Two men sat early the next morning
in a tent with a pot of coffee and a breakfast of
strips of bacon between them. One was elderly,
calm and grave, and his face was known well to the
army; the other was youngish, slight, dark and also
calm, and the soldiers were not familiar with his
face. They were General Lee and Mr. Sefton.
The Secretary had arrived from Richmond
just before the dawn with messages of importance,
and none could tell them with more easy grace than
he. He was quite unembarrassed now as he sat in
the presence of the great General, announcing the
wishes of the Government wishes which lost
no weight in the telling, and whether he was speaking
or not he watched the man before him with a stealthy
gaze that nothing escaped.
“The wishes of the Cabinet are
clear, General Lee,” he said, “and I have
been chosen to deliver them to you orally, lest written
orders by any chance should fall into the hands of
the enemy.”
“And those wishes are?”
“That the war be carried back
into the enemy’s own country. It is better
that he should feel its ills more heavily than we.
You will recall, General, how terror spread through
the North when you invaded Pennsylvania. Ah,
if it had not been for Gettysburg!”
He paused and looked from under lowered
eyelashes at the General. There had been criticism
of Lee because of Gettysburg, but he never defended
himself, taking upon his shoulders all the blame that
might or might not be his. Now when Mr. Sefton
mentioned the name of Gettysburg in such a connection
his face showed no change. The watchful Secretary
could not see an eyelid quiver.
“Yes, Gettysburg was a great
misfortune for us,” said the General, in his
usual calm, even voice. “Our troops did
wonders there, but they did not win.”
“I scarcely need to add, General,”
said the Secretary, “that the confidence of
the Government in you is still unlimited.”
Then making deferential excuses, Mr.
Sefton left the tent and Lee followed his retreating
figure with a look of antipathy.
The Secretary wandered through the
camp, watching everything. He had that most valuable
of all qualities, the ability to read the minds of
men, and now he set himself to the discovery of what
these simple soldiers, the cannon food, were thinking.
He did it, too, without attracting any attention to
himself, by a deft question here, a suggestion there,
and then more questions, always indirect, but leading
in some fashion to the point. Curiously, but truly,
his suggestions were not optimistic, and after he
talked with a group of soldiers and passed on the
effect that he left was depressing. He, too, looked
across toward the Northern lines, and, civilian though
he was, he knew that their tremendous infolding curve
was more than twice as great as that forming the lines
of the South. A singular light appeared in the
Secretary’s eyes as he noticed this, but he
made no verbal comment, not even to himself.
The Secretary’s steps led straight
toward the house in which the wounded Colonel Harley
lay, and when the voice bidding him to enter in response
to his knock was feminine, he smiled slightly, entered
with light step, and bowed with all the old school’s
courteous grace over the hand of Helen Harley.
“There are some women, Miss
Harley,” he said, “who do not fear war
and war’s alarms.”
“Some, Mr. Sefton!” she
replied. “There are many in the
South, I know and there must be as many
in the North.”
“It is your generous heart that
speaks,” he said, and then he turned to Colonel
Harley, who was claiming the attention of an old acquaintance.
The two men shook hands with great
warmth. Here was one who received the Secretary
without reserve. Miss Harley, watching, saw how
her brother hung upon the words of this accomplished
man of the world; how he listened with a pleased air
to his praise and how he saw in the Secretary a great
man and a friend.
He asked Helen presently if she would
not walk with him a little in the camp and her brother
seconded the idea. He was not intentionally selfish,
and he loved his sister.
“She sits here all the time
nursing me,” he said, “when I’m almost
well, and she needs the fresh air. Take her out,
Mr. Sefton, and I’ll thank you if she doesn’t.”
But she was willing to go. She
was young; red blood flowed in her veins; she wished
to be happy; and the world, despite this black cloud
of war which hung over her part of it, was curious
and interesting. She was not fond of close rooms
and sick beds, so with a certain relief she walked
forth by the side of the Secretary.
It was another of those beautiful
days in May which clothe the Virginia earth in a gauze
of spun silver. Nature was blooming afresh, and
peace, disturbed by the vain battle of the night before,
had returned to the armies.
“It seems to me a most extraordinary
thing to behold these two armies face to face and
yet doing nothing,” said Helen.
“Wars consist of much more than
battles,” replied the Secretary.
“I am learning that,” she said.
She looked about her with eager interest,
custom not dimming to her the strange sights of an
army in camp and on the eve of a great conflict.
Nothing was like what she imagined it would be.
