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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of How Private George W. Peck Put Down The
+Rebellion, by George W. Peck
+
+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: How Private George W. Peck Put Down The Rebellion
+ or, The Funny Experiences of a Raw Recruit - 1887
+
+Author: George W. Peck
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2008 [EBook #25492]
+Last Updated: October 5, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK PUT DOWN THE REBELLION
+
+OR, THE FUNNY EXPERIENCES OF A RAW RECRUIT.
+
+By George W. Peck
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ The War Literature of the “Century” is very Confusing--I am
+ Resolved to tell the True Story of the War--How and Why I
+ Became a Raw Recruit--My Quarters--My Horse--My First Ride.
+
+For the last year or more I have been reading the articles in the
+_Century_ magazine, written by generals and things who served on both
+the Union and Confederate sides, and have been struck by the number of
+“decisive battles” that were fought, and the great number of generals
+who fought them and saved the country. It seems that each general on the
+Union side, who fought a battle, and writes an article for the aforesaid
+magazine, admits that his battle was the one which did the business.
+On the Confederate side, the generals who write articles invariably
+demonstrate that they everlastingly whipped their opponents, and drove
+them on in disorder. To read those articles it seems strange that the
+Union generals who won so many decisive battles, should not have ended
+the war much sooner than they did, and to read the accounts of battles
+won by the Confederates, and the demoralization that ensued in the
+ranks of their opponents, it seems marvellous that the Union army was
+victorious. Any man who has followed these generals of both sides, in
+the pages of that magazine, must conclude that the war was a draw game,
+and that both sides were whipped. Thus far no general has lost a battle
+on either side, and all of them tacitly admit that the whole thing
+depended on them, and that other commanders were mere ciphers. This is
+a kind of history that is going to mix up generations yet unborn in the
+most hopeless manner.
+
+It has seemed to me as though the people of this country had got so
+mixed up about the matter that it was the duty of some private soldier
+to write a description of _the_ decisive battle of the war, and as I was
+the private soldier who fought that battle on the Union side, against
+fearful odds, _viz_: against a Confederate soldier who was braver than
+I was, a better horseback rider, and a better poker player, I feel it
+my duty to tell about it. I have already mentioned it to a few veterans,
+and they have advised me to write an article for the _Century_, but
+I have felt a delicacy about entering the lists, a plain, unvarnished
+private soldier, against those generals. While I am something of a liar
+myself, and can do fairly well in my own class, I should feel that in
+the _Century_ I was entered in too fast a class of liars, and the result
+would be that I should not only lose my entrance fee, but be distanced.
+So I have decided to contribute this piece of history solely for the
+benefit of the readers of my own paper, as they will believe me.
+
+It was in 1864 that I joined a cavalry regiment in the department of the
+Gulf, a raw recruit in a veteran regiment. It may be asked why I waited
+so long before enlisting, and why I enlisted at all, when the war was so
+near over. I know that the most of the soldiers enlisted from patriotic
+motives, and because they wanted to help shed blood, and wind up the
+war. I did not. I enlisted for the bounty. I thought the war was nearly
+over, and that the probabilities were that the regiment I had enlisted
+in would, be ordered home before I could get to it. In fact the
+recruiting officer told me as much, and he said I would get my bounty,
+and a few months' pay, and it would be just like finding money. He said
+at that late day I would never see a rebel, and if I did have to join
+the regiment, there would be no fighting, and it would just be one
+continued picnic for two or three months, and there would be no more
+danger than to go off camping for a duck shoot. At my time of life, now
+that I have become gray, and bald, and my eyesight is failing, and I
+have become a grandfather, I do not want to open the sores of twenty-two
+years ago. I want a quiet life. So I would not assert that the
+recruiting officer deliberately lied to me, but I was the worst deceived
+man that ever enlisted, and if I ever meet that man, on this earth, it
+will go hard with him. Of course, if he is dead, that settles it, as I
+shall not follow any man after death, where I am in doubt as to which
+road he has taken, but if he is alive, and reads these lines, he can
+hear of something to his advantage by communicating with me. I would
+probably kill him. As far as the bounty was concerned, I got that all
+right, but it was only three-hundred dollars. Within twenty-four hours
+after I had been credited to the town from which I enlisted, I heard of
+a town that was paying as high as twelve-hundred dollars for recruits.
+I have met with many reverses of fortune in the course of a short, but
+brilliant career, have loaned money and never got it back, have been
+taken in by designing persons on three card monte, and have been beaten
+trading horses, but I never suffered much more than I did when I found
+that I had got to go to war for a beggerly three-hundred dollars bounty,
+when I could have had twelve hundred dollars by being credited to
+another town. I think that during two years and a half of service
+nothing tended more to dampen my ardor, make me despondent, and hate
+myself, than the loss of that nine-hundred dollars bounty. There was not
+an hour of the day, in all of my service, that I did not think of what
+might have been. It was a long time before I brought to my aid that
+passage of scripture, “There is no use crying for spilled bounty,” but
+when I did it helped me some. I thought of the hundreds who didn't get
+any bounty.
+
+I joined my regiment, and had a cavalry horse issued to me, and was
+assigned to a company. I went up to the captain of the company, whom I
+had known as a farmer before the war commenced, and told him I had come
+to help him put down the rebellion. I never saw a man so changed as he
+was. I thought he would ask me to bring my things into his tent, and
+stay with him, but he seemed to have forgotten that he had known me,
+when he worked on the farm. He was dressed up nicely, and I thought he
+put on style, and I could only think of him at home, with his overalls
+tucked in his boots, driving a yoke of oxen to plow a field. He seemed
+to feel that I had known him under unfavorable circumstances before the
+war, and acted as though he wanted to shun me. I had drawn an infantry
+knapsack, at Madison, before I left for the front, and had it full of
+things, besides a small trunk. The captain called a soldier and told him
+to find quarters for me, and I went out of his presence. At my quarters,
+which consisted of what was called a pup-tent, I found no conveniences,
+and it soon dawned on me that war was no picnic, as that lying
+recruiting officers had told me it was. I found that I had got to throw
+away my trunk and knapsack, and all the articles that I couldn't strap
+on a saddle, and when I asked for a mattress the men laughed at me. I
+had always slept on a mattress, or a feather bed, and when I was told
+that I would have to sleep on the ground, under that little tent, I felt
+hurt. I had known the colonel when he used to teach school at home, and
+I went to him and told him what kind of a way they were treating me,
+but he only laughed. He had two nice cots in his tent, and I told him
+I thought I ought to have a cot, too. He laughed some more. Finally I
+asked him who slept in his extra cot, and intimated that I had rather
+sleep in his tent than mine, but he sent me away, and said he would see
+what could be done. I laid on the ground that night, but I didn't sleep.
+If I ever get a pension it will be for rheumatism caught by sleeping on
+the ground. The rheumatism has not got hold of me yet, though twenty-two
+years have passed, but it may be lurking about my system, for all I
+know.
+
+I had never rode a horse, before enlisting. The only thing I had ever
+got straddle of was a stool in a country printing office, and when I
+was first ordered to saddle up my horse, I could not tell which way the
+saddle and bridle went, and I got a colored man to help me, for which I
+paid him some of the remains of my bounty. I hired him permanently, to
+take care of my horse, but I soon learned that each soldier had to take
+care of his own horse. That seemed pretty hard. I had been raised a pet,
+and had edited a newspaper, which had been one of the most outspoken
+advocates of crushing the rebellion, and it seemed to me, as much as I
+had done for the government, in urging enlistments, I was entitled to
+more consideration then to become my own hostler. However, I curbed my
+proud spirit, and after the nigger cook had saddled my horse, I led the
+animal up to a fence to climb on. From the remarks of the soldiers, and
+the general laugh all around, it was easy to see that mounting a cavalry
+horse from off the top of a rail fence was not according to tactics,
+but it was the only way I could see to get on, in the absence of
+step-ladders. They let me ride into the ranks, after mounting, and then
+they laughed. It was hard for me to be obliged to throw away all the
+articles I had brought with me, so I strapped them on the saddle in
+front and behind, and only my head stuck out over them. There was one
+thing, it would be a practicable impossibility to fall off.
+
+[Illustration: Mounting a horse from the top of a rail fence 021]
+
+The regiment started on a raid. The colonel came along by my company
+during the afternoon, and I asked him where we were going. He gave me an
+evasive answer, which hurt my feelings. I asked his pardon, but told him
+I would like to know where we were going, so as to have my letters
+sent to me, but he went off laughing, and never told me, while the old
+soldiers laughed, though I couldn't see what they were laughing at.
+I did not suppose there was so much difference between officers and
+privates, and wondered if it was the policy of this government to have
+a cavalry regiment to start off on a long raid and not let the soldiers
+know where they were going, and during the afternoon I decided to write
+home to the paper I formerly edited and give my opinion of such a fool
+way of running a war. Suppose anybody at home was sick, they wouldn't
+know where to write for me to come back. There is nothing that will give
+a man such an appetite as riding on a galloping horse, and along about
+the middle of the afternoon I began to get hungry, and asked the orderly
+sergeant when we were going to get any dinner. He said there was a hotel
+a short distance ahead, and the colonel had gone forward to order dinner
+for the regiment. I believed him, because I had known the orderly before
+the war, when he drove a horse in a brickyard, grinding clay. But he
+was a liar, too, as I found out afterwards. There was not a hotel within
+fifty miles, and soldiers did not stop at hotels, anyway. Finally the
+orderly sergeant came along and announced that dinner was ready, and I
+looked for the hotel, but the only dinner I saw was some raw pork that
+soldiers took out of their saddle bags, with hard tack. We stopped in
+the woods, dismounted, and the boys would cut off a slice of fat pork
+and spread it on the hard tack and eat it. I had never supposed the
+government would subject its soldiers to such fare as that, and I
+wouldn't eat. I did not dare dismount, as there was no fence near that
+I could use to climb on to my horse, so I sat in the saddle and let the
+horse eat some grass, while I thought of home, and pie and cake, and
+what a condemned fool a man was to leave a comfortable home to go
+and put down anybody's rebellion. The way I felt then I wouldn't have
+touched a rebellion if one lay right in the road. What business was it
+of mine if some people in the South wanted to dissolve partnership and
+go set up business for themselves? How was I going to prevent them
+from having a southern confederacy, by riding an old rack of bones of a
+horse, that would reach his nose around every little while and chew my
+legs? If the recruiting officer who inveigled me into the army had
+come along then, his widow would now be drawing a pension. While I was
+thinking, dreaming of home, and the horse was eating grass, the fool
+animal suddenly took it into his head to lay down and roll, and before I
+could kick any of his ribs in, he was down, and I was rolling off, with
+one leg under him. The soldiers quit eating and pulled the horse of
+me, and hoisted me up into the space between my baggage, and then they
+laughed, lit their pipes and smoked, as happy as could be. I couldn t
+see how they could be happy, and wondered if they were not sick of war.
+Then they mounted, and on we went. My legs and body became chafed, and
+it seemed as though I couldn t ride another minute, and when the captain
+came along I told him about it, and asked him if I couldn t be relieved
+some way. He said the only way was for me to stand on my head and ride,
+and he winked at a soldier near me, and, do you know, that soldier
+actually changed ends with himself and stood on his head and hands in
+the saddle and rode quite a distance, and the captain said that was the
+way a cavalry soldier rested himself. Gracious, I wouldn t have tried
+that for the world, and I found out afterwards that the soldier who
+stood on his head formerly belonged with a circus.
+
+I suppose it was wrong to complain, but the horse they gave me was the
+meanest horse in the regiment. He would bite and kick the other horses,
+and they would kick back, and about half the time I was dodging the
+heels of horses, and a good deal of the time I was wondering if a man
+would get any pension if he was wounded that way. It would seem pretty
+tough to go home on a stretcher, as a wounded soldier, and have people
+find out a horse kicked you. I never had been a man of blood, and didn't
+enlist to kill anybody, as I could prove by that recruiting officer,
+and I didn t want to fight, but from what I could gather from the
+conversation of the soldiers, fighting and killing people was about all
+they thought about. They talked about this one and that one who had been
+killed, and the hundreds of confederates they had all shot or killed
+with sabres, until my hair just stood right up. It seems that twelve or
+fifteen men, more or less, had been shot off the horse I was riding, and
+one fellow who rode next to me said no man who ever rode that old yellow
+horse had escaped alive. This was cheering to me, and I would have given
+my three hundred dollars bounty, and all I could borrow, if I could get
+out of the army. However, I found out afterwards that the soldier lied.
+In fact they all lied, and they lied for my benefit. We struck into the
+woods, and traveled until after dark, with no road, and the march was
+enlivened by remarks of the soldiers near me to the effect that we would
+probably never get out of the woods alive. They said we were trying to
+surround an army of rebels, and cut them off from the main army, and the
+chances were that when tomorrow's sun rose it would rise on the ghostly
+corpses of the whole regiment, with jackals and buzzards eating us.
+One of the soldiers took something from his pocket, about the size of
+a testament, pressed it to his heart, and then kissed it, and I felt as
+though I was about to faint, but by the light of a match which another
+soldier had scratched on his pants to light his pipe, I saw that what I
+supposed to be a testament, was a box of sardines the soldier had bought
+of the sutler. I was just about to die of hunger, exhaustion, and fright
+at the fearful stories the veterans had been telling, when there was
+a shout at the head of the regiment, which was taken up all along the
+line, my horse run under the limb of a tree and raked me out of the
+saddle, and I hung to the limb, my legs hanging down, and
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ I Am Rudely Awakened from Dreams of Home--I Go on Picket--
+ The Foe Advances--A Desperate Conflict--The Union--
+ Confederate Breakfast on the Alabama Race-Track--A Friendly
+ Partin
+
+The careful readers of this history have no doubt been worried about the
+manner in which the first chapter closed, leaving me hanging to a limb
+of a tree, like Absalom weeping for her children, my horse having gone
+out from under me. But I have not been hanging there all this time. The
+soldiers took me down, and caught my horse, and the regiment dismounted
+and a council of war was held. I suppose it was a council of war, as I
+noticed the officers were all in a group under a tree, with a candle,
+examining a map, and drinking out of a canteen. I had read of councils
+of war, but I had never seen one, and so I walked over to the crowd
+of officers and asked the colonel if there was anything particular the
+matter. I never saw a crowd of men who seemed so astonished as those
+officers were, and suddenly I felt myself going away from where they
+were consulting, with somebody's strong hand on my collar, and an
+unmistakable cavalry boot, with a man in it, in the vicinity of my
+pantaloons. I do not know to this day, which officer it was that kicked
+me, but I went away and sat under a tree in the dark, so hungry that I
+was near dead, and I wished I _was_ dead. I guess the officers wished
+that I was, too. The soldiers tried to console me by telling me I was
+too fresh, but I couldn't see why a private soldier, right from home,
+who knew all about the public sentiment at the north in regard to the
+way the war was conducted, should not have a voice in the consultations
+of officers. I had written many editorials before I left home,
+criticising the manner in which many generals had handled their
+commands, and pointed out to my readers how defeat could have been
+turned into victory, if the generals had done as I would have done in
+their places. It seemed to me the officers of my regiment were taking a
+suicidal course in barring me out of their consultations. A soldier had
+told me that we were lost in the woods, and as I had studied geography
+when at school, and was well posted about Alabama, it seemed as though a
+little advice from me would be worth a good deal. But I concluded to let
+them stay lost forever before I would volunteer any information. It was
+crawling along towards midnight, of my first day in the army, and I
+had eaten nothing since morning. As I sat there under the tree I fell
+asleep, and was dreaming of home, and warm biscuit, with honey, and a
+feather bed, when I was rudely awakened by a corporal who told me to
+mount. I asked him what for, and told him that I didn t want to ride any
+more that night. What I wanted was to be let alone, to sleep. He said to
+get on the horse too quick, and I found there was no use arguing with a
+common corporal, so the boys hoisted me on to the horse, and about nine
+of us started off through the woods in the moonlight, looking for a main
+road. The corporal was kind enough to say that as soon as we found a
+road we would put out a picket, and send a courier back to the regiment
+to inform the colonel that we had got out of the woods, and the rest of
+us would lay down and sleep till morning. I don't think I was ever so
+anxious to see a road in all my life, because I _did_ want to lay down
+and sleep, and die. O, if I could have telegraphed home, how I would
+have warned the youth of the land to beware of the allurements held out
+by recruiting officers, and to let war alone. In an hour or so we came
+to a clearing, and presently to a road, and we stopped. The corporal
+detailed me to go up the road a short distance and stand picket on my
+horse. That was not what I had expected of the corporal. I used to know
+him before the war when he worked in a paint shop in a wagon factory,
+and I had always treated him well, and it seemed as though he ought
+to favor me by letting somebody else go on picket. I told him that the
+other boys were more accustomed to such work than I was, and that I
+would resign in their favor, because what I wanted was rest, but he
+said I would have to go, and he called me “Camp and Garrison Equipage,”
+ because I carried so much luggage on my horse, a name that held to
+me for months. I found that there was no use kicking against going on
+picket duty that night, though I tried to argue with the corporal that
+it would be just as well to all lay down and sleep till morning, and
+put out a picket when it got light enough to see. I was willing to work
+during the day time for the government, but it seemed as though it was
+rushing things a little to make a man work day and night for thirteen
+dollars a month. So the corporal went out on the road with me about
+a quarter of a mile, and placed me in position and gave me my
+instructions. The instructions were to keep a sharp lookout up and down
+the road for Confederate cavalry, and if I saw anybody approaching to
+sing out “halt!” and if the party did not halt to shoot him, and then
+call for the corporal of the guard, who would come out to see what was
+the matter. I asked him what I should do if anybody came along and shot
+me, and he said that would be all right, that the boys would come out
+and bury me. He said I must keep awake, for if I got to sleep on my post
+I would be court-martialed and shot, and then he rode away and left
+me alone, on a horse that kept whinnying, and calling the attention of
+possible Confederates to my position.
+
+I do not think any reader of these papers will envy me the position I
+was in at that time. If I remained awake, I was liable to be killed by
+the enemy, and if I fell asleep on my post I would be shot anyway.
+And if I was not killed, it was probable I would be a murderer before
+morning. Hunger was gnawing at my stomach, and the horse was gnawing
+at my legs, and I was gnawing at a hard tack which I had found in the
+saddle-bag. Every little while I would hear a noise, and my hair would
+raise my hat up, and it would seem to me as though the next minute a
+volley would be fired at me, and I shrunk down between the piles of
+baggage on my saddle to be protected from bullets. Suddenly the moon
+came out from behind a cloud and around a turn in the road a solitary
+horseman might have been seen coming towards me. I never have seen a
+horse that looked as high as that horse did. He seemed at least eighteen
+feet high, and the man on him was certainly twelve feet high. My heart
+pounded against a tin canteen that I had strung around my shoulder, so
+I could hear the beating perfectly plain. The man was approaching, and I
+was trying to think whether I had been instructed to shoot and then call
+for the corporal of the guard, or call for the corporal and then ask him
+to halt. I knew there was a halt in my instructions, and wondered if
+it would not conciliate the enemy to a certain extent if I would say
+“Please Halt.” The fact was, I didn t want to have any fuss. If I could
+have backed my horse up into the woods, and let the man go by, it seemed
+as though it would save precipitating a conflict. It is probable that
+no military man was ever in so tight a place as I was that minute. The
+enemy was advancing, and I wondered if, when he got near enough, I could
+say “halt,” in a commanding tone of voice. I knew enough, then, to feel
+that to ask the stranger to halt in a trembling and husky voice would
+give the whole thing away, that I was a recruit and a coward. Ye gods,
+how I suffered! I wondered if I could hit a man with a bullet. Before
+the war I was quite a good shot with a shotgun, shooting into flocks of
+pigeons and ducks, and I thought what a good idea it would be if I could
+get that approaching rebel into a flock. The idea seemed so ridiculous
+that I laughed right out loud. It was not a hearty, happy laugh, but it
+was a laugh all the same, and I was proud that I could laugh in the face
+of danger, when I might be a corpse any minute. The man on the horse
+stopped. Whether he heard me laugh it is impossible to say, but he
+stopped. That relieved me a great deal. As he had stopped it was
+unnecessary for me to invite him to halt. He was welcome to stay there
+if he wanted to. I argued that it was not my place to go howling around
+the Southern Confederacy, ordering people to halt, when they had already
+halted. If he would let me alone and stay where he was, what sense was
+there in picking a quarrel with him?
+
+Why should I want to shoot a total stranger, who might have a family
+at home, somewhere in the South, who would mourn for him. He might be
+a dead shot, as many Southern gentlemen were, and if I went to advising
+him about halting, it would, very likely cause his hot Southern blood to
+boil, and he would say he had just as much right to that road as I had.
+If it come right down to the justice of the thing, I should have to
+admit that Alabama was not my state. Wisconsin was my home, and if I
+was up there, and a man should trespass on my property, it would be
+reasonable enough for me to ask him to go away from there, and enforce
+my request by calling a constable and having him put off the premises.
+But how did I know but he owned property there, and was a tax-payer. I
+had it all figured out that I was right in not disturbing that rebel,
+and I knew that I could argue with my colonel for a week, if necessary,
+on the law points in the case, and the courtesy that I deemed proper
+between gentlemen, if any complaint was made for not doing my duty. But,
+lordy, how I _did_ sweat while I was deciding to let him alone if he
+would let me alone. The war might have been going on now, and that rebel
+and myself might have been standing there today, looking at each other,
+if it hadn't been for the action of the fool horse that I rode. My
+horse had been evidently asleep for some time, but suddenly he woke up,
+pricked up his ears, and began to prance, and jump sideways like a race
+horse that is on the track, and wants to run. The horse reared up and
+plunged, and kept working up nearer to my Southern friend, and I tried
+to hold him, and keep him still, but suddenly he got the best of me and
+started towards the other man and horse, and the other horse started, as
+though some one had said “go”.{*}
+
+ * [Before I get any further on this history of the war, it
+ is necessary to explain. The facts proved to be that my
+ regiment had got lost in the woods, and the scouting party,
+ under the corporal, who had been sent out to find a road,
+ had come upon the three-quarter stretch of an old private
+ race track on a deserted southern plantation, instead of a
+ main road, and I had been placed on picket near the last
+ turn before striking the quarter stretch. A small party of
+ Confederates, who had been out on a scout, and got lost, had
+ come on the track further down, near the judges' stand, and
+ they had put a man, on picket up near where I was, supposing
+ they had struck the road, and intending to wait until
+ morning so as to find out where they were. My horse was an
+ old race horse, and as soon as he saw the other horse, he
+ was in for a race and the other horse was willing. This will
+ show the situation as well as though I had a race track
+ engraved, showing the positions of the two armies. The
+ Confederates, except the man on picket, were asleep beside
+ the track near the quarter stretch, and our fellows, except
+ myself, were asleep over by the three-quarter pole.]
+
+I do not suppose any man on this earth, or any other earth, ever tried
+to stop a fool horse quite as hard as I did that one. I pulled until my
+arms ached, but he went for all that was out, and the horse ahead of
+me was buckling in as fast as he could. I could not help wondering what
+would happen if I should overtake that Southern man. I was gaining on
+him, when suddenly eight or nine men who were sleeping beside the road,
+got up and began to shoot at us. They were the friends of the rebel, who
+believed that the whole Union army was making a charge on them. We got
+by the shooters alive, and then, as we passed the rickety old judge's
+stand, I realized that we were on a race track, and for a moment I
+forgot that I was a soldier, and only thought of myself as a rider of
+a race horse, and I gave the horse his head, and kicked him, and yelled
+like a Comanche Indian, and I had the satisfaction of seeing my horse
+go by the rebel, and I yelled some more. I got a glimpse of my rebel's,
+face as I went by him, and he didn't look much more like a fighting man
+than I did, but he was, for as soon as I had got ahead of him he drew
+a revolver and began firing at me on the run. I thought that was a mean
+trick, and spoke to him about it afterwards, but he said he only wanted
+me to stop so he could get acquainted with me.
+
+[Illustration: On went the two night riders 039]
+
+Well, I never could find any bullets in any of the clothes strapped on
+the back of my saddle, but it _did_ seem to me as though every bullet
+from his revolver hit very near my vital parts. But a new danger
+presented itself. We were rapidly approaching the corporal and his men,
+with whose command I belonged, and they would wake up and think the
+whole Confederate army was charging them, and if I was not killed by the
+confounded rebel behind me, I should probably be shot all to pieces by
+our own men. As we passed our men they fired a few sleepy shots towards
+us, and took to the woods. On went the two night riders, and when the
+rebel had exhausted his revolver he began to urge his horse, and passed
+me, and I drew my revolver and began to fire at him. As we passed the
+judge's stand the second time a couple of shots from quite a distance in
+the woods showed that his rebel friends had taken alarm at the frequent
+charges of cavalry, and had skipped to the woods and were getting away
+as fast as possible. We went around the track once more, and when near
+the judge's stand I was right behind him, and his horse fell down and
+my horse stumbled over him, and I guess we were both stunned. Finally I
+crawled out from under my horse, and the rebel was trying to raise up,
+when I said, “What in thunder you want to chase a man all around the
+Southern Confederacy for, on a dark night, trying to shoot him?” He asked
+me to help him up, which I did, when he said, “Who commenced this here
+chasing? If you had kept whar you was, I wouldn't a had no truck with
+you.” Then I said, “You are my prisoner,” and he said, “No, you are my
+prisoner.” I told him I was no hand to argue, but it seemed to me it was
+about a stand off, as to which was 'tother's prisoner. I told him that
+was my first day's service as a soldier, and I was not posted as to the
+customs of civilized warfare, but I was willing to wait till daylight,
+leaving matters just as they were, each of us on the defensive, giving
+up none of our rights, and after daylight we would play a game of
+seven-up to see which was the prisoner. That seemed fair to him, and he
+accepted the situation, remarking that he had only been conscripted a
+few days and didn't know any more about war than a cow. He said he was
+a newspaper man from Georgia, and had been taken right from the case in
+his office before his paper could be got out. I told him I was only a
+few days out of a country printing office my-self, the sheriff having
+closed out my business on an old paper bill. A bond of sympathy was
+inaugurated at once between us, and when he limped along the track to
+the fence, and found that his ankle was hurt by the fall, I brought a
+bottle of horse liniment out of my saddle-bags, and a rag, and bound
+some liniment on his ankle. He said he had never seen a Yankee soldier
+before, and he was glad he had met me. I told him he was the first rebel
+I had ever met, and I hoped he would be the last, until the war was
+over. By this time our horses had gone to nibbling grass, as though
+there were no such thing as war. We could hear occasional bugle calls
+off in the woods in two directions, and knew that our respective
+commands had gone off and got lost again, so we concluded to camp there
+till morning. After the excitement was over I began to get hungry, and I
+asked him if he had anything to eat. He said he had some corn bread and
+bacon, and he could get some sweet potatoes over in a field. So I built
+a fire there on the track, and he hobbled off after potatoes. Just about
+daylight breakfast was served, consisting of coffee, which I carried
+in a sack, made in a pot he carried, bacon fried in a half of a tin
+canteen, sweet potatoes roasted in the ashes, and Confederate corn
+bread, warmed by holding it over the fire on a sharp stick. My friend,
+the rebel, sat on my saddle, which I had removed from my horse, after he
+had promised me on his honor to help me to put it on when it was time to
+mount. He knew how to put on saddles, and I didn t, and as his ankle
+was lame I gave him the best seat, he being my guest, that is, he was
+my guest if I beat him in the coming game of seven-up, which we were to
+play to see if he was my prisoner, or I was his. It being daylight, I
+could see him, and study his character, and honestly he was a mighty
+fine-looking fellow. As we eat our early breakfast I began to think
+that the recruiting officer was more than half right about war being a
+picnic. He talked about the newspaper business in the South, and before
+breakfast was over we had formed a partnership to publish a paper at
+Montgomery, Ala., after the war should be over. I have eaten a great
+many first-class meals in my time, have feasted at Delmonico's, and
+lived at the best hotels in the land, besides partaking pretty fair food
+camping out, where an appetite was worked up by exercise and sporting,
+but in all my life I have never had anything taste as good as that
+combination Union-Confederate breakfast on the Alabama race track,
+beside the judges stand. After the last potato peeling, and the last
+crumb of corn bread had been “sopped” in the bacon gravy and eaten, we
+whittled some tobacco off a plug, filled our pipes and leaned up against
+the fence and smoked the most enjoyable smoke that ever was smoked.
+After smoking in silence a few minutes my rebel friend said, as he blew
+the smoke from his handsome mouth, “War is not so unpleasant, after
+all.” Then we fell to talking about the manner in which the different
+generals on each side had conducted things. He went on to show that if
+Lee had taken his advice, the Yankees would then be on the run for the
+North, and I showed him, by a few well-chosen remarks that if I
+could have been close to Grant, and given him some pointers, that the
+Confederates would be hunting their holes. We were both convinced that
+it was a great mistake that we were nothing but private soldiers, but
+felt that it would not be long before we were called to occupy high
+places. It seemed to stand to reason that true merit would find its
+reward. Then he knocked the ashes out of his pipe and said if I had a
+pack of cards we would go up in the judges stand and play seven-up
+to see whether I was his prisoner, or he was mine. I wanted to take a
+prisoner back to the regiment, at I thought it would make me solid with
+the colonel, and I played a strong game of seven-up, but before we got
+started to playing he suggested that we call it a stand-off, and agree
+that neither of us should be a prisoner, but that when we got ready to
+part each should go hunt up his own command, and tell the biggest lie we
+could think of as to the fight we had had. That was right into my hand,
+and I agreed, and then my friend suggested that we play poker for money.
+I consented and he put up Confederate money, against my greenbacks, ten
+to one. We played about an hour, and at the close he had won the balance
+of my bounty, except what I had given to the chaplain for safe keeping,
+and a pair of pants, and a blouse, and a flannel shirt, and a pair of
+shoes, which I had on my saddle. I was rather glad to get rid of some
+of my extra baggage, and when he put on the clothes he had won from me,
+blessed if I wasn t rather proud of him. A man could wear any kind of
+clothes in the Confederate army, and my rebel looked real comfortable in
+my clothes, and I felt that it was a real kind act to allow him to win
+a blue suit that I did not need. If the men of both the armies, and the
+people of both sections of the distracted country could have seen us two
+soldiers together, there in the judges stand, peacefully playing poker,
+while the battles were raging in the East and in the West, that would
+have felt that an era of good feeling was about to dawn on the country.
+After we had played enough poker, and I had lost everything I had that
+was loose, I suggested that he sing a song, so he sung the “Bonnie Blue
+Flag.” I did not think it was right for him to work in a rebel song on
+me, but it did sound splendid, and I forgot that there was any war, in
+listening to the rich voice of my new friend. When he got through he
+asked me to sing something. I never _could_ sing, anyway. My folks had
+always told me that my voice sounded like a corn sheller, but he urged
+me at his own peril, and I sung, or tried to, “We'll Hang Jeff Davis
+to a Sour Apple Tree.” I had no designs on Mr. Davis, honestly I hadn't,
+and it was the farthest thing from my thoughts to hurt the feelings of
+that young man, but before I had finished the first verse he took his
+handkerchief out and placed it to his eyes. I stopped and apologized,
+but he said not to mind him, as he was better now. He told me,
+afterwards, in the strictest confidence, that my singing was the worst
+he ever heard, and gave it as his opinion that if Jeff Davis could hear
+me sing he would be willing, even anxious, to be hung. If I had been
+sensitive about my musical talents, probably there would have been hard
+feelings, and possibly bloodshed, right there, but I told him I always
+knew I couldn't sing, and he said that I was in luck. Well, we fooled
+around there till about ten o'clock in the morning, and decided that we
+would part, and each seek our respective commands, so I put some more
+horse liniment on his sprained ankle, and he saddled my horse for me,
+and after expressions of mutual pleasure at meeting each other, and
+promises that after the war we would seek each other out, we mounted,
+he gave three cheers for the Yanks, and I gave three cheers for the
+Johnnies, he divided his plug of tobacco with me, and I gave him the
+bottle of horse liniment, he turned his horse towards the direction his
+gray coats had taken the night before, while I turned my horse towards
+the hole in the woods our fellows had made, and we left the race track
+where we had fought so gamely, eat so heartily, and played poker so
+disastrously, to me. As we were each about going into the woods, half
+a mile apart, he waved his handkerchief at me, and I waved mine at him,
+and we plunged into the forest.
+
+After riding for an hour or so, alone in the woods, thinking up a good
+lie to tell about where I had been, and what I had been doing, I heard
+horses neighing, and presently I came upon my regiment, just starting
+out to hunt me up. The colonel looked at me and said, “Kill the fat
+prodigal, the calf has got back.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ I Describe a Deadly Encounter--Am Congratulated as a Warrior
+ With a Big “W”--The Chaplain Gives Good Advice--I Attend
+ Surgeon's Call--Castor Oil out of a Dirty Bottle--Back to
+ the Chaplain's Tent--I am Wounded in the Canteen.
+
+The last chapter of this history left me facing my regiment, which
+had started out to hunt me up, after my terrible fight with that
+Confederate. The colonel rode up to me and shook me by the hand,
+and congratulated me, and the major and adjutant said they had never
+expected to see me alive, and the soldiers looked at me as one returned
+from the grave, and from what I could gather by the looks of the boys,
+I was something of a hero, even before I had told my story. The colonel
+asked me what had become of all the baggage I had on my saddle when I
+went away, and I told him that I had thrown ballast over-board all over
+the Southern Confederacy, when I was charging the enemy, because I found
+my horse drew too much water for a long run. He said something about my
+being a Horse-Marine, and sent me back to my company, telling me that
+when we got into camp that night he would send for me and I could tell
+the story of my capture and escape. I rode back into my company, and you
+never saw such a change of sentiment towards a raw recruit, as there
+was towards me, and they asked me questions about my first fight. The
+corporal who had placed me on picket, and stampeded at the first fire,
+was unusually gracious to me, and said when he saw a hundred and fifty
+rebels come charging down the road, yelling and firing, he knew it was
+no place for his small command, so he lit out. He said he supposed of
+course I was shot all to pieces. I didn't tell him that it was me that
+did all the yelling, and that there was only one rebel, and that he was
+perfectly harmless, but I told him that he miscalculated the number of
+the enemy, as there were, all told, at least five hundred, and that I
+had killed fourteen that I knew of, besides a number had been taken away
+in ambulances, wounded. The boys opened their eyes, and nothing was too
+good for me during that march. We went into camp in the pine woods late
+in the afternoon, and after supper the colonel sent for me, and I went
+to his tent. All the officers were there, and as many soldiers as dared
+crowd around. The colonel said the corporal had reported where he left
+me, and how the enemy had charged in force, and he supposed that I had
+been promptly killed. That he felt that he could not hold his position
+against such immense odds, so he had fallen back slowly, firing as he
+did so, until the place was too hot for him, and now he wanted to hear
+my story. I told the colonel that I was new at the business, and may
+be I did not use the best judgment in the world, by remaining to fight
+against such odds, but I meant well. I told him I did not wish to
+complain of the corporal, who no doubt was an able fighter, but it did
+seem to me that he ought at least to have waited till the battle had
+actually commenced. I said that the first charge, which stampeded the
+corporal and his men, was not a marker to what took place afterwards. I
+said when the enemy first appeared, I dismounted, got behind a tree, and
+poured a murderous fire into the ranks of the rebels, and that they fell
+all around. I could not tell how many were killed, but probably ten,
+as I fired eleven shots from, my carbine, and I usually calculated on
+missing one out of ten, when shooting at a mark. Then they fell back and
+I mounted my horse and rode to their right flank and poured it into them
+red hot from my revolver, and that I saw several fall from their horses,
+when they stampeded, and I drew my saber and charged them, and after
+cutting down several, I was surrounded by the whole rebel army and
+captured. They tied me to the wheel of a gun carriage, and after trying
+to pump me as to the number of men I had fighting against them, they
+left me to hold a council of war, when I untied myself, mounted my
+horse, and cut my way out, and took to the woods. I apologized to the
+colonel for running away from the enemy, but told him it seemed to me,
+after the number I had killed, and the length of time I had held them at
+bay, it was no more than right to save my own life, as I had use for it
+in my business. During my recital of the lie I had made up, the officers
+and soldiers stood around with mouths open, and when I had concluded my
+story, there was silence for a moment, when the colonel stepped forward
+and took me by the hand, and in a few well chosen remarks congratulated
+me on my escape, and thanked me for so valiantly standing my ground
+against such fearful odds, and he said I had reflected credit upon my
+regiment, and that hereafter I would be classed as a veteran instead of
+a recruit. He said he had never known a man to come right from the paths
+of peace, and develop into a warrior with a big “W” so short a time. The
+other officers congratulated me, and the soldiers said I was a bully boy.
+The colonel treated to some commissary whisky, and then the business of
+the evening commenced, which I found to be draw poker. I sat around for
+some time watching the officers play poker, when the chaplain, who was
+a nice little pious man, asked me to step outside the tent, as he wished
+to converse with me. I went out into the moonlight with him, and he
+took me away from the tents, under a tree, and told me he had been much
+interested in my story. I thanked him, and said I had been as brief as
+possible. He said, “I was interested, because I used to be something
+of a liar myself, before I reformed, and studied for the ministry.” It
+occurred to me that possibly the chaplain did not believe my simple
+tale, and I asked him if he doubted my story. “That is about the size of
+it,” says he. I told him I was sorry I had not told the story in such
+a manner that he would believe it, because I valued the opinion of the
+chaplain above all others. He said he had known a good many star liars
+in his time, some that had national reputations, but he had never
+seen one that could hold a candle to me in telling a colossal lie, or
+aggregation of lies, and tell them so easy. I thanked him for his good
+opinion, and told him that I flattered myself that for a recruit, right
+fresh from the people, who had never had any experience as a military
+liar, I had done pretty well. He said I certainly had, and he was glad
+to make my acquaintance. I asked him to promise not to give it away to
+the other officers, which he did, and then I told him the whole story,
+as it was, and that I was probably the biggest coward that ever
+lived, and that I was only afraid that my story of blood-letting would
+encourage the officers to be constantly putting me into places of
+danger, which I did not want to be in. I told him I believed this war
+could be ended without killing any more men, and cited the fact that I
+had been a soldier nearly forty-eight hours, and nobody had been killed,
+and the enemy was on the run. I told the chaplain that if there was
+one thing I didn't want to see, it was blood. Others might have an
+insatiable appetite for gore, but I didn't want any at all. I was
+willing to do anything for this government but fight; and if he could
+recommend to me any line of action by which I could pull through without
+being sent out to do battle with strangers who could shoot well, I
+should consider it a favor. What I wanted was a soft job, where there
+was no danger. The chaplain looked thoughtful a moment, and then took me
+over to his tent, where he opened a bottle of blackberry brandy. He
+took a small dose, after placing his hand on his stomach and groaning a
+little. He asked me if I did not sometimes have a pain under my vest. I
+told him I never had a pain anywhere. Then he said I couldn't have any
+brandy. He said the brandy came from the sanitary commsssion, and was
+controlled entirely by the chaplains of the different regiments, and the
+instructions were to only use it in case of sickness. He said a great
+many of the boys had pains regularly, and came to him for relief. He
+smacked his lips and said if I felt any pain coming on, to help myself
+to the brandy. It is singular how a pain will sometimes come on when
+you least expect it. It was not a minute before I began to feel a small
+pain, not bigger than a man's hand, and as I looked at the bottle the
+pain increased, and I had to tell the chaplain that I must have relief
+before it was everlastingly too late, so he poured out a dose of brandy
+for me. I could see that I was becoming a veteran very fast, as I could
+work the chaplain for sanitary stores pretty early in the game. Well,
+the chaplain and me had pains off and on, for an hour or two, and became
+good friends. He told me of quite a number of methods of shirking active
+duty, such as being detailed to take care of baggage, acting as orderly,
+and going to surgeon's call. He said if a man went to surgeon's call,
+the doctor would report him sick, and he could not be sent out on duty.
+The next day we went back to our post, where the regiment was stationed,
+and where they had barracks, that they wintered in, and remained there
+several weeks, drilling. I was drilled in mounting and dismounting,
+and soon got so I could mount a horse without climbing on to him from a
+fence. But the drill became irksome, and I decided to try the chaplain's
+suggestion about going to surgeon's call. I got in line with about
+twenty other soldiers, and we marched over to the surgeon's quarters. I
+supposed the doctor would take each soldier into a private room, feel of
+his pulse, look at his tongue, and say that what he needed was rest, and
+give him some powders to be taken in wafers, or in sugar. But all he did
+was to say “What's the matter?” and the sick man would tell him, when
+the doctor would tell his assistant to give the man something, and pass
+on to the next. I was the last one to be served, and the interview was
+about as follows:
+
+Doc.--What's the matter?
+
+Me--Bilious.
+
+Doc.--Run out your tongue. Take a swallow out of the black bottle.
+
+That seems very simple, indeed, but it nearly killed me. When he told me
+to run out my tongue, I run out perhaps six inches of the lower end of
+it, the doctor glanced at it as though it was nothing to him anyway, and
+then he told me to take a swallow out of the bottle. In all my life I
+had never taken four doses of medicine, and when I did the medicine was
+disguised in preserves or something. The hospital steward handed me the
+bottle that a dozen other sick soldiers had drank out of, and it was
+sticky all around the top, and contained something that looked like
+castor oil, for greasing a buggy. He told me to take a good big swallow,
+and I tried to do so. Talk about the suffering brought on by the war, it
+seems to me nobody ever suffered as I did, trying to drink a swallow
+of that castor oil out of a two quart bottle, that was dirty. It run so
+slow that it seemed, an age before I got enough to swallow, and then it
+seemed another age before the oil could pass a given point in my neck.
+And great Caesar's ghost how it _did_ taste. I think it went down my
+neck, and I just had strength enough to ask the steward to give me
+something to take the taste out of my mouth. He handed me a blue pill.
+O, I could have killed him. I rushed to the chaplain's tent and took a
+drink of blackberry brandy, and my life was saved, but for three years
+after that I was never sick enough to get farther than the chaplain's
+quarters.
+
+[Illustration: Great Caesar's ghost how it did taste 049]
+
+I suppose the meanest trick that was ever played on a raw recruit, was
+played on me while we were in camp at that place. It seemed to me
+that some of the boys got jealous of me, because I had become a hero,
+accidentally. May be some of them did not believe I had killed as many
+of the enemy as I had owned up to having killed. Anyway every little
+while some soldier would say that he thought it was a mean man that
+would go out and kill a lot of rebels and not bury them. He said a man
+that would do that was a regular pot-hunter, who killed game and left it
+on the ground to spoil. They made lots of such uncharitable remarks, but
+I did not pay much attention to to them. I had a tent-mate who took a
+great interest in me, and he said no soldier's life was safe who did not
+wear a breast-plate, and he asked me if I did not bring any breast-plate
+with me. I told him I never heard of a breastplate, and asked him what
+it was. He said it was a vest made of the finest spring steel, that
+could be worn under the clothes, which was so strong that a bullet could
+not penetrate it. He supposed of course I had one, when he heard of the
+fight I had, and said none of the old boys would go into a fight without
+one, as it covered the vital parts, and saved many a life. I bit like
+a bass. If there was anything I wanted more than a discharge, it was a
+breast-plate. If the chaplain should succeed in getting me a soft job,
+where there was no danger, I could get along without my breast-plate,
+but there was no sure thing about the chaplain, so I asked the soldier
+where I could get a breastplate. He said the quartermaster used to issue
+them, but he didn't have any on hand now, but he said he knew where
+there was one that once belonged to a soldier who was killed, and he
+thought he could get it for me. I asked him how it happened that the
+soldier was killed, when he had a breast-plate, and he told me the
+man was killed by eating green peaches. Of course I couldn't expect a
+breastplate to save me from the effects of eating unripe fruit, and
+I felt that if it would save me from bullets it would be worth all it
+cost, so I told the soldier to get it for me. That evening he brought it
+around, and he helped me put it on. I learned afterwards that it was an
+old breast-plate that an officer had brought to the regiment when the
+war broke out, and that it had been played on raw recruits for two
+years. After I had got it on, the soldier suggested that we go out with
+several other dare devils, and run the guard and go down town and play
+billiards, and have a jolly time. I asked him if the guard would not
+shoot at us, and he said the guards would be all right, and if they did
+shoot they would shoot at the breast-plates, as all the boys had them
+on. So about six of us sneaked through the guards, went to town and had
+a big time, and came back along towards morning, each with a canteen of
+whisky. It was not easy getting back inside the lines, as the moon was
+shining, but we got by the guards, and then my friends suggested that we
+take our breast-plates off and put them on behind us, as the guards, if
+they shot at all, would be firing in our rear. I took mine off and put
+it on behind my pants, and just then somebody fired a gun, and the boys
+said “run,” and I started ahead, and the firing continued, and about
+every jump I could hear and feel something striking my breast-plate
+behind, which seemed to me to be bullets, and I was glad I had the
+breast-plate on, though afterwards I found that the boys behind me were
+firing off their revolvers in the air, and throwing small stones at my
+breast-plate. Presently a bullet, as I supposed, struck me in the back
+above the breast-plate, and I could feel blood trickling down my back,
+and I knew I was wounded. O, I hankered for gore, before enlisting, and
+while editing a paper, and now I had got it, got gore till I couldn't
+rest. The blood run down my side, down my leg, into my boot, and I could
+feel I was wading in my own blood. And great heaven's, how it did smell.
+I had never smelled blood before, that I knew of, and I thought it had
+the most peculiar, pungent, intoxicating odor. I ran towards my quarters
+as fast as possible, fainting almost, from imaginary loss of blood, and
+finally rushed into my tent, threw myself on my bunk and called loudly
+for the doctor and chaplain, and then I fainted. When I came to I was
+surrounded by the doctor, and a lot of the boys, all laughing, and
+the chaplain was trying to say something pious, while trying to keep
+a straight face. “Have you succeeded in staunching the blood, doc?” I
+asked, in a trembling voice. He said the blood was quite staunch, but
+the whisky could never be saved. I did not know what he meant, and I
+turned to the chaplain and asked him if he wouldn't be kind enough to
+say something appropriate to the occasion. I told him I had been a bad
+man, had lied some, as he well knew, and had been guilty of things that
+would bar me out of the angel choir, but that if he had any influence at
+the throne of grace, and could manage to sneak me in under the canvass
+anyway, he could have the balance of my bounty, and all the pay that
+might be coming to me. The chaplain held up the breast-plate that had
+been removed by kind hands, from the back portion of my person, and said
+I had better take that along with me, as it would be handy to wear
+when I wanted to stand with my back to the fire in hades. I could not
+understand why the good man should joke me, on my death bed, and I
+rolled over with my back to the wall, to weep, unobserved, and I felt
+the blood sticking to my clothes and person, and I asked the doctor why
+he did not dress my wound. He said he should have to send the wound
+to the tin-shop to be dressed, and then they all laughed. This made me
+indignant, and I turned over and faced the crowd, and asked them if they
+had no hearts, that they could thus mock at a dying man. The doctor held
+up my canteen with a hole in it, made by a stone thrown by one of my
+companions, and said, “You d----d fool, you are not wounded. Somebody
+busted your canteen, and the whiskey run down your leg and into your
+boot, and you, like an idiot, thought it was your life blood ebbing
+away. Couldn't you tell that it was whiskey by the smell?” I felt of
+myself, where I thought I was wounded, and couldn't find any hole, and
+then I took off my boot, and emptied the whisky out, and felt stronger,
+and finally I got up, and the boys went away laughing at me, leaving the
+chaplain, who was kind enough to tell me that of all the raw recruits
+that had ever come to the regiment, he thought I was the biggest idiot
+of the lot, to let the boys play that ancient breast-plate and canteen
+joke on me. I asked him if the boys didn't all wear breast-plates, and
+he said “naw!” He told me that was the only breast-plate in the whole
+Department of the Gulf, and it was kept to play on recruits, and that I
+must keep it until a new recruit came that was green enough to allow the
+boys to do him up. So I hid the breast-plate under my bunk, and went
+to bed and tried to dream out some method of getting even with my
+persecutors, while the chaplain went out, after offering to hold himself
+in readiness, day or night, to come and pray for me, if I was wounded in
+the canteen any more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ I Yearn for a Furlough--I Interview the General--I am
+ Detailed to Carry a Rail--I Make a Horse-trade With the
+ Chaplain--I am Put in Charge of a Funeral.
+
+I had now been fighting the battles of my country for two weeks, and
+felt that I needed rest, and one day I became so homesick that it _did_
+seem as though it would kill me. Including the week it had taken me
+to get from home to my regiment, three weeks had elapsed since I bid
+good-bye to my friends, and I wanted to go home. I would lay awake
+nights and think of people at home and wonder what they were doing, and
+if they were laying awake nights thinking of me, or caring whether I was
+alive, or buried in the swamps of the South. It was about the time of
+year when at home we always went off shooting, and I thought how much
+better it was to go off shooting ducks and geese, and chickens, that
+could not shoot back, than to be hunting bloodthirsty Confederates that
+were just as liable to hunt us, and who could kill, with great ease. I
+thought of a pup I had at home that was just the right age to train, and
+that he would be spoiled if he was not trained that season. O, how I
+did want to train that pup. The news that one of my comrades had been
+granted a furlough, after three years' service, and that he was going
+home, made me desperate, and I dreamed that I had waylaid and murdered
+the fortunate soldier, and gone home on his furlough. The idea of
+getting a furlough was the one idea in my mind, and the next morning as
+I took my horse to the veterinary surgeon for treatment,{*} I had a talk
+with the horse doctor about the possibilities of getting a furlough.
+I had known him before the war, when he kept a livery stable, and as I
+owed him a small livery bill, I thought he would give it to me straight.
+The horse doctor had his sleeves rolled up, and was holding a horse's
+tongue in one hand while he poured some medicine down the animal's
+throat out of a bottle with the other hand, which made me sorry for the
+horse, as I remembered my experience at surgeon's call, in drinking a
+dose of castor oil out of a bottle, and I was mean-enough to be glad
+they played it on horses as well as the soldiers. The horse doctor
+returned the horse's tongue to it's mouth, kicked the animal in the
+ribs, turned and wiped his hands on a bale of hay, and said:
+
+“Well, George, to get a furlough a man has got to have plenty of gall,
+especially a man who has only been to the front a couple of weeks. There
+is no use making an application in the regular way, to your captain,
+have him endorse it and send it to regimental headquarters, and so on to
+brigade headquarters, because you would never hear of it again. My idea
+would be for you to go right to the general commanding the division, and
+tell him you have got to go home. But you mustn't go crawling to him,
+and whining. He is a quick-tempered man, and he hates a coward. Go
+to him and talk familiar with him, and act as though you had always
+associated with him, and slap him on the shoulder, and make yourself at
+home. Just make up a good, plausible story, and give it to him, and if
+he seems irritated, give him to understand that he can t frighten you,
+and just as likely as not he will give you a furlough. I don't say he
+will, mind you, but it would be just like him. But he does like to be
+treated familiar like, by the boys.”
+
+ * I neglected to say, in my account of the battle at the
+ race-track, that when firing with my revolver, at my friend
+ the rebel, I put one bullet-hole through the right ear of my
+ horse. I was so excited at the time that I did not know it,
+ and only discovered it a week later when currying off my
+ horse, which I made a practice of doing once a week, with a
+ piece of barrel-stave, when I noticed the horse's ear was
+ swelled up about as big as a canvas ham. I took him to the
+ horse doctor, who reduced the swelling so we could find the
+ hole through the horse's ear, and the horse doctor tied a
+ blue ribbon in the hole. He said the blue ribbon would help
+ heal the sore, but later I found that he had put the ribbon
+ in the ear to call attention to my poor marksmanship, and
+ the boys got so they made comments and laughed at me every
+ time I appeared with the horse.
+
+I thanked the horse doctor and went away with my horse, resolved to have
+a furlough or know the reason why. The general's headquarters were about
+half a mile from our camp, and after drill that morning I went to see
+him. I had seen him several times, at the colonel's headquarters, and
+he always seemed mad about something, and I had thought he was about the
+crossest looking man I ever saw, but if there was any truth in what the
+horse doctor had told me, he was easily reached if a man went at him
+right, and I resolved that if pure, unadulterated cheek and monumental
+gall would accomplish anything, I would have a furlough before night,
+for a homesicker man never lived than I was. I went up to the general's
+tent and a guard halted me and asked me what I wanted, and I said I
+wanted to see “his nibs,” and I walked right by the guard, who seemed
+stunned by my cheek. I saw the general in his tent, with his coat
+off, writing, and he _did_ look savage. Without taking off my hat, or
+saluting him, I went right up to him and sat down on the end of a trunk
+that was in the tent, and with a tremendous effort to look familiar, I
+said:
+
+“Hello, Boss, writing to your girl?”
+
+I have seen a good many men in my time who were pretty mad, but I have
+never seen a man who appeared to be as mad as the general did. He was
+a regular army officer, I found afterwards, and hated a volunteer as he
+did poison. He turned red in the face and pale, and I thought he frothed
+at the mouth, but may be he didn't. He seemed to try to control himself,
+and said through his clenched teeth, in a sarcastic manner, I thought,
+in imitation of a ring master in a circus:
+
+“What will the little lady have next?”
+
+I had been in circuses myself, and when the general said that I answered
+the same as a clown always does, and I said:
+
+“The banners, my lord.”
+
+I thought he would be pleased at my joking with him, but he looked
+around as though he was seeking a revolver or a saber with which to kill
+me finnally he said:
+
+“What do you want, man?”
+
+It was a little tough to be called plain “man,” but I swallowed it. I
+made up my mind it was time to act, so I stood up, put my hand on the
+shoulder of the general familiarly, and said:
+
+“The fact is, old man, I want a furlough to go home. I have got business
+that demands my attention; I am sick of this inactivity in camp, and
+besides the shooting season is just coming on at home, and I have got a
+setter pup that will be spoiled if he is not trained this season. I came
+down here two weeks ago, to help put down the rebellion; but all we
+have done since I got here is to monkey around drilling and cleaning off
+horses, while the officers play poker for red chips. Let me go home
+till the poker season is over, and I will be back in time for the fall
+fighting. What do you say, old apoplexy. Can I go?”
+
+[Illustration: Never did know, how I got out of the general's tent 059]
+
+I do not now, and never did know, how I got out of the general's tent,
+whether he kicked me out, or threw his trunk at me, or whether there was
+an explosion, but when I got outside there were two soldiers trying to
+untangle me from the guy ropes of the general's tent, his wash basin and
+pail of water were tipped over, and a cord that was strung outside
+with a lot of uniforms, shirts, sabers, etc., had fallen down, and the
+general was walking up and down his tent in an excited manner, calling
+me an escaped lunatic, and telling the guards to tie me up by
+the thumbs, and buck and gag me. They led me away, and from their
+conversation I concluded I had committed an unpardonable offense, and
+would probably be hung, though I couldn't see as I had done much more
+than the horse doctor told me to. Finally the officer of the day came
+along and told the guards to get a rail and make me carry it. So they
+got a rail and put it on my shoulder, and I carried it up and down the
+camp, as a punishment for insulting the general. I thought they picked
+out a pretty heavy rail, but I carried it the best I could for an hour,
+when I threw it down and told the guards I didn't enlist to carry rails.
+If the putting down of this rebellion depended on carrying fence rails
+around the Southern Confederacy, and I had to carry the rails, the
+aforesaid rebellion never would be put down. I said I would fight if I
+had to, and be a hostler, and cook my own food, and sleep on the ground,
+and try to earn my thirteen dollars a month, but there must be a line
+drawn somewhere, and I drew it at transporting fences around the sunny
+South. The guards were inclined to laugh at my determination, but they
+said I could carry the rail or be tied up by the thumbs; and I said
+they could go ahead, but if they hurt me I would bring suit against
+the government. They were fixing to tie me up when the colonel of my
+regiment rode up to see the general, and he got the guards to let up
+on me till he could see the general. The general sent for me after the
+colonel had talked with him, and they called me in and asked me how
+I happened to be so fresh with the general; and I told them about the
+horse doctors' advice as to how to get a furlough; and then they both
+laughed, and said I owed the horse doctor one, and I must get even with
+him. The colonel told the general who I was, that he had known me before
+the war, and that I was all right only a little green, and that the boys
+were having fun with me. The colonel told the general about my first
+fight the first day of my service, and how I had, single-handed, put to
+flight a large number of rebels, and the general got up and shook hands
+with me, and said he forgave me for my impertinence, and gave me some
+advice about letting the boys play it on me, and said I might go back
+to my company. He was all smiles, and insisted on my taking a drink with
+himself and the colonel. When I was about leaving his tent, I turned
+to him and said: “Then I don't get any furlough?” “Not till the cruel
+war is over,” said the general, with a laugh, and I went away.
+
+The guards treated me like a gentleman when they saw me taking a drink
+with the general, and I went back to my regiment, resolved not to go
+home, and to get even with the horse doctor for causing me to make a
+fool of myself. However, I was glad I visited the general, for, after
+getting acquainted with him, he seemed a real nice man, and he kept a
+better article of liquor than the chaplain.
+
+For several days nothing occurred that was worthy of note, except that
+the chaplain took a liking to my horse, and wanted to trade a mule for
+him. I never did like a mule, and didn't really want to trade, but the
+chaplain argued his case so eloquently that I was half persuaded. He
+said the horse I rode, from its friskiness, and natural desire to “get
+there, Eli!” would eventually get me killed, for if I ever got in sight
+of the enemy the horse would rush to the front, and I couldn't hold him.
+He said he didn't want to have me killed, and with the mule there would
+be no danger, as the mule knew enough to keep away from a fight. The
+chaplain said he had always rode a mule, because he thought the natural
+solemnity of a mule was in better keeping with a pious man, but lately
+he had begun to go into society some, in the town near where we were
+camped, and sometimes had to preach to different regiments, so he
+thought he ought to have a horse that put on a little more style, and
+as he knew I wanted an animal that would keep as far from the foe as
+possible, and not lose its head and go chasing around after rebels, and
+running me into danger, as my spiritual adviser he would recommend the
+mule to me. He warranted the mule sound in every particular, and as a
+mule was worth more than a horse he would trade with me for ten dollars
+to boot. He said there was not another man in the regiment he would
+trade with on such terms, but he had taken a liking to me, and would
+part with his mule to me, though it broke his heart. At home there was
+a sentiment against trading horses with a minister, as men who did so
+always got beat, but I thought it would be an insult to the chaplain
+to refuse to trade, when he seemed to be working for my interests, to
+prevent me from being killed in a fight by the actions of my horse, so I
+concluded to trade, though it seemed to me that if I couldn't shoot off
+a horse without hitting its ears, I would fill a mule's ears full of
+bullets. I spoke to the chaplain about that, and he said there was no
+danger, because whenever fighting commenced the mule always wore his
+ears lopped down below the line of fire. He said the mule had been
+trained to that, and I would find him a great comfort in time of trial,
+and a sympathizing companion always, one that I would become attached
+to. I told him there was one thing I wanted to know, and that was if the
+mule would kick. I had always been prejudiced against mules because
+they kicked. He said he knew mules had been traduced, and that their
+reputations were not good, but he believed this mule was as free from
+the habit of kicking as any mule he had ever met. He said he would not
+deny that this mule could kick, and in fact he had kicked a little, but
+he would warrant the mule not to kick unless something unusual happened.
+He said I wouldn't want a mule that had no individuality at all, one
+that hadn't sand enough to protect itself. What I wanted, the chaplain
+said, was a mule that would treat everybody right, but that would, if
+imposed upon, stand up for its rights and kick. I told the chaplain that
+was about the kind of mule I wanted, if I had any mule at all, and we
+traded. The chaplain rode off to town on my horse, on a canter, as proud
+as a peacock, while I climbed on to the solemn, lop-eared mule and went
+out to drill with my company. I do not know what it was that went wrong
+with the mule while we were drilling, but as we were wheeling in company
+front, the mule began to “assert his individuality,” as the chaplain
+said he probably would, and he whirled around sideways and kicked three
+soldiers off their horses; then he backed up the other way and broke
+up the second platoon, kicked four horses in the ribs, stampeded the
+company, and stood there alone kicking at the air. The major rode down
+to where I was and began to swear at me, but I told him I couldn't
+help it. He told me to dismount and lead the mule away, but I couldn't
+dismount until the mule stopped kicking, and he seemed to be wound up
+for all day. The major got too near and the mule kicked him on the
+shin, and then started for the company again, which had got into ranks,
+kicking all the way, and the company broke ranks and started for camp,
+the mule following, kicking and braying all the way. I never was so
+helpless in all my life. The more I spurred the mule, the more it
+kicked, and if I stopped spurring it, it kicked worse. When we got to
+camp, I fell off some way, and rushed into the chaplain's tent, and the
+mule kicked the tent down, and some boys drove the mule away, and while
+I was fixing up the tent the chaplain came back looking happy, and asked
+me how I liked the mule. I never was a hypocrite, anyway, and I was mad,
+so I said: “Oh, dam that mule!”
+
+Of course it is wrong to use such language, especially in the presence
+of a minister, but I couldn't help it. I could see it hurt the chaplain,
+for he sighed and said he was sorry to hear such words from me, inasmuch
+as he had just got me detailed as his clerk, where I would have a soft
+thing, and no drilling or fighting. He said he had wanted a clerk, one
+who was a good-hearted, true man, and he had picked me out, but if I
+used such language, that settled it. He said he didn't expect to find a
+private soldier that was as pious as he was, but he did think I would
+be the best man he could find. I wanted a soft job, with no fighting, as
+bad as any man ever did, and I told the chaplain that he need not fear
+as to my swearing again, as it was foreign to my nature, but I told him
+if he had been on the hurricane deck of a kicking mule for an hour, and
+seen comrades fall one by one, and bite the dust, and be carried on with
+marks of mule shoes all over their persons, he would swear, and I would
+bet on it. So it was arranged that I was to be the chaplain's clerk, and
+I moved my outfit over to his tent, and for the first time since I had
+been a soldier, I was perfectly happy. There was no danger of being
+detached for guard duty, police duty, drilling, or fighting, and the
+only boss I had was the chaplain. The chaplain and myself sat that
+evening in his tent, and ate sanitary stores, drank wine for sickess,
+and smoked pipes, and didn't care whether school kept or not, and that
+night I slept on a cot, and had the first good night's rest, and in the
+morning I awoke refreshed, and with no fear of orderly sergeants, or
+anybody. I had a soft snap.
+
+The next morning I asked the chaplain what my duties were to be, and
+he said I was to take care of the tent, write letters for him, issue
+sanitary stores to deserving soldiers who might need them, ride with him
+sometimes when he went to town, or to preach, go to funerals with him
+occasionally, set a good example to the other soldiers, and make myself
+generally useful. He said I would have to attend to the burial of the
+colored people who died, and any such little simple details. He went out
+and left me pondering over my duties. I liked it all except the nigger
+funerals. I had always been a Democrat, at home, and not very much
+mashed on our colored brothers, and one thing that prevented me from
+enlisting before I did was the idea of making the colored men free. I
+had nothing against a colored man, and got to think a great deal of them
+afterwards, but the idea of acting as an undertaker for the colored
+race never occurred to me. I made up my mind to kick on that part of the
+duties, when the chaplain came in and said the colored cook of one of
+the companies was dead, and would be buried that afternoon, and as he
+had to go to a meeting of chaplains down town, I would have to go and
+conduct the services, and I better prepare myself with a little speech.
+I was in a fix. I told the chaplain that it might not have occurred
+to him, but honestly, I couldn't pray. He said that didn't make any
+difference. I told him I couldn't preach hardly at all. He said I didn't
+need to. All I had to do was to go and find out something about the life
+of the deceased, what kind of a man he was, and say a few words at the
+grave complimentary of him, console the mourners, if there were any, and
+counsel them to try to lead a different life, that they might eventually
+enter into the glory of the New Jerusalem, or words to that effect.
+Well, this made me perspire. This was a tighter place than I was in when
+I met the rebel. The idea of my conducting the funeral exercises of
+such a black-burying party, made me tired. The chaplain said a good deal
+depended on how I got through this first case, as if I succeeded well,
+it would be a great feather in my cap. His idea, he said, was to try me
+first on a nigger, and if I was up to snuff, and carried myself like a
+thoroughbred, there would be nothing too good for me in that regiment.
+
+I went to the orderly sergeant of the company where the man died, to
+get some points as to his career, in order to work in a few remarks
+appropriate to the occasion, and I said to the orderly:
+
+“I understand your company cook has gone to that bourne from whence no
+traveler returns. I thought that was pretty good for a green hand, for a
+starter.”
+
+“Yes,” said the orderly, as he looked solemn, “The old son-of-a-gun has
+passed in his chips, and is now walking in green pastures, beside still
+waters, but he will not drink any of the aforesaid still waters, if he
+can steal any whisky to drink.”
+
+“You astonish, me,” said I to the orderly. “The fact is, the chaplain
+has sawed off on to me the duty of seeing to the burial of our deceased
+friend, and I called to gather some few facts as to his characteristics
+as a man and a brother. Can you tell me of anything that would interest
+those who may attend?”
+
+“O, I don't know,” said the orderly. “The deceased was a liar, a thief,
+and a drunkard. He would steal anything that was not chained down. He
+would murder a man for a dollar. He was the worst nigger that ever was.
+If there was a medical college here that wanted bodies, it would be a
+waste of money to bury him. But when he was sober he could bake beans
+for all that was out, and there was no man that could boil corned mule
+so as to take the taste of the saltpetre out, as he could.”
+
+This was not a very good send off for my first funeral, but I clung to
+the good qualities possessed by the late lamented. Though he might have
+been a bad man, all was not lost if he could bake beans well, and boil
+the salt horse or corned mule that soldiers had to eat, so they were
+appetizing. Many truly good men of national reputation, could not have
+excelled him in his chosen specialties, and I made a memorandum of that
+for future use. I made further inquiries in the company, and found that
+the deceased had a bad reputation, owed everybody, had five wives living
+that he had deserted, and was suspected of having murdered two or three
+colored men for their money. His death was caused by delirium tremens.
+He had stole a jug of whisky from the major's tent, laid drunk a week,
+and when the whisky was gone he had tremens, and had gone to the horse
+doctor for something to quiet his nerves, and the horse doctor had given
+him a condition powder to take, to be followed with a swallow of mustang
+liniment, and the man died.
+
+This was the information I got to use in my remarks at the grave of the
+deceased, and I went back to my tent to think it over. I thought perhaps
+I had better work in the horse doctor for mal-practice, in my discourse,
+and thus get even with him for sending me to the general after a
+furlough. While I was thinking over the things I would say, and trying
+to forget the bad things about the man, the orderly sent word that the
+funeral cortege was ready to proceed to the bone yard. I looked down the
+company street and saw the remains being lifted into a cart, and I went
+out and put the saddle on my mule, and with a mental prayer that the
+confounded mule wouldn't get to kicking till the funeral was over,
+started to do the honors at the grave of the late company cook.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ The Funeral of the Colored Cook--I Plead for a Larger
+ Procession--The Funeral Oration--The Funeral Disturbed--I am
+ Arrested--My Fortunate Escape.
+
+This last chapter of these celebrated war papers closed with me saddling
+my mule to ride to the funeral of the colored cook, at which I was to
+act as chaplain. The mule evidently knew that it was a solemn occasion,
+for there was a mournful look on its otherwise placid face, the ears
+drooped more than usual, and there seemed a sweet peace stealing over
+the animal, which well became a funeral, until I began to buckle up the
+saddle, when the long-eared brute began to paw and kick and bite, and it
+took six men to get me into the saddle. I rode down the company street
+where the cart stood with the remains, and a colored driver sitting on
+the foot of the plain pine box, asleep. I woke the driver up with the
+point of my saber, when another colored man came out of a tent with a
+shovel in one hand, and a hardtack with a piece of bacon in the other.
+He climbed into the cart, sat down on the coffin and began to eat his
+dinner. This was my funeral. All that seemed necessary for a funeral was
+a corpse, a driver of a cart, and a man with a shovel. I rode up to the
+orderly's tent and asked him where the mourners were, and he laughed at
+me. The idea of mourners seemed to be ridiculous. I had never, in all my
+life, seen so slim a funeral, and it hurt me. In the meantime the nigger
+with the shovel had woke up the driver of the cart, and he had followed
+me, with the remains. I told them to halt the funeral right there, until
+I could skirmish around and pick up mourners enough for a mess, and
+a choir, and some bearers. As I rode away to the colonel's tent,
+the driver of the cart and the man with the shovel were playing
+“mumbleypeg,” with a jack-knife, on the coffin, which shocked me very
+much, as I was accustomed to living where more respect was paid to the
+dead. I went to the colonel's tent and yelled “Say! The colonel, who was
+changing his shirt, came to the door with his eyes full of soap, rubbing
+his neck with a towel, and asked what was the row. I told him I would
+like to have him detail me six bearers, seven or eight mourners, a few
+singers, and fifteen or twenty men for a congregation. He asked me what
+on earth I was talking about, and just then the cart with the corpse
+in was driven up to where I was, the orderly having told the driver to
+follow me with the late lamented. I pointed to the outfit, and said:
+
+“Colonel, in that box lie the remains of a colored cook. The chaplain
+has appointed me to conduct the funeral service, and I find that the two
+colored men on the cart are the only ones to accompany the remains to
+their last resting place. No man can successfully run a funeral on three
+niggers, one of whom is dead, one liable to go to sleep any minute, and
+the other with an abnormal appetite for hardtack. It is a disgrace
+to civilization to give a dead man such a send off, and I want you to
+detail me some men to see me through. I have loaded myself with some
+interesting remarks befitting the occasion, and I do not want to fire
+them off into space, with no audience except these two coons. Give me
+some mourners and things, or I drop this funeral right where it is.”
+
+While I was speaking the general rode up to visit with the colonel,
+with his staff, and the colonel came out with his undershirt on, and his
+suspenders hanging down, and he and the general consulted for a minute,
+and laughed a little, which I thought was disgraceful. Then the colonel
+sent for the sergeant-major and told, him to detail all the company
+cooks and officer's servants, to attend the funeral with me, and he said
+I could divide them off into reliefs, letting a few be mourners at a
+time. In the meantime, he said, I could move my procession off down
+by the horse-doctor's quarter's, as he did not want it in front of his
+tent. That reminded me that the horse-doctor had prescribed for the
+deceased, and had given him condition powders, and I asked the colonel
+to compel the horse-doctor to go with me. It had always seemed to me at
+home that the attending physician, under whose auspices the person died,
+should attend the funeral of his patient, and when I told the colonel
+about it, he called the horse-doctor and told him he would have to
+go. It took half an hour or so to get the colored cooks and servants
+together, but when all was ready to move, it was quite a respectable
+funeral, except that I could not help noticing a spirit of levity on
+the part of the mourners. All the followers were mounted, the officer's
+servant's on officer's horses, and the cooks on mules, and it required
+all the presence of mind I possessed to keep the coons from turning the
+sad occasion into a horse race, as they would drop back, in squads, a
+quarter of a mile or so, and then come whooping up to the cart containing
+the remains, and each vowing that his horse could clean out the others.
+I rode in front of the remains with the horse-doctor, and tried to
+conduct myself in as solemn a manner as befitted the occasion, and tried
+to reason with the horse-doctor against his unseemly jokes, which he was
+constantly getting on. He told several stories, better calculated for a
+gathering where bacchanalian revelry was the custom, and I told him that
+while I respected his calling, he must respect mine. He said something
+about calling a man on a full hand, against a flush, but I did not
+pretend to know what he meant. We had to go out of town about two
+miles, to the cemetery. Unfortunately we were in the watermelon growing
+section, and the horse-doctor called my attention to the fact that my
+procession was becoming scarce, when I looked around, and every blessed
+one of the cooks and servants, and the man with the shovel, had gone on
+into the field after melons, and I stopped the cart and yelled to them
+to come back to the funeral. Pretty soon they all rode back, each with
+a melon under his arm, and every face looked as though there was no
+funeral that could prevent a nigger from stealing a watermelon. After
+several stops, to round up my mourners, from corn fields and horse
+racing, we arrived at the cemetery, and while the grave was being dug
+the niggers went for the melons, and if it had been a picnic there
+couldn't have been much more enjoyment. The horse-doctor took out a big
+knife that he used to bleed horses, and cut a melon, and offered me a
+slice, and while I did not feel that it was just the place to indulge
+in melon, it looked so good that I ate some, with a mental reservation,
+however. It was all a new experience to me. I had never believed that
+in the presence of death, or at a funeral, people could be anything but
+decorous and solemn. I had never attended a funeral before, except where
+all present were friends of the deceased, and sorry, but here all seemed
+different. They all seemed to look upon the thing as a good joke. I
+had read that in New York and other large cities, those who attended
+funerals had a horse race on the way back, and stopped at beer saloons
+and filled up, but I never believed that people could be so depraved. I
+tried to talk to the coons, and get them to show proper respect for the
+occasion, but they laughed and threw melon rinds at each other. Finnally
+the colonel and the general, with quite a lot of soldiers, who were
+out reconnoitering, rode to where we were, and the coons acted a little
+better, but I could see that the officers were not particularly solemn.
+They seemed to expect something rich. They evidently looked upon me as
+a star idiot, who would make some blunder, or say something to make them
+laugh: I made up my mind that in my new position I would act just as
+decorous, and speak as kindly as though the deceased was the president.
+During all my life I had made it a practice never to speak ill of any
+person on earth, and if I could not say a good word for a person I would
+say nothing, a practice which I have kept up until this writing, with
+much success, and I decided that the words spoken on that occasion
+should not reflect against the poor man who had passed in his checks,
+and laid down the burden of life. The grave was completed, and with a
+couple of picket ropes the body was let down, and there was for a moment
+a sort of solemnity. I arose, and as near as I can remember at this late
+day, spoke about as follows:
+
+[Illustration: A solemn funeral oration 077]
+
+“Friends: We have met here today to conduct the last rites over a man,
+who but yesterday was among us but who, in an unguarded moment drank too
+much whisky, and paid the penalty. (There was a smile perceptible on
+the faces on the officers.) The ignorant man who died, did not know any
+better, but I see around me men who know better, but who drink more than
+this man did, and if they are not careful they will go the same way.
+(There was less smiling among the officers.) It is said of this man that
+he was bad, that he would steal. I have investigated, and have found
+that it is true, but that his peculations consisted of small things, of
+little value, and I am convinced that the habit was not worse with him
+than with any of us. In war times, everybody steals. We are all thieves
+to a certain extent. The soldier will not go hungry if he can jay-hawk
+anything to eat. The officer will not go thirsty if he can capture
+whisky, nor will anybody walk if he can steal a horse. The higher a man
+gets the more he will steal. Shall we harbor unkind thoughts against
+this dead man for stealing a pair of boots, and honor a general who
+steals a thousand bales of cotton? (No! no! shouted the cooks and
+servants, while the officers looked as though they were sorry they
+attended the funeral.) Friends let us look at the good qualities of our
+friend. I say, without fear of successful contradiction, that a man,
+however humble his station, who can bake beans as well as the remains
+could bake them, is entitled to a warm place in the heart of every
+soldier, and if he goes to the land that is fairer than this,-and who
+can say that he will not,--he is liable to be welcomed with 'well done,
+good and faithful servant,' and he will be received where horse doctors
+can never enter with their condition powders, and where there will never
+be war any more. To his family, or several families, as the case may be,
+I would say----”
+
+At this point I had noticed an uneasiness on the part of my mourners and
+bearers, as well as the officers. Nine of the negroes fell down on the
+ground and groaned as if in pain, and the general and his stall looked
+off to a piece of woods where a few shots had been fired, and rode away
+hurriedly, the colonel telling me I had better hurry up that funeral or
+it was liable to be interrupted. The horse-doctor went to the negroes
+who were sick, and after examining them he said they had been poisoned
+by eating melons that had been doctored, and he advised them to get to
+town as quick as possible. They scrambled on their horses the best way
+they could, and just then there was a yell, and out of the woods came
+half a dozen Union soldiers followed by fifteen or twenty Confederates,
+and all was confusion. The niggers scattered towards town, the driver of
+the cart taking the lead, trying to catch the general and his start, who
+were hurrying away, leaving the horse-doctor, myself and the deceased.
+The horse-doctor seized the shovel and threw a little dirt on the
+coffin, then mounted his horse, I mounted my mule, and away we went
+towards town, with the rebels gaining on us every jump. The horse-doctor
+soon left me, and with a picket I had pulled off the fence of the
+cemetery, I worked my passage on that mule. I mauled the mule, and the
+more I pounded the slower it went. There was never a more deliberate
+mule in the world. I forgot all the solemn thoughts that possessed me
+at the grave, and tried to talk to the mule like a mule-driver, but
+the animal just fooled along, as though there was no especial hurry.
+Occasionally I could hear bullets 'zipping' along by me, and the rebels
+were yelling for all that was out. O, how I did wish I had my old race
+horse that the chaplain had beat me out of. In my first engagement my
+horse was too fast, and there was danger that I would catch my friend,
+the rebel, and I complained of the horse. Now I had a mule that was
+too slow. What I wanted was a 'middling' horse, one that was not too
+confounded fast when after the enemy, and one not so all-fired slow when
+being pursued. The Johnnies were coming closer, but we were only half
+a mile from town. Would they chase us clear into town? At that critical
+moment the blasted mule stopped short, never to go again, and began to
+kick. What on earth possessed that fool mule to take a notion to stop
+right there and kick, is more than I shall ever know, but it simply
+kicked, and I felt that my time had come. The Union soldiers that were
+being chased by the Confederates passed me, and told me I better light
+out or I would be captured, but I couldn't get the mule to budge an
+inch. It just kicked. The good Lord only knows, what that mule was
+kicking at, or why it should have been scheduled to stop and kick at
+that particular time, when every minute was precious. I saw the rebels
+very near me, and as it was impossible to get the mule to go a step
+farther, I raised the large, flat, white-washed picket which I had torn
+on the cemetery fence to maul the mule with, in token of surrender, and
+the Confederate boys surrounded me, though they kept a safe distance,
+after my mule had kicked in the ribs of one of their horses. The rebs
+had gone about as far towards the town as it was safe to go, and and
+they knew the whole garrison would be out after them pretty soon, so
+they laughed at me for being armed with a whitewashed picket, and asked
+me if I expected to put down the rebellion by stabbing the enemy with
+such things. I told them I had been burying a nigger. One of my captors
+run the point of his saber into my mule, to stop its kicking, and then
+he said to his comrades, “Boys, we came out here with the glorious
+prospect of capturing a Yankee general and his staff, and instead of
+getting him, we have broken up a nigger funeral and captured the gospel
+sharp, armed with a picket fence, and a kicking mule. Shall we hang
+him for engaging in uncivilized, warfare, by stabbing us with pickets
+poisoned with whitewash, or shall we take the red-headed slim-jim back
+with us as a curiosity.” The boys all said not to hang me, but to take
+me along. I saw that it was all day with me this time. I felt that I
+was helping put down the rebellion rapidly, as I had been a soldier four
+weeks, been captured twice, and not a drop of blood had been spilled.
+The rebels started back, with me and my mule ahead of them, and they
+kept the mule ahead by jabbing it with a saber occasionally. I felt
+humiliated and indignant at being called slim-jim, sorrel-top, and
+elder. They seemed to think I was a preacher. I stood it all until a
+cuss reached into my pocket and took my meershaum pipe and a bag of
+tobacco, filled the pipe and lit it, then I was mad. I had paid eight
+dollars of my bounty for that pipe, and I said to the leader: “Boss, I
+can stand a joke as well as anybody, but when you capture me, in a fair
+fight, you have no right to jab my mule with a saber, or call me names.
