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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Guidon, by
+Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lost Guidon
+ 1911
+
+Author: Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2007 [EBook #23555]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOST GUIDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST GUIDON
+
+By Charles Egbert Craddock
+
+1911
+
+
+Night came early. It might well seem that day had fled affrighted. The
+heavy masses of clouds, glooming low, which had gathered thicker and
+thicker, as if crowding to witness the catastrophe, had finally shaken
+asunder in the concussions of the air at the discharges of artillery,
+and now the direful rain, always sequence of the shock of battle, was
+steadily falling, falling, on the stricken field. Many a soldier who
+might have survived his wounds would succumb to exposure to the elements
+during the night, debarred the tardy succor that must needs await his
+turn. One of the surgeons at their hasty work at the field hospital,
+under the shelter of the cliffs on the slope, paused to note the presage
+of doom and death, and to draw a long breath before he adjusted himself
+anew to the grim duties of the scalpel in his hand. His face was set and
+haggard, less with a realization of the significance of the scene--for
+he was used to its recurrence--than simply with a physical reflection of
+horror, as if it were glassed in a mirror. A phenomenon that had earlier
+caught his attention in the landscape appealed again to his notice,
+perhaps because the symptom was not in his line.
+
+"Looks like a case of dementia," he observed to the senior surgeon,
+standing near at hand.
+
+The superior officer adjusted his field-glass. "Looks like 'Death on the
+White Horse'!" he responded.
+
+Down the highway, at a slow pace, rode a cavalryman wearing a gray
+uniform, with a sergeant's chevrons, and mounted on a steed good in his
+day, but whose day was gone. A great clot of blood had gathered on his
+broad white chest, where a bayonet had thrust him deep. Despite his
+exhaustion, he moved forward at the urgency of his rider's heel and
+hand. The soldier held a long, heavy staff planted on one stirrup,
+from the top of which drooped in the dull air the once gay guidon,
+battle-rent and sodden with rain, and as he went he shouted at
+intervals, "Dovinger's Bangers! Rally on the guidon!" Now and again
+his strident boyish voice varied the appeal, "Hyar's yer Dov-inger's
+Rangers! Bally, boys! Rally on the reserve!"
+
+Indeed, despite his stalwart, tall, broad-shouldered frame, he was
+scarcely more than a boy. His bare head had flaxen curls like a child's;
+his pallid, though sunburned face was broad and soft and beardless; his
+large blue eyes were languid and spiritless, though now and then as he
+turned an intent gaze over the field they flared anew with hope, as if
+he expected to see rise up from that desolate expanse, from among the
+stiffening carcasses of horses and the stark corpses of the troopers,
+that gallant squadron wont to follow, so dashing and debonair, wherever
+the guidons might mark the way. But there was naught astir save the
+darkness slipping down by slow degrees--and perchance under its cloak,
+already stealthily afoot, the ghoulish robbers of the dead that haunt
+the track of battle. They were the human forerunners of the vulture
+breed, with even a keener scent for prey, for as yet the feathered
+carrion-seekers held aloof; two or three only were descried from the
+field hospital, perched on the boughs of a dead tree near the river,
+presently joined by another, its splendid sustained flight impeded
+somewhat by the rain, battling with its big, strong wings against the
+downpour of the torrents and the heavy air.
+
+And still through all echoed the cry, "Rally on the guidon! Dovinger's
+Rangers! Rally on the reserve!"
+
+The bridge that crossed the river, which was running full and foaming,
+had been burnt; but a span, charred and broken, still swung from the
+central pier. Over toward the dun-tinted west a house was blazing, fired
+by some stray bomb, perhaps, or by official design, to hinder the enemy
+from utilizing the shelter, and its red rage of destruction bepainted
+the clouds that hung so low above the chimneys and dormer-windows. To
+the east, the woods on the steeps had been shelled, and a myriad boughs
+and boles riven and rent, lay in fantastic confusion. Through the
+mournful chaos the wind had begun to sweep; it sounded in unison with
+the battle clamors, and shrieked and wailed and roared as it surged
+adown the defiles. Now and then there came on the blast the fusillade
+of dropping shots from the south, where the skirmish line of one
+faction engaged the rear-guard of the other, or the pickets fell within
+rifle-range. Once the sullen, melancholy boom of distant cannon shook
+the clouds, and then was still, and ever and again sounded that tireless
+cry, "Dovinger's Rangers. Hyar's yer guidon! Rally, boys! Rally on the
+guidon! Rally on the reserve!"
