We imagined that the throwing forward
of our brigade was the initial movement of a general
advance of the army; but that, as the reader will
remember, did not take place until the following March.
The Confederates had fallen back to Centreville without
firing a shot, and the national troops were in possession
of Lewinsville, Vienna, and Fairfax Court-House.
Our new position was nearly identical with that which
we had occupied on the night previous to the battle
of Bull Run on the old turnpike road to
Manassas, where the enemy was supposed to be in great
force. With a field-glass we could see the Rebel
pickets moving in a belt of woodland on our right,
and morning and evening we heard the spiteful roll
of their snare-drums.
Those pickets soon became a nuisance
to us. Hardly a night passed but they fired upon
our outposts, so far with no harmful result; but after
a while it grew to be a serious matter. The Rebels
would crawl out on all-fours from the wood into a
field covered with underbrush, and lie there in the
dark for hours, waiting for a shot. Then our men
took to the rifle-pits pits ten or twelve
feet long by four or five deep, with the loose earth
banked up a few inches high on the exposed sides.
All the pits bore names, more or less felicitous,
by which they were known to their transient tenants.
One was called “The Pepper-Box,” another
“Uncle Sam’s Well,” another “The
Reb-Trap,” and another, I am constrained to
say, was named after a not-to-be-mentioned tropical
locality. Though this rude sort of nomenclature
predominated, there was no lack of softer titles,
such as “Fortress Matilda” and “Castle
Mary,” and one had, though unintentionally,
a literary flavor to it, “Blair’s Grave,”
which was not popularly considered as reflecting unpleasantly
on Nat Blair, who had assisted in making the excavation.
Some of the regiment had discovered
a field of late corn in the neighborhood, and used
to boil a few ears every day, while it lasted, for
the boys detailed on the night-picket. The corn-cobs
were always scrupulously preserved and mounted on
the parapets of the pits. Whenever a Rebel shot
carried away one of these barbette guns, there
was swearing in that particular trench. Strong,
who was very sensitive to this kind of disaster, was
complaining bitterly one morning, because he had lost
three “pieces” the night before.
“There’s Quite So, now,”
said Strong, “when a Minie-ball comes ping!
and knocks one of his guns to flinders, he merely smiles,
and does n’t at all see the degradation of the
thing.”
Poor Bladburn! As I watched him
day by day going about his duties, in his shy, cheery
way, with a smile for every one and not an extra word
for anybody, it was hard to believe he was the same
man who, that night before we broke camp by the Potomac,
had poured out to me the story of his love and sorrow
in words that burned in my memory.
While Strong was speaking, Blakely
lifted aside the flap of the tent and looked in on
us.
“Boys, Quite So was hurt last
night,” he said, with a white tremor to his
lip.
“What!”
“Shot on picket.”
“Why, he was in the pit next to mine,”
cried Strong.
“Badly hurt?”
“Badly hurt.”
I knew he was; I need not have asked
the question. He never meant to go back to New
England!
Bladburn was lying on the stretcher
in the hospital-tent The surgeon had knelt down by
him, and was carefully cutting away the bosom of his
blouse. The Latin grammar, stained and torn, slipped,
and fell to the floor. Bladburn gave me a quick
glance. I picked up the book, and as I placed
it in his hand, the icy fingers closed softly over
mine. He was sinking fast. In a few minutes
the surgeon finished his examination. When he
rose to his feet there were tears on the weather-beaten
cheeks. He was a rough outside, but a tender
heart.
“My poor lad,” he blurted
out, “it’s no use. If you ’ve
anything to say, say it now, for you ’ve
nearly done with this world.”
Then Bladburn lifted his eyes slowly
to the surgeon, and the old smile flitted over his
face as he murmured,
“Quite so.”