+I am a meek and lowly soldier of the army of the right, and want to so
+live that I can meet you all in the great hereafter, but by the gods I
+can whip the condemned galoot that stole my meershaum pipe. You think
+I am pious, and a non-combatant, but I am a fighter from away back, and
+don't you forget it.” The young man who seemed to be in command told me
+to dry up, and he would get my pipe. He went and took it away from the
+one who had stolen it, filled it and lit it himself, and said it was a
+good pipe, and then he passed it around among them all. We moved on at a
+trot, and were getting far away from my regiment, and I realized that I
+was a captive, and that I should probably die in Andersonville prison. I
+looked at the dozen stalwart rebels that were riding behind me, and knew
+I could not whip them all with one picket off the cemetery fence, and so
+I resolved to remain a captive, and die for my country, of scurvey, if
+necessary. I turned around in my saddle to ask if it wasn t about time
+for me to have a smoke out of my own pipe, and as I looked up the road
+we had come over I saw a large body of our own cavalry, coming like the
+wind toward us. I said nothing, but my face gave me away. I looked so
+tickled to see the boys coming that the rebels noticed it, and they
+looked back and saw the soldiers in pursuit, they yelled, “The Yanks are
+coming!” put spurs to their horses, stabbed my mule and told me to pound
+it with the picket, and hurry up, and then they passed me, and away they
+went, leaving me in the road alone between them and my own soldiers, I
+yelled to the leader to give me back my pipe, and I can hear his mocking
+laugh to this day, as he told me to “go to hell.” This made me mad, and
+drawing my picket I dashed after the retreating rebels, knowing that the
+men of my regiment would soon overtake me, and they would think I had
+chased the rebels three miles from town, armed only with a picket off
+the fence, and saved the garrison from capture. The thing worked
+to perfection, and when our command came up, the horses panting and
+perspiring, and the boys looking wild, the captain in command asked me
+how many there was of em, and I told him about forty, and he said I
+had done well to drive them so far, and he charged by me after them.
+I yelled to the captain to try and kill that long-legged rebel on
+the sorrel horse, and get my meershaum pipe, but he didn't hear me. I
+hurried along as fast as I could, but before I caught up, there was
+a good deal of firing, and when I got there flankers were out in the
+woods, and there was sorrow, for three or four boys in blue had been
+killed in an ambush, and the rebels had got away across a bayou. As I
+rode up on my mule, with the picket still in my hand, I saw the three
+soldiers of my regiment lying dead under a tree, two others were wounded
+and had bandages around their heads, and for the first time since I had
+been a soldier, I realized that war was not a picnic. I could not keep
+my eyes off the faces of my dead comrades, the best and bravest boys
+in the regiment, boys who always got to the front when there was a
+skirmish. To think that I had been riding right amongst the rebels who
+had done this thing but a few minutes before, and never thought that
+death would claim anybody so soon. I wondered if those rebels were not
+sorry they had killed such good boys. I wondered, as I thought of the
+fathers and mothers, and sisters of my dead companions, whether the
+rebels would not sympathize with them, and then I thought suppose our
+fellows had not been killed, and we had killed some of the Confederates,
+wouldn't it have been just as sorrowful, wouldn't _their_ fathers,
+mothers and sisters have mourned the same.
+
+Then I made a resolve that I would never kill anybody if I could help
+it; I even decided that if I should meet the rebel that had my meershaum
+pipe, I would not fight him to get it. If he wasn't gentleman enough to
+give it up peaceably, he could keep it, and be darned. Just then some
+of our skirmishers came in carrying another dead body, and we were all
+speculating as to which one of our poor boys had fallen, when we noticed
+that the dead soldier had on a gray suit, and it was soon found that he
+was one of the Confederates. He was laid down beside our dead boys, and
+I don't know but I felt about as bad to see him dead, as it was possible
+to feel. It is true he had told me, half an hour before, when I asked
+him for my pipe, to go to hades, but I did not have to go unless I
+wanted to. And he was gone first. I saw something sticking out of the
+breast pocket of the dead Confederate, and could see that it was my
+pipe. Then I thought of the foolish remark I made to the captain, to
+kill that long-legged rebel and get my meershaum. God bless him, I
+didn't want anybody to kill him for a bad smelling old pipe, and I
+wondered if that remark would be registered up against me, in the great
+book above, when I didn't mean it. I tried to make myself believe that
+my remark did not have any influence on the man's fate. He just took
+his chances with his comrades, and was killed, no doubt, and yet it was
+impossible to get the idea off my mind that I was responsible for his
+death. Anyway, I would never touch the confounded old pipe again, and
+if I ever heard of his mother or sister, after the war was over, I would
+stand by them as long as I had a nickel. An ambulance was sent for and
+the dead and wounded were placed in it, and we went back to town, a sad
+procession. There was no need to detail any mourners for this occasion,
+and there was no straggling for watermelons. Everybody was full of
+sorrow. The next day there was a Union funeral in that Southern town,
+and the three Union boys were laid side by side, while a little, to one
+side my Confederate was buried, receiving the same kind words from the
+chaplains. As a volley was about to be fired over the graves, I picked
+a handful of roses, buds and blossoms, from a rose bush in the cemetery,
+and went to the grave of the Confederate and tenderly tossed them upon
+the coffin. The horse doctor saw me do it, and in his rough manner said,
+
+“What you about there? It ain t necessary to plant flowers on the graves
+of rebels.
+
+“O, no, it isn't necessary, I said, as the volley was fired over the
+graves, but it will make his mother or his sister feel better to know
+that there are a few roses in there, and it won't hurt anybody. I will
+just play that I am the authorized agent of that Confederate soldier's
+sister.
+
+“O, all right if you say so, said the horse-doctor, as he drew the
+sleeve of his blue blouse across his eyes, which were wet. The last
+volley was fired, and the soldiers returned to camp, leaving the dead of
+two armies sleeping together. As I went in the chaplain's tent and sat
+down to think, the chaplain handed me something, saying:
+
+“Here's your pipe. They found it on that Confederate soldier that
+captured you.”
+
+I pushed it away and said, “I don't want it. I have quit smoking.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ I Capture “Jeff”--I Get Back at the Chaplain--The Chaplain
+ Arrested--Off on a Raid--I Meet the Relatives of the Dead
+ Confederate--My Powers of Lying are Brought into Play.
+
+The winding up of the last chapter of this history, with its sad
+incidents, deaths and burials, was unavoidable, but it shall not occur
+again. The true historian has got to get in all the particulars. I think
+I never felt quite as downhearted as I did the day or two after the
+skirmish, when our boys were killed. It had seemed as though there
+was no danger of anybody getting hurt, as long as they looked out for
+themselves, but now there was a feeling that anybody was liable to be
+killed, any time, and why not me? Of course the old veterans of the
+regiment were the ones who would naturally be expected to take the brunt
+of the battle, but there was a habit of sending raw recruits into places
+of danger that struck me as being mighty careless, as well as very bad
+judgment. Then there were great preparations being made for an advance
+movement, or a retreat, or something, and my mind was constantly occupied
+in trying to find out whether it was to be an advance or a retreat. If
+it was an advance, I wanted to arrange to be in the rear, and if it was
+a retreat, it seemed to me as as though the proper place for a man who
+wanted to live to go home, was in front. And yet what chance was there
+for a common private soldier to find out whether it was an advance or
+a retreat. Finally I decided that when the regiment _did_ start out, I
+would manage to be about the middle, so it wouldn't make much difference
+which way we went. When that idea occurred to me I pondered over it
+a good deal and told the chaplain, and he said it was a piece of as
+brilliant strategy as he had ever heard of, and he was willing to adopt
+it, only being a staff officer it was necessary for him and me to ride
+with the colonel, and the colonel most always rode at the head, though
+his place was about the middle. He said he would speak to the colonel
+about it. It made my hair stand to see the preparations that were being
+made for carnage. Ammunition enough was issued to kill a million men,
+and the doctors were packing bandages and plasters, and physic, and
+splints and probes, until it made me sick to look at them. When I
+thought of actual war, my mind reverted to my mule, the kicking brute
+that was no good, and I decided to get a horse. I had got so, actually,
+that I could hear bullets whistle without turning pale and having cold
+chills run over me, and it seemed as though a horse was none too good
+for me, so I went to the colonel and told him that a soldier couldn't
+make no show on a kicking mule and I wanted a horse. I told him I
+supposed, as chaplain's clerk. I should have to ride with him and his
+staff on the march, and he didn't want to see as nice a looking fellow
+as I was riding a kicking mule that would kick the ribs of the officers
+horses, and break the officers legs. The colonel said he had not thought
+of that contingency. He had enjoyed seeing me ride the mule, because I
+was so patient when the mule kicked. He said they used that mule in the
+regiment to teach recruits to ride. A man who could stay on that mule
+could ride any horse in the regiment, and as I had been successful,
+and had displayed splendid mulemanship, I should be promoted to ride a
+horse, and he told the quartermaster to exchange with me and give me the
+chestnut-sorrel horse that the Confederate was shot off of. I went with
+the quartermaster to the corral, turned out my mule, and cornered the
+beautiful horse that had been rode so proudly a few days before by my
+friend, the rebel. It took six of us to catch the horse, and bridle and
+saddle him, and the men about the corral said the horse was no good. He
+hadn't eaten anything since being captured, and his eyes looked bad,
+and he wanted to kick and bite everybody. I told them the poor horse was
+homesick, that was all that ailed him. The horse was a Confederate at
+heart, and he naturally had no particular love for Yankees. I remembered
+that once or twice when I was riding with the rebels, after they
+captured me, the young fellow on this horse patted him on the neck and
+called him “Jeff”, so I knew that was his name, so I led him out of the
+corral away from the other fellows, where there was some grass growing,
+and made up my mind I would “mash” him. After he had eaten grass a
+little while, looking at me out of the corner of his eyes as though he
+didn't know whether to kick my head on, or walk on me, as I sat under
+a tree, I got up and patted him on the neck and said, “Well, Jeff, old
+boy, how does the grass fit your stomach?”
+
+You may talk about brute intelligence, but that horse was human. He
+stopped eating, with his mouth full of grass, looked astonished at being
+addressed by a stranger without an introduction, and turned a pair of
+eyes as beautiful and soft as a woman's upon me, and then began to chew
+slowly, as though thinking. I rubbed his sleek coat with, my bare hands,
+and did not say much, desiring to have Jeff make the first advances. He
+looked me over, and finally put his nose on my sleeve, and rubbed me,
+and looked in my face, and acted as though he would say, “Well, of
+course this red-headed fellow is no comparison to my dead master, but
+evidently he's no slouch, and if I have got to be bossed around by a
+Yankee, as he is the only one that has spoken a kind word to me since I
+was captured, and he seems to know my name, I guess I will tie to him,”
+ and the intelligent animal rubbed his nose all over me, and licked my
+hand. I rubbed the horse all over, petted him, took up his feet and
+looked at them, and spoke his name, and pretty soon we were the best of
+friends. I mounted him and rode around and it was just like a rocking
+chair. That poor, dead Confederate had probably rode Jeff since he was
+a kid and Jeff was a colt, and had broken him well, and I was awfully
+sorry that the original owner was not alive, riding his horse home safe
+and sound, to be greeted by his family with loving embraces. But he was
+dead and buried, and his horse belonged to me, by all the laws of war.
+And yet I had not become a hardened warrior to such an extent that I
+could forget the hearts that would ache at his home, and I made up
+mind that horse would be treated as tenderly as though he was one of my
+family. I rode Jeff around for an hour or two, found that he was trained
+to jump fences, stand on his hind feet, trot, pace, rack, and that he
+could run like a scared wolf, and everything the horse did he would sort
+of look around at me with one eye as much as to say, “Boss, you will
+find I have got all the modern improvements, and you needn't be afraid
+that I will disgrace you in any society.” I was fairly in love with my
+new horse, and, except for a feeling that I was an interloper with the
+horse, and sorry for the poor boy that had been shot off him, I should
+have been perfectly happy.
+
+The chaplain had got in the habit of wearing a nice, blue broadcloth
+blouse which I had brought from home, which had two rows of brass
+buttons on it. I had paid about twenty dollars of my bounty for the
+blouse, and had found that the private soldiers did not wear such
+elaborate uniforms in active duty, so I kept it in the chaplain's tent.
+I thought if I was killed and my body was sent home, the blouse would
+come handy. The chaplain wore it occasionally, and he said any time I
+wanted to wear any of his clothes to just help myself. An order had been
+issued to move the following day, with ten days' rations, and some of
+the boys asked for passes to go down town and have a little blow-out
+before we started. They wanted me to go along, and so I got a pass, too.
+We were to go down town in the afternoon and stay till nine o clock at
+night, when we had to be in camp. I saddled up Jeff and looked for
+my blouse, but it was gone, the chaplain having worn it to visit the
+chaplain of some other regiment, so I took his coat and put it on, as
+he had told me to. The coat had the chaplain's shoulder-straps on, but
+I thought there would be no harm in wearing it, so about a dozen of
+us privates started for town to have a good time, and I with
+chaplain's-straps on. It was customary, when soldiers went to town on
+a pass, to partake of intoxicating beverages more or less, as that was
+about the only form of enjoyment, and I blush now, twenty-two years
+afterward, to write the fact that we all got pretty full. It seemed
+so like home to be able to go into a saloon and drink beer, good old
+northern beer, and who knew but tomorrow we would be killed. So we ate,
+drank, and were merry. One of the boys said when the officers got on a
+tear, they would ride right into billiard saloons, and sometime shoot at
+decanters of red liquor behind the bar, and he said a private was just
+as good as an officer any day, and suggested that we mount our horses
+and paint the town. We mounted, and rode about town, racing up and down
+the streets, and finally we came to a billiard saloon, and half a
+dozen of us rode right in, took cues out of the rack, and tried to play
+billiards on horse-back. It was a grand picnic then, though it seems
+foolish now. My horse Jeff would do anything I asked him, and when I
+rode up to the bar and told him to rear up, he put both fore feet on the
+bar, and looked at the bartender as much as to say, “set up the best you
+have got.”
+
+The chaplain's shoulder-straps gave the crowd a sort of confidence that
+everything was all right, and after exhibiting in a saloon for a time,
+there was something said about horse-racing, and I said my horse could
+beat anything on four legs, so we adjourned to the outskirts of town for
+a race, followed by half the people in town. We had a horse-race,
+and Jeff beat them all, and wherever I went the crowd would cheer the
+chaplain. They said they liked to see a man in that position who could
+unbend himself and mix up with the boys. There never was a chaplain more
+popular than the “Wisconsin preacher” was. It did not occur to me that
+I was placing the chaplain in an unfavorable position before the public,
+by wearing his coat. _Nothing_ occurred to me, that day, except that we
+were having a high old time. Finally, after dark, one of our boys got
+into a row with a loafer in a saloon, and picked the loafer up and
+tossed him through the window, to the sidewalk. This was very wrong, but
+it couldn't be helped. There was a great noise, cries for the provost
+guard, and we knew that the only way to get out of the scrape honorably,
+would be to get out real quick, so we mounted and rode to our camp. My
+horse was the fastest and I got home first, unsaddled my horse and went
+to the tent, took off the chaplain's coat and hung it up carefully, and
+was at work writing a letter, and thinking how my horse acted as though
+he had been on sprees before, he enjoyed it so, when I heard a noise
+outside, and it was evident that the provost guard had followed us to
+camp, and were making complaint to the colonel about our conduct down
+town. Finally the guard went away, and shortly the colonel and the
+adjutant called at our tent and inquired for the chaplain. I told them
+the chaplain had been away most of the day, and had not returned. The
+colonel and the adjutant winked at each other, and asked me if he wasn t
+away a good deal. I told them that he was away some. They asked me if I
+never noticed that his breath had a peculiar smell. I told them that it
+was occasionally a little loud. They went away thoughtfully. Now that
+I think of it I ought to have explained that the peculiarity of the
+chaplain's breath was caused from eating pickled onions of the sanitary
+stores, but it did not occur to me at the time. After a while the
+chaplain came back, asked me if anybody had died during the day, took a
+drink of blackberry brandy for what ailed him, and we retired. The next
+morning there was a circus. The little town boasted, a daily paper, and
+it contained the following:
+
+ “The community is prepared to overlook an occasional scene
+ of hilarity among the Federal soldiers stationed in this
+ vicinity, but when a gang of roysterers is led by a
+ chaplain, as was the case yesterday, all right-minded people
+ will be indignant. It is said by our informant that the
+ chaplain of a certain cavalry regiment was the liveliest one
+ of the crowd, that he rode into a billiard room, caused his
+ horse to place its forefeet on the bar, and that he played a
+ better game of billiards on horseback than many worldly men
+ can play on foot. It is the duty of the commanding officer
+ to discipline his chaplain. The chaplain also beat the boys
+ several horse races while in town, and they say he is a
+ perfect horseman, and has one of the finest horses ever
+ seen here, which he probably stole.”
+
+I had a boy bring me a paper every morning, and I read the article
+before the chaplain awoke, and destroyed the paper. Early the next
+morning the colonel sent for the chaplain, placed him under arrest, and
+the good man came back to the tent feeling pretty bad. I asked him what
+was wrong, and he said he was under arrest for conduct unbecoming an
+officer and a gentleman. He said charges were preferred against him for
+drunkenness and disorderly conduct, horse-racing, playing billiards on
+horse-back, riding his horse into a saloon and trying to jump him over
+the bar, and lots of things too numerous to mention. I felt sorry for
+him, and told him I had been fearful all along that he would get
+into trouble by going away from me so much, and associating with the
+chaplains of the other regiments, but I had never supposed it would come
+to this.
+
+“Wine is a mocker,” said I, becoming warmed up, “and none of us can
+afford to tamper with it. With me, it does not make so much difference,
+as I have no reputation but that which is already lost, but you, my dear
+sir, think of your position. Go to the colonel and confess all, and ask
+him to forgive you,” and I wiped my eyes on my coat sleeve.
+
+“But I was not drunk,” said the chaplain, indignantly. “I was not in a
+saloon, and never saw a game of billiards in my life. I was over to
+the New Jersey regiment, talking with their chaplain about getting up a
+revival, among the soldiers,” and the good man groaned as he said, “it
+is a case of mistaken identity.”
+
+“Bully, elder,” said I. “If you can make the court-martial believe you,
+you will be all right, and you will not be cashiered. But it looks dark,
+very dark, for you. May heaven help you.”
+
+The chaplain was worried all the morning, and the officers and men joked
+him unmercifully. At noon the chaplain was released from arrest, as we
+were to move at four p. m., and he begged so to be allowed to accompany
+the regiment. The colonel told him he could be tried when we got back,
+and he was happy. There was a great commotion as the regiment broke up
+its camp and got ready to move. There was the usual crowd of negresses
+who had been doing washing for the soldiers, to be paid on pay day, and
+we were going away, no one knew where, and no one knew when we would
+meet pay day. There were saloon-keepers with bills against officers, and
+standing-off creditors was just about as hard in the army as at home.
+I couldn't see much difference. But finally everything was ready, the
+ammunition wagons, wagon train of stores, and a battery of little guns,
+about three pounders, had been added. I didn't like the battery. It
+seemed to me hard enough to kill our fellow citizens with revolver
+balls, without shooting them with cannon. At 4 p.m. the bugle sounded
+“forward,” and with the clanking of sabers, rattling of hoofs and
+wagons, we marched outside the picket line, past the cemetery where
+my deceased friends were buried, and were going towards the enemy. The
+chaplain and myself were riding behind the colonel, when the colonel
+asked the good man to ride up to a log that was beside the road, and
+make his horse put his forefeet upon it, as he did on the bar in the
+saloon. I felt sorry for the chaplain, and I rode up to the log, and had
+Jeff put his feet up on it. Then I rode back and saluted the colonel
+and told him it was I who had done the wicked things the chaplain was
+accused of, and I told him how the chaplain was using my coat, so I put
+on his, with the shoulder straps on, and all about it. He laughed at
+first and then said, “Then you are under arrest. You may dismount and
+walk and lead your horse until further orders.” I dismounted, like a
+little man, and for five miles I walked, keeping up with the regiment.
+Finally the colonel sung out, “gallop, march,” and I got on my horse.
+I reasoned that the order to gallop was “further orders,” and that as he
+knew I couldn't very well gallop on foot he must have meant for me to
+get on. We galloped for about ten miles, and were ordered to halt, when
+I dismounted and led my horse up to the colonel, and saluted him. “Well,
+you must have had a hard time keeping up with us on foot,” said he. I
+told him it rested me to go on foot. We were just going into camp for
+the night, and the colonel said, “Well, as you are rested so much from
+your walk, you may go out with the foraging party and get some feed for
+your horse and the chaplain's.” I was willing to do anything for a quiet
+life, so I fell in with a party of about forty, under a lieutenant, and
+we rode off into the country to steal forage from a plantation, keeping
+a sharp lookout for Confederates who might object. I guess we rode away
+from camp two or three miles, when we came to a magnificent plantation
+house, and outhouses, negro quarters, etc. The house was on a hill, in a
+grove of live oaks, and had immense white pillars, or columns in
+front. As we rode up to the plantation the boys scattered all over the
+premises. This was the first foraging expedition I had ever been with,
+and I thought all we went for was to get forage for our horses, so I
+went to a shock of corn fodder and took all that I could strap on my
+saddle, and was ready to go, when I passed a smoke house and found some
+of the boys taking smoked hams and sides of bacon. I asked one of the
+boys if they had permission to take hams and things, and he laughed and
+said, “everything goes,” and he handed me a ham which I hung on to my
+saddle. Then the lieutenant told me to go up in front of the house and
+stand guard, and prevent any soldier from entering the house. I rode up
+to the house, where there was an old lady and a young married woman
+with a little girl by her side. They were evidently much annoyed and
+frightened, though too proud to show it, and I told them they need have
+no fear, as the men were only after a little forage for their horses.
+The old lady looked at the ham on my saddle and asked me if the horses
+eat meat, and I said, “No, but sometimes the men eat horses.” I thought
+that was funny. The young woman was beautiful, and the child was
+perfectly enchanting. They were on the opposite side of the railing from
+me, and my horse kept working up towards them, rubbing his nose on the
+pickets, and finally his nose touched the clasped hands of the mother
+and child. The little girl laughed and patted the horse on the nose,
+while the mother drew back. It was almost dark and the horse was almost
+covered with corn fodder, but the little girl screamed and said:
+
+“Mamma, that is Jeff, papa's horse!”
+
+The mamma looked at me with a wild, hunted look, then at the horse,
+rushed down the steps and threw her arms around the neck of the horse
+and sobbed in a despairing manner:
+
+“O, where is my husband? Where is he? Is he dead?
+
+“My son, my son!” cried the old lady.
+
+“Bring me my papa, you bad man!” said the little child, and I was
+surrounded by the three.
+
+Gentle reader, I have been through many scenes in my life, and have been
+many times where it was not the toss of a copper whether death or life
+was my portion, and I had some nerve to help me through, but I never
+was in a place that tried me like that one. I had been captured by the
+father of this little child, the husband of this beautiful, proud woman,
+the son of this charming old lady. I had seen him brought in, dead, had
+seen him buried, and had thrown a bunch of roses in his grave. Now I was
+surrounded by these mourners, mourners when they should know the worst.
+Cold chills run all over me, and cold perspiration was on my brow.
+
+“Is he dead?” they all shouted together.
+
+I hate a liar, on general principles, and yet there are times when a lie
+is so much easier to tell than truth. I did not want to be a murderer,
+and I knew, by the dreadful light in the eyes of that lovely wife, as
+she looked up at me from the neck of the horse, her face as white as
+snow, that if I told the truth she would fall dead right where she was.
+If I told the truth that blessed old lady's heart would be broken, and
+that little child's face would not have any more smiles, during the war,
+for mamma and grandma, and, with a hoarse voice, and choking, and trying
+to swallow something that seemed as big as a baseball in my throat, I
+deliberately lied to them. I told them the young man who rode this horse
+had been captured, after a gallant fight, unharmed, and sent north.
+That he was so brave that our boys fell in love with him, and there was
+nothing too good for him in our army, and that he would be well taken
+care of, and exchanged soon, I had no doubt, and bade them not to worry,
+but to look at the discomforts and annoyances of war as leniently as
+possible, and all would be well soon.
+
+“Thank heaven! Take all we have got in welcome,” said the old lady, as a
+heavenly smile came over her face. “My boy is safe.”
+
+“O, thank you, sir,” said the little mother, as a lovely smile chased a
+dimple all around her mouth, and corraled it in her left cheek, while a
+pair of navy-blue eyes looked up at me as though she would hug me if
+I was not a Yankee, eyes that I have seen a thousand times since, in
+dreams, often with tears in them.
+
+[Illustration: You are a darling good man 103]
+
+“You are a darling good man,” said the little girl, dancing on the
+gravel path. The mother blushed and said,
+
+“Why, Maudie, don't be so rude;” and there was a shout:
+
+“Fall in!”
+
+The lieutenant rode up to me and asked, as he noticed the glad smiles on
+the faces of the ladies, if this was a family reunion, and, apologizing
+for being compelled to raid the plantation, we rode away. I was afraid
+they would mention the news I had brought them, and the lieutenant would
+tell the truth, so I was glad to move. I was glad to go, for if I had
+remained longer I would have cried like a baby, and given them back the
+horse, and walked to camp. As we moved away, I took out my knife and
+cut the string that held the smoked ham on my saddle, and had the
+satisfaction of hearing it drop on the path before the house. I could
+not give back the husband of the blue-eyed woman, the son of the saintly
+Southern mother, the father of the sweet child, but I _could_ leave that
+ham. As we rode back to camp that beautiful moonlight night, I did not
+join in the singing of the boys, or the jokes. I just thought of that
+happy home I had left, and how it would be stricken, later, when the
+news was brought them, and wondered if that fearful lie I had been
+telling, them was justifiable, under the circumstances, and it it would
+be laid up against me, charged up in the book above. That night I slept
+on the ground on some corn fodder and dreamed of nothing but blue-eyed
+mamma's and golden-haired Maudie's and white-haired angel grandmothers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ “Boots and Saddles”--“I am the Colonel's Orderly”--Riding
+ Fifty Miles on an Empty Stomach--The Chaplain Appears--I am
+ Wounded by a Locomotive and a Piece of Coal--I Nearly Kill
+ an Old Man.
+
+When our foraging party got back to camp, and I unloaded the corn fodder
+from my horse, I was about as disgusted with war as a man could be. The
+faces of those people I had met at the plantation rose up before me, and
+I could imagine how they would look when they heard that the Confederate
+soldier who was their all, was dead. I hoped that they would never hear
+of it. While I was thinking the matter over, and grooming my horse, the
+chaplain came along and took nearly all the fodder I had brought in, and
+fed it to his horse, and asked me where the chickens and hams, and sweet
+potatoes were. I told him I didn't get any. Then he spoke very plainly
+to me, plainer than he had ever spoken before, and told me that fodder
+for horses was not all that soldiers got when they went out foraging. He
+said I wanted to snatch anything that was lying around loose, that could
+be eaten. I asked him if the government did not furnish rations enough
+for him to live comfortably, in addition to the sanitary stores. He
+said sometimes he yearned for chicken. Then I told him his salary was
+sufficient to buy such luxuries. He was hot, and talked back to me, and
+told me he didn't propose to be lectured by no red-headed private as to
+his duties, or his conduct, and he wanted me to understand that I was
+expected to forage for him as well as myself, and not to let another
+soldier come into camp with a better assortment of the luxuries afforded
+by the country, than I did. He said that he picked me out as a man that
+would fill the bill, and do his duty. I told him if he had selected me
+from all the men in the regiment as being the most expert sneak thief,
+he had made a mistake, and I would be teetotally d----d if I would go
+through the country stealing hens and chickens for any chaplain that
+ever lived, and he could put that in his pipe and smoke it. It was
+pretty sassy talk for a private soldier to indulge in towards a
+chaplain, but I was so disgusted to hear a man who should discountenance
+anything unsoldierly, talk so flippantly about taking from the women and
+children of the country what little they had to live on, because we had
+the power, their men folks being away in the army, that I got on my ear,
+as it were. I told him that I was not much mashed on war, and hoped I
+would never have to fire a gun at a human being, but now that I was into
+the business, I would fight if I had to, or do any duty of a soldier,
+but I would be cussed if I would rob henroosts, and he didn't weigh
+enough to compel me to. Then he said I could go back to my company, as
+he didn't want a man around him that hadn't sand enough to do his duty.
+I asked him if I hadn't better wait till after supper, it being after
+dark, but he said I could go right away, and he would have another man
+detailed to take my place. I was discharged, because I struck against
+stealing hens. I saddled my horse, took my share of the fodder, and
+started for my company to return to duty as a soldier. On the way to
+my company I saw a half a dozen soldiers, covered with mud, and their
+horses covered with foam, ride up to the colonel's tent, and I stopped
+to see what was the matter. A sergeant gave the colonel a dispatch,
+which he tore open, read it, looked excited, and then he turned to 'me
+and said, “Ride to every commanding officer of a company and say with
+my compliments, that 'Boots and Saddles' will be sounded in ten minutes,
+and every man must be in line, mounted, within five minutes after the
+call is sounded, then come back here.” Well, I was about as excited as
+the colonel, and I rode to every captain's tent and gave the command.
+Some of the captains, who were just sitting down to supper, asked, “What
+you giving us,” thinking it was some foolishness on my part. One captain
+said if I came around with any more such orders he would run a
+saber through me and turn it around a few times; another said to his
+lieutenant, “That is the chaplains idiot, that the boys play jokes on;
+some corporal has probably told him to carry that message.”
+
+I got all around the companies, and went back to the colonel, and told
+him that I had delivered his invitation, but the most of the captains
+sent regrets in one way and another, and one was going to jab me with a
+saber. He called the bugler, and told him to blow “Boots and Saddles,”
+ and in five minutes to sound, “To Horse;” then he turned to me and said,
+“You will be my orderly tonight, and you will have the liveliest ride
+you ever experienced. Buckle up your saddle girth and lead my horse out
+here.” I told the colonel I should have to buckle up my own belt a few
+holes, as I hadn't had any supper, when he told his servant to bring me
+out what was left of his supper, which he did, one small hard tack. I
+eat pretty hearty, and let my horse fill himself all he could on corn
+stalks, and in a short time the bugle calls were echoing through the
+woods, men were saddling up and mounting, and picking up camp
+utensils in the dark, and swearing some at being ordered out in that
+unceremonious manner when they had got all ready to have a night's
+rest. There was not near as much swearing as I had supposed there would
+be, but there was enough. The chaplain came rushing up to where I was
+with his coat off, and asked me what was the matter, and the colonel
+having gone to the major's tent, I answered him that we were going to
+have the liveliest ride he ever experienced, and not to forget it, and
+that probably before morning we would have the biggest fight of the
+season.
+
+“Come and help me catch my horse,” said the chaplain, “I turned him
+loose so he could roll over, and he has stampeded.”
+
+“Go catch your own horse,” said I with lofty dignity, “and steal your
+own chickens. I am serving on the start of the commanding officer, sir.
+I am the colonel's orderly.”
+
+I thought that would break the chaplain all up, but it didn't. “The
+devil you say,” remarked the chaplain, as he went off in the darkness,
+whistling for his horse. Gentle reader, did you ever ride on horseback
+fifty miles in one night, on an empty stomach, after having ridden
+thirty miles during the day? If you never have accomplished such a feat,
+you don't know anything about suffering. O, to this day I can feel my
+stomach freeze itself to my backbone. We started soon after orders were
+given on a gallop, and if we walked our horses a minute during the whole
+night, I did not know it. We marched by “fours,” but I had the whole
+road to myself, as I rode behind the colonel. I wanted to know where we
+were going and what for, and once, when the colonel fell back to where
+I was, while he was taking a drink out of a canteen, I said, “This is
+a little sudden, ain't it?” My idea was to draw him out, and get him to
+tell me all about the destination of the expedition, and its object.
+The colonel got through drinking, and as he knocked the cork into the
+canteen, he said, “Yes, this _is_ a little spry.” That was all he said,
+and evidently he wanted me to draw my own inference, which I did.
+Pretty soon the orderly sergeant of the company that was on the advance,
+directly behind the colonel, rode up to me and asked me if I had any
+idea where we were going. He said he had seen me talking with the
+colonel, and thought maybe he had told me the programme. He added that
+he thought it was a shame that men couldn't be allowed a little rest. I
+told him that I had just been talking with the colonel about it, but I
+had no authority to communicate what he said. However, I would assure
+the orderly that we were going to have the liveliest ride he ever
+experienced. I knew I was safe in saying that, and the orderly remarked
+that he had about come to that conclusion himself, and he left me. I
+had never expected to rise, on pure merit, to that proud position of
+colonel's orderly, and I made up my mind if that night's ride did not
+founder me, or drive my spine up into the top of my hat, or glue the two
+sides of my empty stomach together, so they would never come apart, that
+I would try to conduct myself so that the commanding officers would all
+cry for me and want me on their starts. I argued, to myself, as we
+rode along, that the position of colonel's orderly could not be so very
+unsafe, as it did not stand to reason that a colonel would go into any
+place that was particularly dangerous, as long as he could send other
+officers. I knew that colonels in action should ride behind their
+regiments, and wondered if this colonel knew his place, or would he be
+fool enough to go right ahead of his men? I was going to speak to him
+about it, if we ever stopped galloping long enough, but everything was
+jarred out of my head.
+
+A fellow can think of a good many things, riding on a gallop at night,
+and I guess I thought of about everything that night. There were few
+interruptions of the march. There were about four stops, two being
+caused by horses falling down and being run over by those behind them,
+and two by carbines going off accidentally. One man was dismounted and
+run over by half the horses in the regiment, and when he was pulled out
+from under the horses he asked for a chew of tobacco, and saying he
+was marked for life by horse shoes, he kicked his horse in the ribs for
+falling down, climbed on and said the procession might move on. He was
+all cut to pieces by horse's hoofs, but he was full of fight the next
+morning. Another soldier had his big toe shot off by the accidental
+discharge of a carbine, and when the regiment stopped, and the colonel
+asked him if he wanted to stop there and wait for an ambulance to
+overtake him, he said, not if there is going to be a fight. I don't
+use a big toe much, anyway, and if there is a fight ahead, I want to be
+there, if I haven't got a toe left on my feet. The colonel smiled and
+said, all right, boy. I never saw fellows who were so anxious to fight,
+and I wondered how much money it would take to induce me to go into a
+fight when I was crippled up enough to be excused. Along toward morning
+everybody felt that we were so far into the enemy's lines that there
+must be some object in the long ride, and the probabilities of a fight
+seemed to be settled in every man's mind. Up hill and down we galloped,
+until it seemed to me I should fall off my horse and die. About half an
+hour before daylight the command was halted, and the officers of each
+company were sent for, and they surrounded the colonel, separated
+from the men, and he said: “There is a town ahead, about four miles,
+garrisoned by confederate troops. We are to charge it at daylight, drive
+the enemy out the other side of town, kill as many as possible, and when
+they go out they will be attacked by another Union regiment that has
+been sent around to the rear. There is a railroad there, and a bridge
+across a river, Confederate stores of ammunition, provisions, cotton,
+etc. The stores are to be burned, the railroad bridge destroyed,
+the track torn up, engines, if there are any, are to be ditched, and
+everything destroyed except private residences. You understand?” The
+officers said they did, and they went back to their companies and
+ordered the men to get a bite to eat. When the officers had gone I was
+pretty scared, and I said, “Colonel, suppose the rebels do not get out
+of that town.” The colonel was chewing a hard-tack when he answered.
+Daylight was just streaking up from the East, and he held a piece of
+the hard-tack up to the light to pick a worm out of it, after which
+he answered: “If they don't get out, we will, those of us who are not
+killed. I always like to eat hard-tack in the dark, then I can't see the
+worms.” To say that I was reassured would be untrue. I admired a man who
+could mingle business with pleasure, as he did when talking of possible
+death and worms in hard-tack, but death was never an interesting subject
+to me. I wanted to talk with the colonel more, and asked him if colonels
+often get killed, and if an orderly was exactly safe in his immediate
+vicinity, but he leaned against a tree and went to sleep, and I stood
+near, as wide awake as any man ever was. I wondered whose idea it was
+to send us fifty miles into the Confederacy to destroy provisions and
+railroads.
+
+Did they suppose the Confederates didn't want anything to eat. I thought
+it was a mean man or government that would burn up good wholesome
+provisions because they couldn't eat them themselves. And who owned this
+railroad that was going to be torn up? Why burn a bridge that probably
+cost several hundred thousand dollars. As I was thinking these
+things over and finding fault with the persons responsible for such
+foolishness, the chaplain, who had not showed up during the night, came
+up to where I was, without any hat, leading his horse, which was lame.
+The first thing he asked me how I would trade horses. They all wanted
+my Jen, but he was not in the market. The chaplain said he had caught
+up with the regiment about midnight, and had rode at the rear, with the
+horse-doctor. He said this expedition was foolish, and had no object
+except to try the endurance of the horses and men. I told him that we
+were going to have a fight in less than an hour, and burn a town, and
+probably we would all be killed. The chaplain turned pale and looked
+faint.
+
+I had read about hell, and seen pictures of it, from the imagination of
+some eminent artist, but the hell I had read of, and seen pictured, was
+not a marker to the experience of the next three hours. In a few minutes
+the colonel woke up, and the regiment mounted and moved on. An advance
+guard was put further out than before, with orders to charge the rebel
+picket almost into town, and then hold up for the rest of us. As we
+neared the town it was just light enough to see. The advance captured
+the picket post without a shot being fired, and moved right into town,
+followed by the regiment, and we actually rode right into the camp of
+the boys in gray, and woke them up by firing. They scattered, coatless
+and shoeless, firing as they ran, and in five minutes they were all
+captured, killed, gone out of town, or were in hiding in the buildings.
+Then began the conflagration. Immense buildings, filled with goods, or
+bales of cotton, were fired, and soon the black smoke and falling walls
+made a scene that was enough to set a recruit crazy. A train came in
+just as the fire was at its greatest, and a squad of men was sent to
+burn it, and the colonel told me to go and capture the engineer and
+bring him to the headquarters.
+
+[Illustration: Engineer threw a lump of coal and hit me 113]
+
+I rode up as near to the engine as my horse would go and told the
+engineer I wanted him. He turned a cock somewhere, and a jet of steam
+came out towards me that fairly blinded me and the horse, and I couldn't
+see the engine any more. My horse turned tail, the engineer threw a lump
+of coal and hit me on the head, and I went away and told the colonel the
+engineer wouldn't come, and beside had scalded me with steam, and hit me
+with a lump of coal. The colonel said the engineer could be arrested
+for such conduct. Pretty soon the train was on fire, and one of our boys
+clubbed the engineer, got on the engine and run it on to a side track
+and ditched it, and brought the engineer up to headquarters, where I had
+quite a talk with him about squirting steam and throwing lumps of coal
+at peaceable persons. Then the railroad, bridge was set on fire, and
+it looked cruel to see the timbers licked up by flames, but when the
+burning trestle fell into the river below, it was a grand, an awful
+sight. I came out of the fight alive, but with a lump on my head as big
+as a hen's egg, so big I couldn't wear my hat, and a firm determination
+to whip that engineer who threw the lump of coal when I could catch him
+alone. We cooked a late breakfast on the embers of the ruins, and after
+eating, I noticed a sign, “Printing Office,” in front of a residence
+just outside the burnt district, and asked permission to go there and
+print a paper, with an account of the fight, and the destruction of the
+town. Permission was granted, and I went to the office and found an old
+man and two daughters, beautiful girls, but intensely bitter rebels. The
+old man was near eighty years old, and he said he could whip any dozen
+yankees. I told him I would like to use his type and press, but he said
+if I touched a thing I did it at my peril, as he should consider the
+type contaminated by the touch of a yankee. The girls felt the same
+way, but I talked nice to them, and they didn't kick much when I took
+a “stick” and began to set type. I worked till dinner time, when they
+asked me to take dinner with them, which I did. During the conversation
+I convinced them that I was practically a non-combatant, and wouldn't
+hurt anybody for the world. I worked till about the middle of the
+afternoon, when I noticed that the girls, who had been up on the house,
+looked tickled about something, and presently I heard some firing at
+the edge of the town, some yelling, more firing, bugle calls among our
+soldiers, and finally there was an absence of blue coats, and I looked
+for my horse, and found the old man leading him away. I halted the old
+man, and he stopped and told me that the Confederates had come into town
+from the East and driven our cavalry out on the other side, and I would
+be a prisoner in about five minutes, and he laughed, and the girls
+clapped their hands, and I felt as though my time had come. I had never
+killed an old man in my life, but I made up my mind to have my horse or
+kill him in his traces, so I drew my revolver and told him to let go
+the horse or he was a dead man. It was a question with me whether I
+could hold my hand still-enough to kill him, if he didn't let go the
+horse, and I hoped to heaven he would drop the bridle. He looked so much
+like my father at home that it seemed like killing a near relative, and
+when I looked at the two beautiful daughters on the gallery, looking at
+us, pale as death, I almost felt as though it would be better to lose
+the horse and be captured, then to put a bullet through the gray head of
+that beautiful old man. How I wished that he was a young fellow, and
+had a gun, and had it pointed at me. Then I could kill him and feel as
+though it was self-defense. But the rebels were yelling and firing over
+the hill, and my regiment was going the other way on important business,
+and it was a question with me whether I should kill the old man, and see
+his life-blood ebb out there in front of his children, or be captured,
+and perhaps shot for burning buildings. I decided that it was my duty
+to murder him, and get my horse. So I rested my revolver across my left
+forearm, and took deliberate aim at his left eye, a beautiful, large,
+expressive gray eye, so much like my father's at home that I almost
+imagined I was about to kill the father who loved me. I heard, a scream
+on the gallery, and the blonde girl fainted in the arms of her brunette
+sister. The sister said to me, “Please don't kill my father.” He was not
+ten feet from me, and I said, “Drop the horse or you die.” The old
+man trembled, the girl said: “Pa, give the man his horse,” the old man
+dropped the bridle and walked towards the house. I mounted the horse and
+rode off towards the direction my regiment had taken, thanking heaven
+that the girl had spoken just in time, and that I had not been compelled
+to put a bullet through that noble-looking gray head. The face haunted me
+all the way, as I rode along to catch my regiment, and when I overtook
+it, and rode up to the colonel, and asked him what in thunder he wanted
+to go off and leave me to fight the whole southern Confederacy for,
+he said, “O, get out! There were no rebels there. That was the Indiana
+regiment that started out day before yesterday, to get on the other side
+of the town. The fellows were shooting some cattle for food. What makes
+you look-so pale?” I was thinking of whether a man ever prospered who
+killed old people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ Three Days Without Food!--The Value of Hard Tack--A Silver
+ Watch for a Pint of Meal--I Steal Corn from a Hungry Mule--
+ The Delirium of Hunger--I Dine on Mule--I Capture a Rebel
+ Ram.
+
+After overtaking my regiment, and enjoying a feeling of safety which
+I did not feel in the presence of that violent old man who laid savage
+hands on my horse, and the girls, I began to reflect. Of course the old
+man was not armed, and I was, but how did I know but those Confederate
+girls had revolvers concealed about their persons, and might have killed
+me. To feel that I was once more safe with my regiment, where there was
+no danger as long as they did not get into a fight, was bliss indeed,
+and I rode along in silence, wondering when the cruel war would be
+over, and what all this riding around the country, burning buildings
+and tearing up railroad tracks amounted to, anyway. I didn't enlist as
+a section hand, nor a railroad wrecker, and there was nothing in my
+enlistment papers that said anything about my being compelled to commit
+arson. The recruit-officer who, by his glided picture of the beauties
+of a soldier's life, induced me to enlist as a soldier, never mentioned
+anything that would lead me to believe that one of my duties would be
+to touch a match to another man's bales of cotton, or ditch a locomotive
+belonging to parties who never did me any harm, and who had a right to
+expect dividends from their railroad stock. If I had the money, that was
+represented in the stuff destroyed by our troops that day, I could run
+a daily newspaper for years, if it didn't have a subscriber or a
+patent medicine advertisement. And who was benefitted by such wanton
+destruction of property. As we rode along I told the colonel I thought
+it was a confounded shame to do as we had done, and that such a use of
+power, because we had the power, was unworthy of American soldiers. He
+said it was a soldier's duty to obey orders and not talk back, and if
+he heard any more moralizing on my part he would send me back to my
+company, where I would have to do duty like the rest. I told him I
+was one of the talking backest fellows he ever saw, and that one of my
+duties as a newspaper man was to criticise the conduct of the war. Then
+he said I might report to the captain of my company. It seemed hard to
+go into the ranks, after having had a soft job with the chaplain, and
+again as colonel's orderly, but I thought if I got my back up and showed
+the captain that I was no ordinary soldier, but one who was qualified
+for any position, that maybe he would be afraid to monkey too much with
+me. I knew the captain would be a candidate for some office when the war
+was over, and if he knew I was on to him, and that I should very likely
+publish a paper that could warm him up quite lively, he would see to
+it that I wasn't compelled to do very hard work. So I rode back to my
+company and told the captain that the colonel and the chaplain had got
+through with me, and I had come back to stay, and would be glad to
+do any light work he might have for me. The captain heaved a sigh, as
+though he was not particularly tickled to have me back, and told me to
+fall in, in the rear of the company. I asked if I couldn't ride at the
+head of the company. He said no, there was more room at the rear. I
+tried to tell him that I was accustomed to riding at the head of the
+regiment, but he told me to shut up my mouth and get back there, and I
+got back, and fell in at the tail end of the company, with the cook and
+an officer's servant, and the orderly sergeant came back and wanted to
+know if the company had got to have me around again. Here was promotion
+with a vengeance. From the proud pinnacle from which I had soared, as
+chaplain's clerk, and colonel's orderly, I had dropped with one fell
+swoop to the rear end of my company, and nobody wanted me, because I had
+kicked against stealing hens in one instance, and burning buildings and
+tearing up railroads in the other. We rode all day, and at night laid
+down in the woods and slept, after eating the last of our rations. I
+slept beside a log, and before going to sleep and after waking, I swore
+by the great horn spoons I would not steal anything more while I was in
+the army, nor do any damage to property. In the morning the soldiers had
+scarcely a mouthful to eat, and an order was read to each company that
+for three or four days it would be necessary to live off the country,
+foraging for what we had to eat. I asked the captain what we would do
+for something to eat if we didn't find anything in the country to gobble
+up. He said we would starve. That was an encouraging prospect for a man
+who had taken a solemn oath not to steal any more. I told the captain I
+did not intend to steal any more, as I did not think it right. Then
+he said I better begin to eat the halter off my horse, because leather
+would be the only thing I would have to stay my stomach. The first day I
+did not eat a mouthful, except half of a hard-tack that I had a quarrel
+with my horse to get. In throwing the saddle on my horse, one solitary
+hard-tack that was in the saddle-bag, fell out upon the ground, and the
+horse picked it up. I did not know the hard-tack was in the saddle, and
+when it fell upon the ground I was as astonished as I would have been
+had a clap of thunder come from the clear sky, and when the horse went
+for it, my stomach rebelled and I grabbed one side of the hard-tack
+while the horse held the other side in his teeth. Something had to give,
+and as the horse's teeth nor my hands would give, the hard-tack had to,
+and I saved half of it, and placed it in the inside pocket of my vest,
+as choice as though it were a thousand dollar bill.
+
+I have listened to music, in my time, that has been pretty bad, and
+which has sent cold chills up my back, and caused me pain, but I never
+heard any bad music that seemed to grate on my nerves as did the noise
+my horse made in chewing the half of my last hard-tack, and the look of
+triumph the animal gave me was adding insult to injury. Several times
+during the day I took that piece of hard-tack from my pocket carefully,
+wiped it on my coat-sleeve, and took a small bite, and the horse would
+look around at me wickedly, as though he would like to divide it with
+me again. People talk about guarding riches carefully, and of placing
+diamonds in a safe place, but no riches were ever guarded as securely as
+was that piece of hard-tack, and riches never took to themselves wings
+and new, regretted more than did my last hard-tack. Each bite made it
+smaller, and finally, the last bite was taken, with a sigh, and nothing
+remained for me to eat but the halter. Some of the boys went out
+foraging, and were moderately successful, while others did not get a
+thing to eat. The country was pine woods, with few settlers, and those
+that lived there were so poor that it seemed murder to take what they
+had. One of the men of our company came back with about two quarts of
+corn meal, that night, and I traded him a silver watch for about a pint
+of it. I mixed it up in some water, and after the most of the men had
+fallen asleep, I made two pancakes of the wet meal, and put them in the
+ashes of the camp-fire to bake, but fell asleep before it was done, and
+when I woke up and reached into the ashes for the first pancake, it was
+gone. Some Union soldier, whom it were base flattery to call a thief,
+had watched me, and stole my riches as I slept, robbed me of all I
+held dear in life. With trembling hands I raked the ashes for my other
+pancake, hopelessly, because I thought that, too, was gone, but to my
+surprise I found it. The villain who had pursued me as I slept, had
+failed to discover the second pancake, and I was safe, and my life was
+saved. I have seen a play in a theater in which a miser hides his gold,
+first in one place, then in another, looking to the right and to the
+left to see if anybody was watching him. I was the same kind of a miser
+about my pancake. If I hid it in the woods I might fail to find the
+place, in the morning, where I had hid it, and besides, some soldier
+that was peacefully snoring near me, apparently, might have one eye on
+me, and commit burglary. If I put it in my pocket, and went to sleep, I
+might have my pocket picked, so I concluded to remain awake and hold
+it in my hands. There appeared to be nothing between me and death by
+starvation, except that cornmeal pancake, and I sat there for an hour,
+beside the dying embers of the campfire, trying to make up my mind who
+stole my other pancake, and what punishment should be meted out to him
+if I ever found him out. I would follow him to my dying day. I suspected
+the captain, the colonel, the chaplain, and six hundred soldiers, any
+one of whom was none too good to steal a man's last pancake if he was
+hungry. To this day I have never found out who stole my pancake, but I
+have not given up the search, and if I live to be as old as Methuselah,
+and I find out the fellow that put himself outside my pancake that dark
+night in the pine woods, I will gallop all over that old soldier, if he
+is older than I am. That is the kind of avenger that is on the track of
+that pancake-eater. I sat there and nodded over my remaining pancake,
+clutched in my hands, and finally started to my feet in alarm. Suppose
+I should fall asleep, and be robbed? The thought was maddening. I have
+read of Indians who would eat enough at one sitting to last them several
+days, and the thought occurred to me that if I ate the pancake my
+enemies could not get it away from me, and perhaps it would digest
+gradually, a little each day, and brace me up until we got where there
+were rations plenty. So I sat there and deliberately eat every mouthful
+of it, and looked around at the sleeping companions with triumph, laid
+down and slept as peacefully on the ground as I ever slept in bed.
+
+There may be truth in the story about Indians eating enough to last them
+a week, but it did not work in my case, for in the morning I was hungry
+as a she wolf. The pancake had gone to work and digested itself right
+at once, as though there was no end of food, and my stomach yearned for
+something. I walked down by the quartermaster's wagons, about daylight,
+and there was a four-mule team, each with a nose bag on, with corn in
+it. The mules were eating corn, unconscious of a robber being near. At
+home, where I had lived on good fresh meat, bread, pie, everything that
+was good, nobody could have made me believe that I would steal corn from
+a government mule, but when I heard the mules eating that corn a demon
+possessed me, and I meditated robbery. I did not want to take all the
+corn I wanted from one mule, so I decided to take toll from all of them.
+I went up to the first one, and reached my hand down into the nose bag
+beside the mule's mouth and rescued a handful of corn, then went to
+another to do the same, but that mule kicked at the scheme. I went to
+two others, and they laid their ears back and began to kick at the trace
+chains, so I went back to my first love, the patient mule, and took
+every last kernel of corn in the bag, and as I went away with a pocket
+full of corn the mule looked at me with tears in its eyes, but I
+couldn't be moved by no mule tears, with hunger gnawing at my vitals, so
+I hurried away like a guilty thing. While I was parching the corn stolen
+from the mule, in a half of a tin canteen, over the fire, the chaplain
+came along and wanted to sample it. He was pretty hungry, but I wasn't
+running a free boarding house for chaplains any more, and I told him he
+must go forage for himself. He said he would give his birthright for a
+pocket full of corn. I told him I didn't want any birthright, unless a
+birthright would stay a man's stomach, but if he would promise to always
+love, honor and obey me, I would tell him where he could get some corn.
+He swore by the great bald headed Elijah that if I would steer him onto
+some corn he would remember me the longest day he lived, and pray for
+me. I never was very much, mashed on the chaplain's influence at the
+throne, but I didn't want to see him starve, while government mules
+were living on the fat of the land, so I told him to go down to the
+quartermaster's corral and rob the mules as I had done. He bit like
+a bass, and started for the mules. Honestly, I had no designs on the
+chaplain, but he traded me a kicking mule once, and got a good horse
+of me, because I thought he wanted to do me a favor. As he was familiar
+with mules, I supposed he would know how to steal a little corn. Pretty
+soon I heard a great commotion down there, and presently the chaplain
+came out with a mule chasing him, its ears laid back, and blood in its
+eyes. The chaplain was white as a sheet, and yelling for help. Before
+I could knock the mule down with a neck-yoke, the animal had grabbed the
+chaplain by the coat tail, with its mouth, taking some of his pants,
+also, and perhaps a little skin, raised him up into the air, about seven
+feet, let go of him, and tried to turn around and kick the good man on
+the fly as he came down. We drove the mule away, rescued the chaplain,
+tied his pants together with a piece of string, cut off the tail of his
+coat which the mule had not torn off, so it was the same length as the
+other one, and made him look quite presentable, though he said he _knew_
+he could never ride a horse again. It seems that instead of reaching
+into the nose bag, and taking a little corn, he had unbuckled the nose
+bag and taken it off. I told him he was a hog, and ought to have
+known better than take the nose bag off, thus leaving the mule's mouth
+unmuzzled, while the animal was irritated. He accused me of knowing that
+the mule was vicious, and deliberately sending him there to be killed,
+so rather than have any hard feelings I gave him a handful of my parched
+corn.
+
+A few Sundays afterwards I heard him preach a sermon on the sin of
+covetousness, and I thought how beautifully he could have illustrated
+his sermon if he had turned around and showed his soldier audience where
+the mule eat his coat tail. Soon we saddled up and marched another day
+without food. Reader, were you ever so hungry that you could see, as
+plain as though it was before you, a dinner-table set with a full meal,
+roast beef, mashed potatoes, pie, all steaming hot, ready to sit down
+to? If you have not been very hungry in your life, you can not believe
+that one can be in a condition to see things. The man with delirium
+tremens can see snakes, while the hungry man, in his delirium, can see
+things he would like to eat. Many times during that day's ride through
+the deserted pine-woods, with my eyes wide open, I could see no trees,
+no ground, no horses and men around me, but there seemed a film over
+the eyes, and through it I could see all of the good things I ever had
+eaten. One moment there would be a steaming roast turkey, on a platter,
+ready to be carved. Again I could see a kettle over a cook-stove, with a
+pigeon pot-pie cooking, the dumpings, light as a feather, bobbing up and
+down with the steam, and I could actually smell the odor of the cooking
+pot-pie. It seems strange, and unbelievable to those who have never
+experienced extreme hunger or thirst, that the imagination can picture
+eatables and streams of running water, so plain that one will almost
+reach for the eatables, or rush for the imaginary stream, to plunge in
+and quench thirst, but I have experienced both of those sensations for
+thirteen dollars a month, and nary a pension yet. It is such experiences
+that bring gray hairs to the temples of young soldiers, and cause eyes
+to become hollow and sunken in the head. Today, your Uncle Samuel has
+not got silver dollars enough in his treasury to hire me to suffer one
+day of such hunger as to make me see things that were not there, but
+twenty-two years ago it was easy to have fun over it, and to laugh
+it off the next day. When we stopped that day, at noon, to rest, the
+company commissary sergeant came up to the company, with two men
+carrying the hind quarter of an animal that had been slaughtered, and he
+began to cut it up and issue it out to the men. It was peculiar looking
+meat, but it was meat, and every fellow took his ration, and it was
+not long before the smell of broiled fresh meat could be “heard” all
+around. When I took my meat I asked the sergeant what it was, and where
+he got it. I shall always remember his answer. It was this:
+
+“Young man, when you are starving, and the means of sustaining life
+are given you, take your rations and go away, and don't ask any fool
+questions. If you don't want it, leave it.”
+
+Leave it? Egad, I would have eaten it if it had been a Newfoundland dog,
+and I took it, and cooked it, and ate it. I do not know, and never did,
+what it was, but when the quartermaster's mule teams pulled out after
+dinner, there were two “spike teams;”--that is, two wheel mules and a
+single leader, instead of four-mule teams. After I saw the teams move
+out, each mule looking mournful, as though each one thought his time
+might come next, I didn't want to ask any questions about that meat,
+though I know there wasn't a beef critter within fifty miles of us. I
+have had my children ask me, many times, if I ever eat any mule in the
+army, and I have always said that I did not know. And I don't. But I am
+a great hand to mistrust.
+
+It was on this hungry day, when filled with meat such as I had never met
+before that I did a thing I shall always regret. The captain came down
+to the rear of the company and said, so we could all hear it. “I want
+two men to volunteer for a perilous mission. I want two as brave men as
+ever lived. Who will volunteer? Don't all speak at once. Take plenty of
+time, for your lives may pay the penalty!” I had been feeling for some
+days as though there was not the utmost confidence in my bravery, among
+the men, and I had been studying as to whether I would desert, and
+become a wanderer on the face of the earth, or do some desperate deed
+that would make me solid with the boys, and when the captain called for
+volunteers, I swallowed a large lump in my throat, and said, “Captain,
+_here is your mule_. I will go!” Whether it was that confounded meat I
+had eaten that had put a seeming bravery into me, or desperation at
+the hunger of the past few days, I do not know, but I volunteered for
+a perilous mission. A little Irishman named McCarty spoke up, and said,
+“Captain, I will go anywhere that red headed recruit will go.”
+
+So it was settled that McCarty and myself should go, and with some
+misgivings on my part we rode up to the front and reported. I thought
+what a fool I was to volunteer, when I was liable to be killed, but I
+was in for it, and there was no use squealing now. We came to a cross
+road, and the captain whispered to us that we should camp there, and
+that he had been told by a reliable contraband that up the cross road
+about two miles was a house at which there was a sheep, and he wanted us
+to go and take it. He said there might be rebels anywhere, and we were
+liable to be ambushed and killed, but we must never come back alive
+without sheep meat. Well, we started off. McCarty said I better ride a
+little in advance so if we were ambushed, I would be killed first, and
+he would rush back and inform the captain. I tried to argue with McCarty
+that I being a recruit, and he a veteran, it would look better for him
+to lead, but he said I volunteered first, and he would waive his rights
+of precedence, and ride behind me. So we rode along, and I reflected on
+my changed condition. A few short weeks ago I was a respected editor of
+a country newspaper in Wisconsin, looked up to, to a certain extent, by
+my neighbors, and now I had become a sheep thief. At home the occupation
+of stealing sheep was considered pretty low down, and no man who
+followed the business was countenanced by the best society. A sheep
+thief, or one who was suspected of having a fondness for mutton not
+belonging to him, was talked about. And for thirteen dollars a month,
+and an insignificant bounty, I had become a sheep thief. If I ever run
+another newspaper, after the war, how did I know but a vile contemporary
+across the street would charge me with being a sheep thief, and prove
+it by McCarty. May be this was a conspiracy on the part of the captain,
+whom I suspected of a desire to run for office when we got home, to get
+me in his power, so that if I went for him in my paper, he could charge
+me with stealing sheep. It worked me up considerable, but we were out of
+meat, and if there was a sheep in the vicinity, and I got it, there was
+one thing sure, they couldn't get any more mule down me. So we rode up
+to the plantation, which was apparently deserted. There was a lamb about
+two-thirds grown, in the front yard, and McCarty and myself dismounted
+and proceeded to surround the young sheep. As we walked up to it, the
+lamb came up to me bleating, licked my hand, and then I noticed there
+was a little sleigh-bell tied to its neck with a blue ribbon. The lamb
+looked up at us with almost human eyes, and I was going to suggest that
+we let it alone, when McCarty grabbed it by the hind legs and was going
+to strap it to his saddle, when it set up a bleating, and a little boy
+come rushing out of the house, a bright little fellow about three years
+old, who could hardly talk plain. I wanted to hug him, he looked so much
+like a little black-eyed baby at home, that was too awfully small to say
+“good bye, papa” when I left. The little fellow, with the dignity of an
+emperor, said, “Here, sir, you must not hurt my little pet lamb. Put
+him down, sir, or I will call the servants and have you put off the
+premises.” McCarty laughed, and said the lamb would be fine 'atin for
+the boy's, and was pulling the little thing up, when the tears came into
+the boy's eyes, and that settled it. I said, “Mac, for heaven's sake,
+drop that lamb. I wouldn't break that little boy's heart for all the
+sheep-meat on earth. I will eat mule, or dog, but I draw the line at
+children's household pets. Let the lamb go.” “Begorra, yer right,”
+ said McCarty, as he let the lamb down. “Luk at how the shep runs to
+the little bye. Ah, me little mon, yer pet shall not be taken away from
+yez,” and a big tear ran down McCarty's face. The boy said there was a
+great big sheep in the back yard we could have, if we were hungry, and
+we went around the house to see. There was an old black ram that looked
+as though he could whip a regiment of soldiers, but we decided that he
+was our meat. McCarty suggested that I throw a lariet rope around his
+horns, and lead him, whiles, he would go behind and drive the animal.
+That looked feasible, and taking a horse-hair picket rope off my saddle,
+with a slip noose in the end, I tossed it over the horns of the ram,
+tied the rope to the saddle, and started. The ram went along all right
+till we got out to the road, when he held back a little. Mac jabbed
+the ram in the rear with his saber, and he came along all right, only
+a little too sudden. That was one of the mistakes of the war, Mac's
+pricking that ram, and it has been the source of much study on my part,
+for twenty-two years, as to whether the Irishman did it on purpose,
+knowing the ram would charge on my horse, and butt my steed in the hind
+legs. If that was the plan of the Irishman, it worked well, for the
+first thing I knew my horse jumped about eighteen feet, and started down
+the road towards camp, on a run, dragging the ram, which was bellowing
+for all that was out. I tried to hold the horse in a little, but every
+time he slackened up the ram would gather himself and run his head full
+tilt against the horse, and away he would go again. Sometimes the ram
+was flying through the air, at the end of the rope, then it would be
+dragged in the sand, and again it would strike on its feet, and all
+the time the ram was blatting, and the confounded Irishman was yelling
+and laughing.
+
+[Illustration: We went into the camp that way 131]
+
+We went into the camp that way, and the whole regiment, hearing the
+noise, turned out to see us come in. As my horse stopped, and the
+ram was caught by a colored man, who tied its legs, I realized the
+ridiculousness of the scene, and would have gone off somewhere alone and
+hated myself, or killed the Irishman, but just then I saw the captain,
+and I said, “Captain, I have to report that the perilous expedition was
+a success. There's your sheep,” and I rode away, resolved that that was
+the last time I should ever volunteer for perilous duty. The Irishman
+was telling a crowd of boys the particulars, and they were having a
+great laugh, when I said:
+
+“McCarty, you are a villain. I believe you set that ram on to me on
+purpose. Henceforth we are strangers.”
+
+“Be gob,” said the Irishman, as he held his sides with laughter, “yez
+towld me to drive the shape, and didn't I obey?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Bacon and Hard-tack--In Danger of Ague--In Search of Whisky
+ and Quinine--I Am Appointed Corporal--I Make a Speech--I Am
+ the Leader of Ten Picked Men--I Am Willing to Resign.
+
+The next day we arrived at a post where rations were plenty, and where
+it was announced we should remain for a week or two, so we drew tents
+and made ourselves as comfortable as possible. It did seem good to again
+be where we did not have to depend on our own resources, of stealing,
+for what we wanted to eat. To be able to draw from the commissary
+regular rations of meat, tea, coffee, sugar, baker's bread, and beans,
+was joy indeed, after what we had gone through, and we almost made hogs
+of ourselves. There was one thing--those few days of starvation taught
+us a lesson, and that was, when ordered on a trip with two days'
+rations, to take at least enough for six days, especially of coffee and
+salt pork or bacon. With coffee and a piece of old smoked bacon, a man
+can exist a long time. I remember after that trip, wherever I went,
+there was a chunk of bacon in one of my saddle-bags that nobody knew
+anything about, and many a time, on long marches, when hunger would have
+been experienced almost as severe as the time written about last week,
+I would take out my chunk of bacon, cut off a piece and spread it on
+a hard-tack, and eat a meal that was more strengthening than any meal
+Delmonico ever spread. It was at this post that the boys in the regiment
+played a trick that caused much fun throughout all the army. There
+were a few men in each company who had the chills and fever, or ague,
+and the surgeon gave them each morning, a dose of whisky and quinine. It
+was interesting to see a dozen soldiers go to surgeon's call, take
+their “bitters,” and return to their quarters. The boys would go to the
+surgeon's tent sort of languid, and drag along, and after swallowing a
+good swig of whisky and quinine they would walk back to their quarters
+swinging their arms like Pat Rooney on the stage, and act as though they
+could whip their weight in wild cats. I got acquainted with the hospital
+steward, and he said if the boys were not careful they would all be down
+with the ague, and that an ounce of prevention was worth more than a
+pound of cure. I thought I would take advantage of his advice, so I fell
+in with the sick fellows the next morning, and when the doctor asked,
+“What's the matter?” I said “chills,” and he said, “Take a swallow out
+of the red bottle.” I took a swallow, and it _was_ bitter, but it had
+whisky in it, more than quinine, and the idea of beating the government
+out of a drink of whisky was pleasure enough to overcome the bitter
+taste. I took a big swallow, and before I got back to my quarters I had
+had a fight with a mule-driver, and when the quartermaster interfered I
+had insulted him by telling him I knew him when he carried a hod, before
+the war, and I shouted, “Mort, more mort!” until he was going to lather
+me with a mule whip, but he couldn't catch me. As I run by the surgeon's
+tent, somebody remarked that I had experienced a remarkably sudden
+cure for chills. The whisky was not real good, but as I had heard the
+hospital steward say they had just put in a requisition for two barrels
+of it, to be prepared for an epidemic of chills, I thought the boys
+ought to know it, so that day I went around to the different companies
+and told the boys how to play it for a drink. There are very few
+soldiers, in the best regiment, that will not take a drink of whisky
+when far away from home, discouraged, and worn out by marching, and
+our fellows looked favorably upon the proposition to all turn out to
+surgeon's call the next morning. I shall never forget the look on the
+face of the good old surgeon, as the boys formed in line in front of his
+tent the next morning. The last time I saw him, he was in his coffin,
+about five years ago, at the soldier's home, and a few of the survivors
+of the regiment that lived here had gone out to the home to take a last
+look at him, and act as mourners at the funeral. He looked much older
+than when he used to ask us fellows the conumdrum, “What's the matter?”
+ but there was that same look on his white, cold face that there was the
+morning that nearly the whole regiment reported for “bitters.”
+
+There must have been four hundred men in line, and it happened that I
+was the first to be called. When he asked me about my condition, and
+I told him of the chills, he studied a minute, then looked at me, and
+said, You are bilious, David, give him a dose of castor oil. I know I
+turned pale, for it was a great come down from quinine and whisky to
+castor oil, for a healthy man, and I kicked. I told him I had the shakes
+awfully, and all I wanted was a quinine powder. I knew they had put all
+their quinine into a barrel of whisky, so I was safe in asking for dry
+quinine. The good old gentleman finally relented on the castor oil, and
+told David to give me a swallow of the quinine bitters, but there was a
+twinkle in his eye, as he noticed what a big swallow I took, and then he
+said, “You will be well tomorrow; you needn't come again.” I dropped out
+of the ranks, with my skin full of quinine and whisky, and watched the
+other fellows.
+
+There were men in the line who had never been sick a day since they
+enlisted, big fellows that would fight all day, and stand picket all
+night, and who never knew what it was to have an ache. And it was
+amusing to see them appear to shake, and to act as though they had
+chills. Some of them could not keep from laughing, and it was evident
+that the doctor had his doubts about there being so many cases of
+chills, but he dosed out the quinine and whisky as long as there was a
+man who shook. As each man took his dose, he would show two expressions
+on his face. One was an expression of hilarity at putting himself
+outside of a good swig of whisky, and the other was an expression of
+contempt for the bitter quinine, and an evident wish that the drug
+might be left out. When all had been served, they lingered around the
+surgeon's quarters, talking with each other and laughing, others formed
+on for a stag quadrille, and danced, while a nigger fiddled. Some
+seemed to feel as though they wanted some one to knock a chip off
+their shoulders, old grudges were talked over, and several fights were
+prevented by the interference of friends who were jolly and happy, and
+who did not believe in fighting for fun, when there was so much fighting
+to be done in the way of business. The old doctor walked up and down in
+front of his tent in a deep study. He was evidently thinking over
+the epidemic of ague that had broken out in a healthy regiment, and
+speculating as to its cause. Suddenly an idea seemed to strike him, and
+he walked up to a crowd of his patients, who were watching a couple of
+athletes, who had just taken their quinine, and who had put on boxing
+gloves and were pasting each other in the nose. “One moment,” said the
+old doctor. The boys stopped boxing, and every last “sick” man listened
+respectfully to what the old doctor said; “Boys,” said he, “you have got
+it on me this time. I don't believe a confounded one of you have got
+ague at all. You 'shook me' for the whisky. After this, quinine will
+be dealt out raw, without any whisky, and now you can shake all you
+please.” Some one proposed three cheers for the boys that had made Uncle
+Sam stand treat, and the cheers were given, and the boys separated to
+talk over the event. The next morning only the usual number of sick were
+in attendance at surgeon's call. The healthy fellows didn't want to take
+quinine raw.
+
+About this time an incident occurred that was fraught with great
+importance to the country and to me, though the historians of the war
+have been silent about it in their histories, whether through jealousy
+or something else I do not know, and modesty has prevented me from
+making any inquiries as to the cause. The incident alluded to was my
+appointment as corporal of my company. I say the incident was “fraught”
+ with importance. I do not know the meaning of the word fraught, but it
+is frequently used in history in that connection, and I throw it in,
+believing that it is a pretty good word. The appointment came to me like
+a stroke of paralysis. I was not conscious that my career as a soldier
+had been such as to merit promotion, I could not recall my particularly
+brilliant military achievement that would warrant my government
+selecting me from the ranks and conferring honors upon me, unless it
+was my lasooing that ram and dragging him into camp, when we were out of
+meat. But it was not my place to inquire into the cause that had led to
+my sudden promotion over the rank and file. I thought if I made too many
+inquiries it would be discovered that I was not such an all-fired great
+soldier after all. If the government had somehow got the impression that
+I was well calculated to lead hosts to victory, and it was an erroneous
+impression, it was the governments' place to find it out without any
+help on my part. I would accept the position with a certain dignity, as
+though I knew that it was inevitable that I must sooner or later come
+to the front. So when the captain informed me that he should appoint me
+Corporal, I told him that I thanked him, and through him, the Nation,
+and would try and perform the duties of the exacting and important
+position to the best of my ability, and hoped that I might not do
+anything that would bring discredit upon our distracted country. He said
+that would be all right, that he had no doubt the country would pull
+through. That evening at dress parade the appointment was read, and I
+felt elated. I thought it singular that the regiment did not break out
+into cheers, and make the welkin ring, though they may not have had
+any welkin to ring. However, I thought it was my duty to make a little
+speech, acknowledging the honor conferred upon me, as I had read that
+generals and colonels did when promoted. I took off my hat and said,
+“Fellow soldiers.” That was the end of my speech, for the captain turned
+around and said to the orderly sergeant, “Stop that red-headed cusses
+mouth some way,” and the orderly told me to dry up. Everybody was
+laughing, I supposed, at the captain. Anyway, I felt hurt, and when we
+got back to camp the boys of all the companies surrounded me to offer
+congratulations, and I was called on for a speech. Not being in the
+ranks, nobody could prevent me from speaking, so I got up on a
+barrel, and said:
+
+“Fellow Soldiers:--As I was about to remark, when interrupted by the
+captain, on dress parade, this office has come to me entirely unsought.
+It has not been my wish to wear the gilded trappings of office and
+command men, but rather to fight in the ranks, a private soldier. I
+enlisted as a private, and my ambition has been to remain in the ranks
+to the end of the war. But circumstances over which I have no control
+has taken me and placed me on the high pinnacle of Corporal, and I must
+bow to the decree of fate. Of course, in my new position there must
+necessarily be a certain gulf between us. I have noticed that there has
+been a gulf between me and the officers, and I have thought it wrong. I
+have thought that privates and officers should mingle together freely,
+and share each others secrets, privations and rations. But since being
+promoted I can readily see that such things cannot be. The private has
+his position and the officer has his, and each must be separate. It is
+not my intention to make any radical changes in the conduct of military
+affairs at present, allowing things to go along about as they have, but
+as soon as I have a chance to look about me, certain changes will be
+made. All I ask is that you, my fellow soldiers, shall stand by me,
+follow where I shall lead and--”
+
+At this point in my address the head of the barrel on which I stood fell
+in with a dull thud, and I found myself up to the neck in corned-beef
+brine. The boys set up a shout, some fellow kicked over the barrel, and
+they began to roll it around the camp with me in it.
+
+[Illustration: Just promoted to the proud position of Corporal 141]
+
+This was a pretty position for a man just promoted to the proud position
+of Corporal. As they rolled me about and yelled like Indians, I could
+see that an official position in that regiment was to be no sinecure.
+All official positions have more or less care and responsibility, but
+this one seemed to me to have too much. Finally they spilled me out of
+the barrel, and I was a sight to behold. My first idea was to order the
+whole two hundred fellows under arrest, and have them court-martialed
+for conduct unbecoming soldiers; but on second thought I concluded that
+would seem an arbitrary use of power, so I concluded to laugh it off.
+One fellow said they begged pardon for any seeming disrespect to an
+official; but it had always been customary in the regiment to initiate a
+corporal who was new and too fresh with salt brine. I said that was all
+right, and I invited them all up to the chaplain's tent to join me in a
+glass of wine. The chaplain was away, and I knew he had received a keg
+of wine from the sanitary commission that day, so we went up to his tent
+and drank it, and everything passed off pleasantly until the chaplain
+happened in. The boys dispersed as soon as he came, and left me to fight
+it out with the good man. He was the maddest truly good man I have ever
+seen. I tried to explain about my promotion, and that it was customary
+to set em up for the boys, and that there was no saloon near, and
+that he had always told me to help myself to anything I wanted; but
+he wouldn't be calm at all. I tried to quote from Paul's epistle about
+taking a little wine for the stomach-ache; but he just raved around and
+called me names, until I had to tell him that if he kept on I would, in
+my official capacity as corporal, place him under arrest. That seemed
+to calm him a little, for he laughed, and finally he said I smelled of
+stale corned-beef, and he kicked me out of his tent, and I retired to
+my quarters to study over the mutability of human affairs, and the
+unpleasant features of holding official position.
+
+That night I dreamed that General Grant and myself were running the
+army in splendid shape, and that we were in-receipt of constant
+congratulations from a grateful country, for victories. He and I seemed
+to be great chums. I dreamed of engagements with the enemy, in which I
+led men against fearful odds, and always came out victorious. I woke
+up before daylight and was wondering what dangerous duty I would be
+detailed to lead men upon, when the orderly poked his head in my tent
+and told me I was detailed to take ten picked men, at daylight, for hard
+service, and to report at once. I felt that my time had come to achieve
+renown, and I dressed myself with unusual care, putting on the blouse
+with two rows of buttons, which I had brought from home. I borrowed a
+pair of Corporal's chevrons and sewed them to the sleeves of my blouse,
+and was ready to die, if need be. I placed a Testament I had brought
+from home, inside my blouse, in a breast pocket, as I had read of
+many cases where a Testament had been struck with a bullet and saved a
+soldier's life. I placed all my keepsakes in a package, and told my tent
+mate that I was going out with ten picked men, and it was possible I
+might never show up again, and if I fell he was to send the articles
+to my family. I wondered that I did not feel afraid to die. I was no
+professor of religion, though I had always tried to do the square thing
+all around, but with no consolation of religion at all, I felt a sweet
+peace that was indescribable. If it was my fate to fall in defence of my
+country, at the head of ten picked men, so be it. Somebody must die, and
+why not me. I was no better than thousands of others, and while life was
+sweet to me, and I had anticipated much pleasure in life, after the war,
+in shooting ducks and holding office, I was willing to give up all hope
+of pleasure in the future, and die like a thoroughbred. I was glad that
+I had been promoted, and wondered if they would put “Corporal” on my
+tombstone. I wondered, if I fell that day at the head of my mem, if
+the papers at the North, and particularly in Wisconsin, would say “The
+deceased had just been promoted, for gallant conduct, to the position of
+Corporal, and it will be hard to fill his place.” With these thoughts
+I sadly reported to the orderly. The ten picked men were in line. They
+were four of them Irishmen, two Yankees, two Germans, a Welshman and a
+Scotchman. The orderly gave me a paper, sealed in an envelope. I turned
+to my men, and said, “Boys, whatever happens today, I don't want to see
+any man show the white feather. The world will read the accounts of this
+day's work with feelings of awe, and the country will care for those
+we leave behind.” We started off, and it occurred to me to read my
+instructions. I opened the envelope with the air of a general who was
+accustomed to receive important messages. I read it, and almost fainted,
+It read “Report to the quartermaster, at the steamboat landing, to
+unload quartermaster's stores from steamer Gazelle.” Ye gods! And this
+was the hard service that I was to lead ten picked men into. They had
+picked out ten stevedores, to carry sacks of corn, and hard-tack boxes,
+and barrels of pork, and that was the action I was to engage in as my
+first duty as corporal.
+
+I almost cried. We rode down to the landing, where a dozen teams were
+waiting to be loaded. It was all I could do to break the news to my
+picked men that they were expected to lug sacks of corn instead of fight,
+and when I did they kicked at once. One of the Irishmen said he would be
+teetotally d----d if he enlisted to carry corn for mules, and he would
+lay in the guard-house till the war was over before he would lift a
+sack. There was a strike on my hands to start on. I was sorry that I had
+permitted myself to be promoted to Corporal. Trouble from the outset.
+One of the Yankees suggested that we hold an indignation meeting, so we
+rode up in front of a cotton warehouse and dismounted. The Scotchman was
+appointed chairman, and for half an hour the ten picked men discussed
+the indignity that was attempted to be heaped upon them, by compelling
+them to do the work of niggers.
+
+They argued that a cavalry soldier's duty was exclusively to ride on
+horseback, and that there was no power on earth to compel them to carry
+sacks of corn. One of the Dutchmen said he could never look a soldier in
+the face again after doing such menial duty, and he would not submit to
+it. The Scotch chairman said if he had read the articles of war right
+there was no clause that said that the cavalry man should leave his
+horse and carry corn. I was called upon for my opinion, and said that I
+was a little green as to the duties of a soldier, but supposed we had to
+do anything we were ordered to do, but it seemed a little tough. I told
+them I didn't want any mutiny, and it would be a plain case of mutiny
+if they refused to work. One of the Irishmen asked if I would help carry
+sacks of corn, and I told him that as commander of the expedition it
+would be plainly improper for me to descend to a common day laborer.
+I held it to be the duty of a corporal to stand around and see the men
+work. They all said that was too thin, and I would have to peel on my
+coat and work if they did. I told them I couldn't lift a sack of corn
+to save me, but they said if that was the case I ought not to have come.
+The quartermaster was looking around for the detail that was to unload
+the boat, and he asked me if I had charge of the men detailed to unload.