+
+The senior surgeon, as the road wound near, stepped down toward it
+when the horseman, still holding himself proudly erect, passed by.
+"Sergeant," he hailed the guidon, "where is Captain Dovinger?"
+
+The hand mechanically went to the boy's forehead in the usual military
+salute. "Killed, sir."
+
+"Where are the other officers of the squadron--the junior captain, the
+lieutenants?"
+
+"Killed, sir."
+
+"What has become of the troopers?"
+
+"Killed, sir, in the last charge."
+
+There was a pause. Then Dr. Trent broke forth: "Are you a fool, boy? If
+your command is annihilated, why do you keep up this commotion?"
+
+The young fellow looked blank for a moment. Then, as if he had not
+reasoned on the catastrophe: "I thought at first they monght be
+scattered--some of 'em. But ef--ef--they _war_ dead, but could once
+_see_ the guidon, sure 't would call 'em to life. They _couldn't_ be
+so dead but they would rally to the guidon! Guide right!" he shouted
+suddenly. "Dovinger's Rangers! Rally on the guidon, boys! Rally on the
+reserve!"
+
+It was a time that hardened men's hearts. The young soldier had no
+physical hurt that might appeal to the professional sympathies of the
+senior surgeon, and he turned away with a half laugh. "Let him go
+along! He can't rally Dovinger's Rangers this side of the river Styx, it
+seems."
+
+But an old chaplain who had been hovering about the field hospital,
+whispering a word here and there to stimulate the fortitude of the
+wounded and solace the fears of the dying, recognized moral symptoms
+alien to any diagnosis of which the senior surgeon was capable. The
+latter did not deplore the diversion of interest, for the old man's
+presence was not highly esteemed by the hospital corps at this scene of
+hasty and terrible work, although, having taken a course in medicine in
+early life, he was permitted to aid in certain ways. But the surgeons
+were wont to declare that the men began to bleat at the very sight of
+the chaplain. So gentle, so sympathetic, so paternal, was he that they
+made the more of their wretched woes, seeing them so deeply deplored.
+The senior surgeon, moreover, was not an ardent religionist. "This is no
+time for a revival, Mr. Whitmel," he would insist. "Jack, there, never
+spoke the name of God in his life, except to swear by it. He is too late
+for prayers, and if _I_ can't pull him through, he is a goner!" But the
+chaplain was fond of quoting:
+
+ "Between the stirrup and the ground
+ He mercy sought and mercy found----"
+
+and sometimes the scene was irreverently called a "love feast" when
+some hard-riding, hard-swearing, hard-fighting, unthinking sinner went
+joyfully out of this world from the fatherly arms of the chaplain into
+the paternal embrace of an eternal and merciful Father, as the man of
+God firmly believed.
+
+He stood now, staring after the guidon borne through the rain and the
+mist, flaunting red as the last leaves of autumn against the dun-tinted
+dusk, that the dead might view the gallant and honored pennant and rise
+again to its leading!
+
+No one followed but the tall, thin figure of the gaunt old chaplain,
+unless indeed the trooping shadows that kept him company had
+mysteriously roused at the stirring summons. Lanterns were now visible,
+dimly flickering in one quarter where the fighting had been furious and
+the slain lay six deep on the ground. Their aspirations, their valor,
+their patriotism, had all exhaled--volatile essences, these incomparable
+values!--and now their bodies, weighted with death, cumbered the earth.
+They must be hurried out of sight, out of remembrance soon, and the
+burial parties were urged to diligence at the trenches where these
+cast-off semblances were to lie undistinguished together. And still the
+reflection of the burning house reddened the gloomy west, and still the
+cry, "Rally on the guidon! Dovinger's Rangers!" smote the thick air.
