The little dinner ended. Despite
his disapproval of General Early’s swearing,
General Lee laughed heartily at further details of
the strange Yankee spy’s exploits. But
it was well known that in this particular General
Early was the champion of the East. Harry did
not know that in the person of Colonel Charles Woodville,
his cousin, Dick Mason, had encountered one of equal
ability in the Southwest.
Presently General Lee and his two
young aides mounted their horses for the return.
The commander-in-chief seemed gayer than usual.
He was always very fond of Stuart, whose high spirits
pleased him, and before his departure he thanked him
for his thoughtfulness.
“Whenever we get any particularly
choice shipments from the North I shall always be
pleased to notify you, General, and send you your share,”
said Stuart, sweeping the air in front of him again
with his great plumed hat. With his fine, heroic
face and his gorgeous uniform he had never looked
more a knight of the Middle Ages.
General Lee smiled and thanked him
again, and then rode soberly back, followed at a short
distance by his two young aides. Although the
view of hills and mountains and valleys and river and
brooks was now magnificent, the sumach burning in
red and the leaves vivid in many colors, Lee, deeply
sensitive, like all his rural forbears, to rural beauty,
nevertheless seemed not to notice it, and soon sank
into deep thought.
It is believed by many that Lee knew
then that the Confederacy had already received a mortal
blow. It was not alone sufficient for the South
to win victories. She must keep on winning them,
and the failure at Gettysburg and the defeat at Vicksburg
had put her on the defensive everywhere. Fewer
blockade runners were getting through. Above
all, there was less human material upon which to draw.
But he roused himself presently and said to Harry:
“There was something humorous
in the exploits of the man who held up General Early’s
messengers, but the fellow is dangerous, exceedingly
dangerous at such a time.”
“I’ve an idea who he is, sir,” said
Harry.
“Indeed! What do you know?”
Then Harry told nearly all that he
knew about Shepard, but not all that struggle
in the river, and his sparing of the spy and the filching
of the map at the Curtis house, for instance and
the commander-in-chief listened with great attention.
“A bold man, uncommonly bold,
and it appears uncommonly skilled, too. We must
send out a general alarm, that is, we must have all
our own scouts and spies watching for him.”
Harry said nothing, but he did not
believe that anybody would catch Shepard. The
man’s achievements had been so startling that
they had created the spell of invincibility.
His old belief that he was worth ten thousand men
on the Northern battle line returned. No movement
of the Army of Northern Virginia could escape him,
and no lone messenger could ever be safe from him.
Lee returned to his camp on Clarke’s
Mountain, and, a great revival meeting being in progress,
he joined it, sitting with a group of officers.
Fitzhugh Lee, W. H. F. Lee, Jones, Rosser, Wickham,
Munford, Young, Wade Hampton and a dozen others were
there. Taylor and Marshall and Peyton of his
staff were also in the company.
The preacher was a man of singular
power and earnestness, and after the sermon he led
the singing himself, in which often thirty or forty
thousand voices joined. It was a moving sight
to Harry, all these men, lads, mostly, but veterans
of many fields, united in a chorus mightier than any
other that he had ever heard. It would have pleased
Stonewall Jackson to his inmost soul, and once more,
as always, a tear rose to his eye as he thought of
his lost hero.
Harry and Dalton left their horses
with an orderly and came back to the edge of the great
grove, in which the meeting was being held. They
had expected to find St. Clair and Happy Tom there,
but not seeing them, wandered on and finally drifted
apart. Harry stood alone for a while on the
outskirts of the throng. They were all singing
again, and the mighty volume of sound rolled through
the wood. It was not only a singular, it was
a majestic scene also to Harry. How like unto
little children young soldiers were! and how varied
and perplexing were the problems of human nature!
They were singing with the utmost fervor of Him who
had preached continuously of peace, who was willing
to turn one cheek when the other was smitten, and
because of their religious zeal they would rush the
very next day into battle, if need be, with increased
fire and zeal.