+I told him that I _did_ have charge of them when we left camp, but
+that they had charge of me now, and said they wouldn't lift a pound. He
+thought a minute, and said, “I don't like to see you boys carrying corn
+sacks, and rolling pork barrels. Why don't you chip in and hire some
+niggers.” The idea seemed inspired. There were plenty of niggers around
+that would work for a little money. One of the Irishmen moved that the
+Corporal hire ten niggers to unload the quartermasters stores, and the
+motion was carried unanimously. I would have voted against it, but the
+Scotchman, who was chairman, ruled that I had no right to vote. So I
+went and found ten niggers that agreed to work for fifty cents each, and
+they were set to work, the quartermaster promising not to tell in camp
+about my hiring the work done. One of my Dutchmen moved that, inasmuch
+as we had nothing to do all day, that we take in the town, and play
+billiards, and whoop it up until the boat was unloaded. That seemed a
+reasonable proposition, and the motion carried, after an amendment had
+been added to the effect that the Corporal stay on the boat and watch
+the niggers, and see that they didn't shirk. So my first command, my ten
+picked men, rode off up town, and I set on a wagon and watched my hired
+men. It was four o clock in the afternoon before the stuff was all
+loaded, and after paying the niggers five dollars out of my own pocket,
+some of my bounty money, I went up to town to round up my picked men to
+take them to camp. I found the Scotchman pretty full of Scotch whisky.
+He had found a countryman who kept a tailor shop, who had a bag pipe,
+and they were having a high old time playing on the instrument, and
+singing Scotch songs. I got him on his horse, and we looked for the
+rest. The two Germans were in a saloon playing pee-nuckel, and singing
+German songs, and their skins were pretty full of beer and cheese. They
+were got into the ranks, and we found the Irishmen playing forty-five
+in a saloon kept by a countryman of theirs, and they had evidently had
+a shindig, as one of them had a black eye and a scratch on his nose, and
+they were full of fighting whisky. The Yankees had swelled up on some
+kind of benzine and had hired a hack and taken two women out riding, and
+when we rounded them up each one had his feet out of the window of the
+hack, and they were enjoying themselves immensely. The Welchman was the
+only one that was sober, but the boys said there was not enough liquor
+in the South to get him drunk. When I got them all mounted they looked
+as though they had been to a banquet. We started for camp, but I did not
+want to take them in until after dark, so we rode around the suburbs of
+the town until night drew her sable mantle over the scene. They insisted
+on singing until within half a mile of camp, and it would no doubt have
+been good music, only the Scotchman insisted on singing “The March of
+the Cameron Men,” while the Irishmen sung “Lots of fun at Finnegan's
+Wake,” and the German's sung “Wacht am Rhine.” The Yankees sung the
+“Star Spangled Banner,” and the Welchman sung something in the Welch
+language which was worse than all. All the songs being sung together,
+of course I couldn't enjoy either of them as well as a Corporal ought
+to enjoy the music of his command. Arriving near camp, the music was
+hushed, and we rode in, and up to the captain's tent, where I reported
+that the corn was unloaded, all right. He said that was all right.
+Everything would have passed off splendidly, only one of the Irishmen
+proposed “three cheers” for the dandy Corporal of the regiment, and
+those inebriated, picked men, gave three cheers that raised the roof of
+the colonel's tent near by, because I had hired niggers to do the work,
+and let the men have a holiday. I dismissed them as quick as I could,
+but the colonel sent for me, and I had to tell him the whole story. He
+said I would demoralize the whole regiment in a week more, and I
+better let up or he would have to discipline me. I offered to resign my
+commission as Corporal, but he said I better hold on till we could have
+a fight, and may be I would get killed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ Yearnings for Military Fame--What I Want is a Chance--I Feel
+ I Could Crush the Rebellion--My Chance Arrives--I am
+ Crushed--The Rebellion Remains Pretty Well.
+
+As I could get no one to accept my resignation as corporal, which I
+tendered after my first service in that capacity, unloading a steamboat,
+I decided to post myself as to the duties of the position, so I borrowed
+a copy of “Hardee's Tactics,” and studied a good deal. Every place
+in the book that mentioned the word “corporal,” had a particular and
+thrilling interest for me, and I soon got so it would have been easy for
+me to have done almost anything that a corporal would have to do. But
+I was not contented to study the duty of a corporal. I read about
+the “school of the company,” and the “school of the regiment,” and
+“battalion drills,” and everything, until I could handle a regiment, or
+a brigade, for that matter, as well as any officer in the army, in my
+mind. This led me to go farther, and I borrowed a copy of a large blue
+book the colonel had, the name of which I do not remember now, but
+it was all military, and told how to conduct a battle successfully. I
+studied that book until I got the thing down so fine that I could have
+fought the battle of Gettysburg successfully, and I longed for a chance
+to show what I knew about military science and strategy. It seemed
+wonderful to me that one small red-head could contain so much knowledge
+about military affairs, and I felt a pity for some officers I knew who
+never had studied at all, and did not know anything except what they
+had picked up. I fought battles in my mind, day and night. Some nights
+I would lay awake till after midnight, planning campaigns, laying
+out battle-fields, and marching men against the enemy, who fought
+stubbornly, but I always came out victorious, and then I would go to
+sleep and dream that the President and secretary of war had got on to
+me, as it were, and had offered me high positions, and I would wake
+up in the morning the same red-headed corporal, and cook my breakfast.
+Sometimes I thought it my duty to inform the government, in some round
+about way, what a bonanza the country had in me, if my talent could only
+be utilized by placing me where I would have a chance to distinguish
+myself, and bring victory to our arms. I reflected that Grant, and
+Sherman, and Sheridan, and all of the great generals, were once
+corporals, and by study they had risen.
+
+There was not one of them that could dream out a battle, and a victory
+any better that I could. All I wanted was a chance. Just give me men
+enough, and turn me loose in the Southern Confederacy, with that head of
+mine, and the result would be all an anxious nation could desire.
+
+My first chance came sooner than I expected. The next day a part of
+the regiment went out on a scout, to be gone a couple of days, and my
+company was along. I was unusually absorbed in thought, and wondered if
+I would be given a chance to do anything. It seemed reasonable that if
+any corporal was sent out with a squad of men, to fight, it would be
+an old corporal, while if there was any duty that was menial, the new
+corporals would get it. The second day out we stopped at noon to let
+our horses rest, when little scouting parties that had been sent out on
+different roads during the forenoon, began to come in. Many of them had
+picked up straggling rebels, and brought them to damp, and they were
+carefully guarded, and the major, who was in command of our party, was
+asking them questions, and pumping them to find out all he could. I
+went over and looked at them, and they were quite a nice looking lot
+of fellows, some being officers, with plenty of gold lace on their gray
+suits. They were home from the Confederate army on a leave of absence,
+probably recruiting. After talking with a rebel officer for a time the
+major turned to the adjutant and said, “send me a corporal and ten
+men.” The adjutant started, on, and I followed him. I used to know the
+adjutant when he taught a district school, before the war, and I asked
+him as a special favor to let me be the corporal. He said the detail
+would be from my company, and if I could fix it with the orderly
+sergeant of my company it was all right. I rushed to my company and
+found the orderly, and got him to promise if there was a detail from the
+company that day, I could go. Before the words were out of his mouth the
+detail came, and in five minutes I reported to the major with ten men.
+The major simply told me that a certain rebel captain, from Lee's army,
+was reported to be at home, and his plantation was about four miles
+east, and he described it to me. He told me to ride out there, surround
+the house, capture the captain, and bring him into camp.
+
+No general ever received his orders in regard to fighting a battle, with
+a feeling of greater pride and responsibililty than I did my orders
+to capture that rebel. We started out, and then for the first time I
+noticed that there was another corporal in the squad with, me, and
+at once it occurred to me that he might claim a part of the glory
+of capturing the rebel. I had heard of the jealousy existing between
+generals, and how the partisans of different generals filled the
+newspapers, after a battle, with accounts of the part taken by their
+favorites, and that the accounts got so mixed, up that the reader
+couldn't tell to whom the credit of success was due, and I decided to
+take prompt measure with this supernumerary corporal, who had evidently
+got in by mistake, so I told him he might go back to the regiment. He
+said he guessed not. He had been detailed to go on the scout, and he was
+going, if he knew himself, and he thought he did. He said when it come
+right down to rank, he was an older corporal than I was, and could take
+command of the squad if he wanted to. I told him he was mistaken as to
+his position. That if the major had wanted him to take charge of the
+expedition, he would have given him the instructions, but as the major
+had given me the instructions, in a low tone of voice, nobody but myself
+knew where we were going or what we were going for, and that I was
+responsible, and the first intimation I had from him that he wanted to
+mutiny, or relieve me from my command, I would have him shot at once.
+I told him he could go along, but he must keep his mouth shut, and obey
+orders. He said he would obey, if he felt like it. We moved on, and I
+would have given a month's pay if that corporal had not been there. In a
+short time we were in sight of the house, and at a cross road I told the
+corporal to take one man and stop there, until further orders, and if
+any rebel came along, to capture him. He was willing enough to stay
+there, because there was a patch, of musk melons just over the fence. I
+moved my remaining eight men to a high piece of ground near the house,
+and halted, to look over the field of battle. Pulling a spy glass from
+my pocket, which I had borrowed from the sutler, I surveyed, as near
+like a general as possible, the situation. On one side of the house
+was a ravine, which I decided must be held at all hazards, and after
+studying my copy of tactics a moment, I sent an Irishman over there to
+hold the key to the situation, and told him he might consider himself
+the Iron Brigade. The lay of the ground reminded me much of pictures I
+had seen of the battle of Bull Run, and the road on which I had left
+the corporal and one man, was the road to Washington, on which we would
+retreat, if overcome by the enemy. To the right of the ravine, which was
+held by the Iron Brigade, I noticed a hen-house with a gate leading back
+to the nigger quarters, and I called a soldier and told him to make a
+detour behind a piece of woods, and at a signal from me, the waving of
+my right arm, to charge directly to the gate of the hen-house, and
+hold it against any force that might attempt to carry it, and to let
+no guilty man escape. Fifteen years afterwards Gen. Grant used those
+self-same words, “Let no guilty man escape,” and they became historic,
+but I will take my oath I was the first commander to use the words,
+when I sent that man to hold the gate of the hen-house. That man I
+denominated the First Division. Farther to the right was a field of
+sweet potatoes, in which was a colored man digging the potatoes. I sent
+a Dutchman to hold that field, with their right resting on the left of
+the First Division, located at the gate of the hen-house, whose right
+was supposed to rest on the left of the Iron Brigade, the Irishman who
+commanded the ravine. Then I turned my attention to the left of the
+battle-field, placed one man at the milk-house, with his left resting on
+the right of the Irishman, and a man at the smoke-house. This left three
+men, one of whom I appointed an aid de camp, one an orderly and the
+other I held as a reserve, at a cotton gin. When I had got my army into
+position, I sat under a tree and reflected a little, and concluded that
+the Iron Brigade was in rather too exposed a position, so I sent my aid
+de camp to order the Iron Brigade to move forward, under cover of the
+ravine, and take a position behind a mule-shed. The aide soon returned
+and reported that the Iron Brigade had taken off his shirt and kanoodled
+a negro woman to wash it for him, and would not be able to move until
+the shirt was dry.
+
+This altered my plans a little, but I was equal to the emergency, and
+ordered my reserve to make a detour and take the mule-shed, and hold it
+until relieved by the Iron Brigade, which would be as soon as his shirt
+was dry, and then to report to me on the field. Then I took my aide and
+orderly, and galloped around the lines, to see that all was right. I
+found that the First Division, holding the gate of the hen-house, was
+well in hand, though he had killed five chickens, and had them strapped
+on his saddle, and was trying to cut off the head of another with his
+sabre. He said he thought I said to let no guilty hen escape. I found
+the Iron Brigade dismounted, his shirt hung on a line to dry, and the
+colored woman had been pressed into the Federal service, and was frying
+a chicken for the Brigade. I told him to get his shirt on as soon as it
+was dry, and move by forced marches, to relieve the force holding the
+mule-shed, and the Iron Brigade said he would as soon as he had his
+dinner. I found the Division composed of the Dutchman, stubbornly
+holding the sweet-potato field, and he was eating some boiled ham and
+corn-bread he had sent the nigger to the house after, and he had a
+bushel of sweet-potatoes in a sack strapped to his saddle. The force
+at the milk-house had a fine position, and gave me a pitcher of
+butter-milk, which I drank with great gusto. I do not know as there is
+anything in butter-milk that is stimulating, but after drinking it
+my head seemed clearer, and I could see the whole battle-field, and
+anticipate each movement I should cause to be made. I was so pleased
+with the butter-milk, on the eve of battle, that I ordered the second
+Division to fill my canteen with it, which he did. Then I rode back to
+my headquarters, where I started from, having ridden clear around
+the beleaguered plantation. Presently the reserve returned to me and
+reported that he had been relieved by the Iron Brigade at the mule-shed,
+whose shirt had become dry, and who had given the reserve a leg of
+fried chicken, and a corn dodger. I took the leg of chicken away from my
+reserve, eat it with great relish, and prepared for the onslaught, the
+reserve picking some persimmons off a tree and eating them for lunch.
+I was about to order the different divisions and brigades of my army to
+advance from their different positions, and close in on the enemy, when
+a colored man came out of the house and moved toward me, signalling
+that he would fain converse with me. I struck a dignified attitude, by
+throwing my right leg over the pommel of the saddle, like a hired girl
+riding a plow-horse to town after a doctor, and waited. When he came up
+to me, he said, “Massa wants to know what all dis darn foolishness is
+about. He says if you all don't go away from here he will shoot de liver
+outen you all.” I told the negro to be calm, and not cause me to resort
+to extreme measures, and I asked him if his master was at home. He said
+he was, and he was a bad man wid a gun. He had killed plenty of men
+before the war, and since the war he had killed more Yankees than enough
+to build a rail-fence around the plantation. I did not exactly like the
+reports in regard to the enemy. I told the colored man to take a flag of
+truce to his master, and tell him I would like an interview. The colored
+man went to the house, and I sent for the Iron Brigade to report to
+me at once, in light marching order, and the Irishman came riding up
+without any shirt on. I caused the Brigade to put on his shirt, when I
+sent him to the house, to follow the nag of truce and feel of the enemy.
+He went to the house, and was evidently invited in, for he disappeared.
+I waited half an hour for him, and as he did not show up, I called the
+Second Division, and sent the Dutchman to the house. The Second Division
+went in, and did not come out. I ordered the whole right wing of my army
+to deploy to my support, and the fellow at the hen-house gate came, and
+I sent him in after the Irishman and the Dutchman. He didn't come back,
+and I sent an orderly after the force stationed at the milk-house, and
+he came, and I sent him, with the same result. It was evident I was
+frittering away my command, with no good result, so I looked at my
+tactics, and decided to hold a council of war. My aide, orderly, and
+reserve, three besides myself, composed the council of war. We three
+were in favor of ordering up the other corporal and man from the
+cross-roads, but I opposed it. I did not want the other corporal to have
+any finger in the pie. So I decided that the four of us would go in a
+body to the house and demand the surrender of the rebel captain. We
+rode down the lane where the other men had gone, and it was a question
+whether we ever came back alive. I thought they had a trap door in the
+house, which probably let the soldiers down suddenly into a dungeon.
+Certainly unless there was something of the kind my men would have come
+back. As we dismounted at the door; and walked up the steps, the door
+opened and a fine looking rebel officer appeared smiling.
+
+“Come in, Captain, with your men, and join me in a glass of wine,” said
+the rebel.
+
+I had never been called “Captain” before, and it touched me in a tender
+spot. The rebel evidently thought I looked like a captain, and I was
+proud. He had probably watched my maneuvers, and the way I handled my
+men, and thought I was no common soldier.
+
+“Well, I don't care if I do,” said I, and we walked into a splendid old
+room, and were bidden to be seated.
+
+“Hello, Corp,” said my Iron Brigade, as he took his legs down from a
+table, and poured out a glass of whisky from a bottle near him, “This is
+the divil's own place for an aisy life.”
+
+“Gorporal,” said my Dutch fellow soldier, as he poured out a glass of
+schnapps, “Led me indroduce you mit dot repel. He is a tasy, und
+don'd you forgot aboud it. Mishder repel, dot ish der gorporal fun my
+gumpany.”
+
+The rebel smiled and said he was glad to see me, and hoped I was well,
+and would I take wine, or something stronger. I took a small glass of
+wine, but the rest of the fellows took strong drink, and my Iron Brigade
+was already full, and the Dutchman was getting full rapidly. Finally I
+told the rebel officer that I did not like to accept a man's hospitality
+when I had such an unpleasant duty to perform as to arrest him, but
+circumstances seemed to make it necessary. He said that was all right.
+In times of war we must do many things that were unpleasant. We took
+another drink, and then I told him I was sorry to inconvenience him,
+but he would have to accompany me to camp. He said certainly, he had
+expected to be captured ever since he saw that the house was surrounded,
+and while at first he had made up his mind to take his rifle and kill
+us all from the gallery of the house, he had thought better of it, and
+would surrender without bloodshed. What was the use of killing any more
+men? The war was nearly over, and why not submit, and save carnage. I
+told him that was the way I felt about it. Then he said if I would wait
+until he retired to an adjoining room and changed his linen, he would be
+ready. I said of course, certainly, and he went out of a door. I waited
+about half an hour, until it seemed to me the rebel had had time to
+change all the linen in the state of Alabama. The Iron Brigade had gone
+to sleep on a lounge, and the German troop was full as a goat, and some
+of the others were beginning to feel the hospitality.
+
+“I beg your pardon for intruding,” said I, as I opened the door and
+walked into the room the rebel had entered. “Great Scott, he is gone!”
+
+My army, all except the Iron Brigade and the Dutchman, followed me, and
+the room was empty. A window was up, through which he had escaped. We
+searched the house, but there was no rebel captain. On going to the
+front door I found that the horse belonging to the iron brigade was
+gone, and that the saddle girths of all the other horses had been
+unbuckled, so we would be delayed in following him. The Irishman was
+awakened, and when he found his horse was gone, he sobered up and went
+to the pasture and borrowed a mule to ride.
+
+It took us half an hour to fix our saddles, so we could ride, and then
+we sadly started for camp. How could I face the major, and report to
+him that I had met the rebel captain, talked with him, drank with
+him, enjoyed his hospitality, and then let him escape? I felt that my
+military career had come to an inglorious ending. “We rode slow, because
+the Iron Brigade was insecurely mounted on a slippery bare-backed mule.
+As we neared the corporal and one man, that I had left to guard the
+cross-roads, I noticed that there was a stranger with them, and on
+riding closer what was my surprise to find that it was the rebel
+captain, under arrest. So the confounded corporal, whom I had left there
+so he would be out of the way, and not get any of the glory of capturing
+the rebel, had captured him, and got _all_ the glory. I was hurt, but
+putting on a bold military air, like a general who has been whipped, I
+said:
+
+“Ah, corporal, I see my plan has worked successfully. I arranged it so
+this prisoner would run right into the trap.”
+
+“Yes,” said the corporal, throwing away a melon rind that he had been
+chewing the meat off of, “I saw his nibs coming down the road, and I
+thought may be he was the one you wanted, so I told him to halt or I
+would fill his lungs full of lead pills, and he said he guessed he
+would halt. He said it was a nice day, and he was only trying one of
+the Yankee cavalry horses, to see how he liked it.” “Here, you murdherin'
+divil, get down aff that harse,” said the Iron Brigade, who had got
+awake enough to see that the rebel was on his horse. “Take this mule,
+and lave a dacent gintleman's harse alone.”
+
+The rebel smiled, dismounted, gave the Irishman his horse, mounted the
+mule, and we started for camp. I was never so elated in my life as I was
+when I rode into camp with that rebel captain beside me on the mule. The
+object of the expedition had been accomplished, a little different, it
+is true, from what I had expected and planned, but who knew that it was
+not a part of my plan to have it turn out as it did? I reflected
+much, and wondered if it was right for me to report the capture of the
+Confederate and say nothing about the part played by the other corporal.
+That corporal was no military strategist, like me. It was just a streak
+of luck, his capturing the rebel. He was leaning against the fence where
+I left him, eating melons, and the rebel came along, and the corporal
+quit chewing melon long enough to obey my orders and arrest the fellow.
+By all rules of military law I was entitled to the credit, and I would
+take it, though it made me ashamed to do so. How-ever, generals did
+the same thing. If a major-general was in command, and ordered a
+brigadier-general to do a thing and it was a success, the major-general
+got the credit in the newspapers. So I rode into camp and turned my
+prisoner over to the major as modestly as possible, with a few words of
+praise of my gallant command. Hello, Jim, said the major to the rebel.
+
+Hello, Maje, said the rebel.
+
+“Better take off them togs now, and join your company, said the major.
+
+“I guess so,” said the rebel, and he took off his rebel uniform, and the
+major handed him a blue coat and pair of pants, and he put them on.
+
+I was petrified. The fact was, the rebel was a sergeant in our regiment,
+who had been detailed as a scout, and had been making a trip into the
+rebel lines as a spy. I had made an ass of myself in the whole business,
+and he would tell all the boys about it. I went back to my company
+crushed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ I am Detailed to Build a Bridge-It Was a Good Bridge, but
+ Over the Wrong Stream--The General Appears--I am Crushed, in
+ Fact Pulverized!--I am Attacked with Rheumatism.
+
+After the episode, related last week, in which I foolishly organized
+a regular battle, to capture a supposed rebel, who turned out to be a
+member of my own regiment, I expected to be the laughing stock of all
+the soldiers, and that my commission as corporal would be taken away
+from me, and that I would be reduced to the ranks, and when, the next
+morning, the colonel sent for me to come to his tent, it was a stand-off
+with me whether I would take to the woods and desert, in disgrace, and
+never show up again, or go to the colonel, face the music, and admit
+that I had made an ass of myself. Finally I decided to visit the
+colonel. On the way to his tent I noticed that our force had been
+augmented greatly. The road was full of wagons, the fields near us were
+filled with infantry and artillery, and there were fifty wagons or more
+loaded with pontoons, great boats, or the frame-work of boats, which
+were to be covered with canvass, which was water-proof, and the boats
+were to be used for bridges across streams. The colonel had not told me
+anything about the expected arrival of more troops, and it worried me a
+good deal. May be there was a big battle coming off, and I might blunder
+into it unconscious of danger, and: get the liver blowed out of me by a
+cannon. I felt that the colonel had not treated me right in keeping me
+in ignorance of all this preparation. I went to the colonel's tent
+and there was quite a crowd of officers, some with artillery uniforms,
+several colonels, and one general with a star on his shoulder straps,
+and a crooked sword with a silver scabbard, covered with gold trimmings.
+I felt quite small with those big officers, but I tried to look brave,
+and as though I was accustomed to attending councils of war. The colonel
+smiled at me as I came in which braced me up a good deal.
+
+General, this is the sergeant I spoke to you about, said the colonel,
+as he turned from a map they had been looking at. I felt pale when the
+colonel addressed me as sergeant, and was going to call his attention to
+the mistake, when the general said:
+
+Sergeant, the colonel tells me that you can turn your hand to almost
+anything. What line of business have you worked at previous to your
+enlistment?
+
+“Well, I guess there is nothing that is usually done in a country
+village that I have not done. I have clerked in a grocery, tended bar,
+drove team on a threshing machine, worked in a slaughter house,
+drove omnibus, worked in a-saw-mill, learned the printing trade, rode
+saw-logs, worked in a pinery, been brakeman on a freight train, acted as
+assistant chambermaid in a livery stable, clerked in a hotel, worked on
+a farm, been an auctioneer, edited a newspaper, took up the collection
+in church, canvassed for books, been life-insurance agent, worked at
+bridge-building, took tintypes, sat on a jury, been constable, been
+deck-hand on a steamboat, chopped cord-wood, run a cider-mill, and drove
+a stallion in a four-minute race at a county fair.”
+
+“That will do,” said the general. “You will be placed in charge of a
+pioneer corps, and you will go four miles south, on the road, where
+a bridge has been destroyed across a small bayou, build a new bridge
+strong enough to cross artillery, then move on two miles to a river you
+will find, and look out a good place to throw a pontoon bridge across.
+The first bridge you will build under an artillery fire from the rebels,
+and when it is done let a squad of cavalry cross, then the pontoon
+train, and a regiment of infantry. Then light out for the river ahead of
+the pontoon train, with the cavalry. The pioneer corps will be ready in
+fifteen minutes.”
+
+The colonel told me to hurry up, but I called him out of his tent and
+asked him if I was really a sergeant, or if it was a mirage. He said if
+I made a success of that bridge, and the command got across, and I was
+not killed I would be appointed sergeant. He said the general would
+try me as a bridge-builder, and if I was a success he would try me, no
+doubt, in other capacities, such as driving team on a threshing machine,
+and editing a newspaper.
+
+When, I went on after my horse, being pretty proud. The idea of being
+picked out of so many non-commissioned officers, and placed in charge of
+a pioneer corps, and sent ahead of the army to rebuild a bridge that had
+been destroyed, with a prospect of being promoted or killed, was glory
+enough for one day, and I rode back to headquarters feeling that the
+success of the whole expedition rested on me. If I built a corduroy
+bridge that would pass that whole army safely over, artillery and all,
+would anybody enquire who built the bridge. Of course, if I built a
+bridge that would break down, and drown somebody, everybody would know
+who built it. The twenty men were mounted, and ready, and the general
+told me to go to the quartermaster and get all the tools I wanted, and I
+took twenty axes, ten shovels, two log chains, and was riding away, when
+the general said:
+
+“When you get there, and look the ground over, make up your mind exactly
+at what hour and minute you can have the bridge completed, and send a
+courier back to inform me, and at that hour the head of the column will
+be there, and the bridge must be ready to cross on.”
+
+I said that would be all right, and we started out. In about forty
+minutes we had arrived, at the bayou, and I called a private soldier
+who used to do logging in the woods, and we looked the thing over. The
+timber necessary was right on the bank of the stream.
+
+“Jim,” I said to the private, “I have got to build a bridge across this
+stream strong enough to cross artillery. I shall report to the general
+that he can send, along his artillery at seventeen minutes after eight o
+clock this evening. Am I right?”
+
+“Well,” said Jim, as he looked at the standing timber, at the stream,
+and spit some black tobacco juice down on the red ground, “I should make
+it thirty-seven minutes after eight. You see, a shell may drop in here
+and kill a mule, or something, and delay us. Make it thirty-seven, and I
+will go you.”
+
+We finally compromised by splitting the difference, and I sent a courier
+back to the general, with my compliments, and with the information
+that at precisely eight o clock and twenty-seven minutes he could start
+across. Then we fell to work. Large, long trees were cut for stringers,
+and hewn square, posts were made to prop up the stringers, though the
+stringers would have held any weight. Then small trees were cut and
+flattened on two sides, for the road-bed, holes bored in them and pegs
+made to drive through them into the stringers. A lot of cavalry soldiers
+never worked as those men did. Though there was only twenty of them,
+it seemed as though the woods were full of men. Trees were falling, and
+axes resounding, and men yelling at mules that were hauling logs, and
+the scene reminded me of logging in the Wisconsin pineries, only these
+were men in uniform doing the work. About the middle of the afternoon we
+had the stringers across, when there was a half dozen shots heard down
+the stream, and bullets began “zipping” all around the bridge, and
+we knew the rebels were onto the scheme, and wanted it stopped. I got
+behind a tree when the bullets began to come, to think it over. My first
+impulse was to leave the bridge and go back and tell the general that I
+couldn't build no bridge unless everything was quiet. That I had never
+built bridges where people objected to it. I asked the private what we
+had better do. He said his idea was to knock off work on the bridge for
+just fifteen minutes, cross the stream on the stringers, and go down
+there in the woods and scare the life out of those rebels, drive them
+away, and make them think the whole army was after them, then cross back
+and finish the bridge. That seemed feasible enough, so about a dozen of
+us squirreled across the stringers with our carbines, and the rest went
+down the stream on our side, and all of us fired a dozen rounds from our
+Spencer repeaters, right into the woods where the rebels seemed to be.
+When we did so, the rebels must have thought there was a million of us,
+for they scattered too quick, and we had a quiet life for two hours. We
+had got the bridge nearly completed, when there was a hissing sound
+in the air, a streak of smoke, and a powder magazine seemed to explode
+right over us. I suppose I turned pale, for I had never heard anything
+like it. Says I, “Jim, excuse me, but what kind of a thing is that?”
+
+[Illustration: Xcuse me, but what kind of a thing is that? 175]
+
+Jim kept on at work, remarking, O, nothing only they are a shellin on
+us. And so that was a shell. I had read of shells and seen pictures
+of them in _Harper's Weekly_, but I never supposed I would hear one.
+Presently another came, and I wanted to pack up and go away. I looked at
+my pioneers, and they did not pay any more attention to the shells than
+they would, to the braying of mules. I asked Jim if there wasn't more or
+less danger attached to the building of bridges, in the South, and he,
+the old veteran, said:
+
+“Corp, don't worry as long as they hain't got our range. Them 'ere shell
+are going half a mile beyond us, and we don't need to worry. Just let
+em think they are killing us off by the dozen, and they will keep on
+sending shells right over us. If we had a battery here to shell back,
+they would get our range, and make it pretty warm for us. But now it is
+all guess work with them, and we are as safe as we would be in Oshkosh.
+Let's keep right on with the bridge.”
+
+I never can explain what a comfort Jim's remarks were to me. After
+listening to him, I could work right along, driving pegs in the bridge,
+and pay no attention to the shells that were going over us. In fact,
+I lit my pipe and smoked, and began to figure how much it was going to
+cost the Confederacy to “celebrate” that way. It was costing them at the
+rate of fourteen dollars a minute, and I actually found myself laughing
+at the good joke on the rebels. Pretty soon a courier rode up, from the
+general, asking if the shelling was delaying the bridge. I sent word
+back that it was not delaying us in the least; in fact, it was
+hurrying us a little, if anything, and he could send along his command
+twenty-seven minutes sooner than I had calculated, as the bridge would
+be ready to cross on at eight o'clock sharp. At a quarter to eight, just
+as the daylight was fading, and we had lighted pine torches to see to
+eat our supper, an orderly rode up and said the general and staff had
+been looking for me for an hour, and were down at the forks of the
+road. I told the orderly to bring the general and staff right up to the
+headquarters, and we would entertain them to the best of our ability,
+and he rode off. Then we sat down under a tree and smoked and played
+seven up by the light of pine torches, and waited. I was never so proud
+of anything in my life, as I was of that bridge, and it did not seem
+to me as though a promotion to the position of sergeant was going to
+be sufficient recompense for that great feat of engineering. It was as
+smooth as though sawed plank had covered it, and logs were laid on each
+side to keep wagons from running off. I could see, in my mind, hundreds
+of wagons, and thousands of soldiers, crossing safely, and I would be a
+hero. My breast swelled so my coat was too tight. Presently I heard some
+one swearing down the road, the clanking of sabres, and in a few moments
+the general rode into the glare of the torch-light. I had struck an
+attitude at the approach of the bridge, and thought that I would give
+a good deal if an artist could take a picture of my bridge, with me, the
+great engineer, standing upon it, and the head of the column just
+ready to cross. I was just getting ready to make a little speech to the
+general, presenting the bridge to him, as trustee of the nation, for the
+use of the army, when I got a sight of his face, as a torch flared up
+and lit the surroundings. It was pale, and if he was not a madman, I
+never saw one. He fairly frothed at the mouth, as he said, addressing a
+soldier who had fallen in the stream, during the afternoon, and who was
+putting on his shirt, which he had dried by a fire:
+
+“Where is the corporal, the star idiot, who built that bridge?”
+
+I couldn't have been more surprised if he had killed me. This was a nice
+way to inquire for a gentleman who had done as much for the country as
+I had, in so short a time. I felt hurt, but, summoning to my aid all the
+gall I possessed, I stepped forward, and, in as sarcastic a manner as I
+could assume, I said:
+
+“I am the sergeant, sir, who has wrought this work, made a highway in
+twelve hours, across a torrent, and made is possible for your army to
+cross.”
+
+“Well, what do you suppose my army wants to cross this confounded ditch
+for? What business has the army got in that swamp over there? You have
+gone off the main road, where I wanted a bridge built, and built one on
+a private road to a plantation, where nobody wants to cross. This bridge
+is of no more use to me than a bridge across the Mississippi river at
+its source. You, sir, have just simply raised hell, that's what you have
+done.”
+
+Talk about being crushed! I was pulverized. I felt like jumping into the
+stream and drowning myself. For a moment I could not speak, because I
+hadn't anything to say. Then I thought that it would be pretty tough to
+go off and leave that bridge without the general's seeing what a good
+job it was, so I said:
+
+“Well, general, I am sorry you did not give me more explicit
+instructions, but I wish you would get down and examine this bridge. It
+is a daisy, and if it is not in the right place we can move it anywhere
+you want it.”
+
+That seemed to give the general an idea, and he dismounted and examined
+it. He said it was as good a job as he ever saw, and if it was a mile
+down the road, across another bayou, where he wanted to cross, he would
+give a fortune. I told him if he would give me men enough and wagons
+enough, I would move it to where he wanted it, and have it ready by
+daylight the next morning. He agreed, and that was the hardest nights
+work I ever did. Every stick of timber in my pet bridge had to be taken
+off separately, and moved over a mile, but it was done, and at daylight
+the next morning I had the pleasure of calling the general and telling
+him that the bridge was ready. I thought he was a little mean when he
+woke up and rubbed his eyes, and said:
+
+“Now, you are sure you have got it in the right place this time, for if
+that bridge has strayed away onto anybody's plantation this time, you
+die.”
+
+The army crossed all right, and I had the proud pleasure of standing by
+the bridge until the last man was across, when I rode up to my regiment
+and reported to the colonel, pretty tired.{*} He was superintending the
+laying of a pontoon bridge across a large river, a few miles from my
+bridge, and he said:
+
+“George, the general was pretty hot last night, but he was to blame
+about the mistake in the location, and he says he is going to try and
+get you a commission as lieutenant.”
+
+ * A few weeks ago I met a member of my old regiment, who is
+ traveling through the South as agent for a beer bottling
+ establishment in the North. He was with me when we built the
+ corduroy bridge twenty-two years ago. As we were talking
+ over old-times he asked me if I remembered that bridge we
+ built one day in Alabama, in the wrong place, and moved it
+ during the night. I told him I wished I had as many dollars
+ as I remembered that bridge. “Well,” said my comrade, “on
+ my last trip through Alabama I crossed that bridge, and paid
+ two bits for the privilege of crossing. A man has
+ established a toll-gate at the bridge, and they say he has
+ made a fortune. I asked him how much his bridge cost him,
+ and he said it didn't cost him a cent, as the Yankees built
+ it during the war. He said they cut the timber on his land,
+ and when he got out of the Confederate army he was busted,
+ and he claimed the bridge, and got a charter to keep a toll-
+ gate.” My comrade added that the bridge was as sound as it
+ was when it was built. He said he asked the toll-gate keeper
+ if he knew the bridge was first built a mile away, and he
+ said he knew the timber was cut up there, and he wondered
+ what the confounded Yankees went away off there to cut the
+ timber for, when they could get it right on the bank. Then
+ my comrade told the toll-gate keeper that he helped build
+ the bridge, the rebel thanked him, and wanted to pay back
+ the two bits. Some day I am going down to Alabama and cross
+ on that bridge again, the bridge that almost caused me to
+ commit suicide, and if that old rebel-for he must be an old
+ rebel now--charges me two bits toll, I shall very likely
+ pull off my coat and let him whip me, and then as likely as
+ not there will be another war.
+
+I felt faint, but I said, “How can he recommend a star idiot for a
+commissioned office?”
+
+“O, that is all right,” said, the colonel, “some of the greatest idiots
+in the army have received commisssions.” As he spoke the rebels began to
+shell the place where the pontoon bridge was being built, and I went
+hunting for a place to borrow an umbrella to hold over me, to ward off
+the pieces of shell. Then a battery of our own opened on the rebels, so
+near me that every time a gun was discharged I could, feel the roof of
+my head raise up like the cover to a band box. It was the wildest time
+I ever saw. Cavalry was swimming the river to charge the rebel battery,
+shells were exploding all around, and it seemed to me as though if I was
+to lay a pontoon bridge I would go off somewhere out of the way, where
+it would be quiet. Finally my regiment was ordered to swim the river,
+and we rode in. The first lunge my horse made he went under water about
+a mile, and when we came up I was not on him, but catching hold of his
+tail I was dragged across the river nearly drowned, and landed on the
+bank like a dog that has been after a duck I shook myself, we mounted
+and without waiting to dry out our clothes we went into the fight,
+before I could realize it, or back out. Scared! I was so scared it is
+a wonder I did not die. That was more excitement than a county fair.
+Bullets whizzing, shells shrieking, smoke stifling, yelling that was
+deafening. It seemed as though I was crazy. I must have been or I could
+never, as a raw recruit, with no experience, have ridden right toward
+those guns that were belching forth sulphur and pieces of blacksmith
+shop. I didn't dare look anywhere except right ahead. All thought
+of being hit by bullets or anything was completely out of my mind.
+Occasionally something would go over me that sounded as though a buzz
+saw had been fired from a saw mill explosion. Presently the firing on
+the rebel side ceased, and it was seen they were in retreat. I was never
+so glad of anything in my life. We stopped, and I examined my clothes,
+and they were perfectly dry. The excitement and warmth of the body had
+acted like a drying-room in a laundry. Then I laid down under a fence
+and went to sleep, and dreamed I was in hades, building a corduroy
+bridge across the Styx, and that the devil repremanded me for building
+it in the wrong place. When I awoke I was so stiff with rheumatism
+that I had to be helped up from under the fence, and they put me in
+an ambulance with a soldier who had his jaw shot off. He was not good
+company, because I had to do all the talking. And in that way we moved
+towards the enemy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ I am Instructed to Capture and Search a Female Smuggler--
+ I Protest in Vain--The Terrible Ordeal--Beauty Behind the
+ Pulpit--Pills, Plasters, Quinine--The Pathetic Letter--
+ We Meet Under Happier Stars.
+
+It was at this time that the hardest duty that it was my lot to perform
+during my service, fell to me, and the only wonder to me is that I am
+alive today to tell of it. If I ever get a pension it will be on
+account of night sweats, caused by the terrible and trying work that was
+assigned to me. One day the colonel sent for me, and I knew at once that
+there was something unusual in the wind. After seating myself in his
+tent he opened the subject by asking me if I wasn't something of a hand
+to be agreeable to the ladies. I told him, with many blushes, that
+if there was one thing on this earth that I thought was nicer than
+everything else, it was a lady, and that a good woman was the noblest
+work of God. He said he was on to all of that, but it wasn't a good
+woman that he was after. That startled me a little. I had heard the
+officers had a habit of fooling around a good deal with certain females,
+and I told the colonel that any duty that I was assigned to I would
+perform to the best of my poor ability, but I could not go around with
+the girls as officers did, because I couldn't afford it, and it was
+against my principles, anyway. He showed me a picture of a beautiful
+woman, and asked me if I would know her if I saw her again. I told him I
+could pick her out of a thousand. He said she was a smuggler. She had a
+pass from a general, who seemed to be under her influence to a certain
+extent, for some reason, and went in and out of the lines freely. The
+general didn't want to order her arrest, because she would squeal on
+him, but he wanted her arrested all the same, and the idea was to have
+some corporal in charge of a picket post take the responsibility of
+arresting her without orders, refuse to recognize her pass, take the
+quinine and other medicines, and money away from her, and then be
+arrested himself for exceeding his authority. He said they wanted a
+corporal who had every appearance of being a big-headed idiot, and yet
+who knew what he was about, who knew something about women, and who
+could do such a job up in shape, and never let the woman know that the
+general or anybody had anything to do with her arrest. The idea was
+to catch her in the act of smuggling quinine through the lines to the
+rebels, by the act of a fresh corporal who took the matter into his
+own hands, and who claimed that the pass she had from the general was a
+forgery. When the general could, when the woman was brought before
+him, be indignant at the corporal for insulting a woman, and order him
+arrested, and he could also go back on the woman, and have her sent
+away, after which he would release the corporal, and perhaps promote
+him, and all would be well. It was as pretty a scheme as I ever listened
+to, and I consented to do the duty, though I wouldn't do it again for
+a million dollars. The colonel told me to take four men and go to a
+particular place on an unfrequented road, near a school house, and
+put out a picket. The female would be along during the afternoon, on
+horseback, and when she showed her pass, one of the men must take hold
+of her horse and hold him, while I kicked about the pass, made her
+dismount, and searched her for quinine. I turned ashy pale when the
+colonel said that, and I said to him:
+
+“Colonel, for heaven's sake don't compel me to search a woman. I have a
+family at home, and they will hear of it. My political enemies will use
+it against me at home when I run for office, after the war. Let me bring
+her here to your tent, and you search her.”
+
+“No, that would spoil all,” said the colonel. “We want her searched
+right there at the little school house, by a corporal without apparent
+authority, and every last quinine pill taken off of her. If she was
+brought here she would cry, and rave, and we should weaken, because we
+know her, and have been entertained at her house. You are supposed to
+be a heartless corporal, with no sentiment, no mercy, no nothing, just
+a delver after smuggled quinine. Besides, I too, have a family, and I
+don't want to search no females. By the way, one of the general's start
+saw her last night, and drew the cartridges from her revolver, and put
+in some blank cartridges. If the worst comes, she will draw her revolver
+on you, and perhaps fire at you, but there are no balls in her revolver,
+so you needn't be afraid.”
+
+“But suppose she has two revolvers,” I asked, “and one is loaded with
+bullets?”
+
+“I don't think she has,” said the colonel. “But we have to take some
+chances, you know. Now go right along. Treat her like a lady, disbelieve
+everything she says and insist on searching her. The general says she
+wears an enormous bustle, and probably that is full of quinine. Use your
+judgement, but get it all. Pretend to be an ignorant sort of a corporal
+who feels that the success of the war depends on him, act as though you
+outranked the general, and tell her you would not let her pass with that
+quinine if the general himself was present. Just display plenty gall
+and when you have go the quinine, bring the girl here, and I will abuse
+you, and you take it like a little man, and all will be well. If she
+bites and scratches, some of you will have to hold her, but the best
+way will be to argue with her, and persuade her by honied words, to come
+down with the quinine. Go!”
+
+“One word, colonel, before I go,” I said. “About how many men should you
+think it would take to hold this woman? You suggested three, but if one
+holds her horse, it seems to me, from my knowledge of female kicking,
+biting and scratching, that I would need one man for each arm and foot,
+one to hold her head and choke her, if necessary, and one with a roving
+commission to work around where he would be apt to make himself useful.
+What do you say if I take five men!”
+
+“All right, take six,” said the colonel. “One may be disabled, or have
+his jaw kicked off, or something. But don't detail anybody to search
+her. Do that yourself, and do it like a gentleman. And above all things,
+do not let her kanoodle you with soft words and looks of love, because
+she is full of em. If she can't scare you, with her indignation at the
+outrage of arresting and searching her, she will try to capture you and
+make you love her. You must be as firm as adamant. Now hurry up.”
+
+I picked out six men, four of whom were young Americans, rather
+handsome, and very polite, regular mashers.
+
+Then I had an Irishman named Duffy, and a German named Holzmeyer, who
+was a butcher. We went out on the road, to the school house, and I put
+the Irishman on picket, and instructed the German about taking the horse
+by the bridle at the proper time. Then the rest of us got behind the
+school house and waited. For two hours we waited, and I had a chance to
+think over the situation. Here I was, putting down the rebellion, laying
+for a woman, who was loaded. At home, I was a polite man, and full of
+fun, a person any lady might be proud to meet and talk with, but here I
+was expected to do something, for thirteen dollars a month, to put down
+the rebellion, which there was not money enough in the whole state
+of Wisconsin to hire me to do. Was it such a crime to carry a little
+quinine to a sick friend? Suppose a rebel was sick with ague, and I had
+quinine, would I see him shake himself out of his boots and not give him
+medicine? No, I would divide my last quinine powder with him. So would
+any soldier. If it was not treason to give one rebel a quinine powder,
+when he was sick, why should it be treason to take along enough for
+a whole lot of sick rebels? Did our government want to put down the
+rebellion by keeping medicines away from a sick enemy? Were we to gloat
+over the number of rebels who died of disease, that we could save by
+sending them medicines? It seemed to me, if I was in command of the
+army, instead of arresting women for carrying medicine to their sick
+brothers, I would load up a wagon with medicine and send it to them,
+and say, “Here, you fellows, fire this quinine down your necks, and get
+well, and then if you want to fight any more, come out on the field and
+we will give you the best turn in the wheel-house.” It seemed to me that
+would be the way to win the enemy over, and that they would be thankful,
+take the medicine, get well, and then say, “Boys, these Yankees are
+pretty good fellows after all. Let's quit fighting, and call it quits.”
+ But I was not running the war, and had got to obey orders, if I broke
+heartstrings and corset strings. I would have given anything to have
+got out of the job. The idea of arresting a woman and searching her,
+and seeing her cry, and have her think me a hard-hearted wretch, was
+revolting, and I found myself wishing she would take some other road.
+May be she looked like somebody that I knew at home, and may be she had
+a big brother in the Confederate army who would look me up after the war
+and everlastingly maul the life out of me for insulting his sister. I
+made up my mind if anything of that kind happened I would tell on the
+general and the colonel, and get them whipped, too.
+
+“Phat the divil is it coming,” said the Irishman. “Corporal of the
+guaod, the quane of all the South is coming down the road, riding a high
+stepper. Phat will I do, I dunno?”
+
+“Stop her,” I yelled with my teeth chattering.
+
+“Halt right fhere yez are,” said the Irishman, with a look on his face
+that showed he was--well, that he was an Irishman, and had an eye for
+beauty. The German had taken the horse by the bit, and I stepped out
+from behind the school house.
+
+Great heavens, but she was a beautiful woman, and she sat on her horse
+like a statue. I had never seen a more beautiful woman. She was a
+brunette, with large black eyes, and her face was flushed with the
+exercise of riding.
+
+She smiled and showed two rows of the prettiest teeth that ever were put
+into a female mouth, and one ungloved hand, with which she handed me the
+pass had a dimple at every knuckle, and was as white as paper, and soft
+as silk. I know it was soft, because it touched my red, freckled hand
+when I took the pass. I did not blame the general for being in love with
+her, or for wanting to saw off the unpleasant duty of breaking up her
+smuggling, on to a poor orphan like me. She said:
+
+“Captain, I have a pass from the general, to go through the lines at any
+time, unmollested.”
+
+“It is no good,” I said, examining it. “This pass is evidently a
+forgery.”
+
+“But, my dear captain,” she said, with a smile that I would give ten
+dollars for a picture of, “The pass is not a forgery. I have used it for
+months.”
+
+“I am not a dear captain, only a cheap corporal,” I said, with an
+attempt to be at my ease, which I wasn't.
+
+“There has been at least a wagon load of quinine smuggled through the
+lines on this pass, and it has got to stop; you cannot go.”
+
+“The dickens you say,” said she as she drew her revolver, and sung out,
+“let go that horse,” and firing at the German.
+
+“Kritz-dunnerwetter,” said the German, as he got down by the horse's fore
+feet, and held on to the bridle, “vot vor you choot a man ven he holt
+your horse?”
+
+“Madame,” I said, “your revolver is loaded with blank cartridges, and
+you can do no harm. Try another one on the Irishman.”
+
+“Hold on,” said the Irishman, “and don't experiment on a poor man who
+has a wife and six children. Shoot the corporal.”
+
+But I had reached up and taken the revolver from her, and she was weak
+as a kitten. Her nerve had forsaken her, and when I told her to dismount
+she was like a rag, and had to be helped down. If she was beautiful
+before, now that she had started her tear mill, she was ravishingly
+radiant, and I felt like a villain. She leaned on my shoulder, and it
+was the loveliest burden a soldier ever held. I seated her on the steps
+of the schoolhouse, and I thought she would faint, but she didn't. She
+was evidently taken by surprise, and wanted a little time to think it
+over, and form a plan. So did I. As I looked her over, and thought what
+I was expected to do, I wondered where it would be best to commence. She
+began to recover, smiled at me and asked me to have the other soldiers
+go away, so she could talk with me. I wished she wouldn't smile like
+that, because it unnerved me. She asked me what I was going to do with
+her, what caused me to suspect her, if I would not believe her if she
+told me she was not a smuggler, if I had orders to arrest her, and all
+that. I said, “Madame, my orders are to arrest all quinine smugglers, and
+you are one. I am Hawkshaw, the detective. For months I have shadowed
+you, and I know you have concealed about your person a whole drug store.
+In that innocent looking bustle I feel that there is quinine for the
+million. Your heaving bosom contains, besides love for your friends and
+hatred of your enemies, a storehouse of useful medicines, contraband
+of war. In your stockings there is much that would interest the seeker
+after the truth, your corset that fits you so beautifully is liable
+to be full of revolver cartridges, while in your shoes there may be
+messages to the rebels. I shall search you from Genesis to Revelations,
+and may the Lord have mercy on both of us. To begin, please let me
+examine the hat you have on.”
+
+With some reluctance she took off a sort of half-stovepipe hat, and
+covered her face with her handkerchief while I looked into it. I found
+a package of newly printed confederate bonds, and a quantity of court
+plaster. That settled it. She cried a little, and wanted to go into the
+schoolhouse. I went in with her, and two of my soldiers.
+
+I told her that it was a duty that was pretty tough, but it was
+necessary for her to disrobe, as I must have every article she had. She
+cried, and said if I searched her, or molested her, I would do it at
+my peril, and that I wouldn't know how to go to work to take off her
+clothes, anyway, and that I ought to be ashamed of myself. I told her I
+felt as ashamed as any gentleman could, and though I knew little about
+the details of the female apparel, I had some general ideas about
+bustles, polonaise, socks, skirts, and so forth, and while I might be
+awkward, and uncouth, and nervous, as long as there were buttons to
+unbutton, hooks to unhook, and safety-pins to unpin, I thought I could
+eventually get to the quinine, if she would give me time, and I did not
+faint by the wayside, but my idea was that it would save all trouble,
+her modesty would not receive a shock, nor mine either, if she would go
+behind the little pulpit in the schoolhouse, out of sight of us, take
+off her clothes, and hand them over the pulpit to us to examine. She
+said she would die first, besides, she knew we would peek around the
+pulpit at her. I was getting very nervous, and perspiring a good deal,
+and wishing it was over, and I swore, upon my honor, that if she would
+go behind the pulpit and disrobe, she should be as safe from intrusion
+as though she was in her own room. She swore she would not, and I went
+up to her to commence unraveling the mystery. Her dress hooked up in the
+back, which I always _did_ think a great nuisance, and I began to unhook
+it. I wondered that she stood so quietly and let me unhook it, but
+after it was unhooked from the neck to the small of her back, and I was
+wishing I was dead, she said:
+
+“There, now that you have got my dress unhooked, a feat I never could
+accomplish myself, I will go behind the pulpit and take off my dress, if
+you will promise not to look, and that you will help me hook up my dress
+when this cruel quinine war is over.”
+
+I told her by the great Jehosephat, and the continental congress, I
+would help her, and that I would kill anybody who looked, and she went
+behind the schoolhouse pulpit, where a country preacher, very likely,
+preached on Sundays, and bent over out of sight, and it wasn't half a
+minute before she handed the dress over to me. In the pockets I found
+several papers of some kind of medicine, and a few small bottles, sealed
+up with red sealing-wax.
+
+“Now, the bustle, please, I said, in a voice trembling with emotion.
+
+“Take your old bustle,” she said, as she whacked it on the top of the
+pulpit.
+
+Well, if anybody had told me that a bustle could be made to hold stuff
+enough to fill a bushel-basket, I would not have believed it. We filled
+three nose-bags, such as cavalrymen feed horses in, with paper packages
+and bottles of quinine. There were thirty bottles of pills, and salves
+and ointments, and plasters.
+
+“This is panning out first rate,” I said, with less emotion. The emotion
+was somehow getting out of me, and the affair was becoming more of a
+mercantile transaction. It was like a young druggist going from the side
+of his beloved, to the drug store, to take an inventory. “Now hand out
+that other lot.”
+
+She evidently knew what I referred to, for she handed out over the
+pulpit a package just exactly the shape of what I had supposed, in my
+guileless innocence, was a portion of the female form. That is, I had
+suspected it was not all human form, but didn't know. That was also full
+of medicines, of which quinine was the larger part, though there was
+about a pint of gun caps.
+
+“Speaking about stockings,” I said, “please take them off and hand them
+over.”
+
+[Illustration: Two very long stockings, came over the pulpit 185]
+
+She kicked about taking off her shoes and stockings, and said no
+gentleman would compel a lady to do that. I said I would wait about two
+minutes, and then, if it was too much trouble for her to take them off,
+I would come around the pulpit and help. Bless you, I wouldn't have
+gone for the world, as I was already more than satisfied with what I had
+found. She said I needn't trouble myself, as she guessed she could
+take off her shoes without my help. I heard her unlacing her shoes, and
+pretty soon two dainty shoes and two very long stockings, came over the
+pulpit, the heel of one shoe hitting me in the ear. As I picked up the
+shoes I heard the crumpling of a letter behind the pulpit, and I told
+her I must have all the messages she had. She said it was only a letter
+to one she loved. I told her I must have it, and she handed it over. I
+read, “My darling husband,” and handed it back, saying I would not pry
+into her family secrets. She began to cry, and insisted on my reading
+it, which I did. It was to her husband, an officer in the Confederate
+army, and was about as follows:
+
+ “My Darling Husband:--This life of deception is killing me.
+ I want to do all in my power to help our cause, but I am
+ each day more nervous, and liable to detection. The Yankee
+ officers are frequently at our house, and I have to treat
+ them kindly, but it is all I can do to keep from crying, and
+ I am expected to laugh. I fear that I am suspected of
+ smuggling, as the subject is frequently brought up in
+ conversation, and I feel my face burn, though I try hard not
+ to show it. I think of you, away off in Virginia, with your
+ armless sleeve, our children in New Orleans, and I wonder if
+ we will ever be united again. O, God, when will this all
+ end. I have no fault to find with the Federal troops. The
+ officers are very kind and through one fatherly general I am
+ allowed to pass into our lines. I feel that I am betraying
+ his kindness every trip I make, and only the urgent need
+ that our dear boys have for medicines could induce me to do
+ as I do. After this trip I shall go to New Orleans,{*}
+ where I fear Madge is sick, as shew as not at all well the
+ last I heard from her. Pray earnestly, my dear husband,
+ every day, as I do, that this trouble may end soon, some
+ way, and I beg of you not to have a feeling of revenge in
+ your heart towards your enemies, on account of the loss of
+ your arm, as there are thousands of federals similarly
+ afflicted. I shall love you more, and I will wrap your empty
+ sleeve about my neck, and try never to miss the strong arm
+ that was my support. Adieu.
+
+ “Your loving wife.”
+
+That letter knocked me out in one round. I had begun to enjoy the
+unpacking of the smuggled goods, and the discomfiture of my female
+smuggler, but when I read that loving letter, breathing such a
+Christian spirit, and thought of the poor wife-mother behind the pulpit
+unravelling herself, I was ashamed, and I said to myself, “she shall not
+take off another rag. So I handed back the letter and the dress, and all
+of the things she had taken off, and I said:
+
+“Put everything right back onto yourself, and come out at your leisure,
+and we took the medicines and went out of the schoolhouse. Presently
+She came out, and I told her it was my duty to take her back to
+headquarters, but if she had no objections to my taking the letter to
+the general, with the medicines, she could go back to the house where
+she boarded, and I thought if she took the first boat for New Orleans,
+it would be all right, and I would see that the letter was sent through
+the lines to her husband. I helped her on her horse, and I said:
+
+“You can escape. Your horse is better than ours, and though you are a
+prisoner, we would not shoot at you if you tried to escape. I hope your
+prayers will have the effect you desire, and that the trouble will soon
+be over. I hope you will and the children well, and that the husband
+will be spared to be a comfort to you.”
+
+She bowed her head, as she sat in the saddle, and the look of defiance
+which she had shown, was gone, and one of thankfulness, peace, hope,
+purity, took its place. She handed me the letter, and asked:
+
+“Can I go?”
+
+I told, her she was free to go. She turned her horse; towards town,
+touched him with the whip, and he was; away like the wind. I stood
+for two minutes, watching her, when I was recalled to my senses by the
+Irishman, who said:
+
+“Fhat are we to do wid the quinane and the gun caps?” We packed the
+smuggled goods in our saddle-bags and elsewhere, and rode back to
+headquarters. The colonel and the general were in the colonel's tent,
+and I took the “stuff” in and reported all the occurrences.
+
+“But where is the lady?” inquired the general, after reading the letter
+and wiping his eyes.
+
+“As we were about to start back,” said I, “after taking the smuggled
+goods from her, she gave her horse the whip, and rode away. I had no
+orders to shoot a woman, and I let her go.”
+
+“Thank God,” said the general. “That's the best way,” said the colonel.
+“She will quit smuggling and go to her children.”
+
+ *Eighteen months after the lady rode away from me, “leaving”
+ her quinine, I was in New Orleans, to be mustered in as
+ Second Lieutenant, having received a commsssion. I had
+ bought me a fine uniform, and thought I was about as cunning
+ a looking officer as ever was. I was walking on Canal
+ street, looking in the windows, and finally went into a
+ store to buy some collars. A gentleman came in with a gray
+ uniform on, and one sleeve empty. He was evidently a
+ Confederate officer. He asked me if I did not belong to a
+ certain cavalry regiment, and if my name was not so and so.
+ I told him he was correct. He told me there was a lady in an
+ adjoining store that wanted to see me. I did not know a
+ soul, that is, a female soul, in New Orleans, but I went
+ with him. Any lady that wanted to see me, in my new uniform,
+ could see me. As we entered the store a lady left two little
+ girls and rushed up to me, threw her arms around my neck and
+ --(say, does a fellow have to tell everything, when he writes
+ a war history?) Well, she was awfully tickled to see me, and
+ she was my smuggler, the Confederate was her husband, and
+ the children were hers. The officer was as tickled as she
+ was, and they compelled me to go to their house to dinner,
+ and I enjoyed it very much. We talked over the arrest of the
+ “female smuggler,” and she said to her husband, “Pa, it
+ was an awfully embarrassing situation for me and this
+ Yankee, but he treated me like a lady, and the only thing I
+ have to find fault about, is that he forgot to help me hook
+ up my dress, and I rode clear to town with it unhooked.” The
+ Confederate had been discharged at the surrender, and I was
+ on my way to Texas, to serve another year, hunting Indians.
+ I left them very happy, and as I went out of their door she
+ wrapped his empty sleeve around her waist, drew the children
+ up to her, and said, “Mr. Yankee, may you always be very
+ happy.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ The Female Smuggler Episode Makes Me Famous--I am Sent Forth
+ in Women's Clothes--My Interview with the Bad Corporal--A
+ Fist Fight--The Rebellion is Put Down Once More--I Reveal My
+ Identity.
+
+It was not twenty-four hours before the news spread all over my
+regiment, as well as several other regiments, that a certain corporal
+had captured a female smuggler, while on picket, had searched her on the
+spot and found a large quantity of quinine and other articles contraband
+of war, and there was a general desire to look upon the features of a
+man, not a commissioned officer who had gall enough to search a female
+rebel, from top to toe, without orders from the commanding officer, and
+I was constantly being visited by curiosity-seekers, who wanted to know
+all about it. Of course it was not known that I had been ordered to do
+as I did, and they all wondered why I was not made an example of; and
+many privates, corporals and sergeants wondered if they would get out
+of it so easily if they should do as I did. There were a great many
+women passing through the lines, and I am sure many soldiers decided
+that the first woman who attempted to pass through would get searched.
+It was talked among the men, and for a day or two a lady would certainly
+have stood a poor show to have rode up to a picket post with a pass to
+go outside. The soldiers had so long been away from female society
+that it would have been a picnic for them to have captured a suspicious
+looking woman who was pretty. I was pointed out, down town, as the
+man who captured the woman loaded with quinine, and women with rebel
+tendencies would look at me as though I was a bold, bad man that ought
+to be killed, and they acted as though they would like to eat me. But
+I tried to appear modest, and not as though I had done anything I was
+particularly proud of. The next evening the colonel sent for me and said
+he had got something for me to do that required nerve. I told him that
+my experience in putting down the rebellion had shown me that the whole
+thing required nerve. That I had been on my nerve until my nerves were
+pretty near used up, and I asked him if he couldn't let some of the
+other boys do a little of the nervous work. He said he had one more
+woman job that he would like to have me undertake.
+
+I was sick of the whole woman business, and told him I did not want to
+be aggravated any more; that arresting women and searching them, was
+nothing but an aggravation, and I wanted to be let out. He said in this
+case I would not have to arrest anybody of the female persuasion, but
+that I would have to be arrested, and that it would be the greatest joke
+that ever was. I told him if there was any joke about it he could count
+me in. Then he went on to say that my success with the female smuggler
+had excited all the boys to emulate my deeds, and they were all laying
+for a female smuggler, and that he feared it wouldn't be safe for a
+woman to be caught on the picket line. There had got to be a stop put to
+it, and he and the general had thought of a scheme. He said there was
+a corporal in one of the companies who had made his brags that he would
+arrest the first female that came to his picket post, and search her for
+smuggled goods, and they wanted to make an example of him. He asked me
+if I wasn't something of a boxer, and I told him for a light weight I
+was considered pretty good. Then he asked me if I could ride on a side
+saddle. I told him I could ride anything, from a hobby to an elephant.
+He said that was all right, and I would fill the bill. Then he went
+into details. I was to go to the town with him, and be fitted out with
+a riding habit of the female persuasion, false hair, side saddle, and
+a bustle as big as a bushel basket. That I was to ride out on a certain
+road, where the corporal would be on picket with two men. He would stop
+me, and search me, I was to cry, and beg, and all that, but finally
+submit to be searched, and after the corporal had got started to search
+me, I was to haul off and give him one “biff” in the nose, another if it
+was necessary to knock him down, paste one of the men in the ear, if he
+showed any impudence, jump on my horse and come back to town, and leave
+the corporal to find his mistake.
+
+I didn't half like the idea of dressing up in such a masquering
+costume, but of course if I could help put down the rebellion that
+way, it was my duty to do it, and besides, I had a grudge against that
+corporal, anyway, because he called me a “jay” and a “substitute,” and
+a “drafted man,” when I came to the regiment. The colonel took me to the
+residence of a lady friend who rode on horseback a good deal, and as he
+let her into the secret, she helped fix me up. All I had to do was
+to remove my cavalry jacket, and she put the dress on over my head. I
+always supposed they put on these dresses the same as men put on pants,
+by walking into them feet first, but she said they went over the head.
+I felt as though my pants were going to show, but she gave me some
+instructions about keeping the dress down, and I began to feel a good
+deal like a woman. The dress fit me around the waist as though it was
+made for me, and when it was all buttoned up in front I felt stunning.
+She and the colonel made a bustle out of newspapers, and a small sofa
+cushion of eider down was placed where it would do the most good. After
+the dress was all fixed, she got a wig and put it on my head, and a hat,
+with a feather in it, and then pinned a veil on the hair, so it reached
+down to my rose-bud mouth. Then she took a powder arrangement and
+powdered my face, put on a pair of long gauntlets which she usually
+wore, and told me to look in the glass. When I looked into the glass I
+almost fainted. The deception was so good that it would have fooled the
+oldest man in the world.
+
+The colonel said he was almost inclined to fall in love with me himself,
+and he did put his arm around me and squeeze me, but I didn't notice
+any particular feeling, such as I did when his lady friend was fooling
+around me. That was different. Well, I was an inveterate smoker at that
+time, so I took my pipe and a bag of tobacco, and put it in a pocket of
+the dress, and some matches, and we went out doors. The colonel took
+my tiny number eight boot in his hand and tossed me lightly into the
+saddle, then he mounted his own horse and we rode around the suburbs
+of the town, so I could get used to the side-saddle. I got him to stop
+behind a fence and let me have a smoke out of my pipe, and then I told
+him I was ready. He gave me a pass, and told me to go out on the road
+the corporal was on, and if he let me pass out of the lines to go on
+to a turn in the road, where a squad of our men were on a scout, and
+to report to the officer in charge, who would bring me in all right, by
+another road, but if the corporal attempted to search me, to do as I had
+been told to do. After I had knocked the corporal down, if I would give
+a yell, the officer who was outside would come and arrest us all
+and bring us to headquarters, where the colonel could reprimand the
+corporal, etc. I threw a kiss to the colonel and started out on the
+road. It was about a mile to the picket post, and I had time to reflect
+on my position. This was putting down the rebellion at a great rate.
+I was an ostensible female, liable to be insulted at any moment, but I
+would maintain the dignity of my alleged sex if I didn't lay up a cent.
+I put on a proud, haughty look, full of purity and all that, and as I
+neared the picket post, I saw the corporal step out into the road, and
+as I came up he told me to halt. I halted, and handed him my pass, but
+he said it was a forgery, and ordered me to dismount. I turned on the
+water, from my eyes, and began to cry, but it run off the bad corporal
+like water off a duck.
+
+“None of your sniveling around me,” said the vile man. “Get down off
+that horse.”
+
+“Sir,” I said, with well feigned indignation, “you would not molest a poor
+girl who has no one to defend her. Let me go I prithe.”
+
+I had read that, “Let me go I prithe,” in a novel, and it seemed to
+me to be the proper thing to say, though I couldn't hardly keep from
+laughing.
+
+“Prithe nothing,” said the corporal. “What you got in that bustle?”
+ said the corporal.
+
+“Bustle,” I said, blushing so you could have touched a match to my face.
+“Why speak of such a thing in the presence of a lady. I want you to let
+me go or I shall think you are real mean, so now. Please, Mr. Soldier,
+let me go,” and I smiled at him and winked with my left eye in a manner
+that ought to have paralyzed a marble statue. “O, what you giving us,”
+ said the vile man. “Get down off that horse and let me go through you
+for quinine. Do you hear?”
+
+I was afraid if he helped me down he would see my boots or pants, which
+would be a give-away. So I gathered my dress in my hands and jumped down
+in pretty good shape. I had sparred with the corporal several times in
+camp, and I knew I could knock him out easy, and I made up my mind that
+the first indignity he offered me I would just “lam him one. It was all
+I could do to keep from pasting him in the nose, when I first landed on
+the ground, but I had a part to play, and it would not do to go off half
+cocked. So I looked sad, pouted my lips, and wondered if he would kiss
+me, and feel the beard where I had been shaved.
+
+“Now, shuck yourself,” said he.
+
+“Do what? I asked, with apparent alarm.
+
+“Peel,” said he, as he put his hand on my back,
+
+“Sir,” I said with my eyes flashing fire, and my heart throbbing, and
+almost bursting with suppressed laughter, “you are insolent. I am a poor
+orphan, unused to contact with coarse men. I have been raised a pet, and
+no vile hand has ever been laid upon me until you just touched me. If
+you touch me I shall scream. I shall call for help. What would you do,
+you wicked, naughty man.”
+
+“Unbutton,” said he as he pointed to my dress in front. “Call for help and
+be darned. You are a smuggler, and I know it.”
+
+“O, my God,” said I, with a stage accent, “has it come to this? Am I to be
+robbed of all I hold dear, by a common Yankee corporal. Has a woman no
+rights which are to be respected? Am I to be murdered in cold bel-lud,
+with all my sins upon my head. O, Mr. Man, give me a moment to utter a
+silent prayer.”
+
+“O, hush,” said he, “and hold up your hands. There ain't going to be any
+bel-lud. All I want is to go through you for quinine.”
+
+“Spare me, I beseech you,” I said, as I held up my hands, and got in
+position to knock him silly the first move he made. “I am no walking
+drug store, I am a good girl.” Around my awful form I draw an imaginary
+circle. “Step but one foot within that sacred circle, and on thy head I
+launch the cu-r-r-r-se of Rome, Georgia.”
+
+[Illustration: Gave a yell that could have been heard a mile 203]
+
+“Let up on this Shakespeare, and get to busiess, said the corporal, as
+he reached up to my neck to unbutton the top button of my dress. He was
+looking at my dress, and wondering what he would find concealed within,
+when I brought down both fists and took him with one in each eye, with a
+force that would have knocked a mule down. He fell backwards, and gave a
+yell that could have been heard a mile. Then one of his men started for
+me and I knocked him in the ear, and he fell beside the corporal. The
+other man was going to come for his share, when the officer who had been
+stationed outside the lines rode up with his men and asked what was
+the matter. The soldier-who was not hit said I had assassinated the
+corporal. The officer said that was wrong, and women who would go around
+killing off the Union army with their fists ought to be arrested. Just
+then the corporal raised up on his elbow and tried to open two of the
+blackest eyes that ever were seen. Turning to the officer, he said:
+
+“That woman is a smuggler, and she struck me with a brick house!
+
+“Ancient female,” said the officer, looking at me and laughing, “why do
+you go around like a besum of destruction, wiping out armies, one man at
+a time. You ought to be ashamed of myself, and you should be muzzled.
+
+“Don't call me a female,” said I, in my natural hoarse voice. “That is
+something that I will not submit to.”
+
+The corporal looked up at me with one eye, the other being almost closed
+from the effects of the fall of the brick house. He looked as though
+he smelled woolen burning, as the old saying is. The officer said he
+guessed he would take us all to headquarters, and inquire into the
+affair. The corporal said that there was nothing to inquire into. That
+this female came along and insisted on going outside of the lines, and
+when he asked her, in a polite manner, to show her pass, she struck him
+down with a billy, or some weapon she had concealed about her person.
+
+“You are not much of a liar, either,” said I, jumping on to my horse
+astraddle, like a man.
+
+The corporal looked at me as though he would sink, but he maintained
+that he had done nothing that should offend the most fastidious female.
+The corporal and his men mounted, and we all started for headquarters. I
+rode beside the officer, and the corporal was right behind me. After we
+had got started I pulled out my pipe, filled it, lit a match as soldiers
+usually do, though it was quite unhandy, and began to smoke. As the
+tobacco smoke rolled out under my veil, from the alleged rosebud mouth,
+the scene was one that the corporal and the most of the men had never
+thought of, though the officer was “on” all right enough. The corporal
+could hardly believe his eyes, or one eye, for the other one had gone
+closed. I was a fine enough looking female as we rode through the
+regiment, except the pipe, which I puffed along just as though I had no
+dress on. As we rode up to the colonel's tent, it was noised around that
+a scout had captured a daring female rebel, and she had almost killed a
+corporal, and the whole regiment gathered around the colonel's tent.
+
+“What is the trouble, corporal?” asked the colonel of my black-eyed
+friend.
+
+“Well this woman wanted to go outside, and when I objected, she knocked
+me down with a rail off a fence.”
+
+“And you offered her no indignity?” the colonel asked.
+
+“Not in the least,” said the corporal.
+
+Then the colonel asked me to tell my story, which I did. The corporal
+said it was a lie, but the other man, whom I did not hit, said I was
+right.
+
+“Can you disrobe, before these soldiers, without getting off your
+horse?” asked the colonel, looking at me.
+
+I told him I could and he told me to proceed. I pulled the hat and hair
+off first and appeared with my red hair clipped short. I then I threw
+the dress over my head, and appeared in my cavalry pants, all dressed,
+except my jacket and cap, which the colonel handed me, having brought it
+from the house where I put on the dress. I put on the jacket, wiped the
+powder off my face, and the corporal said:
+
+“It's that condemned raw recruit.”
+
+All the boys took in the transformation scene, and then the colonel told
+them that he wanted this to be a lesson to all of them, to let all women
+who came to the picket posts, or anywhere, who had passes, alone, and
+not think because one woman had been caught smuggling, that all
+women were smugglers. In fact he wanted every soldier to mind his own
+business. Then he dismissed us, and we went to our quarters. On the way,
+the one-eyed corporal touched me on the arm, and he said:
+
+“Old man, you played it fine on me, but I will get even with you yet.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ Military Attire--My Suit of Government Clothes--The Memory
+ of Them Saddens Me Still--The Dreadful March--The Adjutant
+ Appoints Me to Make Out a Monthly Report--The Report Is an
+ Astonishing One.
+
+About this time I received the greatest shock of the whole war. I had
+prided myself upon my uniform that I brought from home, which was made
+by a tailor, and fit me first rate. It was of as good cloth and as well
+made as the uniforms of any of the officers, and I was not ashamed to go
+out with a party of officers on a little evening tear, because there was
+nothing about my uniform to distinguish me from an officer, except the
+shoulder-straps, and many officers did not wear shoulder-straps at all,
+except on dress parade or inspection. I took great pleasure in riding
+around town, wherever the regiment was located, looking wise, and posing
+as an officer. But the time came when my uniform, which came with me as
+a recruit, became seedy, and badly worn, and it was necessary to discard
+it, and draw some clothing of the quartermaster. That is a trying time
+for a recruit. One day it was announced that the quartermaster sergeant
+had received a quantity of clothing, and the men were ordered to go and
+draw coats, pants, hats, shoes, overcoats, and underclothing, as
+winter was coming on, and the regiment was liable to move at any time.
+Something happened that I was unable to be present the first
+forenoon that clothing was issued, and, when I did call upon the
+quartermaster-sergeant, there was only two or three suits left, and they
+had been tumbled over till they looked bad. I can remember now how my
+heart sank within me, as I picked up a pair of pants that was left. They
+were evidently cut out with a buzz-saw, and were made for a man that
+weighed three hundred. I held them up in installments, and looked at
+them. Holding them by the top, as high as I could, and the bottom of the
+legs of the pants laid on the ground. The sergeant charged the pants to
+my account, and then handed me a jacket, a small one, evidently made
+for a hump-backed dwarf. The jacket was covered with yellow braid. O, so
+yellow, that it made me sick. The jacket was charged to me, also. Then
+he handed me some undershirts and drawers, so coarse and rough that
+it seemed to me they must have been made of rope, and lined with
+sand-paper. Then came an overcoat, big enough for an equestrian statue
+of George Washington, with a cape on it as big as a wall tent. The hat I
+drew was a stiff, cheap, shoddy hat, as high as a tin camp kettle, which
+was to take the place of my nobby, soft felt hat that I had paid five
+dollars of my bounty money for. The hat was four sizes too large for me.
+Then I took the last pair of army shoes there was, and they weighed as
+much as a pair of anvils, and had raw-hide strings to fasten them with.
+Has any old soldier of the army ever forgotten the clothing that he drew
+from the quartermaster? These inverted pots for hats, the same size all
+the way up, and the shoes that seemed to be made of sole leather, and
+which scraped the skin off the ankles. O, if this government ever does
+go to Gehenna, as some people contend it will, sometime, it will be as
+a penalty for issuing such ill-fitting shoddy clothing to its brave
+soldiers, who never did the government any harm. I carried the lot of
+clothing to my tent, feeling sick and faint. The idea of wearing them
+among folks was almost more than I could bear to think of. I laid them
+on my bunk, and looked at them, and “died right there.” That hat was
+of a style older than Methuselah. O, I could have stood it, all but the
+hat, and pants, and shoes, but they killed me. While I was looking at
+the lay-out, and trying to make myself believe that my old clothes that
+I brought with me were good enough to last till the war was over, though
+the seat of the pants, and the knees, and the sleeves of the coat were
+nearly gone, an orderly came through the company and said the regiment
+would have a dismounted dress parade at sundown, and every man must wear
+his new clothes. Ye gods! that was too much! If I could have had a week
+or ten days to get used to those new clothes, one article at a time, I
+could have stood it, but to be compelled to put the pants, and jacket,
+shoes and hat on all at once, was horrible to think of, and if I had
+not known that a deserter was always caught, and punished, I would have
+deserted. But the clothes must be put on, and I must go out into the
+world a spectacle to behold. Believing that it is better to face the
+worst, and have it over, I put on the pants first. If I could ever meet
+the army contractor who furnished those pants to a government almost in
+the throes of dissolution, I would kill him as I would an enemy of the
+human race. There was room enough in those pants for a man and a horse.
+Yes, and a bale of hay. There were no suspenders furnished to the men,
+and how to keep the pants from falling from grace was a question, but I
+got a piece of tent rope, cut a hole in the waist band, and run the rope
+around inside, and tied it around my waist, puckering the top of the
+pants at proper intervals.
+
+When I think of those pants now, after twenty-two years, I wonder that I
+was not irretrievably lost in them. I would have been lost if I had not
+stuck out of the top. But when I looked at the bottoms of the pants I
+found at least a foot too much. If I had tied the rope around under my
+arms, or buttoned them to my collar button, they would have been too
+long at the bottom. I finally rolled them up at the bottom, and they
+rolled clear up above my knees. But how they did bag around my body.
+There was cloth enough to spare to have made a whole uniform for the
+largest man in the regiment. At that time I was a slim fellow, that
+weighed less than 125 pounds, and there is no doubt I got the largest
+pair of pants that was issued in the whole Union army. I only had
+a-small round mirror in my tent, so I could not see how awfully I
+looked, only in installments, but to a sensitive young man who had
+always dressed well, any one can see how a pair of such pants would
+harrow up his soul. If the pants were too large, you ought to have
+seen the jacket. The contractor who made the clothes evidently took the
+measure of a monkey to make that jacket. It was so small that I could
+hardly get it on. The sleeves were so tight that the vaccination marks
+on my arm must have shown plainly. The sleeves were too short, and my
+hands and half of my forearm riding outside. The body was so tight that
+I had to use a monkey-wrench to button it, and then I couldn't breathe
+without unbuttoning one button. It was so tight that my ribs showed so
+plain they could be counted.
+
+I stuffed some pieces of grain sack in the shoes, and got them on, and
+tied them, put on that awful hat, the bugle sounded to fall in, and I
+fell out of my tent towards the place of assembly, with my carbine. If
+we had been going out mounted, I could have managed to hide some of the
+pants around the saddle, if I could have got my shoe over the horse's
+back, but to walk out among men, stubbing my shoes against each other,
+and interfering and knocking my ankles off, was pretty hard. The company
+was about formed when I fell out of my tent, and when the men saw me
+they snickered right out. I have heard a great many noises in my time
+that took the life out of me.
+
+The first shell that I heard whistle through the air, and shriek, and
+explode, caused my hair to raise, and I was cold all up and down my
+spine. The first flock of minnie bullets that sang about my vicinity
+caused my flesh to creep and my heart's blood to stand still. Once I was
+near a saw mill when the boiler exploded, and as the pieces of boiler
+began to rain around me, I felt how weak and insignificant a small,
+red-headed, freckled-faced man is. Once I heard a girl say “no,” when I
+had asked her a civil question, and I was so pale and weak that I could
+hardly reply that I didn't care a continental whether she married me
+or not, but I never felt quite so weak, and powerless, and ashamed, and
+desperate as I did when I came out, falling over myself and the men of
+my company snickered at my appearance. The captain held his hand over
+his face and laughed. I fell in at the left of my company, and the
+captain went to the right and looked down the line, and seeing my pants
+out in front about a foot, he ordered me to stand back. I stood back,
+and he looked at the rear of the line, and I stuck out worse behind, and
+he made me move up. Finally he came down to where I was and told me to
+throw out my chest. I tried to throw it out, and busted a button off,
+but the pressure was too great, and my chest went back. Finally the
+captain told me I could go to the right of the company and act as
+orderly sergeant on dress parade. He said as our company was on the
+right of the regiment, they could dress on my pants, and I wouldn't be
+noticed.