+
+Suddenly it was silent. The white horse that had been visible in the
+flare from the flaming house, now and again flung athwart the landscape,
+no longer loomed in the vista of the shadowy road. He had given way at
+last, sinking down with that martial figure still in the saddle, and,
+with no struggle save a mere galvanic shiver, passing away from the
+scene of his faithful devoirs.
+
+Fatigue, agitation, anguish, his agonized obsession of the possibility
+of rallying the squadron, had served to prostrate the soldier's physical
+powers of resistance. He could not constrain his muscles to rise from
+the recumbent position against the carcass. He started up, then sank
+back, and in another moment triumphant nature conquered, and he was
+asleep--a dull, dreamless sleep of absolute exhaustion, that perchance
+rescued his reason as well as saved his life.
+
+The old chaplain was a man of infinite prejudice, steeped in all the
+infirmities and fantasies of dogma; a lover of harmony, and essentially
+an apostle of peace. Nevertheless, it would not have been physically
+safe to call him a Jesuit. But indeed he scarcely hesitated; he stepped
+over the great inert bulk of the dead horse, unclenched the muscular
+grasp of the soldier, as if it had been a baby's clasp, slipped the
+staff, technically the lance, of the guidon from its socket, and stood
+with it in his own hand, looking suspiciously to and fro to descry if
+perchance he were observed. The coast clear, he turned to the wall
+of rock beside the road, for this was near the mountain sandstone
+formation, fissured, splintered, with the erosions of water and weather;
+and into one of the cellular, tunnel-like apertures he ran the guidon,
+lance and all,--lost forever from human sight.
+
+In those days one might speak indeed of the march of events. Each seemed
+hard on the heels of its precursor. Change ran riot in the ordering of
+the world, and its aspect was utterly transformed when Casper Girard,
+no longer bearing the guidon of Dovinger's Rangers, came out of the war
+with a captain's shoulder-straps, won by personal fitness often proved,
+the habit of command, and a great and growing opinion of himself. He was
+a changeling, so to speak. No longer he felt a native of the mountain
+cove where he had been born and reared. He had had a glimpse of
+the world from a different standpoint, and it lured him. A dreary,
+disaffected life he led for a time.
+
+"'Minds me of a wild tur-r-key in a trap," his mother was wont to
+comment. "Always stretchin' his neck an' lookin' up an' away--when
+he mought git out by looking down." And the simile was so apt that it
+stayed in his mind--looking up and away!
+
+Of all dull inventions, in his estimation the art of printing exceeded.
+He had made but indifferent progress in education during his early
+youth; he was a slow and inexpert reader, and a writer whose chirography
+shrank from exhibition. Now, however, a book in the hand gave him a
+cherished sentiment of touch with the larger world beyond those blue
+ranges that limited his sphere, and he spent much time in sedulously
+reading certain volumes which he had brought home with him.
+
+"Spent _money_ fur 'em!" his mother would ejaculate, contemplating this
+extreme audacity of extravagance.
+
+As she often observed, "the plough-handles seemed red-hot," and as soon
+as political conditions favored he ran for office. On the strength of
+his war record, a potent lever in those days, he was elected register
+of the county. True, there was only a population of about fifty souls
+in the county town, and the houses were log-cabins, except the temple
+of justice itself, which was a two-story frame building. But his success
+was a step on the road to political preferment, and his ambitious eyes
+were on the future. Into the midst of his quiet incumbency as register
+came Fate, all intrusive, and found him through the infrequent medium of
+a weekly mail. It was at the beginning of the retrospective enthusiasm
+that has served to revive the memories of the War, and he received a
+letter from an old comrade-in-arms, giving the details of a brigade
+reunion shortly to be held at no great distance, and, being of the
+committee, inviting him to be present.