The soldiers seemed to have no fear of death; in fact,
nothing, if they could be judged by their actions,
was further from their thoughts; they were gay rather
than sad, and apparently were enjoying life with an
indifference to circumstances that was amazing.
They were joined presently by Prescott,
who thought it no part of his cue to avoid the Secretary.
Mr. Sefton received him with easy courtesy, and the
three strolled on together.
The Secretary asked the news of the
camp, and Prescott replied that the Reverend Doctor
Warren, a favourite minister, was about to preach to
the soldiers.
“He is worth hearing,”
said Prescott. “Doctor Warren is no ordinary
man, and this is Sunday, you know.”
This army, like other armies, included
many wild and lawless men who cherished in their hearts
neither the fear of God nor the fear of man; but the
South was religious, and if the battle or march did
not forbid, Sunday was observed with the rites of
the church. The great Jackson, so eager for the
combat on other days, would not fight on Sunday if
it could be helped.
The crowd was gathering already to
hear the minister, who would address them from a rude
little platform built in the centre of a glade.
The day was so calm, so full of the
May bloom that Helen felt its peace steal over her,
and for the moment there was no war; this was not an
army, but just a great camp-meeting in the woods, such
as the South often had and still has.
The soldiers were gathered already
to the number of many thousands, some sitting on stumps
and logs and others lying on the ground. All were
quiet, inspired with respect for the man and his cloth.
“Let us sit here and listen,”
said Prescott, and the three, sitting on a convenient
log, waited.
Doctor Warren, for he was an M.A.
and a Ph.D. of a great American university and had
taken degrees at another in Germany, ascended his
rude forest pulpit. He was then about forty years
of age; tall, thin, with straight black hair, slightly
long, and with angular but intellectual features.
“A good man,” thought
Helen, and she was deeply impressed by his air of
authority and the respect that he so evidently inspired.
He spoke to them as to soldiers of
the cross, and he made his appeal directly to their
hearts and minds, never to their passions. He
did not inquire into the causes of the conflict in
which they were engaged, he had no criticism for the
men on the other side; he seemed rather to include
them in his address. He said it was a great war,
marked by many terrible battles as it would be marked
by many more, and he besought them so to bear themselves
that whatever the issue none could say that he had
not done his duty as he saw it. And whether they
fell in battle or not, that would be the great comfort
to those who were at home awaiting their return.
Prescott noticed many general officers
in the crowd listening as attentively as the soldiers.
All sounds in the camp had died and the speaker’s
clear voice rose now and penetrated far through the
forest. The open air, the woods, the cannon at
rest clothed the scene with a solemnity that no cathedral
could have imparted. The same peace enfolded
the Northern army, and it required but little fancy
to think that the soldiers there were listening, too.
It seemed at the moment an easy and natural thing
for them both to lay down their arms and go home.
The minister talked, too, of home,
a place that few of those who heard him had seen in
two years or more, but he spoke of it not to enfeeble
them, rather to call another influence to their aid
in this struggle of valour and endurance. Prescott
saw tears rise more than once in the eyes of hardened
soldiers, and he became conscious again of the power
of oratory over the Southern people. The North
loved to read and the South to hear speeches; that
seemed to him to typify the difference in the sections.
The minister grew more fiery and more
impassioned. His penetrating voice reached far
through the woods and around him was a ring of many
thousands. Few have ever spoken to audiences so
large and so singular; of women there were not twenty,
just men, and men mostly young, mere boys the majority,
but with faces brown and scarred and clothing tattered
and worn, men hardened to wounds and reckless of death,
men who had seen life in its wildest and most savage
phases. But all the brown and scarred faces were
upturned to the preacher, and the eyes of the soldiers
as they listened gleamed with emotional fire.
The wind moaned now and then, but none heard it.
Around them the smoky camp-fires flared and cast a
distorting light over those who heard.
Prescott’s mind, as he listened
to the impassioned voice of the preacher and looked
at the brown, wild faces of those who listened, inevitably
went back to the Crusades. There was now no question
of right or wrong, but he beheld in it the spirit
of men stirred by their emotions and gathering a sort
of superhuman fire for the last and greatest conflict,
for Armageddon. Here was the great drama played
against the background of earth and sky, and all the
multitude were actors.
The spirit of the preacher, too, was
that of the crusading priest. The battlefields
before them were but part of the battle of life; it
was their duty to meet the foe there as bravely as
they met the temptation of evil, and then he preached
of the reward afterward, the Heaven to come.
His listeners began to see a way into a better life
through such a death, and many shook with emotion.