+
+What I ought to have done, was to have committed suicide right there,
+but I went to the right, trying to look innocent, and we moved off to
+the field for dress parade. Everything went on well enough, except that
+in coming to a “carry arms,” with my carbine, from a present, the muzzle
+of the carbine knocked off my stiff hat, and the stock of the carbine
+went into the pocket of my pants and run clear down my leg, before I
+could rescue it. A file closer behind me picked up my hat and put it on
+me, with the yellow cord tassels in front, and before I could fix it,
+the order came, “First sergeants to the front and center, march.” Those
+who are familiar with military matters, know that at dress parade the
+first sergeants march a few paces to the front, then turn and march to
+the center of the regiment, turn and face the adjutant, and each salutes
+that officer in turn, and reports, “Co. ----, all present or accounted
+for.” That was the hardest march I ever had in all of my army
+experience. I knew that every eye of every soldier in the six companies
+at the right of the regiment, would be on my pants, and the officers
+would laugh at me, and the several hundred ladies and gentlemen from
+town, who were back of the colonel, witnessing the dress parade, would
+laugh, too. A man can face death, in the discharge of his duty, better
+than he can face the laughter of a thousand people. I seemed to be the
+only soldier in the whole regiment who had not got a pretty good fit
+in drawing his new clothes, but I was a spectacle. As I marched to the
+front, with the other eleven first sergeants, and stood still for them
+to dress on me, I felt as though the piece of tent rope with which I
+had fastened my large pants up, was becoming untied, and I began to
+perspire. What would become of me if that rope _should_ become untied?
+If that rope gave way, it seemed to me it would break up the whole army,
+stampede the visitors, and cause me to be court-martialed for conduct
+unbecoming any white man. I made up my mind if the worst came, I would
+drop my carbine and grab the pants with both hands, and save the day. At
+the command, right and left face, I turned to the left, and I could feel
+the pants begin to droop, as it were, so I took hold of the top of them
+with my left hand, and at the command, march, I started for the center.
+
+I had got almost past my own company, and there had been no general
+laugh, but when I passed an Irishman, named Mulcahy, I heard him whisper
+out loud to the man next to him, “Howly Jasus, luk at the pants.” Then
+there was a snicker all through the company, which was taken up by the
+next, and by the time I got to the center, and “front faced,” a half of
+the regiment were laughing, and the officers were scolding the men and
+whispering to them to shut up. Just then I felt that the one hand that
+was trying to hold the pants up, was never going to do the work in the
+world, so I dropped my carbine behind me, said, “Co. E, all present or
+accounted for,” and stood there like a stoughton bottle, holding the
+waist-band of those pants with both hands, as pale as a ghost. I could
+see that the adjutant and the colonel and two majors, were laughing, and
+many of the visitors were trying to keep from laughing. I think I lived
+seventy years in five minutes, while the other eleven orderlies were
+reporting, and when the order came to return to our posts, I whispered
+to the next orderly to me, and told him if he would pick up my carbine
+and bring it along, I would die for him, and he picked it up. The dress
+parade was soon finished, but instead of marching the companies back to
+their quarters, they were ordered to break ranks on the parade ground,
+and for an hour I was surrounded with officers and men, who laughed at
+me till I thought I would die.
+
+The colonel and adjutant finally told me that it was a put up job on me,
+to make a little fun for the boys. They said I had often had fun at the
+expense of the other boys, and they wanted to see if I could stand a
+joke on myself, and they admitted that I had done it well. If I had
+known it was a joke, I could have lived through it better. The adjutant
+said he had got a little work for me that evening, and the next morning
+I could take my clothes down town to the post quartermaster, and
+exchange them for a suit that would fit me. I went to his tent, and
+he showed me a lot of company reports, and wanted me to make out a
+consolidated monthly report, for the assistant adjutant general of the
+brigade. I had done some work for him before, and he left a blank signed
+by himself and colonel, and told me to make out a report and send it
+to the brigade headquarters, as he was going down town with a party of
+officers. I made up my mind that I would get even with the adjutant and
+the colonel, so I took a pen and filled out the blank. My idea was to
+put all the figures in the wrong column, which I did, and send it to
+the brigade headquarters. The next morning I went down town with the
+quartermaster, and got a suit of clothes to fit me, and on the way back
+to camp I passed brigade headquarters, when I saw our adjutant looking
+quite dejected. He called to me and said he had been summoned to brigade
+headquarters to explain some inaccuracies in the monthly report sent in
+the night before, and he wanted me to stay and see what was the trouble,
+but I acted as though if there was a mistake, it was an error of the
+head rather than of the feet. Pretty soon the old brigade adjutant, who
+was a strict diciplinarian, and a man who never heard of a joke, came
+in from the general's tent, with his brow corrugated. They had evidently
+been brooding over the report.
+
+“I beg your pardon, adjutant,” said he, with a preoccupied look, “but in
+your report I observe that your regiment contains forty-three enlisted
+men, and nine hundred and twenty-six company cooks. This seems to me
+improbable, and the general cannot seem to understand it.”
+
+The adjutant turned red in the face, and was about to stammer out
+something, when the adjutant general continued:
+
+“Again, we observe that your quartermaster has on hand nine hundred
+bales of condition powders, which is placed in your report as rations
+for the men, that you only have eleven horses in your regiment fit
+for duty, that you have the same number of men, while the commissioned
+officers foot up at nine hundred and twenty-six. Of your sick men
+there seems to be plenty, some eight hundred, which would indicate an
+epidemic, of which these headquarters had not been informed previously.
+In the column headed “officers detailed on other duty” I find four
+“six-mule teams,” and one “spike team of five mules.” In the column
+“officers absent without leave” I find the entry “all gone off on a
+drunk.” This, sir, is the most incongruous report that has ever been
+received at these head-quarters, from a reputably sober officer. Can
+this affair be satisfactorily explained, at once, or would you prefer to
+explain it to a court-martial?”
+
+“Captain,” said the adjutant in distress, and perspiring freely, “my
+clerk has made a mistake, and placed a piece of waste paper that has
+been scribbled on, in the envelope, instead of the regular report. Let
+me take it, and I will send the proper report to you in ten minutes.”
+
+The adjutant general handed over my report, after asking how it happened
+that the signature of the colonel and adjutant was on the ridiculous
+report, and the adjutant and the red-headed recruit went out, mounted
+and rode away. On the way the adjutant said, “I ought to kill you on the
+spot. But I wont. You have only retaliated on us for playing them pants
+on you. I hate a man that can't take a joke.”
+
+Then we made out a new report, and I took it to headquarters, and all
+was well. But the adjutant was not as kitteny with his jokes on the
+other fellows for many moons.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ My Experience as a Sick Man--Jim Thinks I Have Yellow Fever--
+ What I Suffered--A Rebel Angel--I am Sent to the Hospital.
+
+Up to this time I had never been sick a day in my life, that is, sick
+enough to ache and groan and grunt, and lay in bed. At home I had
+occasionally had a cold, and I was put to bed at night, after drinking a
+quart of ginger tea, and covered up with blankets in a warm room, and I
+was fussed over by loving hands until I got to sleep, and in the morning
+I would wake up as fresh as a daisy, with my cold all gone. Once or
+twice at home I had a bilious attack that lasted me almost twenty-four
+hours; but the old family doctor fired blue pills down me, and I came
+under the wire an easy winner. I did have the mumps and the measles, of
+course before enlisting, but the loving care I was given brought me
+out all right, and I looked upon those little sicknesses as a sort of
+luxury. The people at home would do everything to make sick experiences
+far from bitter memories. It was getting along towards Christmas of my
+first year in the army, and though it was the Sunny South we were in, I
+noticed that it was pretty all-fired cold. The night rides were full
+of fog and malaria; and one morning I came in from an all-night ride
+through the woods and swamps, feeling pretty blue. The mud around my
+tent was frozen, and there was a little snow around in spots. As I laid
+down in my bunk to take a snooze before breakfast, I noticed how awfully
+thin an army blanket was. It was good enough for summer, but when winter
+came the blanket seemed to have lost its cunning. I was again doing duty
+as a private soldier, having learned that my promotion to the position
+of corporal was only temporary. I had been what is called a “lance
+corpora,” or a brevet corporal. It seemed hard, after tasting of the
+sweets of official position, to be returned to the ranks, but I had to
+take the bitter with the sweet, and a soldier must not kick. I had never
+laid down to sleep before without dropping off into the land of dreams
+right away, but now, though I was tired enough, my eyes were wide open
+and I felt strange. At times I would be so hot that I would throw the
+blanket off, and then I would be so cold that it seemed as though I
+would freeze. I had taken a severe cold which had settled everywhere,
+and there was not a bone in my body but what ached; my lungs seemed of
+no use; I could not take a long breath without a hacking cough, and
+I felt as though I should die. It was then that I thought of the warm
+little room at home and the ginger tea, and the soaking of my feet in
+mustard water and wrapping my body in a soft flannel blanket, and the
+kindly faces of my parents, my sister, my wife--everybody that had been
+kind to me. I would close my eyes and imagine I could see them all,
+and open my eyes and see my cold little tent and shiver as I thought of
+being sick away from home. I laid for an hour wishing I was home again;
+and while alone there I made up my mind I would write home and warn all
+the boys I knew against enlisting. The thought that I should die there
+alone was too much, and I was about to yell for help when my tent mate,
+who had been on a scout, came in. He was a big green Yankee, who had a
+heart in him as big as a water pail, but he wasn't much, of a nurse.
+He came in nearly frozen, threw his saddle down in a corner, took out a
+hard tack and began to chew it, occasionally taking a drink of water out
+of a canteen. That was his breakfast.
+
+“Well, I've got just about enough of war,” said he, as he picked his
+teeth with a splinter off his bunk, and filled his pipe and lit it.
+“They can't wind up this business any too soon to suit the old man. War
+in the summer is a picnic, but in winter it is wearin on the soldier.”
+
+Heretofore I had enjoyed tobacco smoke very much, both from my own pipe
+and Jim's, but when he blew out the first whiff of smoke it went to
+my head and stomach and all up and down me, and I yelled, in a hoarse,
+pneumonia sort of voice:
+
+“Jim, for God's sake don't smoke. I am at death's door, and I don't want
+to smell of tobacco smoke when St. Peter opens the gate.”
+
+“What, pard, you ain't sick,” said Jim, putting his pipe outside of the
+tent, and coming to me and putting his great big hand on my forehead, as
+tender as a woman.
+
+“Great heavens! you have got the yellow fever. You won't live an hour.”
+
+That was where Jim failed as a nurse. He made things out worse than they
+were. He, poor old fellow, thought it was sympathy, and if I had let
+him go on he would have had me dead before night. I told him I was all
+right. All I had was a severe cold, on my lungs, and pneumonia, and
+rheumatism, and chills and fever, and a few such things, but I would be
+all right in a day or two. I wanted to encourage Jim to think I was not
+very bad off, but he wouldn't have it. He insisted that I had typhoid
+fever, and glanders, and cholera. He went right out of the tent and
+called in the first man he met, who proved to be the horse doctor. The
+horse doctor was a friend of mine, and a mighty good fellow, but I had
+never meditated having him called in to doctor me. However, he felt
+of my fore leg, looked at my eyes, rubbed the hair the wrong way on my
+head, and told Jim to bleed me in the mouth, and blanket me, and give
+me a bran mash, and rub some mustang liniment on my chest and back.
+I didn't want to hurt the horse doctor's feelings by going back on his
+directions, but I told him I only wanted to soak my feet in mustard
+water, and take some ginger tea. He said all right, if I knew more
+about it than he did, and that he said he would skirmish around for some
+ginger, while Jim raised the mustard, and they both went out and left me
+alone. It seemed an age before anybody come, and I thought of home all
+the time, and of the folks who would know just what to do if I was
+there. Pretty soon Jim came in with a camp kettle half full of hot
+water, and a bottle of French mixed mustard which he had bought of the
+sutler. I told him I wanted plain ground mustard, but he said there
+wasn't any to be found, and French mustard was the best he could do. We
+tried to dissolve it in the water, but it wouldn't work, and finally Jim
+suggested that he take a mustard spoon and plaster the French mustard
+all over my feet, and then put them to soak that way. He said that
+prepared mustard was the finest kind for pigs feet and sausage, and he
+didn't know why it was not all right to soak feet in. So he plastered
+it on and I proceeded to soak my feet. I presume it was the most
+unsuccessful case of soaking feet on record. The old camp kettle was
+greasy, and when the hot water and French mustard began to get in their
+work on the kettle, the odor was sickening, and I do not think I was
+improved at all in my condition. I told Jim I guessed I would lay down
+and wait for the ginger tea. Pretty soon the horse doctor came in with a
+tin cup full of hot ginger tea. I took one swallow of it and I thought I
+had swallowed a blacksmith's forge, with a coal fire in it. I gasped and
+tried to yell murder. The horse doctor explained that he couldn't get
+any ginger, so he had taken cayenne pepper, which, he added, could knock
+the socks off of ginger any day in the week. I felt like murdering the
+horse doctor, and I felt a little hard at Jim for playing French mustard
+on me, but when I come to reflect, I could see that they had done the
+best they could, and I thanked them, and told them to leave me alone
+and I would go to sleep. They went out of the tent and I could hear them
+speculating on my case. Jim said he knew I had diabetis, and lung fever
+combined, with sciatic rheumatism, and brain fever, and if I lived
+till morning the horse doctor could take it out of his wages. The horse
+doctor admitted that my case had a hopeless look, but he once had a
+patient, a bay horse, sixteen hands high, and as fine a saddle horse
+as a man ever threw a leg over, that was troubled exactly the same as
+I was. He blistered his chest, gave him a table-spoonful of condition
+powders three times a day in a bran mash, took off his shoes and turned
+him out to grass, and in a week he sold him for two hundred and fifty
+dollar. I laid there and tried to go to sleep listening to that talk.
+Then, some of the boys who had heard that I was sick, came along and
+inquired how I was, and I listened to the remarks they made. One of them
+wanted to go and get some burdock leaves, and pound them into a pulp,
+and bind them on me for a poultice. He said he had an aunt in Wisconsin
+who had a milk sickness, and her left leg swelled up as big as a post,
+and the doctors tried everything, and charged her over two hundred
+dollars, and never did her any good, and one day an Indian doctor came
+along and picked some burdock leaves and fixed a poultice for her,
+and in a week she went to a hop-picker's dance, and was as kitteny as
+anybody, and the Indian doctor only charged her a quarter. Jim was for
+going out for burdock leaves at once, for me, but the horse doctor told
+him I didn't have no milk sickness. He said all the milk soldiers got
+was condensed milk, and mighty little of that, and he would defy the
+world to show that a man could get milk sickness on condensed milk. That
+seemed to settle the burdock remedy, and they went to inquiring of Jim
+if he knew where my folks lived, so he could notify them, in case I was
+not there in the morning. Jim couldn't remember whether it was Atchison,
+Kan., or Fort Atkinson, Wis., but he said he would go and ask me, while
+I was alive, so there would be no mistake, and the poor fellow, meaning
+as well as any man ever did, came in and asked for the address of my
+father, saying it was of no account, particularly, only he wanted to
+know. I gave him the address, and then he asked me if he shouldn't get
+me something to eat. I told him I couldn't eat anything to save me.
+He offered to fry me some bacon, and make me a cup of coffee, but the
+thought of bacon and coffee made me wild. I told him if he could make
+me a nice cup of green tea, and some milk toast, or poach me an egg and
+place it on a piece of nice buttered toast, and give me a little currant
+jelly, I thought I could swallow a mouthful. Jim's eyes stuck out when
+I gave my order, which I had done while thinking of home, and a tear
+rolled down his cheek, and he went out of the tent, saying, “All right,
+pard.” I saw him tap his forehead with his finger, point his thumb
+toward the tent, and say to the boys outside:
+
+“He's got 'em! Head all wrong! Wants me to make him milk toast, poached
+eggs, green tea, and currant jelly. And I offered him _bacon_. Sow belly
+for a sick man! There isn't a loaf of bread in camp. Not an egg within
+five miles. And milk! currant jelly! Why, he might as well ask for
+Delmonico's bill of fare, but we have got to get 'em. I told him he
+should have em, and, by mighty! he shall. Here, Mr. Horse-doctor, you
+stay and watch him, and I and Company D here will saddle up and go out
+on the road to a plantation, and raid it for delicacies.
+
+“You bet your life,” says the Company “D” man, and pretty soon I heard a
+couple of saddles thrown on two horses, and then there was a clatter of
+horses feet on the frozen ground. I have thought of it since a good many
+times, and have concluded that I must have dropped asleep. Any way, it
+didn't seem more than five minutes before the tent nap opened and Jim
+came in.
+
+“Come, straighten out here, now, you red-headed corpse, and try that
+toast,” said he, as he came in with a piece of hard-tack box for a tray,
+and on it was a nice china plate, and a cup and saucer, an egg on toast,
+and a little pitcher of milk, and some jelly.
+
+“Jim,” I said, tasting of the tea, which was not much like army tea,
+“you never made this tea. A woman made that tea, or I'm a goat. And that
+toast was toasted by a woman, and that egg was poached by a woman. Where
+am I?” I asked, imagining that I was home again.
+
+“You guessed it the first time, pard,” said Jim, as he threw the blanket
+over my shoulders, as I sat up on the bunk to try and eat. “The whole
+thing was done by the rebel angel.”
+
+“Rebel angel, Jim; what are you talking about? There ain't any rebel
+angels,” and I became weak and laid down again.
+
+“Yes, there is a rebel angel, and she is a dandy,” said Jim, as he
+covered me up. “She is out by the fire making milk toast for you. You
+see, I went out to the Brown plantation, to try and steal an egg, and
+some bread, and milk, but I thought, on the way out, as it was a case
+of life and death, the stealing of it might rest heavy on your soul when
+you come to pass in your chips, so I concluded to go to the house and
+ask for it. There was a young woman there, and I told her the red-headed
+corporal that captured the female smuggler, was dying, and couldn't eat
+any hard-tack and bacon, and I wanted to fill him up on white folks food
+before he died, so he could go to heaven or elsewhere, as the case might
+be, on a full stomach, and she flew around like a kernel of pop-corn
+on a hot griddle, and picked up a basket of stuff, and had the nigger
+saddle a mule for her, and she came right to the camp with me, and said
+she would attend to everything. She's a thoroughbred, and don't you make
+no mistake about it.”
+
+I must have gone to sleep when Jim was talking about the girl, for I
+dreamed that there was a million angels in rebel uniforms, poaching eggs
+for me. Pretty soon I heard a rustle of female clothes, and a soft, cool
+hand was placed on my forehead, my hair was brushed back, a perfumed
+handkerchief wiped the cold perspiration from my face, and I heard the
+rebel angel ask Jim what the doctor said about me. Jim told her what the
+horse doctor had said about curing a horse that had been sick the
+same as I was, and then she asked if we had not sent for the regular
+doc-doctor. Jim said we had not thought of that. She asked what had been
+done for me, and Jim told her about the French mustard episode, and the
+cayenne pepper tea. I thought she laughed, but it had become dark in
+the tent, and I couldn't see her face, but she told Jim to go after the
+regimental surgeon at once, and Jim went out. The angel asked me how I
+felt, and I told her I was all right, but she said I was all wrong. I
+thanked her for the trouble she had taken to come so far, and she said
+not to mention it. She said she had a brother who was a prisoner at
+the-North, and if somebody would only be kind to him if he was sick,
+she would be well repaid. She said the last she heard of him he was a
+prisoner of war at Madison, Wis., and she wondered what kind of people
+lived there, away off on the frontier, and if they could be kind to
+their enemies. That touched me where I lived, and I raised up on my
+elbow, and said:
+
+“Why bless your heart, Miss, if your brother is a prisoner in old Camp
+Randlll, in Madison, he has got a pic nic. That town was my home before
+I came down here on this fool job. The people there are the finest in
+the world. All of them, from old Grovernor Lewis, to the poorest man in
+town, would set up nights with a sick person, whether he was a rebel or
+not. Your brother couldn't be better fixed if he was at home. The idea
+of a man suffering for food, clothing, or human sympathy in Madison,
+would be ridiculous. There is not a family in that town,” I said,
+becoming excited from the feeling that any one doubted the humanity of
+the people of Wisconsin, “but would divide their breakfast, and their
+clothes, and their money, with your brother, egad, I wish I was there
+myself. I will be responsible for your brother, Miss.”
+
+She told me to lay down and be quiet, and not talk any more, as I was
+becoming wild. She said she was glad to know what kind of people lived
+there, as she had supposed it was a wilderness. In a few minutes
+Jim came back and said the doctor was playing poker with some other
+officers, in a captain's tent, and he didn't dare go in and break up the
+game, but he spoke to the doctor's orderly, and he said I ought to take
+castor oil. That didn't please the little woman at all, and she told
+Jim to go to the poker tent and tell the doctor to come at once, or she
+would come after him. It was not long before the doctor came stooping in
+to my pup tent. His idea was to have all sick men attend surgeon's call
+in the morning, and not go around visiting the sick in tents. He asked
+me what was the matter, and I told him nothing much. Then he asked me
+why I wasn't at surgeon's call in the morning. I told him the reason was
+that I was wading in a swamp, after the rebels that ambushed some of
+our boys the day before. “Then you've got malaria,” said he. “Take some
+quinine tonight, and come to surgeon's call in the morning.”
+
+[Illustration: She gave him a piece of her mind 229]
+
+The little woman, the rebel angel, got her back up at the coolness of
+the doctor; and she gave him a piece of her mind, and then he called for
+a candle, and he examined me carefully. When he got through, he said:
+
+“He is going to have a run of fever. He must be sent to the hospital.
+Jim, go tell the driver to send the ambulance here at once, and you,
+Jim, go along and see that this fellow gets to the hospital all right.
+He can't live here in a tent, and I doubt if he will in the hospital.”
+
+That settled it. In a short time the ambulance came, and I got in and
+sat on a seat, and the rebel angel got in with me, and we rode seven
+miles to the hospital, over the roughest road a sick man ever jolted
+over, and I would have died, if I could have had my own way about it,
+but the little woman talked so cheerfully that when we arrived at the
+great building, I should have considered myself well, only that my mind
+was wandering. All I remember of my entrance to the hospital was that
+when we got out of the ambulance Jim was there on his horse, leading the
+mule belonging to the angel. Some attendants helped me up stairs, and
+down a corridor, where we met two stretchers being carried out to the
+dead house with bodies on them, and I had to sit in a chair and wait
+till clean sheets could be put on one of the cots where a man had just
+died. The little woman told me to keep up my courage, and she would come
+and see me often, Jim cried and said he would come everyday, a man said,
+“your bed is ready, No. 197,” and I laid down as No. 197, and didn't care
+whether I ever got up again or not. I just had breath enough left to bid
+the angel good bye, and tell Jim to see her safe home. Jim said, “You
+bet your life I will,” and the world seemed blotted out, and for all I
+cared, I was dead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ My Varied Experiences in the Hospital--The Doctor Seems Sure
+ of My Death--I Suggest the Postponement of My Funeral--I Get
+ Very Sick of Gruel--I Go Back to my Regiment.
+
+Let's see, last week I wound up in the hospital. When Jim, my old
+comrade, and the rebel angel, left me, I to all intents and purposes. I
+supposed I was going to sleep, but after I got well enough to know what
+was going on, I found that for about ten days I had been out of my
+head. It was not much of a head to get out of, but however small and
+insignificant a man's head is, he had rather have it with him, keeping
+good time, than to have it wandering around out of his reach. When I
+“come to,” as the saying is, it only seemed as though I had been asleep
+over night, but I dreamed more than any able-bodied man could have done
+in one night. I was what they call un-. conscious, but I did a great
+deal of work during that period of unconsciousness. One thing I did,
+which I was proud of, was to wind up the war. I arranged it so that all
+of the bullets that were fired on each side, were made of India-rubber,
+like those little toy balloons, and war was just fun. The boys on both
+sides would fire at each other and watch the rubber balloons hit the
+mark, and explode, and nobody was hurt, and everybody laughed. There was
+no more blood. Everything was rubber and wind. There was no one killed,
+no legs shot off, and the men on each side; when not fighting with
+the harmless missiles, were gathered together, blue and gray, having
+a regular picnic, and every evening there was a dance, the rebels
+furnishing the girls. In my delirium I could see that my rebel angel was
+dancing a good deal with the boys, and frequently with my comrade, Jim,
+and I was pretty jealous. I made up my mind that I wouldn't speak to
+either of them again. I would watch my balloon battles with a good deal
+of interest, and think how much better and safer it was to fight that
+way. Every day, when the battle was over, and the two sides would get
+together for fun, I noticed when the bugle sounded for battle again,
+that on each side the boys were terribly mixed, there being about as
+many blue-coated Yankees among the gray rebels as there were rebels
+among the Yankees, and after awhile it seemed as though all were dressed
+alike, in a sort of “blue-gray,” and then they disappeared, and I
+recovered my senses. Frequently, during my delerium and unconsciousness,
+I would feel my mouth pulled open, and hear a spoon chink against my
+teeth, and I would taste something bad going down my neck, and then my
+head would buzz as though a swarm of bees had taken up their abode where
+my brain used to be. Sometimes I would hear the clanking of a saber and
+a pair of Mexican spurs, and feel a great big hand on my head, and I
+knew that was Jim, but I couldn't move a muscle, or say a word. “I guess
+he's dead, ain't he doc?” I would hear in Jim's voice, and the doc would
+say there was a little life left, but not enough, to swear by. Then the
+doc would say, “You better come in about 10:30 tomorrow, as we bury
+them all at that hour, and I guess he'll croak by that time.” I tried to
+speak and tell them that I was alive, and that I was going to get well,
+but it, wasn't any use. I was tongue-tied. Again I would hear the sweet
+rustle of a dress, and feel a warm hand on my head, and I knew that the
+rebel angel had rode her mule to town to see me. Then I would try
+hard to tell her that I was going to write a letter to the governor of
+Wisconsin, and ask him to look out particularly for her brother, who was
+a rebel prisoner at Madison, and take care of him if he was sick, but
+I couldn't say a word, and after smoothing my hair a little while, she
+would give my cheek three or four pats, just as a mother pats her child,
+and she would go away.
+
+One morning, a little after daylight, I woke up and looked around the
+ward of the hospital. My eyes were weak, and I was hungry as a bear. I
+had to try two or three times before I could raise my hand to my head,
+and when I felt of my head it seemed awfully small. I could feel my
+cheek bones stick out so that you could hang your hat on them. My cheeks
+were sunken, and my fingers were like pipe-stems. I wondered how a man
+could change so in one night. I saw two or three fellows over at the
+other end of the room, and I thought I would get up and go over there
+and have some fun with them. I wanted to know where my horse was, and
+where I was. I tried to raise up and couldn't get any further than on my
+elbow. From that position I looked around to see what was going on, and
+tried to attract the attention of some attendant. Finally, I saw four
+fellows bringing a stretcher along towards my cot. They had evidently
+been told by the doctor that I would be dead in the morning, and having
+confidence in the word of the professional man, had come to take me to
+the dead house, before the other sick man was awake. As they came up to
+the foot of my cot and sat the stretcher down, I thought I would play
+a joke on them. I pulled the sheet over my face, and laid still. One of
+the men said, “Two of us can lift it, as it is thinner than a lathe.” To
+be considered dead, when I was alive, was bad enough, but to be called
+“it” was too much. I felt one of the men take hold of my feet, and then
+I threw the sheet off my face and in a hoarse voice I said, “Say, Mr.
+Body-snotcher, you can postpone the funeral and bring me a porter-house
+steak and some fried potatoes.” Well, nobody ever saw a couple of men
+fall over themselves and turn pale, as those fellows did. Before I
+had given my order for breakfast, the two men had fallen back over
+the stretcher and the two others were backing on as though a ghost had
+appeared. But finally they came toward me and I convinced them that I
+was not dead. They seemed hurt to know that I was still alive, and one
+of them went off after the doctor, to enter a complaint, I supposed.
+The doctor soon came and he was the only one that seemed pleased at my
+recovery. He ordered some sort of gruel for me, but wouldn't let me have
+meat and things. I took the gruel under protest but it did strengthen
+me. I told the doctor I wanted him to send for my horse, because I
+wanted to go out with the boys, but he said he guessed I wouldn't go out
+with the boys very soon. He said I might sit up in bed a little while,
+and when I did so I found that I did not have my clothes on, but was
+clothed in a hospital night-gown, which was also used for a shroud for
+burial when a fellow died. He said Jim and the girl would be in about 10
+o clock, as he had sent for them, and some of my comrades. I told him
+if I was going to entertain company, and give a reception, I wanted my
+pants on, as I was sure no gentleman could give a reception successfully
+without pants. The doctor seemed sort of glad to see me taking an
+interest in human affairs again, and so he let me put my pants and
+jacket on. I got a butcher to shave me, and when ten o clock came I
+looked quite presentable for a skeleton. I was sitting up in bed, with a
+little round zinc frame looking-glass, noting the changes in my personal
+appearance, when a door opened and Jim entered, dressed up in his best,
+with the rebel angel on his arm, and followed by six boys from the
+regiment. They came in as solemn as any party I ever saw. The angel
+looked as sad as I ever saw anybody, and I thought she had probably
+heard that her brother was dead. It did not occur to me that they
+had come to attend my funeral. They stood there by the door, in that
+helpless manner that people always stand around at a funeral, waiting
+for the master of ceremonies to tell them that they can now pass in the
+other room and view the remains. I finally caught Jim looking my way,
+and I waved a handkerchief at him. He gave me one look, and jumped over
+two cots and came up to me with tears in his eyes, and a package in his
+hand, and said, “Pard, you ain't dead worth a cent,” and then he hugged
+me, and added, “but there ain't enough left of you for a full size
+funeral.” Then he unrolled the package he had in his hand, and dropped
+on the bed four silver-plated coffin handles. By that time the girl,
+and the six boys had seen me, and they came over, and we had a regular
+visit. They were all surprised to find me alive, as they had been
+notified that I was on my last legs, and would be buried in the morning,
+and the captain had detailed the six boys to act as pall-bearers and
+fire a salute over the grave, while Jim and the girl were to act as
+mourners.
+
+“Well, it saves ammunition,” said Jim. “But how be I going to get these
+coffin handles off my hands. There is no dependence to be placed on
+doctors, anyway. When that doctor appointed this funeral, we thought he
+knew his business, and I told the angel, say I, 'My pard ain't going
+to be buried without any style, in one of those pine boxes that ain't
+planed, and has got slivers on.' So I hired the hospital coffin-maker
+to sand-paper the inside and outside of a box, and black it with
+shoe-blacking, and I went to a store down town and bought these handles.
+Of course, pard, I am glad you pulled through, and all that, but I want
+to say to you, if you had croaked in the night, and been ready to bury
+this A. m., you would have had a more stylish outfit than anybody,
+except officers, usually get in this army, and the angel and I would
+have been a pair of mourners that would have slung grief so your folks
+to home would have felt proud of you.”
+
+The angel was tickled to see me alive, and suggested to Jim and the
+boys, that it was easy to talk a fellow to death after he had been so
+sick, and told them to go back to camp, and she would stay with me all
+day. So the boys shook hands with me, and Jim had an attendant to roll
+my cot up to a window, so I could see my horse when they rode away. The
+boys got on their horses and Jim led my horse, and I could see that my
+pet had been fixed up for the occasion. He had the saddle on, and it was
+draped with black, a pair of boots were fastened in the stirrups, and
+my carbine was in the socket. The idea was to have my horse, with empty
+boot and saddle tied behind the wagon that took me to the cemetery where
+soldiers wind up their career. It was not a cheerful thing to look at,
+and to think of, but it did me good to see the old horse, and the boys
+ride away in good health, and happy at my escape, and it encouraged me
+to make every effort to get well, so I could ride with the gang. The
+rebel angel re-mained with me till almost night, and superintended my
+eating. No person who has never had a fever, can appreciate the appetite
+of a person when the fever “turns.” I wanted everything that was ever
+eaten, and roast beef or turkey was constantly in my mind. As anything
+of that kind would have made use for Jim's coffin-handles, I had to put
+up with soups and gruels. The doctor thought that this thin gruel was
+good enough, but it didn't seem to hit the spot, and so the girl asked
+the doctor if he thought nice gumbo soup and a weak milk punch wouldn't
+be pretty good for me. He said it would, but nobody in the hospital
+could make gumbo soup, or milk punch. She said she could, and she told
+me not to eat a thing until she came back, and she would bring me a dish
+fit for the gods. She said she knew an old colored woman in town, who
+cooked for a lady friend of hers, who had some gumbo, and the lady had
+a little brandy that was seventy years old, but she said the lady was a
+rebel, and I must overlook that. I told her I didn't care, as I had got
+considerably mashed on all the rebels I had met personally. She went out
+with a smile that would have knocked a stronger man than I was silly,
+and I turned over and took a nap, the first real sleep I had had in a
+week. I woke up finally smelling something that was not gruel. O, I had
+got so sick of gruel. The angel handed me a glass of milk punch,
+and told me to drink a swallow and a half. I have drank a great many
+beverages in my lifetime, but I never swallowed anything that was as
+good as the milk punch that rebel girl made for me. It seemed to go
+clear to my toes, and I felt strong. Then she gave me a small soup plate
+and told me to taste of the gumbo. I had never tasted gumbo soup before,
+but I had no difficulty in mastering it. No description can do gumbo
+soup justice, or explain to a person who has never tasted it the rich
+odor, and palatable taste. The little that I ate seemed to make a man of
+me again, instead of the weak invalid. Since then I have been loyal
+to southern gumbo soup, and have always eaten it wherever it could be
+obtained, and I never put a spoonful of it to my lips without thinking
+of the rebel girl in the hospital, who prepared that dish for me. If
+I ever become a glutton, it will be on gumbo soup, and if I am ever a
+drunkard, it will be a milk-punch drunkard, and the soup and the punch
+must be prepared in the South.
+
+Well, my experience after that, in the hospital, was about the same as a
+hundred thousand other boys in blue, only few of the boys had such care,
+and such food. The girl kept me supplied with gumbo soup and milk punch
+until I could eat heartier food, and in a couple of days I got so I
+could walk around the hospital. At home I had never been much of a hand
+to be around with the sick, but experience had been a good teacher, and
+I found that going around among the boys, and talking cheerfully did
+them good and me too. I found men from my own regiment, that I did not
+know had been sick. The custom was to make just as little show about
+sending sick men to the hospital, as possible, hence they were often
+packed off in the night, and the first their comrades would know of
+their illness would be a detail to bury them, or a boy would suddenly
+appear in his company, looking pale and sick, having been discharged
+from the hospital. If the men had known how many of their comrades were
+sent to the hospital, it would have demoralized the well ones. For ten
+days I visited around among the sick men, telling a funny story to
+a group here and and cheering them up, and writing letters home for
+fellows that were too weak to write. I learned to lie a little bit in
+writing letters for the boys. One young fellow who had his leg taken
+off, wanted me to write to his intended, and tell her all about it, how
+the leg was taken off, and how he was sick and discouraged, and would
+always be a cripple and a burden on his friends, etc. I wrote the letter
+entirely different from the way he told me. I spoke of his being wounded
+in the leg but that the care he received had made him all right, and
+that he would probably soon have a discharge, and be home, and make them
+all happy. I thought to myself that if she loved him as a girl ought to,
+that a leg or two short wouldn't make any difference to her, and there
+was no use of harrowing up her feelings in advance, and that he could
+buy a cork leg before he got home, and may be she would never find it
+out. I might have been wrong, but when he got an answer from that letter
+he was the happiest fellow I ever saw in this world, and he arranged
+at my suggestion, to stop over in New York and get a cork leg before he
+went home. I have never learned whether the girl ever found out that he
+had a cork leg, but if she did, and blames anybody, she can lay it to
+me. Lots of the boys that wrote letters for wanted to detail all of
+their calamities to their mothers and sisters and sweet-hearts, but I
+worded the letters in a funny sort of way, so that the friends at home
+would not be worried, and the answers the boys got would please them
+very much. The hardest work I had was a couple of days writing letters
+for a doctor, to relatives of boys who had died, detailing the sickness,
+death and burial, and notifying friends that they could obtain the
+personal effects of the deceased, clothing, money, pipes, knives, etc.,
+by sending express charges. It always seemed to me that if I had been
+running the government I would have paid the express charges on the
+clothing of the boys who had died, if I didn't lay up a cent. Finally I
+got well enough to go back to my regiment, and one day I showed up at
+my company, and the first man I met saluted me and said, “Hello,
+Lieutenant.” I told him he did wrong to joke a sick man that way, and
+I went on to find Jim. He was in our tent, greasing his shoes, and
+he looked up with a queer expression on his face and said, “Hello,
+Lieutenant.”
+
+“Look a here.” I said, as I grasped his greasy hand, “what do you fellows
+mean by calling me names, I have never done anything to deserve to be
+made a fool of. Pard, what ails you anyway?”
+
+“Didn't they tell you,” said Jim, as he scraped the mud on his other
+shoe with a stick. “The colonel has sent your name to the governor of
+Wisconsin to be commissioned as second Lieutenant of the company. All
+the boys are tickled to death, and they are going to whoop it up for you
+when your commission comes. But this pup tent will not be good enough
+for you then, and old Jim will have to pick up another pard. You won't
+have to cook your bacon on a stick when you get your commsssion, and you
+can drink out of a leather covered flask instead of a flannel covered
+canteen. But by the great horn spoons I shall love you if you get to be
+a Jigadier Brindle,” and the old pard looked as though he wanted to cry
+like a baby.
+
+“Jim,” I said, “I think the fellows are giving us taffy, and that there
+is nothing in this Lieutenant business. But if there is, you will be my
+pard till this cruel war is over, and don't you forget it,” and I went
+along the company street towards the colonel's tent, leaning on a cane,
+and all the boys congratulated me, and I felt like a fool.
+
+“Lieutenant, I am glad to see you back,” said the Colonel, as I entered
+his tent, and he showed it in his face. “What is the foolishness,
+colonel? I asked. The boys are all guying me. Can't I stay a private?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+ Thanksgiving Dinner with the “Rebel Angel”--She Gives Me a
+ World of Good Advice--Can an Officer be Detailed To Go And
+ Shovel Dirt?--My First Day As A Commissioned Officer.
+
+The last chapter of this history wound up in my interview with the
+colonel, in which he told me that what the boys had said was true, and
+that I had a right to to be called “Lieutenant.” He said there was a
+vacancy in the commissioned officers of my company, caused, by some
+discrepancy in regard to the ownership of a horse which an officer had
+sold as belonging to him, when investigation showed that there was
+“U. S.” branded on the horse. The colonel said he had looked over the
+company pretty thoroughly, and while I was not all that he could desire
+in an officer, there were less objections to me than to many others, and
+he had recommended the governor of our state to commission me. He said
+he didn't want me to run away with the idea that my promotion from
+private to a commissioned office was for any particular gallantry, or
+that I was particularly entitled to promotion, but I seemed the most
+available. It was true, he said, that I had done everything I had been
+told to do, in a cheerful manner, and had not displayed any cowardice,
+that he knew of, though I had often admitted to him that I was a coward.
+He said he thought few men knew whether they were cowards or not, until
+they got in a tight place, and that most men honestly believed they were
+cowards, but they didn't want others to know it, and they took pains to
+conceal the fact. He said he had rather be considered a coward than a
+dare-devil of bravery, for if he flunked when a chance come to show his
+metal, it wouldn't be thought much of, and if he pulled through, and
+made a decent record for bravery, he would get a heap of credit. He
+said he believed it took a man with more nerve to do some things he
+had ordered me to do, than it did to get behind a tree and shoot at the
+enemy, and he was willing to take his chances on me. He congratulated
+me, and some of the other officers did the same.
+
+I was invited to sit into a game of draw poker with some of the
+officers. I pleaded that I was not sufficiently recovered from my
+sickness to play poker, and I went back to my tent to talk with Jim. I
+was thinking over the new responsibilities that were about to come to
+me, and figuring on the salary. A hundred and fifty dollars a month!
+It is cruel to raise the salary of a poor devil from thirteen dollars a
+month to a hundred and fifty. I wondered how in the world the government
+was ever going to get that much out of me. Certainly I couldn't do any
+more than I had been doing towards crushing the rebellion for thirteen
+dollars. And what would I do with so much money? In my wildest dreams of
+promotion I had never hoped to be a commissioned officer. I had thought
+sometimes, a week or two after I enlisted, that if I was a general I
+could put down the rebellion so quick the government would have lots of
+nations left on its hands to spoil, but a few months active service had
+taken all that sort of nonsense out of me, and I had been contented as
+a private. But here I was jumped over everybody, and made an officer
+unbeknown to me, It made me dizzy. I was not very strong anyway, and
+this thing had come upon me suddenly I was thinking of the magnificent
+uniform I would have, and the fancy saddle and bridle, and the regular
+officer's tent, with bottles of whiskey and glasses, when Jim asked me
+if I wouldn't just hold that frying-pan of bacon over the fire, while
+he cooked some coffee. He said we would just eat a little to settle our
+stomachs, and then go out to Thanksgiving dinner.
+
+“Thanksgiving dinner,” I said. “What are you talking about?”
+
+“Don't you know,” said Jim, “to-day is Thanksgiving? The 'angel' told
+me last night to bring you out to the plantation to-day, and I was going
+after you at the hospital if you hadn't showed up. She has received a
+letter from her brother, who is a rebel prisoner at Madison, and he says
+a Yankee hotel-keeper at Madison, that you had written to, had called
+at the pen where they were kept, and had brought him a lot of turkey and
+fixings, and offered to send him a lot for Thanksgiving, so the rebel
+boys could have a big feed, and he says he is well and happy, and going
+to be exchanged soon. And she wants us to come out and eat turkey and
+'possum. I had rather eat gray tom-cat than possum, but I told her we
+would come. So we will eat a little bacon and bread, and ride out.”
+
+“Well, all right Jim,” I said. “We will go, but in my weak state I can't
+be expected to eat possum. If there is anything of that kind to be eat,
+Jim, you will have to eat it. However, I will do anything the rebel
+angel asks me to do,” I added, remembering her kindness to me when I was
+sick.
+
+The ride to the plantation, after several weeks confinement, was better
+than medicine, and I enjoyed every step my proud horse took. The animal
+acted as though he had been told of my promotion, but it was plain to me
+that he acted proud, because he had been resting during my sickness. It
+was all I could do to keep Jim alongside of me. He would fall back every
+little while and try to act like an orderly riding behind an officer.
+I had to discipline him before he would come up alongside like a
+“partner.” I mention this Thanksgiving dinner in the army, in order to
+bring in a little advice the rebel girl gave me, which I shall always
+remember. We arrived at the old plantation house where the girl and her
+mother and some servants were living, waiting for the war to close, so
+the men folks could come back. The old lady welcomed us cordially, the
+girl warmly and the servants effusively. The dinner was good, though
+not elaborate, except the possum. That was elaborate, and next to gumbo
+soup, the finest dish I ever tasted. After we had got seated at the
+table, the old lady asked a blessing, and it was more like a prayer.
+She asked for a blessing upon all of the men in both armies, and made us
+feel as though there was no bitterness in her heart towards the enemies
+of her people. During the dinner Jim told of my promotion, and the
+circumstance was commented on by all, and after dinner the rebel angel
+took me one side, and said she had got a few words of advice to give me.
+She commenced by saying:
+
+“Now that you are to be a commissioned officer, don't get the big head.
+During this war, we have had soldiers near us all the time, and I have
+seen some splendid soldiers spoiled by being commsssioned. Nine out
+of ten men that have received commissions in this locality, have been
+spoiled. I am a few years older than you, and have seen much of the
+world. You are a kind hearted man, and desire to treat everybody well,
+whether rich or poor, yankee or confederate. If you let this commission
+spoil you, you are not worthy of it. You will naturally feel as though
+you should associate with officers entirely, but you will find in them
+no better companions than you have found in the private soldiers, and I
+doubt if you will find as true friends. Do not, under any circumstances,
+draw away from your old friends, and let a barrier raise up between you
+and them. My observation teaches me that the only difference between the
+officers and men in the Union army, is that officers get more pay for
+doing less duty; they become dissipated and fast because they can better
+afford it, they drink more, put on style, play cards for money, and
+think the world revolves around them, and that they are indispensible
+to success, and yet when they die, or are discharged for cause, private
+soldiers take their place and become better officers than they did,
+until they in turn become spoiled. I can think of no position better
+calculated to ruin a young man than to commission him in a cavalry
+regiment. Now take my advice. Do not run in debt for a new uniform and
+a silver mounted sword, and don't put a stock of whisky and cigars into
+your tent, and keep open house, because when your whisky and cigars are
+gone, those who drank and smoked them will not think as much of you as
+before, and you will have formed habits that will illy prepare you for
+your work. You will not make any friends among good officers, and you
+will lose the respect of the men who have known you when you were one of
+them, but who will laugh at you for getting the big head and going back
+on those who are just as good as you are, but who have not yet attained
+the dignity of wearing shoulder straps. I meet officers every day, who
+were good soldiers before they were raised from privates, and they show
+signs of dissipation, and have a hard look, leering at women, and trying
+to look _blasé_. They try to act as near like foreign noblemen who are
+officers, as they can, from reading of their antics, but Americans
+just from farms, workshops, commercial pursuits, and the back woods
+and country villages of the north, are not of the material that foreign
+officials are made of, and in trying to imitate them they only show
+their shallowness. Do not, I beg of you, change one particle from what
+you have been as a private soldier, unless it is to have your pants fit
+better, and wear a collar. Of course, you will be thrown among officers
+more than you have before. Imitate their better qualities, and do not
+compete with them in vices. Always remember that when a volunteer army
+is mustered out, all are alike. The private, who has business ability,
+will become rich and respected, after the war, while the officer, who
+has been promoted through favoritism, and who acquires bad habits, will
+keep going down hill, and will be glad to drive a delivery wagon for the
+successful private, whom he commanded and snubbed when he held a proud
+position and got the big head. Now, my convalescent red-headed yankee,
+you have the best advice, I know how to give a young man who has struck
+a streak of luck. Go back to your friends, and may God bless you.”
+
+Well, I had never had any such advice as that before, and as Jim and me
+rode back to camp that Thanksgiving evening, her words seemed to burn
+into my alleged brain. I could see how easy it would be for a fellow to
+make a spectacle of himself. What did a commission amount to, anyway,
+that a fellow should feel above anybody. When we arrived in camp, and
+went into our tent to have a smoke, the chaplain came in. I had not
+seen much of him lately. When I was sick I felt the need of a chaplain
+considerably. Not that I cared particularly to have him come and set
+up a howl over me, as though I was going to die, and he was expected
+to steer me the right way. But I felt as though it was his duty to look
+after the boys when they were sick, and talk to them about something
+cheerful. But he did not show up when I needed him, and when he called
+at our tent after I was well, there wasn't that cordiality on my part
+that there ought to have been. He had a package which he unrolled, after
+congratulating me on my recovery, and it proved to be a new saber, with
+silver mounted scabbard and gold sword handle. The chaplain said he had
+heard that I was to be commissioned, and he had found that saber at a
+store down town, and thought I might want to buy it. He said of course
+I would not want to wear a common government saber, as it would look too
+rude..He said he could get that saber for forty dollars, dirt cheap, and
+I could pay for it when I got my first pay as an officer. I could see
+through the chaplain in a minute. He had thought I would jump at the
+chance to put on style, and that he could make ten or fifteen dollars
+selling me a gilt-edged saber. I thanked him warmly, and a little
+sarcastically, for his great interest in the welfare of my soul, in
+sickness and in health, but told him that I was going to try and pull
+through with a common private's saber. I told him that the few people I
+should kill with a saber, would enjoy it just as well to be run through
+with a common saber. My only object was to help put down the rebellion,
+and I could do it with ordinary plain cutlery, as well as silver-mounted
+trappings. I said that to smear a silver-mounted saber all over with
+gore, would spoil the looks of it. The chaplain went out, when a drummer
+for a tailor shop came in with some samples, and wanted to make up a new
+uniform for me, regardless of expense. I stood him off, and went to bed,
+tired, and thought I had rather be a private than a general. The next
+morning it was my turn to cook our breakfast, and I turned out and built
+a fire, cut off some salt pork, and was frying it, when the orderly
+sergeant came along and detailed Jim and me, with ten or a dozen others
+to go to work on the fortifications. The rebels-were preparing to attack
+our position, and the commanding officer had deemed it advisable to
+throw up some earthworks. I told the orderly that he couldn't detail me
+to work with a shovel, digging trenches, when I was an officer, but he
+said he could, until I received my commission and was mustered in. I
+left my cooking and went to the colonel's tent. He was just rolling out
+of his bunk, and I said:
+
+“How is it, Colonel? Can an officer be detailed to go and shovel dirt? I
+have been detailed by the orderly, with a lot of privates, to report
+to the engineer, to throw up fortifications. That does not strike me as
+proper work for a commissioned officer.”
+
+“You will have to go,” said the colonel, as he stood on one leg while he
+tried to lasso his other foot with a pants leg. “It may be three months
+before your commission will arrive, and then you will have to go to New
+Orleans to be mustered out as a private and mustered in as an officer.
+Until that time you will have to do duty as a private.”
+
+“Then what the devil did you say anything about my being commissioned
+for, until the commission got here,” said I, and I went back and
+finished cooking breakfast for myself and Jim.
+
+Our detail went down to the river, at the left of the line, and reported
+to the engineer, and were set to work cutting down trees, throwing up
+dirt, and doing about the dirtiest and hardest work that I had ever
+done. As a private I could have done anything that was asked of me,
+but the thought of doing such work, while all the boys were calling me
+“Lieutenant,” was too much. I never was so crushed in my life. How glad
+I was that I did not buy that gilt-edged saber of the chaplain. We had
+to wear our side arms while at work, fearing an attack at any
+minute, and I thought how ridiculous I would have looked with that
+silver-mounted saber hanging to me, while I was handling a shovel like a
+railroad laborer. If that detail was made to humiliate me, and reduce my
+proud flesh, that had appeared on me by my sudden promotion, it had the
+desired effect, for before night I was as humble an amateur officer as
+ever lived. I had chopped down trees until my hands were blistered, and
+had shoveled dirt until my back was broke, and at night returned to my
+tent too tired to eat supper, and went to bed too weary and disgusted to
+sleep. And that was my first day as a commissioned officer.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+ My Sickness and Hospital Experiences Have Spoiled Me for a
+ Soldier--I Am Full of Charity, and Hope the War Will Cease--
+ We Have a Grand Attack--The Battle Lasted Ten Minutes--The
+ Rebel Angel's Brother is Captured.
+
+I became satisfied, more each day, that my sickness, and experience in
+the hospital, had spoiled me for a soldier. Being attended to so kindly
+by a rebel girl and getting acquainted with her people, and hearing her
+mother pray earnestly that the bloodshed might cease, sort of knocked
+what little fight there was in me, out, and I didn't hanker any more
+for blood. It seemed to me as though I could meet any rebel on top of
+earth, and shake hands with him, and ask him to share my tent, and help
+eat my rations.
+
+The fact of being promoted to a commissioned office, didn't make me feel
+half as good as I thought it was going to, and I found myself wishing I
+could be a he sister of charity, or something that did not have to
+shoot a gun, or go into any fight. I got so I didn't care whether my
+commission ever arrived or not. The idea of respectable men going out to
+hunt each other, like game, became ridiculous to me, and I wondered why
+the statesmen of the North and South did not get together and agree
+on some sort of a compromise, and have the fighting stop. I would have
+agreed to anything, only, of course, whatever arrangement was made, it
+must be understood that the South had no right to secede. Then I would
+think, Why, that is all the South is fighting for, and if they concede
+that they are wrong it is the same as though they were whipped, and of
+course they could not agree to that. I tried to think out lots of ways
+to wind the business up without fighting any more, but all the plans
+I made, maintained that our side was right, and I concluded to give
+up worrying about it. But I made up my mind that I would not fight any
+more. I was still weak from sickness, and there was no fight in me. I
+thought this over a good deal, and concluded that if I was called upon
+to go into another fight, where there was any chance of anybody being
+killed, I would just have a relapse, and go to the hospital again till
+it was over. I had heard of fellows being taken suddenly ill when a
+fight was in prospect, and I knew they were always laughed at, but I
+made up my mind that I had rather be laughed at than to hurt anybody.
+There was no thought of sneaking out of a fight because of the danger of
+being killed myself, but I just didn't want to shoot any friends of that
+girl who had nursed me when I was sick. These thoughts kept coming to me
+for a week or more, and one evening it was rumored around that we were
+liable to be attacked the next day. Some of our regiments had been out
+all day, and they reported the enemy marching on our position, in force.
+The rebels that lived in town could not conceal their joy at the idea
+that we were to be cleaned out. They would hint that there were enough
+Confederates concentrating at that point to drive every Yankee into the
+river, and they were actually preparing bandages and lint, to take care
+of the Confederates who might be wounded. If we had taken their word for
+it there wouldn't be a Yankee left in town, when the Confederate boys
+begun to get in their work. I went to bed that night resolved that I
+should not be so well in the morning, and would go to surgeon's call,
+and be sent to the hospital. But I didn't like the way those rebels
+talked about the coming fight. Egad, if they were so sure our fellows
+were going to be whipped, may be I would stay and see about it. If they
+thought any of our fellows were going to slink out, when they made their
+brags about whipping us, they would find their mistake. However, if I
+didn't feel very well in the morning, I would go to surgeon's call, but
+I wouldn't go to the hospital. In the meantime, I would just see if I
+had cartridges enough for much of a row, and rub up the old carbine a
+little, for luck. Not that. I wanted to shoot anybody dead, but I could
+shoot their horses, and make the blasted rebels walk, anyway. And so all
+that evening I was part of the time trying to see my way clear to get
+out of a regular fight, where anybody would be liable to get hurt,
+and again I was wondering if my sickness had injured my eyesight so I
+couldn't take good aim at the buttons on a rebel's coat. I was about
+half and half. If the rebels would let us alone, and not bring on a
+disturbance, I was for peace at any price, but gol-blast them, if
+they come fooling around trying to scare anybody, I wouldn't go to a
+hospital, not much. I talked with Jim about it, and he felt about as I
+did. He didn't want any more fighting, and while he couldn't go to the
+hospital, he was going to try and get detailed to drive a six mule
+team for the quartermaster, but he cleaned up his gun all the same, and
+looked over his cartridges to see if they were all right. We got up
+next morning, got our breakfast, and Jim asked me if I was going to the
+hospital and I told him I would wait till afternoon. I asked him if he
+was going to drive mules, and he said not a condemned mule, not until
+the fight was over. There was a good deal of riding around, orderlies,
+staff officers, etc. Artillery was moving around, and about eight o
+clock some of our boys who had been on picket all night, came in looking
+tired and nervous, saying they had been shot at all night, and that the
+rebels had got artillery and infantry till you couldn't rest, and they
+would make it mighty warm for us before night. Orders come to each
+company, that no soldier was to leave camp under any circumstances, to
+go to town or anywhere. I told Jim if he was going to drive mules, he
+better be seeing the quartermaster sergeant, but he said he never was
+much gone on mule driving, anyhow. But he said if he looked as sick as
+I did he would go to the hospital too quick. I told him there wasn't
+anything the matter with me. Pretty soon, over to the right, near the
+river, there was a cannon discharged. It was not long before another
+went off around to the left, and then a dozen, twenty, a hundred,
+all along the line. They were rebel cannon, and pretty soon they were
+answered by our batteries. Then there was a rattling of infantry, and
+the noise was deafening. I expected at the first fire that our bugler
+would come out in front of headquarters and blow for heaven's sake, for
+us to saddle up, but for three hours we loafed around camp and no move
+was made. It was tiresome. We started to play cards several times, but
+nobody could remember what was trumps, and we gave that up. Some of our
+boys would sneak up on to a hill for a few minutes, against orders, and
+come back and say that they could see the fight, and it was which and
+tother. Then a few more would sneak off, and after awhile the whole
+regiment was up on the hill, looking off to the hills and valleys,
+watching rebel shells strike our earth works and throw up the dust, and
+watching our shells go over to the woods where the rebels were. Then
+I found myself hoping our shells were just paralyzing the Johnnies.
+Presently the ambulances began to come by us, loaded with wounded, and
+that settled it. When there was no fighting, and I was half sick, and
+felt under obligations to a Confederate girl for taking care of me,
+I didn't want any of her friends hurt, but when her friends forgot
+them-selves, and come to a peaceable place, and began to kill off our
+boys, friendship ceased, and I wondered why we didn't get orders to
+saddle up and go in. We were all on the hill watching things, when the
+colonel, who had been riding off somewhere, came along. We thought he
+would order us all under arrest for disobeying orders, but he rode up to
+us, and pointing to a place off to the right a mile or so, where there
+was a sharp infantry fight, he said, “Boys, we shall probably go in
+right there about 3 p.m., unless the rebels are reinforced,” and he rode
+down to his tent. Well, after about twenty ambulances had gone by us
+with wounded soldiers, we didn't care how soon we went in there. We
+watched the infantry and artillery for another hour, as pretty a sight
+as one often sees. It was so far away we could not see men fall, and it
+was more like a celebration, until one got near enough to see the dead.
+Presently the regimental bugle sounded “Boots and saddles,” and in a
+minute every man on the hill had rushed down to his tent, even before
+the notes had died away from the bugle. Nothing was out of place. Every
+soldier had known that the bugle _would_ sound sooner or later, and we
+had everything ready. It did not seem five minutes before every company
+was mounted, in its street, waiting for orders. Jim leaned over towards
+me and said, “Hospital?” and I answered, “Not if I know myself,” and I
+patted my carbine on the stock. I said to him, “Six mule team?” and he
+whispered back, “Nary six mule team for the old man.” Then the bugle
+sounded the “Assembly,” and each company rode up on to the hill and
+formed in regimental front facing the battle. Every eye was on the place
+where the colonel had said we would probably “go in.” There never was a
+more beautiful sight, and every man in the cavalry regiment looked at
+it till his eyes ached. Then came an order to dismount and every man was
+ordered to tighten up his saddle girth as tight as the horse would bear
+it, and be sure his stirrup straps were too short rather than too long.
+To a cavalry man these orders mean business.
+
+Then we mounted again, and a few noticed a flag off to the right
+signaling. The colonel noticed it and coolly gave the order, “fours
+right, march.” We went off towards the fighting, then right down by our
+own cannon and formed in line behind the infantry, that was at work with
+the enemy, the artillery firing over our heads at the confederates in
+the woods. The noise was so loud that one could not hear his neighbor
+speak; but above it all came a buggle note, and glancing to the left,
+another cavalry regiment, and another, formed on our left. Another bugle
+note, and to the right another cavalry regiment formed, and for half a
+mile there was a line of horsemen, deafened by the waiting the command
+of some man, through a bugle. If the rebels had time to notice those
+four regiments of cavalry, fresh and ready for a gallop, they must have
+known that it was a good time to get away. Finally, our artillery ceased
+firing and it seemed still as death, except for the rattling of infantry
+in front of us. The rebel artillery had ceased firing also, and a great
+dust beyond the woods showed that they were getting away. The bugle
+sounded “forward” and that line of cavalry started on a walk. The
+infantry in front ceased firing, and went to the right of us at a
+double-quick, and the field was clear of our men. While our cavalry was
+walking, they kept a pretty good line, each man glancing to the
+right for a guide. As we neared the place where our infantry had been
+stationed, it was necessary to break up a little to pass dead and
+wounded without riding over them, and when falling back to keep from
+hurting a wounded comrade, a look at the line up and down showed that it
+was almost a mob, with no shape, but after get-ing forty rods, we
+passed the field where men had fallen, and the order to “close up, guide
+right,” was given, and in an instant the line was perfect. Then came the
+order to trot, and we went a short distance, until the rebels could
+be plainly seen behind trees, logs, and in line, firing. We halted and
+fired a few rounds from carbines, and then dropped the carbines, on
+orders. For a moment nothing was done, when officers ordered every man
+to draw his revolver, and when the six charges had been fired, after
+near-ing the enemy, to drop the revolver in the holster, and draw
+sabers, and every man for himself, but to rally on the colors, at the
+sound of the bugle, and not to go too far. Talk about being sick, and
+going to the hospital, or driving mules! Coward as I was, and I knew it,
+there was something about the air that made me feel that I wouldn't be
+in the hospital that day for all the money in the world. All idea of
+being sorry for the enemy, all charity, all hope that the war might
+close before any more men were killed, was gone. After looking in the
+upturned faces of our dead and wounded on the field, the more of the
+enemy that were killed the better. It is thus that war makes men brutal,
+while in active service. They think of things and do things that they
+regret immediately after the firing ceases. The next ten minutes was the
+nearest thing to hell that I ever experienced, and it seemed as though
+my face must look like that of a fiend. I felt like one. The bugle
+sounded “forward,” and then there was an order to trot, and the
+revolver firing began, with the enemy so near that you could see their
+countenances, their eyes. Some of them were mounted, others were on
+foot, some on artillery caissons, and all full of fight. It did not take
+long to exhaust the revolvers, and then the sabers began to come out,
+and the horrible word “charge,” came from a thousand throats, and every
+soldier yelled like a Comanche Indian, the line spread out like a fan,
+and every soldier on his own hook. Sabers whacked, horses run, everybody
+yelled. Men said “I surrender,” “What you jabbing at me for when I ain't
+fighting no moah,” “Drop that gun, you Johnnie, and go to the rear.”
+ Ones of pain and anguish, and awful sounds that a man ought never to
+hear but once. The business was all done in ten minutes.
+
+Many of our men were killed and wounded, and many of theirs were treated
+the same way. Those who could get away, got, and those we passed without
+happening to hit them, were prisoners, because the infantry followed
+and took them back to the rear. Jim and me stayed as near together as
+possible, and we noticed one young Confederate on a mule. His left arm
+was hanging limp by his side, and as Jim passed on one side of him and I
+on the other, he said, as he held up his right hand, “I dun got enough,
+and I surrender.” The thing was about over, the bugle having sounded the
+“recall,” and we turned and went back with this Confederate. He was
+as handsome a boy as ever fired a gun, and while he was pale from his
+shattered left arm, and weak, he said, “You gentlemen are all fine
+riders, sir. You fought as well as Southern men, sir.” That was a
+compliment that Jim and me acknowledged on behalf of the northern army.
+He couldn't have paid our regiment a higher compliment if he had
+studied a week. Then he said: “I was a fool to be in this fight. I was
+a prisoner and was only exchanged last week. I might have remained at
+home on a furlough, but when our army came along yesterday, and the boys
+said there was going to be a fight, I took my sisters mule, the only
+animal on the place, and came along, and now I am a cripple.” I looked
+at the mule, and I said to Jim, in a whisper, “I hope to die if it isn't
+the angel's mule. That must be her brother.” Jim was going to ask him
+what his name was, when we neared the place, where our regiment was
+forming and the surgeon of our regiment came along, and I said, “Doc, I
+wish you would take this young fellow and fix up his arm nice. He is a
+friend of mine. Take him to our regimental hospital.” Then we went
+back to the regiment, the prisoners were taken away, and after marching
+around through the woods for an hour we rode back to our camp, and the
+battle was over. Two or three hours later I went over to the regimental
+hospital and found the black-eyed confederate with his arm dressed, and
+he was talking with our boys as though he belonged there. Some one asked
+how he happened to be there, and the old doctor said he believed he was
+a relative of one of our officers. Anyway he was going to stay there. I
+gave him a bunch of sutler cigars, and left him, and an hour later the
+“angel” showed up, pale as death, and wanted some one to go with her to
+the battle held to help find the body of her dead brother. She said he
+had arrived home from the North the morning before, and had gone into
+the fight, and when the Confederates came back, defeated, past their
+plantation, her brother was not among them, and she knew he was dead.
+I have done a great many things in my life that have given me pleasure,
+but no one that I remember of that made me quite so happy as I was to
+escort the girl who had been so kind to me, to the hospital where her
+brother was. His wound was not serious, and he sat on a box, smoking a
+cigar, telling the boys the news from Wisconsin. He had just come from
+there, where he was a prisoner, and he couldn't talk enough about the
+kindness of the “people of the nowth.” His sister almost fainted when
+she found him alive, then hugged him until I was afraid she would
+disturb his arm, and then she sat by him and heard him tell of his visit
+to Wisconsin. Before night he was allowed to go home with his sister on
+parole, and Jim and I were detailed to go and help bury the dead of the
+regiment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ I am Detailed to Drive a Six-Mule Team--I am Covered with
+ Red Mud--I am Sent on an Expedition of Cold-Blooded Murder--
+ I Make a Dozen ex-Confederate Soldiers Happy by Setting Them
+ Up in Business.
+
+After the battle alluded to in my last chapter, it took us a week or
+more to get brushed up, the dead buried, and everything ready to go to
+living again. A battle to a regiment in the field is a good deal like
+a funeral in a family at home. When a member of a family is sick unto
+death, all looks dark, and when the sick person dies it seems as though
+the world could never look bright again. Every time the relatives and
+friends look at any article belonging to a deceased friend, the agony
+comes back, and it is quite a while before there is any brightness
+anywhere, but in time the tear-stained faces become smiling, the lost
+friend is thought of only occasionally, and the world moves along just
+the same. So in the army. For a few days the thought of comrades being
+gone forever, was painful, and no man wanted to ride the horse whose
+owner had been killed, but within a week the feeling was all gone, and
+if a horse was a good one he didn't stay in the corral very long on
+account of some good fellow having been shot off his back. The boys
+who couldn't remember what was trumps on the day of the battle---(and
+a soldier has got to be greatly interested in something else to forget
+what is trumps) returned to their card-playing, and no one would know,
+to look at them, that they had passed through a pretty serious scare,
+and seen their comrades fall all around. We told stories of our
+experience in the army and at home, and entertained each other. I
+couldn't tell much, except what a good shot I was with a shotgun and
+rifle, and I told some marvelous stories about hitting the bull's eye.
+It got to be tiresome waiting around for my commission to arrive, and I
+did not quite enjoy being a commissioned high private. Everybody knew
+I had been recommended for a commsssion, and they all called me
+“Lieutenant,” but all the same I was doing duty as a private. For two
+or three clays I was detailed to drive mules for the quartermaster, and
+that was the worst service I ever did perform. It seemed as though
+the colonel wanted to prepare me for any service that in the nature of
+things I was liable to be called upon to perform. I kicked some at being
+detailed to drive a six-mule team, but the colonel said I might see the
+time when I could save the government a million dol-lars by being able
+to jump on to a wheel mule and drive a wagon loaded with ammunition,
+or paymaster's cash, out of danger of being captured by the enemy. So I
+went to work and learned to gee-haw a six-mule team of the stubbornest
+mules in the world, hauling bacon, but there was no romance in taking
+care of six mules that would kick so you had to put the harness on them
+with a pitchfork, for fear of having your head kicked off. If I ever
+get a pension it will be for my loss of character and temper in driving
+those mules. I have been in some dangerous places, but I was never in
+so dangerous a place, in battle, as I was one day while driving those
+mules. One of the lead mules got his forward foot over the bridle some
+way, and I went to fix it, and the team started and “straddled” me. As
+soon as I saw that I was between the two lead mules, and that the team
+had started, I knew my only-safety was in laying down and taking the
+chances of the three pairs of mules and wagon going straight over me.
+To attempt to get out would mix them all up, so I fell right down in
+the mud, which was about a foot deep, and just like soft mortar. As the
+mules passed on each side of me, every last one of them kicked at me,
+and I was under the impression that each wheel of the wagon kicked at
+me, but I escaped everything except the mud, and when I got up on my
+feet behind the wagon, the quartermaster, who was ahead on horseback,
+had stopped the team. He called a colored man to drive, and told me I
+could go back to the regiment. I tried to sneak in the back way, and not
+see anybody, but when I passed the chaplain's tent a lot of officers,
+who had been sampling his sanitary stores, come out, and one of them
+recognized me, and they insisted on my stopping and talking something
+with them. Honestly, there was not an inch of my clothing but was
+covered with, red mud, that every soldier remembers who has been through
+Alabama. They had fun with me for half an hour and then let me go. I
+have never been able to look at a mule since, without a desire to kill
+it.
+
+I had said so much about my marksmanship with a rifle, that one day I
+was sent for by the colonel. He said he had heard I was a crack shot
+with the rifle, and I admitted that I was a pretty good shot. He asked
+me if I could hit a man's eye every time at ten paces. I told him I was
+almost sure I could. He said he had a duty that must be performed by
+some man that was an excellent shot, and I might report at once with
+forty rounds of ammunition. I don't know when I had been any more
+startled than I was at the colonel's questions, and his manner. Could it
+be that he had some secret expedition of murder that he wanted to send
+me on. I had never deliberately aimed at a man's eye, and if there
+was anybody to be killed I would be no hand to do it in cold blood. It
+seemed as though I had rather give anything than to kill a man, but that
+was evidently the business the colonel had in his mind. Was it a lot of
+prisoners that were to be killed in retaliation for some of our men who
+had been treated badly by the enemy. I reported shortly, with my carbine
+and forty cartridges, and the colonel told me to go to a certain place
+on the bank of the river, a mile away, and report to the chaplain, who
+would be there to see that everything was done properly. Then when I
+started off I heard the colonel say to the adjutant that there were
+about forty to be killed, and while it seemed cruel, it had to be done,
+and he hoped they would suffer as little as possible. If I could have
+had my way, I wouldn't have gone a step. I reflected on the pained look
+on the colonel's face, and wondered why I was picked out for all these
+sad events, but I thought if the chaplain was there everything would
+be all right. Arriving at the placed I found the chaplain sitting on a
+stump, on a big bluff overlooking the river. He sighed as I came up and
+said:
+
+“Death is always a sad thing.”
+
+I told him that no one appreciated it more than I did, and I sighed
+also.
+
+“But,” said he, as he took a chew of navy plug tobacco, “when death
+is necessary, we should make it as painless as possible, I have been
+studying this matter over a good deal, and trying to figure out how
+to make the death the least painful to these poor victims, and it has
+occurred to me that if we place them on the edge of the precipice, and
+you shoot them through the brain, while at the same time I push them,
+they will fall down a hundred feet into the river, and if they are not
+killed instantly by having the brain blown out, they will certainly
+drown. How does that strike you?”
+
+I thought the chaplain was about the most heartless cuss I ever heard
+talk about killing people, but I said that seemed to me to be the best
+way, but a cold chill went over me as I thought of shooting anybody
+through the head and the chaplain pushing him down the cliff into the
+water. I was just going to ask him what the men had done, when he said:
+
+“Ah, there they come.”
+
+I looked, and a lot of colored men were leading about forty old
+back-number horses and mules, afflicted with glanders and other
+diseases.
+
+“Are the niggers to be killed?” I asked.
+
+“Naw,” said the chaplain. “The horses and mules.”
+
+I was never so relieved in all my life as I was when I found that my
+excellent marksmanship was to be expended on animals instead of human
+beings. But I did feel hurt, the idea of a brevet officer, a man
+qualified to do deeds of daring, being detailed one day to drive mules
+and the next-to shoot sick horses. But I decided to do whatever I had
+to do, well, and so preparations were made for the executions. The
+glandered horses were brought out first, and then the ones with sore
+backs. Many of them were first-rate horses, their only fault being sores
+made from the saddles, and as it would take months to cure them up, and
+as the army was going to move soon, it had been decided to kill them
+rather than leave them to fall into the enemy's hands, or take them
+along to be cured on the march. I shot about a dozen glandered horses,
+that being the largest game I had ever killed, and the bodies fell down
+into the river. Then there was a mule that was ugly, and it occurred to
+me I would have some fun with the chaplain.
+
+We were outside the lines, and quite a number of men had gathered from
+the plantations, on hearing the firing, to see what was up. I suggested
+to the chaplain that it was a shame to kill so many good horses, when
+they might be of use to some of the planters, but he said they were all
+rebels, and it was not the policy of the government to set them up in
+business, by giving them horses to use tilling crops. I argued that the
+men had come home from the confederate army--this was in 1864--either
+discharged for wounds or disability, or paroled prisoners, and they were
+anxious to go to work, but that they hadn't a dollar, and our army had
+skinned every horse and mule on their places, and the niggers had gone,
+so that a horse would be a God-send to them. But the chaplain wouldn't
+hear to it. The men, who had collected, were mostly too proud to ask for
+a horse from a Yankee, but I could see that they did not like to see the
+animals killed. I thought if I could get the chaplain, who had been
+sent out to the execution as a sort of humane society, to see that the
+animals were killed easy, to go back to camp and leave me alone with the
+horses, I could kill them or not, as I chose. They brought out the ugly
+mule next, and my idea was to shoot the mule through the tip of the ear,
+while the chaplain stood near with a rail to push it over the bank, and
+maybe the mule would flax around and kick the chaplain up a tree, or
+scare him so he would leave. I took deliberate aim at the mule's ear,
+told the chaplain to push hard with the rail so the corpse would be sure
+to go over the cliff, and fired. Well, I have never seen such a scene in
+all my life. The mule seemed to squat down, when the bullet hit the top
+of his ear, then he brayed so loud that it would raise your hat right
+off your head, then he jumped into the air and whirled around and kicked
+in every direction with all four feet at once, fell down and rolled over
+towards the chaplain, and got up, and seeming to think the chaplain
+was the author of the misery, started for him, and that good man dodged
+behind trees until he got a chance to climb up one, which he did, and
+sat on a limb and shook his fist at the mule and me. He used quite
+strong language at me for not killing the animal dead. Finally the
+niggers caught the mule and the chaplain dismounted from the limb, and
+came to me. I told him my carbine was out of order, and I should have to
+take it apart and fix it, and that there was no knowing whether it would
+shoot where I aimed it or not, after it was fixed, and I might have
+trouble with the rest of the horses. It would take an hour at least to
+fix the gun. He said he guessed he would go back to camp, and leave me
+to finish up the slaughter, and that was what I wanted. The colored men
+were anxious to go back too, so I let them tie the horses to trees, and
+all go back except one, whom I knew. After they had all gone I went up
+to the dozen southern men who had been watching the proceedings, and
+asked one who was called colonel by the rest, if he didn't think it was
+wrong to kill the horses when by a little care they could be of much
+use in tilling crops. “Well, sah,” said he with dignity. “If it is not
+disloyalty, sah, for a southern gentleman to criticize anything that
+a yankee does, I should say, sah, that it was a d----d shame, sah, to
+steal our horses, and after using them up, sah, kill them in cold blood,
+sah. Each one of those animals sah, would be a gold mine, sah, at this
+time, to us who have come from the wah, sah, destitute, with nothing but
+our bare hands to make a crop, to keep our families from want, sah.”
+
+The other gentlemen nodded at what the colonel had said, as though
+that was about their sentiments. I told him that I felt about that way
+myself, but there was an objection. If I gave the horses away, for use
+on the plantations, and the animals should be used hereafter in the
+confederate army, it would not only be wrong, but I would be liable to
+be dismissed from the army.
+
+The colonel said he should want to be dismissed from the Yankee army if
+he was in it, but I might feel different about it. But he said he would
+pledge me his word as a Southern gentleman, that if the animals could be
+lent to them, they should never be used for war purposes. He said he was
+poor, and his friends there were poor, but they would not take a horse
+as a gift from a stranger, but if I would lend them the horses for a
+year, they would use them, and return them to the proper officer a year
+hence, if the army was yet in existence, or they would take them in
+exchange for horses that had previously been stolen from them by our
+army. He said there was not a gentleman present but had lost from two to
+a dozen horses since the army had been in their vicinity. I admired the
+dignity and honesty of the old gentleman, and I knew mighty well that we
+had picked up every horse we could find, and I said:
+
+“Colonel, here are about thirty horses I have been ordered to kill. If
+I do not kill them I take a certain responsibility. I feel under
+obligations to many Southern people for courtesies, and I feel that the
+nursing I received during a recent sickness, from one of your Southern
+ladies, about the same as saved my life. I believe the war is very near
+over, and that neither you nor our men will have occasion for much more
+active service. You have come home to your desolate plantations, and
+found everything gone. This is the fate of war, but it is unpleasant all
+the same. If you can use these animals for your work, in raising crops,
+you may take them in welcome, and if there is any cussing, I will stand
+it. My advice would be to take them to some isolated place on your
+plantation, and keep them out of sight for a time. Our army will move
+within a week, and perhaps never come back here. The animals are
+branded 'U. S.' which will always remain. If the horses are found in your
+possession, later, you may have to say that they were given to you by
+an agent of the quartermaster. If they are taken from you, grin and bear
+it. If you are permitted to keep them, and they do you any good, I shall
+be very glad. If I get hauled over the coals for giving aid and comfort
+to the enemy, I will lie out of it some way, or stand my punishment like
+a little man. The horses are yours, as far as I am concerned.”
+
+“Well, sah, you are a perfect gentleman, sah,” said the colonel, as he
+took my hand and shook it cordially. “And I should be proud to entertain
+you at my place, sah. We have got little left, sah, but you are welcome
+to our home at any time. I am an old man, with a bullet in my leg.
+Two of my boys are dead, in Virginia, sah, and I have one boy who is a
+prisoner at the north. If he comes home alive, we will be able to make
+a living and have a home again. The war has been a terrible blow to
+us all, sah. I reckon both sides, sah, have got about enough, and
+both sides have made cussed, fools of themselves. When this affair is
+settled, sah, the north and south will be better friends than ever, sah.
+I wish you a long life, sah.”
+
+The other gentlemen expressed thanks, and they picked out two or three
+horses apiece and led them away, it seemed to me as happy a lot of
+gentlemen as I ever saw. I called the colored man, and we started
+for camp. For a five dollar bill, and a promise to always take a deep
+interest in the colored man's welfare, I got his promise that he would
+never tell anybody about my giving the horses away, and for nearly a
+year he kept his promise. I went back to headquarters and reported that
+the animals had been disposed of, and that evening I was invited to set
+into a poker game with some of the officers, and when we got up I
+had won over a hundred dollars. I looked upon the streak of luck as a
+premium for my kindness to the gentlemen who took the horses, but some
+of the officers seemed to have a suspicion that I concealed cards up my
+sleeve. It is thus that the best of us are misunderstood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ I Demonstrate that Gambling Does Not Pay--I Cause a General
+ Stampede--Christmas in the Pine Woods of Alabama--Millions
+ of Dollars, but no Christmas Dinner.
+
+When I went away from the party of officers, where we had been playing
+draw-poker, with a hundred dollars in my pocket, which I had won from
+men who thought they were pretty good poker players, I felt as though
+I owned the earth. I had my hand in my pocket, hold of the roll of
+greenbacks, and in that way constantly realized that I was no common
+pauper. I had never thought that I was an expert at cards, but this
+triumph convinced me that there was more money to be made playing poker
+than in any other way. I figured up in my mind that if I could win a
+hundred dollars a night, and only played five nights a week, I could
+lay up two thousand dollars a month. To keep it up a year would make me
+rich, and if the war lasted a couple of years I could go home with money
+enough to buy out the best newspaper in Wisconsin. It is wonderful
+what a train of thought a young man's first success in gambling, or
+speculation, brings to him. I went to bed with my hundred dollars
+buttoned inside my flannel shirt, and dreamed all night about holding
+four aces, full hands, and three of a kind. All that night, in my sleep,
+I never failed to “fill” when I drew to a hand. I made up my mind
+to break every officer in the regiment, at poker, and then turn my
+attention to other regiments, and win all the money the paymaster should
+bring to the brigade. I got up in the morning with a headache, and
+thought how long it would be before night, when we could play poker
+again, and I wondered why we couldn't play during the day, as there was
+nothing else going on. It got rumored around the regiment that I had
+cleaned the officers out at poker the night before, and the boys seemed
+glad that a private had made them pay attention. I had not yet got my
+commsssion, and so any victory I might achieve was considered a victory
+for a private soldier. Several of the boys congratulated me. The nearest
+I ever come to quarreling with my old partner, Jim, was over this poker
+business. I showed him my roll, and told him how I had cleaned the
+officers out, and instead of feeling good over it, Jim said I was a
+confounded fool. I tried to argue the matter with Jim, but he couldn't
+be convinced, and insisted that they had made a fool of me, and had let
+me win on purpose, and that they would win it all back, and all I had
+besides. He said I had better let the chaplain take the hundred dollars
+to keep for me, and stay away from that poker game, and I would be
+a hundred ahead, but I didn't want any second-class chaplain to be a
+guardian over me, and I told Jim I was of age, and could take care of
+myself. Jim said he thought I had some sense before I was commsssioned,
+but it had spoiled me. He said in less than a week I would be borrowing
+money of him. I knew better, and went around camp with my thumbs stuck
+in my armholes, and felt big. It was an awful long day, but I put in the
+time thinking how I would draw cards, and bet judiciously, and finally
+night came, and I went over to the major's tent, where the officers
+usually congregated. I was early, and had to wait half an hour before
+the crowd showed up. As they came in each had something to say to me.
