and gether up the lines.”
Impelled by this, and the vigorous
clutch of Si upon his collar, Groundhog climbed clumsily
into the saddle and sullenly brandished his whip.
The mules made a start and went down
the bank, but at the edge of the turbid torrent the
leaders set their legs as stiffly as if they were the
supports of a sawhorse. They did not make a sound,
but somehow the other four understood, with electric
suddenness, and their legs set like posts.
“Jest as I expected,”
said Groundhog, with a grunt of satisfaction; “they’ve
balked for all day, an’ you can’t git ’em
to move another foot if you killed ’em.
They’re as solid as if they’d growed there.”
With an air of having encountered
the irresistible, he started to get out of his saddle.
“Stay in there, confound you,”
said Shorty, prodding him with his bayonet. “Lick
them mules. Make ’em start.”
“‘Bout as much use in
lickin’ a white-oak stump,” said Groundhog,
plying the whip viciously as a relief to his feelings.
“You kin lick every inch of skin off ’em,
and they won’t move no more’n a gravestone.”
“Start those mules along.
Stop fooling,’ said the Adjutant impatiently.
“We can’t start ’em.
They’re balkin’, sir,” said Si desperately.
“Nonsense, nonsense,”
said the Adjutant. “Come ahead. Don’t
you see you’re stopping the Second Brigade and
all its teams?”
The men of the Second Brigade were
already swarming across on the logs, while looking
backward Si and Shorty could see the road filling up
with teams. They ran down to the lead mules and
caught them by the bridles and tried to pull them
ahead. They might as well have pulled at the
giant sycamore trees growing along the banks.
Everybody now began to take an interest
in the affair. It is one of the delightful peculiarities
of human nature that everybody knows better how to
manage a balky horse or mule than the unfortunate man
who is trying to.
“Stop whippin’ them mules.
You only make them wuss,” shouted one man authoritatively.
“Tie stones to their tails.”
“Tie a string around their ears,”
shouted another. “That’ll be sure
to start ’em.”
“Bite their ears, you fools.
Don’t you know nothin’ about mules?
Bite their ears, I tell you,” shouted a man
from Indianapolis.
“Throw some hot water on ’em.”
“Tie their feet and tails together with a string.”
“Build a fire under ’em.”
“Turn the harness around the other way on ’em.”
“Blindfold ’em.”
Then the regimental humorists began to get in their
work:
“Sing ’em the ‘Battle Cry o’
Freedom.’”
“They’ve struck for more
grub. Promise ’em double rations till we
get to Shelbyville.”
“Stop swearin’, there,
you fellers. You’ve frozen ’em stiff
with your bad language. Pray with ’em.”
“Read them the Emancipation Proclamation.”
“Call ’em pet names.
You can do anything with kindness. Even a mule
has, a heart.”
“Bring up the band and serenade ’em.”
Shorty was raging around the team,
kicking and striking first at one mule and then at
another, and swearing like a pirate, alternately at
the team and then at the jeering crowds. Si was
following suit to the best of his ability, but his
pious education had left him out of sight of Shorty
when it came to using language that the occasion seemed
to justify. He had, however, yanked Groundhog
out of the saddle and driven him up the bank, where
he sat down and grinned at the confusion which had
overtaken his enemies.
Setting a man at the head of each
mule to coax and encourage him, and the rest of the
company to pushing and prying on the wagon, Si had
mounted the wheel-mule himself and put forth his mule-knowledge
in one feverish effort, which was as futile as it
was desperate, for the mules did not seem to change
their positions for a rest, even, when the wagon was
forced forward on them.
A very dapper young Aid, fresh from
West Point, and with that high appreciation for himself
that can only be acquired at the United States Military
Academy, galloped up, sternly ordering everybody to
make way for him, and,
“Present the compliments of
the Major-General commanding the division, and what
the h-’s the matter?”
“Capt. McGillicuddy, to
whom the young gentle man had been referred as in
charge, said quietly:
“You see: A mule-team has
balked and stopped everything. We’re doing
our best to start them, but so far without success.”
“So we all perceive,”
said the young man superciliously. “Why
are you not down there directing them?”
“The men that I have down there
thoroughly understand mules, and are doing their very
utmost. They are having, as you can see, a superfluity
of advice which is not helping them. I can best
help by letting them alone to work it out their own
way. They will do all that men can.”
“I shall report the case to
the General,” said the Aid, with scarcely-concealed
insolence. “Just like these confounded volunteers,”
he said as he turned away, taking no pains to keep
the Captain from overhearing. “Never will
be genuine soldiers in the world. Here, my men,”
continued he, riding over to the wagon, “stir
yourselves lively, now, and start these wagons along.
I want no more fooling, and won’t have it.
Start, now.”