He saw a heavily built, powerful man
on the outskirts, but some distance away, singing
in a deep rolling voice, but something vaguely familiar
in the figure drew his glance again. He looked
long and well and then began to edge quietly toward
the singer, who was clothed in the faded butternut
uniform that so many of the Confederate soldiers wore.
The fervor of the singer did not decrease,
but Harry noticed that he too was moving, moving slowly
toward the eastern end of the grove, the same direction
that Harry was pursuing. Now he was sure.
He would have called out, but his voice would not
have been heard above the vast volume of sound.
He might have pointed out the singer to others, but,
although he felt sure, he did not wish to be laughed
at in case of mistake. But strongest of all was
the feeling that it had become a duel between Shepard
and himself.
He walked slowly on, keeping the man
in view, but Shepard, although he never ceased singing,
moved away at about the same pace. Harry inferred
at once that Shepard had seen him and was taking precautions.
The temptation to cry out at the top of his voice
that the most dangerous of all spies was among them
was almost irresistible, but it would only create
an uproar in which Shepard could escape easily, leaving
to him a load of ridicule.
He continued his singular pursuit.
Shepard was about a hundred yards away, and they
had made half the circuit of this huge congregation.
Then the spy passed into a narrow belt of pines, and
when Harry moved forward to see him emerge on the
other side he failed to reappear. He hastened
to the pines, which led some distance down a little
gully, and he was sure that Shepard had gone that
way. He followed fast, but he could discover
no sign. He had vanished utterly, like thin smoke
swept away by a breeze.
He returned deeply stirred by the
appearance and disappearance easy, alike of
Shepard. His sense of the man’s uncanny
powers and of his danger to the Confederacy was increased.
He seemed to come and go absolutely as he pleased.
It was true that in the American Civil War the opportunities
for spies were great. All men spoke the same
language, and all looked very much alike. It
was not such a hard task to enter the opposing lines,
but Shepard had shown a daring and success beyond all
comparison. He seemed to have both the seven
league boots and the invisible cloak of very young
childhood. He came as he pleased, and when pursuit
came he vanished in thin air.
Harry bit his lips in chagrin.
He felt that Shepard had scored on him again.
It was true that he had been victorious in that fight
in the river, when victory meant so much, but since
then Shepard had triumphed, and it was bitter.
He hardened his determination, and resolved that
he would always be on the watch for him. He even
felt a certain glow, because he was one of two in
such a conflict of skill and courage.
The meeting having been finished,
he went down one of the streets of tents to the camp
of the Invincibles. Colonel Leonidas Talbot and
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire were not playing
chess. Instead they were sitting on a pine log
with Happy Tom and St. Clair and other officers, listening
to young Julien de Langeais, who sat on another log,
playing a violin with surpassing skill. Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire, knowing his prowess as a violinist, had
asked him to come and play for the Invincibles.
Now he was playing for them and for several thousand
more who were gathered in the pine woods.
Young de Langeais sat on a low stump,
and the great crowd made a solid mass around him.
But he did not see them, nor the pine woods nor the
heavy cannon sitting on the ridges. He looked
instead into a region of fancy, where the colors were
brilliant or gay or tender as he imagined them.
Harry, with no technical knowledge of music but with
a great love of it, recognized at once the touch of
a master, and what was more, the soul of one.
To him the violin was not great, unless
the player was great, but when the player was great
it was the greatest musical instrument of all.
He watched de Langeais’ wrapt face, and for him
too the thousands of soldiers, the pines and the cannon
on the ridges melted away. He did not know what
the young musician was playing, probably some old French
air or a great lyric outburst of the fiery Verdi,
whose music had already spread through America.
“A great artist,” whispered
Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire in his ear. “He
studied at the schools in New Orleans and then for
two years in Paris. But he came back to fight.
Nothing could keep Julien from the army, but he brought
his violin with him. We Latins, or at least we
who are called Latins, steep our souls in music.
It’s not merely intellectual with us.