+“Here's the man who walked off with our wealth last night,” said one.
+“Here's our victim,” said another. “We will send him to his tent tonight
+without a dollar.” They chaffed me a good deal, but I made up my mind
+that I could play as well as they could, and some of them were old
+fellows that had played poker before I was born. Well, we went to work,
+and the first hand I got I lost ten dollars. It was the history of all
+smart Aleck's, and there is no use of going into details. In less than
+an hour they had won the hundred dollars, and fifty that I had sewed
+inside my shirt to keep for a rainy day, and they had joked me every
+time I bet until I was exasperated to such an extent that I could have
+killed them. Winning or losing money with them was a mere pastime, and
+they seemed to enjoy losing about as much as winning. I was too proud,
+or too big a fool to leave the game when I had lost all I had, and I
+borrowed a little of each of them, and lost it, and then I said I was
+tired and I guessed I would go to bed, and I went out, dizzy and sick at
+heart, and the officers laughed so I could hear them clear to my tent. On
+the way to my tent, and as I walked around for half an hour before going
+there, I thought over what a fool I was, how I had forgotten all the
+good advice ever given me by my friends. Knowing that I was not intended
+by nature for a gambler, I had gone in with my eyes open, made a
+temporary success, got the big head, as all boys do, and gone back and
+laid down my bundle, and become the laughing stock of the whole crowd.
+I figured up that I was just an even hundred dollars out of pocket, and
+decided that I would never try to get it back. I would simply swear off
+gambling right there, forget that I knew one card from another, pay up
+my gambling debts when I got my first pay, and never touch a card again.
+
+That was the wisest conclusion that I ever come to. After I had walked
+around until my head cleared off a little, I went in the tent sly and
+still, to go to bed without letting Jim hear me. I was ashamed, and
+didn't want to talk. I heard Jim roll over on his bunk, and he said:
+
+“Bet ten dollars, pard, that you lost all you had.”
+
+“Jim, I won't bet with you. I have sworn off betting intirely.”
+
+“Help yourself,” said Jim, as he reached over his greasy old pocketbook
+to me. “Take all you want, now that you have come to your senses. But
+you must admit that what I said about your being a fool, was true.”
+
+“Yes, and an idiot, and an ass,” I said, as I handed back Jim's money.
+“But that settles it. I will never gamble another cent's worth as long
+as I live, and if I see a friend of mine gambling, I will try and break
+him of the habit. There is nothing in it, and I went to sleep, and
+didn't dream any more about winning all the money in camp.”
+
+Two days before Christmas our cavalry, consisting of a full brigade,
+started on a raid, or a march through the enemy's country, and as I
+could not act as an officer very well, before my commission arrived, and
+as the colonel seemed to hate to see me in the ranks when I was looked
+upon as an officer, he sent me to brigade headquarters on a detail to
+carry the brigade colors. The brigade colors consisted of a blue guidon,
+on a pole. The butt end of the pole, or staff, was inserted in a socket
+of leather fastened to my stirrup, and I held on to the staff with my
+right hand when on the march, guiding my horse with my left hand, When
+the command halted the colors were planted in the ground in front of
+the place which the brigade commander had selected. On the march I rode
+right behind the brigade commander and his staff, with the body guard
+to protect the precious colors. I was glad of this position, because it
+took me among high officials, and if there was anything I doted, on it
+was high officers. The colonel had told me that I must be on my good
+behavior, and salute the officers of the staff, whenever they came
+near me. He said the brigade commander was a strict disciplinarian, and
+wouldn't put up with any monkey business. The first hour of my service
+as color bearer came near breaking up the brigade. I was perhaps forty
+feet behind the brigade commander and his staff, riding as stiff as
+though I was a part of the horse, and feeling as proud as though I owned
+the army. Suddenly the colonel and staff turned out of the road, and
+faced to the rear, and started to ride back to one of the regiments in
+the rear. I saw them coming, and felt that I must salute them. How to
+do it was a puzzle to me. If I saluted with my left hand, it would be
+wrong, besides I would have to drop the reins, and my horse might start
+to run, as he was prancing and putting on as much style as I was. If I
+saluted with my right hand, I should have to let go the flag staff. The
+salute must be sudden, so I could grasp the staff very quick, before it
+toppled over. It took a great head to decide what to do, and I had to
+decide quick. Just as the brigade commander got opposite me I let go the
+flag stair, brought my right hand quickly to the right eye, as nice a
+salute as a man ever saw, and returned it to grab the flag stall. But it
+was too late. As soon as my right hand let go of the staff, it fell over
+and the gilt dart on the end of the staff struck the general's horse in
+the flank, he jumped sideways against the adjutant-general's horse, and
+his horse fell over the brigade surgeon's horse, the general's horse run
+under a tree, and brushed the general off, and the whole staff was wild
+trying to hold their horses, and jumping to catch the general's horse,
+and pick the general off the ground. In the meantime my horse had got
+frightened at the staff and flag that was dragging on the ground, with
+one end in the socket in the stirrup, the pole tickling him in the
+ribs, and he began to dance around, and whirl, and knock members of the
+color-guard off their horses, and they stampeded to the woods leaving me
+in the road, on a frightened horse, whirliing around, unmanageable, the
+start striking trees and horses, until the staff was broken.
+
+The regiment in the rear of us saw the commotion, saw the general
+dismounted, and the colors on the ground, and a general stampede in
+front, and, thinking the general and staff had been ambushed by the
+rebels, and many killed, the colonel ordered his men forward on a
+charge, and, in less time than it takes to write it, the woods were
+full of charging soldiers, looking for an imaginary enemy, a surgeon
+had opened up a lot of remedies, and all was confusion, and I was the
+innocent cause of it all. I had seen my mistake as soon as the flag
+staff knocked the general off his horse, and when I dismounted and
+picked up the flag, and the pieces of the staff, and found myself
+surrounded by excited troops, I wondered if the general would pull his
+revolver and shoot me himself, or order some of the soldiers to kill me.
+For choice I had rather have been killed by a volley from a platoon of
+soldiers, but I recognized the fact that the general had a perfect right
+to kill me. In fact I wanted him to shoot me. I was trimming the limbs
+off a sapling for a makeshift flag staff, when I saw the crowd open, and
+the general walked towards me. His face was a trifle pale, except where
+the red clay from the road covered it, and I felt that the next moment
+or two would decide in what manner I was to meet my doom. I remembered
+what the colonel had told me, about the general being a strict
+disciplinarian, and wondered if it wouldn't help matters if I should
+fall on my knees and say a little prayer, or ask him to spare my life.
+I wondered if I would be justified in drawing my revolver and trying to
+get the drop on the general. But I had no time to think it over, for he
+come right up to me, and said:
+
+“I beg your pardon, my young friend, for the trouble and annoyance I
+have caused you. I should have known better than to ride so near you,
+and frighten your horse, when you had only one hand to guide the animal.
+Are you hurt? No; well, I am very glad. Ah, the flag staff is broken!
+Let me help you tack the flag on the sapling. Orderly, bring me some
+nails. Let me whittle the bark off the sapling, so it will not hurt your
+hands. When we get into camp tonight, and the wagons come up, I will see
+that you have another staff. There, don't feel bad about it. There is no
+damage.”
+
+Bless his soul! I could, have hugged him for his kindness. When he came
+towards me, I was mad and desperate, and when he spoke kind words to
+me, my chin trembled, and I felt like a baby. He stopped the brigade for
+half an hour, to help fix up my flag, and all the time talked so kindly
+to me, that when the thing was fixed, I felt remorse of conscience, and
+said: “General, I am entirely to blame myself. I tried to perform the
+impossible feat of saluting you and holding the colors at the same time,
+which I am satisfied now cannot be done successfully. Lay it all to me.”
+
+“I knew it,” said the good old general, “and I was going to tell you
+that you are not expected to salute anybody when you have the colors.
+You are a part of the flag, then. You will learn it all by and by,” and
+he mounted his horse and rode away about his business, as cool as though
+nothing had happened, and left me feeling that he was the best man on
+earth. Further acquaintance with the old man taught me that he was one
+of nature's noblemen. He was an Illinois farmer, who had enlisted as a
+private, and had in time become colonel of his regiment, and had been
+placed in command of this brigade. Every evening he would take an axe
+and cut up fire-wood enough for headquarters, and he was not above
+cleaning off his horse if his servant was sick, or did not do it to
+suit, and frequently I have seen him greasing his own boots.
+
+Two days out, and we were in the pine woods of Alabama, with no
+habitation within ten miles. After a day's march we went into camp in
+the woods, and it was the afternoon before Christmas. The young pines,
+growing among the larger ones, were just such little trees as were used
+at home for Christmas trees, and within an hour after getting the camp
+made, every man thought of Christmas at home. The boys went off into
+the woods and got holly, and mistletoe, and every pup tent of the whole
+brigade was decorated, and they hung nose bags, grain sacks, army socks
+and pants on the trees. Around the fires stakes had been driven to hang
+clothes on to dry, and as night came and the pitch pine fires blazed
+up to the tops of the great pines, it actually looked like Christmas,
+though there was not a Christmas present anywhere. After supper the
+brigade band began to play patriotic airs, with occasionally an old
+fashioned tune, like “Old Hundred,” the woods rung with music from the
+boys who could sing, and everybody was as happy as I ever saw a crowd
+of people, and when it came time to retire the band played “Home, Sweet
+Home,” and three thousand rough soldiers went to bed with tears in their
+eyes, and every man dreamed of the dear ones at home, and many prayed
+that the home ones might be happy, and in the morning they all got up,
+stripped the empty Christmas stockings off the evergreen trees, put
+them on, and went on down the red road, and at noon the army entered
+Montgomery, Alabama, the first capital of the confederate states, took
+possession of the capital building in which were millions of dollars of
+confederate money and bonds. Every soldier filled his pockets and saddle
+bags with bonds and bills of large denominations. It was a poor soldier
+that could not count up his half a million dollars, but with all the
+money no man could buy a Christmas dinner. A dollar in greenbacks would
+buy more than all of the wagon loads of confederate currency captured
+that day. And yet the people of Montgomery looked upon the arrival of
+the Yankees much as they would the arrival of a pestilence. However,
+it was not many days before a better understanding was arrived at, and
+Yankee blue and Confederate gray got mixed up, and acquaintances were
+made that ripened into mutual respect and in some cases love.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+ I Go on a Scouting Expedition--My Horse Dies of Poison--
+ I Turn Horse-Thief--I Capture a Church, Congregation, and
+ Ministers, but I Spare the Communion Wine.
+
+Let's see, the last chapter left me with a million dollars, more or
+less, of confederate money in my possession, and yet I had not enough
+to buy a square meal. I think there was no one thing that caused, the
+people of the confederate states, outside of their army, to realize the
+hopelessness of their cause, along in '64, as much as the relative
+value of confederate money and greenbacks. Of course the confederate
+soldiers, poor fellows, realized the difference some, when they could
+get hold of greenbacks, but the people of the south who did not have
+rations furnished them, and who had to skirmish around and buy something
+to live upon, early learned that a greenback was worth “two in the
+bush,” as it were. No community in the south was more loyal to the
+confederacy than the people of Montgomery, Alabama. They tried to use
+confederate currency as long as there was any hope, and they tried hard
+to despise the greenbacks; but when it got so that a market basket
+full of their own currency was looked upon with suspicion by their own
+dealers in eatables, and a greenback was sought after by the dealer, and
+its possessor was greeted with a smile while the overloaded possessor
+of confederate currency was frowned upon, more in sorrow than in anger,
+however, a wild desire took possession of the people to get hold of the
+hated greenbacks; and a soldier or army follower who had a good supply
+of greenbacks was met more than half way in reconciliation; and little
+jobs were put up to get the money that made many ashamed, but they had
+to have greenbacks. Many would have given their lives if confederate
+money could have been as good as the money of the invaders, but it was
+not and never could be, and it was not an hour after the enemy was in
+Montgomery before people who had been loyal to the south up to that
+hour and believed in its currency, went back on it completely, and
+they cherished the greenback and hugged it to their bosoms like an old
+friend. They had rather had gold, but good green paper would buy so much
+more than any currency they had known for years, that they snatched it
+greedily. And many of them enjoyed the first real respect for the
+Union that they had had for four years, when they met the well-fed and
+well-clothed Union soldiers, who did not seem as bad as they had been
+painted, the poorest one of which had more money in his pockets than the
+richest citizen of supposed wealth. The people seemed surprised to meet
+well-dressed private soldiers who could converse on any subject, and who
+seemed capable of doing any kind of business. Fires broke out in many
+places in the city, and Union soldiers went to work with the primitive
+fire apparatus at hand and put out the fires. Locomotives had been
+thrown from the track of the railroad in an attempt to destroy them, and
+private soldiers were detailed to put the locomotives together and run
+them, which they did, to the surprise of the people. An officer would
+take charge of a quantity of captured property, and he would detail the
+first half-dozen soldiers he met to go and make out an invoice of
+the property, and the boys would do it as well as the oldest southern
+merchant. A planter that could not speak anything but French would come
+to the captain, of a company to complain of something, and the captain
+after vainly trying to understand the man, would turn to some soldier
+in his company and say, “Here Frenchy, talk to this man, and see what
+he wants,” and the soldier would address the planter in French, politely,
+and in a moment the difficulty would be settled, and the planter
+would go away bowing and smiling. Any language could be spoken by the
+soldiers, and any business that ever was transacted could be done by
+them. A soldier printer visited the office of a city paper, and in a
+conversation with the editor informed him that there were editors enough
+in his regiment to edit the New York _Herald_. At first the better class
+of citizens, the old fathers in Israel, of the confederacy, stood
+aloof from the new soldiers in blue, expecting them to be insolent, as
+conquerors are sometimes supposed to be; but soon they saw that the boys
+were as mild a mannered and friendly and jolly a lot as they ever saw,
+not the least inclined to gloat over their fallen enemy, and at times
+acting as though they were sorry to make any trouble; and it was not
+long before boys in blue and citizens in gray were playing billiards
+together, with old gentlemen keeping count for them, old fellows, who a
+week before would have been insulted if any one had told them they would
+ever speak to a Yankee soldier. The second day the southern ladies, who
+had kept indoors, came out and promenaded the beautiful streets, and
+seemed to enjoy the sight of the bright uniforms, and before night
+acquaintances had been made, and it did not cause any remark to see
+Union officers and soldiers waiting with ladies, talking with animation,
+and laughing pleasantly. It almost seemed, as though the war was over.
+
+It was about this time that I stole my first horse. I had ridden horses
+that had been “captured” from the enemy, in fair fights, and that had
+been accumulated in divers ways by the quartermaster, and issued to the
+men, but I never deliberately stole a horse. Two or three companies
+of my regiment had gone off on a scout, to be gone a couple of days,
+leaving the command at Montgomery, and one day we were encamped on an
+old abandoned field, taking dinner. The horses and mules were grazing
+near us, and there was no indication that any epidemic was about to
+break out. We were about sixty miles from Montgomery, and were cooking
+our last meal, expecting to make a forced march and be back before
+morning. I had got the midday meal for Jim and myself cooked, the bacon,
+sweet potatoes, coffee and so forth, and spread upon a horse blanket on
+the ground, and we were just about to sit down to eat, when a mule that
+had been browsing near us, and snooping into our affairs, attracted
+our attention. All of a sudden the animal became rigid, and stood up as
+stiff as possible, then its muscles relaxed, and it became limber, and
+whirled around and brayed, backed up towards us, and as we rushed away
+to keep from being kicked, the mule fell over in a fit directly on our
+beautifully cooked dinner, rolled over on the bacon and potatoes and
+coffee, and trembled and brayed, and died right there. I looked at Jim
+and Jim looked at me. “Well, condam a mule, anyway,” said Jim. “That
+animal has been ready to die for two hours, and just to show its
+cussedness, it waited until we had our dinner cooked, the last morsel we
+had, and then it fell in a fit, and expired on our dining table.” I made
+some remark not complimentary to the mule as a member of society and
+we went to the corpse and pulled it around to see if we couldn't save
+a mouthful or two that could be eaten. We could not, as everything was
+crushed into the ground. I suggested that we cut a steak out of the
+mule, and broil it, but Jim said he was not going to be a cannibal, if
+he knew his own heart. While we were looking at the remains of our meal,
+my horse, the rebel horse that I had rode so many months, and loved so,
+which was hitched near, lay down, began to groan and kick, and in two
+minutes he was dead. Then Jim's horse went through the same performance
+and died, and by that time there was a commotion all around camp, horses
+and mules dying suddenly, until within half an hour there were only a
+dozen animals alive, and forty cavalrymen, at least, were horseless. The
+camp looked like a battle field. Nobody knew what was the matter of the
+animals, until an old negro, who lived near, came out and said, “You uns
+ought to know better than to let you horses eat dat sneeze weed. Dat is
+poison. Kills animals, just like rat poison.” And then he showed us a
+weed, with a square stem, that grew there, and which was called sneeze
+weed. He said native animals would not touch it, but strange animals eat
+it because it was nice and green. Well, we were in a fix. The men were
+called together, and the major told them there was nothing to do but to
+take their saddles and bridles on their backs and walk to Montgomery,
+unless they could steal a horse. He advised us to scatter into parties
+of two or three, enough to protect ourselves from possible attack, go on
+cross roads, and to plantations, forage for something to eat, and take
+the first horse or mule we could find, and report to Montgomery as soon
+as possible. Jim and I, of course, decided to stand by each, other, and
+after the men who had not lost their horses, had rode away, the forty
+dismounted men shouldered their saddles, and started in different
+directions, seeking some other men's horses. I never had realized that
+a cavalry saddle was so heavy, before. Mine seemed to weigh a ton. We
+struck a cross road, and followed it for two or three miles, when
+I called a council of war, with Jim. I told him that it was all
+foolishness to lug those heavy saddles all over the Southern
+Confederacy. If we succeeded in stealing horses, we could probably steal
+saddles, also, or if not we could get a sheepskin. I told Jim I would
+receipt to him for his saddle, and then I would leave them in a fence
+corner, and if we ever got back to the regiment I would report the
+saddle lost in action.
+
+Jim said I had a great head, and he consented, and we left our saddles
+and moved on. Jim said that now we had only a bridle and a pair of
+spurs, we were more like regularly ordained horse-thieves. He said the
+most successful horse-thief he ever knew in Wisconsin never had anything
+but a halter as his stock in trade. He would go out with a halter, with
+a rope on the end, pick up a horse, put the rope in the horse's mouth,
+and ride away, and nobody could catch him. I asked Jim if he didn't feel
+humiliated, a loyal soldier, to class himself with horse-thieves. He
+said when he enlisted he made up his mind to do nothing but shoot
+rebels through the heart or the left lung. It was his idea to be a
+sharpshooter, and aim at the button on the left breast of the enemy, but
+when he found that lots of the rebels didn't have any buttons on their
+coats and that he might shoot all day at a single rebel and not hit him,
+and that shooting into them in flocks didn't seem to diminish the enemy
+the least bit, he had made up his mind to turn his hand to anything;
+and if the rebellion could be put down easier by his stealing horses
+at thirteen dollars a month, he would do it if ordered. He said we were
+only putting in time, promenading around, and we should get our salary
+all the same. And so we wandered on, talking the thing over. When we
+came to a plantation we would walk all around it, and examine the woods
+and swamps adjacent, because the people of the South had learned that
+a horse or a mule was not safe anywhere out of the most impenetrable
+swamp. It was dark when Jim and I decided to camp for the night, and we
+went into a deserted cotton gin and prepared for a sleep. It was almost
+dark, and Jim said he had just seen a chicken, near a cabin, fly up in a
+peach tree to roost, and he was going to have the chicken as soon as it
+was dark. I laid down on some refuse cotton, and Jim went out after the
+chicken. I had fallen asleep when Jim returned, and he had the chicken,
+and a skillet, and a couple of canteens of water. I crawled out of my
+nest and built a fire, while Jim dressed the chicken, and got the water
+to boiling, and the chicken was put in. For three hours we boiled the
+chicken, but each hour made it tougher. I told Jim he might be a success
+as a horse-thief, but when it come to stealing tender poultry he was a
+lamentable failure, but he said it was the only hen on the place, and if
+I didn't want to eat it I could retire to my couch and he would set up
+with the hen. I was so hungry, and the smell of the boiling hen was so
+Savory, that I remained awake, and at about midnight Jim announced that
+he had succeeded in prying off a piece of the breast, so we speared
+the hen out of the water, laid it on the frame of a grindstone in the
+gin-house, and sat down to the festive board. “Will you have the light
+or the dark meat,” asked Jim, with a politeness that would have done
+credit to a dancing-master. I told, him I preferred the dark meat, so he
+took hold of one leg and I the other, and we pulled the hen apart. The
+hen seemed to be copper-rivetted, for when I got a chunk of it down, and
+it chinked up a vacant place in the stomach, it did seem as though there
+was nothing like hen to save life. We eat sparingly that night, because
+we were weak, and the hen was strong, and we laid down and slept
+peacefully, and awoke in the morning hungry. When the hen became cold,
+in the morning it _was_ tough. “Will you have some of the cold chicken,”
+ said Jim, and I told him I would try a little. It was better than India
+rubber, and we made a breakfast and started on. It was Sunday. As we
+came out to the main road, we saw people dressed up, that is, with clean
+shirts. As ten o clock approached we could see colored people and white,
+wending their way to a little church in the pine woods. We kept out
+of sight, and waited, several parties passed us on horseback, some in
+carriages, and many on foot. Presently three soldiers of our scattered
+party came along carrying saddles, and we called them into the woods,
+where we were. I unfolded to them my scheme, which was to surround that
+church, hold the worshippers as prisoners inside, while we stole the
+horses that would be hitched to the fence. Jim kicked on it. He said he
+had rather walk than to interfere with people who were enjoying their
+religion. He said he was never very pious himself, but his parents were,
+and he should always hate himself if he helped to raid that church. The
+other fellows were for going for the horses. Pretty soon four more
+of our boys came along, and we called them in. They had got on to the
+church services, and had their eyes on the horses. That made nine of
+us, and as we were armed, we believed we could capture those old men and
+women and negroes, and get the horses.
+
+Being a brevet officer I was placed in command of the party, and a plan
+was agreed upon. We were to scatter and surround the church, and ask the
+people outside to step inside, and then lock the door, and place a guard
+on three sides of the little old church where there were windows, but
+not to fire a gun unless attacked, and not to speak disrespectfully
+to any person. If there was any argument with anybody, I was to do the
+talking. We decided to take about fifteen horses, if there were that
+number there, because we would be sure to find some of our scattered
+boys dismounted before we got far toward Montgomery, and it was a good
+idea to take horses when we had a chance. Well, it was a job I did
+not like, but what was a fellow to do. We were sixty miles from
+headquarters, on foot and out of meat. I had never been in a church row
+before. It seemed as though religious worshippers ought to be exempt
+from war, with its wide desolation. But business was business. We
+surrounded the church, walking up quietly from different directions,
+and as we closed up on the sacred edifice half a dozen men, white and
+colored, were standing in front, and two men were talking over a horse
+trade. The minister was expounding the gospel, talking loud, and all
+else was still. We invited the outsiders to go in, which they did with
+some reluctance, the door was fastened on the outside, guards were
+placed, and the preaching stopped. The minister had been informed that
+the yankees had captured the place. There were only two sides of the
+church with windows, so two guards were sufficient, and the rest of us
+went to work skinning the harnesses off the horses. A window was raised
+and an old man stuck his head out and said, as one of the boys was
+mounting an old mare belonging to him, “I forbid you touching that
+mare.” A carbine was pointed at the window, and the old man drew in his
+head, and the window was slammed down.
+
+[Illustration: I forbid you touching that mare 287]
+
+We had got sixteen pretty good horses, when a window on the other side
+opened, and the minister's head was put out, and he said, “In the name
+of the church I command you to desist.” He looked so fierce that Jim,
+who was on guard on that side, and who had objected to the scheme on
+account of its being a church, cocked his carbine and pointed it at
+the minister and said, “gol darn you, dry up!” He dried up, the window
+closed and except for the heads at the windows, and faces looking very
+mad, all was quit. When we had got the horses strung out, and the men
+were mounted, I looked in a carriage, accidentally, and saw a basket,
+covered over with a paper. The paper was a religious one, published at
+Savannah, and being a newspaper man, I looked at the leading editorial,
+which was headed, “The Lord will provide.” I never took much stock
+in regular stereotyped editorials, but when I turned my eye from the
+editorial to the basket, I realized than an editorial in a religious
+newspaper, was liable to contain much truth, for the basket was filled
+with as fine a lunch as a man ever saw. It seemed that the people came
+quite a long distance to church, and brought their dinner, remaining to
+the afternoon services. O, but I was hungry. I looked in several other
+carriages, and found baskets in each. Every man in my party was as
+hungry as a she wolf, and I knew they would not leave a mouthful if
+they once got to going on the lunches, and as it wasn't the policy of my
+government to take the bread from the mouths of Sunday-school children,
+I decided to divide the lunches. So I appointed Jim and an Irishman to
+help me, and we opened all the baskets and took half. Jim came to one
+basket with two loaves of bread and two bottles of wine, and he stopped.
+
+He said, “Pard, that lay-out in the big basket, with the silver pitcher,
+is for the communion. I'm a bold buccaneer of the Spanish main, but I'll
+be cussed if I touch that.”
+
+The Irishman said no power on earth could get him to touch it, and
+he crossed himself reverently, and we left the communion lay-out, and
+passed the half we had taken from the baskets around among the boys, and
+they eat as though a special providence had provided them with appetites
+and means of satisfying them. After enjoying the meal the boys said we
+ought to return thanks for the good things the pious people had provided
+for us, so I went to the door of the church, opened it, and faced the
+congregation. There were old and young, and some of them looked mad,
+and I didn't blame them. In a few well chosen remarks I addressed
+the minister, telling him I regretted the circumstances, but it was
+necessary to do what we had done. We had tried to do it as pleasantly as
+possible, but no doubt it seemed hard to them. I said we had got to go
+to Montgomery, and that if any of them who had lost their horses, would
+come there within a few days, I had no doubt the proper authorities
+would return them their horses, but that they must stand the loss of a
+half of their lunch, as we had divided it up as square as we knew how.
+One young Confederate soldier, with an empty sleeve, who had come to
+church with his mother, and who could, no doubt, realize the situation
+better than the rest, said, “That is all right, Mr. Yankee. I would
+do the same thing, under the circumstances, if I was in your country,
+horseless and hungry.” There were some murmurs of dissatisfaction, some
+smiled at the situation, and we mounted and rode away. Before we were
+out of sight the whole congregation was out of the church, under the
+pine trees, taking an account of stock, or lost stock, and no doubt
+saying hard things of the Yankees. We traveled all day and nearly all
+night, picked up some of our dismounted men, and arrived in Montgomery
+the next day before noon. In a few days my one-armed confederate
+soldier, who was home from the army in Virginia, having been discharged
+for disability, came to Montgomery with the people who had lost their
+horses at the church, and I had the satisfaction of seeing many of them
+either receive their animals back, or vouchers from the quartermaster,
+by which they got pay from the government for the animals. And I
+entertained the one-armed confederate for two days, and we became great
+friends. Two years ago I met him in Georgia, grown gray, and found him
+connected with a Georgia railroad, and we had a great laugh over my
+capture of the congregation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+ The Spotted Horse--His Shameful Behaviour at a Funeral--I
+ was Tempted to Have My Horse Shot--But I Traded Him to the
+ Chaplain.
+
+It seemed to me that my luck was the worst of any man's in the army, and
+I was constantly getting into situations that caused, my conduct to
+be talked about. When we raided the church, mentioned last week, for
+horses, I saw a nice white horse with red spots on him, with a saddle,
+and being the commander of the squad of horse-thieves, it was no more
+than right for me to take my choice first, so I chose the spotted horse,
+and thought I had the showiest horse in the army. The animal was a sort
+of Arabian, and before I had rode him a mile I was in love with him.
+then I got to Montgomery a man told me that horse used to belong to a
+circus that closed up there the first year of the war, and was sold to
+a planter. He said the horse was considered one of the finest ever seen
+in the South. I felt much elated over my capture, and refused several
+offers to trade. I thought no horse was too good for me, and for two or
+three days I did nothing but feed and groom my spotted horse, until his
+coat shone like satin, and he felt so kitteny that I was almost afraid
+to get on his back. One morning an order was issued for the regiment
+to turn out in a body to attend the funeral of a major of one of the
+regiments, who had died, and I was sent for to carry the brigade colors,
+a position I had been relieved from after we arrived at Montgomery. The
+boys all dressed up in their best, and I looked about as slick as any of
+them, and with my spotted horse, I felt as though I would attract about
+as much attention as any of the officers in the procession. At the
+proper time I mounted my horse and rode over to brigade headquarters,
+not without some difficulty, for my horse saw the crowd on the streets,
+and evidently thought it was circus day, for he pranced and snorted, and
+walked with one fore-foot at a time, pawing as you have seen a horse in
+a circus, trained to walk that way. As I rode up to brigade headquarters
+and stopped, I must have touched my horse with my foot somewhere, for
+he got down on his knees, and as I got off, the horse laid down right in
+front of the colonel's tent, just as he would in a circus. Even then I
+did not realize that the confounded brute was a circus trick-horse. He
+had been taught to lay down, evidently, at a certain signal. And he laid
+there, looking up at me with his cunning eyes, waiting for me to give
+the signal for him to get up, but I “did not know the combination,” and
+he wouldn't get up for kicking, so I stood there like a fool waiting to
+see what he would do next. The colonel commanding the brigade, the nice
+old man who had helped me out of my difficulty with my other horse, on
+the march when he got on a tantrum, come out of his tent and said he
+guessed my horse was sick, and he told an orderly to go to the cook
+house and get a little red pepper and let the horse take a snuff of
+it. In the meantime my horse got up on his fore feet and sat on his
+haunches, like a dog, just as circus horses always do, reached up his
+neck and took a nice white silk handkerchief out of the breast of the
+colonel's coat, and held it in his mouth. It was a circus trick, and
+I knew it, but the colonel said, “Poor horse, he is sick,” and as the
+orderly come with the red pepper the colonel held it to the horse's
+nose. The horse got up, and I mounted, and it must have been about that
+time that the red pepper began its work, for my horse stood on his
+fore feet and kicked up, then got on his hind feet and reared up,
+and snorted, and come down on the colonel's tent, and crushed it to
+the-ground, and broke the colonel's camp cot, got tangled in the guy
+ropes, and tore everything loose and jumped out in the street, and began
+to paw and snort. I suppose there was a thousand people around by that
+time, soldiers and citizens, and I sat there on that horse and wished I
+was dead, and I guess the colonel did so too.
+
+Finally it was time to move, and the colonel sent out the brigade colors
+to me, and the start started up street towards the funeral. My horse
+started with them, and seemed proud of the flag, and I guess he would
+have gone along all right, only a band down the street began to play
+a waltz. Do you know, that spotted horse began to waltz around just as
+though he was in a circus, and I couldn't keep him straight to save me.
+The colonel seemed mortified, as we were approaching the place where the
+services were to be held, and it was necessary to appear solemn.
+Finally we began to get out of hearing of the band, and my horse stopped
+waltzing, but he kept up a-dancing, and snorting from the red pepper,
+until I could have killed him. When the colonel and his staff, including
+myself and the circus-horse, arrived at the place where the funeral was,
+another band was playing a very solemn sort of a funeral tune, and for a
+wonder my horse did not act up at all. He seemed to stand and think, as
+though trying to make out what kind of music it was. He had evidently
+never heard such music in the circus and did not know what to do. When
+the body was brought out of the house, and the procession started down
+the street for the grave, a drum major, with a staff in his hand, came
+along by me, and I have always thought my horse took the drum major for
+the ring master of a circus, for he reared up and walked on his hind
+feet, and pawed the air, and made a spectacle of me that made me so
+ashamed that I wanted to be killed. I had the brigade colors in one
+hand, and had only one hand and two feet to cling on the horse by, and I
+must have looked like a cat climbing the roof of a whitewashed barn. The
+drum major got scared at my horse walking towards him in that way, and
+he lost his bear-skin cap off and fell over it, and rolled in the sand,
+and the horse, thinking that was a part of the circus turned and kicked
+at the drum major with both his hind feet, until the poor assistant
+musician got up and climbed over a fence. The horse got quiet then,
+only he began to nibble his fore leg, as though trying to untie a
+handkerchief that the clown had tied on, as they do in the circus. The
+colonel rode up to me, and with a good deal of indignation, asked me
+what I. meant by causing ourselves to become a spectacle for gods and
+men on so solemn an occasion. He said he was tempted to have my horse
+shot, and me placed in the guard-house. I told him I hoped to die if I
+could help it. I said the horse seemed to be possessed to do some circus
+business wherever he went. I confided to the colonel that the horse had
+been a circus-horse before the war, and the music and tinsel, and crowd
+that he saw, had turned his head and made him think that he was again
+with his beloved circus, where he had spent the best years of his life.
+The colonel said I ought to have known better than to bring a circus
+horse to a funeral. Well, when the drum major got out of sight the horse
+acted better, and we went along all right, the solemn music of the
+march to the grave seeming to take the circus out of him. He didn't do
+anything out of the way on the march, except to put out his fore-feet
+stiff, and keep time to the music, like a trained circus horse, which
+attracted a good deal of attention among the citizens on the street,
+who seemed to know the horse. Just as we got out at che edge of town
+he _did_ make one raw break. There was a colored drayman, with his dray
+backed up towards the procession, and when my circus horse saw the dray,
+before I could prevent him, he whirled around and put his fore feet
+upon the hind end of the dray, put one foot on the top of a stake on the
+dray, and stood there for a minute, like a horse statute, until I jerked
+him down off of there.
+
+[Illustration: Stood there for a minute, like a horse statute 297]
+
+O, I was so mortified that my teeth fairly ached, and the perspiration
+stood out on me in great beads. A staff officer of the general
+commanding, came along to the colonel, presented the compliments of
+the general, and asked if he could not do something to prevent that
+redheaded clown on the spotted horse from doing any more circus acts
+until after the last sad rites had been performed. The colonel said it
+should be stopped, and told the start officer to present his compliments
+to the general and say that he was humiliated beyond endurance by the
+performance of the horse, but that the young man riding the horse
+was not to blame, as he had done all in his power to keep the circus
+tendencies of the horse down, but he added that he would have the horse
+shot if there was any more of it.
+
+The horse kept quiet until we had got to the cemetery, and returned to
+town. As we got into a wide street there was an old circus ring, partly
+grown up with weeds, near where the division quartermaster had a large
+tent inside a picket fence, filled with quartermaster stores. If I had
+known anything, I would have kept the horse's head turned away from the
+circus ring, and the tent, but I thought there would be no more trouble.
+Just as we got opposite the ring, the band, which had heretofore played
+dead marches, struck up a regular ripety-rap-rap-boom-boom circus tune,
+and I felt the horse tremble all over. Before I could think twice, the
+confounded horse had tried to jump through the bass drum, had knocked
+the drummer down, and jumped into the circus ring. I sawed on the bit
+and tried to stop him, and dug into his ribs with the spurs, but he
+galloped around the circus ring three or four times, and stopped still,
+as though expecting a clown would come up and say, “What will the little
+lady have now?” O, if I could have had one more hand to use, I would
+have drawn my revolver and put a bullet through the brain of the
+wretched horse, who was making me the laughing stock of the whole army,
+and the citizens.
+
+The procession moved on towards camp, the colonel seeming relieved to
+have me out of sight, with my spotted horse, and a crowd of citizens,
+boys and niggers collected around the ring, yelling and laughing. I made
+one desperate effort and reined the horse out of the ring, and just
+then he caught sight of the quartermaster's tent across the road, and
+evidently thinking it was the dressing-room of the circus, he started
+for it on a run, jumped the picket fence as though it was a circus
+hurdle, and rushed in the door of the tent where a dozen clerks were
+weighing out commissary stores, stopped suddenly, and I went over his
+head, into a barrel of ground, coffee. The clerks picked me out of the
+coffee, and laid me on a pile of corn sacks, and then the horse began to
+lay back his ears and chase the clerks out of the tent, and it was awful
+the way the animal acted. After I had recovered from the effects of my
+fall into the coffee barrel, I got up and took the horse by the bridle,
+and led him out of the gate, and up the street to headquarters, with
+the brigade flag in my hand. I finally got to headquarters and left
+the flag, and the colonel told me he never wanted me around brigade
+headquarters again. He said I was a regular Jonah, that brought bad
+luck. I apologized the best I could, told him I would never bother
+him again, and led my horse back to my regiment. The chaplain of my
+regiment, who had not been to the funeral with us, and knew nothing
+about the circus, met me, and, as usual, bantered me to trade horses. I
+felt as though if I could saw that horse off on to the chaplain, and fix
+him so he could engage in the circus business, life would yet have some
+charms for me, so after some bantering we got down to business. The
+chaplain asked me if I thought it would cause any remark if he should
+ride a spotted horse, and I told him I did not know why it should, if
+the chaplain behaved himself. He said he didn't know but the boys might
+think that a spotted horse was too gay for a chaplain. I told him I
+didn't know why a spotted horse couldn't be just as solemn as any horse.
+He asked me if the horse had any tricks, and if he was sound. I told him
+I had not had him long, but it seemed to me if the horse had any tricks
+I should have found it out by this time, and I knew he was sound,
+because I jumped a fence with him not an hour ago, and he took the fence
+just as though he had jumped fences all his life. I asked ten dollars to
+boot, and the chaplain said if I would warrant the horse not to have any
+tricks he would take him. I told him I couldn't warrant the horse not to
+have any tricks, but that the colonel commanding the brigade wanted my
+horse, and he certainly would not want a horse that had tricks. What the
+colonel wanted was a horse noted for its strict attention to business.
+Then the chaplain said he would trade, and we changed saddles, and the
+chaplain led the spotted horse away, and I was revenged for many things
+the chaplain had done me. When the chaplain led the spotted horse to his
+tent, and all the boys in the regiment saw that I had traded the brute
+off, and they thought what a pic-nic they would have the first time the
+chaplain rode the horse down town, there was a laugh all through the
+regiment, but nobody squealed, or told the chaplain what a prize package
+he had secured. I cannot account for it, how I could have coolly traded
+that dastardly horse off on to the chaplain, but I was young then. Now,
+after arriving at a ripe old age, I would not play such a trick on a
+chaplain. The next day there was to be a review, and when the regiment
+was notified, I got sick and could not go. I felt as though I did not
+want to be a witness of the chaplain's attempt to exhibit a solemn
+demeanor, on that circus horse. I thought I should probably die right in
+my tracks if the horse acted with him as he did with me, so I remained
+in my tent with a wet towel on my head, and saw the regiment ride out
+to review, the chaplain on the spotted horse beside the colonel, not
+dreaming that it was going to be the most eventful day of his life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+ Tells How the Chaplain was Paralyzed by the Spotted Circus-
+ Horse--I am Court Martialed--I Plead my own Case, and am
+ Acquitted.
+
+In the last chapter I told of trading my circus-horse to the chaplain,
+and how the chaplain had rode away with the regiment for review, and I
+remained in camp, pretending to be sick. The result of that scheme on my
+part was not all my fancy painted it. I stood in front of my tent with
+a wet towel around my head, and saw the regiment return from review, the
+chaplain's spotted circus horse with no rider, being led by a colored
+man, the horse looking as innocent as any horse I ever saw. Where was
+the 'chaplain? Had he been killed? I noticed half the men were laughing
+and it seemed to me they wouldn't laugh if the good chaplain was dead.
+I also noticed that the colonel and his staff wore faces clouded with
+anger, and that they seemed as though they would like to kill somebody.
+Before the regiment had got fairly dismounted, a sergeant and three men
+marched to my tent, and I was arrested, and was informed that I would be
+tried at once, by court-martial, for conduct prejudicial to good order
+and military discipline. I knew the sergeant, and tried to joke with
+him, telling him to “go on with his old ark, as there wasn't going to be
+much of a shower,” but he wouldn't have any funny business, and kindly
+informed me that I had probably got to the end of my rope, and that
+I would no doubt spend the remainder of my term of enlistment in the
+military prison. I asked him what the row was about, and he said. I
+would find out soon enough. One soldier got on each side of me, and one
+behind with sabers drawn, to stick me with if I attempted to get away,
+and we started for the colonel's tent. On the way there, the chaplain
+came towards us, covered with red clay, and begged the sergeant to allow
+him to kill me right there. He was the maddest truly good man I ever
+saw. He fairly foamed at the mouth, and said, “O, sergeant, turn him
+loose, and let me chew him up.” I said to the sergeant:
+
+“Now, look-a-here, don't you let that savage get at me, or he will get
+hurt. I don't want to have any trouble with the church, but if any
+regularly ordained ministerial cannibal of a sky pilot attempts to chew
+me, he will find a good deal more gristle than tender loin, and I will
+italicise his nose so he will look so crossed-eyed that he can't draw
+his pay.”
+
+My thus showing that I was not afraid of a non-combatant, seemed to have
+the desired effect, for he spit on his hands, jumped up and cracked
+his heels together, said he would wipe the Southern Confederacy with my
+remains, and he went to his tent to change his clothes, and get ready
+for the court-martial. The guard took me to the colonel's tent, and I
+walked right in where the colonel and major and several others were, and
+I said Hello, and smiled, and extended my hand to the colonel. None of
+them helloed, and none of them returned my smile, and the colonel did
+not shake hands with me. He said, however, that I had brought disgrace
+on the regiment, and broken the heart of a noble man, the chaplain. I
+told him I didn't think the chaplain's heart was very badly broke, as he
+had just ottered to whip me in several languages, and threatened to eat
+me. The colonel had me sit down on a trunk and keep still, while the
+court-martial convened. It was not many minutes before the officers had
+arrived, and organized, the adjutant read the charges and specifications
+against me. Not to go into the military-form of charges and
+specifications, the substance of them was that I had with malice
+aforethought, procured a trick-horse from a circus, with the intention
+of inducing the chaplain to trade for it, with the purpose of causing
+the aforesaid chaplain to become a spectacle for laughter. When the
+charges were read I was asked what I had to say, and I told the Judge
+Advocate it was a condemned lie. That made him mad, and he was going
+to commence whipping me where the chaplain left off, when the colonel
+smoothed matters over by asking me if I didn't mean to plead “not
+guilty.” I said, “Certainly, not guilty. It is false. I did not secure
+the horse for the purpose of sawing it off on the chaplain. I jayhawked
+it, and when I found it was not the kind of a horse for a modest fellow
+like me, who didn't want to make any display, I thought I would trade it
+to some officer with gall, and the chaplain was the first man who struck
+me for a trade, and he got it, and from his remarks to me, and from
+these court-martial proceedings, I was satisfied the chaplain did not
+like the horse.” The officers laughed then, and I suppose they were
+thinking of something that happened to the chaplain on review. The
+colonel asked me if I wanted anybody to defend me, and I told him I
+had a printing office once next door to a lawyer's office, and I knew a
+little about law, and would defend myself. The chaplain came soon, and
+began to tell his story, but I insisted, that he be sworn, and then he
+proceeded to tell his tale. He said that he was a God-fearing man, and
+meant to do right, and was willing to take his chances in the lottery of
+war, but when a man got him to ride a circus trick-horse, and bring
+upon his sacred calling the ribald laughter of the wicked, he felt that
+civilization was a failure. He said he traded for the spotted horse in
+good faith, and that he was particular to ask me if the horse had any
+tricks, and I said he had none, and he traded on that understanding,
+that he rode the afore--said horse to the review, and as soon as the
+aforesaid horse heard the band play, he waltzed out into the middle
+of the street, whirled around more than fifty times, waltzed into
+an infantry regiment, breaking the ranks of the soldiers just as the
+reviewing officer come along, causing the reviewing officer to say, “get
+out of the ranks, you d-d fool, and take that horse back to the circus,”
+ thus causing him, the chaplain, to be scandalized. He said he would have
+stood that, but the horse carried him to a battery of artillery which
+was in position, and began to jump over the guns, and that a gunner
+took a swab with which he had been cleaning a gun, and punched him, the
+chaplain, in the face, covering his face with burnt powder which smelled
+badly.
+
+Then the horse carried him out on the field in front of the reviewing
+officers, got up on its hind feet and walked for half a block, making
+the chaplain appear as though climbing up the horse's neck, and when
+some of the general's staff came out to arrest him, the horse whirled
+around and kicked, in every direction at once, and broke the saber of
+one of the staff-officers. That the horse seemed to be possessed of the
+devil. That he finally got the horse to go back to the regiment where he
+belonged, but on the way he had to pass brigade headquarters, when the
+horse stopped in front of the commanding officer and sat down like
+a dog, on his hind parts, and tried to shake hands with the colonel
+commanding, who was offended, and told the chaplain he was an ass, and
+to go away with his museum, or he would have the chaplain put in the
+guard house. That a colored man near the review ground had a ginger
+bread stand, with a sheet tacked up to keep the sun off, and the spotted
+horse attempted to jump through the sheet, evidently thinking it was a
+paper hoop in a circus. And in conclusion, after making the chaplain so
+mortified and ashamed that he wished he might die, the horse laid down
+in the road and rolled over the aforsaid chaplain, leaving him in the
+road covered with dirt, while the horse run across the street and walked
+up a pair of stairs, outside a store, went into the rooms occupied by
+some milliners and scared the women so they put their heads out of
+the windows and yelled fire, and said a regiment of Yankee cavalry had
+raided their homes. That the review was made a farce, the chaplain a
+laughing stock, and that it took ten men to get the horse down stairs,
+and half the regiment to console the milliners, and convince them that
+no harm was intended. He said he demanded that I be sentenced to be
+shot.
+
+The colonel asked me if I had anything to say, and I asked permission
+to cross-examine the witness. Permission being granted, I asked the
+chaplain what his business was. He said he was a minister. I asked him
+if he didn't consider trading horses one of the noblest professions
+extant. He said he didn't know about that. Then I asked him if he didn't
+take advantage of me when I came to the regiment, as a raw recruit,
+and trade me a kicking mule, that made my life a burden. He said he
+remembered that he traded me a mule. I asked him if he didn't know
+the mule was balky, vicious, and spavined, that it would kick its best
+friend, bite anybody, that it was so ugly that he had to put the saddle
+on with a long pole, that he warranted the mule sound when he knew it
+had all the diseases that were going.
+
+He said he objected to being asked such questions, but the
+judge-advocate said I had a right to bring out any previous transactions
+in the horse-trade line, as it would have some effect in this case. Then
+I asked him if he didn't know the horse he beat me out of was sound,
+a splendid rider, and that the mule was the worst one in the army. He
+admitted that he knew the animal was not a desirable animal, but he
+thought a recruit could get along with a kicking mule better than a
+chaplain. I had saved my best shot for the last, and I said, “knowing
+the mule was unsound, a vicious animal, and that my horse was sound and
+desirable, and worth more than a dozen such mules, did you consider
+that you was pursuing your calling as a minister when you gained my
+confidence, and not only sawed the mule off on to me, bereaved me of a
+fine horse, but took twenty dollars of my hard-earned bounty money as
+boot in the trade? In doing that to an innocent and fresh recruit who
+had confidence in you, did you not pave the way for me to get even with
+you on a horse trade, and haven't I got even, and do you blame me for
+doing it?” The chaplain was perspiring while I was asking the questions,
+and all the officers were looking at him as though he had caught a
+tartar, but he blushed, choked, and finally answered that perhaps he did
+wrong in trading me that mule, and he asked to be forgiven.
+
+Then I turned to the officers and said, “Gentlemen, I admit that I
+traded the spotted circus-horse to the chaplain. I did it on purpose
+to show him that there is a God in Israel. When I came to the regiment,
+right fresh from the people, I needed salting. The boys all salted me
+whenever they got a chance, and I took it like a little man. In turning
+to the chaplain for comfort, I did not expect that he would salt me
+worse than all of the boys combined, but when I found that he had gone
+through me, and taken advantage of my guileless innocence, and laughed
+at my woe when I found the confounded mule was not all his fancy had
+painted it, and that it laid awake nights to devise ways to kick my head
+on, I took a blooded oath that before the cruel war was over I would
+salt that chaplain on a horse trade, until he would own up the corn. I
+leave it to you, gentlemen, if I have done it or not. When that spotted
+horse fell to me, by the fortunes of war, I was not long in learning
+that it was the relic of a circus. I rode the horse one day last week at
+a funeral, and it acted in such a manner as to almost wake up the late
+lamented. I was made the laughing stock of the brigade, and of the
+town. It was government property, and I could not kill the horse, and I
+thought the time had arrived for me to get even with my old friend. He
+was mashed on my spotted horse, and bantered me for a trade. Finally we
+traded, and I got ten dollars to boot. The result has been all that I
+could desire. I have had the satisfaction of demonstrating to this
+truly good man that all is not gold that glitters. I have shown him that
+however spotted a man may be, if he rides a spotted circus horse, he
+will get there. I will leave it to the chaplain, now, if I was not
+justified in trading him that horse, after what he had done to me, and
+will ask him if he was not served perfectly right, and if in trading me
+that mule he did not do to others as he would have others do to him, and
+if so, if he does not think the others did it to him in great shape. I
+am done. I leave my life in your hands.”
+
+When I quit they were all laughing except the chaplain, and there was
+a quiet smile around his mouth, as he thought of his experience on the
+spotted horse. The colonel asked the chaplain, if he had anything to
+say, and he said he had just been thinking that he could go over to a
+New Jersey regiment and trade that spotted horse to the chaplain of that
+regiment, and if he could, he would be willing to drop the case. He
+said that chaplain played a mean trick on him once, and he wanted to
+get even. The court martial acquitted me, and while we were all taking
+a drink with the colonel, the chaplain went out, and pretty soon we saw
+his servant leading the spotted horse over towards the camp of the New
+Jersey regiment, and later the chaplain sauntered off in that direction
+on foot, as though there was some weighty subject on his mind. The
+weighty subject was the spotted circus-horse.
+
+I do not suppose any incident ever caused so much talk as did the
+chaplain's circus. The boys were talking and laughing about it in every
+company all that afternoon, and when it was found that I had not been
+punished, for trading the horse to him, the boys were wild. They wanted
+to show their appreciation of the fun I had given them, so a lot of them
+got together to give me a sort of reception. They sent for me to come
+over to Co. D., and when I got over there they grabbed me and carried me
+off on their shoulders. I felt proud to see them so joyous and friendly,
+until they put me in a blanket and tossed me up into the trees, and
+caught me in the blanket as I came down. Of all the sensations I ever
+experienced, that of being tossed up in a blanket was the worst. I tried
+to laugh, at first, but it became serious, as I went into the air
+twenty feet, let loose of the air and came down, expecting to be crushed
+maimed, killed. My breath forsook me, I was dizzy, but I struck the
+blanket easy, and after being sent up a dozen times they let me go, and
+my reception was over.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+ Mingled Reminiscences-I Relate a Mississippi River Steamboat
+ Experience.
+
+Long before this I should have related a little experience I had on
+my first journey south, when I was a fresh recruit. After leaving
+Wisconsin, in the winter, a lot of us recruits were corralled at
+Benton Barracks, St. Louis, and for six weeks we had a picnic. There
+were about fifty of us, that belonged to the cavalry, our regiments
+being down the Mississippi river, and the commanding officer of the
+barracks seemed to be waiting for a chance to send us to our regiments.
+I have often wondered what he waited six weeks for, when we were not
+doing any duty in camp, and were making him trouble enough every day
+and every night to turn his hair gray. He was a Colonel Bonneville, if I
+remember right, a regular army officer of French extraction. Anyway, he
+always swore at us in French. The camp was run in a slack sort of a way,
+and it was easy for us to get out and go down town, or wander off into
+the country, and, as we had plenty of money, and were dressed better
+than soldiers in active service, we were welcome to all the saloons,
+and painted old St. Louis all the colors of the rainbow, returned to the
+barracks at unseasonable hours, crawled through the fence and went to
+our quarters howling, waking up the old general, who invariably ordered
+the provost-guard to arrest us, which the provost-guard invariably
+didn't do, for some reason or other. The old colonel was fast aging,
+in trying to lead a quiet life in the vicinity of “dose d-----d cavalry
+regruits,” and he said he “would order them all shot if they didn't
+behave.” Benton Barracks was the greatest place for the breeding of rats
+that I ever saw. In every house there were millions of them, and at
+night they were out in full force. One night our crowd of recruits,
+about forty in number, had been down to St. Louis on a painting
+expedition, and it was midnight when camp was reached. Every recruit had
+a revolver, and it was decided that if the rats insulted us, as they
+had often done before, we would shoot them. It was a beautiful moonlight
+night, as still as death, and we could almost hear the snoring of the
+excitable colonel in his house across the parade ground. As we came
+near our barrack, a few thousand rats crossed our path, and I drew my
+revolver and fired at a large one that seemed unusually impudent, and
+the rest of the crowd opened fire, and there was a battle in no time. A
+bugler got out and blowed some call that I did not know, a drum sounded
+a continuous roll, men rushed out and formed in line, and before we
+had fired the six charges from our revolvers, the Invalid Corps came
+hobbling across the parade ground, the colonel behind them with his
+shirt on, his pants in his hand, and swearing in French, and ordering
+the troops to arrest the whole crowd of recruits. We went right in the
+barrack, and retired, as soon as the troops showed up, and were snoring,
+with smoking revolvers under our pillows, when the guard entered.
+
+The colonel came in with the guard, and then put on his pants, after
+which he woke up some of us, and asked what was the cause of the firing.
+Every recruit swore that he had not fired a shot, but that he had heard
+some firing over the fence, on the outside, at a road-house and saloon,
+where bad men from St. Louis congregated and drank to excess. It seemed
+very hard to thus lie to so estimable a gentleman as the colonel, but
+as he was only half-dressed, and sleepy, and excited, it didn't seem as
+though the lies ought to count. But they did. The colonel apologized for
+waking us up, when we were enjoying our much-needed rest, and he went
+away with the guard. Then we all got up and danced a can-can, in our
+army underclothes, passed a series of resolutions endorsing the colonel
+as one of the ablest officers in the army, recommended that he be
+promoted to brigadier-general at the first opportunity, gave three
+cheers and a tiger for the Union, and went to bed. That is one thing
+that we recruits always come out strong in, i. e., three cheers for the
+Union. We had enlisted to save the Union, and as there was no fighting
+that we could do, during our stay at St. Louis, whenever we got a chance
+we gave three cheers for the Union. Sometimes it was not appreciated,
+however. I remember one evening our crowd went into a saloon and ordered
+beer all around, and after we had drank it, I proposed three cheers for
+the Union, which we gave in a hearty manner, and went out without paying
+for the beer. You would hardly credit it, but the saloonkeeper, an
+Irishman named Oppenheimer, became offended, and wanted us to pay cash
+for the beer. The boys wanted me to reason with him, and I began by
+asking him if he was a loyal man, and he said he was. Then I asked him
+if he didn't believe in supporting the Union. He said he did, but he
+couldn't pay the brewer for his beer by giving three cheers for the
+Union. He had to put up cash. I confess that his remarks made quite an
+impression on me, as I had not thought of it in that light before. I
+proposed that we give three cheers for Oppenheimer, which was done, and
+I thought that would settle it, but he insisted on having cash. I told
+the boys, and they said he was a rebel. I told Oppenheimer, and he got
+out a wooden bung-starter, and said he could clean out the whole party.
+Finally we compromised, in this way. We had given two rounds of cheer,
+one for the Union and one for Oppenheimer, which were a total loss, so
+it was agreed that if Oppenheimer would give three cheers for the Union
+and three for us we would pay him for the beer, if he would agree to set
+'em up for us, at his own expense. He agreed, and then we tried to
+get him to onset the beer he was going to give us, for the beer we had
+drank, and not pay him for that we had consumed. That, to any business
+man, we thought, would seem fair, but he wouldn't have it. So, after
+he had returned our cheers to us, we paid him, and then he treated.
+I mention this to show the hardships of a soldier's life, and the
+difficulties of inculcating business methods into the minds of the
+saloon-keepers. Oppenheimer meant well, but he did not appreciate cheers
+for the Union. He got so, after that when we came in his saloon, in a
+gang, he would say, “Poys, of you dondt gif any jeers fun dot Union, I
+set'em oop,” and we would swallow our cheers for the Union, and his beer.
+
+The next day after the battle of the rats, an order was issued for the
+recruits to board the steamer “City of Memphis,” and go down the river
+to join our several regiments, in the vicinity of New Orleans. In a
+few hours we had drawn rations to last a week, and were on board the
+steamer, and had started down stream. I think every soldier that is now
+alive will remember that when he took his first trip on a transport, as
+a recruit, during the war, he labored under the impression that he owned
+the boat, or at least a controlling interest in it. That was a very
+natural feeling. The opinions of the steamboat officials, it will
+be remembered, were different. I had never been on a large steamboat
+before, and after tying my knapsack and other baggage to a wood-pile
+on the lower deck, after I had vainly attempted to induce the proper
+official to give me checks for my baggage, I began to climb up stairs,
+and soon found myself on top of the Texas, beside the smoke stack,
+viewing the ever changing scenery of the grand old Mississippi. I was
+drinking in the scenery, and the fresh air, and wondering if it could
+be possible that there could be war, and killing, anywhere in this broad
+land, when all was so peace-ful and beautiful on the river, when I felt
+something strike me on the pantaloons most powerfully, and I looked
+around and a gentleman was just removing a large sized boot from my
+person. I was about to reprove him for kicking me, a total stranger, who
+had not even presented letters of introduction to me, when he said, in a
+voice that was deep down in his chest, “get down below.” I did not feel
+like arguing with a man of so violent a nature, and I went down the
+narrow stairs, after he had said he would throw me overboard if I did
+not hurry. I learned afterwards that he was the mate of the steamboat.
+I could see that he had mistaken me for a common soldier, which I would
+not admit was the case, but I went down stairs, probably looking hurt.
+I was hurt. I went into the cabin and sat down on one of the sofas, to
+think, when a colored person told me to get off the sofa. As he seemed
+to know what he was talking about I got on. I saw a bar, where officers
+of the army and passengers were drinking, and I went up and asked for a
+whisky sour, thinking that would relieve the pain and cause my injured
+feelings to improve. The bar tender told me to go out on deck and I
+could get plain whisky through a window where the negro deck hands got
+their drinks, but I could not drink with gentlemen. That was the first
+day that I realized that in becoming a soldier I had descended to a
+level with negro deck hands and roustabouts, and could not be allowed
+to associate with gentlemen. Soon the gong rung for supper, and I went
+into the cabin and sat down to the table for a square meal, the other
+seats being filled with army officers and passengers. I was going to
+give my order to a waiter, when he called an officer of the boat, who
+told me to get up from the table and go below, as the cabin was intended
+for gentlemen and not soldiers. My idea was to kick against being turned
+out, but I thought of the mate's boot, and I went out, went down on the
+lower deck with the recruits, and eat some bread and meat. I was rapidly
+becoming crushed. I talked my experience over with the boys, and they
+all agreed with me that the way we were treated was an outrage on
+American soldiers, which we would not stand. We began to wonder where
+we were going to sleep, when I remembered seeing state-rooms on the deck
+above, with berths, and it seemed to me they must be intended for us,
+so we agreed to go up and go into the state-rooms from the doors that
+opened out on deck, believing that those who got in first would be
+allowed to occupy them. About fifty of us got into state-rooms, while
+the officers and passengers were playing poker in the cabin. I was
+asleep, when I heard a noise out on deck, and raising up in my berth
+I looked over the transom and saw about twenty of the recruits being
+driven along by officers of the boat, kicks and cuffs, and loud talking
+being the order. “I'll teach you brutes to steal the beds of passengers
+on this boat. You dirty whelps, to presume to sleep in beds. Get
+down stairs and sleep on the wood-pile with the niggers,” shouted the
+captain.
+
+If there was going to be any fuss about it, I didn't want to stay in the
+state-room. I didn't want to be broke of my rest, of course, but if it
+was not customary for common soldiers to indulge in such luxuries, I
+would go out. Just then there was a knock at the door leading into the
+cabin, and I heard a female voice say, “Powtaw, I am afraid one of those
+dirty soljaws has got into my state-room,” and then I heard the
+mate's voice say, “Wait till I get at him.” Of course, under those
+circumstances I could not remain. No gentleman would occupy a lady's
+birth, and cause her to sit up all night. To be sure there were two
+berths, and I could remain in the upper one, and she could turn in
+below, and I would turn my face to the wall and not look, but I doubted
+if a lady, who was a perfect stranger, and whose opinion of soldiers
+was so pronounced, could compromise on such a basis, so when the mate
+knocked at the door I took my pants and shoes and went out the door
+leading on deck, and went below, without being discovered. I found my
+companions, who had been routed out of their beds, dressing themselves
+as best they could by the light from the furnace, when the stokers would
+put in wood, and they were about as mad as I was. The treatment we had
+received was not what we had a right to expect when we enlisted. We
+decided to set up all night, and growl and discuss the situation.
+Several of the recruits made remarks that were very scathing, and
+the officials of the boat were held up to scorn, and charged with
+inhumanity. We sat there till daylight, and then organized an
+indignation meeting, and appointed a committee to draft resolutions
+indicative of the sense of the meeting. I had been lightning on
+resolutions before I enlisted, having attended several county
+conventions, and I was appointed to draft the resolutions. As near as I
+can remember the following were the words:
+
+ “_Whereas_, The undersigned, members of the army of the
+ union, in the course of our duty as soldiers, have been
+ ordered to proceed to our several regiments down the
+ Mississippi river, on board of the 'City of Memphis,' and,
+
+ “_Whereas_, We have been treated by the officers of the
+ aforesaid boat more like animals than human beings, in being
+ deprived of luxuries to which we have been accustomed, have
+ been driven from the public dining-table, driven from our
+ beds at the dead hour of night, that shoulder-strapped
+ officers might be made comfortable, and kicked down stairs,
+ therefore, be it
+
+ “_Resolved_, That we demand of the captain of the steamer
+ 'City of Memphis,' that we be allowed the same privileges on
+ this boat that others enjoy. 'We hold these truths to be
+ self-evident,' that one man is just as good as another, no
+ matter what his rank. We demand that we be allowed to eat at
+ the table in the cabin, to sleep in the state-rooms, to
+ drink at the bar if we so elect, and to go to any place on
+ the boat that other passengers are allowed, and that we be
+ treated like white men, which we, have not up to the adoption
+ of these resolutions.
+
+ “_Resolved_, That a copy of these resolutions be presented
+ to the captain of the boat, that a copy be sent to the
+ secretary of war, and that the resolutions be published in
+ the newspapers.”
+
+When I read the resolutions to the boys they were passed unanimously,
+after a few amendments had been voted down. One of the boys wanted a
+resolution passed demanding that the mate be discharged, and one moved
+the captain be requested to apologize. I argued that if the captain
+received the resolutions in the proper spirit, and acceded to our
+demand, that would be an apology in itself, and in that case the mate
+would probably resign. I was appointed one of a committee of three to
+wait on the captain, and read the resolutions to him, after the boys had
+all signed them. I had rather some one else had been appointed, as I had
+been kicked once already, but the boys said it needed somebody that
+was equal to making a little speech, as it would be necessary to say
+something before reading the resolutions. They also said, it needed a
+man with plenty of gall, one that was not afraid to stand up be-fore the
+world and ask for our rights. I felt flattered at being selected, but I
+took the precaution to place a gunny-sack, nicely folded up, in the seat
+of my pants, because I didn't know what might happen. After breakfast, I
+took the committee and the resolutions, and went up into the cabin,
+and told a colored man that he might tell the captain that a committee
+wished an audience with him. He was playing poker in the ladies' cabin,
+and I have always thought he had an idea there was a committee of
+passengers who wanted to present him with a gold headed cane, a thing
+that was often done on the boats. Any way he came along smiling, and
+when the nigger pointed me out, and the captain noticed that I had a
+large paper in my hand, he said, “What is it, gentlemen?” This was the
+first time I had been alluded to in that manner since I enlisted. I
+asked him to be seated, and he sat down on a lounge, and I proceeded. I
+forgot to make any speech, but went right at the _whereases_ at once.
+I say the captain smiled when he came up. Of course, reading the
+resolutions, as I was, I could not see his face change, but afterwards
+one of the committee told me about it. I could not tell that a storm was
+coming. I noticed that quite a number of people had collected around
+the captain, from curiosity, I supposed. I had just got to the last
+resolution where it spoke of sending a copy to the secretary of war,
+when there was a howl. The captain got up and grabbed me by the throat,
+while somebody else took me by the hind legs. As we went towards the
+door, I noticed other men were carrying the rest of the committee. My
+idea was that they would throw us overboard, and as I could not swim, I
+closed my eyes and said, “Now I lay me.” The stairs leading to the lower
+deck were covered with brass. I remember that distinctly, because I rode
+down the stairs on the small of my back, and we had a committee meeting
+at the foot of the stairs. I brought up on top of the rest of the
+committee. We sat there a moment, and decided, unanimously, that we had
+been unceremoniously chucked down stairs, resolutions and all, and we
+picked ourselves up and limped back to where our companions were, and
+so reported. The expedition was a total failure, for in a short time a
+notice was tacked on the foot of the stairs, stating that all enlisted
+men were forbidden from occupying any portion of the boat except the
+lower deck, and if one was found above that deck, he would be turned
+over to the first army post, a prisoner. So we remained on the lower
+deck, and took it out abusing the officers, and hoping the boat would
+blow up. But the scenery was just as nice from the lower deck.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+ Our Party of Recruits own the Earth--We Live High, Give a
+ Ball, and go to the Guard-House--And are Arrested by Colored
+ Troops.
+
+Let's see, I forget whether I have ever told about getting strung up on
+a bayonet, near New Orleans, when I first went south as a recruit. It
+was before I had joined my regiment, and I was with a gang of recruits,
+all looking for the regiments we had enlisted in. We had come down from
+St. Louis on a steamboat, our regiments being scattered all over the
+Department of the Gulf. We were not in any particular hurry to find our
+regiments, as the longer we kept away from them the less duty we would
+have to do. I do not think, out of the whole forty recruits, there was
+one who was in the least hurry to find his regiment, and none of them
+would have known their regiments if they had seen them, unless somebody
+told them. They had enlisted just as it happened, all of them hoping the
+war would be over before they found where they belonged. They didn't know
+anybody in their respective regiments, hence there were no ties binding
+them. But they had been together for several months, as recruits, until
+all had got well acquainted, and if they could have been formed into
+a company, for service together, they might have done pretty good
+fighting. The crowd was becoming smaller, as every day or two some
+recruit would come and bid us all good bye. He had actually stumbled on
+to his regiment, and when the officers of an old regiment, in examining
+recruits, found one assigned to his regiment, he never took his eyes
+off the recruit until he was landed. I have seen some very affecting
+partings, when one of our gang would find where he belonged and had to
+leave us, perhaps never to meet again. The gang was rapidly dropping
+apart, and when we got to New Orleans there were only twenty or so
+left. We reported to the commanding officer, and he quartered us at
+Carrollton, near the city, in what had once been a beer-garden and
+dance-house. We slept on the floor of the dance-house, cooked our meals
+out in the garden, spread our food on the old beer tables, and imagined
+we were proprietors of the place, or guests of the government. We always
+ordered beer or expensive wines with our meals. Not that we ever got
+any beer or wine, because the beer garden was deserted, but we put on a
+great deal of style.
+
+We found a lot of champagne bottles out in the back yard, and I do not
+think I ever took a meal there without having a champagne bottle sitting
+beside me on the table, and when any citizens were passing along the
+street we would take up the bottles, look at the label in a scrutinizing
+way, as though not exactly certain in our minds whether we were getting
+as good wine as we were paying for. The old empty bottles gave us a
+standing in Carrollton society that nothing else could have given us.
+Some of the boys got so they could imitate the popping of a champagne
+cork to perfection, by placing one finger in the mouth, prying the cheek
+around on one side, and letting it fly open suddenly. We would have
+several of the boys with aprons on, and when anybody was passing on the
+street, one of us would call, “Waiter open a bottle of that extra dry.”
+ The waiter would say, “Certainly, sah,” take a bottle between his knees,
+run his finger in his mouth and make it pop, and then pretend to pour
+out the champagne in glasses, imitating the “fizzing” perfectly. It was
+the extra dryest champagne that I ever had. But all that foolishness had
+the desired effect. It convinced the citizens of Carrollton that we were
+no ordinary soldiers. We were all nicely dressed, had no guards, and
+apparently no officers, had plenty of money, which we spent freely at
+the stores, and the impression soon got out that we were on some special
+service, and there was, of course, much curiosity to know our business.
+I learned that we were looked upon as secret service men, and I told the
+boys about it, and advised them not to tell that we were recruits, but
+to put on an air of mystery, and we would have fun while we remained.
+One day an oldish gentleman who lived near, and who had a fine orange
+plantation, or grove, toward which we had cast longing eyes, called at
+the dance-house where we were quartered. We had just finished our frugal
+meal, and the empty bottles were being taken away. He addressed me, and
+said, “Good day, Colonel.” I responded as best I could, and invited him
+to be seated. I apologized for not offering him a glass of champagne,
+but told him we had cracked the last bottle, and would not have any more
+until the next day, as I had only that morning requested my friend, the
+general commanding at New Orleans, to send me a fresh supply, which he
+would do at once, I had no doubt. Well, you ought to have seen the boys
+try to keep from laughing, stuffing handkerchiefs in their mouths, etc.
+But not a man laughed. The old citizen said it was no matter, as he
+would drop in the next day, and drink with us. We talked about the war,
+and it is my impression he was anxious for us to believe he was a loyal
+man. But after a while he asked me what particular duty I was on, there
+at Carrollton. I hesitated a moment, and finally told him that I hoped
+he would excuse me for not telling him, but the fact was it would be as
+much as my “commission” would be worth to unfold any of my plans. I
+told him that time alone would reveal the object of our being there, and
+until such time as my government thought it best to make it public, it
+was my duty as an officer, to keep silent. He said certainly, that was
+all right, and he admired me for keeping my own counsel. (I was probably
+the highest private and rawest recruit in the army.) He said there was a
+natural curiosity on the part of the people of Carrollton to know who
+we were, as we lived so high, and seemed such thorough gentlemen. I
+admitted that we were thorough gentlemen, and thanked him for the high
+opinion that the cultured people of Carrollton had of us. He wound up
+by pointing to his orange grove, and said he-would consider it a special
+favor if we would consider ourselves perfectly free to go there and help
+ourselves at any time, and particularly that evening, as a number of
+young people would be at his house for a quiet dance. I told him that
+a few of us would certainly be present, and thanked him kindly. When he
+was gone I told the boys, and they wanted to give three cheers, but I
+got them to keep still, and we talked all the afternoon of the soft snap
+we had struck, and cleaned up for the party. My intention was to pick
+out half a dozen of the best dressed, recruits, those that could make a
+pretty fair showing in society to go with me, but they all wanted to
+go, and there was no way to prevent it, so all but one Irishman, that we
+hired to stay and watch our camp, went. Well, we ate oranges fresh from
+the trees, joined in the dance, ate refreshments, and drank the old
+gentleman's wine, and had a good time, made a good impression on the
+ladies, and went back to camp at midnight. On the way over to the party
+I told the boys the gentleman was coming to see us the next day, and we
+should have to get a bottle of champagne some-where, to treat him, as I
+had told him we expected, some more up from the city. When we came back
+from the party a German recruit pulled a bottle of champagne out of his
+pocket, which he had stolen from the man's house in order to treat him
+with the next day. The gentleman came over to our quarters the next day,
+and we opened our bottle, and he drank to our very good health, though I
+thought he looked at the label on the bottle pretty close. For a week
+we frequented the gentleman's orange grove every day, and ate oranges to
+our heart's content.
+
+Several times during the week we were invited to different houses, where
+we boys became quite interested in the fair girls of Louisiana. It was
+ten days from the time we settled in the beer garden, and we had kept
+our secret well. Nobody in Carrollton knew that we were raw recruits
+that had never seen a day of service, but the impression was still
+stronger than ever that we were pets of the government. We had an old
+map of the United States that we had borrowed at a saloon, and during
+the day we would hang the map up and surround it, while I pointed out
+imaginary places to attack. This we would do while people were passing.
+Everything was working splendidly, and we decided to give a party.
+We hired a band to play in the dance house, ordered refreshments, and
+invited about forty ladies and gentlemen to attend. The day we were to
+give the party we sent a recruit down town to draw rations, and he told
+everybody what a high old time we recruits were having at Carrollton.
+The commanding officer heard of it, and, probably having forgotten
+that we were up there waiting to be sent to our regiments he sent a
+peremptory order for us to report at New Orleans before noon of that
+day. How could we report at noon, when we were going to give a party at
+night? It was simply impossible, and I, as a sort of breast corporal in
+charge, sent a man down town to tell the commanding officer that we had
+an engagement that night, and couldn't come before the next day. I did
+not know that it was improper to send regrets to a commanding officer
+when ordered to do anything. The man I sent down to New Orleans came
+back and I asked him what the general said. The man said he read the
+note and said, “The hell they can't come till tomorrow. The impudence of
+the recruits. They will come tonight!” I did not believe we would. In
+my freshness I did not believe that any commander of troops would
+deliberately break up a ball, and humiliate brave soldiers. I thought
+my explanation to the commander that we had an engagement, would be
+sufficient, that he would see that it was impossible to hurry matters.
+We had been to a good deal of expense, and it was our duty, after
+accepting the hospitalities of those people, to pay our indebtedness in
+the only way we knew how, and so, as the boys had gathered around me
+to see what was to be done, I said, “On with the dance. Let joy be
+unconfined.”
+
+Our guests arrived on time, and shortly after it became dark, the Dutch
+band we had hired from, a beer hall down town, struck up some sort of
+foreign music, and “there was a sound of revelry by night.” We danced
+half a dozen times, smiled sweetly on our guests, walked around the
+paths of the old garden, flirted a little perhaps, and talked big
+with the male guests, and convinced them anew that we were regular old
+battle-scarred vets, on detached duty of great importance. Near midnight
+we all set down to lunch, around the beer tables, and everything was
+going along smooth. The old gentleman who had been first to make our
+acquaintance, and who had been the means of getting us into society,
+proposed as a toast, “Our brave and generous hosts,” and the boys called
+upon me to respond. I got up on a bench and was making a speech that, if
+I had been allowed to continue, would have been handed down in
+history as one of the ablest of our time. It was conciliatory in tone,
+calculated to cement a friendship between the army and the citizens of
+the south, and show that while we were engaged in war, there was nothing
+mean about us, and that we loved our neighbors as ourselves. I was just
+getting warmed up, and our guests had spatted their hands at some of my
+remarks, when I heard a tramp, tramp, tramp on the sidewalk outside, and
+before I could breathe a squad of infantry soldiers had filed into the
+garden, surrounded the dance-house, a dozen had formed in line before
+the door, and a sergeant had walked in and ordered the citizens to
+disperse, and said the recruits were under arrest. Well, I have been
+in some tight places in my life, but that was the closest place I ever
+struck. The old gentleman, the leader of our guests, turned to me and
+asked what this all meant, and I told him to be calm, and I would fix
+everything. I got down off the bench and approached the sergeant,
+to argue the thing. I found that he was, a colored man, and that his
+soldiers were also colored troops. This was the unkindest cut of all.
+I could stand it to be arrested by white soldiers, but the sending of a
+lot of “niggers” after us white fellows was more than human nature could
+bear. We had most of us been Democrats before enlisting, and had never
+looked upon the colored man with that respect that we learned to
+do, later. I went up to the sergeant, as brave as I could, and said,
+“Look-a-here, boss, you have made a dreadful mistake. We are gentlemen,
+enjoying ourselves, and this interruption on your part will cost you
+dear. Now go away with your men, quietly, and I promise you, on
+the honor of a gentleman, that I will not report you, and have you
+punished,” and I looked at him in a tone of voice that I thought
+would convince him that I was a friend if he should go away, but if he
+remained it would be at his peril.
+
+He said he didn't want any foolishness, or some of us would get hurt,
+and just then one of the Irish recruits, who had tried to skin out the
+back way, got jabbed in the pants by a bayonet, and he began to howl
+and cuss the “niggers.” The sergeant called up half a dozen of his sable
+guard, and they surrounded me and some of the boys. Our guests were
+becoming frightened, ladies had put on-their wraps, and there was a good
+deal of confusion, when I shouted, “Boys, are we going to submit to
+this insult on the part of a lot of nigger field hands? Never! To the
+rescue!” Well, they didn't “to the rescue” worth a cent. A colored man
+with a bayonet had every recruit's breast at the point of his weapon,
+three soldiers surrounded me, and one run his bayonet through the breast
+of my coat and out under my arm, and held me on my tip-toes, and I
+was powerless, except with my mouth. The old gentleman, our most
+distinguished guest, came up to me, and I said to him, in confidence,
+so our guests could hear, however, with a smile, “This may seem to you a
+singular proceeding. I cannot explain it to you now, as I am pledged to
+secrecy by my government, but I will say that the duty we are on here is
+part of a well-laid plan of our commander, and this seeming arrest is
+a part of the plan. This colored sergeant is innocent. He is simply
+obeying orders, and is a humble instrument in carrying out our plan. I
+expected to be arrested before morning, but hoped it would be after our
+party. However, we soldiers have to go where ordered. We shall be thrown
+into prison for a time, but when this detective or secret service work
+on which we are engaged is done, we will take pleasure in calling upon
+you again, wearing such laurels as we may win. We bid you good-night,
+and wish you much happiness.” They all shook hands with us, evidently
+believing what I had said, and even the sergeant seemed to take it in,
+for, after the crowd had gone, the sergeant said, “You will excuse me,
+kernel, for what I have done. I didn't know about any 'plan.' All I knew
+was dat the provost-marshal told me to go up to Carrollton and pull
+dem recruits dat was camping at de beer garden, and fotch 'em to de
+guard-house.” I told him he did perfectly right, and then we recruits
+packed up our things and marched with the colored soldiers to New
+Orleans, about six miles, and we slept in the guard-house. The next
+morning the provost-marshal called upon us, damned us a little for not
+insisting on being sent to our regiments, found out that my regiment was
+up the river two hundred miles, and seemed mad because I passed it
+when I come from St. Louis. I told him I was not expected to go hunting
+around for my regiment, like a lost calf. What I wanted was for my
+regiment to hunt me up. That afternoon he put me on an up-river boat
+with a tag on my baggage telling where I belonged, and I bid good-bye
+to the recruits, after having had three months of fun at the expense of
+Uncle Sam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+ I Strike Another Soft-Snap, Which is Harder Than Any Snap
+ Heretofore--I Begin Taking Music Lessons, and Fill Up a
+ Confederate Prisoner With Yankee Food.
+
+The last two chapters of this stuff has related to early experiences,
+but now that it is probable the chaplain has got over being mad at my
+trading him the circus-horse, I will resume the march with the regiment.