+
+Girard had participated in great military crises; he had marshalled his
+troop in line of battle; as a mere boy, he had ridden with the guidon
+lance planted on his stirrup, with the pennant flying above his head,
+as the marker to lead the fierce and famous Dov-inger Rangers into the
+thickest of the fight; yet he had never felt such palpitant tremors
+of excitement as when he stood on the hotel piazza of the New Helvetia
+Springs, where the banqueters had gathered, and suffered the ordeal of
+introduction to sundry groups of fashionable ladies. He had earlier seen
+specimens of the species in the course of military transitions through
+the cities of the lowlands, and he watched them narrowly to detect
+if they discerned perchance a difference between him and the men of
+education and social station with whom his advancement in the army
+had associated him. He did not reflect that they were too well-bred
+to reveal any appreciation of such incongruity, but he had never
+experienced a more ardent glow of gratification than upon overhearing a
+friend's remark: "Girard is great! Anybody would imagine he was used to
+all this!"
+
+No strategist was ever more wary. He would not undertake to dance, for
+he readily perceived that the gyrations in the ball-room were utterly
+dissimilar to the clumsy capering to which he had been accustomed on the
+puncheon floor of a mountain cabin. He had the less reason for
+regret since he was privileged instead to stroll up and down the
+veranda,--"promenade" was the technical term,--a slender hand,
+delicately gloved, on the sleeve of his gray uniform, the old
+regimentals being _de rigueur_ at these reunions. A white ball-gown,
+such as he had never before seen, fashioned of tissue over lustrous
+white silk, swayed in diaphanous folds against him, for these were the
+days of voluminous draperies; a head of auburn hair elaborately dressed
+gleamed in the moonlight near his shoulder. Miss Alicia Duval thought
+him tremendously handsome; she adored his record, as she would have
+said--unaware how little of it she knew--and she did not so much intend
+to flirt as to draw him out, for there was something about him different
+from the men of her set, and it stimulated her interest.
+
+"Isn't the moon heavenly!" she observed, gazing at the brilliant orb,
+now near the full, swinging in the sky, which became a definite blue in
+its light above the massive dark mountains and the misty valley below;
+for the building was as near the brink as safety permitted--nearer, the
+cautious opined.
+
+"Heavenly? Not more'n it's got a right to be. It's a heavenly body,
+ain't it?" he rejoined.
+
+"Oh, how sarcastic!" she exclaimed. "In what school did you acquire your
+trenchant style?"
+
+He thought of the tiny district school where he had acquired the very
+little he knew of aught, and said nothing, laughing constrainedly in
+lieu of response.
+
+The music of the orchestra came, to them from the ball-room, and the
+rhythmic beat of dancing feet; the wind lifted her hair gently and
+brought to them the fragrance of flowering plants and the pungent
+aroma of mint down in the depths of the ravine hard by, where lurked
+a chalybeate spring; but for the noisy rout of the dance, and now and
+again the flimsy chatter of a passing couple on the piazza, promenading
+like themselves, they might have heard the waters of the fountain
+rise and bubble and break and sigh as the pulsating impulse beat like
+heart-throbs, and perchance on its rocky marge an oread a-singing.
+
+"But you don't answer me," she pouted with an affectation of
+pettishness. "Do you know that you trouble yourself to talk very little,
+Captain Girard!"
+
+"I think the more," he declared.
+
+"Think? Oh, dear me! I didn't know that anybody does anything so
+unfashionable nowadays as to _think!_ And what do you think about,
+pray?"
+
+"About you!"
+
+And that began it: he was a gallant man, and he had been a brave one. He
+was not aware how far he was going on so short an acquaintance, but
+his temerity was not displeasing to the lady. She liked his manner of
+storming the citadel, and she did not realize that he merely spoke at
+random, as best he might. He was in his uniform a splendid and martial
+presentment of military youth, and indeed he was much the junior of his
+compeers.
+
+"Who are Captain Girard's people, Papa?" she asked Colonel Duval next
+morning, as the family party sat at breakfast in quasi seclusion at
+one of the small round tables in the crowded dining-room, full of the
+chatter of people and the clatter of dishes.
+
+"Girard?" Colonel Duval repeated thoughtfully. "I really don't know. I
+have an impression they live somewhere in East Tennessee. I never met
+him till just about the end of the war."