It’s passion, fire, abandonment, triumph and
all the great primitive emotions of the human race.”
Harry’s feelings differed somewhat
from those of Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire in
character but not in power and as young
de Langeais played on he began to think what a loss
a stray bullet could make. Why should a great
artist be allowed to come on the battle line?
There were hundreds of thousands of common men.
One could replace another, but nobody could replace
the genius, a genius in which the whole world shared.
It was not possible for either drill or training to
do it, and yet a little bullet might take away his
life as easily as it would that of a plowboy.
They were all alike to the bullets and the shells.
De Langeais finished, and a great
shout of applause arose. The cheering became
so insistent that he was compelled to play again.
“His family is well-to-do,”
said Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire just before he
began playing once more, “and they’ll see
that he goes back to Paris for study as soon as the
war is over. If they didn’t I would.”
It did not seem to occur to Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire that young de Langeais could be killed,
and Harry began to share his confidence. De Langeais
now played the simple songs of the old South, and there
was many a tear in the eyes of war-hardened youth.
The sun was setting in a sea of fire, and the pine
forests turned red in its blaze. In the distance
the waters of the Rapidan were crimson, too, and a
light wind out of the west sighed among the pines,
forming a subdued chorus to the violin.
De Langeais began to play a famous
old song of home, and Harry’s mind traveled
back on its lingering note to his father’s beautiful
house and grounds, close by Pendleton, and all the
fine country about it, in which he and Dick Mason
and the boys of their age had roamed. He remembered
all the brooks and ponds and the groves that produced
the best hickory nuts. When should he see them
again and would his father be there, and Dick, and
all the other boys of their age! Not all!
Certainly not all, because some were gone already.
And yet this plaintive note of the homes they had
left behind, while it brought a tear to many an eye,
made no decrease in martial determination. It
merely hardened their resolution to win the victory
all the sooner, and bring the homecoming march nearer.
De Langeais ended on a wailing note
that died like a faint sigh in the pine forest.
Then he came back to earth, sprang up, and put his
violin in its case. Applause spread out and
swelled in a low, thunderous note, but de Langeais,
who was as modest as he was talented, quickly hid
himself among his friends.
The sun sank behind the blue mountains,
and twilight came readily over the pine and cedar
forests. Colonel Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire, who had a large tent together, invited
the youths to stay awhile with them as their guests
and talk. All the soldiers dispersed to their
own portions of the great camp, and there would be
an hour of quiet and rest, until the camp cooks served
supper.
It had been a lively day for Harry,
his emotions had been much stirred, and now he was
glad to sit in the peace of the evening on a stone
near the entrance of the tent, and listen to his friends.
War drew comrades together in closer bonds than those
of peace. He was quite sure that St. Clair,
Dalton and Happy Tom were his friends for life, as
he was theirs, and the two colonels seemed to have
the same quality of youth. Simple men, of high
faith and honor, they were often childlike in the
ways of the world, their horizons sometimes not so
wide as those of the lads who now sat with them.
“As I told Harry,” said
Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire to Julien, “you
shall have that talent of yours cultivated further
after the war. Two years more of study and you
will be among the greatest. You must know, lads,
that for us who are of French descent, Paris is the
world’s capital in the arts.”
“And for many of English blood,
too,” said Colonel Talbot.
Then they talked of more immediate
things, of the war, the armies and the prospect of
the campaigns. Harry, after an hour or so, returned
to headquarters and he found soldiers making a bed
for the commander-in-chief under the largest of the
pines. Lee in his campaigns always preferred
to sleep in the open air, when he could, and it required
severe weather to drive him to a tent. Meanwhile
he sat by a small fire the October nights
were growing cold and talked with Peyton
and other members of his staff.
Harry and Dalton decided to imitate
his example and sleep between the blankets under the
pines. Harry found a soft place, spread his blankets
and in a few minutes slept soundly. In fact,
the whole Army of Northern Virginia was a great family
that retired early, slept well and rose early.