The spell was complete. The wind
still moaned afar, and the fires still flared, casting
their pallid light, but all followed the preacher.
They saw only his deepset, burning eyes, the long
pale face, and the long black hair that fell around
it. They followed only his promises of death
and life. He besought them to cast their sins
at the feet of the Master to confess and
prepare for the great day to come.
Prescott was a sober man, one who
controlled his emotions, but he could not help being
shaken by the scene, the like of which the world has
not witnessed since the Crusades the vast
forest, the solemn sky overhead, the smoky fires below,
and the fifty thousand in the shadow of immediate
death who hung on the words of one man.
The preacher talked of olden days,
of the men who, girding themselves for the fight,
fell in the glory of the Lord. Theirs was a beautiful
death, he said, and forgiveness was for all who should
do as they and cast away their sins. Groans began
to arise from the more emotional of the soldiers;
some wept, many now came forward and, confessing their
sins, asked that prayers be said for their souls.
Others followed and then they went forward by thousands.
Over them still thundered the voice of the preacher,
denouncing the sin of this world and announcing the
glory of the world to come. Clouds swept up the
heavens and the fires burned lower, but no one noticed.
Before them flashed the livid face and burning eyes
of the preacher, and he moved them with his words as
the helmsman moves the ship.
Denser and denser grew the throng
that knelt at his feet and begged for his prayers,
and there was the sound of weeping. Then he ceased
suddenly and, closing his eyes and bending his head,
began to pray. Involuntarily the fifty thousand,
too, closed their eyes and bent their heads.
He called them brands snatched from
the burning; he devoted their souls to God. There
on their knees they had confessed their sins and he
promised them the life everlasting. New emotions
began to stir the souls of those who mourned.
Death? What was that? Nothing. A mere
dividing place between mortality and immortality,
a mark, soon passed, and nothing more. They began
to feel a divine fire. They welcomed wounds and
death, the immortal passage, and they longed for the
battlefield and the privilege of dying for their country.
They thought of those among their comrades who had
been so fortunate as to go on before, and expected
joyfully soon to see them again.
Prescott looked up once, and the scene
was more powerful and weird than any he had ever seen
before. The great throng of people stood there
with heads bowed listening to the single voice pouring
out its invocation and holding them all within its
sweep and spell.
The preacher asked the blessing of
God on every one and finished his prayer. Then
he began to sing:
“I’ve found a
friend in Jesus,
He is everything
to me,
He’s the fairest of
ten thousand to my soul;
The Lily of the
Valley in Him alone I see
All I need to cleanse and
make me fully whole.
“He’s my comfort
in trouble,
In sorrow He’s my stay;
He tells me every
care on Him to roll.
He’s the Lily of the
Valley, the Bright and Morning Star
He’s the
fairest of ten thousand to my soul.”
He sang one verse alone, and then
the soldiers began to join, at first by tens, then
by hundreds and then by thousands, until the grand
chorus, rolling and majestic, of fifty thousand voices
swelled through all the forest:
“He’s the Lily
of the Valley, the Bright and Morning Star,
He’s the fairest of
ten thousand to my soul.”
The faces of the soldiers were no
longer sad. They were transfigured now.
Joy had come after sorrow and then forgiveness.
They heard the promise.
“The best of all ways to prepare
soldiers for battle,” said a cynical voice at
Prescott’s elbow.
It was Mr. Sefton.
“But it is not so intended,” rejoined
Prescott.
“Perhaps not, but it will suffice.”
“His is what I call constructive
oratory,” presently continued the Secretary
in a low voice. “You will notice that what
he says is always calculated to strengthen the mind,
although the soldiers themselves do not observe it.”
“But no man could be more sincere,” said
Helen.
“I do not doubt it,” replied the Secretary.
“It is impossible for me to
think that the men singing here may fall in battle
in a few days,” said Helen.
The singing ended and in a few minutes
the soldiers were engaged in many avocations, going
about the business of the day. Prescott and Mr.
Sefton took Helen back to the house and then each
turned to his own task.
Several officers were gathered before
a camp-fire on the following morning mending their
clothes. They were in good humour because Talbot
was with them and gloom rarely endured long in his
presence.
“After all, why should the spirit
of mortal be proud?” said Talbot. “Will
it profit me more to be killed in a decent uniform
than in a ragged one?”
“Don’t you want to make
a respectable casualty?” asked Prescott.
“Yes; but I don’t like
to work so much for it,” replied Talbot.
