Harry was sent a few days later with
dispatches from the president to General Lee, who
was still in his camp beside the Opequan. Dalton
was held in the capital for further messages, but
Harry was not sorry to make the journey alone.
The stay in Richmond had been very pleasant.
The spirits of youth, confined, had overflowed, but
he was beginning to feel a reaction. One must
return soon to the battlefield. This was merely
a lull in the storm which would sweep with greater
fury than ever. The North, encouraged by Gettysburg
and Vicksburg, was gathering vast masses which would
soon be hurled upon the South, and Harry knew how thin
the lines there were becoming.
He thought, too, of Shepard, who was
the latest to score in their duel, and he believed
that this man had already sent to the Northern leaders
information beyond value. Harry felt that he
must strive in some manner to make the score even.
It was late in the summer when he
rejoined the Army of Northern Virginia and delivered
the letters to the commander-in-chief, who sat in the
shade of a large tree. Harry observed him closely.
He seemed a little grayer than before the Battle
of Gettysburg, but his manner was as confident as
ever. He filled to both eye and mind the measure
of a great general. After asking Harry many questions
he dismissed him for a while, to play, so he said.
The young Kentuckian at once, and,
as a matter of course, sought the Invincibles.
St. Clair and Langdon hailed him with shouts of joy,
but to his great surprise, Colonel Leonidas Talbot
and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire were not
playing chess.
“We were getting on with the
game last night, Harry,” explained Colonel Talbot,
“but we came to a point where we were about to
develop heat over a projected move. Then, in
order to avoid such a lamentable occurrence, we decided
to postpone further play until to-night. But
we find you looking uncommonly well, Harry.
The flesh pots of Egypt have agreed with you.”
“I had a good time in Richmond,
sir, a fine one,” replied Harry. “The
people there have certainly been kind to me, as they
are to all the officers of the Army of Northern Virginia.”
“What have you done with the
grave Dalton, who was your comrade on your journey
to the capital?”
“They’ve kept him there
for the present. They think he’s stronger
proof against the luxuries and temptations of a city
than I am.”
“Youth is youth, and I’m
glad that you’ve had this little fling, Harry.
Perhaps you’ll have another, as I think you’ll
be sent back to Richmond very soon.”
“What has been going on here, Colonel?”
“Very little. Nothing,
in fact, of any importance. When we crossed
the swollen Potomac, although threatened by an enemy
superior to us in numbers, I felt that we would not
be pushed. General Meade has been deliberate,
extremely deliberate in his offensive movements.
Up North they call Gettysburg a great victory, but
we’re resting here calmly and peacefully.
Hector and I and our young friends have found rural
peace and ease among these Virginia hills and valleys.
You, of course, found Richmond very gay and bright?”
“Very gay and bright, Colonel,
and full of handsome ladies.”
Colonel Talbot sighed and Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire sighed also.
“Hector and I should have been
there,” said Colonel Talbot. “Although
we’ve never married, we have a tremendous admiration
for the ladies, and in our best uniforms we’re
not wholly unpopular among them, eh, Hector?”
“Not by any means, Leonidas.
We’re not as young as Harry here, but I know
that you’re a fine figure of a man, and you know
that I am. Moreover, our experience of the dangerous
sex is so much greater than that of mere boys like
Harry and Arthur and Tom here, that we know how to
make ourselves much more welcome. You talk to
them about frivolous things, mere chit chat, while
we explain grave and important matters to them.”
“Are you sure, sir,” asked
St. Clair, “that the ladies don’t really
prefer chit chat?”
“I was not speaking of little
girls. I was alluding to those ornaments of
their sex who have arrived at years of discretion.
Ah, if Leonidas and I were only a while in Richmond!
It would be the next best thing to being in Charleston.”
“Maybe the Invincibles will be sent there for
a while.”
“Perhaps. I don’t
foresee any great activity here in the autumn.
How do they regard the Army of Northern Virginia in
Richmond now, Harry?”