+For a month or more I had been waiting for my commission to arrive, so
+that I could serve as an officer, but it did not arrive while we were at
+Montgomery, and we started away from that city towards Vicksburg, Miss.,
+with a fair prospect of having hot work with strolling bands of the
+enemy. I was much depressed. It had got so they didn't seem to want me
+anywhere. It seemed that I was a sort of a Jonah, and wherever I was,
+something went wrong. The chaplain wouldn't have me, because he had a
+suspicion that I was giddy, and full of the devil, and I have thought he
+had an idea I would sacrifice the whole army to perpetrate a practical
+joke, and he also maintained that I would lie, if a lie would help me
+out of a scrape. I never knew how such an impression could have been
+created. The colonel said he would try and get along without me, the
+adjutant didn't want any more of my mathematics in his reports and the
+brigade commander said he would carry the brigade colors himself rather
+than have me around, as I would bring headquarters into disgrace some
+way. So I had to serve as a private in my own company, which was very
+hard on a man who had tasted the sweets of official position. O, if my
+commission did not come soon I was lost. After we had marched a couple
+of days it began to look as though we were liable to have a fight on our
+hands. Every little while there would be firing in advance, or on the
+flanks, and things looked blue for one who did not want to have any
+trouble with anybody. One morning when we were cooking our breakfast
+beside a pitch pine log, a little Irishman, who was a friend of mine,
+as I always lent him my tobacco, said: “There will be a fight today, and
+some wan of the byes will sleep cold tonight.”
+
+A cold chill came over me, and I wondered which of of the “by's” would
+draw the ticket of death. The Irishman noticed that I was not feeling
+perfectly easy, and he said, “Sorrel top, wud yez take a bit of advice
+from the loikes of me?” I did not like to be called sorrel top, but if
+there was any danger I would take advice from anybody, so I told him to
+fire away. He told me that when we fell in, for the march of the day,
+to arrange to be No. 4, as in case we were dismounted, to fight on foot,
+number four would remain on his horse, and hold three other horses, and
+keep in the rear, behind the trees, while the dismounted men went into
+the fight. Great heavens, and that had never occurred to me before. Of
+course number four would hold the horses, in case of a dismounted fight,
+and I had never thought what a soft thing it was. It can be surmised by
+the reader of profane history, that when our company formed that morning
+I was number four. We marched a long for a couple of hours, when there
+was some firing on the flanks, and a couple of companies were wheeled
+into line and marched off into the woods for half a mile, and the order
+was given to “prepare to fight on foot.” It was a momentous occasion for
+me, and when the three men of our four dismounted and handed the bridle
+reins to me, I was about the happiest man in the army. I did not want
+the boys to think I was anxious to keep away from the front, so I said,
+“Say, cap, don't I go too?” He said I could if I wanted to, as one of
+the other boys would hold the horses if I was spoiling to be a corpse,
+but I told him I guessed, seeing that I was already on the horse, I
+would stay, and the boys went off laughing, leaving about twenty-five of
+us “number fours” holding horses. Now, you may talk all you please about
+safe places in a fight, but sitting on a horse in plain sight, holding
+three other prancing, kicking, squalling horses, while the rest of the
+boys are behind trees, or behind logs, popping at the enemy, is no soft
+thing. The bullets seemed to pass right over our fellows on foot, and
+came right among the horses, who twisted around and got tangled up, and
+made things unpleasant. I was trying to get a stallion I was holding to
+quit biting my legs, when I saw my little Irishman, who had steered me
+on to the soft snap, dodge down behind his horse's head, to escape a
+bullet that killed one of the horses he was holding, and I said, “This
+is a fine arrangement you have got me into. This is worse than being in
+front.” He said he believed it was, as he backed his other horses away
+from the dying horse, but he said as long as they killed horses we
+had no cause to complain. There was a sergeant in charge of us “number
+fours,” and he was as cool as any fellow I ever saw. The sergeant was a
+nice man, but he was no musician. He was an Irishman, also, and when any
+bugle-call and when any bugle-call sounded he had to ask some one what
+it was. There was a great deal of uncertainty about bugle-calls, I
+noticed, among officers as well as men.
+
+Of course it could not be expected that every man in a cavalry regiment
+would be a music teacher, and the calls sounded so much alike to the
+uncultivated ear, that it was no wonder that everybody got the calls
+mixed. In camp we got so we could tell “assembly,” and “surgeon's call,”
+ and “tattoo,” and quite a number of others, but the calls of battle
+were Greek to us. The bugle sounded down in the woods, and the sergeant
+turned to me and asked, “Fhat the divil is that I dunno?” I was
+satisfied it was “To horse,” but when I saw our fellows come rushing
+back towards the horses it looked as though the order was to fall
+back, and I suggested as much to the sergeant. He thought it looked
+reasonable, too, and he ordered us to fall back slowly toward the
+regiment. We didn't go so confounded slow, and of course I was ahead
+with my three horses. The sergeant heard the captain yell to him to hold
+on, and he got the most of the “fours” to stop, and let the boys get on,
+but the little Irishman and myself couldn't hold our extra horses, and
+they dragged us along over logs and through brush, the regiment drew
+sabers to “shoo” the horses back, waived their hats, my horse run his
+fore feet into a hole, fell down, and let me off over his head, the
+other horses seemed to walk on me, I became insensible, and the next
+thing I knew I was in an ambulance, behind the regiment, which was on
+the march, as though nothing had happened. I felt of myself to see if
+anything was broke, and finding I was all right I told the driver of the
+ambulance I guessed I would get out and mount my horse, but he said he
+guessed I wouldn t, because the colonel had told him if I died to bury
+me beside the road, but if I lived to bring me to headquarters for
+punishment. The driver said the boys whose horses I had stampeded,
+wanted to kill me, but the colonel had said death was too good for me.
+Well, nobody was hurt in the skirmish, and about noon we arrived at
+a camping place for the night, and the ambulance drove up, and I was
+placed under guard.
+
+It seems the sergeant had laid the whole thing to me. He had admitted
+to the colonel that he didn't know one bugle call from another, and he
+supposed I did, and when he asked me what it was, and I said it was to
+retreat, he supposed I knew, and retreated. The colonel asked me what I
+had to say, and I told him I didn't know any bugle call except get your
+quinine, get your quinine. That when I enlisted there was nothing said
+about my ability to read notes in music, and I had never learned, and
+couldn't learn, as I had no more ear for music than a mule. I told
+him if he would furnish a music teacher, I would study hard to try and
+master the difference between “forward and back,” but that it didn't
+seem to me as though I ought to be held responsible for an expression of
+opinion, however erroneous, when asked for it by a superior officer.
+
+I told him that when the bugle sounded, and I saw the boys coming back
+on a hop, skip and jump, it seemed to me the most natural thing in
+the world that the bugle had sounded a retreat. That seemed the only
+direction we could go, and as my natural inclination was to save those
+horses that had been placed in my charge, of course I interpreted the
+bugle call to mean for us to get out of there honorably, and as the only
+way to get out honorably was to get out quick, we got up and dusted. The
+colonel always gave me credit for being a good debater, and he smiled
+and said that as no damage had been done, he would not insist that I be
+shot on the spot, but he felt that an example should be made of me. He
+said I would be under arrest until bed time, down under a tree, half a
+mile or so from headquarters, in plain sight, and he would send music
+teachers there to teach me the bugle calls. I thanked him, in a few
+well chosen remarks, and the guard marched me to the tree, which was the
+guard-house. I found another soldier there, under arrest, who had rode
+out of the ranks to water his horse, while on the march, against
+orders, and a Confederate prisoner that had been captured in the morning
+skirmish, a captain of a Virginia regiment. The captain seemed real hurt
+at having been captured, and was inclined to be uppish and distant. I
+tried two or three times to get him into conversation on some subject
+connected with the war, but he wouldn't have it. He evidently looked
+upon me as a horse-thief, a deserter, and a bad man, or else a soldier
+who had been sent to pump information out of him. I never was let alone
+quite as severely as I was by our prisoner, at first. But I went to work
+and built a fire, and soon had some coffee boiling, bacon frying, and
+sweet potatoes roasting, and when I spread the lay out on the ground,
+and said, “Colonel, this is on me. Won't you join me?” I think he was
+the most surprised man I ever saw, He had watched every move I made, in
+cooking, with a yearning such as is seldom seen, and he probably had
+no more idea that he was going to have a mouthful of it, than that he
+should fly. His eyes might have been weak, but if he had been a man I
+knew well, I should have said there were a couple of tears gathering
+in his eyes, and I was quite sure of it when the flood broke over the
+eye-lid dam, and rolled down among the underbrush whiskers. He stopped
+the flood at once, by an effort of will, though there seemed a something
+in his throat when he said, “You don't mean it, do you, kernel?” I told
+him of course I meant it, and to slide right up and help himself, and I
+speared a great big sweet potato, and some bacon, and placed them on
+a big leaf, and poured coffee out in the only cup I had. He kicked on
+using the cup, but I said we would both drink out of it. He said, “you
+are very kind, sir,” and that was all he said during the meal. But how he
+_did_ eat. He tried to act as though he didn't care much for dinner, and
+as though he was eating out of courtesy to me, but I could tell by the
+way the sweet potato went down in the depths of my Confederate friend,
+and by the joyous look when a swallow of coffee hit the right place,
+that he was having a picnic.
+
+When we were through with dinner and the guard and the other prisoner
+were cooking theirs, he said, “My friend, I do not mind telling you
+now that I was much in need of food. I had not eaten since yesterday
+morning, as we have been riding hard to intercept you gentlemen, sir.
+I trust I shall live long enough to repay, you sir.” I told him not to
+mention it, as all our boys made it a point to divide when we captured a
+prisoner. He said he believed his people felt the same way, but God knew
+they had little to divide. He said he trembled when he thought that some
+of our men who were prisoners in the south were faring very poorly, but
+it could not be helped. “Suppose I had captured you,” he said, with a
+smile that was forced, “I could not have given you a mouthful of bread,
+until we had found a southern family that 'had bread to spare.'” I told
+him it was pretty tough, but it would all be over before long, and then
+we would all have plenty to eat. I got out a pack of cards, and the
+confederate captain played seven-up with me, while we smoked. Presently
+nine buglers came down to where we were, formed in line, and began to
+sound cavalry calls in concert. I knew that they were the music teachers
+the colonel had sent to teach me the calls. The confederate looked on
+in astonishment, while they sounded a call, and when it was done I asked
+the chief bugler what it was, and he told me, and I asked him to sound
+something else, which he did. My idea was to convince the prisoner that
+this was a part of daily routine. He got nervous and couldn't remember
+which was trumps; and finally said we might talk all we pleased about
+the horrors of Andersonville, but to be blowed to death with cavalry
+bugles was a fate that only the most hardened criminals should suffer.
+The confederate evidently had no ear for music more than I had, and
+he soon got enough. However the buglers kept up their noise till about
+supper time, when they were called on. I got another meal for the
+confederate, and he seemed to be actually getting fat. The colonel of my
+regiment came down to where we were, and said, “You fellows seem to be
+doing pretty well,” and then he had a long talk with the rebel prisoner,
+invited him up to his tent to pass the night, apologized for the concert
+he had been giving us, explained what it was for, told me I could go to
+my company if I thought I could remember a bugle call in the future; the
+captain shook hands with me and thanked me cordially, and we separated.
+He was exchanged, the next day, and I never saw him for twenty-two
+years, when I found him at the head of a manufacturing enterprise in his
+loved Virginia, and he furnished me a more expensive meal than I did him
+years before, but it didn't taste half as good as the bacon dinner in
+Alabama under the guard-house tree.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+ A Short Story About a Pair of Boots, Showing the Monumental
+ Gall of their Owner.
+
+When I enlisted in the cavalry I bought a pair of top boots, of the
+Wellington pattern, stitched with silk up and down the legs, which were
+of shiny morocco. They came clear above my knees, and from the pictures
+I had seen of cavalry soldiers, it struck me those boots would be
+a pass-port to any society in the army. The first few months of my
+service, it seemed to me, the boots gave me more tone than any one
+thing. I learned afterwards that all new recruits came to the regiment
+with such boots, and that they were the laughing stock of all the old
+veterans. I did not know that I was being guyed by the boys, and I
+loved those boots above all things I had. To be sure, when we struck an
+unusually muddy country, some idiot of an officer seemed to be inspired
+to order us to dismount. The boys who had common army boots would
+dismount anywhere, in mud or water, but it seemed to me cruel for
+officers to order a dismount, when they knew I would have to step in the
+mud half way up to my knees, with those morocco boots on. Several times
+when ordered to dismount in the mud, I have ridden out of the road,
+where it was not muddy, to dismount, but the boys would laugh so loud,
+and the officers would swear so wickedly, that I got so I would dismount
+wherever they told me, suppress my emotions, as I felt my beautiful,
+shiny boots sink into the red clay, and when we got into camp I would
+spend half the night cleaning my boots. The captain said if I would
+spend half the time cleaning my carbine and saber that I did cleaning my
+boots, I would have been a model soldier.
+
+I think that for the first year of my service I had as elegant a pair of
+boots as could be found in the army. But it was the hardest work to keep
+track of them. The first three months it was all I could do to keep
+the chaplain from trading me a pair of old army shoes for my boots. The
+arguments he used to convince me that mo-. rocco boots were far above my
+station, and that they were intended for a chaplain, were labored. If he
+had used the same number of words in the right direction, he could have
+converted the whole army. I had to sleep with my boots under my head
+every night, to prevent them from being stolen and twice they were
+stolen from my tent, but in each case recovered at the sutler's, where
+they had been pawned for a bottle of brandy peaches, which I had to pay
+for to redeem the boots. The boots had become almost a burden to me,
+in keeping them, but I enjoyed them so much that money could not have
+bought them. When we were in a town for a few days, and I rode around,
+it did not make any difference whether I had any other clothes on, of
+any account, the morocco boots captured the town. The natives could
+not see how a man who wore such boots could be anything but a high-up
+thoroughbred. The last time I lost my boots will always be remembered by
+those who were in the same command. We were on the march with a Michigan
+and a New Jersey regiment, through the dustiest country that ever was.
+The dust was eight inches deep in the road, and just like fine ashes.
+Every time a horse put his foot down the dust would raise above the
+trees, and as there were two thousand horses, with four feet apiece, and
+each foot in constant motion, it can be imagined that the troops were
+dusty. And it was so hot that the perspiration oozed out of us, but the
+dust covered it.
+
+The three regiments took turns in acting as rear guard, to pick up
+stragglers, and on this hot and dusty day the New Jersey regiment was in
+the rear. It was composed of Germans entirely, with a German colonel,
+a man who had seen service in Europe, and he looked upon a soldier as a
+machine, with no soul, fit only to obey orders. That was not the kind of
+a soldier I was. During the day's march the boys stripped off
+everything they could. I know all I had on was a shirt and pants, and
+a handkerchief around my head. I took off my boots and coat and let the
+colored cook of the company strap them on to his saddle with the camp
+kettles. He usually rode right behind the company, and I thought I could
+get my things any time if I wanted to dress up. It was the hardest day's
+march that I ever experienced, lungs full of dust, and every man so
+covered with dust that you could not recognize your nearest neighbor.
+Afternoon the command halted beside a stream, and it was announced that
+we would go into camp for the night. The colored cook came along soon
+after, and he was perfectly pale, whether from dust or fright I could
+not tell, but he announced to me, in a manner that showed that he
+appreciated the calamity which had befallen the command, that he had
+lost my boots. I was going to kill him, but my carbine was full of dust,
+and I made it a point never to kill a man with a dirty gun, so I let him
+explain. He said:
+
+“I fell back to de rear, by dat plantation where de cotton gin was
+burning, to see if I couldn't get a canteen of buttermilk to wash de
+dust outen my froat, when dat Dutch Noo Jersey gang come along, and de
+boss he said, 'nicker, you got back ahead fere you pelong, or I gick you
+in de pack mit a saber, aind't it,' and when I get on my mule to come
+along he grab de boots and he say, 'nicker, dot boots is better for me,'
+and when I was going to take dem away from him he stick me in de pants
+wid a saber. Den I come away.”
+
+I could have stood up under having an arm shot off, but to lose my boots
+was more than I could bear. It never did take me long to decide on any
+important matter, and in a moment I decided to invade the camp of
+that New Jersey regiment, recapture my boots or annihilate every last
+foreigner on our soil, so I started off, barefooted, without a coat, and
+covered with dust, for the headquarters of the New Jersey fellows. They
+had been in camp but a few minutes, but every last one of them had taken
+a bath in the river, brushed the dust off his clothes, and looked ready
+for dress parade. That was one fault of those foreigners, they were
+always clean, if they had half a chance. I went right to the colonel's
+tent, and he was surrounded with officers, and they were opening bottles
+of beer, and how cool it looked. There was something peculiar about
+those foreigners, no matter if they were doing duty in the most
+inaccessible place in the south, and were short of transportation, you
+could always find beer at their headquarters. I walked right in, and the
+colonel was just blowing the foam off a glass of beer. He looked at me
+in astonishment, and I said in a voice husky from dust down my neck:
+
+“Colonel this is an important epoch in the history of our beloved
+country. Events have transpired within the past hour, which leaves it an
+open question whether, as a nation, we are afoot or on horseback.”
+
+“Great hefens,” said the colonel, stopping with his glass of beer half
+drank, “you vrighten me. Vot has habbened. But vait, und dake a glass of
+beer, as you seem exhausted, und proke up. Captain Ouskaspiel, hand the
+shendleman some peer. Mine Gott, bud you look hard, strancher.”
+
+I do not believe that I ever drank anything that seemed to go right to
+the spot, the way that beer did. It seemed to start a freshet of dust
+down my neck, clear my throat, and brace me up. While I was drinking it
+I noticed that the German colonel and his officers eyed me closely, my
+bare feet, my flannel shirt full of dust, and my hair that looked
+as though I had stood on my head in the road. They waited for me to
+continue, and after draining the last drop in the glass, I said:
+
+“Colonel, it was no ordinary circumstance that induced you brave
+foreigners, holding allegiance to European sovereigns, to fly to arms to
+defend this new nation from an internecine foe. While we natives, and
+to the manor born, left our plows in the furrow, to spring to-arms, you
+left your shoemaker shops, the spigots of your beer saloons, the marts
+of commerce in which you were engaged, and stood shoulder to shoulder.
+Where the bullets of the enemy whistled, there could be found the brave
+Dutchmen of New Jersey. It brings tears to eyes unused to weeping, to
+think of the German fathers and mothers of our land, who are waiting and
+watching for the return of sons who will never come back, and this is,
+indeed, harder for them to bear, when we reflect that these boys were
+not obliged to fight for our country, holding allegiance, as I said
+before to----”
+
+“Waid a minute, of you blease,” said the colonel. “Dake von more drink,
+and dell me, of you please, vot de hell you vos drying to get at. Capt.
+Hemrech, gif der shendleman a glass of beer.”
+
+A second glass of beer was given me, and I drank it. There was evidently
+a suspicion on the part of the New Jersey officers that the importance
+of my visit had been over-rated by them, and they seemed anxious to have
+me come to the point.
+
+“On the march today,” said I, wiping the foam off my moustache on my
+shirt-sleeve, “one of your thieving soldiers stole my boots from our
+nigger cook, who was conveying them for me. A cavalry soldier without
+boots, is no good. I came after my boots, and I will have them or blood.
+Return my boots, or by the eternal, the Wisconsin cavalry regiment
+will come over here and everlastingly gallop over your fellows. The
+constitution of the United States and the Declaration of Independence,
+are on my side. In civil life a man's house is his castle. In the army
+a man's boots is his castle. Give me my boots, sir, or the blood of the
+slain will rest on your heads.”
+
+The colonel was half mad and half pleased. He tapped his forehead with
+his fore-finger, and looked at his officers in a manner that showed he
+believed my head was wrong, but he said kindly:
+
+“My man, you go oud and sit under a tree, in the shade, and I vill hafe
+your poots found if they are in my rechiment,” and I went out. I heard
+the colonel say to one of his officers, “It vas too pad dot two good
+glasses of beer should be spoiled, giving them to dot grazy solcher. Ve
+must be more careful mit de beer.”
+
+Pretty soon an officer came out and asked me how the boots were taken,
+and I gave him all the information I had, and he sent men all around the
+regiment, and in an hour or so the boots were brought to me, the man who
+stole them was arrested, the officers apologized to me, and I went back
+to my regiment in triumph, with my boots under my arms. The incident got
+noised around among the other regiments, and for months after that, when
+the colonel of the New Jersey cavalry rode by another regiment, the boys
+would yell out, “Boots, boots,” or when a company or squad of the New
+Jersey fellows would pass along, it was “Look out for your boots! The
+shoemakers are coming.” For stealing that one pair of boots, by one man,
+a whole regiment got a reputation for stealing that hung to it a long
+time. Ten years afterward I was connected with a New York daily paper,
+and one evening I was detailed to go to a New Jersey city to report the
+commencement exercises of a college. In the programme of exercises I
+noticed that a man of the same name of that of the New Jersey colonel,
+was one of the college professors, and I wondered if he was the same
+man. During the evening he put in an appearance on the stage, and I
+could see that he was the colonel who had given me the beer, and caused
+my boots to be returned to me. After the exercises of the evening, the
+New York newspaper men were invited to partake of a collation in the
+apartments of the college officials, and the professors were introduced
+to the newspaper men. When my turn came to be introduced, and the old
+colonel stood before me, I said:
+
+“General, you were in the army, were you not?”
+
+“Yezzer!” said the old man. “I am broud to say dot I fought for my
+adopted country. But vy do you ask?”
+
+“We have met before. I, too, was a soldier. I was at your headquarters
+once, on a very important mission. I was entertained, sir, in your tent,
+permitted, to partake of the good, things you had, and sent away happy.
+
+“Vell, you dond't say so,” said the old man, as he pressed my hand
+warmly. “Vere vas dis dat you were my guest, and vot vas de important
+message?” and he smiled all over his face at the prospect of hearing
+something about old times.
+
+“It was in Mississippi, between Montgomery, Ala., and Vicksburg. Do you
+remember the hottest and dustiest day that ever was, when we camped on a
+little stream?” said I.
+
+“O, yah!” said the colonel; “very well. It vas an awful time.”
+
+“I went to your headquarters with information of vital importance. One
+of your soldiers _had stolen my boots_.”
+
+“Gott in himmel!” said the old colonel, now a college professor, as he
+looked at me to see if there was any resemblance between the New York
+reporter and the dusty, bare-footed soldier of ten years before. “Vill
+I never hear de last of dem dam boots? And you are de same veller, eh. I
+have often thought, since dat day, vot an awful gall you had. But it
+is all ofer now. You vatch your poots vile you are in New Chersey, for
+plenty of dose cavalry-men are all around here. But do me a favor now,
+and don't ever again say poots to me, dot's a good fellow,” and then we
+all sat down to lunch, and the old colonel told the newspaper boys from
+New York about how I called at his tent on the march, looking for a pair
+of boots that had eloped with one of his New Chersey dutchmen.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of How Private George W. Peck Put Down
+The Rebellion, by George W. Peck
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+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ How Private George W. Peck Put Down the Rebellion, by George W. Peck
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of How Private George W. Peck Put Down The
+Rebellion, by George W. Peck
+
+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: How Private George W. Peck Put Down The Rebellion
+ or, The Funny Experiences of a Raw Recruit - 1887
+
+Author: George W. Peck
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2008 [EBook #25492]
+Last Updated: October 5, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img alt="titlepage (106K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ HOW PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK PUT DOWN THE REBELLION
+ </h1>
+ <h1>
+ or, THE FUNNY EXPERIENCES OF A RAW RECRUIT.
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By George W. Peck
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ 1887
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Mounting a Horse from the Top of A Rail
+ Fence </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> On Went the Two Night Riders </a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> Never Did Know, How I Got out of the
+ General's Tent </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> A Solemn Funeral Oration </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> You Are a Darling Good Man </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> Engineer Threw a Lump of Coal and Hit Me
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> We Went Into the Camp That Way </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> Just Promoted to the Proud Position of
+ Corporal </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0010"> Xcuse Me, But What Kind of a Thing is
+ That? </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0011"> Two Very Long Stockings, Came over the
+ Pulpit </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0012"> Gave a Yell That Could Have Been Heard A
+ Mile </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0013"> She Gave Him a Piece of Her Mind </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014"> I Forbid You Touching That Mare </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0015"> Stood There for a Minute, Like A Horse
+ Statute </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The War Literature of the &ldquo;Century&rdquo; is very Confusing&mdash;I am
+ Resolved to tell the True Story of the War&mdash;How and Why I
+ Became a Raw Recruit&mdash;My Quarters&mdash;My Horse&mdash;My First Ride.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For the last year or more I have been reading the articles in the <i>Century</i>
+ magazine, written by generals and things who served on both the Union and
+ Confederate sides, and have been struck by the number of &ldquo;decisive
+ battles&rdquo; that were fought, and the great number of generals who fought
+ them and saved the country. It seems that each general on the Union side,
+ who fought a battle, and writes an article for the aforesaid magazine,
+ admits that his battle was the one which did the business. On the
+ Confederate side, the generals who write articles invariably demonstrate
+ that they everlastingly whipped their opponents, and drove them on in
+ disorder. To read those articles it seems strange that the Union generals
+ who won so many decisive battles, should not have ended the war much
+ sooner than they did, and to read the accounts of battles won by the
+ Confederates, and the demoralization that ensued in the ranks of their
+ opponents, it seems marvellous that the Union army was victorious. Any man
+ who has followed these generals of both sides, in the pages of that
+ magazine, must conclude that the war was a draw game, and that both sides
+ were whipped. Thus far no general has lost a battle on either side, and
+ all of them tacitly admit that the whole thing depended on them, and that
+ other commanders were mere ciphers. This is a kind of history that is
+ going to mix up generations yet unborn in the most hopeless manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has seemed to me as though the people of this country had got so mixed
+ up about the matter that it was the duty of some private soldier to write
+ a description of <i>the</i> decisive battle of the war, and as I was the
+ private soldier who fought that battle on the Union side, against fearful
+ odds, <i>viz</i>: against a Confederate soldier who was braver than I was,
+ a better horseback rider, and a better poker player, I feel it my duty to
+ tell about it. I have already mentioned it to a few veterans, and they
+ have advised me to write an article for the <i>Century</i>, but I have
+ felt a delicacy about entering the lists, a plain, unvarnished private
+ soldier, against those generals. While I am something of a liar myself,
+ and can do fairly well in my own class, I should feel that in the <i>Century</i>
+ I was entered in too fast a class of liars, and the result would be that I
+ should not only lose my entrance fee, but be distanced. So I have decided
+ to contribute this piece of history solely for the benefit of the readers
+ of my own paper, as they will believe me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1864 that I joined a cavalry regiment in the department of the
+ Gulf, a raw recruit in a veteran regiment. It may be asked why I waited so
+ long before enlisting, and why I enlisted at all, when the war was so near
+ over. I know that the most of the soldiers enlisted from patriotic
+ motives, and because they wanted to help shed blood, and wind up the war.
+ I did not. I enlisted for the bounty. I thought the war was nearly over,
+ and that the probabilities were that the regiment I had enlisted in would,
+ be ordered home before I could get to it. In fact the recruiting officer
+ told me as much, and he said I would get my bounty, and a few months' pay,
+ and it would be just like finding money. He said at that late day I would
+ never see a rebel, and if I did have to join the regiment, there would be
+ no fighting, and it would just be one continued picnic for two or three
+ months, and there would be no more danger than to go off camping for a
+ duck shoot. At my time of life, now that I have become gray, and bald, and
+ my eyesight is failing, and I have become a grandfather, I do not want to
+ open the sores of twenty-two years ago. I want a quiet life. So I would
+ not assert that the recruiting officer deliberately lied to me, but I was
+ the worst deceived man that ever enlisted, and if I ever meet that man, on
+ this earth, it will go hard with him. Of course, if he is dead, that
+ settles it, as I shall not follow any man after death, where I am in doubt
+ as to which road he has taken, but if he is alive, and reads these lines,
+ he can hear of something to his advantage by communicating with me. I
+ would probably kill him. As far as the bounty was concerned, I got that
+ all right, but it was only three-hundred dollars. Within twenty-four hours
+ after I had been credited to the town from which I enlisted, I heard of a
+ town that was paying as high as twelve-hundred dollars for recruits. I
+ have met with many reverses of fortune in the course of a short, but
+ brilliant career, have loaned money and never got it back, have been taken
+ in by designing persons on three card monte, and have been beaten trading
+ horses, but I never suffered much more than I did when I found that I had
+ got to go to war for a beggerly three-hundred dollars bounty, when I could
+ have had twelve hundred dollars by being credited to another town. I think
+ that during two years and a half of service nothing tended more to dampen
+ my ardor, make me despondent, and hate myself, than the loss of that
+ nine-hundred dollars bounty. There was not an hour of the day, in all of
+ my service, that I did not think of what might have been. It was a long
+ time before I brought to my aid that passage of scripture, &ldquo;There is no
+ use crying for spilled bounty,&rdquo; but when I did it helped me some. I
+ thought of the hundreds who didn't get any bounty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I joined my regiment, and had a cavalry horse issued to me, and was
+ assigned to a company. I went up to the captain of the company, whom I had
+ known as a farmer before the war commenced, and told him I had come to
+ help him put down the rebellion. I never saw a man so changed as he was. I
+ thought he would ask me to bring my things into his tent, and stay with
+ him, but he seemed to have forgotten that he had known me, when he worked
+ on the farm. He was dressed up nicely, and I thought he put on style, and
+ I could only think of him at home, with his overalls tucked in his boots,
+ driving a yoke of oxen to plow a field. He seemed to feel that I had known
+ him under unfavorable circumstances before the war, and acted as though he
+ wanted to shun me. I had drawn an infantry knapsack, at Madison, before I
+ left for the front, and had it full of things, besides a small trunk. The
+ captain called a soldier and told him to find quarters for me, and I went
+ out of his presence. At my quarters, which consisted of what was called a
+ pup-tent, I found no conveniences, and it soon dawned on me that war was
+ no picnic, as that lying recruiting officers had told me it was. I found
+ that I had got to throw away my trunk and knapsack, and all the articles
+ that I couldn't strap on a saddle, and when I asked for a mattress the men
+ laughed at me. I had always slept on a mattress, or a feather bed, and
+ when I was told that I would have to sleep on the ground, under that
+ little tent, I felt hurt. I had known the colonel when he used to teach
+ school at home, and I went to him and told him what kind of a way they
+ were treating me, but he only laughed. He had two nice cots in his tent,
+ and I told him I thought I ought to have a cot, too. He laughed some more.
+ Finally I asked him who slept in his extra cot, and intimated that I had
+ rather sleep in his tent than mine, but he sent me away, and said he would
+ see what could be done. I laid on the ground that night, but I didn't
+ sleep. If I ever get a pension it will be for rheumatism caught by
+ sleeping on the ground. The rheumatism has not got hold of me yet, though
+ twenty-two years have passed, but it may be lurking about my system, for
+ all I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never rode a horse, before enlisting. The only thing I had ever got
+ straddle of was a stool in a country printing office, and when I was first
+ ordered to saddle up my horse, I could not tell which way the saddle and
+ bridle went, and I got a colored man to help me, for which I paid him some
+ of the remains of my bounty. I hired him permanently, to take care of my
+ horse, but I soon learned that each soldier had to take care of his own
+ horse. That seemed pretty hard. I had been raised a pet, and had edited a
+ newspaper, which had been one of the most outspoken advocates of crushing
+ the rebellion, and it seemed to me, as much as I had done for the
+ government, in urging enlistments, I was entitled to more consideration
+ then to become my own hostler. However, I curbed my proud spirit, and
+ after the nigger cook had saddled my horse, I led the animal up to a fence
+ to climb on. From the remarks of the soldiers, and the general laugh all
+ around, it was easy to see that mounting a cavalry horse from off the top
+ of a rail fence was not according to tactics, but it was the only way I
+ could see to get on, in the absence of step-ladders. They let me ride into
+ the ranks, after mounting, and then they laughed. It was hard for me to be
+ obliged to throw away all the articles I had brought with me, so I
+ strapped them on the saddle in front and behind, and only my head stuck
+ out over them. There was one thing, it would be a practicable
+ impossibility to fall off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/021.jpg"
+ alt="Mounting a Horse from the Top of A Rail Fence 021 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The regiment started on a raid. The colonel came along by my company
+ during the afternoon, and I asked him where we were going. He gave me an
+ evasive answer, which hurt my feelings. I asked his pardon, but told him I
+ would like to know where we were going, so as to have my letters sent to
+ me, but he went off laughing, and never told me, while the old soldiers
+ laughed, though I couldn't see what they were laughing at. I did not
+ suppose there was so much difference between officers and privates, and
+ wondered if it was the policy of this government to have a cavalry
+ regiment to start off on a long raid and not let the soldiers know where
+ they were going, and during the afternoon I decided to write home to the
+ paper I formerly edited and give my opinion of such a fool way of running
+ a war. Suppose anybody at home was sick, they wouldn't know where to write
+ for me to come back. There is nothing that will give a man such an
+ appetite as riding on a galloping horse, and along about the middle of the
+ afternoon I began to get hungry, and asked the orderly sergeant when we
+ were going to get any dinner. He said there was a hotel a short distance
+ ahead, and the colonel had gone forward to order dinner for the regiment.
+ I believed him, because I had known the orderly before the war, when he
+ drove a horse in a brickyard, grinding clay. But he was a liar, too, as I
+ found out afterwards. There was not a hotel within fifty miles, and
+ soldiers did not stop at hotels, anyway. Finally the orderly sergeant came
+ along and announced that dinner was ready, and I looked for the hotel, but
+ the only dinner I saw was some raw pork that soldiers took out of their
+ saddle bags, with hard tack. We stopped in the woods, dismounted, and the
+ boys would cut off a slice of fat pork and spread it on the hard tack and
+ eat it. I had never supposed the government would subject its soldiers to
+ such fare as that, and I wouldn't eat. I did not dare dismount, as there
+ was no fence near that I could use to climb on to my horse, so I sat in
+ the saddle and let the horse eat some grass, while I thought of home, and
+ pie and cake, and what a condemned fool a man was to leave a comfortable
+ home to go and put down anybody's rebellion. The way I felt then I
+ wouldn't have touched a rebellion if one lay right in the road. What
+ business was it of mine if some people in the South wanted to dissolve
+ partnership and go set up business for themselves? How was I going to
+ prevent them from having a southern confederacy, by riding an old rack of
+ bones of a horse, that would reach his nose around every little while and
+ chew my legs? If the recruiting officer who inveigled me into the army had
+ come along then, his widow would now be drawing a pension. While I was
+ thinking, dreaming of home, and the horse was eating grass, the fool
+ animal suddenly took it into his head to lay down and roll, and before I
+ could kick any of his ribs in, he was down, and I was rolling off, with
+ one leg under him. The soldiers quit eating and pulled the horse of me,
+ and hoisted me up into the space between my baggage, and then they
+ laughed, lit their pipes and smoked, as happy as could be. I couldn t see
+ how they could be happy, and wondered if they were not sick of war. Then
+ they mounted, and on we went. My legs and body became chafed, and it
+ seemed as though I couldn t ride another minute, and when the captain came
+ along I told him about it, and asked him if I couldn t be relieved some
+ way. He said the only way was for me to stand on my head and ride, and he
+ winked at a soldier near me, and, do you know, that soldier actually
+ changed ends with himself and stood on his head and hands in the saddle
+ and rode quite a distance, and the captain said that was the way a cavalry
+ soldier rested himself. Gracious, I wouldn t have tried that for the
+ world, and I found out afterwards that the soldier who stood on his head
+ formerly belonged with a circus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose it was wrong to complain, but the horse they gave me was the
+ meanest horse in the regiment. He would bite and kick the other horses,
+ and they would kick back, and about half the time I was dodging the heels
+ of horses, and a good deal of the time I was wondering if a man would get
+ any pension if he was wounded that way. It would seem pretty tough to go
+ home on a stretcher, as a wounded soldier, and have people find out a
+ horse kicked you. I never had been a man of blood, and didn't enlist to
+ kill anybody, as I could prove by that recruiting officer, and I didn t
+ want to fight, but from what I could gather from the conversation of the
+ soldiers, fighting and killing people was about all they thought about.
+ They talked about this one and that one who had been killed, and the
+ hundreds of confederates they had all shot or killed with sabres, until my
+ hair just stood right up. It seems that twelve or fifteen men, more or
+ less, had been shot off the horse I was riding, and one fellow who rode
+ next to me said no man who ever rode that old yellow horse had escaped
+ alive. This was cheering to me, and I would have given my three hundred
+ dollars bounty, and all I could borrow, if I could get out of the army.
+ However, I found out afterwards that the soldier lied. In fact they all
+ lied, and they lied for my benefit. We struck into the woods, and traveled
+ until after dark, with no road, and the march was enlivened by remarks of
+ the soldiers near me to the effect that we would probably never get out of
+ the woods alive. They said we were trying to surround an army of rebels,
+ and cut them off from the main army, and the chances were that when
+ tomorrow's sun rose it would rise on the ghostly corpses of the whole
+ regiment, with jackals and buzzards eating us. One of the soldiers took
+ something from his pocket, about the size of a testament, pressed it to
+ his heart, and then kissed it, and I felt as though I was about to faint,
+ but by the light of a match which another soldier had scratched on his
+ pants to light his pipe, I saw that what I supposed to be a testament, was
+ a box of sardines the soldier had bought of the sutler. I was just about
+ to die of hunger, exhaustion, and fright at the fearful stories the
+ veterans had been telling, when there was a shout at the head of the
+ regiment, which was taken up all along the line, my horse run under the
+ limb of a tree and raked me out of the saddle, and I hung to the limb, my
+ legs hanging down, and
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Am Rudely Awakened from Dreams of Home&mdash;I Go on Picket&mdash;
+ The Foe Advances&mdash;A Desperate Conflict&mdash;The Union&mdash;
+ Confederate Breakfast on the Alabama Race-Track&mdash;A Friendly
+ Partin
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The careful readers of this history have no doubt been worried about the
+ manner in which the first chapter closed, leaving me hanging to a limb of
+ a tree, like Absalom weeping for her children, my horse having gone out
+ from under me. But I have not been hanging there all this time. The
+ soldiers took me down, and caught my horse, and the regiment dismounted
+ and a council of war was held. I suppose it was a council of war, as I
+ noticed the officers were all in a group under a tree, with a candle,
+ examining a map, and drinking out of a canteen. I had read of councils of
+ war, but I had never seen one, and so I walked over to the crowd of
+ officers and asked the colonel if there was anything particular the
+ matter. I never saw a crowd of men who seemed so astonished as those
+ officers were, and suddenly I felt myself going away from where they were
+ consulting, with somebody's strong hand on my collar, and an unmistakable
+ cavalry boot, with a man in it, in the vicinity of my pantaloons. I do not
+ know to this day, which officer it was that kicked me, but I went away and
+ sat under a tree in the dark, so hungry that I was near dead, and I wished
+ I <i>was</i> dead. I guess the officers wished that I was, too. The
+ soldiers tried to console me by telling me I was too fresh, but I couldn't
+ see why a private soldier, right from home, who knew all about the public
+ sentiment at the north in regard to the way the war was conducted, should
+ not have a voice in the consultations of officers. I had written many
+ editorials before I left home, criticising the manner in which many
+ generals had handled their commands, and pointed out to my readers how
+ defeat could have been turned into victory, if the generals had done as I
+ would have done in their places. It seemed to me the officers of my
+ regiment were taking a suicidal course in barring me out of their
+ consultations. A soldier had told me that we were lost in the woods, and
+ as I had studied geography when at school, and was well posted about
+ Alabama, it seemed as though a little advice from me would be worth a good
+ deal. But I concluded to let them stay lost forever before I would
+ volunteer any information. It was crawling along towards midnight, of my
+ first day in the army, and I had eaten nothing since morning. As I sat
+ there under the tree I fell asleep, and was dreaming of home, and warm
+ biscuit, with honey, and a feather bed, when I was rudely awakened by a
+ corporal who told me to mount. I asked him what for, and told him that I
+ didn t want to ride any more that night. What I wanted was to be let
+ alone, to sleep. He said to get on the horse too quick, and I found there
+ was no use arguing with a common corporal, so the boys hoisted me on to
+ the horse, and about nine of us started off through the woods in the
+ moonlight, looking for a main road. The corporal was kind enough to say
+ that as soon as we found a road we would put out a picket, and send a
+ courier back to the regiment to inform the colonel that we had got out of
+ the woods, and the rest of us would lay down and sleep till morning. I
+ don't think I was ever so anxious to see a road in all my life, because I
+ <i>did</i> want to lay down and sleep, and die. O, if I could have
+ telegraphed home, how I would have warned the youth of the land to beware
+ of the allurements held out by recruiting officers, and to let war alone.
+ In an hour or so we came to a clearing, and presently to a road, and we
+ stopped. The corporal detailed me to go up the road a short distance and
+ stand picket on my horse. That was not what I had expected of the
+ corporal. I used to know him before the war when he worked in a paint shop
+ in a wagon factory, and I had always treated him well, and it seemed as
+ though he ought to favor me by letting somebody else go on picket. I told
+ him that the other boys were more accustomed to such work than I was, and
+ that I would resign in their favor, because what I wanted was rest, but he
+ said I would have to go, and he called me &ldquo;Camp and Garrison Equipage,&rdquo;
+ because I carried so much luggage on my horse, a name that held to me for
+ months. I found that there was no use kicking against going on picket duty
+ that night, though I tried to argue with the corporal that it would be
+ just as well to all lay down and sleep till morning, and put out a picket
+ when it got light enough to see. I was willing to work during the day time
+ for the government, but it seemed as though it was rushing things a little
+ to make a man work day and night for thirteen dollars a month. So the
+ corporal went out on the road with me about a quarter of a mile, and
+ placed me in position and gave me my instructions. The instructions were
+ to keep a sharp lookout up and down the road for Confederate cavalry, and
+ if I saw anybody approaching to sing out &ldquo;halt!&rdquo; and if the party did not
+ halt to shoot him, and then call for the corporal of the guard, who would
+ come out to see what was the matter. I asked him what I should do if
+ anybody came along and shot me, and he said that would be all right, that
+ the boys would come out and bury me. He said I must keep awake, for if I
+ got to sleep on my post I would be court-martialed and shot, and then he
+ rode away and left me alone, on a horse that kept whinnying, and calling
+ the attention of possible Confederates to my position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not think any reader of these papers will envy me the position I was
+ in at that time. If I remained awake, I was liable to be killed by the
+ enemy, and if I fell asleep on my post I would be shot anyway. And if I
+ was not killed, it was probable I would be a murderer before morning.
+ Hunger was gnawing at my stomach, and the horse was gnawing at my legs,
+ and I was gnawing at a hard tack which I had found in the saddle-bag.
+ Every little while I would hear a noise, and my hair would raise my hat
+ up, and it would seem to me as though the next minute a volley would be
+ fired at me, and I shrunk down between the piles of baggage on my saddle
+ to be protected from bullets. Suddenly the moon came out from behind a
+ cloud and around a turn in the road a solitary horseman might have been
+ seen coming towards me. I never have seen a horse that looked as high as
+ that horse did. He seemed at least eighteen feet high, and the man on him
+ was certainly twelve feet high. My heart pounded against a tin canteen
+ that I had strung around my shoulder, so I could hear the beating
+ perfectly plain. The man was approaching, and I was trying to think
+ whether I had been instructed to shoot and then call for the corporal of
+ the guard, or call for the corporal and then ask him to halt. I knew there
+ was a halt in my instructions, and wondered if it would not conciliate the
+ enemy to a certain extent if I would say &ldquo;Please Halt.&rdquo; The fact was, I
+ didn t want to have any fuss. If I could have backed my horse up into the
+ woods, and let the man go by, it seemed as though it would save
+ precipitating a conflict. It is probable that no military man was ever in
+ so tight a place as I was that minute. The enemy was advancing, and I
+ wondered if, when he got near enough, I could say &ldquo;halt,&rdquo; in a commanding
+ tone of voice. I knew enough, then, to feel that to ask the stranger to
+ halt in a trembling and husky voice would give the whole thing away, that
+ I was a recruit and a coward. Ye gods, how I suffered! I wondered if I
+ could hit a man with a bullet. Before the war I was quite a good shot with
+ a shotgun, shooting into flocks of pigeons and ducks, and I thought what a
+ good idea it would be if I could get that approaching rebel into a flock.
+ The idea seemed so ridiculous that I laughed right out loud. It was not a
+ hearty, happy laugh, but it was a laugh all the same, and I was proud that
+ I could laugh in the face of danger, when I might be a corpse any minute.
+ The man on the horse stopped. Whether he heard me laugh it is impossible
+ to say, but he stopped. That relieved me a great deal. As he had stopped
+ it was unnecessary for me to invite him to halt. He was welcome to stay
+ there if he wanted to. I argued that it was not my place to go howling
+ around the Southern Confederacy, ordering people to halt, when they had
+ already halted. If he would let me alone and stay where he was, what sense
+ was there in picking a quarrel with him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should I want to shoot a total stranger, who might have a family at
+ home, somewhere in the South, who would mourn for him. He might be a dead
+ shot, as many Southern gentlemen were, and if I went to advising him about
+ halting, it would, very likely cause his hot Southern blood to boil, and
+ he would say he had just as much right to that road as I had. If it come
+ right down to the justice of the thing, I should have to admit that
+ Alabama was not my state. Wisconsin was my home, and if I was up there,
+ and a man should trespass on my property, it would be reasonable enough
+ for me to ask him to go away from there, and enforce my request by calling
+ a constable and having him put off the premises. But how did I know but he
+ owned property there, and was a tax-payer. I had it all figured out that I
+ was right in not disturbing that rebel, and I knew that I could argue with
+ my colonel for a week, if necessary, on the law points in the case, and
+ the courtesy that I deemed proper between gentlemen, if any complaint was
+ made for not doing my duty. But, lordy, how I <i>did</i> sweat while I was
+ deciding to let him alone if he would let me alone. The war might have
+ been going on now, and that rebel and myself might have been standing
+ there today, looking at each other, if it hadn't been for the action of
+ the fool horse that I rode. My horse had been evidently asleep for some
+ time, but suddenly he woke up, pricked up his ears, and began to prance,
+ and jump sideways like a race horse that is on the track, and wants to
+ run. The horse reared up and plunged, and kept working up nearer to my
+ Southern friend, and I tried to hold him, and keep him still, but suddenly
+ he got the best of me and started towards the other man and horse, and the
+ other horse started, as though some one had said &ldquo;go&rdquo;.{*}
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * [Before I get any further on this history of the war, it
+ is necessary to explain. The facts proved to be that my
+ regiment had got lost in the woods, and the scouting party,
+ under the corporal, who had been sent out to find a road,
+ had come upon the three-quarter stretch of an old private
+ race track on a deserted southern plantation, instead of a
+ main road, and I had been placed on picket near the last
+ turn before striking the quarter stretch. A small party of
+ Confederates, who had been out on a scout, and got lost, had
+ come on the track further down, near the judges' stand, and
+ they had put a man, on picket up near where I was, supposing
+ they had struck the road, and intending to wait until
+ morning so as to find out where they were. My horse was an
+ old race horse, and as soon as he saw the other horse, he
+ was in for a race and the other horse was willing. This will
+ show the situation as well as though I had a race track
+ engraved, showing the positions of the two armies. The
+ Confederates, except the man on picket, were asleep beside
+ the track near the quarter stretch, and our fellows, except
+ myself, were asleep over by the three-quarter pole.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I do not suppose any man on this earth, or any other earth, ever tried to
+ stop a fool horse quite as hard as I did that one. I pulled until my arms
+ ached, but he went for all that was out, and the horse ahead of me was
+ buckling in as fast as he could. I could not help wondering what would
+ happen if I should overtake that Southern man. I was gaining on him, when
+ suddenly eight or nine men who were sleeping beside the road, got up and
+ began to shoot at us. They were the friends of the rebel, who believed
+ that the whole Union army was making a charge on them. We got by the
+ shooters alive, and then, as we passed the rickety old judge's stand, I
+ realized that we were on a race track, and for a moment I forgot that I
+ was a soldier, and only thought of myself as a rider of a race horse, and
+ I gave the horse his head, and kicked him, and yelled like a Comanche
+ Indian, and I had the satisfaction of seeing my horse go by the rebel, and
+ I yelled some more. I got a glimpse of my rebel's, face as I went by him,
+ and he didn't look much more like a fighting man than I did, but he was,
+ for as soon as I had got ahead of him he drew a revolver and began firing
+ at me on the run. I thought that was a mean trick, and spoke to him about
+ it afterwards, but he said he only wanted me to stop so he could get
+ acquainted with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/039.jpg" alt="On Went the Two Night Riders 039 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Well, I never could find any bullets in any of the clothes strapped on the
+ back of my saddle, but it <i>did</i> seem to me as though every bullet
+ from his revolver hit very near my vital parts. But a new danger presented
+ itself. We were rapidly approaching the corporal and his men, with whose
+ command I belonged, and they would wake up and think the whole Confederate
+ army was charging them, and if I was not killed by the confounded rebel
+ behind me, I should probably be shot all to pieces by our own men. As we
+ passed our men they fired a few sleepy shots towards us, and took to the
+ woods. On went the two night riders, and when the rebel had exhausted his
+ revolver he began to urge his horse, and passed me, and I drew my revolver
+ and began to fire at him. As we passed the judge's stand the second time a
+ couple of shots from quite a distance in the woods showed that his rebel
+ friends had taken alarm at the frequent charges of cavalry, and had
+ skipped to the woods and were getting away as fast as possible. We went
+ around the track once more, and when near the judge's stand I was right
+ behind him, and his horse fell down and my horse stumbled over him, and I
+ guess we were both stunned. Finally I crawled out from under my horse, and
+ the rebel was trying to raise up, when I said, &ldquo;What in thunder you want
+ to chase a man all around the Southern Confederacy for, on a dark night,
+ trying to shoot him?&rdquo; He asked me to help him up, which I did, when he
+ said, &ldquo;Who commenced this here chasing? If you had kept whar you was, I
+ wouldn't a had no truck with you.&rdquo; Then I said, &ldquo;You are my prisoner,&rdquo; and
+ he said, &ldquo;No, you are my prisoner.&rdquo; I told him I was no hand to argue, but
+ it seemed to me it was about a stand off, as to which was 'tother's
+ prisoner. I told him that was my first day's service as a soldier, and I
+ was not posted as to the customs of civilized warfare, but I was willing
+ to wait till daylight, leaving matters just as they were, each of us on
+ the defensive, giving up none of our rights, and after daylight we would
+ play a game of seven-up to see which was the prisoner. That seemed fair to
+ him, and he accepted the situation, remarking that he had only been
+ conscripted a few days and didn't know any more about war than a cow. He
+ said he was a newspaper man from Georgia, and had been taken right from
+ the case in his office before his paper could be got out. I told him I was
+ only a few days out of a country printing office my-self, the sheriff
+ having closed out my business on an old paper bill. A bond of sympathy was
+ inaugurated at once between us, and when he limped along the track to the
+ fence, and found that his ankle was hurt by the fall, I brought a bottle
+ of horse liniment out of my saddle-bags, and a rag, and bound some
+ liniment on his ankle. He said he had never seen a Yankee soldier before,
+ and he was glad he had met me. I told him he was the first rebel I had
+ ever met, and I hoped he would be the last, until the war was over. By
+ this time our horses had gone to nibbling grass, as though there were no
+ such thing as war. We could hear occasional bugle calls off in the woods
+ in two directions, and knew that our respective commands had gone off and
+ got lost again, so we concluded to camp there till morning. After the
+ excitement was over I began to get hungry, and I asked him if he had
+ anything to eat. He said he had some corn bread and bacon, and he could
+ get some sweet potatoes over in a field. So I built a fire there on the
+ track, and he hobbled off after potatoes. Just about daylight breakfast
+ was served, consisting of coffee, which I carried in a sack, made in a pot
+ he carried, bacon fried in a half of a tin canteen, sweet potatoes roasted
+ in the ashes, and Confederate corn bread, warmed by holding it over the
+ fire on a sharp stick. My friend, the rebel, sat on my saddle, which I had
+ removed from my horse, after he had promised me on his honor to help me to
+ put it on when it was time to mount. He knew how to put on saddles, and I
+ didn t, and as his ankle was lame I gave him the best seat, he being my
+ guest, that is, he was my guest if I beat him in the coming game of
+ seven-up, which we were to play to see if he was my prisoner, or I was
+ his. It being daylight, I could see him, and study his character, and
+ honestly he was a mighty fine-looking fellow. As we eat our early
+ breakfast I began to think that the recruiting officer was more than half
+ right about war being a picnic. He talked about the newspaper business in
+ the South, and before breakfast was over we had formed a partnership to
+ publish a paper at Montgomery, Ala., after the war should be over. I have
+ eaten a great many first-class meals in my time, have feasted at
+ Delmonico's, and lived at the best hotels in the land, besides partaking
+ pretty fair food camping out, where an appetite was worked up by exercise
+ and sporting, but in all my life I have never had anything taste as good
+ as that combination Union-Confederate breakfast on the Alabama race track,
+ beside the judges stand. After the last potato peeling, and the last crumb
+ of corn bread had been &ldquo;sopped&rdquo; in the bacon gravy and eaten, we whittled
+ some tobacco off a plug, filled our pipes and leaned up against the fence
+ and smoked the most enjoyable smoke that ever was smoked. After smoking in
+ silence a few minutes my rebel friend said, as he blew the smoke from his
+ handsome mouth, &ldquo;War is not so unpleasant, after all.&rdquo; Then we fell to
+ talking about the manner in which the different generals on each side had
+ conducted things. He went on to show that if Lee had taken his advice, the
+ Yankees would then be on the run for the North, and I showed him, by a few
+ well-chosen remarks that if I could have been close to Grant, and given
+ him some pointers, that the Confederates would be hunting their holes. We
+ were both convinced that it was a great mistake that we were nothing but
+ private soldiers, but felt that it would not be long before we were called
+ to occupy high places. It seemed to stand to reason that true merit would
+ find its reward. Then he knocked the ashes out of his pipe and said if I
+ had a pack of cards we would go up in the judges stand and play seven-up
+ to see whether I was his prisoner, or he was mine. I wanted to take a
+ prisoner back to the regiment, at I thought it would make me solid with
+ the colonel, and I played a strong game of seven-up, but before we got
+ started to playing he suggested that we call it a stand-off, and agree
+ that neither of us should be a prisoner, but that when we got ready to
+ part each should go hunt up his own command, and tell the biggest lie we
+ could think of as to the fight we had had. That was right into my hand,
+ and I agreed, and then my friend suggested that we play poker for money. I
+ consented and he put up Confederate money, against my greenbacks, ten to
+ one. We played about an hour, and at the close he had won the balance of
+ my bounty, except what I had given to the chaplain for safe keeping, and a
+ pair of pants, and a blouse, and a flannel shirt, and a pair of shoes,
+ which I had on my saddle. I was rather glad to get rid of some of my extra
+ baggage, and when he put on the clothes he had won from me, blessed if I
+ wasn t rather proud of him. A man could wear any kind of clothes in the
+ Confederate army, and my rebel looked real comfortable in my clothes, and
+ I felt that it was a real kind act to allow him to win a blue suit that I
+ did not need. If the men of both the armies, and the people of both
+ sections of the distracted country could have seen us two soldiers
+ together, there in the judges stand, peacefully playing poker, while the
+ battles were raging in the East and in the West, that would have felt that
+ an era of good feeling was about to dawn on the country. After we had
+ played enough poker, and I had lost everything I had that was loose, I
+ suggested that he sing a song, so he sung the &ldquo;Bonnie Blue Flag.&rdquo; I did
+ not think it was right for him to work in a rebel song on me, but it did
+ sound splendid, and I forgot that there was any war, in listening to the
+ rich voice of my new friend. When he got through he asked me to sing
+ something. I never <i>could</i> sing, anyway. My folks had always told me
+ that my voice sounded like a corn sheller, but he urged me at his own
+ peril, and I sung, or tried to, &ldquo;We'll Hang Jeff Davis to a Sour Apple
+ Tree.&rdquo; I had no designs on Mr. Davis, honestly I hadn't, and it was the
+ farthest thing from my thoughts to hurt the feelings of that young man,
+ but before I had finished the first verse he took his handkerchief out and
+ placed it to his eyes. I stopped and apologized, but he said not to mind
+ him, as he was better now. He told me, afterwards, in the strictest
+ confidence, that my singing was the worst he ever heard, and gave it as
+ his opinion that if Jeff Davis could hear me sing he would be willing,
+ even anxious, to be hung. If I had been sensitive about my musical
+ talents, probably there would have been hard feelings, and possibly
+ bloodshed, right there, but I told him I always knew I couldn't sing, and
+ he said that I was in luck. Well, we fooled around there till about ten
+ o'clock in the morning, and decided that we would part, and each seek our
+ respective commands, so I put some more horse liniment on his sprained
+ ankle, and he saddled my horse for me, and after expressions of mutual
+ pleasure at meeting each other, and promises that after the war we would
+ seek each other out, we mounted, he gave three cheers for the Yanks, and I
+ gave three cheers for the Johnnies, he divided his plug of tobacco with
+ me, and I gave him the bottle of horse liniment, he turned his horse
+ towards the direction his gray coats had taken the night before, while I
+ turned my horse towards the hole in the woods our fellows had made, and we
+ left the race track where we had fought so gamely, eat so heartily, and
+ played poker so disastrously, to me. As we were each about going into the
+ woods, half a mile apart, he waved his handkerchief at me, and I waved
+ mine at him, and we plunged into the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After riding for an hour or so, alone in the woods, thinking up a good lie
+ to tell about where I had been, and what I had been doing, I heard horses
+ neighing, and presently I came upon my regiment, just starting out to hunt
+ me up. The colonel looked at me and said, &ldquo;Kill the fat prodigal, the calf
+ has got back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Describe a Deadly Encounter&mdash;Am Congratulated as a Warrior
+ With a Big &ldquo;W&rdquo;&mdash;The Chaplain Gives Good Advice&mdash;I Attend
+ Surgeon's Call&mdash;Castor Oil out of a Dirty Bottle&mdash;Back to
+ the Chaplain's Tent&mdash;I am Wounded in the Canteen.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last chapter of this history left me facing my regiment, which had
+ started out to hunt me up, after my terrible fight with that Confederate.
+ The colonel rode up to me and shook me by the hand, and congratulated me,
+ and the major and adjutant said they had never expected to see me alive,
+ and the soldiers looked at me as one returned from the grave, and from
+ what I could gather by the looks of the boys, I was something of a hero,
+ even before I had told my story. The colonel asked me what had become of
+ all the baggage I had on my saddle when I went away, and I told him that I
+ had thrown ballast over-board all over the Southern Confederacy, when I
+ was charging the enemy, because I found my horse drew too much water for a
+ long run. He said something about my being a Horse-Marine, and sent me
+ back to my company, telling me that when we got into camp that night he
+ would send for me and I could tell the story of my capture and escape. I
+ rode back into my company, and you never saw such a change of sentiment
+ towards a raw recruit, as there was towards me, and they asked me
+ questions about my first fight. The corporal who had placed me on picket,
+ and stampeded at the first fire, was unusually gracious to me, and said
+ when he saw a hundred and fifty rebels come charging down the road,
+ yelling and firing, he knew it was no place for his small command, so he
+ lit out. He said he supposed of course I was shot all to pieces. I didn't
+ tell him that it was me that did all the yelling, and that there was only
+ one rebel, and that he was perfectly harmless, but I told him that he
+ miscalculated the number of the enemy, as there were, all told, at least
+ five hundred, and that I had killed fourteen that I knew of, besides a
+ number had been taken away in ambulances, wounded. The boys opened their
+ eyes, and nothing was too good for me during that march. We went into camp
+ in the pine woods late in the afternoon, and after supper the colonel sent
+ for me, and I went to his tent. All the officers were there, and as many
+ soldiers as dared crowd around. The colonel said the corporal had reported
+ where he left me, and how the enemy had charged in force, and he supposed
+ that I had been promptly killed. That he felt that he could not hold his
+ position against such immense odds, so he had fallen back slowly, firing
+ as he did so, until the place was too hot for him, and now he wanted to
+ hear my story. I told the colonel that I was new at the business, and may
+ be I did not use the best judgment in the world, by remaining to fight
+ against such odds, but I meant well. I told him I did not wish to complain
+ of the corporal, who no doubt was an able fighter, but it did seem to me
+ that he ought at least to have waited till the battle had actually
+ commenced. I said that the first charge, which stampeded the corporal and
+ his men, was not a marker to what took place afterwards. I said when the
+ enemy first appeared, I dismounted, got behind a tree, and poured a
+ murderous fire into the ranks of the rebels, and that they fell all
+ around. I could not tell how many were killed, but probably ten, as I
+ fired eleven shots from, my carbine, and I usually calculated on missing
+ one out of ten, when shooting at a mark. Then they fell back and I mounted
+ my horse and rode to their right flank and poured it into them red hot
+ from my revolver, and that I saw several fall from their horses, when they
+ stampeded, and I drew my saber and charged them, and after cutting down
+ several, I was surrounded by the whole rebel army and captured. They tied
+ me to the wheel of a gun carriage, and after trying to pump me as to the
+ number of men I had fighting against them, they left me to hold a council
+ of war, when I untied myself, mounted my horse, and cut my way out, and
+ took to the woods. I apologized to the colonel for running away from the
+ enemy, but told him it seemed to me, after the number I had killed, and
+ the length of time I had held them at bay, it was no more than right to
+ save my own life, as I had use for it in my business. During my recital of
+ the lie I had made up, the officers and soldiers stood around with mouths
+ open, and when I had concluded my story, there was silence for a moment,
+ when the colonel stepped forward and took me by the hand, and in a few
+ well chosen remarks congratulated me on my escape, and thanked me for so
+ valiantly standing my ground against such fearful odds, and he said I had
+ reflected credit upon my regiment, and that hereafter I would be classed
+ as a veteran instead of a recruit. He said he had never known a man to
+ come right from the paths of peace, and develop into a warrior with a big
+ &ldquo;W&rdquo; so short a time. The other officers congratulated me, and the soldiers
+ said I was a bully boy. The colonel treated to some commissary whisky, and
+ then the business of the evening commenced, which I found to be draw
+ poker. I sat around for some time watching the officers play poker, when
+ the chaplain, who was a nice little pious man, asked me to step outside
+ the tent, as he wished to converse with me. I went out into the moonlight
+ with him, and he took me away from the tents, under a tree, and told me he
+ had been much interested in my story. I thanked him, and said I had been
+ as brief as possible. He said, &ldquo;I was interested, because I used to be
+ something of a liar myself, before I reformed, and studied for the
+ ministry.&rdquo; It occurred to me that possibly the chaplain did not believe my
+ simple tale, and I asked him if he doubted my story. &ldquo;That is about the
+ size of it,&rdquo; says he. I told him I was sorry I had not told the story in
+ such a manner that he would believe it, because I valued the opinion of
+ the chaplain above all others. He said he had known a good many star liars
+ in his time, some that had national reputations, but he had never seen one
+ that could hold a candle to me in telling a colossal lie, or aggregation
+ of lies, and tell them so easy. I thanked him for his good opinion, and
+ told him that I flattered myself that for a recruit, right fresh from the
+ people, who had never had any experience as a military liar, I had done
+ pretty well. He said I certainly had, and he was glad to make my
+ acquaintance. I asked him to promise not to give it away to the other
+ officers, which he did, and then I told him the whole story, as it was,
+ and that I was probably the biggest coward that ever lived, and that I was
+ only afraid that my story of blood-letting would encourage the officers to
+ be constantly putting me into places of danger, which I did not want to be
+ in. I told him I believed this war could be ended without killing any more
+ men, and cited the fact that I had been a soldier nearly forty-eight
+ hours, and nobody had been killed, and the enemy was on the run. I told
+ the chaplain that if there was one thing I didn't want to see, it was
+ blood. Others might have an insatiable appetite for gore, but I didn't
+ want any at all. I was willing to do anything for this government but
+ fight; and if he could recommend to me any line of action by which I could
+ pull through without being sent out to do battle with strangers who could
+ shoot well, I should consider it a favor. What I wanted was a soft job,
+ where there was no danger. The chaplain looked thoughtful a moment, and
+ then took me over to his tent, where he opened a bottle of blackberry
+ brandy. He took a small dose, after placing his hand on his stomach and
+ groaning a little. He asked me if I did not sometimes have a pain under my
+ vest. I told him I never had a pain anywhere. Then he said I couldn't have
+ any brandy. He said the brandy came from the sanitary commsssion, and was
+ controlled entirely by the chaplains of the different regiments, and the
+ instructions were to only use it in case of sickness. He said a great many
+ of the boys had pains regularly, and came to him for relief. He smacked
+ his lips and said if I felt any pain coming on, to help myself to the
+ brandy. It is singular how a pain will sometimes come on when you least
+ expect it. It was not a minute before I began to feel a small pain, not
+ bigger than a man's hand, and as I looked at the bottle the pain
+ increased, and I had to tell the chaplain that I must have relief before
+ it was everlastingly too late, so he poured out a dose of brandy for me. I
+ could see that I was becoming a veteran very fast, as I could work the
+ chaplain for sanitary stores pretty early in the game. Well, the chaplain
+ and me had pains off and on, for an hour or two, and became good friends.
+ He told me of quite a number of methods of shirking active duty, such as
+ being detailed to take care of baggage, acting as orderly, and going to
+ surgeon's call. He said if a man went to surgeon's call, the doctor would
+ report him sick, and he could not be sent out on duty. The next day we
+ went back to our post, where the regiment was stationed, and where they
+ had barracks, that they wintered in, and remained there several weeks,
+ drilling. I was drilled in mounting and dismounting, and soon got so I
+ could mount a horse without climbing on to him from a fence. But the drill
+ became irksome, and I decided to try the chaplain's suggestion about going
+ to surgeon's call. I got in line with about twenty other soldiers, and we
+ marched over to the surgeon's quarters. I supposed the doctor would take
+ each soldier into a private room, feel of his pulse, look at his tongue,
+ and say that what he needed was rest, and give him some powders to be
+ taken in wafers, or in sugar. But all he did was to say &ldquo;What's the
+ matter?&rdquo; and the sick man would tell him, when the doctor would tell his
+ assistant to give the man something, and pass on to the next. I was the
+ last one to be served, and the interview was about as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doc.&mdash;What's the matter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Me&mdash;Bilious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doc.&mdash;Run out your tongue. Take a swallow out of the black bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That seems very simple, indeed, but it nearly killed me. When he told me
+ to run out my tongue, I run out perhaps six inches of the lower end of it,
+ the doctor glanced at it as though it was nothing to him anyway, and then
+ he told me to take a swallow out of the bottle. In all my life I had never
+ taken four doses of medicine, and when I did the medicine was disguised in
+ preserves or something. The hospital steward handed me the bottle that a
+ dozen other sick soldiers had drank out of, and it was sticky all around
+ the top, and contained something that looked like castor oil, for greasing
+ a buggy. He told me to take a good big swallow, and I tried to do so. Talk
+ about the suffering brought on by the war, it seems to me nobody ever
+ suffered as I did, trying to drink a swallow of that castor oil out of a
+ two quart bottle, that was dirty. It run so slow that it seemed, an age
+ before I got enough to swallow, and then it seemed another age before the
+ oil could pass a given point in my neck. And great Caesar's ghost how it
+ <i>did</i> taste. I think it went down my neck, and I just had strength
+ enough to ask the steward to give me something to take the taste out of my
+ mouth. He handed me a blue pill. O, I could have killed him. I rushed to
+ the chaplain's tent and took a drink of blackberry brandy, and my life was
+ saved, but for three years after that I was never sick enough to get
+ farther than the chaplain's quarters.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ I suppose the meanest trick that was ever played on a raw recruit, was
+ played on me while we were in camp at that place. It seemed to me that
+ some of the boys got jealous of me, because I had become a hero,
+ accidentally. May be some of them did not believe I had killed as many of
+ the enemy as I had owned up to having killed. Anyway every little while
+ some soldier would say that he thought it was a mean man that would go out
+ and kill a lot of rebels and not bury them. He said a man that would do
+ that was a regular pot-hunter, who killed game and left it on the ground
+ to spoil. They made lots of such uncharitable remarks, but I did not pay
+ much attention to to them. I had a tent-mate who took a great interest in
+ me, and he said no soldier's life was safe who did not wear a
+ breast-plate, and he asked me if I did not bring any breast-plate with me.
+ I told him I never heard of a breastplate, and asked him what it was. He
+ said it was a vest made of the finest spring steel, that could be worn
+ under the clothes, which was so strong that a bullet could not penetrate
+ it. He supposed of course I had one, when he heard of the fight I had, and
+ said none of the old boys would go into a fight without one, as it covered
+ the vital parts, and saved many a life. I bit like a bass. If there was
+ anything I wanted more than a discharge, it was a breast-plate. If the
+ chaplain should succeed in getting me a soft job, where there was no
+ danger, I could get along without my breast-plate, but there was no sure
+ thing about the chaplain, so I asked the soldier where I could get a
+ breastplate. He said the quartermaster used to issue them, but he didn't
+ have any on hand now, but he said he knew where there was one that once
+ belonged to a soldier who was killed, and he thought he could get it for
+ me. I asked him how it happened that the soldier was killed, when he had a
+ breast-plate, and he told me the man was killed by eating green peaches.
+ Of course I couldn't expect a breastplate to save me from the effects of
+ eating unripe fruit, and I felt that if it would save me from bullets it
+ would be worth all it cost, so I told the soldier to get it for me. That
+ evening he brought it around, and he helped me put it on. I learned
+ afterwards that it was an old breast-plate that an officer had brought to
+ the regiment when the war broke out, and that it had been played on raw
+ recruits for two years. After I had got it on, the soldier suggested that
+ we go out with several other dare devils, and run the guard and go down
+ town and play billiards, and have a jolly time. I asked him if the guard
+ would not shoot at us, and he said the guards would be all right, and if
+ they did shoot they would shoot at the breast-plates, as all the boys had
+ them on. So about six of us sneaked through the guards, went to town and
+ had a big time, and came back along towards morning, each with a canteen
+ of whisky. It was not easy getting back inside the lines, as the moon was
+ shining, but we got by the guards, and then my friends suggested that we
+ take our breast-plates off and put them on behind us, as the guards, if
+ they shot at all, would be firing in our rear. I took mine off and put it
+ on behind my pants, and just then somebody fired a gun, and the boys said
+ &ldquo;run,&rdquo; and I started ahead, and the firing continued, and about every jump
+ I could hear and feel something striking my breast-plate behind, which
+ seemed to me to be bullets, and I was glad I had the breast-plate on,
+ though afterwards I found that the boys behind me were firing off their
+ revolvers in the air, and throwing small stones at my breast-plate.
+ Presently a bullet, as I supposed, struck me in the back above the
+ breast-plate, and I could feel blood trickling down my back, and I knew I
+ was wounded. O, I hankered for gore, before enlisting, and while editing a
+ paper, and now I had got it, got gore till I couldn't rest. The blood run
+ down my side, down my leg, into my boot, and I could feel I was wading in
+ my own blood. And great heaven's, how it did smell. I had never smelled
+ blood before, that I knew of, and I thought it had the most peculiar,
+ pungent, intoxicating odor. I ran towards my quarters as fast as possible,
+ fainting almost, from imaginary loss of blood, and finally rushed into my
+ tent, threw myself on my bunk and called loudly for the doctor and
+ chaplain, and then I fainted. When I came to I was surrounded by the
+ doctor, and a lot of the boys, all laughing, and the chaplain was trying
+ to say something pious, while trying to keep a straight face. &ldquo;Have you
+ succeeded in staunching the blood, doc?&rdquo; I asked, in a trembling voice. He
+ said the blood was quite staunch, but the whisky could never be saved. I
+ did not know what he meant, and I turned to the chaplain and asked him if
+ he wouldn't be kind enough to say something appropriate to the occasion. I
+ told him I had been a bad man, had lied some, as he well knew, and had
+ been guilty of things that would bar me out of the angel choir, but that
+ if he had any influence at the throne of grace, and could manage to sneak
+ me in under the canvass anyway, he could have the balance of my bounty,
+ and all the pay that might be coming to me. The chaplain held up the
+ breast-plate that had been removed by kind hands, from the back portion of
+ my person, and said I had better take that along with me, as it would be
+ handy to wear when I wanted to stand with my back to the fire in hades. I
+ could not understand why the good man should joke me, on my death bed, and
+ I rolled over with my back to the wall, to weep, unobserved, and I felt
+ the blood sticking to my clothes and person, and I asked the doctor why he
+ did not dress my wound. He said he should have to send the wound to the
+ tin-shop to be dressed, and then they all laughed. This made me indignant,
+ and I turned over and faced the crowd, and asked them if they had no
+ hearts, that they could thus mock at a dying man. The doctor held up my
+ canteen with a hole in it, made by a stone thrown by one of my companions,
+ and said, &ldquo;You d&mdash;&mdash;d fool, you are not wounded. Somebody busted
+ your canteen, and the whiskey run down your leg and into your boot, and
+ you, like an idiot, thought it was your life blood ebbing away. Couldn't
+ you tell that it was whiskey by the smell?&rdquo; I felt of myself, where I
+ thought I was wounded, and couldn't find any hole, and then I took off my
+ boot, and emptied the whisky out, and felt stronger, and finally I got up,
+ and the boys went away laughing at me, leaving the chaplain, who was kind
+ enough to tell me that of all the raw recruits that had ever come to the
+ regiment, he thought I was the biggest idiot of the lot, to let the boys
+ play that ancient breast-plate and canteen joke on me. I asked him if the
+ boys didn't all wear breast-plates, and he said &ldquo;naw!&rdquo; He told me that was
+ the only breast-plate in the whole Department of the Gulf, and it was kept
+ to play on recruits, and that I must keep it until a new recruit came that
+ was green enough to allow the boys to do him up. So I hid the breast-plate
+ under my bunk, and went to bed and tried to dream out some method of
+ getting even with my persecutors, while the chaplain went out, after
+ offering to hold himself in readiness, day or night, to come and pray for
+ me, if I was wounded in the canteen any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Yearn for a Furlough&mdash;I Interview the General&mdash;I am
+ Detailed to Carry a Rail&mdash;I Make a Horse-trade With the
+ Chaplain&mdash;I am Put in Charge of a Funeral.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I had now been fighting the battles of my country for two weeks, and felt
+ that I needed rest, and one day I became so homesick that it <i>did</i>
+ seem as though it would kill me. Including the week it had taken me to get
+ from home to my regiment, three weeks had elapsed since I bid good-bye to
+ my friends, and I wanted to go home. I would lay awake nights and think of
+ people at home and wonder what they were doing, and if they were laying
+ awake nights thinking of me, or caring whether I was alive, or buried in
+ the swamps of the South. It was about the time of year when at home we
+ always went off shooting, and I thought how much better it was to go off
+ shooting ducks and geese, and chickens, that could not shoot back, than to
+ be hunting bloodthirsty Confederates that were just as liable to hunt us,
+ and who could kill, with great ease. I thought of a pup I had at home that
+ was just the right age to train, and that he would be spoiled if he was
+ not trained that season. O, how I did want to train that pup. The news
+ that one of my comrades had been granted a furlough, after three years'
+ service, and that he was going home, made me desperate, and I dreamed that
+ I had waylaid and murdered the fortunate soldier, and gone home on his
+ furlough. The idea of getting a furlough was the one idea in my mind, and
+ the next morning as I took my horse to the veterinary surgeon for
+ treatment,{*} I had a talk with the horse doctor about the possibilities
+ of getting a furlough. I had known him before the war, when he kept a
+ livery stable, and as I owed him a small livery bill, I thought he would
+ give it to me straight. The horse doctor had his sleeves rolled up, and
+ was holding a horse's tongue in one hand while he poured some medicine
+ down the animal's throat out of a bottle with the other hand, which made
+ me sorry for the horse, as I remembered my experience at surgeon's call,
+ in drinking a dose of castor oil out of a bottle, and I was mean-enough to
+ be glad they played it on horses as well as the soldiers. The horse doctor
+ returned the horse's tongue to it's mouth, kicked the animal in the ribs,
+ turned and wiped his hands on a bale of hay, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, George, to get a furlough a man has got to have plenty of gall,
+ especially a man who has only been to the front a couple of weeks. There
+ is no use making an application in the regular way, to your captain, have
+ him endorse it and send it to regimental headquarters, and so on to
+ brigade headquarters, because you would never hear of it again. My idea
+ would be for you to go right to the general commanding the division, and
+ tell him you have got to go home. But you mustn't go crawling to him, and
+ whining. He is a quick-tempered man, and he hates a coward. Go to him and
+ talk familiar with him, and act as though you had always associated with
+ him, and slap him on the shoulder, and make yourself at home. Just make up
+ a good, plausible story, and give it to him, and if he seems irritated,
+ give him to understand that he can t frighten you, and just as likely as
+ not he will give you a furlough. I don't say he will, mind you, but it
+ would be just like him. But he does like to be treated familiar like, by
+ the boys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I neglected to say, in my account of the battle at the
+ race-track, that when firing with my revolver, at my friend
+ the rebel, I put one bullet-hole through the right ear of my
+ horse. I was so excited at the time that I did not know it,
+ and only discovered it a week later when currying off my
+ horse, which I made a practice of doing once a week, with a
+ piece of barrel-stave, when I noticed the horse's ear was
+ swelled up about as big as a canvas ham. I took him to the
+ horse doctor, who reduced the swelling so we could find the
+ hole through the horse's ear, and the horse doctor tied a
+ blue ribbon in the hole. He said the blue ribbon would help
+ heal the sore, but later I found that he had put the ribbon
+ in the ear to call attention to my poor marksmanship, and
+ the boys got so they made comments and laughed at me every
+ time I appeared with the horse.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I thanked the horse doctor and went away with my horse, resolved to have a
+ furlough or know the reason why. The general's headquarters were about
+ half a mile from our camp, and after drill that morning I went to see him.