+
+"Oh, Papa! How unsatisfactory you are! You never know anything about
+anybody."
+
+"I should think his people must be very plain," said Mrs. Duval. Her
+social discrimination was extremely acute and in constant practice.
+
+"I don't know why. He is very much of a gentleman," the Colonel
+contended. His heart was warm to-day with much fraternizing, and it was
+not kind to brush the bloom off his peach.
+
+"Oh, trifles suggest the fact. He is not at all _au fait_."
+
+He was, however, experienced in ways of the world unimagined in her
+philosophy. The reunion had drawn to a close, ending in a flare of
+jollity and tender reminiscence and good-fellowship. The old soldiers
+were all gone save a few regular patrons of the hotel, who with their
+families were completing their summer sojourn. Captain Girard lingered,
+too, fascinated by this glimpse of the frivolous world, hitherto
+unimagined, rather than by the incense to his vanity offered by his
+facile acceptance as a squire of dames. For the first time in his life
+he felt the grinding lack of money. Being a man of resource, he set
+about swiftly supplying this need. In the dull days of inaction, when
+the armies lay supine and only occasionally the monotony was broken by
+the engagement of distant skirmishers or a picket line was driven in on
+the main body, he had learned to play a game at cards much in vogue
+at that period, though for no greater hazards than grains of corn or
+Confederate money, almost as worthless. In the realization now that the
+same principles held good with stakes of value, he seemed to enter upon
+the possession of a veritable gold mine. The peculiar traits that his
+one unique experience of the world had developed--his coolness, his
+courage, his discernment of strategic resources--stood him in good
+stead, and long after the microcosm of the hotel lay fast asleep the
+cards were dealt and play ran high in the little building called the
+casino, ostensibly devoted to the milder delights of billiards and
+cigars.
+
+Either luck favored him or he had rare discrimination of relative
+chances in the run of the cards, or the phenomenally bold hand he played
+disconcerted his adversaries, but his almost invariable winning began
+to affect injuriously his character. Indeed, he was said to be a rook
+of unrivalled rapacity. Colonel Duval was in the frame of mind that his
+wife called "bearish" one morning as his family gathered for breakfast
+in the limited privacy of their circle about the round table in the
+dining-room.
+
+"I want you to avoid that fellow, Alicia," he growled _sotto voce_, as
+he intercepted a bright matutinal smile that the fair Alicia sent as a
+morning greeting to Girard, who had just entered and taken his seat at a
+distance. "We know nothing under heaven about his people, and he himself
+has the repute of being a desperate gambler."
+
+His wife raised significant eyebrows. "If that is true, why should he
+stay in this quiet place?"
+
+Colonel Duval experienced a momentary embarrassment. "Oh, the place is
+right enough. He stays, no doubt, because he likes it. You might as well
+ask why old Mr. Whitmel stays here."
+
+"The idea of mentioning a clergyman in this connection!"
+
+"Mr. Whitmel is professionally busy," cried Alicia. "He told me that he
+is studying 'the disintegration of a soul.' I hope it is not _my_ soul."
+
+The phrase probably interested Alicia in her idleness, for she was
+certainly actuated by no view of a moral uplift in the character of
+Girard, the handsome gambler. She did not recognize a subtle cruelty in
+her system of universal fascination, but her vanity demanded constant
+tribute, and she was peculiarly absorbed in the effort to bring to her
+feet this man of iron, her knight in armor, as she was wont to call him,
+to control him with her influence, to bend this unmalleable material
+like the proverbial wax in her hands. She had great faith in the
+coercive power of her hazel eyes, and she brought their batteries to
+bear on Girard on the first occasion when she had him at her mercy.
+
+"I have heard something about you which is very painful," she said one
+day as they sat together beside the chalybeate spring. The crag, all
+discolored in rust-red streaks by the dripping of the mineral water
+through its interstices, towered above their heads; the ferns, exquisite
+and of subtle fragrance, tufted the niches; the trees were close about
+them, and below, on the precipitous slope; sometimes the lush green
+boughs parted, revealing a distant landscape of azure ranges, far
+stretching against a sky as blue, and in the valley of the foreground
+long bars of golden hue, where fields, denuded of the harvested wheat,
+took the sun. Girard lounged, languid, taciturn, and quiescent as ever,
+on the opposite side of the circular rock basin wherein the clear water
+fell.