“With supreme confidence.”
The talk soon drifted to the people
whom Harry had met at the capital, and then he told
of his adventure with Shepard, the spy.
“He seems to be a most daring
man,” said Talbot; “not a mere ordinary
spy, but a man of a higher type. I think he’s
likely to do us great harm. But the woman, Miss
Carden, was surely kind to you. If she hadn’t
found you wandering around in the rain you’d
have doubtless dropped down and died. God bless
the ladies.”
“And so say we all of us,” said Harry.
He returned to Richmond in a few days,
bearing more dispatches, and to his great delight
all that was left of the Invincibles arrived a week
later to recuperate and see a little of the world.
St. Clair and Happy Tom plunged at once and with
all the ardor of youth into the gayeties of social
life, and the two colonels followed them at a more
dignified but none the less earnest pace. All
four appeared in fine new uniforms, for which they
had saved their money, and they were conspicuous upon
every occasion.
Harry was again at the Curtis house,
and although it was not a great ball this time the
assemblage was numerous, including all his friends.
The two colonels had become especial favorites everywhere,
and they were telling stories of the old South, which
Harry had divined was passing; passing whether the
South won or not.
Although there had been much light
talk through the evening and an abundance of real
gayety, nearly every member of the company, nevertheless,
had serious moments. The news from Tennessee
and Georgia was heavy with import. It was vague
in some particulars, but it was definite enough in
others to tell that the armies of Rosecrans and Bragg
were approaching each other. All eyes turned
to the West. A great battle could not be long
delayed, and a powerful division of the Army of Northern
Virginia under Longstreet had been sent to help Bragg.
Harry found himself late at night
once more in that very room in which the map had disappeared
so mysteriously. The two colonels, St. Clair
and Langdon, and one or two others had drifted in,
and the older men were smoking. Inevitably they
talked of the battle which they foresaw with such
certainty, and Harry’s anxiety about it was increased,
because he knew his father would be there on one side,
and the cousin, for whom he cared so much, would be
on the other.
“If only General Lee were in
command there,” said Colonel Talbot, “we
might reckon upon a great and decisive victory.”
“But Bragg is a good general,”
said Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire.
“It’s not enough to be
merely a good general. He must have the soul
of fire that Lee has, and that Jackson had. Bragg
is the Southern McClellan. He is brave enough
personally, but he always overrates the strength of
the enemy, and, if he is victorious on the field, he
does not reap the fruits of victory.”
“Where were the armies when
we last heard from them?” asked a captain.
“Bragg was turning north to
attack Rosecrans, who stood somewhere between him
and Chattanooga.”
“I’m glad that it’s
Rosecrans and not Grant who commands the Northern
army there,” said Harry.
“Why?” asked Colonel Talbot.
“I’ve studied the manner
in which he took Vicksburg, and I’ve heard about
him from my father, and others. He won’t
be whipped. He isn’t like the other Northern
generals. He hangs on, whatever happens.
I heard some one quoting him as saying that no matter
how badly his army was suffering in battle, the army
of the other fellow might be suffering worse.
It seems to me that a general who is able to think
that way is very dangerous.”
“And so he is, Harry,”
said Colonel Talbot. “I, too, am glad that
it’s Rosecrans and not Grant. If there’s
any news of a battle, we’re not in a bad place
to hear it. It’s said that Mr. Curtis always
knows as soon as our government what’s happened.”
The talk drifted on to another subject
and then a hum came from the larger room. A
murmur only, but it struck such an intense and earnest
note that Harry was convinced.
“It’s news of battle! I know it!”
he exclaimed.
They sprang to their feet and hurried
into the ballroom. William Curtis, his habitual
calm broken, was standing upon a chair and all the
people had gathered in front of him. A piece
of paper, evidently a telegram, was clutched in his
hand.
“Friends,” he said in
a strained, but exultant voice, “a great battle
has been fought near Chattanooga on a little river
called the Chickamauga, and we have won a magnificent
victory.”