The next morning there was frost on
the grass, but the lads were so hardy that they took
no harm. The autumn deepened. The leaves
blazed for a while in their most vivid colors and
then began to fall under the strong west winds.
Brown and wrinkled, they often whirled past in clouds.
The air had a bite in it, and the soldiers built more
and larger fires.
The Army of Northern Virginia never
before had been quiescent so long. The Army of
the Potomac was not such a tremendous distance away,
but it seemed that neither side was willing to attack,
and as the autumn advanced and began to merge into
winter the minds of all turned toward the Southwest.
For the valiant soldiers encamped
on the Virginia hills the news was not good.
Grant, grim and inflexible, was deserving the great
name that was gradually coming to him. He had
gathered together all the broken parts of the army
defeated at Chickamauga and was turning Union defeat
into Union victory.
Winter closed in with the knowledge
that Grant had defeated the South disastrously on
Lookout Mountain and all around Chattanooga.
Chickamauga had gone for nothing, the whole flank
of the Confederacy was turned and the Army of Northern
Virginia remained the one great barrier against the
invading legions of the North. Yet the confidence
of the men in that army remained undimmed. They
felt that on their own ground, and under such a man
as Lee, they were invincible.
In the course of these months Harry,
as a messenger and often as a secretary, was very
close to Lee. He wrote a swift and clear hand,
and took many dispatches. Almost daily messages
were sent in one direction or another and Harry read
from them the thoughts of his leader, which he kept
locked in his breast. He knew perhaps better
than many an older officer the precarious condition
of the Confederacy. These letters, which he
took from dictation, and the letters from Richmond
that he read to his chief, told him too plainly that
the limits of the Confederacy were shrinking.
Its money declined steadily. Happy Tom said
that he had to “swap it pound for pound now
to the sutlers for groceries.” Yet it
is the historical truth that the heart of the Army
of Northern Virginia never beat with more fearless
pride, as the famous and “bloody” year
of ’63 was drawing to its close.
The news arrived that Grant, the Sledge
Hammer of the West, had been put by Lincoln in command
of all the armies of the Union, and would come east
to lead the Army of the Potomac in person, with Meade
still as its nominal chief, but subject, like all
the others, to his command.
Harry heard the report with a thrill.
He knew now that decisive action would come soon
enough. He had always felt that Meade in front
of them was a wavering foe, and perhaps too cautious.
But Grant was of another kind. He was a pounder.
Defeats did not daunt him. He would attack
and then attack again and again, and the diminishing
forces of the Confederacy were ill fitted to stand
up against the continued blows of the hammer.
Harry’s thrill was partly of apprehension, but
whenever he looked at the steadfast face of his chief
his confidence returned.
Winter passed without much activity
and spring began to show its first buds. The
earth was drying, after melting snows and icy rains,
and Harry knew that action would not be delayed much
longer. Grant was in the East now. He
had gone in January to St. Louis to visit his daughter,
who lay there very ill, and then, after military delays,
he had reached Washington.
Harry afterward heard the circumstances
of his arrival, so characteristic of plain and republican
America. He came into Washington by train as
a simple passenger, accompanied only by his son, who
was but fourteen years of age. They were not
recognized, and arriving at a hotel, valise in hand,
with a crowd of passengers, he registered in his turn:
“U. S. Grant and son, Galena, Ill.”
The clerk, not noticing the name, assigned the modest
arrival and his boy to a small room on the fifth floor.
Then they moved away, a porter carrying the valise.
But the clerk happened to look again at the register,
and when he saw more clearly he rushed after them
with a thousand apologies. He did not expect
the victor of great battles, the lieutenant-general
commanding all the armies of the Union, a battle front
of more than a million men, to come so modestly.
When Harry heard the story he liked
it. It seemed to him to be the same simple and
manly quality that he found in Lee, both worthy of
republican institutions. But he did not have
time to think about it long. The signs were
multiplying that the advance would soon come.
The North had never ceased to resound with preparations,
and Grant would march with veterans. All the
spies and scouts brought in the same report.