+
+"I will tell you what it is," Alicia went on, after a pause, for, though
+he looked attentive, he gave not even a glance of question. "I hear that
+you gamble."
+
+His gaze concentrated as he knitted his brows, but he said nothing.
+
+She pulled her broad straw hat forward on her auburn hair and readjusted
+the flounces of her white morning dress, saying while thus engaged,
+"Yes, indeed; that you gamble--like--like fury!"
+
+"Why, don't you know that's against the law?" he demanded unexpectedly.
+
+"I know that it is very wrong and sinful," she said solemnly.
+
+"Thanky. I'll put that in my pipe an' smoke it! I'm very wrong and
+sinful, I am given to understand."
+
+"Why, I didn't mean _you_ so much," she faltered, perturbed by this
+sudden charge of the enemy. "I meant the practice."
+
+"Oh, I know that I'm a sinner in more ways 'n one; but I _didn't_ know
+that you were a lady-preacher."
+
+"You mean that it is none of my business----"
+
+"You ought to be so glad of that," he retorted.
+
+She maintained a silence that might have suggested a degree of offended
+pride, and she was truly humiliated that her vaunted hazel eyes had
+so signally failed to work their wonted charm. As they strolled back
+together up the steep path to the hotel he seemed either unobservant
+or uncaring, so impassive were his manners, and she was aware that her
+demonstration had resulted in giving him information which he could
+not otherwise have gained. Later, she was nettled to notice that he had
+utilized it in prosaic fashion, for that night no lights flared late
+from the casino.
+
+The gamesters, informed that rumors were a-wing, had betaken themselves
+elsewhere. A small smoking-room in the hotel proper seemed less
+obnoxious to suspicion in the depleted condition of the guest-list,
+since autumn was now approaching. After eleven o'clock the coterie would
+scarcely be subject to interruption, and there they gathered as the hour
+waxed late. The cards were duly dealt, the draw was on, when suddenly
+the door opened and old Mr. Whitmel, his favorite meerschaum in his
+hand and a sheaf of newly arrived journals, entered with the evident
+intention of a prolonged stay. A "standpatter" seemed hardly so assured
+as before he encountered the dim, surprised gaze, but the old clergyman
+was esteemed a good sort, and he ventured on a reminder:
+
+"You have been here before, haven't you, Mr. Whitmel? Saw a deal of this
+sort of thing in the army!" And he rattled the chips significantly.
+
+"Used to see that sort of thing in the army? Yes, yes, indeed--more than
+I wanted to see--very much more!"
+
+Colonel Duval took schooling much amiss. He turned up his florid face
+with its auburn mustachios and Burnside whiskers from its bending
+over the cards and showed a broad arch of glittering white teeth in an
+ungenial laugh.
+
+"Remember, Mr. Whitmel, at that fight we had in the hills not far from
+the Ocoee, how you rebuked two artillerymen for swearing? Something was
+wrong with the vent-hole of the piece, and one of the gunners asked what
+business you had with their language; and you said, 'I am a minister of
+the Lord,' and the fellow gave it back very patly, 'I ain't carin' ef
+you was a minister of state!' Then you said, 'No, you would doubtless
+swear in the presence of an angel.' And the fellow with the sponge-staff
+declared, 'Say, Mister, ef you are _that_, you are an angel off your
+feed certain'--you were worn to skin and bone then--'an' the rations of
+manna must be ez skimpy in heaven ez the rations o' bacon down here in
+Dixie.' Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+Mr. Whitmel had taken a seat in an easy-chair; he had struck a match and
+was composedly kindling his pipe. "I felt nearer a higher communion that
+day than often since," he said.