A mighty cheer came from the crowd.
“The army of Rosecrans, attacked
with sudden and invincible force by Bragg, has been
shattered and driven into Chattanooga.”
Another cheer burst forth.
“No part of the Union army was
able to hold fast, save one wing under Thomas.”
A third mighty cheer arose, but this
time Harry did not join in it. He felt a sudden
sinking of the heart at the words, “save one
wing under Thomas.” Then the victory was
not complete. It could be complete only when
the whole Union army was driven from the field.
As long as Thomas stood, there was a flaw in the
triumph. He had heard many times of this man,
Thomas. He had Grant’s qualities.
He was at his best in apparent defeat.
“Is there anything else, Mr.
Curtis?” asked Colonel Talbot.
“That is all my agent sends
me concerning its results, but he says that it lasted
two days, and that it was fierce and bloody beyond
all comparison with anything that has happened in
the West. He estimated that the combined losses
are between thirty and forty thousand men.”
A heavy silence fell upon them all.
The victory was great, but the price for it was great,
too. Yet exultation could not be subdued long.
They were soon smiling over it, and congratulating
one another. But Harry was still unable to share
wholly in the joy of victory.
“Why this gloom in your face,
when all the rest of us are so happy?” asked
St. Clair.
“My father was there.
He may have fallen. How do I know?”
“That’s not it.
He always comes through. What’s the real
cause? Out with it!”
“You know that part of the dispatch
saying, ’No part of the Union army was able
to hold fast save one wing under Thomas.’
How about that wing! You heard, too, what the
colonel said about General Bragg. He always
overestimates the strength of the enemy, and while
he may win a victory he will not reap the fruits of
it. That wing under Thomas still may be standing
there, protecting all the rest of the Union army.”
“Come now, old Sober Face!
This isn’t like you. We’ve won a
grand victory! We’ve more than paid them
back for their Gettysburg.”
Harry rejoiced then with the others,
but at times the thought came to him that Thomas with
one wing might yet be standing between Bragg and complete
victory. When he and Dalton went back home they
were again with the Lanhams they found
the whole population of Richmond ablaze with triumph.
The Yankee army in the West had been routed.
Not only was Chickamauga an offset for Gettysburg,
but for Vicksburg as well, and once more the fortunes
of the South were rising toward the zenith.
Dalton had returned from the army
a little later this time than Harry, but he had joined
him at the Lanhams’, and he too showed gravity
amid the almost universal rejoicing.
“I see that you’re afraid
the next news won’t be so complete, Harry,”
he said.
“That’s it, George.
We don’t really know much, except that Thomas
was holding his ground. Oh, if only Stonewall
Jackson were there! Remember how he came down
on them at the Second Manassas and at Chancellorsville!
Thomas would be swept off his feet and as Rosecrans
retreated into Chattanooga our army would pour right
on his heels!”
They waited eagerly the next day and
the next for news, and while Richmond was still filled
with rejoicings over Chickamauga, Harry saw that his
fears were justified. Thomas stood till the end.
Bragg had not followed Rosecrans into Chattanooga.
The South had won a great battle, but not a decisive
victory. The commanding general had not reaped
all the rewards that were his for the taking.
Bragg had justified in every way Colonel Talbot’s
estimate of him.
And yet Richmond, like the rest of
the South, felt the great uplift of Chickamauga, the
most gigantic battle of the West. It told South
as well as North that the war was far from over.
The South could no longer invade the North, nor could
the North invade the South at will. Even on
the northernmost border of the rebelling section the
Army of Northern Virginia under its matchless leader,
rested in its camp, challenging and defiant.
Harry was glad to return with his
friends to the army. His brief period of festival
was over, and his fears for his father had been relieved
by a letter, stating that he had received no serious
harm in the great and terrible battle of Chickamauga.