“It’s harder to dress well now than it
is to win a battle. You can get mighty little
money and it’s worth mighty little after you
get it. The ’I promise to pay’ of
the Confederate States of America has sunk terribly
low, boys.”
He held up a Confederate bill and
regarded it with disgust.
“It would take a wheelbarrow
full of those to buy a decent suit of clothes,”
he said. “Do you know the luck I had yesterday
when I tried to improve my toilet?”
All showed interest.
“More than six months’
pay was due me,” said Talbot, “and thinking
I’d buy something to wear, I went around to
old Seymour, the paymaster, for an installment.
‘See here, Seymour,’ I said, ’can’t
you let me have a month’s pay. It’s
been so long since I have had any money that I’ve
forgotten how it looks. I want to refresh my memory.’
“You ought to have seen the
look old Seymour put on. You’d have thought
I’d asked him for the moon. ‘Talbot’
he said, ’you’re the cheekiest youngster
I’ve met in a long time.’
“‘But the army owes me
six months’ pay,’ I said. ’What’s
that got to do with it?’ he asked. ‘I’d
like to know what use a soldier has for money?’
Then he looked me up and down as if it wouldn’t
work a footrule hard to measure me. But I begged
like a good fellow said I wanted to buy
some new clothes, and I’d be satisfied if he’d
let me have only a month’s pay. At last
he gave me the month’s pay five hundred
dollars in nice new Confederate bills,
and I went to a sutler to buy the best he had in the
way of raiment.
“I particularly wanted a nice
new shirt and found one just to suit me. ‘The
price?’ I said to the sutler. ‘Eight
hundred dollars,’ he answered, as if he didn’t
care whether I took it or not. That settled me
so far as the shirt question was concerned I’d
have to wait for that until I was richer; but I looked
through his stock and at last I bought a handkerchief
for two hundred dollars, two paper collars for one
hundred dollars each, and I’ve got this hundred
dollars left. Oh, I’m a bargainer!”
And he waved the Confederate bill aloft in triumph.
“I’d give this hundred
dollars for a good cigar,” he added, “but
there isn’t one in the army.”
One of the men sang:
“I am busted, mother,
busted.
Gone the last
unhappy check;
And the infernal sutler’s
prices
Make every pocket-book
a wreck.”
Prescott sat reading a newspaper.
It was the issue of the Richmond Whig of April
30, 1864, and his eyes were on these paragraphs:
“That the great struggle is
about to take place for the possession of Richmond
is conceded on all sides. The enemy is marshaling
his cohorts on the Rapahannock and the Peninsula,
and that a last desperate effort will be made to overrun
Virginia and occupy her ancient capital is admitted
by the enemy himself. What, then, becomes the
duty of the people of Richmond in view of the mighty
conflict at hand? It is evidently the same as
that of the commander of a man-of-war who sails out
of port to engage the foes of his flag in mortal combat.
The decks are cleared for action; non-combatants are
ordered below or ashore; the supply of ammunition
and food is looked to, and a short prayer uttered
that Heaven will favour the right and protect the land
and the loved ones for whom the battle is waged.
“We sincerely hope and pray
that the red waves of battle may not, as in 1862,
roll and break and hiss against the walls of the capital,
and the ears of our suffering but resolute people
may never again be saluted by the reports of hostile
guns. But our hopes may be disappointed; the
enemy may come again as he has come before, and, for
aught we know, the battle may be fought on these hills
and in these streets. It is with a view of this
possible contingency that we would urge upon our people
to make all needful preparation for whatever fate
betides them, and especially to give our brave and
unconquerable defenders a clear deck and open field.
And above all, let the living oracles of our holy
religion, and pious men and women of every persuasion,
remember that God alone giveth the victory, and that
His ear is ever open to the prayer of the righteous.”
Prescott’s thoughts the next
morning were of Lucia Catherwood, who had floated
away from him in a sort of haze. It seemed a long
time since they parted that night in the snow, and
he found himself trying to reproduce her face and
the sounds of her voice. Where was she now?
With that army which hung like a thunder cloud on
their front? He had no doubt of it. Her
work would be there. He felt that they were going
to meet again, and it would not be long.
That day the Southern breeze blew
stronger and sweeter than ever. It came up from
the Gulf, laden with a million odours, and the little
wild flowers in delicate tints of pink and purple
and blue peeped up amid the shades of the forest.
That night Grant, with one hundred
and thirty thousand men and four hundred guns, crossed
the Rapidan and advanced on the Army of Northern Virginia.
The fiercest and bloodiest campaign
recorded since history rose from the past was about
to begin.