+ I had seen him several times, at the colonel's headquarters, and he always
+ seemed mad about something, and I had thought he was about the crossest
+ looking man I ever saw, but if there was any truth in what the horse
+ doctor had told me, he was easily reached if a man went at him right, and
+ I resolved that if pure, unadulterated cheek and monumental gall would
+ accomplish anything, I would have a furlough before night, for a
+ homesicker man never lived than I was. I went up to the general's tent and
+ a guard halted me and asked me what I wanted, and I said I wanted to see
+ &ldquo;his nibs,&rdquo; and I walked right by the guard, who seemed stunned by my
+ cheek. I saw the general in his tent, with his coat off, writing, and he
+ <i>did</i> look savage. Without taking off my hat, or saluting him, I went
+ right up to him and sat down on the end of a trunk that was in the tent,
+ and with a tremendous effort to look familiar, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hello, Boss, writing to your girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen a good many men in my time who were pretty mad, but I have
+ never seen a man who appeared to be as mad as the general did. He was a
+ regular army officer, I found afterwards, and hated a volunteer as he did
+ poison. He turned red in the face and pale, and I thought he frothed at
+ the mouth, but may be he didn't. He seemed to try to control himself, and
+ said through his clenched teeth, in a sarcastic manner, I thought, in
+ imitation of a ring master in a circus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What will the little lady have next?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been in circuses myself, and when the general said that I answered
+ the same as a clown always does, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The banners, my lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought he would be pleased at my joking with him, but he looked around
+ as though he was seeking a revolver or a saber with which to kill me
+ finnally he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want, man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a little tough to be called plain &ldquo;man,&rdquo; but I swallowed it. I made
+ up my mind it was time to act, so I stood up, put my hand on the shoulder
+ of the general familiarly, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fact is, old man, I want a furlough to go home. I have got business
+ that demands my attention; I am sick of this inactivity in camp, and
+ besides the shooting season is just coming on at home, and I have got a
+ setter pup that will be spoiled if he is not trained this season. I came
+ down here two weeks ago, to help put down the rebellion; but all we have
+ done since I got here is to monkey around drilling and cleaning off
+ horses, while the officers play poker for red chips. Let me go home till
+ the poker season is over, and I will be back in time for the fall
+ fighting. What do you say, old apoplexy. Can I go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/059.jpg"
+ alt="Never Did Know, How I Got out of the General's Tent 059 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ I do not now, and never did know, how I got out of the general's tent,
+ whether he kicked me out, or threw his trunk at me, or whether there was
+ an explosion, but when I got outside there were two soldiers trying to
+ untangle me from the guy ropes of the general's tent, his wash basin and
+ pail of water were tipped over, and a cord that was strung outside with a
+ lot of uniforms, shirts, sabers, etc., had fallen down, and the general
+ was walking up and down his tent in an excited manner, calling me an
+ escaped lunatic, and telling the guards to tie me up by the thumbs, and
+ buck and gag me. They led me away, and from their conversation I concluded
+ I had committed an unpardonable offense, and would probably be hung,
+ though I couldn't see as I had done much more than the horse doctor told
+ me to. Finally the officer of the day came along and told the guards to
+ get a rail and make me carry it. So they got a rail and put it on my
+ shoulder, and I carried it up and down the camp, as a punishment for
+ insulting the general. I thought they picked out a pretty heavy rail, but
+ I carried it the best I could for an hour, when I threw it down and told
+ the guards I didn't enlist to carry rails. If the putting down of this
+ rebellion depended on carrying fence rails around the Southern
+ Confederacy, and I had to carry the rails, the aforesaid rebellion never
+ would be put down. I said I would fight if I had to, and be a hostler, and
+ cook my own food, and sleep on the ground, and try to earn my thirteen
+ dollars a month, but there must be a line drawn somewhere, and I drew it
+ at transporting fences around the sunny South. The guards were inclined to
+ laugh at my determination, but they said I could carry the rail or be tied
+ up by the thumbs; and I said they could go ahead, but if they hurt me I
+ would bring suit against the government. They were fixing to tie me up
+ when the colonel of my regiment rode up to see the general, and he got the
+ guards to let up on me till he could see the general. The general sent for
+ me after the colonel had talked with him, and they called me in and asked
+ me how I happened to be so fresh with the general; and I told them about
+ the horse doctors' advice as to how to get a furlough; and then they both
+ laughed, and said I owed the horse doctor one, and I must get even with
+ him. The colonel told the general who I was, that he had known me before
+ the war, and that I was all right only a little green, and that the boys
+ were having fun with me. The colonel told the general about my first fight
+ the first day of my service, and how I had, single-handed, put to flight a
+ large number of rebels, and the general got up and shook hands with me,
+ and said he forgave me for my impertinence, and gave me some advice about
+ letting the boys play it on me, and said I might go back to my company. He
+ was all smiles, and insisted on my taking a drink with himself and the
+ colonel. When I was about leaving his tent, I turned to him and said:
+ &ldquo;Then I don't get any furlough?&rdquo; &ldquo;Not till the cruel war is over,&rdquo; said
+ the general, with a laugh, and I went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guards treated me like a gentleman when they saw me taking a drink
+ with the general, and I went back to my regiment, resolved not to go home,
+ and to get even with the horse doctor for causing me to make a fool of
+ myself. However, I was glad I visited the general, for, after getting
+ acquainted with him, he seemed a real nice man, and he kept a better
+ article of liquor than the chaplain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For several days nothing occurred that was worthy of note, except that the
+ chaplain took a liking to my horse, and wanted to trade a mule for him. I
+ never did like a mule, and didn't really want to trade, but the chaplain
+ argued his case so eloquently that I was half persuaded. He said the horse
+ I rode, from its friskiness, and natural desire to &ldquo;get there, Eli!&rdquo; would
+ eventually get me killed, for if I ever got in sight of the enemy the
+ horse would rush to the front, and I couldn't hold him. He said he didn't
+ want to have me killed, and with the mule there would be no danger, as the
+ mule knew enough to keep away from a fight. The chaplain said he had
+ always rode a mule, because he thought the natural solemnity of a mule was
+ in better keeping with a pious man, but lately he had begun to go into
+ society some, in the town near where we were camped, and sometimes had to
+ preach to different regiments, so he thought he ought to have a horse that
+ put on a little more style, and as he knew I wanted an animal that would
+ keep as far from the foe as possible, and not lose its head and go chasing
+ around after rebels, and running me into danger, as my spiritual adviser
+ he would recommend the mule to me. He warranted the mule sound in every
+ particular, and as a mule was worth more than a horse he would trade with
+ me for ten dollars to boot. He said there was not another man in the
+ regiment he would trade with on such terms, but he had taken a liking to
+ me, and would part with his mule to me, though it broke his heart. At home
+ there was a sentiment against trading horses with a minister, as men who
+ did so always got beat, but I thought it would be an insult to the
+ chaplain to refuse to trade, when he seemed to be working for my
+ interests, to prevent me from being killed in a fight by the actions of my
+ horse, so I concluded to trade, though it seemed to me that if I couldn't
+ shoot off a horse without hitting its ears, I would fill a mule's ears
+ full of bullets. I spoke to the chaplain about that, and he said there was
+ no danger, because whenever fighting commenced the mule always wore his
+ ears lopped down below the line of fire. He said the mule had been trained
+ to that, and I would find him a great comfort in time of trial, and a
+ sympathizing companion always, one that I would become attached to. I told
+ him there was one thing I wanted to know, and that was if the mule would
+ kick. I had always been prejudiced against mules because they kicked. He
+ said he knew mules had been traduced, and that their reputations were not
+ good, but he believed this mule was as free from the habit of kicking as
+ any mule he had ever met. He said he would not deny that this mule could
+ kick, and in fact he had kicked a little, but he would warrant the mule
+ not to kick unless something unusual happened. He said I wouldn't want a
+ mule that had no individuality at all, one that hadn't sand enough to
+ protect itself. What I wanted, the chaplain said, was a mule that would
+ treat everybody right, but that would, if imposed upon, stand up for its
+ rights and kick. I told the chaplain that was about the kind of mule I
+ wanted, if I had any mule at all, and we traded. The chaplain rode off to
+ town on my horse, on a canter, as proud as a peacock, while I climbed on
+ to the solemn, lop-eared mule and went out to drill with my company. I do
+ not know what it was that went wrong with the mule while we were drilling,
+ but as we were wheeling in company front, the mule began to &ldquo;assert his
+ individuality,&rdquo; as the chaplain said he probably would, and he whirled
+ around sideways and kicked three soldiers off their horses; then he backed
+ up the other way and broke up the second platoon, kicked four horses in
+ the ribs, stampeded the company, and stood there alone kicking at the air.
+ The major rode down to where I was and began to swear at me, but I told
+ him I couldn't help it. He told me to dismount and lead the mule away, but
+ I couldn't dismount until the mule stopped kicking, and he seemed to be
+ wound up for all day. The major got too near and the mule kicked him on
+ the shin, and then started for the company again, which had got into
+ ranks, kicking all the way, and the company broke ranks and started for
+ camp, the mule following, kicking and braying all the way. I never was so
+ helpless in all my life. The more I spurred the mule, the more it kicked,
+ and if I stopped spurring it, it kicked worse. When we got to camp, I fell
+ off some way, and rushed into the chaplain's tent, and the mule kicked the
+ tent down, and some boys drove the mule away, and while I was fixing up
+ the tent the chaplain came back looking happy, and asked me how I liked
+ the mule. I never was a hypocrite, anyway, and I was mad, so I said: &ldquo;Oh,
+ dam that mule!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it is wrong to use such language, especially in the presence of
+ a minister, but I couldn't help it. I could see it hurt the chaplain, for
+ he sighed and said he was sorry to hear such words from me, inasmuch as he
+ had just got me detailed as his clerk, where I would have a soft thing,
+ and no drilling or fighting. He said he had wanted a clerk, one who was a
+ good-hearted, true man, and he had picked me out, but if I used such
+ language, that settled it. He said he didn't expect to find a private
+ soldier that was as pious as he was, but he did think I would be the best
+ man he could find. I wanted a soft job, with no fighting, as bad as any
+ man ever did, and I told the chaplain that he need not fear as to my
+ swearing again, as it was foreign to my nature, but I told him if he had
+ been on the hurricane deck of a kicking mule for an hour, and seen
+ comrades fall one by one, and bite the dust, and be carried on with marks
+ of mule shoes all over their persons, he would swear, and I would bet on
+ it. So it was arranged that I was to be the chaplain's clerk, and I moved
+ my outfit over to his tent, and for the first time since I had been a
+ soldier, I was perfectly happy. There was no danger of being detached for
+ guard duty, police duty, drilling, or fighting, and the only boss I had
+ was the chaplain. The chaplain and myself sat that evening in his tent,
+ and ate sanitary stores, drank wine for sickess, and smoked pipes, and
+ didn't care whether school kept or not, and that night I slept on a cot,
+ and had the first good night's rest, and in the morning I awoke refreshed,
+ and with no fear of orderly sergeants, or anybody. I had a soft snap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning I asked the chaplain what my duties were to be, and he
+ said I was to take care of the tent, write letters for him, issue sanitary
+ stores to deserving soldiers who might need them, ride with him sometimes
+ when he went to town, or to preach, go to funerals with him occasionally,
+ set a good example to the other soldiers, and make myself generally
+ useful. He said I would have to attend to the burial of the colored people
+ who died, and any such little simple details. He went out and left me
+ pondering over my duties. I liked it all except the nigger funerals. I had
+ always been a Democrat, at home, and not very much mashed on our colored
+ brothers, and one thing that prevented me from enlisting before I did was
+ the idea of making the colored men free. I had nothing against a colored
+ man, and got to think a great deal of them afterwards, but the idea of
+ acting as an undertaker for the colored race never occurred to me. I made
+ up my mind to kick on that part of the duties, when the chaplain came in
+ and said the colored cook of one of the companies was dead, and would be
+ buried that afternoon, and as he had to go to a meeting of chaplains down
+ town, I would have to go and conduct the services, and I better prepare
+ myself with a little speech. I was in a fix. I told the chaplain that it
+ might not have occurred to him, but honestly, I couldn't pray. He said
+ that didn't make any difference. I told him I couldn't preach hardly at
+ all. He said I didn't need to. All I had to do was to go and find out
+ something about the life of the deceased, what kind of a man he was, and
+ say a few words at the grave complimentary of him, console the mourners,
+ if there were any, and counsel them to try to lead a different life, that
+ they might eventually enter into the glory of the New Jerusalem, or words
+ to that effect. Well, this made me perspire. This was a tighter place than
+ I was in when I met the rebel. The idea of my conducting the funeral
+ exercises of such a black-burying party, made me tired. The chaplain said
+ a good deal depended on how I got through this first case, as if I
+ succeeded well, it would be a great feather in my cap. His idea, he said,
+ was to try me first on a nigger, and if I was up to snuff, and carried
+ myself like a thoroughbred, there would be nothing too good for me in that
+ regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I went to the orderly sergeant of the company where the man died, to get
+ some points as to his career, in order to work in a few remarks
+ appropriate to the occasion, and I said to the orderly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand your company cook has gone to that bourne from whence no
+ traveler returns. I thought that was pretty good for a green hand, for a
+ starter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the orderly, as he looked solemn, &ldquo;The old son-of-a-gun has
+ passed in his chips, and is now walking in green pastures, beside still
+ waters, but he will not drink any of the aforesaid still waters, if he can
+ steal any whisky to drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You astonish, me,&rdquo; said I to the orderly. &ldquo;The fact is, the chaplain has
+ sawed off on to me the duty of seeing to the burial of our deceased
+ friend, and I called to gather some few facts as to his characteristics as
+ a man and a brother. Can you tell me of anything that would interest those
+ who may attend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, I don't know,&rdquo; said the orderly. &ldquo;The deceased was a liar, a thief,
+ and a drunkard. He would steal anything that was not chained down. He
+ would murder a man for a dollar. He was the worst nigger that ever was. If
+ there was a medical college here that wanted bodies, it would be a waste
+ of money to bury him. But when he was sober he could bake beans for all
+ that was out, and there was no man that could boil corned mule so as to
+ take the taste of the saltpetre out, as he could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not a very good send off for my first funeral, but I clung to the
+ good qualities possessed by the late lamented. Though he might have been a
+ bad man, all was not lost if he could bake beans well, and boil the salt
+ horse or corned mule that soldiers had to eat, so they were appetizing.
+ Many truly good men of national reputation, could not have excelled him in
+ his chosen specialties, and I made a memorandum of that for future use. I
+ made further inquiries in the company, and found that the deceased had a
+ bad reputation, owed everybody, had five wives living that he had
+ deserted, and was suspected of having murdered two or three colored men
+ for their money. His death was caused by delirium tremens. He had stole a
+ jug of whisky from the major's tent, laid drunk a week, and when the
+ whisky was gone he had tremens, and had gone to the horse doctor for
+ something to quiet his nerves, and the horse doctor had given him a
+ condition powder to take, to be followed with a swallow of mustang
+ liniment, and the man died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the information I got to use in my remarks at the grave of the
+ deceased, and I went back to my tent to think it over. I thought perhaps I
+ had better work in the horse doctor for mal-practice, in my discourse, and
+ thus get even with him for sending me to the general after a furlough.
+ While I was thinking over the things I would say, and trying to forget the
+ bad things about the man, the orderly sent word that the funeral cortege
+ was ready to proceed to the bone yard. I looked down the company street
+ and saw the remains being lifted into a cart, and I went out and put the
+ saddle on my mule, and with a mental prayer that the confounded mule
+ wouldn't get to kicking till the funeral was over, started to do the
+ honors at the grave of the late company cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Funeral of the Colored Cook&mdash;I Plead for a Larger
+ Procession&mdash;The Funeral Oration&mdash;The Funeral Disturbed&mdash;I am
+ Arrested&mdash;My Fortunate Escape.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This last chapter of these celebrated war papers closed with me saddling
+ my mule to ride to the funeral of the colored cook, at which I was to act
+ as chaplain. The mule evidently knew that it was a solemn occasion, for
+ there was a mournful look on its otherwise placid face, the ears drooped
+ more than usual, and there seemed a sweet peace stealing over the animal,
+ which well became a funeral, until I began to buckle up the saddle, when
+ the long-eared brute began to paw and kick and bite, and it took six men
+ to get me into the saddle. I rode down the company street where the cart
+ stood with the remains, and a colored driver sitting on the foot of the
+ plain pine box, asleep. I woke the driver up with the point of my saber,
+ when another colored man came out of a tent with a shovel in one hand, and
+ a hardtack with a piece of bacon in the other. He climbed into the cart,
+ sat down on the coffin and began to eat his dinner. This was my funeral.
+ All that seemed necessary for a funeral was a corpse, a driver of a cart,
+ and a man with a shovel. I rode up to the orderly's tent and asked him
+ where the mourners were, and he laughed at me. The idea of mourners seemed
+ to be ridiculous. I had never, in all my life, seen so slim a funeral, and
+ it hurt me. In the meantime the nigger with the shovel had woke up the
+ driver of the cart, and he had followed me, with the remains. I told them
+ to halt the funeral right there, until I could skirmish around and pick up
+ mourners enough for a mess, and a choir, and some bearers. As I rode away
+ to the colonel's tent, the driver of the cart and the man with the shovel
+ were playing &ldquo;mumbleypeg,&rdquo; with a jack-knife, on the coffin, which shocked
+ me very much, as I was accustomed to living where more respect was paid to
+ the dead. I went to the colonel's tent and yelled &ldquo;Say! The colonel, who
+ was changing his shirt, came to the door with his eyes full of soap,
+ rubbing his neck with a towel, and asked what was the row. I told him I
+ would like to have him detail me six bearers, seven or eight mourners, a
+ few singers, and fifteen or twenty men for a congregation. He asked me
+ what on earth I was talking about, and just then the cart with the corpse
+ in was driven up to where I was, the orderly having told the driver to
+ follow me with the late lamented. I pointed to the outfit, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, in that box lie the remains of a colored cook. The chaplain has
+ appointed me to conduct the funeral service, and I find that the two
+ colored men on the cart are the only ones to accompany the remains to
+ their last resting place. No man can successfully run a funeral on three
+ niggers, one of whom is dead, one liable to go to sleep any minute, and
+ the other with an abnormal appetite for hardtack. It is a disgrace to
+ civilization to give a dead man such a send off, and I want you to detail
+ me some men to see me through. I have loaded myself with some interesting
+ remarks befitting the occasion, and I do not want to fire them off into
+ space, with no audience except these two coons. Give me some mourners and
+ things, or I drop this funeral right where it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I was speaking the general rode up to visit with the colonel, with
+ his staff, and the colonel came out with his undershirt on, and his
+ suspenders hanging down, and he and the general consulted for a minute,
+ and laughed a little, which I thought was disgraceful. Then the colonel
+ sent for the sergeant-major and told, him to detail all the company cooks
+ and officer's servants, to attend the funeral with me, and he said I could
+ divide them off into reliefs, letting a few be mourners at a time. In the
+ meantime, he said, I could move my procession off down by the
+ horse-doctor's quarter's, as he did not want it in front of his tent. That
+ reminded me that the horse-doctor had prescribed for the deceased, and had
+ given him condition powders, and I asked the colonel to compel the
+ horse-doctor to go with me. It had always seemed to me at home that the
+ attending physician, under whose auspices the person died, should attend
+ the funeral of his patient, and when I told the colonel about it, he
+ called the horse-doctor and told him he would have to go. It took half an
+ hour or so to get the colored cooks and servants together, but when all
+ was ready to move, it was quite a respectable funeral, except that I could
+ not help noticing a spirit of levity on the part of the mourners. All the
+ followers were mounted, the officer's servant's on officer's horses, and
+ the cooks on mules, and it required all the presence of mind I possessed
+ to keep the coons from turning the sad occasion into a horse race, as they
+ would drop back, in squads, a quarter of a mile or so, and then come
+ whooping up to the cart containing the remains, and each vowing that his
+ horse could clean out the others. I rode in front of the remains with the
+ horse-doctor, and tried to conduct myself in as solemn a manner as
+ befitted the occasion, and tried to reason with the horse-doctor against
+ his unseemly jokes, which he was constantly getting on. He told several
+ stories, better calculated for a gathering where bacchanalian revelry was
+ the custom, and I told him that while I respected his calling, he must
+ respect mine. He said something about calling a man on a full hand,
+ against a flush, but I did not pretend to know what he meant. We had to go
+ out of town about two miles, to the cemetery. Unfortunately we were in the
+ watermelon growing section, and the horse-doctor called my attention to
+ the fact that my procession was becoming scarce, when I looked around, and
+ every blessed one of the cooks and servants, and the man with the shovel,
+ had gone on into the field after melons, and I stopped the cart and yelled
+ to them to come back to the funeral. Pretty soon they all rode back, each
+ with a melon under his arm, and every face looked as though there was no
+ funeral that could prevent a nigger from stealing a watermelon. After
+ several stops, to round up my mourners, from corn fields and horse racing,
+ we arrived at the cemetery, and while the grave was being dug the niggers
+ went for the melons, and if it had been a picnic there couldn't have been
+ much more enjoyment. The horse-doctor took out a big knife that he used to
+ bleed horses, and cut a melon, and offered me a slice, and while I did not
+ feel that it was just the place to indulge in melon, it looked so good
+ that I ate some, with a mental reservation, however. It was all a new
+ experience to me. I had never believed that in the presence of death, or
+ at a funeral, people could be anything but decorous and solemn. I had
+ never attended a funeral before, except where all present were friends of
+ the deceased, and sorry, but here all seemed different. They all seemed to
+ look upon the thing as a good joke. I had read that in New York and other
+ large cities, those who attended funerals had a horse race on the way
+ back, and stopped at beer saloons and filled up, but I never believed that
+ people could be so depraved. I tried to talk to the coons, and get them to
+ show proper respect for the occasion, but they laughed and threw melon
+ rinds at each other. Finnally the colonel and the general, with quite a
+ lot of soldiers, who were out reconnoitering, rode to where we were, and
+ the coons acted a little better, but I could see that the officers were
+ not particularly solemn. They seemed to expect something rich. They
+ evidently looked upon me as a star idiot, who would make some blunder, or
+ say something to make them laugh: I made up my mind that in my new
+ position I would act just as decorous, and speak as kindly as though the
+ deceased was the president. During all my life I had made it a practice
+ never to speak ill of any person on earth, and if I could not say a good
+ word for a person I would say nothing, a practice which I have kept up
+ until this writing, with much success, and I decided that the words spoken
+ on that occasion should not reflect against the poor man who had passed in
+ his checks, and laid down the burden of life. The grave was completed, and
+ with a couple of picket ropes the body was let down, and there was for a
+ moment a sort of solemnity. I arose, and as near as I can remember at this
+ late day, spoke about as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/077.jpg" alt="A Solemn Funeral Oration 077" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friends: We have met here today to conduct the last rites over a man, who
+ but yesterday was among us but who, in an unguarded moment drank too much
+ whisky, and paid the penalty. (There was a smile perceptible on the faces
+ on the officers.) The ignorant man who died, did not know any better, but
+ I see around me men who know better, but who drink more than this man did,
+ and if they are not careful they will go the same way. (There was less
+ smiling among the officers.) It is said of this man that he was bad, that
+ he would steal. I have investigated, and have found that it is true, but
+ that his peculations consisted of small things, of little value, and I am
+ convinced that the habit was not worse with him than with any of us. In
+ war times, everybody steals. We are all thieves to a certain extent. The
+ soldier will not go hungry if he can jay-hawk anything to eat. The officer
+ will not go thirsty if he can capture whisky, nor will anybody walk if he
+ can steal a horse. The higher a man gets the more he will steal. Shall we
+ harbor unkind thoughts against this dead man for stealing a pair of boots,
+ and honor a general who steals a thousand bales of cotton? (No! no!
+ shouted the cooks and servants, while the officers looked as though they
+ were sorry they attended the funeral.) Friends let us look at the good
+ qualities of our friend. I say, without fear of successful contradiction,
+ that a man, however humble his station, who can bake beans as well as the
+ remains could bake them, is entitled to a warm place in the heart of every
+ soldier, and if he goes to the land that is fairer than this,-and who can
+ say that he will not,&mdash;he is liable to be welcomed with 'well done,
+ good and faithful servant,' and he will be received where horse doctors
+ can never enter with their condition powders, and where there will never
+ be war any more. To his family, or several families, as the case may be, I
+ would say&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point I had noticed an uneasiness on the part of my mourners and
+ bearers, as well as the officers. Nine of the negroes fell down on the
+ ground and groaned as if in pain, and the general and his stall looked off
+ to a piece of woods where a few shots had been fired, and rode away
+ hurriedly, the colonel telling me I had better hurry up that funeral or it
+ was liable to be interrupted. The horse-doctor went to the negroes who
+ were sick, and after examining them he said they had been poisoned by
+ eating melons that had been doctored, and he advised them to get to town
+ as quick as possible. They scrambled on their horses the best way they
+ could, and just then there was a yell, and out of the woods came half a
+ dozen Union soldiers followed by fifteen or twenty Confederates, and all
+ was confusion. The niggers scattered towards town, the driver of the cart
+ taking the lead, trying to catch the general and his start, who were
+ hurrying away, leaving the horse-doctor, myself and the deceased. The
+ horse-doctor seized the shovel and threw a little dirt on the coffin, then
+ mounted his horse, I mounted my mule, and away we went towards town, with
+ the rebels gaining on us every jump. The horse-doctor soon left me, and
+ with a picket I had pulled off the fence of the cemetery, I worked my
+ passage on that mule. I mauled the mule, and the more I pounded the slower
+ it went. There was never a more deliberate mule in the world. I forgot all
+ the solemn thoughts that possessed me at the grave, and tried to talk to
+ the mule like a mule-driver, but the animal just fooled along, as though
+ there was no especial hurry. Occasionally I could hear bullets 'zipping'
+ along by me, and the rebels were yelling for all that was out. O, how I
+ did wish I had my old race horse that the chaplain had beat me out of. In
+ my first engagement my horse was too fast, and there was danger that I
+ would catch my friend, the rebel, and I complained of the horse. Now I had
+ a mule that was too slow. What I wanted was a 'middling' horse, one that
+ was not too confounded fast when after the enemy, and one not so all-fired
+ slow when being pursued. The Johnnies were coming closer, but we were only
+ half a mile from town. Would they chase us clear into town? At that
+ critical moment the blasted mule stopped short, never to go again, and
+ began to kick. What on earth possessed that fool mule to take a notion to
+ stop right there and kick, is more than I shall ever know, but it simply
+ kicked, and I felt that my time had come. The Union soldiers that were
+ being chased by the Confederates passed me, and told me I better light out
+ or I would be captured, but I couldn't get the mule to budge an inch. It
+ just kicked. The good Lord only knows, what that mule was kicking at, or
+ why it should have been scheduled to stop and kick at that particular
+ time, when every minute was precious. I saw the rebels very near me, and
+ as it was impossible to get the mule to go a step farther, I raised the
+ large, flat, white-washed picket which I had torn on the cemetery fence to
+ maul the mule with, in token of surrender, and the Confederate boys
+ surrounded me, though they kept a safe distance, after my mule had kicked
+ in the ribs of one of their horses. The rebs had gone about as far towards
+ the town as it was safe to go, and and they knew the whole garrison would
+ be out after them pretty soon, so they laughed at me for being armed with
+ a whitewashed picket, and asked me if I expected to put down the rebellion
+ by stabbing the enemy with such things. I told them I had been burying a
+ nigger. One of my captors run the point of his saber into my mule, to stop
+ its kicking, and then he said to his comrades, &ldquo;Boys, we came out here
+ with the glorious prospect of capturing a Yankee general and his staff,
+ and instead of getting him, we have broken up a nigger funeral and
+ captured the gospel sharp, armed with a picket fence, and a kicking mule.
+ Shall we hang him for engaging in uncivilized, warfare, by stabbing us
+ with pickets poisoned with whitewash, or shall we take the red-headed
+ slim-jim back with us as a curiosity.&rdquo; The boys all said not to hang me,
+ but to take me along. I saw that it was all day with me this time. I felt
+ that I was helping put down the rebellion rapidly, as I had been a soldier
+ four weeks, been captured twice, and not a drop of blood had been spilled.
+ The rebels started back, with me and my mule ahead of them, and they kept
+ the mule ahead by jabbing it with a saber occasionally. I felt humiliated
+ and indignant at being called slim-jim, sorrel-top, and elder. They seemed
+ to think I was a preacher. I stood it all until a cuss reached into my
+ pocket and took my meershaum pipe and a bag of tobacco, filled the pipe
+ and lit it, then I was mad. I had paid eight dollars of my bounty for that
+ pipe, and I said to the leader: &ldquo;Boss, I can stand a joke as well as
+ anybody, but when you capture me, in a fair fight, you have no right to
+ jab my mule with a saber, or call me names. I am a meek and lowly soldier
+ of the army of the right, and want to so live that I can meet you all in
+ the great hereafter, but by the gods I can whip the condemned galoot that
+ stole my meershaum pipe. You think I am pious, and a non-combatant, but I
+ am a fighter from away back, and don't you forget it.&rdquo; The young man who
+ seemed to be in command told me to dry up, and he would get my pipe. He
+ went and took it away from the one who had stolen it, filled it and lit it
+ himself, and said it was a good pipe, and then he passed it around among
+ them all. We moved on at a trot, and were getting far away from my
+ regiment, and I realized that I was a captive, and that I should probably
+ die in Andersonville prison. I looked at the dozen stalwart rebels that
+ were riding behind me, and knew I could not whip them all with one picket
+ off the cemetery fence, and so I resolved to remain a captive, and die for
+ my country, of scurvey, if necessary. I turned around in my saddle to ask
+ if it wasn t about time for me to have a smoke out of my own pipe, and as
+ I looked up the road we had come over I saw a large body of our own
+ cavalry, coming like the wind toward us. I said nothing, but my face gave
+ me away. I looked so tickled to see the boys coming that the rebels
+ noticed it, and they looked back and saw the soldiers in pursuit, they
+ yelled, &ldquo;The Yanks are coming!&rdquo; put spurs to their horses, stabbed my mule
+ and told me to pound it with the picket, and hurry up, and then they
+ passed me, and away they went, leaving me in the road alone between them
+ and my own soldiers, I yelled to the leader to give me back my pipe, and I
+ can hear his mocking laugh to this day, as he told me to &ldquo;go to hell.&rdquo;
+ This made me mad, and drawing my picket I dashed after the retreating
+ rebels, knowing that the men of my regiment would soon overtake me, and
+ they would think I had chased the rebels three miles from town, armed only
+ with a picket off the fence, and saved the garrison from capture. The
+ thing worked to perfection, and when our command came up, the horses
+ panting and perspiring, and the boys looking wild, the captain in command
+ asked me how many there was of em, and I told him about forty, and he said
+ I had done well to drive them so far, and he charged by me after them. I
+ yelled to the captain to try and kill that long-legged rebel on the sorrel
+ horse, and get my meershaum pipe, but he didn't hear me. I hurried along
+ as fast as I could, but before I caught up, there was a good deal of
+ firing, and when I got there flankers were out in the woods, and there was
+ sorrow, for three or four boys in blue had been killed in an ambush, and
+ the rebels had got away across a bayou. As I rode up on my mule, with the
+ picket still in my hand, I saw the three soldiers of my regiment lying
+ dead under a tree, two others were wounded and had bandages around their
+ heads, and for the first time since I had been a soldier, I realized that
+ war was not a picnic. I could not keep my eyes off the faces of my dead
+ comrades, the best and bravest boys in the regiment, boys who always got
+ to the front when there was a skirmish. To think that I had been riding
+ right amongst the rebels who had done this thing but a few minutes before,
+ and never thought that death would claim anybody so soon. I wondered if
+ those rebels were not sorry they had killed such good boys. I wondered, as
+ I thought of the fathers and mothers, and sisters of my dead companions,
+ whether the rebels would not sympathize with them, and then I thought
+ suppose our fellows had not been killed, and we had killed some of the
+ Confederates, wouldn't it have been just as sorrowful, wouldn't <i>their</i>
+ fathers, mothers and sisters have mourned the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I made a resolve that I would never kill anybody if I could help it;
+ I even decided that if I should meet the rebel that had my meershaum pipe,
+ I would not fight him to get it. If he wasn't gentleman enough to give it
+ up peaceably, he could keep it, and be darned. Just then some of our
+ skirmishers came in carrying another dead body, and we were all
+ speculating as to which one of our poor boys had fallen, when we noticed
+ that the dead soldier had on a gray suit, and it was soon found that he
+ was one of the Confederates. He was laid down beside our dead boys, and I
+ don't know but I felt about as bad to see him dead, as it was possible to
+ feel. It is true he had told me, half an hour before, when I asked him for
+ my pipe, to go to hades, but I did not have to go unless I wanted to. And
+ he was gone first. I saw something sticking out of the breast pocket of
+ the dead Confederate, and could see that it was my pipe. Then I thought of
+ the foolish remark I made to the captain, to kill that long-legged rebel
+ and get my meershaum. God bless him, I didn't want anybody to kill him for
+ a bad smelling old pipe, and I wondered if that remark would be registered
+ up against me, in the great book above, when I didn't mean it. I tried to
+ make myself believe that my remark did not have any influence on the man's
+ fate. He just took his chances with his comrades, and was killed, no
+ doubt, and yet it was impossible to get the idea off my mind that I was
+ responsible for his death. Anyway, I would never touch the confounded old
+ pipe again, and if I ever heard of his mother or sister, after the war was
+ over, I would stand by them as long as I had a nickel. An ambulance was
+ sent for and the dead and wounded were placed in it, and we went back to
+ town, a sad procession. There was no need to detail any mourners for this
+ occasion, and there was no straggling for watermelons. Everybody was full
+ of sorrow. The next day there was a Union funeral in that Southern town,
+ and the three Union boys were laid side by side, while a little, to one
+ side my Confederate was buried, receiving the same kind words from the
+ chaplains. As a volley was about to be fired over the graves, I picked a
+ handful of roses, buds and blossoms, from a rose bush in the cemetery, and
+ went to the grave of the Confederate and tenderly tossed them upon the
+ coffin. The horse doctor saw me do it, and in his rough manner said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you about there? It ain t necessary to plant flowers on the graves
+ of rebels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, no, it isn't necessary, I said, as the volley was fired over the
+ graves, but it will make his mother or his sister feel better to know that
+ there are a few roses in there, and it won't hurt anybody. I will just
+ play that I am the authorized agent of that Confederate soldier's sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, all right if you say so, said the horse-doctor, as he drew the sleeve
+ of his blue blouse across his eyes, which were wet. The last volley was
+ fired, and the soldiers returned to camp, leaving the dead of two armies
+ sleeping together. As I went in the chaplain's tent and sat down to think,
+ the chaplain handed me something, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here's your pipe. They found it on that Confederate soldier that captured
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pushed it away and said, &ldquo;I don't want it. I have quit smoking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Capture &ldquo;Jeff&rdquo;&mdash;I Get Back at the Chaplain&mdash;The Chaplain
+ Arrested&mdash;Off on a Raid&mdash;I Meet the Relatives of the Dead
+ Confederate&mdash;My Powers of Lying are Brought into Play.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The winding up of the last chapter of this history, with its sad
+ incidents, deaths and burials, was unavoidable, but it shall not occur
+ again. The true historian has got to get in all the particulars. I think I
+ never felt quite as downhearted as I did the day or two after the
+ skirmish, when our boys were killed. It had seemed as though there was no
+ danger of anybody getting hurt, as long as they looked out for themselves,
+ but now there was a feeling that anybody was liable to be killed, any
+ time, and why not me? Of course the old veterans of the regiment were the
+ ones who would naturally be expected to take the brunt of the battle, but
+ there was a habit of sending raw recruits into places of danger that
+ struck me as being mighty careless, as well as very bad judgment. Then
+ there were great preparations being made for an advance movement, or a
+ retreat, or something, and my mind was constantly occupied in trying to
+ find out whether it was to be an advance or a retreat. If it was an
+ advance, I wanted to arrange to be in the rear, and if it was a retreat,
+ it seemed to me as as though the proper place for a man who wanted to live
+ to go home, was in front. And yet what chance was there for a common
+ private soldier to find out whether it was an advance or a retreat.
+ Finally I decided that when the regiment <i>did</i> start out, I would
+ manage to be about the middle, so it wouldn't make much difference which
+ way we went. When that idea occurred to me I pondered over it a good deal
+ and told the chaplain, and he said it was a piece of as brilliant strategy
+ as he had ever heard of, and he was willing to adopt it, only being a
+ staff officer it was necessary for him and me to ride with the colonel,
+ and the colonel most always rode at the head, though his place was about
+ the middle. He said he would speak to the colonel about it. It made my
+ hair stand to see the preparations that were being made for carnage.
+ Ammunition enough was issued to kill a million men, and the doctors were
+ packing bandages and plasters, and physic, and splints and probes, until
+ it made me sick to look at them. When I thought of actual war, my mind
+ reverted to my mule, the kicking brute that was no good, and I decided to
+ get a horse. I had got so, actually, that I could hear bullets whistle
+ without turning pale and having cold chills run over me, and it seemed as
+ though a horse was none too good for me, so I went to the colonel and told
+ him that a soldier couldn't make no show on a kicking mule and I wanted a
+ horse. I told him I supposed, as chaplain's clerk. I should have to ride
+ with him and his staff on the march, and he didn't want to see as nice a
+ looking fellow as I was riding a kicking mule that would kick the ribs of
+ the officers horses, and break the officers legs. The colonel said he had
+ not thought of that contingency. He had enjoyed seeing me ride the mule,
+ because I was so patient when the mule kicked. He said they used that mule
+ in the regiment to teach recruits to ride. A man who could stay on that
+ mule could ride any horse in the regiment, and as I had been successful,
+ and had displayed splendid mulemanship, I should be promoted to ride a
+ horse, and he told the quartermaster to exchange with me and give me the
+ chestnut-sorrel horse that the Confederate was shot off of. I went with
+ the quartermaster to the corral, turned out my mule, and cornered the
+ beautiful horse that had been rode so proudly a few days before by my
+ friend, the rebel. It took six of us to catch the horse, and bridle and
+ saddle him, and the men about the corral said the horse was no good. He
+ hadn't eaten anything since being captured, and his eyes looked bad, and
+ he wanted to kick and bite everybody. I told them the poor horse was
+ homesick, that was all that ailed him. The horse was a Confederate at
+ heart, and he naturally had no particular love for Yankees. I remembered
+ that once or twice when I was riding with the rebels, after they captured
+ me, the young fellow on this horse patted him on the neck and called him
+ &ldquo;Jeff&rdquo;, so I knew that was his name, so I led him out of the corral away
+ from the other fellows, where there was some grass growing, and made up my
+ mind I would &ldquo;mash&rdquo; him. After he had eaten grass a little while, looking
+ at me out of the corner of his eyes as though he didn't know whether to
+ kick my head on, or walk on me, as I sat under a tree, I got up and patted
+ him on the neck and said, &ldquo;Well, Jeff, old boy, how does the grass fit
+ your stomach?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may talk about brute intelligence, but that horse was human. He
+ stopped eating, with his mouth full of grass, looked astonished at being
+ addressed by a stranger without an introduction, and turned a pair of eyes
+ as beautiful and soft as a woman's upon me, and then began to chew slowly,
+ as though thinking. I rubbed his sleek coat with, my bare hands, and did
+ not say much, desiring to have Jeff make the first advances. He looked me
+ over, and finally put his nose on my sleeve, and rubbed me, and looked in
+ my face, and acted as though he would say, &ldquo;Well, of course this
+ red-headed fellow is no comparison to my dead master, but evidently he's
+ no slouch, and if I have got to be bossed around by a Yankee, as he is the
+ only one that has spoken a kind word to me since I was captured, and he
+ seems to know my name, I guess I will tie to him,&rdquo; and the intelligent
+ animal rubbed his nose all over me, and licked my hand. I rubbed the horse
+ all over, petted him, took up his feet and looked at them, and spoke his
+ name, and pretty soon we were the best of friends. I mounted him and rode
+ around and it was just like a rocking chair. That poor, dead Confederate
+ had probably rode Jeff since he was a kid and Jeff was a colt, and had
+ broken him well, and I was awfully sorry that the original owner was not
+ alive, riding his horse home safe and sound, to be greeted by his family
+ with loving embraces. But he was dead and buried, and his horse belonged
+ to me, by all the laws of war. And yet I had not become a hardened warrior
+ to such an extent that I could forget the hearts that would ache at his
+ home, and I made up mind that horse would be treated as tenderly as though
+ he was one of my family. I rode Jeff around for an hour or two, found that
+ he was trained to jump fences, stand on his hind feet, trot, pace, rack,
+ and that he could run like a scared wolf, and everything the horse did he
+ would sort of look around at me with one eye as much as to say, &ldquo;Boss, you
+ will find I have got all the modern improvements, and you needn't be
+ afraid that I will disgrace you in any society.&rdquo; I was fairly in love with
+ my new horse, and, except for a feeling that I was an interloper with the
+ horse, and sorry for the poor boy that had been shot off him, I should
+ have been perfectly happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain had got in the habit of wearing a nice, blue broadcloth
+ blouse which I had brought from home, which had two rows of brass buttons
+ on it. I had paid about twenty dollars of my bounty for the blouse, and
+ had found that the private soldiers did not wear such elaborate uniforms
+ in active duty, so I kept it in the chaplain's tent. I thought if I was
+ killed and my body was sent home, the blouse would come handy. The
+ chaplain wore it occasionally, and he said any time I wanted to wear any
+ of his clothes to just help myself. An order had been issued to move the
+ following day, with ten days' rations, and some of the boys asked for
+ passes to go down town and have a little blow-out before we started. They
+ wanted me to go along, and so I got a pass, too. We were to go down town
+ in the afternoon and stay till nine o clock at night, when we had to be in
+ camp. I saddled up Jeff and looked for my blouse, but it was gone, the
+ chaplain having worn it to visit the chaplain of some other regiment, so I
+ took his coat and put it on, as he had told me to. The coat had the
+ chaplain's shoulder-straps on, but I thought there would be no harm in
+ wearing it, so about a dozen of us privates started for town to have a
+ good time, and I with chaplain's-straps on. It was customary, when
+ soldiers went to town on a pass, to partake of intoxicating beverages more
+ or less, as that was about the only form of enjoyment, and I blush now,
+ twenty-two years afterward, to write the fact that we all got pretty full.
+ It seemed so like home to be able to go into a saloon and drink beer, good
+ old northern beer, and who knew but tomorrow we would be killed. So we
+ ate, drank, and were merry. One of the boys said when the officers got on
+ a tear, they would ride right into billiard saloons, and sometime shoot at
+ decanters of red liquor behind the bar, and he said a private was just as
+ good as an officer any day, and suggested that we mount our horses and
+ paint the town. We mounted, and rode about town, racing up and down the
+ streets, and finally we came to a billiard saloon, and half a dozen of us
+ rode right in, took cues out of the rack, and tried to play billiards on
+ horse-back. It was a grand picnic then, though it seems foolish now. My
+ horse Jeff would do anything I asked him, and when I rode up to the bar
+ and told him to rear up, he put both fore feet on the bar, and looked at
+ the bartender as much as to say, &ldquo;set up the best you have got.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain's shoulder-straps gave the crowd a sort of confidence that
+ everything was all right, and after exhibiting in a saloon for a time,
+ there was something said about horse-racing, and I said my horse could
+ beat anything on four legs, so we adjourned to the outskirts of town for a
+ race, followed by half the people in town. We had a horse-race, and Jeff
+ beat them all, and wherever I went the crowd would cheer the chaplain.
+ They said they liked to see a man in that position who could unbend
+ himself and mix up with the boys. There never was a chaplain more popular
+ than the &ldquo;Wisconsin preacher&rdquo; was. It did not occur to me that I was
+ placing the chaplain in an unfavorable position before the public, by
+ wearing his coat. <i>Nothing</i> occurred to me, that day, except that we
+ were having a high old time. Finally, after dark, one of our boys got into
+ a row with a loafer in a saloon, and picked the loafer up and tossed him
+ through the window, to the sidewalk. This was very wrong, but it couldn't
+ be helped. There was a great noise, cries for the provost guard, and we
+ knew that the only way to get out of the scrape honorably, would be to get
+ out real quick, so we mounted and rode to our camp. My horse was the
+ fastest and I got home first, unsaddled my horse and went to the tent,
+ took off the chaplain's coat and hung it up carefully, and was at work
+ writing a letter, and thinking how my horse acted as though he had been on
+ sprees before, he enjoyed it so, when I heard a noise outside, and it was
+ evident that the provost guard had followed us to camp, and were making
+ complaint to the colonel about our conduct down town. Finally the guard
+ went away, and shortly the colonel and the adjutant called at our tent and
+ inquired for the chaplain. I told them the chaplain had been away most of
+ the day, and had not returned. The colonel and the adjutant winked at each
+ other, and asked me if he wasn t away a good deal. I told them that he was
+ away some. They asked me if I never noticed that his breath had a peculiar
+ smell. I told them that it was occasionally a little loud. They went away
+ thoughtfully. Now that I think of it I ought to have explained that the
+ peculiarity of the chaplain's breath was caused from eating pickled onions
+ of the sanitary stores, but it did not occur to me at the time. After a
+ while the chaplain came back, asked me if anybody had died during the day,
+ took a drink of blackberry brandy for what ailed him, and we retired. The
+ next morning there was a circus. The little town boasted, a daily paper,
+ and it contained the following:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The community is prepared to overlook an occasional scene
+ of hilarity among the Federal soldiers stationed in this
+ vicinity, but when a gang of roysterers is led by a
+ chaplain, as was the case yesterday, all right-minded people
+ will be indignant. It is said by our informant that the
+ chaplain of a certain cavalry regiment was the liveliest one
+ of the crowd, that he rode into a billiard room, caused his
+ horse to place its forefeet on the bar, and that he played a
+ better game of billiards on horseback than many worldly men
+ can play on foot. It is the duty of the commanding officer
+ to discipline his chaplain. The chaplain also beat the boys
+ several horse races while in town, and they say he is a
+ perfect horseman, and has one of the finest horses ever
+ seen here, which he probably stole.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ I had a boy bring me a paper every morning, and I read the article before
+ the chaplain awoke, and destroyed the paper. Early the next morning the
+ colonel sent for the chaplain, placed him under arrest, and the good man
+ came back to the tent feeling pretty bad. I asked him what was wrong, and
+ he said he was under arrest for conduct unbecoming an officer and a
+ gentleman. He said charges were preferred against him for drunkenness and
+ disorderly conduct, horse-racing, playing billiards on horse-back, riding
+ his horse into a saloon and trying to jump him over the bar, and lots of
+ things too numerous to mention. I felt sorry for him, and told him I had
+ been fearful all along that he would get into trouble by going away from
+ me so much, and associating with the chaplains of the other regiments, but
+ I had never supposed it would come to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wine is a mocker,&rdquo; said I, becoming warmed up, &ldquo;and none of us can afford
+ to tamper with it. With me, it does not make so much difference, as I have
+ no reputation but that which is already lost, but you, my dear sir, think
+ of your position. Go to the colonel and confess all, and ask him to
+ forgive you,&rdquo; and I wiped my eyes on my coat sleeve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I was not drunk,&rdquo; said the chaplain, indignantly. &ldquo;I was not in a
+ saloon, and never saw a game of billiards in my life. I was over to the
+ New Jersey regiment, talking with their chaplain about getting up a
+ revival, among the soldiers,&rdquo; and the good man groaned as he said, &ldquo;it is
+ a case of mistaken identity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bully, elder,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;If you can make the court-martial believe you,
+ you will be all right, and you will not be cashiered. But it looks dark,
+ very dark, for you. May heaven help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain was worried all the morning, and the officers and men joked
+ him unmercifully. At noon the chaplain was released from arrest, as we
+ were to move at four p. m., and he begged so to be allowed to accompany
+ the regiment. The colonel told him he could be tried when we got back, and
+ he was happy. There was a great commotion as the regiment broke up its
+ camp and got ready to move. There was the usual crowd of negresses who had
+ been doing washing for the soldiers, to be paid on pay day, and we were
+ going away, no one knew where, and no one knew when we would meet pay day.
+ There were saloon-keepers with bills against officers, and standing-off
+ creditors was just about as hard in the army as at home. I couldn't see
+ much difference. But finally everything was ready, the ammunition wagons,
+ wagon train of stores, and a battery of little guns, about three pounders,
+ had been added. I didn't like the battery. It seemed to me hard enough to
+ kill our fellow citizens with revolver balls, without shooting them with
+ cannon. At 4 p.m. the bugle sounded &ldquo;forward,&rdquo; and with the clanking of
+ sabers, rattling of hoofs and wagons, we marched outside the picket line,
+ past the cemetery where my deceased friends were buried, and were going
+ towards the enemy. The chaplain and myself were riding behind the colonel,
+ when the colonel asked the good man to ride up to a log that was beside
+ the road, and make his horse put his forefeet upon it, as he did on the
+ bar in the saloon. I felt sorry for the chaplain, and I rode up to the
+ log, and had Jeff put his feet up on it. Then I rode back and saluted the
+ colonel and told him it was I who had done the wicked things the chaplain
+ was accused of, and I told him how the chaplain was using my coat, so I
+ put on his, with the shoulder straps on, and all about it. He laughed at
+ first and then said, &ldquo;Then you are under arrest. You may dismount and walk
+ and lead your horse until further orders.&rdquo; I dismounted, like a little
+ man, and for five miles I walked, keeping up with the regiment. Finally
+ the colonel sung out, &ldquo;gallop, march,&rdquo; and I got on my horse. I reasoned
+ that the order to gallop was &ldquo;further orders,&rdquo; and that as he knew I
+ couldn't very well gallop on foot he must have meant for me to get on. We
+ galloped for about ten miles, and were ordered to halt, when I dismounted
+ and led my horse up to the colonel, and saluted him. &ldquo;Well, you must have
+ had a hard time keeping up with us on foot,&rdquo; said he. I told him it rested
+ me to go on foot. We were just going into camp for the night, and the
+ colonel said, &ldquo;Well, as you are rested so much from your walk, you may go
+ out with the foraging party and get some feed for your horse and the
+ chaplain's.&rdquo; I was willing to do anything for a quiet life, so I fell in
+ with a party of about forty, under a lieutenant, and we rode off into the
+ country to steal forage from a plantation, keeping a sharp lookout for
+ Confederates who might object. I guess we rode away from camp two or three
+ miles, when we came to a magnificent plantation house, and outhouses,
+ negro quarters, etc. The house was on a hill, in a grove of live oaks, and
+ had immense white pillars, or columns in front. As we rode up to the
+ plantation the boys scattered all over the premises. This was the first
+ foraging expedition I had ever been with, and I thought all we went for
+ was to get forage for our horses, so I went to a shock of corn fodder and
+ took all that I could strap on my saddle, and was ready to go, when I
+ passed a smoke house and found some of the boys taking smoked hams and
+ sides of bacon. I asked one of the boys if they had permission to take
+ hams and things, and he laughed and said, &ldquo;everything goes,&rdquo; and he handed
+ me a ham which I hung on to my saddle. Then the lieutenant told me to go
+ up in front of the house and stand guard, and prevent any soldier from
+ entering the house. I rode up to the house, where there was an old lady
+ and a young married woman with a little girl by her side. They were
+ evidently much annoyed and frightened, though too proud to show it, and I
+ told them they need have no fear, as the men were only after a little
+ forage for their horses. The old lady looked at the ham on my saddle and
+ asked me if the horses eat meat, and I said, &ldquo;No, but sometimes the men
+ eat horses.&rdquo; I thought that was funny. The young woman was beautiful, and
+ the child was perfectly enchanting. They were on the opposite side of the
+ railing from me, and my horse kept working up towards them, rubbing his
+ nose on the pickets, and finally his nose touched the clasped hands of the
+ mother and child. The little girl laughed and patted the horse on the
+ nose, while the mother drew back. It was almost dark and the horse was
+ almost covered with corn fodder, but the little girl screamed and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamma, that is Jeff, papa's horse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mamma looked at me with a wild, hunted look, then at the horse, rushed
+ down the steps and threw her arms around the neck of the horse and sobbed
+ in a despairing manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, where is my husband? Where is he? Is he dead?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son, my son!&rdquo; cried the old lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bring me my papa, you bad man!&rdquo; said the little child, and I was
+ surrounded by the three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gentle reader, I have been through many scenes in my life, and have been
+ many times where it was not the toss of a copper whether death or life was
+ my portion, and I had some nerve to help me through, but I never was in a
+ place that tried me like that one. I had been captured by the father of
+ this little child, the husband of this beautiful, proud woman, the son of
+ this charming old lady. I had seen him brought in, dead, had seen him
+ buried, and had thrown a bunch of roses in his grave. Now I was surrounded
+ by these mourners, mourners when they should know the worst. Cold chills
+ run all over me, and cold perspiration was on my brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he dead?&rdquo; they all shouted together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hate a liar, on general principles, and yet there are times when a lie
+ is so much easier to tell than truth. I did not want to be a murderer, and
+ I knew, by the dreadful light in the eyes of that lovely wife, as she
+ looked up at me from the neck of the horse, her face as white as snow,
+ that if I told the truth she would fall dead right where she was. If I
+ told the truth that blessed old lady's heart would be broken, and that
+ little child's face would not have any more smiles, during the war, for
+ mamma and grandma, and, with a hoarse voice, and choking, and trying to
+ swallow something that seemed as big as a baseball in my throat, I
+ deliberately lied to them. I told them the young man who rode this horse
+ had been captured, after a gallant fight, unharmed, and sent north. That
+ he was so brave that our boys fell in love with him, and there was nothing
+ too good for him in our army, and that he would be well taken care of, and
+ exchanged soon, I had no doubt, and bade them not to worry, but to look at
+ the discomforts and annoyances of war as leniently as possible, and all
+ would be well soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank heaven! Take all we have got in welcome,&rdquo; said the old lady, as a
+ heavenly smile came over her face. &ldquo;My boy is safe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, thank you, sir,&rdquo; said the little mother, as a lovely smile chased a
+ dimple all around her mouth, and corraled it in her left cheek, while a
+ pair of navy-blue eyes looked up at me as though she would hug me if I was
+ not a Yankee, eyes that I have seen a thousand times since, in dreams,
+ often with tears in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/103.jpg" alt="You Are a Darling Good Man 103 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a darling good man,&rdquo; said the little girl, dancing on the gravel
+ path. The mother blushed and said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Maudie, don't be so rude;&rdquo; and there was a shout:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fall in!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lieutenant rode up to me and asked, as he noticed the glad smiles on
+ the faces of the ladies, if this was a family reunion, and, apologizing
+ for being compelled to raid the plantation, we rode away. I was afraid
+ they would mention the news I had brought them, and the lieutenant would
+ tell the truth, so I was glad to move. I was glad to go, for if I had
+ remained longer I would have cried like a baby, and given them back the
+ horse, and walked to camp. As we moved away, I took out my knife and cut
+ the string that held the smoked ham on my saddle, and had the satisfaction
+ of hearing it drop on the path before the house. I could not give back the
+ husband of the blue-eyed woman, the son of the saintly Southern mother,
+ the father of the sweet child, but I <i>could</i> leave that ham. As we
+ rode back to camp that beautiful moonlight night, I did not join in the
+ singing of the boys, or the jokes. I just thought of that happy home I had
+ left, and how it would be stricken, later, when the news was brought them,
+ and wondered if that fearful lie I had been telling, them was justifiable,
+ under the circumstances, and it it would be laid up against me, charged up
+ in the book above. That night I slept on the ground on some corn fodder
+ and dreamed of nothing but blue-eyed mamma's and golden-haired Maudie's
+ and white-haired angel grandmothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Boots and Saddles&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I am the Colonel's Orderly&rdquo;&mdash;Riding
+ Fifty Miles on an Empty Stomach&mdash;The Chaplain Appears&mdash;I am
+ Wounded by a Locomotive and a Piece of Coal&mdash;I Nearly Kill
+ an Old Man.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When our foraging party got back to camp, and I unloaded the corn fodder
+ from my horse, I was about as disgusted with war as a man could be. The
+ faces of those people I had met at the plantation rose up before me, and I
+ could imagine how they would look when they heard that the Confederate
+ soldier who was their all, was dead. I hoped that they would never hear of
+ it. While I was thinking the matter over, and grooming my horse, the
+ chaplain came along and took nearly all the fodder I had brought in, and
+ fed it to his horse, and asked me where the chickens and hams, and sweet
+ potatoes were. I told him I didn't get any. Then he spoke very plainly to
+ me, plainer than he had ever spoken before, and told me that fodder for
+ horses was not all that soldiers got when they went out foraging. He said
+ I wanted to snatch anything that was lying around loose, that could be
+ eaten. I asked him if the government did not furnish rations enough for
+ him to live comfortably, in addition to the sanitary stores. He said
+ sometimes he yearned for chicken. Then I told him his salary was
+ sufficient to buy such luxuries. He was hot, and talked back to me, and
+ told me he didn't propose to be lectured by no red-headed private as to
+ his duties, or his conduct, and he wanted me to understand that I was
+ expected to forage for him as well as myself, and not to let another
+ soldier come into camp with a better assortment of the luxuries afforded
+ by the country, than I did. He said that he picked me out as a man that
+ would fill the bill, and do his duty. I told him if he had selected me
+ from all the men in the regiment as being the most expert sneak thief, he
+ had made a mistake, and I would be teetotally d&mdash;&mdash;d if I would
+ go through the country stealing hens and chickens for any chaplain that
+ ever lived, and he could put that in his pipe and smoke it. It was pretty
+ sassy talk for a private soldier to indulge in towards a chaplain, but I
+ was so disgusted to hear a man who should discountenance anything
+ unsoldierly, talk so flippantly about taking from the women and children
+ of the country what little they had to live on, because we had the power,
+ their men folks being away in the army, that I got on my ear, as it were.
+ I told him that I was not much mashed on war, and hoped I would never have
+ to fire a gun at a human being, but now that I was into the business, I
+ would fight if I had to, or do any duty of a soldier, but I would be
+ cussed if I would rob henroosts, and he didn't weigh enough to compel me
+ to. Then he said I could go back to my company, as he didn't want a man
+ around him that hadn't sand enough to do his duty. I asked him if I hadn't
+ better wait till after supper, it being after dark, but he said I could go
+ right away, and he would have another man detailed to take my place. I was
+ discharged, because I struck against stealing hens. I saddled my horse,
+ took my share of the fodder, and started for my company to return to duty
+ as a soldier. On the way to my company I saw a half a dozen soldiers,
+ covered with mud, and their horses covered with foam, ride up to the
+ colonel's tent, and I stopped to see what was the matter. A sergeant gave
+ the colonel a dispatch, which he tore open, read it, looked excited, and
+ then he turned to 'me and said, &ldquo;Ride to every commanding officer of a
+ company and say with my compliments, that 'Boots and Saddles' will be
+ sounded in ten minutes, and every man must be in line, mounted, within
+ five minutes after the call is sounded, then come back here.&rdquo; Well, I was
+ about as excited as the colonel, and I rode to every captain's tent and
+ gave the command. Some of the captains, who were just sitting down to
+ supper, asked, &ldquo;What you giving us,&rdquo; thinking it was some foolishness on
+ my part. One captain said if I came around with any more such orders he
+ would run a saber through me and turn it around a few times; another said
+ to his lieutenant, &ldquo;That is the chaplains idiot, that the boys play jokes
+ on; some corporal has probably told him to carry that message.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I got all around the companies, and went back to the colonel, and told him
+ that I had delivered his invitation, but the most of the captains sent
+ regrets in one way and another, and one was going to jab me with a saber.
+ He called the bugler, and told him to blow &ldquo;Boots and Saddles,&rdquo; and in
+ five minutes to sound, &ldquo;To Horse;&rdquo; then he turned to me and said, &ldquo;You
+ will be my orderly tonight, and you will have the liveliest ride you ever
+ experienced. Buckle up your saddle girth and lead my horse out here.&rdquo; I
+ told the colonel I should have to buckle up my own belt a few holes, as I
+ hadn't had any supper, when he told his servant to bring me out what was
+ left of his supper, which he did, one small hard tack. I eat pretty
+ hearty, and let my horse fill himself all he could on corn stalks, and in
+ a short time the bugle calls were echoing through the woods, men were
+ saddling up and mounting, and picking up camp utensils in the dark, and
+ swearing some at being ordered out in that unceremonious manner when they
+ had got all ready to have a night's rest. There was not near as much
+ swearing as I had supposed there would be, but there was enough. The
+ chaplain came rushing up to where I was with his coat off, and asked me
+ what was the matter, and the colonel having gone to the major's tent, I
+ answered him that we were going to have the liveliest ride he ever
+ experienced, and not to forget it, and that probably before morning we
+ would have the biggest fight of the season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come and help me catch my horse,&rdquo; said the chaplain, &ldquo;I turned him loose
+ so he could roll over, and he has stampeded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go catch your own horse,&rdquo; said I with lofty dignity, &ldquo;and steal your own
+ chickens. I am serving on the start of the commanding officer, sir. I am
+ the colonel's orderly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought that would break the chaplain all up, but it didn't. &ldquo;The devil
+ you say,&rdquo; remarked the chaplain, as he went off in the darkness, whistling
+ for his horse. Gentle reader, did you ever ride on horseback fifty miles
+ in one night, on an empty stomach, after having ridden thirty miles during
+ the day? If you never have accomplished such a feat, you don't know
+ anything about suffering. O, to this day I can feel my stomach freeze
+ itself to my backbone. We started soon after orders were given on a
+ gallop, and if we walked our horses a minute during the whole night, I did
+ not know it. We marched by &ldquo;fours,&rdquo; but I had the whole road to myself, as
+ I rode behind the colonel. I wanted to know where we were going and what
+ for, and once, when the colonel fell back to where I was, while he was
+ taking a drink out of a canteen, I said, &ldquo;This is a little sudden, ain't
+ it?&rdquo; My idea was to draw him out, and get him to tell me all about the
+ destination of the expedition, and its object. The colonel got through
+ drinking, and as he knocked the cork into the canteen, he said, &ldquo;Yes, this
+ <i>is</i> a little spry.&rdquo; That was all he said, and evidently he wanted me
+ to draw my own inference, which I did. Pretty soon the orderly sergeant of
+ the company that was on the advance, directly behind the colonel, rode up
+ to me and asked me if I had any idea where we were going. He said he had
+ seen me talking with the colonel, and thought maybe he had told me the
+ programme. He added that he thought it was a shame that men couldn't be
+ allowed a little rest. I told him that I had just been talking with the
+ colonel about it, but I had no authority to communicate what he said.
+ However, I would assure the orderly that we were going to have the
+ liveliest ride he ever experienced. I knew I was safe in saying that, and
+ the orderly remarked that he had about come to that conclusion himself,
+ and he left me. I had never expected to rise, on pure merit, to that proud
+ position of colonel's orderly, and I made up my mind if that night's ride
+ did not founder me, or drive my spine up into the top of my hat, or glue
+ the two sides of my empty stomach together, so they would never come
+ apart, that I would try to conduct myself so that the commanding officers
+ would all cry for me and want me on their starts. I argued, to myself, as
+ we rode along, that the position of colonel's orderly could not be so very
+ unsafe, as it did not stand to reason that a colonel would go into any
+ place that was particularly dangerous, as long as he could send other
+ officers. I knew that colonels in action should ride behind their
+ regiments, and wondered if this colonel knew his place, or would he be
+ fool enough to go right ahead of his men? I was going to speak to him
+ about it, if we ever stopped galloping long enough, but everything was
+ jarred out of my head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fellow can think of a good many things, riding on a gallop at night, and
+ I guess I thought of about everything that night. There were few
+ interruptions of the march. There were about four stops, two being caused
+ by horses falling down and being run over by those behind them, and two by
+ carbines going off accidentally. One man was dismounted and run over by
+ half the horses in the regiment, and when he was pulled out from under the
+ horses he asked for a chew of tobacco, and saying he was marked for life
+ by horse shoes, he kicked his horse in the ribs for falling down, climbed
+ on and said the procession might move on. He was all cut to pieces by
+ horse's hoofs, but he was full of fight the next morning. Another soldier
+ had his big toe shot off by the accidental discharge of a carbine, and
+ when the regiment stopped, and the colonel asked him if he wanted to stop
+ there and wait for an ambulance to overtake him, he said, not if there is
+ going to be a fight. I don't use a big toe much, anyway, and if there is a
+ fight ahead, I want to be there, if I haven't got a toe left on my feet.
+ The colonel smiled and said, all right, boy. I never saw fellows who were
+ so anxious to fight, and I wondered how much money it would take to induce
+ me to go into a fight when I was crippled up enough to be excused. Along
+ toward morning everybody felt that we were so far into the enemy's lines
+ that there must be some object in the long ride, and the probabilities of
+ a fight seemed to be settled in every man's mind. Up hill and down we
+ galloped, until it seemed to me I should fall off my horse and die. About
+ half an hour before daylight the command was halted, and the officers of
+ each company were sent for, and they surrounded the colonel, separated
+ from the men, and he said: &ldquo;There is a town ahead, about four miles,
+ garrisoned by confederate troops. We are to charge it at daylight, drive
+ the enemy out the other side of town, kill as many as possible, and when
+ they go out they will be attacked by another Union regiment that has been
+ sent around to the rear. There is a railroad there, and a bridge across a
+ river, Confederate stores of ammunition, provisions, cotton, etc. The
+ stores are to be burned, the railroad bridge destroyed, the track torn up,
+ engines, if there are any, are to be ditched, and everything destroyed
+ except private residences. You understand?&rdquo; The officers said they did,
+ and they went back to their companies and ordered the men to get a bite to
+ eat. When the officers had gone I was pretty scared, and I said, &ldquo;Colonel,
+ suppose the rebels do not get out of that town.&rdquo; The colonel was chewing a
+ hard-tack when he answered. Daylight was just streaking up from the East,
+ and he held a piece of the hard-tack up to the light to pick a worm out of
+ it, after which he answered: &ldquo;If they don't get out, we will, those of us
+ who are not killed. I always like to eat hard-tack in the dark, then I
+ can't see the worms.&rdquo; To say that I was reassured would be untrue. I
+ admired a man who could mingle business with pleasure, as he did when
+ talking of possible death and worms in hard-tack, but death was never an
+ interesting subject to me. I wanted to talk with the colonel more, and
+ asked him if colonels often get killed, and if an orderly was exactly safe
+ in his immediate vicinity, but he leaned against a tree and went to sleep,
+ and I stood near, as wide awake as any man ever was. I wondered whose idea
+ it was to send us fifty miles into the Confederacy to destroy provisions
+ and railroads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did they suppose the Confederates didn't want anything to eat. I thought
+ it was a mean man or government that would burn up good wholesome
+ provisions because they couldn't eat them themselves. And who owned this
+ railroad that was going to be torn up? Why burn a bridge that probably
+ cost several hundred thousand dollars. As I was thinking these things over
+ and finding fault with the persons responsible for such foolishness, the
+ chaplain, who had not showed up during the night, came up to where I was,
+ without any hat, leading his horse, which was lame. The first thing he
+ asked me how I would trade horses. They all wanted my Jen, but he was not
+ in the market. The chaplain said he had caught up with the regiment about
+ midnight, and had rode at the rear, with the horse-doctor. He said this
+ expedition was foolish, and had no object except to try the endurance of
+ the horses and men. I told him that we were going to have a fight in less
+ than an hour, and burn a town, and probably we would all be killed. The
+ chaplain turned pale and looked faint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had read about hell, and seen pictures of it, from the imagination of
+ some eminent artist, but the hell I had read of, and seen pictured, was
+ not a marker to the experience of the next three hours. In a few minutes
+ the colonel woke up, and the regiment mounted and moved on. An advance
+ guard was put further out than before, with orders to charge the rebel
+ picket almost into town, and then hold up for the rest of us. As we neared
+ the town it was just light enough to see. The advance captured the picket
+ post without a shot being fired, and moved right into town, followed by
+ the regiment, and we actually rode right into the camp of the boys in
+ gray, and woke them up by firing. They scattered, coatless and shoeless,
+ firing as they ran, and in five minutes they were all captured, killed,
+ gone out of town, or were in hiding in the buildings. Then began the
+ conflagration. Immense buildings, filled with goods, or bales of cotton,
+ were fired, and soon the black smoke and falling walls made a scene that
+ was enough to set a recruit crazy. A train came in just as the fire was at
+ its greatest, and a squad of men was sent to burn it, and the colonel told
+ me to go and capture the engineer and bring him to the headquarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/113.jpg"
+ alt="Engineer Threw a Lump of Coal and Hit Me 113 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ I rode up as near to the engine as my horse would go and told the engineer
+ I wanted him. He turned a cock somewhere, and a jet of steam came out
+ towards me that fairly blinded me and the horse, and I couldn't see the
+ engine any more. My horse turned tail, the engineer threw a lump of coal
+ and hit me on the head, and I went away and told the colonel the engineer
+ wouldn't come, and beside had scalded me with steam, and hit me with a
+ lump of coal. The colonel said the engineer could be arrested for such
+ conduct. Pretty soon the train was on fire, and one of our boys clubbed
+ the engineer, got on the engine and run it on to a side track and ditched
+ it, and brought the engineer up to headquarters, where I had quite a talk
+ with him about squirting steam and throwing lumps of coal at peaceable
+ persons. Then the railroad, bridge was set on fire, and it looked cruel to
+ see the timbers licked up by flames, but when the burning trestle fell
+ into the river below, it was a grand, an awful sight. I came out of the
+ fight alive, but with a lump on my head as big as a hen's egg, so big I
+ couldn't wear my hat, and a firm determination to whip that engineer who
+ threw the lump of coal when I could catch him alone. We cooked a late
+ breakfast on the embers of the ruins, and after eating, I noticed a sign,
+ &ldquo;Printing Office,&rdquo; in front of a residence just outside the burnt
+ district, and asked permission to go there and print a paper, with an
+ account of the fight, and the destruction of the town. Permission was
+ granted, and I went to the office and found an old man and two daughters,
+ beautiful girls, but intensely bitter rebels. The old man was near eighty
+ years old, and he said he could whip any dozen yankees. I told him I would
+ like to use his type and press, but he said if I touched a thing I did it
+ at my peril, as he should consider the type contaminated by the touch of a
+ yankee. The girls felt the same way, but I talked nice to them, and they
+ didn't kick much when I took a &ldquo;stick&rdquo; and began to set type. I worked
+ till dinner time, when they asked me to take dinner with them, which I
+ did. During the conversation I convinced them that I was practically a
+ non-combatant, and wouldn't hurt anybody for the world. I worked till
+ about the middle of the afternoon, when I noticed that the girls, who had
+ been up on the house, looked tickled about something, and presently I
+ heard some firing at the edge of the town, some yelling, more firing,
+ bugle calls among our soldiers, and finally there was an absence of blue
+ coats, and I looked for my horse, and found the old man leading him away.
+ I halted the old man, and he stopped and told me that the Confederates had
+ come into town from the East and driven our cavalry out on the other side,
+ and I would be a prisoner in about five minutes, and he laughed, and the
+ girls clapped their hands, and I felt as though my time had come. I had
+ never killed an old man in my life, but I made up my mind to have my horse
+ or kill him in his traces, so I drew my revolver and told him to let go
+ the horse or he was a dead man. It was a question with me whether I could
+ hold my hand still-enough to kill him, if he didn't let go the horse, and
+ I hoped to heaven he would drop the bridle. He looked so much like my
+ father at home that it seemed like killing a near relative, and when I
+ looked at the two beautiful daughters on the gallery, looking at us, pale
+ as death, I almost felt as though it would be better to lose the horse and
+ be captured, then to put a bullet through the gray head of that beautiful
+ old man. How I wished that he was a young fellow, and had a gun, and had
+ it pointed at me. Then I could kill him and feel as though it was
+ self-defense. But the rebels were yelling and firing over the hill, and my
+ regiment was going the other way on important business, and it was a
+ question with me whether I should kill the old man, and see his life-blood
+ ebb out there in front of his children, or be captured, and perhaps shot
+ for burning buildings. I decided that it was my duty to murder him, and
+ get my horse. So I rested my revolver across my left forearm, and took
+ deliberate aim at his left eye, a beautiful, large, expressive gray eye,
+ so much like my father's at home that I almost imagined I was about to
+ kill the father who loved me. I heard, a scream on the gallery, and the
+ blonde girl fainted in the arms of her brunette sister. The sister said to
+ me, &ldquo;Please don't kill my father.&rdquo; He was not ten feet from me, and I
+ said, &ldquo;Drop the horse or you die.&rdquo; The old man trembled, the girl said:
+ &ldquo;Pa, give the man his horse,&rdquo; the old man dropped the bridle and walked
+ towards the house. I mounted the horse and rode off towards the direction
+ my regiment had taken, thanking heaven that the girl had spoken just in
+ time, and that I had not been compelled to put a bullet through that
+ noble-looking gray head. The face haunted me all the way, as I rode along
+ to catch my regiment, and when I overtook it, and rode up to the colonel,
+ and asked him what in thunder he wanted to go off and leave me to fight
+ the whole southern Confederacy for, he said, &ldquo;O, get out! There were no
+ rebels there. That was the Indiana regiment that started out day before
+ yesterday, to get on the other side of the town. The fellows were shooting
+ some cattle for food. What makes you look-so pale?&rdquo; I was thinking of
+ whether a man ever prospered who killed old people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Three Days Without Food!&mdash;The Value of Hard Tack&mdash;A Silver
+ Watch for a Pint of Meal&mdash;I Steal Corn from a Hungry Mule&mdash;
+ The Delirium of Hunger&mdash;I Dine on Mule&mdash;I Capture a Rebel
+ Ram.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After overtaking my regiment, and enjoying a feeling of safety which I did
+ not feel in the presence of that violent old man who laid savage hands on
+ my horse, and the girls, I began to reflect. Of course the old man was not
+ armed, and I was, but how did I know but those Confederate girls had
+ revolvers concealed about their persons, and might have killed me. To feel
+ that I was once more safe with my regiment, where there was no danger as
+ long as they did not get into a fight, was bliss indeed, and I rode along
+ in silence, wondering when the cruel war would be over, and what all this
+ riding around the country, burning buildings and tearing up railroad
+ tracks amounted to, anyway. I didn't enlist as a section hand, nor a
+ railroad wrecker, and there was nothing in my enlistment papers that said
+ anything about my being compelled to commit arson. The recruit-officer
+ who, by his glided picture of the beauties of a soldier's life, induced me
+ to enlist as a soldier, never mentioned anything that would lead me to
+ believe that one of my duties would be to touch a match to another man's
+ bales of cotton, or ditch a locomotive belonging to parties who never did
+ me any harm, and who had a right to expect dividends from their railroad
+ stock. If I had the money, that was represented in the stuff destroyed by
+ our troops that day, I could run a daily newspaper for years, if it didn't
+ have a subscriber or a patent medicine advertisement. And who was
+ benefitted by such wanton destruction of property. As we rode along I told
+ the colonel I thought it was a confounded shame to do as we had done, and
+ that such a use of power, because we had the power, was unworthy of
+ American soldiers. He said it was a soldier's duty to obey orders and not
+ talk back, and if he heard any more moralizing on my part he would send me
+ back to my company, where I would have to do duty like the rest. I told
+ him I was one of the talking backest fellows he ever saw, and that one of
+ my duties as a newspaper man was to criticise the conduct of the war. Then
+ he said I might report to the captain of my company. It seemed hard to go
+ into the ranks, after having had a soft job with the chaplain, and again
+ as colonel's orderly, but I thought if I got my back up and showed the
+ captain that I was no ordinary soldier, but one who was qualified for any
+ position, that maybe he would be afraid to monkey too much with me. I knew
+ the captain would be a candidate for some office when the war was over,
+ and if he knew I was on to him, and that I should very likely publish a
+ paper that could warm him up quite lively, he would see to it that I
+ wasn't compelled to do very hard work. So I rode back to my company and
+ told the captain that the colonel and the chaplain had got through with
+ me, and I had come back to stay, and would be glad to do any light work he
+ might have for me. The captain heaved a sigh, as though he was not
+ particularly tickled to have me back, and told me to fall in, in the rear
+ of the company. I asked if I couldn't ride at the head of the company. He
+ said no, there was more room at the rear. I tried to tell him that I was
+ accustomed to riding at the head of the regiment, but he told me to shut
+ up my mouth and get back there, and I got back, and fell in at the tail
+ end of the company, with the cook and an officer's servant, and the
+ orderly sergeant came back and wanted to know if the company had got to
+ have me around again. Here was promotion with a vengeance. From the proud
+ pinnacle from which I had soared, as chaplain's clerk, and colonel's
+ orderly, I had dropped with one fell swoop to the rear end of my company,
+ and nobody wanted me, because I had kicked against stealing hens in one
+ instance, and burning buildings and tearing up railroads in the other. We
+ rode all day, and at night laid down in the woods and slept, after eating
+ the last of our rations. I slept beside a log, and before going to sleep
+ and after waking, I swore by the great horn spoons I would not steal
+ anything more while I was in the army, nor do any damage to property. In
+ the morning the soldiers had scarcely a mouthful to eat, and an order was
+ read to each company that for three or four days it would be necessary to
+ live off the country, foraging for what we had to eat. I asked the captain
+ what we would do for something to eat if we didn't find anything in the
+ country to gobble up. He said we would starve. That was an encouraging
+ prospect for a man who had taken a solemn oath not to steal any more. I
+ told the captain I did not intend to steal any more, as I did not think it
+ right. Then he said I better begin to eat the halter off my horse, because
+ leather would be the only thing I would have to stay my stomach. The first
+ day I did not eat a mouthful, except half of a hard-tack that I had a
+ quarrel with my horse to get. In throwing the saddle on my horse, one
+ solitary hard-tack that was in the saddle-bag, fell out upon the ground,
+ and the horse picked it up. I did not know the hard-tack was in the
+ saddle, and when it fell upon the ground I was as astonished as I would
+ have been had a clap of thunder come from the clear sky, and when the
+ horse went for it, my stomach rebelled and I grabbed one side of the
+ hard-tack while the horse held the other side in his teeth. Something had
+ to give, and as the horse's teeth nor my hands would give, the hard-tack
+ had to, and I saved half of it, and placed it in the inside pocket of my
+ vest, as choice as though it were a thousand dollar bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have listened to music, in my time, that has been pretty bad, and which
+ has sent cold chills up my back, and caused me pain, but I never heard any
+ bad music that seemed to grate on my nerves as did the noise my horse made
+ in chewing the half of my last hard-tack, and the look of triumph the
+ animal gave me was adding insult to injury. Several times during the day I
+ took that piece of hard-tack from my pocket carefully, wiped it on my
+ coat-sleeve, and took a small bite, and the horse would look around at me
+ wickedly, as though he would like to divide it with me again. People talk
+ about guarding riches carefully, and of placing diamonds in a safe place,
+ but no riches were ever guarded as securely as was that piece of
+ hard-tack, and riches never took to themselves wings and new, regretted
+ more than did my last hard-tack. Each bite made it smaller, and finally,
+ the last bite was taken, with a sigh, and nothing remained for me to eat
+ but the halter. Some of the boys went out foraging, and were moderately
+ successful, while others did not get a thing to eat. The country was pine
+ woods, with few settlers, and those that lived there were so poor that it
+ seemed murder to take what they had. One of the men of our company came
+ back with about two quarts of corn meal, that night, and I traded him a
+ silver watch for about a pint of it. I mixed it up in some water, and
+ after the most of the men had fallen asleep, I made two pancakes of the
+ wet meal, and put them in the ashes of the camp-fire to bake, but fell
+ asleep before it was done, and when I woke up and reached into the ashes
+ for the first pancake, it was gone. Some Union soldier, whom it were base
+ flattery to call a thief, had watched me, and stole my riches as I slept,
+ robbed me of all I held dear in life. With trembling hands I raked the
+ ashes for my other pancake, hopelessly, because I thought that, too, was
+ gone, but to my surprise I found it. The villain who had pursued me as I
+ slept, had failed to discover the second pancake, and I was safe, and my
+ life was saved. I have seen a play in a theater in which a miser hides his
+ gold, first in one place, then in another, looking to the right and to the
+ left to see if anybody was watching him. I was the same kind of a miser
+ about my pancake. If I hid it in the woods I might fail to find the place,
+ in the morning, where I had hid it, and besides, some soldier that was
+ peacefully snoring near me, apparently, might have one eye on me, and
+ commit burglary. If I put it in my pocket, and went to sleep, I might have
+ my pocket picked, so I concluded to remain awake and hold it in my hands.
+ There appeared to be nothing between me and death by starvation, except
+ that cornmeal pancake, and I sat there for an hour, beside the dying
+ embers of the campfire, trying to make up my mind who stole my other
+ pancake, and what punishment should be meted out to him if I ever found
+ him out. I would follow him to my dying day. I suspected the captain, the
+ colonel, the chaplain, and six hundred soldiers, any one of whom was none
+ too good to steal a man's last pancake if he was hungry. To this day I
+ have never found out who stole my pancake, but I have not given up the
+ search, and if I live to be as old as Methuselah, and I find out the
+ fellow that put himself outside my pancake that dark night in the pine
+ woods, I will gallop all over that old soldier, if he is older than I am.