After the failure of the armies of
Lee and Meade to bring about a decisive battle at
Mine Run, the Army of Northern Virginia established
its autumn and winter headquarters on a jutting spur
of the great range called Clarke’s Mountain,
Orange Court House lying only a few miles to the west.
The huge camp was made in a wide-open space, surrounded
by dense masses of pines and cedars. Tents were
pitched securely, and, feeling that they were to stay
here a long time many of the soldiers built rude log
cabins.
General Lee himself continued to use
his tent, which stood in the center of the camp, the
streets of tents and cabins radiating from it like
the spokes of a wheel. Close about Lee’s
own tent were others occupied by Colonel Taylor, his
adjutant general, Colonel Peyton, Colonel Marshall,
and other and younger officers, including Harry and
Dalton. A little distance down one of the main
avenues, which they were pleased to call Victory Street,
the Invincibles were encamped, and Harry saw them almost
every day.
The troops were well fed now, and
the brooks provided an abundance of clear water.
The days were still warm, but the evenings were cold,
and, inhaling the healing odors of the pines and cedars,
wounded soldiers returned rapidly to health.
It was a wonderful interval for Harry
and his friends associated with him so closely.
Save for the presence of armies, it seemed at times
that there was no war. Deep peace prevailed
along the Rapidan and the slopes of the mountain.
It was the longest period of rest that he and his
comrades were to know in the course of the mighty struggle.
The action of the war was now chiefly in the Southwest,
where Grant, taking the place of Rosecrans, was seeking
to recover all that was lost at Chickamauga.
Harry had another letter from his
father, telling him that his own had been received,
and giving personal details of the titanic struggle
on the Chickamauga. He did not speak out directly,
but Harry saw in his words the vain regret that the
great opportunity won at Chickamauga at such a terrible
price had not been used. In his belief the whole
Federal army might have been destroyed, and the star
of the South would have risen again to the zenith.
Here Harry sighed and remembered his
own forebodings. Oh, if only a Stonewall Jackson
had been there! His mighty sweep would have driven
Thomas and the rest in a wild rout. A tear rose
in his eye as he remembered his lost hero. He
sincerely believed then and always that the Confederacy
would have won had he not fallen on that fatal evening
at Chancellorsville. It was an emotion with
him, a permanent emotion with which logic could not
interfere.
Harry was conscious, too, that the
long quiet on the Eastern front was but a lull.
There was nothing to signify peace in it. If
the North had ever felt despair about the war Gettysburg
and Vicksburg had removed every trace of it.
He knew that beyond the blue ranges of mountains,
both to east and west, vast preparations were going
forward. The North, the region of great population,
of illimitable resources, of free access to the sea,
and of mechanical genius that had counted for so much
in arming her soldiers, was gathering herself for
a supreme effort. The great defeats of the war’s
first period were to be ignored, and her armies were
to come again, more numerous, better equipped and perhaps
better commanded than ever.
Nevertheless, his mind was still the
mind of youth, and he could not dwell continuously
upon this prospect. The camp in the hills was
pleasant. The heats had passed, and autumn in
the full richness of its coloring had come.
The forests blazed in all the brilliancy of red and
yellow and brown. The whole landscape had the
color and intensity that only a North American autumn
can know, and the October air had the freshness and
vitality sufficient to make an old man young.
The great army of youth it
was composed chiefly of boys, like the one opposing
it enjoyed itself during these comparatively
idle months. The soldiers played rural games,
marbles even, pitching the horseshoe, wrestling, jumping
and running. It was to Harry like Hannibal in
winter quarters at Capua, without the Capua.
There was certainly no luxury here. While food
was more abundant than for a long time, it was of the
simplest. Instead of dissipation there was a
great religious revival. Ministers of different
creeds, but united in a common object, appeared in
the camp, and preached with power and energy.
The South was emotional then and perhaps the war
had made it more so. The ministers secured thousands
of converts. All day long the preaching and singing
could be heard through the groves of pine and cedar,
and Harry knew that when the time for battle came
they would fight all the better because of it.