Butler would move up from Fortress Monroe toward Richmond
with thirty thousand men and Grant with a hundred
and fifty thousand would cross the Rapidan, moving
by the right flank of Lee until they could unite and
destroy the Confederacy. Such was the plan,
said the scouts and spies in gray.
Longstreet with his corps had returned
from the West and Lee gathered his force of about
sixty thousand men to meet the mighty onslaught he
alone perhaps divined how mighty it would be and
when he was faced by the greatest of his adversaries
his genius perhaps never shone more brightly.
May and the full spring came.
It was the third day of the month, and the camp of
the Army of Northern Virginia was as usual. Many
of the young soldiers played games among the trees.
Here and there they lay in groups on the new grass,
singing their favorite songs. The cooks were
preparing their suppers over the big fires.
Several bands were playing. Had it not been
for the presence of so many weapons the whole might
have been taken for one vast picnic, but Harry, who
sat in the tent of the commander-in-chief, was writing
as fast as he could dispatch after dispatch that the
Southern leader was dictating to him. He knew
perfectly well, of course, that the commander-in-chief
was gathering his forces and that they would move
quickly for battle. He knew, too, how inadequate
was the equipment of the army. Only a short time
before he had taken from the dictation of his chief
a letter to the President of the Confederacy a part
of which ran:
My anxiety on the subject of provisions
for the army is so great that I cannot refrain from
expressing it to your Excellency. I cannot see
how we can operate with our present supplies.
Any derangement in their arrival or disaster to the
railroad would render it impossible for me to keep
the army together and might force a retreat into North
Carolina. There is nothing to be had in this
section for men or animals. We have rations
for the troops to-day and to-morrow. I hope a
new supply arrived last night, but I have not yet
had a report.
Harry had thought long over this letter
and he knew from his own observation its absolute
truth. The depleted South was no longer able
to feed its troops well. The abundance of the
preceding autumn had quickly passed, and in winter
they were mostly on half rations.
Lee, better than any other man in
the whole South, had understood what lay before them,
and his foes both of the battlefield and of the spirit
have long since done him justice. Less than a
week before this eve of mighty events he had written
to a young woman in Virginia, a relative:
I dislike to send letters within reach
of the enemy, as they might serve, if captured, to
bring distress on others. But you must sometimes
cast your thoughts on the Army of Northern Virginia,
and never forget it in your prayers. It is preparing
for a great struggle, but I pray and trust that the
great God, mighty to deliver, will spread over it His
Almighty arms and drive its enemies before it.
Harry had seen this letter before
its sending, and he was not surprised now when Lee
was sending messengers to all parts of his army.
With all the hero-worshiping quality of youth he
was once more deeply grateful that he should have
served on the staffs and been brought into close personal
relations with two men, Stonewall Jackson and Lee,
who seemed to him so great. As he saw it, it
was not alone military greatness but greatness of
the soul, which was greater. Both were deeply
religious Lee, the Episcopalian, and Jackson,
the Presbyterian, and it was a piety that contained
no trace of cant.
Harry felt that the crisis of the
great Civil War was at hand. It had been in
the air all that day, and news had come that Grant
had broken up his camps and was crossing the Rapidan
with a huge force. He knew how small in comparison
was the army that Lee could bring against him, and
yet he had supreme confidence in the military genius
of his chief.
He had written a letter with which
an aide had galloped away, and then he sat at the
little table in the great tent, pen in hand and ink
and paper before him, but Lee was silent. He
was dressed as usual with great neatness and care,
though without ostentation. His face had its
usual serious cast, but tinged now with melancholy.
Harry knew that he no longer saw the tent and those
around him. His mind dwelled for a few moments
upon his own family and the ancient home that he had
loved so well.
The interval was very brief.
He was back in the present, and the principal generals
for whom he had sent were entering the tent.
Hill, Longstreet, Ewell, Stuart and others came, but
they did not stay long. They talked earnestly
with their leader for a little while, and then every
one departed to lead his brigades.