+
+The coterie of gentlemen looked at one another in disconsolate
+uncertainty, and one turned his cards face downward and laid them
+resignedly on the table. The party was evidently in for one of the old
+chaplain's long stories, with a few words by way of application, and
+there was no decent opportunity to demur. They were the intruders in the
+smoking-room--not he! Here with his pipe and his paper, he was within
+the accommodation assigned him. They must hie them back to the casino to
+be at ease, and this would they do when he should reach the end of his
+story--if indeed it had an end.
+
+For with the prolixity of the eye-witness he was detailing the points of
+the battle; what troops were engaged; how the flank was turned; how
+the reserve was delayed; how the guns were planted; how the cavalry was
+ordered to charge over impracticable ground, and how in consequence he
+saw a squadron literally annihilated; how for hours after the fight
+was over a sergeant of the Dovinger Rangers pervaded the field with the
+guidon, calling on them by name to rally.
+
+"And, gentlemen," he continued, turning in his chair, the fire kindling
+in his eyes as it died in the bowl of his pipe, "not one man responded,
+for none could rise from that horrid slaughter."
+
+There was a moment of tense silence. Then, "Back and forth the guidon
+flaunted, and the rain began to fall, and the night came on, and still
+the dusk echoed the cry, 'Guide right! Dovinger's Rangers! Rally on the
+guidon! Rally on the reserve!'"
+
+The old chaplain stuck his pipe into his mouth and brought it aflare
+again with two or three strong indrawing respirations.
+
+"The surgeons said it would end in a case of dementia. I was sorry, for
+I had seen much that day that hurt me, and more than all was this. For
+I could picture that valiant young spirit going through life, spared by
+God's mercy; and it seemed to me that when the enemy, in whatever guise,
+should press him hard and defeat should bear him down he would have the
+courage and the ardor and the moral strength to rally on the reserve. He
+would rally on the guidon."
+
+The old chaplain pulled strongly at his pipe, setting the blue wreaths
+of smoke circling about his head. "I should know that young fellow again
+wherever I might chance to see him."
+
+"Did he collapse at last and verify the surgeon's prophecy!" asked the
+dealer.
+
+"Well," drawled the chaplain, with a little flattered laugh, "I myself
+took care of that Many years ago I studied medicine, before I was
+favored with a higher call. Neurology was my line. When the boy's horse
+sank exhausted beneath him, and he fell into a sleep or stupor on
+the carcass, I removed the object of the obsession. I slipped the
+flag-staff, guidon and all, into a crevice of the rocks, where it will
+remain till the end of our time, be sure." He laughed in relish of his
+arbitrary intervention.
+
+"There was a fine healthy clamor in camp the next morning about the lost
+guidon. But I did the soldier no damage, for he had been promoted to a
+lieutenancy for special gallantry on the field, and he therefore could
+no longer have carried the guidon if he had had both the flag and the
+troop."
+
+The stories of camp and field, thus begun, swiftly multiplied; they wore
+the fire to embers, and the oil sank low in the lamps. There was a chill
+sense of dawn in the blue-gray mist when the group, separating at last,
+issued upon the veranda; the moon, so long hovering over the sombre
+massive mountains, was slowly sinking in the west.
+
+Among the shadows of the pillars a tall, martial figure lurked in ambush
+for the old chaplain, as he rounded the corner of the veranda on his way
+to his own quarters.
+
+"Pa'son," a husky voice spoke from out the dim comminglement of the
+mist and the moon, "'twas me that carried that guidon in Dovinger 's
+Bangers."
+
+"I know it," declared the triumphant tactician. "_I_ recognized you as
+soon as I saw you again."
+
+"I 'm through with this," the young mountaineer exclaimed abruptly,
+with an eloquent gesture of renunciation toward the deserted card-table
+visible through the vista of open doors. "I'm going home--to work! I'll
+never forget that I was marker in Dovinger's Rangers. I carried the
+guidon! And that last day I marked their way to glory! There's nothing
+left of them except honor and duty, but I'll rally on that, Chaplain.
+Never fear for me, again. I'll rally on the reserve!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Guidon, by
+Charles Egbert Craddock (AKA Mary Noailles Murfree)
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOST GUIDON ***
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