Yielding to the enemy was no part of the Christianity
that these ministers preached.
Harry also saw the growth of the hero-worship
accorded to his great commander. He did not
believe that any other general, except perhaps Napoleon
in his earlier career, had ever received such trust
and admiration. Many soldiers who had felt his
guiding hand in battle now saw him for the first time.
He had an appearance and manner to inspire respect,
and, back of that, was something much greater, a firm
conviction in the minds of all that he had illimitable
patience, a willingness to accept responsibility,
and a military genius that had never been surpassed.
Such was the attitude of the Southern people toward
their great leader then, and, to an even greater degree
now, when his figure, like that of Lincoln, instead
of becoming smaller grows larger as it recedes into
the past.
Harry often rode with him. He
seemed to have an especial liking for the very young
members of his staff, or for old private soldiers,
bearded and gray like himself, whom he knew by name.
Far in October he rode down toward the Rapidan where
Stuart was encamped, taking with him only Harry and
Dalton. He was mounted on his great white war
horse, Traveller, which the soldiers knew from afar.
Cheering arose, but when he raised his hand in a
deprecating way the soldiers, obedient to his wish,
ceased, and they heard only the murmur of many voices,
as they went on. The general made the lads ride,
one on his right and the other on his left hand, and
brilliant October coloring and crisp air seemed to
put him in a mood that was far from war.
“I pine for Arlington,”
he said at length to Harry, “that ancestral home
of mine that is held by the enemy. I should like
to see the ripening of the crops there. We Virginians
of the old stock hold to the land, and you Kentuckians,
who are really of the same race, hold to it, too.”
“It is true, sir,” said
Harry. “My father loves the land.
After his retirement from the army, following the
Mexican war, he worked harder upon our place in Kentucky
than any slave or hired man. He was going to
free his slaves, but I suppose, sir, that the war has
made him feel different about it.”
“Yes, we’re often willing
to do things by our own free will, but not under compulsion.
The great Washington himself wrote of the evils of
slave labor. The ‘old fields’ scattered
all over Virginia show what it has done for this noble
commonwealth.”
Harry remembered quite well similar
“old fields” in Kentucky. Slaves
were far less numerous there than in Virginia, and
he was old enough to have observed that, in addition
to the wrong of slavery, they were a liability rather
than an asset. But he too felt anew the instinctive
rebellion against being compelled to do what he would
perhaps do anyhow.
General Lee talked more of the land
and Harry and Dalton listened respectfully.
Harry saw that his commander’s heart turned strongly
toward it. He knew that Jefferson had dreamed
of the United States as an agricultural community,
having no part in the quarrels of other nations, but
he knew that it was only a dream. The South,
the section that had followed Jefferson’s dream,
was now at a great disadvantage. It had no ships,
and it did not have the mills to equip it for the great
war it was waging. He realized more keenly than
ever the one-sided nature of the South’s development.
The general turned his horse toward
the banks of the Rapidan, and a resplendent figure
came forward to meet him. It was that incarnation
of youth and fantastic knighthood, Jeb Stuart, who
had just returned from a ride toward the north.
He wore a new and brilliant uniform and the usual
broad yellow sash about his waist. His tunic
was embroidered, too, and his epaulets were heavy
with gold. The thick gold braid about his hat
was tied in a gorgeous loop in front. His hands
were encased in long gloves of the finest buckskin,
and he tapped the high yellow tops of his riding boots
with a little whip.
Harry always felt that Stuart did
not really belong to the present. His place was
with the medieval knights who loved gorgeous armor,
who fought by day for the love of it and who sat in
the evening on the castle steps with fair ladies for
the love of it, and who in the dark listened to the
troubadours below, also for the love of it. A
great cavalry leader, he shone at his brightest in
the chase, and, when there was no fighting to be done,
his were the spirits of a boy, and he was as quick
for a prank as any lad under his own command.