The secretaries put away pen, ink
and paper. Twilight was advancing in the east
and night suddenly fell outside. The songs ceased,
the bands played no more, and there was only the deep
rumble of marching men and moving cannon.
“We’ll ride now, gentlemen,” said
Lee to his staff.
Traveller, saddled and bridled, was
waiting and the commander-in-chief sprang into the
saddle with all the agility of a young man. The
others mounted, too, Harry and Dalton as usual taking
their places modestly in the rear.
A regiment, small in numbers but famous
throughout the army for valor, was just passing, and
its colonel and its lieutenant-colonel, erect men,
riding splendidly, but gray like Lee, drew their swords
and gave the proud and flashing salute of the saber
as they went by. Lee and his staff almost with
involuntary impulse returned the salute in like fashion.
Then the Invincibles passed on, and were lost from
view in the depths of the forest.
Harry felt a sudden constriction of
the heart. He knew that he might never see Colonel
Leonidas Talbot nor Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St.
Hilaire again, nor St. Clair, nor Happy Tom either.
But his friends could not remain long
in his mind at such a time. They were marching,
marching swiftly, the presence of the man on the great
white horse seeming to urge them on to greater speed.
As the stars came out Lee’s brow, which had
been seamed by thought, cleared. His plan which
he had formed in the day was moving well. His
three corps were bearing away toward the old battlefield
of Chancellorsville. Grant would be drawn into
the thickets of the Wilderness as Hooker had been the
year before, although a greater than Hooker was now
leading the Army of the Potomac.
Harry, who foresaw it all, thrilled
and shuddered at the remembrance. It was in there
that the great Jackson had fallen in the hour of supreme
triumph. Not far away were the heights of Fredericksburg,
where Burnside had led the bravest of the brave to
unavailing slaughter. As Belgium had been for
centuries the cockpit of Europe, so the wild and sterile
region in Virginia that men call the Wilderness became
the cockpit of North America.
While Lee and his army were turning
into the Wilderness Grant and the greatest force that
the Union had yet assembled were seeking him.
It was composed of men who had tasted alike of victory
and defeat, veterans skilled in all the wiles and
stratagems of war, and with hearts to endure anything.
In this host was a veteran regiment that had come
East to serve under Grant as it had served under him
so valiantly in the West. Colonel Winchester
rode at its head and beside him rode his favorite
aide, young Richard Mason. Not far away was Colonel
Hertford, with a numerous troop of splendid cavalry.
Grant, alert and resolved to win,
carried in his pocket a letter which he had received
from Lincoln, saying:
Not expecting to see you before the
spring campaign opens, I wish to express in this way
my entire satisfaction with what you have done up to
this time, so far as I understand it. The particulars
of your plans I neither know nor seek to know.
You are vigilant and self-reliant, and, pleased with
this, I wish not to obtrude any constraints or restraints
upon you. While I am very anxious that any great
disaster or the capture of our men in great numbers
should be avoided, I know these points are less likely
to escape your attention than they would mine.
If there is anything wanting which is within my power
to give, do not fail to let me know it. And
now, with a brave army and a just cause, may God sustain
you.
A noble letter, breathing the loftiest
spirit, and showing that moral grandeur which has
been so characteristic of America’s greatest
men. He had put all in Grant’s hands and
he had given to him an army, the like of which had
never been seen until now on the American continent.
Never before had the North poured forth its wealth
and energy in such abundance.
Four thousand wagons loaded with food
and ammunition followed the army, and there was a
perfect system by which a wagon emptied of its contents
was sent back to a depot to be refilled, while a loaded
wagon took its place at the front. Complete
telegram equipments, poles, wires, instruments and
all were carried with every division. The wires
could be strung easily and the lieutenant-general
could talk to every part of his army. There
were, also, staffs of signalmen, in case the wires
should fail at any time. Grant held in his hand
all the resources of the North, and if he could not
win no one could.
All through the night the hostile
armies marched, and before them went the spies and
scouts.