Shorty had the usual volunteer dislike
to young West Pointers; like the rest of the men he
cordially hated and ridiculed the young and airy staff
officers, whether from West Point or not. It irritated
him to see the youngster’s treatment of his
Captain. Saying snappy things at and about the
Captain was a privilege jealously reserved to members
of the company. To have anybody outside abuse
the Captain was an insult to be resented. Above
all, his American soul rose in wrath at the patronizing
“my men.” He would not have been at
all offended at one of his own rough-and-ready officers
jumping in and distributing curses on all hands, but
“my men” was too much for him.
Without appearing to notice the presence
of the Aid, Shorty walked up to the lead-mule, gave
him a tremendous kick in the ribs, and sung out in
a tone loud enough to be heard across the roaring
branch:
“You pernickety pile o’
poll-evil; you hee-hawin’ graduate o’ West
Point; you pin-feathered, taller-faced, pop-eyed, lantern-jawed,
loud-mouthed Second Lieutenant, you, won’t you
git up?”
The other boys began to catch on and
grin. The Aid’s face flushed, but Shorty
continued his loud objurgations at the mule:
“You misbegotten pill o’
perdition; you pompous, puddin’-headed staff
officer; you miserable errand-boy for the General,
puttin’ on more airs than the General; you half-hatched
officer, runnin’ around yit with the shell on
your head, and pretendin’ to be cock-o’-the-walk,
won’t you git up?”
Even the Aid began to understand the
drift of Shorty’s remarks by this time, and
Capt. McGillicuddy called out warningly:
“Shorty! Shorty!"’
Si looked in amazement at this new
development of his partner’s genius. The
officers and men on the other side of the branch seemed
to have forgotten for the moment the annoyance of
the balked team in enjoyment of Shorty’s outburst.
“Why under heaven they put such
murrain cattle as you in the army I can’t tell,”
he continued with another savage kick in the mule’s
side. “You only take up room from your
betters. You don’t fight, you only strut
like a turkey-cock, and eat and he-haw. Now, will
you git up?”
The Aid could not fail to understand
now. He burst out in a torrent of rage:
“You infernal scoundrel,” he shouted, forcing
his horse up to Shorty; “I’ll have you
shot for insubordination, for insulting and mutinous
language to your superior officer.”
“I wasn’t sayin’
nothin’ to you,” said Shorty, looking up
with an air of surprise. “I hain’t
had nothin’ to do with you. I was cussin’
this other piebald pilgarlic from West Point; this
other pig headed pickaninny o’ the Regular Army;
this Brevet-Second Lieutenant o’ the Quartermaster’s
Department, and Aid on the staff o’ Gen. Groundhog.
You ain’t my superior officer, nohow.”
“Corporal,” shouted the
Aid to Si, “take this rascal up there on the
bank and buck-and-gag him. Do it at once.”
“I don’t believe you have
the right to give me orders, sir,” said Si respectfully.
“I am under Capt. McGillicuddy’s orders.”
“You are right, Corporal,”
said Capt. McGillicuddy, stepping forward.
“Lieutenant, you cannot order one of my men to
be punished. You have no right to command here.
You are merely to convey the General’s orders
to those who are in command.”
“I have the right to give orders.
I represent the General, and speak in his name, and
I order that man to be bucked-and-gagged,” reiterated
the Aid in a flame of anger. “I’ll
see that it is done. I shall not be so insulted
before the whole army. It will destroy all discipline.”
“Fortunately, the discipline
of the army does not depend on the respect shown Second
Lieutenants,” Capt. McGillicuddy could not
help saying. “If you have any complaint
to make against one of my men, state it to me, their
Captain, or to the Colonel of the regiment. We
are the persons, not you, to deal with them.”
The men around understood; nothing
pleased them better than to see a bumptious young
Aid sat down upon, and they were outspoken in their
delight.
“I shall report you to the General,
and have you court-martialed,” said the Aid,
shaking his fist at Capt. McGillicuddy. “I
shall!”
“Mr. Farwell,” said the
Chief of Staff, riding up, “why haven’t
you reported to the General as to the trouble here?
We’ve been waiting for you.”
“Here,” came the clear-cut
tones of the Colonel across the branch; “no
use of wasting any more time on those mules. They’re
there to stay. Unhitch them, fasten on a picket-rope,
and we’ll pull the wagon across from this side.”
Everybody sprang to execute this order,
but Si and Shorty’s hands had not reached the
traces when an idea seemed to shoot simultaneously
through each of the six mules, and with one impulse
they plunged ahead, directly into the swollen waters.
Si and Shorty sprang back toward their
heads to guide them over the narrow crossing.
But the mules seemed to take the right course by instinct,
and landed the wagon safely on the other side, without
a particle of water entering the bed. Everybody
cheered, and Si and Shorty looked as if their minds
had been relieved of a terrible load.
“Si,” said Shorty, with
a tinge of weariness in his tone, “they say it
is about 18 miles from here to Shelbyville.”
“Somethin’ like that,” answered
Si.
“I think there are about three
o’ these cricks to every mile. Do you really
suppose we’ll be able to git there before our
three years is up?”
“All depends on the mules,”
answered Si cheerily. “If this sudden spell
o’ goodness holds out we may get there before
evening.”