But Stuart, although he had joked
with Jackson, never took any liberties with Lee.
He instantly swept the ground with his plumed hat
and said in his most respectful manner:
“General, will you honor us
by dining with us? We’ve just returned
from a long ride northward and we’ve made some
captures.”
Lee caught a twinkle in his eye, and he smiled.
“I see no prisoners, General
Stuart,” he replied, “and I take it that
your captures do not mean human beings.”
“No, sir, there are other things
just now more valuable to us than prisoners.
We raided a little Yankee outpost. Nobody was
hurt, but, sir, we’ve captured some provisions,
the like of which the Army of Northern Virginia has
not tasted in a long time. Would you mind coming
with me and taking a look? And bring Kenton
and Dalton with you, if you don’t mind, sir.”
“This indeed sounds tempting,”
said the commander-in-chief of the Army of Northern
Virginia. “I accept your invitation, General
Stuart, in behalf of myself and my two young aides.”
He dismounted, giving the reins of
Traveller to an orderly, and walked toward Stuart’s
tent, which was pitched near the river. The “captures”
were heaped in a grassy place.
“Here, sir,” said General
Stuart, “are twenty dozen boxes of the finest
French sardines. I haven’t tasted sardines
in a year and I love them.”
“I’ve always liked them,” said General
Lee.
“And here, sir, are several
cases of Yorkshire ham, brought all the way across
the sea and for us. It isn’t
as good as our Virginia ham, which is growing scarce,
but we’ll like it. And cove oysters, cases
and cases of ’em. I like ’em almost
as well as sardines.”
“Most excellent.”
“And real old New England pies,
baked, I suppose, in Washington. We can warm
’em over.”
“I see that you have the fire ready.”
“And jars of preserves, a half-dozen
kinds at least, and all of ’em look as if two
likely youngsters like Kenton and Dalton would be anxious
to get at ’em.”
“You judge us rightly, General,”
said Harry. “We’ll show no mercy
to such prisoners as we have here.”
“You wouldn’t be boys
and you wouldn’t be human if you did,”
rejoined Stuart, “would they, General?”
“They would not,” replied
Lee. “One of the principal recollections
of my boyhood is that I was always hungry. Our
regular three meals a day were not enough for us,
however much we ate at one time. Virginia, like
your own Kentucky, Harry, is full of forage, and we
moved in groups. Now, didn’t you find
a lot of food in the woods and fields?”
“Oh, yes, sir,” rejoined
Harry with animation. “I was hungry all
the time, too. An hour after breakfast I was
hungry again, and an hour after dinner, which we had
in the middle of the day, I was hungry once more.”
“But you knew where to go for supplies.”
“Yes, sir; we had berries, strawberries,
blackberries, raspberries, gooseberries, dewberries,
cherries, all of them growing wild although some of
them started tame. And then we could forage for
pears, peaches, plums, damsons, all kinds of apples,
paw paws, and then later for the nuts, hickory nuts,
walnuts, chestnuts, hazel nuts, chinquapins, and a
lot more. We could have almost lived in the woods
and fields from early spring until late fall.”
“We did the same in Virginia,”
said the commander-in-chief. “I’ve
often thought that our forest Indians did not develop
a higher civilization, because it was so easy for
them to live, save in the depths of a hard winter.
They had most of the berries and fruits and nuts that
we white boys had. The woods were full of game,
and the lakes and rivers full of fish. They
were not driven by the hard necessity that creates
civilization.”
“Dinner is ready, sir,”
announced General Stuart, who had been directing the
orderlies. “I can offer you and the others
nothing but boxes and kegs to sit on, but I can assure
you that this Northern food, some of which comes in
cans, is excellent.”
The two lads and General Stuart fell
to work with energy. General Lee ate more sparingly.
Stuart was a boy himself, talking much and running
over with fun.
“Have you heard what happened
to General Early, sir?” he asked the commander-in-chief.
“Not yet.”
“But you will, sir, to-morrow.
Early will be slow in sending you that dispatch.
He hasn’t had time to write it yet. He’s
not through swearing.”
“General Early is a valiant
and able man, but I disapprove of his swearing.”
“Why, sir, ‘Old Jube’
can’t help it. It’s a part of his
breathing, and man cannot live without breath.
He sent one of his best aides with a dispatch to
General Hill, who is posted some distance away.
Passing through a thick cedar wood the aide was suddenly
set upon by a genuine stage villain, large, dark and
powerful, who clubbed him over the head with the butt
of a pistol, and then departed with his dispatch.”
“And what happened then?”
“The aide returned to General
Early with his story, but without his dispatch.
The general believed his account, of course, but he
called him names for allowing himself to be surprised
and overcome by a single Yankee. He cursed until
the air for fifty yards about him smelled strongly
of sulphur and brimstone.”
“Did he do anything more?”
“Yes, General. He sent
a duplicate of the dispatch by an aide whom he said
he could trust. In an hour the second man came
back with the same big lump on his head and with the
same story. He had been ambushed at the crossing
of a ravine full of small cedars, and the highwayman
was undoubtedly the same, too, a big, powerful fellow,
as bold as you please.”
Harry’s pulse throbbed hard
for a few moments, when he first heard mention of
the man. The description, not only physical,
but of manner and action as well, answered perfectly.
He had not the slightest doubt that it was Shepard.
“A daring deed,” said
General Lee. “We must see that it is not
repeated.”
“But that wasn’t all of
the tale, sir. While the second man was sitting
on the bank, nursing his broken head, the Yankee Dick
Turpin read the dispatch and saw that it was a duplicate
of the first. He became red-hot with wrath,
and talked furiously about the extra and unnecessary
work that General Early was forcing upon him.
He ended by cramming the dispatch into the man’s
hands, directing him to take it back, and to tell
General Early to stop his foolishness. The aide
was a bit dazed from the blow he received and he delivered
that message word for word. Why, sir, General
Early exploded. People who have heard him swear
for years and who know what an artist he is in swearing,
heard him then utter swear words that they had never
heard before, words invented on the spur of the moment,
and in the heat of passion, words full of pith and
meaning.”
“And that was all, I suppose?”
“Not by any means, sir.
General Early picked two sharpshooters and sent them
with another copy of the dispatch. They passed
the place of the first hold-up, and next the ravine
without seeing anybody. But as they were riding
some distance further on both of their horses were
killed by shots from a small clump of pines.
Before they could regain their feet Dick Turpin came
out and covered them with his rifle it seems
that he had one of those new repeating weapons.
“The men saw that his eye was
so keen and his hand so steady that they did not dare
to move a hand to a pistol. Then as he looked
down the sights of his rifle he lectured them.
He told them they were foolish to come that way,
when the two who came before them had found out that
it was a closed road. He said that real soldiers
learned by experience, and would not try again to
do what they had learned to be impossible.
“Then he said that after all
they were not to blame, as they had been sent by General
Early, and he made one of them who had the stub of
a pencil write on the back of the dispatch these words:
’General Jubal Early, C. S. A.: This has
ceased to be a joke. After your first man was
stopped, it was not necessary to do anything more.
I have the dispatch. Why insist on sending duplicate
after duplicate?’ And the two had to walk all
the way back to General Early with that note, because
they didn’t dare make away with the dispatch.
“I have a certain respect for
that man’s skill and daring, but General Early
had a series of spells. He retired to his tent
and if the reports are not exaggerated, a continuous
muttering like low thunder came from the tent, and
all the cloth of it turned blue from the lightnings
imprisoned inside.”
General Lee himself smiled.
“It was certainly annoying,”
he said. “I hope the dispatch was not of
importance.”
“It contained nothing that will
help the Yankees, but it shows that the enemy has
some spies or at least one spy who
are Napoleons at their trade.”