+ That is the kind of avenger that is on the track of that pancake-eater. I
+ sat there and nodded over my remaining pancake, clutched in my hands, and
+ finally started to my feet in alarm. Suppose I should fall asleep, and be
+ robbed? The thought was maddening. I have read of Indians who would eat
+ enough at one sitting to last them several days, and the thought occurred
+ to me that if I ate the pancake my enemies could not get it away from me,
+ and perhaps it would digest gradually, a little each day, and brace me up
+ until we got where there were rations plenty. So I sat there and
+ deliberately eat every mouthful of it, and looked around at the sleeping
+ companions with triumph, laid down and slept as peacefully on the ground
+ as I ever slept in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There may be truth in the story about Indians eating enough to last them a
+ week, but it did not work in my case, for in the morning I was hungry as a
+ she wolf. The pancake had gone to work and digested itself right at once,
+ as though there was no end of food, and my stomach yearned for something.
+ I walked down by the quartermaster's wagons, about daylight, and there was
+ a four-mule team, each with a nose bag on, with corn in it. The mules were
+ eating corn, unconscious of a robber being near. At home, where I had
+ lived on good fresh meat, bread, pie, everything that was good, nobody
+ could have made me believe that I would steal corn from a government mule,
+ but when I heard the mules eating that corn a demon possessed me, and I
+ meditated robbery. I did not want to take all the corn I wanted from one
+ mule, so I decided to take toll from all of them. I went up to the first
+ one, and reached my hand down into the nose bag beside the mule's mouth
+ and rescued a handful of corn, then went to another to do the same, but
+ that mule kicked at the scheme. I went to two others, and they laid their
+ ears back and began to kick at the trace chains, so I went back to my
+ first love, the patient mule, and took every last kernel of corn in the
+ bag, and as I went away with a pocket full of corn the mule looked at me
+ with tears in its eyes, but I couldn't be moved by no mule tears, with
+ hunger gnawing at my vitals, so I hurried away like a guilty thing. While
+ I was parching the corn stolen from the mule, in a half of a tin canteen,
+ over the fire, the chaplain came along and wanted to sample it. He was
+ pretty hungry, but I wasn't running a free boarding house for chaplains
+ any more, and I told him he must go forage for himself. He said he would
+ give his birthright for a pocket full of corn. I told him I didn't want
+ any birthright, unless a birthright would stay a man's stomach, but if he
+ would promise to always love, honor and obey me, I would tell him where he
+ could get some corn. He swore by the great bald headed Elijah that if I
+ would steer him onto some corn he would remember me the longest day he
+ lived, and pray for me. I never was very much, mashed on the chaplain's
+ influence at the throne, but I didn't want to see him starve, while
+ government mules were living on the fat of the land, so I told him to go
+ down to the quartermaster's corral and rob the mules as I had done. He bit
+ like a bass, and started for the mules. Honestly, I had no designs on the
+ chaplain, but he traded me a kicking mule once, and got a good horse of
+ me, because I thought he wanted to do me a favor. As he was familiar with
+ mules, I supposed he would know how to steal a little corn. Pretty soon I
+ heard a great commotion down there, and presently the chaplain came out
+ with a mule chasing him, its ears laid back, and blood in its eyes. The
+ chaplain was white as a sheet, and yelling for help. Before I could knock
+ the mule down with a neck-yoke, the animal had grabbed the chaplain by the
+ coat tail, with its mouth, taking some of his pants, also, and perhaps a
+ little skin, raised him up into the air, about seven feet, let go of him,
+ and tried to turn around and kick the good man on the fly as he came down.
+ We drove the mule away, rescued the chaplain, tied his pants together with
+ a piece of string, cut off the tail of his coat which the mule had not
+ torn off, so it was the same length as the other one, and made him look
+ quite presentable, though he said he <i>knew</i> he could never ride a
+ horse again. It seems that instead of reaching into the nose bag, and
+ taking a little corn, he had unbuckled the nose bag and taken it off. I
+ told him he was a hog, and ought to have known better than take the nose
+ bag off, thus leaving the mule's mouth unmuzzled, while the animal was
+ irritated. He accused me of knowing that the mule was vicious, and
+ deliberately sending him there to be killed, so rather than have any hard
+ feelings I gave him a handful of my parched corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few Sundays afterwards I heard him preach a sermon on the sin of
+ covetousness, and I thought how beautifully he could have illustrated his
+ sermon if he had turned around and showed his soldier audience where the
+ mule eat his coat tail. Soon we saddled up and marched another day without
+ food. Reader, were you ever so hungry that you could see, as plain as
+ though it was before you, a dinner-table set with a full meal, roast beef,
+ mashed potatoes, pie, all steaming hot, ready to sit down to? If you have
+ not been very hungry in your life, you can not believe that one can be in
+ a condition to see things. The man with delirium tremens can see snakes,
+ while the hungry man, in his delirium, can see things he would like to
+ eat. Many times during that day's ride through the deserted pine-woods,
+ with my eyes wide open, I could see no trees, no ground, no horses and men
+ around me, but there seemed a film over the eyes, and through it I could
+ see all of the good things I ever had eaten. One moment there would be a
+ steaming roast turkey, on a platter, ready to be carved. Again I could see
+ a kettle over a cook-stove, with a pigeon pot-pie cooking, the dumpings,
+ light as a feather, bobbing up and down with the steam, and I could
+ actually smell the odor of the cooking pot-pie. It seems strange, and
+ unbelievable to those who have never experienced extreme hunger or thirst,
+ that the imagination can picture eatables and streams of running water, so
+ plain that one will almost reach for the eatables, or rush for the
+ imaginary stream, to plunge in and quench thirst, but I have experienced
+ both of those sensations for thirteen dollars a month, and nary a pension
+ yet. It is such experiences that bring gray hairs to the temples of young
+ soldiers, and cause eyes to become hollow and sunken in the head. Today,
+ your Uncle Samuel has not got silver dollars enough in his treasury to
+ hire me to suffer one day of such hunger as to make me see things that
+ were not there, but twenty-two years ago it was easy to have fun over it,
+ and to laugh it off the next day. When we stopped that day, at noon, to
+ rest, the company commissary sergeant came up to the company, with two men
+ carrying the hind quarter of an animal that had been slaughtered, and he
+ began to cut it up and issue it out to the men. It was peculiar looking
+ meat, but it was meat, and every fellow took his ration, and it was not
+ long before the smell of broiled fresh meat could be &ldquo;heard&rdquo; all around.
+ When I took my meat I asked the sergeant what it was, and where he got it.
+ I shall always remember his answer. It was this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man, when you are starving, and the means of sustaining life are
+ given you, take your rations and go away, and don't ask any fool
+ questions. If you don't want it, leave it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leave it? Egad, I would have eaten it if it had been a Newfoundland dog,
+ and I took it, and cooked it, and ate it. I do not know, and never did,
+ what it was, but when the quartermaster's mule teams pulled out after
+ dinner, there were two &ldquo;spike teams;&rdquo;&mdash;that is, two wheel mules and a
+ single leader, instead of four-mule teams. After I saw the teams move out,
+ each mule looking mournful, as though each one thought his time might come
+ next, I didn't want to ask any questions about that meat, though I know
+ there wasn't a beef critter within fifty miles of us. I have had my
+ children ask me, many times, if I ever eat any mule in the army, and I
+ have always said that I did not know. And I don't. But I am a great hand
+ to mistrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on this hungry day, when filled with meat such as I had never met
+ before that I did a thing I shall always regret. The captain came down to
+ the rear of the company and said, so we could all hear it. &ldquo;I want two men
+ to volunteer for a perilous mission. I want two as brave men as ever
+ lived. Who will volunteer? Don't all speak at once. Take plenty of time,
+ for your lives may pay the penalty!&rdquo; I had been feeling for some days as
+ though there was not the utmost confidence in my bravery, among the men,
+ and I had been studying as to whether I would desert, and become a
+ wanderer on the face of the earth, or do some desperate deed that would
+ make me solid with the boys, and when the captain called for volunteers, I
+ swallowed a large lump in my throat, and said, &ldquo;Captain, <i>here is your
+ mule</i>. I will go!&rdquo; Whether it was that confounded meat I had eaten that
+ had put a seeming bravery into me, or desperation at the hunger of the
+ past few days, I do not know, but I volunteered for a perilous mission. A
+ little Irishman named McCarty spoke up, and said, &ldquo;Captain, I will go
+ anywhere that red headed recruit will go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was settled that McCarty and myself should go, and with some
+ misgivings on my part we rode up to the front and reported. I thought what
+ a fool I was to volunteer, when I was liable to be killed, but I was in
+ for it, and there was no use squealing now. We came to a cross road, and
+ the captain whispered to us that we should camp there, and that he had
+ been told by a reliable contraband that up the cross road about two miles
+ was a house at which there was a sheep, and he wanted us to go and take
+ it. He said there might be rebels anywhere, and we were liable to be
+ ambushed and killed, but we must never come back alive without sheep meat.
+ Well, we started off. McCarty said I better ride a little in advance so if
+ we were ambushed, I would be killed first, and he would rush back and
+ inform the captain. I tried to argue with McCarty that I being a recruit,
+ and he a veteran, it would look better for him to lead, but he said I
+ volunteered first, and he would waive his rights of precedence, and ride
+ behind me. So we rode along, and I reflected on my changed condition. A
+ few short weeks ago I was a respected editor of a country newspaper in
+ Wisconsin, looked up to, to a certain extent, by my neighbors, and now I
+ had become a sheep thief. At home the occupation of stealing sheep was
+ considered pretty low down, and no man who followed the business was
+ countenanced by the best society. A sheep thief, or one who was suspected
+ of having a fondness for mutton not belonging to him, was talked about.
+ And for thirteen dollars a month, and an insignificant bounty, I had
+ become a sheep thief. If I ever run another newspaper, after the war, how
+ did I know but a vile contemporary across the street would charge me with
+ being a sheep thief, and prove it by McCarty. May be this was a conspiracy
+ on the part of the captain, whom I suspected of a desire to run for office
+ when we got home, to get me in his power, so that if I went for him in my
+ paper, he could charge me with stealing sheep. It worked me up
+ considerable, but we were out of meat, and if there was a sheep in the
+ vicinity, and I got it, there was one thing sure, they couldn't get any
+ more mule down me. So we rode up to the plantation, which was apparently
+ deserted. There was a lamb about two-thirds grown, in the front yard, and
+ McCarty and myself dismounted and proceeded to surround the young sheep.
+ As we walked up to it, the lamb came up to me bleating, licked my hand,
+ and then I noticed there was a little sleigh-bell tied to its neck with a
+ blue ribbon. The lamb looked up at us with almost human eyes, and I was
+ going to suggest that we let it alone, when McCarty grabbed it by the hind
+ legs and was going to strap it to his saddle, when it set up a bleating,
+ and a little boy come rushing out of the house, a bright little fellow
+ about three years old, who could hardly talk plain. I wanted to hug him,
+ he looked so much like a little black-eyed baby at home, that was too
+ awfully small to say &ldquo;good bye, papa&rdquo; when I left. The little fellow, with
+ the dignity of an emperor, said, &ldquo;Here, sir, you must not hurt my little
+ pet lamb. Put him down, sir, or I will call the servants and have you put
+ off the premises.&rdquo; McCarty laughed, and said the lamb would be fine 'atin
+ for the boy's, and was pulling the little thing up, when the tears came
+ into the boy's eyes, and that settled it. I said, &ldquo;Mac, for heaven's sake,
+ drop that lamb. I wouldn't break that little boy's heart for all the
+ sheep-meat on earth. I will eat mule, or dog, but I draw the line at
+ children's household pets. Let the lamb go.&rdquo; &ldquo;Begorra, yer right,&rdquo; said
+ McCarty, as he let the lamb down. &ldquo;Luk at how the shep runs to the little
+ bye. Ah, me little mon, yer pet shall not be taken away from yez,&rdquo; and a
+ big tear ran down McCarty's face. The boy said there was a great big sheep
+ in the back yard we could have, if we were hungry, and we went around the
+ house to see. There was an old black ram that looked as though he could
+ whip a regiment of soldiers, but we decided that he was our meat. McCarty
+ suggested that I throw a lariet rope around his horns, and lead him,
+ whiles, he would go behind and drive the animal. That looked feasible, and
+ taking a horse-hair picket rope off my saddle, with a slip noose in the
+ end, I tossed it over the horns of the ram, tied the rope to the saddle,
+ and started. The ram went along all right till we got out to the road,
+ when he held back a little. Mac jabbed the ram in the rear with his saber,
+ and he came along all right, only a little too sudden. That was one of the
+ mistakes of the war, Mac's pricking that ram, and it has been the source
+ of much study on my part, for twenty-two years, as to whether the Irishman
+ did it on purpose, knowing the ram would charge on my horse, and butt my
+ steed in the hind legs. If that was the plan of the Irishman, it worked
+ well, for the first thing I knew my horse jumped about eighteen feet, and
+ started down the road towards camp, on a run, dragging the ram, which was
+ bellowing for all that was out. I tried to hold the horse in a little, but
+ every time he slackened up the ram would gather himself and run his head
+ full tilt against the horse, and away he would go again. Sometimes the ram
+ was flying through the air, at the end of the rope, then it would be
+ dragged in the sand, and again it would strike on its feet, and all the
+ time the ram was blatting, and the confounded Irishman was yelling and
+ laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/131.jpg" alt="We Went Into the Camp That Way 131 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ We went into the camp that way, and the whole regiment, hearing the noise,
+ turned out to see us come in. As my horse stopped, and the ram was caught
+ by a colored man, who tied its legs, I realized the ridiculousness of the
+ scene, and would have gone off somewhere alone and hated myself, or killed
+ the Irishman, but just then I saw the captain, and I said, &ldquo;Captain, I
+ have to report that the perilous expedition was a success. There's your
+ sheep,&rdquo; and I rode away, resolved that that was the last time I should
+ ever volunteer for perilous duty. The Irishman was telling a crowd of boys
+ the particulars, and they were having a great laugh, when I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;McCarty, you are a villain. I believe you set that ram on to me on
+ purpose. Henceforth we are strangers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be gob,&rdquo; said the Irishman, as he held his sides with laughter, &ldquo;yez
+ towld me to drive the shape, and didn't I obey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bacon and Hard-tack&mdash;In Danger of Ague&mdash;In Search of Whisky
+ and Quinine&mdash;I Am Appointed Corporal&mdash;I Make a Speech&mdash;I Am
+ the Leader of Ten Picked Men&mdash;I Am Willing to Resign.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The next day we arrived at a post where rations were plenty, and where it
+ was announced we should remain for a week or two, so we drew tents and
+ made ourselves as comfortable as possible. It did seem good to again be
+ where we did not have to depend on our own resources, of stealing, for
+ what we wanted to eat. To be able to draw from the commissary regular
+ rations of meat, tea, coffee, sugar, baker's bread, and beans, was joy
+ indeed, after what we had gone through, and we almost made hogs of
+ ourselves. There was one thing&mdash;those few days of starvation taught
+ us a lesson, and that was, when ordered on a trip with two days' rations,
+ to take at least enough for six days, especially of coffee and salt pork
+ or bacon. With coffee and a piece of old smoked bacon, a man can exist a
+ long time. I remember after that trip, wherever I went, there was a chunk
+ of bacon in one of my saddle-bags that nobody knew anything about, and
+ many a time, on long marches, when hunger would have been experienced
+ almost as severe as the time written about last week, I would take out my
+ chunk of bacon, cut off a piece and spread it on a hard-tack, and eat a
+ meal that was more strengthening than any meal Delmonico ever spread. It
+ was at this post that the boys in the regiment played a trick that caused
+ much fun throughout all the army. There were a few men in each company who
+ had the chills and fever, or ague, and the surgeon gave them each morning,
+ a dose of whisky and quinine. It was interesting to see a dozen soldiers
+ go to surgeon's call, take their &ldquo;bitters,&rdquo; and return to their quarters.
+ The boys would go to the surgeon's tent sort of languid, and drag along,
+ and after swallowing a good swig of whisky and quinine they would walk
+ back to their quarters swinging their arms like Pat Rooney on the stage,
+ and act as though they could whip their weight in wild cats. I got
+ acquainted with the hospital steward, and he said if the boys were not
+ careful they would all be down with the ague, and that an ounce of
+ prevention was worth more than a pound of cure. I thought I would take
+ advantage of his advice, so I fell in with the sick fellows the next
+ morning, and when the doctor asked, &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; I said &ldquo;chills,&rdquo;
+ and he said, &ldquo;Take a swallow out of the red bottle.&rdquo; I took a swallow, and
+ it <i>was</i> bitter, but it had whisky in it, more than quinine, and the
+ idea of beating the government out of a drink of whisky was pleasure
+ enough to overcome the bitter taste. I took a big swallow, and before I
+ got back to my quarters I had had a fight with a mule-driver, and when the
+ quartermaster interfered I had insulted him by telling him I knew him when
+ he carried a hod, before the war, and I shouted, &ldquo;Mort, more mort!&rdquo; until
+ he was going to lather me with a mule whip, but he couldn't catch me. As I
+ run by the surgeon's tent, somebody remarked that I had experienced a
+ remarkably sudden cure for chills. The whisky was not real good, but as I
+ had heard the hospital steward say they had just put in a requisition for
+ two barrels of it, to be prepared for an epidemic of chills, I thought the
+ boys ought to know it, so that day I went around to the different
+ companies and told the boys how to play it for a drink. There are very few
+ soldiers, in the best regiment, that will not take a drink of whisky when
+ far away from home, discouraged, and worn out by marching, and our fellows
+ looked favorably upon the proposition to all turn out to surgeon's call
+ the next morning. I shall never forget the look on the face of the good
+ old surgeon, as the boys formed in line in front of his tent the next
+ morning. The last time I saw him, he was in his coffin, about five years
+ ago, at the soldier's home, and a few of the survivors of the regiment
+ that lived here had gone out to the home to take a last look at him, and
+ act as mourners at the funeral. He looked much older than when he used to
+ ask us fellows the conumdrum, &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; but there was that same
+ look on his white, cold face that there was the morning that nearly the
+ whole regiment reported for &ldquo;bitters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There must have been four hundred men in line, and it happened that I was
+ the first to be called. When he asked me about my condition, and I told
+ him of the chills, he studied a minute, then looked at me, and said, You
+ are bilious, David, give him a dose of castor oil. I know I turned pale,
+ for it was a great come down from quinine and whisky to castor oil, for a
+ healthy man, and I kicked. I told him I had the shakes awfully, and all I
+ wanted was a quinine powder. I knew they had put all their quinine into a
+ barrel of whisky, so I was safe in asking for dry quinine. The good old
+ gentleman finally relented on the castor oil, and told David to give me a
+ swallow of the quinine bitters, but there was a twinkle in his eye, as he
+ noticed what a big swallow I took, and then he said, &ldquo;You will be well
+ tomorrow; you needn't come again.&rdquo; I dropped out of the ranks, with my
+ skin full of quinine and whisky, and watched the other fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were men in the line who had never been sick a day since they
+ enlisted, big fellows that would fight all day, and stand picket all
+ night, and who never knew what it was to have an ache. And it was amusing
+ to see them appear to shake, and to act as though they had chills. Some of
+ them could not keep from laughing, and it was evident that the doctor had
+ his doubts about there being so many cases of chills, but he dosed out the
+ quinine and whisky as long as there was a man who shook. As each man took
+ his dose, he would show two expressions on his face. One was an expression
+ of hilarity at putting himself outside of a good swig of whisky, and the
+ other was an expression of contempt for the bitter quinine, and an evident
+ wish that the drug might be left out. When all had been served, they
+ lingered around the surgeon's quarters, talking with each other and
+ laughing, others formed on for a stag quadrille, and danced, while a
+ nigger fiddled. Some seemed to feel as though they wanted some one to
+ knock a chip off their shoulders, old grudges were talked over, and
+ several fights were prevented by the interference of friends who were
+ jolly and happy, and who did not believe in fighting for fun, when there
+ was so much fighting to be done in the way of business. The old doctor
+ walked up and down in front of his tent in a deep study. He was evidently
+ thinking over the epidemic of ague that had broken out in a healthy
+ regiment, and speculating as to its cause. Suddenly an idea seemed to
+ strike him, and he walked up to a crowd of his patients, who were watching
+ a couple of athletes, who had just taken their quinine, and who had put on
+ boxing gloves and were pasting each other in the nose. &ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; said
+ the old doctor. The boys stopped boxing, and every last &ldquo;sick&rdquo; man
+ listened respectfully to what the old doctor said; &ldquo;Boys,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you
+ have got it on me this time. I don't believe a confounded one of you have
+ got ague at all. You 'shook me' for the whisky. After this, quinine will
+ be dealt out raw, without any whisky, and now you can shake all you
+ please.&rdquo; Some one proposed three cheers for the boys that had made Uncle
+ Sam stand treat, and the cheers were given, and the boys separated to talk
+ over the event. The next morning only the usual number of sick were in
+ attendance at surgeon's call. The healthy fellows didn't want to take
+ quinine raw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time an incident occurred that was fraught with great
+ importance to the country and to me, though the historians of the war have
+ been silent about it in their histories, whether through jealousy or
+ something else I do not know, and modesty has prevented me from making any
+ inquiries as to the cause. The incident alluded to was my appointment as
+ corporal of my company. I say the incident was &ldquo;fraught&rdquo; with importance.
+ I do not know the meaning of the word fraught, but it is frequently used
+ in history in that connection, and I throw it in, believing that it is a
+ pretty good word. The appointment came to me like a stroke of paralysis. I
+ was not conscious that my career as a soldier had been such as to merit
+ promotion, I could not recall my particularly brilliant military
+ achievement that would warrant my government selecting me from the ranks
+ and conferring honors upon me, unless it was my lasooing that ram and
+ dragging him into camp, when we were out of meat. But it was not my place
+ to inquire into the cause that had led to my sudden promotion over the
+ rank and file. I thought if I made too many inquiries it would be
+ discovered that I was not such an all-fired great soldier after all. If
+ the government had somehow got the impression that I was well calculated
+ to lead hosts to victory, and it was an erroneous impression, it was the
+ governments' place to find it out without any help on my part. I would
+ accept the position with a certain dignity, as though I knew that it was
+ inevitable that I must sooner or later come to the front. So when the
+ captain informed me that he should appoint me Corporal, I told him that I
+ thanked him, and through him, the Nation, and would try and perform the
+ duties of the exacting and important position to the best of my ability,
+ and hoped that I might not do anything that would bring discredit upon our
+ distracted country. He said that would be all right, that he had no doubt
+ the country would pull through. That evening at dress parade the
+ appointment was read, and I felt elated. I thought it singular that the
+ regiment did not break out into cheers, and make the welkin ring, though
+ they may not have had any welkin to ring. However, I thought it was my
+ duty to make a little speech, acknowledging the honor conferred upon me,
+ as I had read that generals and colonels did when promoted. I took off my
+ hat and said, &ldquo;Fellow soldiers.&rdquo; That was the end of my speech, for the
+ captain turned around and said to the orderly sergeant, &ldquo;Stop that
+ red-headed cusses mouth some way,&rdquo; and the orderly told me to dry up.
+ Everybody was laughing, I supposed, at the captain. Anyway, I felt hurt,
+ and when we got back to camp the boys of all the companies surrounded me
+ to offer congratulations, and I was called on for a speech. Not being in
+ the ranks, nobody could prevent me from speaking, so I got up on a barrel,
+ and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow Soldiers:&mdash;As I was about to remark, when interrupted by the
+ captain, on dress parade, this office has come to me entirely unsought. It
+ has not been my wish to wear the gilded trappings of office and command
+ men, but rather to fight in the ranks, a private soldier. I enlisted as a
+ private, and my ambition has been to remain in the ranks to the end of the
+ war. But circumstances over which I have no control has taken me and
+ placed me on the high pinnacle of Corporal, and I must bow to the decree
+ of fate. Of course, in my new position there must necessarily be a certain
+ gulf between us. I have noticed that there has been a gulf between me and
+ the officers, and I have thought it wrong. I have thought that privates
+ and officers should mingle together freely, and share each others secrets,
+ privations and rations. But since being promoted I can readily see that
+ such things cannot be. The private has his position and the officer has
+ his, and each must be separate. It is not my intention to make any radical
+ changes in the conduct of military affairs at present, allowing things to
+ go along about as they have, but as soon as I have a chance to look about
+ me, certain changes will be made. All I ask is that you, my fellow
+ soldiers, shall stand by me, follow where I shall lead and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point in my address the head of the barrel on which I stood fell
+ in with a dull thud, and I found myself up to the neck in corned-beef
+ brine. The boys set up a shout, some fellow kicked over the barrel, and
+ they began to roll it around the camp with me in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/141.jpg"
+ alt="Just Promoted to the Proud Position of Corporal 141 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This was a pretty position for a man just promoted to the proud position
+ of Corporal. As they rolled me about and yelled like Indians, I could see
+ that an official position in that regiment was to be no sinecure. All
+ official positions have more or less care and responsibility, but this one
+ seemed to me to have too much. Finally they spilled me out of the barrel,
+ and I was a sight to behold. My first idea was to order the whole two
+ hundred fellows under arrest, and have them court-martialed for conduct
+ unbecoming soldiers; but on second thought I concluded that would seem an
+ arbitrary use of power, so I concluded to laugh it off. One fellow said
+ they begged pardon for any seeming disrespect to an official; but it had
+ always been customary in the regiment to initiate a corporal who was new
+ and too fresh with salt brine. I said that was all right, and I invited
+ them all up to the chaplain's tent to join me in a glass of wine. The
+ chaplain was away, and I knew he had received a keg of wine from the
+ sanitary commission that day, so we went up to his tent and drank it, and
+ everything passed off pleasantly until the chaplain happened in. The boys
+ dispersed as soon as he came, and left me to fight it out with the good
+ man. He was the maddest truly good man I have ever seen. I tried to
+ explain about my promotion, and that it was customary to set em up for the
+ boys, and that there was no saloon near, and that he had always told me to
+ help myself to anything I wanted; but he wouldn't be calm at all. I tried
+ to quote from Paul's epistle about taking a little wine for the
+ stomach-ache; but he just raved around and called me names, until I had to
+ tell him that if he kept on I would, in my official capacity as corporal,
+ place him under arrest. That seemed to calm him a little, for he laughed,
+ and finally he said I smelled of stale corned-beef, and he kicked me out
+ of his tent, and I retired to my quarters to study over the mutability of
+ human affairs, and the unpleasant features of holding official position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night I dreamed that General Grant and myself were running the army
+ in splendid shape, and that we were in-receipt of constant congratulations
+ from a grateful country, for victories. He and I seemed to be great chums.
+ I dreamed of engagements with the enemy, in which I led men against
+ fearful odds, and always came out victorious. I woke up before daylight
+ and was wondering what dangerous duty I would be detailed to lead men
+ upon, when the orderly poked his head in my tent and told me I was
+ detailed to take ten picked men, at daylight, for hard service, and to
+ report at once. I felt that my time had come to achieve renown, and I
+ dressed myself with unusual care, putting on the blouse with two rows of
+ buttons, which I had brought from home. I borrowed a pair of Corporal's
+ chevrons and sewed them to the sleeves of my blouse, and was ready to die,
+ if need be. I placed a Testament I had brought from home, inside my
+ blouse, in a breast pocket, as I had read of many cases where a Testament
+ had been struck with a bullet and saved a soldier's life. I placed all my
+ keepsakes in a package, and told my tent mate that I was going out with
+ ten picked men, and it was possible I might never show up again, and if I
+ fell he was to send the articles to my family. I wondered that I did not
+ feel afraid to die. I was no professor of religion, though I had always
+ tried to do the square thing all around, but with no consolation of
+ religion at all, I felt a sweet peace that was indescribable. If it was my
+ fate to fall in defence of my country, at the head of ten picked men, so
+ be it. Somebody must die, and why not me. I was no better than thousands
+ of others, and while life was sweet to me, and I had anticipated much
+ pleasure in life, after the war, in shooting ducks and holding office, I
+ was willing to give up all hope of pleasure in the future, and die like a
+ thoroughbred. I was glad that I had been promoted, and wondered if they
+ would put &ldquo;Corporal&rdquo; on my tombstone. I wondered, if I fell that day at
+ the head of my mem, if the papers at the North, and particularly in
+ Wisconsin, would say &ldquo;The deceased had just been promoted, for gallant
+ conduct, to the position of Corporal, and it will be hard to fill his
+ place.&rdquo; With these thoughts I sadly reported to the orderly. The ten
+ picked men were in line. They were four of them Irishmen, two Yankees, two
+ Germans, a Welshman and a Scotchman. The orderly gave me a paper, sealed
+ in an envelope. I turned to my men, and said, &ldquo;Boys, whatever happens
+ today, I don't want to see any man show the white feather. The world will
+ read the accounts of this day's work with feelings of awe, and the country
+ will care for those we leave behind.&rdquo; We started off, and it occurred to
+ me to read my instructions. I opened the envelope with the air of a
+ general who was accustomed to receive important messages. I read it, and
+ almost fainted, It read &ldquo;Report to the quartermaster, at the steamboat
+ landing, to unload quartermaster's stores from steamer Gazelle.&rdquo; Ye gods!
+ And this was the hard service that I was to lead ten picked men into. They
+ had picked out ten stevedores, to carry sacks of corn, and hard-tack
+ boxes, and barrels of pork, and that was the action I was to engage in as
+ my first duty as corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I almost cried. We rode down to the landing, where a dozen teams were
+ waiting to be loaded. It was all I could do to break the news to my picked
+ men that they were expected to lug sacks of corn instead of fight, and
+ when I did they kicked at once. One of the Irishmen said he would be
+ teetotally d&mdash;&mdash;d if he enlisted to carry corn for mules, and he
+ would lay in the guard-house till the war was over before he would lift a
+ sack. There was a strike on my hands to start on. I was sorry that I had
+ permitted myself to be promoted to Corporal. Trouble from the outset. One
+ of the Yankees suggested that we hold an indignation meeting, so we rode
+ up in front of a cotton warehouse and dismounted. The Scotchman was
+ appointed chairman, and for half an hour the ten picked men discussed the
+ indignity that was attempted to be heaped upon them, by compelling them to
+ do the work of niggers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They argued that a cavalry soldier's duty was exclusively to ride on
+ horseback, and that there was no power on earth to compel them to carry
+ sacks of corn. One of the Dutchmen said he could never look a soldier in
+ the face again after doing such menial duty, and he would not submit to
+ it. The Scotch chairman said if he had read the articles of war right
+ there was no clause that said that the cavalry man should leave his horse
+ and carry corn. I was called upon for my opinion, and said that I was a
+ little green as to the duties of a soldier, but supposed we had to do
+ anything we were ordered to do, but it seemed a little tough. I told them
+ I didn't want any mutiny, and it would be a plain case of mutiny if they
+ refused to work. One of the Irishmen asked if I would help carry sacks of
+ corn, and I told him that as commander of the expedition it would be
+ plainly improper for me to descend to a common day laborer. I held it to
+ be the duty of a corporal to stand around and see the men work. They all
+ said that was too thin, and I would have to peel on my coat and work if
+ they did. I told them I couldn't lift a sack of corn to save me, but they
+ said if that was the case I ought not to have come. The quartermaster was
+ looking around for the detail that was to unload the boat, and he asked me
+ if I had charge of the men detailed to unload. I told him that I <i>did</i>
+ have charge of them when we left camp, but that they had charge of me now,
+ and said they wouldn't lift a pound. He thought a minute, and said, &ldquo;I
+ don't like to see you boys carrying corn sacks, and rolling pork barrels.
+ Why don't you chip in and hire some niggers.&rdquo; The idea seemed inspired.
+ There were plenty of niggers around that would work for a little money.
+ One of the Irishmen moved that the Corporal hire ten niggers to unload the
+ quartermasters stores, and the motion was carried unanimously. I would
+ have voted against it, but the Scotchman, who was chairman, ruled that I
+ had no right to vote. So I went and found ten niggers that agreed to work
+ for fifty cents each, and they were set to work, the quartermaster
+ promising not to tell in camp about my hiring the work done. One of my
+ Dutchmen moved that, inasmuch as we had nothing to do all day, that we
+ take in the town, and play billiards, and whoop it up until the boat was
+ unloaded. That seemed a reasonable proposition, and the motion carried,
+ after an amendment had been added to the effect that the Corporal stay on
+ the boat and watch the niggers, and see that they didn't shirk. So my
+ first command, my ten picked men, rode off up town, and I set on a wagon
+ and watched my hired men. It was four o clock in the afternoon before the
+ stuff was all loaded, and after paying the niggers five dollars out of my
+ own pocket, some of my bounty money, I went up to town to round up my
+ picked men to take them to camp. I found the Scotchman pretty full of
+ Scotch whisky. He had found a countryman who kept a tailor shop, who had a
+ bag pipe, and they were having a high old time playing on the instrument,
+ and singing Scotch songs. I got him on his horse, and we looked for the
+ rest. The two Germans were in a saloon playing pee-nuckel, and singing
+ German songs, and their skins were pretty full of beer and cheese. They
+ were got into the ranks, and we found the Irishmen playing forty-five in a
+ saloon kept by a countryman of theirs, and they had evidently had a
+ shindig, as one of them had a black eye and a scratch on his nose, and
+ they were full of fighting whisky. The Yankees had swelled up on some kind
+ of benzine and had hired a hack and taken two women out riding, and when
+ we rounded them up each one had his feet out of the window of the hack,
+ and they were enjoying themselves immensely. The Welchman was the only one
+ that was sober, but the boys said there was not enough liquor in the South
+ to get him drunk. When I got them all mounted they looked as though they
+ had been to a banquet. We started for camp, but I did not want to take
+ them in until after dark, so we rode around the suburbs of the town until
+ night drew her sable mantle over the scene. They insisted on singing until
+ within half a mile of camp, and it would no doubt have been good music,
+ only the Scotchman insisted on singing &ldquo;The March of the Cameron Men,&rdquo;
+ while the Irishmen sung &ldquo;Lots of fun at Finnegan's Wake,&rdquo; and the German's
+ sung &ldquo;Wacht am Rhine.&rdquo; The Yankees sung the &ldquo;Star Spangled Banner,&rdquo; and
+ the Welchman sung something in the Welch language which was worse than
+ all. All the songs being sung together, of course I couldn't enjoy either
+ of them as well as a Corporal ought to enjoy the music of his command.
+ Arriving near camp, the music was hushed, and we rode in, and up to the
+ captain's tent, where I reported that the corn was unloaded, all right. He
+ said that was all right. Everything would have passed off splendidly, only
+ one of the Irishmen proposed &ldquo;three cheers&rdquo; for the dandy Corporal of the
+ regiment, and those inebriated, picked men, gave three cheers that raised
+ the roof of the colonel's tent near by, because I had hired niggers to do
+ the work, and let the men have a holiday. I dismissed them as quick as I
+ could, but the colonel sent for me, and I had to tell him the whole story.
+ He said I would demoralize the whole regiment in a week more, and I better
+ let up or he would have to discipline me. I offered to resign my
+ commission as Corporal, but he said I better hold on till we could have a
+ fight, and may be I would get killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yearnings for Military Fame&mdash;What I Want is a Chance&mdash;I Feel
+ I Could Crush the Rebellion&mdash;My Chance Arrives&mdash;I am
+ Crushed&mdash;The Rebellion Remains Pretty Well.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As I could get no one to accept my resignation as corporal, which I
+ tendered after my first service in that capacity, unloading a steamboat, I
+ decided to post myself as to the duties of the position, so I borrowed a
+ copy of &ldquo;Hardee's Tactics,&rdquo; and studied a good deal. Every place in the
+ book that mentioned the word &ldquo;corporal,&rdquo; had a particular and thrilling
+ interest for me, and I soon got so it would have been easy for me to have
+ done almost anything that a corporal would have to do. But I was not
+ contented to study the duty of a corporal. I read about the &ldquo;school of the
+ company,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;school of the regiment,&rdquo; and &ldquo;battalion drills,&rdquo; and
+ everything, until I could handle a regiment, or a brigade, for that
+ matter, as well as any officer in the army, in my mind. This led me to go
+ farther, and I borrowed a copy of a large blue book the colonel had, the
+ name of which I do not remember now, but it was all military, and told how
+ to conduct a battle successfully. I studied that book until I got the
+ thing down so fine that I could have fought the battle of Gettysburg
+ successfully, and I longed for a chance to show what I knew about military
+ science and strategy. It seemed wonderful to me that one small red-head
+ could contain so much knowledge about military affairs, and I felt a pity
+ for some officers I knew who never had studied at all, and did not know
+ anything except what they had picked up. I fought battles in my mind, day
+ and night. Some nights I would lay awake till after midnight, planning
+ campaigns, laying out battle-fields, and marching men against the enemy,
+ who fought stubbornly, but I always came out victorious, and then I would
+ go to sleep and dream that the President and secretary of war had got on
+ to me, as it were, and had offered me high positions, and I would wake up
+ in the morning the same red-headed corporal, and cook my breakfast.
+ Sometimes I thought it my duty to inform the government, in some round
+ about way, what a bonanza the country had in me, if my talent could only
+ be utilized by placing me where I would have a chance to distinguish
+ myself, and bring victory to our arms. I reflected that Grant, and
+ Sherman, and Sheridan, and all of the great generals, were once corporals,
+ and by study they had risen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not one of them that could dream out a battle, and a victory any
+ better that I could. All I wanted was a chance. Just give me men enough,
+ and turn me loose in the Southern Confederacy, with that head of mine, and
+ the result would be all an anxious nation could desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first chance came sooner than I expected. The next day a part of the
+ regiment went out on a scout, to be gone a couple of days, and my company
+ was along. I was unusually absorbed in thought, and wondered if I would be
+ given a chance to do anything. It seemed reasonable that if any corporal
+ was sent out with a squad of men, to fight, it would be an old corporal,
+ while if there was any duty that was menial, the new corporals would get
+ it. The second day out we stopped at noon to let our horses rest, when
+ little scouting parties that had been sent out on different roads during
+ the forenoon, began to come in. Many of them had picked up straggling
+ rebels, and brought them to damp, and they were carefully guarded, and the
+ major, who was in command of our party, was asking them questions, and
+ pumping them to find out all he could. I went over and looked at them, and
+ they were quite a nice looking lot of fellows, some being officers, with
+ plenty of gold lace on their gray suits. They were home from the
+ Confederate army on a leave of absence, probably recruiting. After talking
+ with a rebel officer for a time the major turned to the adjutant and said,
+ &ldquo;send me a corporal and ten men.&rdquo; The adjutant started, on, and I followed
+ him. I used to know the adjutant when he taught a district school, before
+ the war, and I asked him as a special favor to let me be the corporal. He
+ said the detail would be from my company, and if I could fix it with the
+ orderly sergeant of my company it was all right. I rushed to my company
+ and found the orderly, and got him to promise if there was a detail from
+ the company that day, I could go. Before the words were out of his mouth
+ the detail came, and in five minutes I reported to the major with ten men.
+ The major simply told me that a certain rebel captain, from Lee's army,
+ was reported to be at home, and his plantation was about four miles east,
+ and he described it to me. He told me to ride out there, surround the
+ house, capture the captain, and bring him into camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No general ever received his orders in regard to fighting a battle, with a
+ feeling of greater pride and responsibililty than I did my orders to
+ capture that rebel. We started out, and then for the first time I noticed
+ that there was another corporal in the squad with, me, and at once it
+ occurred to me that he might claim a part of the glory of capturing the
+ rebel. I had heard of the jealousy existing between generals, and how the
+ partisans of different generals filled the newspapers, after a battle,
+ with accounts of the part taken by their favorites, and that the accounts
+ got so mixed, up that the reader couldn't tell to whom the credit of
+ success was due, and I decided to take prompt measure with this
+ supernumerary corporal, who had evidently got in by mistake, so I told him
+ he might go back to the regiment. He said he guessed not. He had been
+ detailed to go on the scout, and he was going, if he knew himself, and he
+ thought he did. He said when it come right down to rank, he was an older
+ corporal than I was, and could take command of the squad if he wanted to.
+ I told him he was mistaken as to his position. That if the major had
+ wanted him to take charge of the expedition, he would have given him the
+ instructions, but as the major had given me the instructions, in a low
+ tone of voice, nobody but myself knew where we were going or what we were
+ going for, and that I was responsible, and the first intimation I had from
+ him that he wanted to mutiny, or relieve me from my command, I would have
+ him shot at once. I told him he could go along, but he must keep his mouth
+ shut, and obey orders. He said he would obey, if he felt like it. We moved
+ on, and I would have given a month's pay if that corporal had not been
+ there. In a short time we were in sight of the house, and at a cross road
+ I told the corporal to take one man and stop there, until further orders,
+ and if any rebel came along, to capture him. He was willing enough to stay
+ there, because there was a patch, of musk melons just over the fence. I
+ moved my remaining eight men to a high piece of ground near the house, and
+ halted, to look over the field of battle. Pulling a spy glass from my
+ pocket, which I had borrowed from the sutler, I surveyed, as near like a
+ general as possible, the situation. On one side of the house was a ravine,
+ which I decided must be held at all hazards, and after studying my copy of
+ tactics a moment, I sent an Irishman over there to hold the key to the
+ situation, and told him he might consider himself the Iron Brigade. The
+ lay of the ground reminded me much of pictures I had seen of the battle of
+ Bull Run, and the road on which I had left the corporal and one man, was
+ the road to Washington, on which we would retreat, if overcome by the
+ enemy. To the right of the ravine, which was held by the Iron Brigade, I
+ noticed a hen-house with a gate leading back to the nigger quarters, and I
+ called a soldier and told him to make a detour behind a piece of woods,
+ and at a signal from me, the waving of my right arm, to charge directly to
+ the gate of the hen-house, and hold it against any force that might
+ attempt to carry it, and to let no guilty man escape. Fifteen years
+ afterwards Gen. Grant used those self-same words, &ldquo;Let no guilty man
+ escape,&rdquo; and they became historic, but I will take my oath I was the first
+ commander to use the words, when I sent that man to hold the gate of the
+ hen-house. That man I denominated the First Division. Farther to the right
+ was a field of sweet potatoes, in which was a colored man digging the
+ potatoes. I sent a Dutchman to hold that field, with their right resting
+ on the left of the First Division, located at the gate of the hen-house,
+ whose right was supposed to rest on the left of the Iron Brigade, the
+ Irishman who commanded the ravine. Then I turned my attention to the left
+ of the battle-field, placed one man at the milk-house, with his left
+ resting on the right of the Irishman, and a man at the smoke-house. This
+ left three men, one of whom I appointed an aid de camp, one an orderly and
+ the other I held as a reserve, at a cotton gin. When I had got my army
+ into position, I sat under a tree and reflected a little, and concluded
+ that the Iron Brigade was in rather too exposed a position, so I sent my
+ aid de camp to order the Iron Brigade to move forward, under cover of the
+ ravine, and take a position behind a mule-shed. The aide soon returned and
+ reported that the Iron Brigade had taken off his shirt and kanoodled a
+ negro woman to wash it for him, and would not be able to move until the
+ shirt was dry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This altered my plans a little, but I was equal to the emergency, and
+ ordered my reserve to make a detour and take the mule-shed, and hold it
+ until relieved by the Iron Brigade, which would be as soon as his shirt
+ was dry, and then to report to me on the field. Then I took my aide and
+ orderly, and galloped around the lines, to see that all was right. I found
+ that the First Division, holding the gate of the hen-house, was well in
+ hand, though he had killed five chickens, and had them strapped on his
+ saddle, and was trying to cut off the head of another with his sabre. He
+ said he thought I said to let no guilty hen escape. I found the Iron
+ Brigade dismounted, his shirt hung on a line to dry, and the colored woman
+ had been pressed into the Federal service, and was frying a chicken for
+ the Brigade. I told him to get his shirt on as soon as it was dry, and
+ move by forced marches, to relieve the force holding the mule-shed, and
+ the Iron Brigade said he would as soon as he had his dinner. I found the
+ Division composed of the Dutchman, stubbornly holding the sweet-potato
+ field, and he was eating some boiled ham and corn-bread he had sent the
+ nigger to the house after, and he had a bushel of sweet-potatoes in a sack
+ strapped to his saddle. The force at the milk-house had a fine position,
+ and gave me a pitcher of butter-milk, which I drank with great gusto. I do
+ not know as there is anything in butter-milk that is stimulating, but
+ after drinking it my head seemed clearer, and I could see the whole
+ battle-field, and anticipate each movement I should cause to be made. I
+ was so pleased with the butter-milk, on the eve of battle, that I ordered
+ the second Division to fill my canteen with it, which he did. Then I rode
+ back to my headquarters, where I started from, having ridden clear around
+ the beleaguered plantation. Presently the reserve returned to me and
+ reported that he had been relieved by the Iron Brigade at the mule-shed,
+ whose shirt had become dry, and who had given the reserve a leg of fried
+ chicken, and a corn dodger. I took the leg of chicken away from my
+ reserve, eat it with great relish, and prepared for the onslaught, the
+ reserve picking some persimmons off a tree and eating them for lunch. I
+ was about to order the different divisions and brigades of my army to
+ advance from their different positions, and close in on the enemy, when a
+ colored man came out of the house and moved toward me, signalling that he
+ would fain converse with me. I struck a dignified attitude, by throwing my
+ right leg over the pommel of the saddle, like a hired girl riding a
+ plow-horse to town after a doctor, and waited. When he came up to me, he
+ said, &ldquo;Massa wants to know what all dis darn foolishness is about. He says
+ if you all don't go away from here he will shoot de liver outen you all.&rdquo;
+ I told the negro to be calm, and not cause me to resort to extreme
+ measures, and I asked him if his master was at home. He said he was, and
+ he was a bad man wid a gun. He had killed plenty of men before the war,
+ and since the war he had killed more Yankees than enough to build a
+ rail-fence around the plantation. I did not exactly like the reports in
+ regard to the enemy. I told the colored man to take a flag of truce to his
+ master, and tell him I would like an interview. The colored man went to
+ the house, and I sent for the Iron Brigade to report to me at once, in
+ light marching order, and the Irishman came riding up without any shirt
+ on. I caused the Brigade to put on his shirt, when I sent him to the
+ house, to follow the nag of truce and feel of the enemy. He went to the
+ house, and was evidently invited in, for he disappeared. I waited half an
+ hour for him, and as he did not show up, I called the Second Division, and
+ sent the Dutchman to the house. The Second Division went in, and did not
+ come out. I ordered the whole right wing of my army to deploy to my
+ support, and the fellow at the hen-house gate came, and I sent him in
+ after the Irishman and the Dutchman. He didn't come back, and I sent an
+ orderly after the force stationed at the milk-house, and he came, and I
+ sent him, with the same result. It was evident I was frittering away my
+ command, with no good result, so I looked at my tactics, and decided to
+ hold a council of war. My aide, orderly, and reserve, three besides
+ myself, composed the council of war. We three were in favor of ordering up
+ the other corporal and man from the cross-roads, but I opposed it. I did
+ not want the other corporal to have any finger in the pie. So I decided
+ that the four of us would go in a body to the house and demand the
+ surrender of the rebel captain. We rode down the lane where the other men
+ had gone, and it was a question whether we ever came back alive. I thought
+ they had a trap door in the house, which probably let the soldiers down
+ suddenly into a dungeon. Certainly unless there was something of the kind
+ my men would have come back. As we dismounted at the door; and walked up
+ the steps, the door opened and a fine looking rebel officer appeared
+ smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come in, Captain, with your men, and join me in a glass of wine,&rdquo; said
+ the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never been called &ldquo;Captain&rdquo; before, and it touched me in a tender
+ spot. The rebel evidently thought I looked like a captain, and I was
+ proud. He had probably watched my maneuvers, and the way I handled my men,
+ and thought I was no common soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don't care if I do,&rdquo; said I, and we walked into a splendid old
+ room, and were bidden to be seated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hello, Corp,&rdquo; said my Iron Brigade, as he took his legs down from a
+ table, and poured out a glass of whisky from a bottle near him, &ldquo;This is
+ the divil's own place for an aisy life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gorporal,&rdquo; said my Dutch fellow soldier, as he poured out a glass of
+ schnapps, &ldquo;Led me indroduce you mit dot repel. He is a tasy, und don'd you
+ forgot aboud it. Mishder repel, dot ish der gorporal fun my gumpany.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebel smiled and said he was glad to see me, and hoped I was well, and
+ would I take wine, or something stronger. I took a small glass of wine,
+ but the rest of the fellows took strong drink, and my Iron Brigade was
+ already full, and the Dutchman was getting full rapidly. Finally I told
+ the rebel officer that I did not like to accept a man's hospitality when I
+ had such an unpleasant duty to perform as to arrest him, but circumstances
+ seemed to make it necessary. He said that was all right. In times of war
+ we must do many things that were unpleasant. We took another drink, and
+ then I told him I was sorry to inconvenience him, but he would have to
+ accompany me to camp. He said certainly, he had expected to be captured
+ ever since he saw that the house was surrounded, and while at first he had
+ made up his mind to take his rifle and kill us all from the gallery of the
+ house, he had thought better of it, and would surrender without bloodshed.
+ What was the use of killing any more men? The war was nearly over, and why
+ not submit, and save carnage. I told him that was the way I felt about it.
+ Then he said if I would wait until he retired to an adjoining room and
+ changed his linen, he would be ready. I said of course, certainly, and he
+ went out of a door. I waited about half an hour, until it seemed to me the
+ rebel had had time to change all the linen in the state of Alabama. The
+ Iron Brigade had gone to sleep on a lounge, and the German troop was full
+ as a goat, and some of the others were beginning to feel the hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon for intruding,&rdquo; said I, as I opened the door and walked
+ into the room the rebel had entered. &ldquo;Great Scott, he is gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My army, all except the Iron Brigade and the Dutchman, followed me, and
+ the room was empty. A window was up, through which he had escaped. We
+ searched the house, but there was no rebel captain. On going to the front
+ door I found that the horse belonging to the iron brigade was gone, and
+ that the saddle girths of all the other horses had been unbuckled, so we
+ would be delayed in following him. The Irishman was awakened, and when he
+ found his horse was gone, he sobered up and went to the pasture and
+ borrowed a mule to ride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took us half an hour to fix our saddles, so we could ride, and then we
+ sadly started for camp. How could I face the major, and report to him that
+ I had met the rebel captain, talked with him, drank with him, enjoyed his
+ hospitality, and then let him escape? I felt that my military career had
+ come to an inglorious ending. &ldquo;We rode slow, because the Iron Brigade was
+ insecurely mounted on a slippery bare-backed mule. As we neared the
+ corporal and one man, that I had left to guard the cross-roads, I noticed
+ that there was a stranger with them, and on riding closer what was my
+ surprise to find that it was the rebel captain, under arrest. So the
+ confounded corporal, whom I had left there so he would be out of the way,
+ and not get any of the glory of capturing the rebel, had captured him, and
+ got <i>all</i> the glory. I was hurt, but putting on a bold military air,
+ like a general who has been whipped, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, corporal, I see my plan has worked successfully. I arranged it so
+ this prisoner would run right into the trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the corporal, throwing away a melon rind that he had been
+ chewing the meat off of, &ldquo;I saw his nibs coming down the road, and I
+ thought may be he was the one you wanted, so I told him to halt or I would
+ fill his lungs full of lead pills, and he said he guessed he would halt.
+ He said it was a nice day, and he was only trying one of the Yankee
+ cavalry horses, to see how he liked it.&rdquo; &ldquo;Here, you murdherin' divil, get
+ down aff that harse,&rdquo; said the Iron Brigade, who had got awake enough to
+ see that the rebel was on his horse. &ldquo;Take this mule, and lave a dacent
+ gintleman's harse alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebel smiled, dismounted, gave the Irishman his horse, mounted the
+ mule, and we started for camp. I was never so elated in my life as I was
+ when I rode into camp with that rebel captain beside me on the mule. The
+ object of the expedition had been accomplished, a little different, it is
+ true, from what I had expected and planned, but who knew that it was not a
+ part of my plan to have it turn out as it did? I reflected much, and
+ wondered if it was right for me to report the capture of the Confederate
+ and say nothing about the part played by the other corporal. That corporal
+ was no military strategist, like me. It was just a streak of luck, his
+ capturing the rebel. He was leaning against the fence where I left him,
+ eating melons, and the rebel came along, and the corporal quit chewing
+ melon long enough to obey my orders and arrest the fellow. By all rules of
+ military law I was entitled to the credit, and I would take it, though it
+ made me ashamed to do so. How-ever, generals did the same thing. If a
+ major-general was in command, and ordered a brigadier-general to do a
+ thing and it was a success, the major-general got the credit in the
+ newspapers. So I rode into camp and turned my prisoner over to the major
+ as modestly as possible, with a few words of praise of my gallant command.
+ Hello, Jim, said the major to the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hello, Maje, said the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better take off them togs now, and join your company, said the major.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess so,&rdquo; said the rebel, and he took off his rebel uniform, and the
+ major handed him a blue coat and pair of pants, and he put them on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was petrified. The fact was, the rebel was a sergeant in our regiment,
+ who had been detailed as a scout, and had been making a trip into the
+ rebel lines as a spy. I had made an ass of myself in the whole business,
+ and he would tell all the boys about it. I went back to my company
+ crushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Detailed to Build a Bridge-It Was a Good Bridge, but
+ Over the Wrong Stream&mdash;The General Appears&mdash;I am Crushed, in
+ Fact Pulverized!&mdash;I am Attacked with Rheumatism.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After the episode, related last week, in which I foolishly organized a
+ regular battle, to capture a supposed rebel, who turned out to be a member
+ of my own regiment, I expected to be the laughing stock of all the
+ soldiers, and that my commission as corporal would be taken away from me,
+ and that I would be reduced to the ranks, and when, the next morning, the
+ colonel sent for me to come to his tent, it was a stand-off with me
+ whether I would take to the woods and desert, in disgrace, and never show
+ up again, or go to the colonel, face the music, and admit that I had made
+ an ass of myself. Finally I decided to visit the colonel. On the way to
+ his tent I noticed that our force had been augmented greatly. The road was
+ full of wagons, the fields near us were filled with infantry and
+ artillery, and there were fifty wagons or more loaded with pontoons, great
+ boats, or the frame-work of boats, which were to be covered with canvass,
+ which was water-proof, and the boats were to be used for bridges across
+ streams. The colonel had not told me anything about the expected arrival
+ of more troops, and it worried me a good deal. May be there was a big
+ battle coming off, and I might blunder into it unconscious of danger, and:
+ get the liver blowed out of me by a cannon. I felt that the colonel had
+ not treated me right in keeping me in ignorance of all this preparation. I
+ went to the colonel's tent and there was quite a crowd of officers, some
+ with artillery uniforms, several colonels, and one general with a star on
+ his shoulder straps, and a crooked sword with a silver scabbard, covered
+ with gold trimmings. I felt quite small with those big officers, but I
+ tried to look brave, and as though I was accustomed to attending councils
+ of war. The colonel smiled at me as I came in which braced me up a good
+ deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General, this is the sergeant I spoke to you about, said the colonel, as
+ he turned from a map they had been looking at. I felt pale when the
+ colonel addressed me as sergeant, and was going to call his attention to
+ the mistake, when the general said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sergeant, the colonel tells me that you can turn your hand to almost
+ anything. What line of business have you worked at previous to your
+ enlistment?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I guess there is nothing that is usually done in a country village
+ that I have not done. I have clerked in a grocery, tended bar, drove team
+ on a threshing machine, worked in a slaughter house, drove omnibus, worked
+ in a-saw-mill, learned the printing trade, rode saw-logs, worked in a
+ pinery, been brakeman on a freight train, acted as assistant chambermaid
+ in a livery stable, clerked in a hotel, worked on a farm, been an
+ auctioneer, edited a newspaper, took up the collection in church,
+ canvassed for books, been life-insurance agent, worked at bridge-building,
+ took tintypes, sat on a jury, been constable, been deck-hand on a
+ steamboat, chopped cord-wood, run a cider-mill, and drove a stallion in a
+ four-minute race at a county fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will do,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;You will be placed in charge of a
+ pioneer corps, and you will go four miles south, on the road, where a
+ bridge has been destroyed across a small bayou, build a new bridge strong
+ enough to cross artillery, then move on two miles to a river you will
+ find, and look out a good place to throw a pontoon bridge across. The
+ first bridge you will build under an artillery fire from the rebels, and
+ when it is done let a squad of cavalry cross, then the pontoon train, and
+ a regiment of infantry. Then light out for the river ahead of the pontoon
+ train, with the cavalry. The pioneer corps will be ready in fifteen
+ minutes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel told me to hurry up, but I called him out of his tent and
+ asked him if I was really a sergeant, or if it was a mirage. He said if I
+ made a success of that bridge, and the command got across, and I was not
+ killed I would be appointed sergeant. He said the general would try me as
+ a bridge-builder, and if I was a success he would try me, no doubt, in
+ other capacities, such as driving team on a threshing machine, and editing
+ a newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, I went on after my horse, being pretty proud. The idea of being
+ picked out of so many non-commissioned officers, and placed in charge of a
+ pioneer corps, and sent ahead of the army to rebuild a bridge that had
+ been destroyed, with a prospect of being promoted or killed, was glory
+ enough for one day, and I rode back to headquarters feeling that the
+ success of the whole expedition rested on me. If I built a corduroy bridge
+ that would pass that whole army safely over, artillery and all, would
+ anybody enquire who built the bridge. Of course, if I built a bridge that
+ would break down, and drown somebody, everybody would know who built it.
+ The twenty men were mounted, and ready, and the general told me to go to
+ the quartermaster and get all the tools I wanted, and I took twenty axes,
+ ten shovels, two log chains, and was riding away, when the general said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you get there, and look the ground over, make up your mind exactly
+ at what hour and minute you can have the bridge completed, and send a
+ courier back to inform me, and at that hour the head of the column will be
+ there, and the bridge must be ready to cross on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said that would be all right, and we started out. In about forty minutes
+ we had arrived, at the bayou, and I called a private soldier who used to
+ do logging in the woods, and we looked the thing over. The timber
+ necessary was right on the bank of the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said to the private, &ldquo;I have got to build a bridge across this
+ stream strong enough to cross artillery. I shall report to the general
+ that he can send, along his artillery at seventeen minutes after eight o
+ clock this evening. Am I right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Jim, as he looked at the standing timber, at the stream, and
+ spit some black tobacco juice down on the red ground, &ldquo;I should make it
+ thirty-seven minutes after eight. You see, a shell may drop in here and
+ kill a mule, or something, and delay us. Make it thirty-seven, and I will
+ go you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We finally compromised by splitting the difference, and I sent a courier
+ back to the general, with my compliments, and with the information that at
+ precisely eight o clock and twenty-seven minutes he could start across.
+ Then we fell to work. Large, long trees were cut for stringers, and hewn
+ square, posts were made to prop up the stringers, though the stringers
+ would have held any weight. Then small trees were cut and flattened on two
+ sides, for the road-bed, holes bored in them and pegs made to drive
+ through them into the stringers. A lot of cavalry soldiers never worked as
+ those men did. Though there was only twenty of them, it seemed as though
+ the woods were full of men. Trees were falling, and axes resounding, and
+ men yelling at mules that were hauling logs, and the scene reminded me of
+ logging in the Wisconsin pineries, only these were men in uniform doing
+ the work. About the middle of the afternoon we had the stringers across,
+ when there was a half dozen shots heard down the stream, and bullets began
+ &ldquo;zipping&rdquo; all around the bridge, and we knew the rebels were onto the
+ scheme, and wanted it stopped. I got behind a tree when the bullets began
+ to come, to think it over. My first impulse was to leave the bridge and go
+ back and tell the general that I couldn't build no bridge unless
+ everything was quiet. That I had never built bridges where people objected
+ to it. I asked the private what we had better do. He said his idea was to
+ knock off work on the bridge for just fifteen minutes, cross the stream on
+ the stringers, and go down there in the woods and scare the life out of
+ those rebels, drive them away, and make them think the whole army was
+ after them, then cross back and finish the bridge. That seemed feasible
+ enough, so about a dozen of us squirreled across the stringers with our
+ carbines, and the rest went down the stream on our side, and all of us
+ fired a dozen rounds from our Spencer repeaters, right into the woods
+ where the rebels seemed to be. When we did so, the rebels must have
+ thought there was a million of us, for they scattered too quick, and we
+ had a quiet life for two hours. We had got the bridge nearly completed,
+ when there was a hissing sound in the air, a streak of smoke, and a powder
+ magazine seemed to explode right over us. I suppose I turned pale, for I
+ had never heard anything like it. Says I, &ldquo;Jim, excuse me, but what kind
+ of a thing is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/175.jpg"
+ alt="Xcuse Me, But What Kind of a Thing is That? 175 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Jim kept on at work, remarking, O, nothing only they are a shellin on us.
+ And so that was a shell. I had read of shells and seen pictures of them in
+ <i>Harper's Weekly</i>, but I never supposed I would hear one. Presently
+ another came, and I wanted to pack up and go away. I looked at my
+ pioneers, and they did not pay any more attention to the shells than they
+ would, to the braying of mules. I asked Jim if there wasn't more or less
+ danger attached to the building of bridges, in the South, and he, the old
+ veteran, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Corp, don't worry as long as they hain't got our range. Them 'ere shell
+ are going half a mile beyond us, and we don't need to worry. Just let em
+ think they are killing us off by the dozen, and they will keep on sending
+ shells right over us. If we had a battery here to shell back, they would
+ get our range, and make it pretty warm for us. But now it is all guess
+ work with them, and we are as safe as we would be in Oshkosh. Let's keep
+ right on with the bridge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never can explain what a comfort Jim's remarks were to me. After
+ listening to him, I could work right along, driving pegs in the bridge,
+ and pay no attention to the shells that were going over us. In fact, I lit
+ my pipe and smoked, and began to figure how much it was going to cost the
+ Confederacy to &ldquo;celebrate&rdquo; that way. It was costing them at the rate of
+ fourteen dollars a minute, and I actually found myself laughing at the
+ good joke on the rebels. Pretty soon a courier rode up, from the general,
+ asking if the shelling was delaying the bridge. I sent word back that it
+ was not delaying us in the least; in fact, it was hurrying us a little, if
+ anything, and he could send along his command twenty-seven minutes sooner
+ than I had calculated, as the bridge would be ready to cross on at eight
+ o'clock sharp. At a quarter to eight, just as the daylight was fading, and
+ we had lighted pine torches to see to eat our supper, an orderly rode up
+ and said the general and staff had been looking for me for an hour, and
+ were down at the forks of the road. I told the orderly to bring the
+ general and staff right up to the headquarters, and we would entertain
+ them to the best of our ability, and he rode off. Then we sat down under a
+ tree and smoked and played seven up by the light of pine torches, and
+ waited. I was never so proud of anything in my life, as I was of that
+ bridge, and it did not seem to me as though a promotion to the position of
+ sergeant was going to be sufficient recompense for that great feat of
+ engineering. It was as smooth as though sawed plank had covered it, and
+ logs were laid on each side to keep wagons from running off. I could see,
+ in my mind, hundreds of wagons, and thousands of soldiers, crossing
+ safely, and I would be a hero. My breast swelled so my coat was too tight.
+ Presently I heard some one swearing down the road, the clanking of sabres,
+ and in a few moments the general rode into the glare of the torch-light. I
+ had struck an attitude at the approach of the bridge, and thought that I
+ would give a good deal if an artist could take a picture of my bridge,
+ with me, the great engineer, standing upon it, and the head of the column
+ just ready to cross. I was just getting ready to make a little speech to
+ the general, presenting the bridge to him, as trustee of the nation, for
+ the use of the army, when I got a sight of his face, as a torch flared up
+ and lit the surroundings. It was pale, and if he was not a madman, I never
+ saw one. He fairly frothed at the mouth, as he said, addressing a soldier
+ who had fallen in the stream, during the afternoon, and who was putting on
+ his shirt, which he had dried by a fire:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the corporal, the star idiot, who built that bridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I couldn't have been more surprised if he had killed me. This was a nice
+ way to inquire for a gentleman who had done as much for the country as I
+ had, in so short a time. I felt hurt, but, summoning to my aid all the
+ gall I possessed, I stepped forward, and, in as sarcastic a manner as I
+ could assume, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am the sergeant, sir, who has wrought this work, made a highway in
+ twelve hours, across a torrent, and made is possible for your army to
+ cross.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what do you suppose my army wants to cross this confounded ditch
+ for? What business has the army got in that swamp over there? You have
+ gone off the main road, where I wanted a bridge built, and built one on a
+ private road to a plantation, where nobody wants to cross. This bridge is
+ of no more use to me than a bridge across the Mississippi river at its
+ source. You, sir, have just simply raised hell, that's what you have
+ done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Talk about being crushed! I was pulverized. I felt like jumping into the
+ stream and drowning myself. For a moment I could not speak, because I
+ hadn't anything to say. Then I thought that it would be pretty tough to go
+ off and leave that bridge without the general's seeing what a good job it
+ was, so I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, general, I am sorry you did not give me more explicit instructions,
+ but I wish you would get down and examine this bridge. It is a daisy, and
+ if it is not in the right place we can move it anywhere you want it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That seemed to give the general an idea, and he dismounted and examined
+ it. He said it was as good a job as he ever saw, and if it was a mile down
+ the road, across another bayou, where he wanted to cross, he would give a
+ fortune. I told him if he would give me men enough and wagons enough, I
+ would move it to where he wanted it, and have it ready by daylight the
+ next morning. He agreed, and that was the hardest nights work I ever did.
+ Every stick of timber in my pet bridge had to be taken off separately, and
+ moved over a mile, but it was done, and at daylight the next morning I had
+ the pleasure of calling the general and telling him that the bridge was
+ ready. I thought he was a little mean when he woke up and rubbed his eyes,
+ and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, you are sure you have got it in the right place this time, for if
+ that bridge has strayed away onto anybody's plantation this time, you
+ die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army crossed all right, and I had the proud pleasure of standing by
+ the bridge until the last man was across, when I rode up to my regiment
+ and reported to the colonel, pretty tired.{*} He was superintending the
+ laying of a pontoon bridge across a large river, a few miles from my
+ bridge, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;George, the general was pretty hot last night, but he was to blame about
+ the mistake in the location, and he says he is going to try and get you a
+ commission as lieutenant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A few weeks ago I met a member of my old regiment, who is
+ traveling through the South as agent for a beer bottling
+ establishment in the North. He was with me when we built the
+ corduroy bridge twenty-two years ago. As we were talking
+ over old-times he asked me if I remembered that bridge we
+ built one day in Alabama, in the wrong place, and moved it
+ during the night. I told him I wished I had as many dollars
+ as I remembered that bridge. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said my comrade, &ldquo;on
+ my last trip through Alabama I crossed that bridge, and paid
+ two bits for the privilege of crossing. A man has
+ established a toll-gate at the bridge, and they say he has
+ made a fortune. I asked him how much his bridge cost him,
+ and he said it didn't cost him a cent, as the Yankees built
+ it during the war. He said they cut the timber on his land,
+ and when he got out of the Confederate army he was busted,
+ and he claimed the bridge, and got a charter to keep a toll-
+ gate.&rdquo; My comrade added that the bridge was as sound as it
+ was when it was built. He said he asked the toll-gate keeper
+ if he knew the bridge was first built a mile away, and he
+ said he knew the timber was cut up there, and he wondered
+ what the confounded Yankees went away off there to cut the
+ timber for, when they could get it right on the bank. Then
+ my comrade told the toll-gate keeper that he helped build
+ the bridge, the rebel thanked him, and wanted to pay back
+ the two bits. Some day I am going down to Alabama and cross
+ on that bridge again, the bridge that almost caused me to
+ commit suicide, and if that old rebel-for he must be an old
+ rebel now&mdash;charges me two bits toll, I shall very likely
+ pull off my coat and let him whip me, and then as likely as
+ not there will be another war.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I felt faint, but I said, &ldquo;How can he recommend a star idiot for a
+ commissioned office?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, that is all right,&rdquo; said, the colonel, &ldquo;some of the greatest idiots in
+ the army have received commisssions.&rdquo; As he spoke the rebels began to
+ shell the place where the pontoon bridge was being built, and I went
+ hunting for a place to borrow an umbrella to hold over me, to ward off the
+ pieces of shell. Then a battery of our own opened on the rebels, so near
+ me that every time a gun was discharged I could, feel the roof of my head
+ raise up like the cover to a band box. It was the wildest time I ever saw.
+ Cavalry was swimming the river to charge the rebel battery, shells were
+ exploding all around, and it seemed to me as though if I was to lay a
+ pontoon bridge I would go off somewhere out of the way, where it would be
+ quiet. Finally my regiment was ordered to swim the river, and we rode in.
+ The first lunge my horse made he went under water about a mile, and when
+ we came up I was not on him, but catching hold of his tail I was dragged
+ across the river nearly drowned, and landed on the bank like a dog that
+ has been after a duck I shook myself, we mounted and without waiting to
+ dry out our clothes we went into the fight, before I could realize it, or
+ back out. Scared! I was so scared it is a wonder I did not die. That was
+ more excitement than a county fair. Bullets whizzing, shells shrieking,
+ smoke stifling, yelling that was deafening. It seemed as though I was
+ crazy. I must have been or I could never, as a raw recruit, with no
+ experience, have ridden right toward those guns that were belching forth
+ sulphur and pieces of blacksmith shop. I didn't dare look anywhere except
+ right ahead. All thought of being hit by bullets or anything was
+ completely out of my mind. Occasionally something would go over me that
+ sounded as though a buzz saw had been fired from a saw mill explosion.
+ Presently the firing on the rebel side ceased, and it was seen they were
+ in retreat. I was never so glad of anything in my life. We stopped, and I
+ examined my clothes, and they were perfectly dry. The excitement and
+ warmth of the body had acted like a drying-room in a laundry. Then I laid
+ down under a fence and went to sleep, and dreamed I was in hades, building
+ a corduroy bridge across the Styx, and that the devil repremanded me for
+ building it in the wrong place. When I awoke I was so stiff with
+ rheumatism that I had to be helped up from under the fence, and they put
+ me in an ambulance with a soldier who had his jaw shot off. He was not
+ good company, because I had to do all the talking. And in that way we
+ moved towards the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Instructed to Capture and Search a Female Smuggler&mdash;
+ I Protest in Vain&mdash;The Terrible Ordeal&mdash;Beauty Behind the
+ Pulpit&mdash;Pills, Plasters, Quinine&mdash;The Pathetic Letter&mdash;
+ We Meet Under Happier Stars.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that the hardest duty that it was my lot to perform
+ during my service, fell to me, and the only wonder to me is that I am
+ alive today to tell of it. If I ever get a pension it will be on account
+ of night sweats, caused by the terrible and trying work that was assigned
+ to me. One day the colonel sent for me, and I knew at once that there was
+ something unusual in the wind. After seating myself in his tent he opened
+ the subject by asking me if I wasn't something of a hand to be agreeable
+ to the ladies. I told him, with many blushes, that if there was one thing
+ on this earth that I thought was nicer than everything else, it was a
+ lady, and that a good woman was the noblest work of God. He said he was on
+ to all of that, but it wasn't a good woman that he was after. That
+ startled me a little. I had heard the officers had a habit of fooling
+ around a good deal with certain females, and I told the colonel that any
+ duty that I was assigned to I would perform to the best of my poor
+ ability, but I could not go around with the girls as officers did, because
+ I couldn't afford it, and it was against my principles, anyway. He showed
+ me a picture of a beautiful woman, and asked me if I would know her if I
+ saw her again. I told him I could pick her out of a thousand. He said she
+ was a smuggler. She had a pass from a general, who seemed to be under her
+ influence to a certain extent, for some reason, and went in and out of the
+ lines freely. The general didn't want to order her arrest, because she
+ would squeal on him, but he wanted her arrested all the same, and the idea
+ was to have some corporal in charge of a picket post take the
+ responsibility of arresting her without orders, refuse to recognize her
+ pass, take the quinine and other medicines, and money away from her, and
+ then be arrested himself for exceeding his authority. He said they wanted
+ a corporal who had every appearance of being a big-headed idiot, and yet
+ who knew what he was about, who knew something about women, and who could
+ do such a job up in shape, and never let the woman know that the general
+ or anybody had anything to do with her arrest. The idea was to catch her
+ in the act of smuggling quinine through the lines to the rebels, by the
+ act of a fresh corporal who took the matter into his own hands, and who
+ claimed that the pass she had from the general was a forgery. When the
+ general could, when the woman was brought before him, be indignant at the
+ corporal for insulting a woman, and order him arrested, and he could also
+ go back on the woman, and have her sent away, after which he would release
+ the corporal, and perhaps promote him, and all would be well. It was as
+ pretty a scheme as I ever listened to, and I consented to do the duty,
+ though I wouldn't do it again for a million dollars. The colonel told me
+ to take four men and go to a particular place on an unfrequented road,
+ near a school house, and put out a picket. The female would be along
+ during the afternoon, on horseback, and when she showed her pass, one of
+ the men must take hold of her horse and hold him, while I kicked about the
+ pass, made her dismount, and searched her for quinine. I turned ashy pale
+ when the colonel said that, and I said to him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, for heaven's sake don't compel me to search a woman. I have a
+ family at home, and they will hear of it. My political enemies will use it
+ against me at home when I run for office, after the war. Let me bring her
+ here to your tent, and you search her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, that would spoil all,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;We want her searched right
+ there at the little school house, by a corporal without apparent
+ authority, and every last quinine pill taken off of her. If she was
+ brought here she would cry, and rave, and we should weaken, because we
+ know her, and have been entertained at her house. You are supposed to be a
+ heartless corporal, with no sentiment, no mercy, no nothing, just a delver
+ after smuggled quinine. Besides, I too, have a family, and I don't want to
+ search no females. By the way, one of the general's start saw her last
+ night, and drew the cartridges from her revolver, and put in some blank
+ cartridges. If the worst comes, she will draw her revolver on you, and
+ perhaps fire at you, but there are no balls in her revolver, so you
+ needn't be afraid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose she has two revolvers,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;and one is loaded with
+ bullets?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think she has,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;But we have to take some
+ chances, you know. Now go right along. Treat her like a lady, disbelieve
+ everything she says and insist on searching her. The general says she
+ wears an enormous bustle, and probably that is full of quinine. Use your
+ judgement, but get it all. Pretend to be an ignorant sort of a corporal
+ who feels that the success of the war depends on him, act as though you
+ outranked the general, and tell her you would not let her pass with that
+ quinine if the general himself was present. Just display plenty gall and
+ when you have go the quinine, bring the girl here, and I will abuse you,
+ and you take it like a little man, and all will be well. If she bites and
+ scratches, some of you will have to hold her, but the best way will be to
+ argue with her, and persuade her by honied words, to come down with the
+ quinine. Go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One word, colonel, before I go,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;About how many men should you
+ think it would take to hold this woman? You suggested three, but if one
+ holds her horse, it seems to me, from my knowledge of female kicking,
+ biting and scratching, that I would need one man for each arm and foot,
+ one to hold her head and choke her, if necessary, and one with a roving
+ commission to work around where he would be apt to make himself useful.
+ What do you say if I take five men!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, take six,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;One may be disabled, or have his
+ jaw kicked off, or something. But don't detail anybody to search her. Do
+ that yourself, and do it like a gentleman. And above all things, do not
+ let her kanoodle you with soft words and looks of love, because she is
+ full of em. If she can't scare you, with her indignation at the outrage of
+ arresting and searching her, she will try to capture you and make you love
+ her. You must be as firm as adamant. Now hurry up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I picked out six men, four of whom were young Americans, rather handsome,
+ and very polite, regular mashers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I had an Irishman named Duffy, and a German named Holzmeyer, who was
+ a butcher. We went out on the road, to the school house, and I put the
+ Irishman on picket, and instructed the German about taking the horse by
+ the bridle at the proper time. Then the rest of us got behind the school
+ house and waited. For two hours we waited, and I had a chance to think
+ over the situation. Here I was, putting down the rebellion, laying for a
+ woman, who was loaded. At home, I was a polite man, and full of fun, a
+ person any lady might be proud to meet and talk with, but here I was
+ expected to do something, for thirteen dollars a month, to put down the
+ rebellion, which there was not money enough in the whole state of
+ Wisconsin to hire me to do. Was it such a crime to carry a little quinine
+ to a sick friend? Suppose a rebel was sick with ague, and I had quinine,
+ would I see him shake himself out of his boots and not give him medicine?
+ No, I would divide my last quinine powder with him. So would any soldier.
+ If it was not treason to give one rebel a quinine powder, when he was
+ sick, why should it be treason to take along enough for a whole lot of
+ sick rebels? Did our government want to put down the rebellion by keeping
+ medicines away from a sick enemy? Were we to gloat over the number of
+ rebels who died of disease, that we could save by sending them medicines?
+ It seemed to me, if I was in command of the army, instead of arresting
+ women for carrying medicine to their sick brothers, I would load up a
+ wagon with medicine and send it to them, and say, &ldquo;Here, you fellows, fire
+ this quinine down your necks, and get well, and then if you want to fight
+ any more, come out on the field and we will give you the best turn in the
+ wheel-house.&rdquo; It seemed to me that would be the way to win the enemy over,
+ and that they would be thankful, take the medicine, get well, and then
+ say, &ldquo;Boys, these Yankees are pretty good fellows after all. Let's quit
+ fighting, and call it quits.&rdquo; But I was not running the war, and had got
+ to obey orders, if I broke heartstrings and corset strings. I would have
+ given anything to have got out of the job. The idea of arresting a woman
+ and searching her, and seeing her cry, and have her think me a
+ hard-hearted wretch, was revolting, and I found myself wishing she would
+ take some other road. May be she looked like somebody that I knew at home,
+ and may be she had a big brother in the Confederate army who would look me
+ up after the war and everlastingly maul the life out of me for insulting
+ his sister. I made up my mind if anything of that kind happened I would
+ tell on the general and the colonel, and get them whipped, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Phat the divil is it coming,&rdquo; said the Irishman. &ldquo;Corporal of the guaod,
+ the quane of all the South is coming down the road, riding a high stepper.
+ Phat will I do, I dunno?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop her,&rdquo; I yelled with my teeth chattering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halt right fhere yez are,&rdquo; said the Irishman, with a look on his face
+ that showed he was&mdash;well, that he was an Irishman, and had an eye for
+ beauty. The German had taken the horse by the bit, and I stepped out from
+ behind the school house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great heavens, but she was a beautiful woman, and she sat on her horse
+ like a statue. I had never seen a more beautiful woman. She was a
+ brunette, with large black eyes, and her face was flushed with the
+ exercise of riding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled and showed two rows of the prettiest teeth that ever were put
+ into a female mouth, and one ungloved hand, with which she handed me the
+ pass had a dimple at every knuckle, and was as white as paper, and soft as
+ silk. I know it was soft, because it touched my red, freckled hand when I
+ took the pass. I did not blame the general for being in love with her, or
+ for wanting to saw off the unpleasant duty of breaking up her smuggling,
+ on to a poor orphan like me. She said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain, I have a pass from the general, to go through the lines at any
+ time, unmollested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no good,&rdquo; I said, examining it. &ldquo;This pass is evidently a forgery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear captain,&rdquo; she said, with a smile that I would give ten
+ dollars for a picture of, &ldquo;The pass is not a forgery. I have used it for
+ months.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a dear captain, only a cheap corporal,&rdquo; I said, with an attempt
+ to be at my ease, which I wasn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There has been at least a wagon load of quinine smuggled through the
+ lines on this pass, and it has got to stop; you cannot go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dickens you say,&rdquo; said she as she drew her revolver, and sung out,
+ &ldquo;let go that horse,&rdquo; and firing at the German.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kritz-dunnerwetter,&rdquo; said the German, as he got down by the horse's fore
+ feet, and held on to the bridle, &ldquo;vot vor you choot a man ven he holt your
+ horse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;your revolver is loaded with blank cartridges, and you
+ can do no harm. Try another one on the Irishman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold on,&rdquo; said the Irishman, &ldquo;and don't experiment on a poor man who has
+ a wife and six children. Shoot the corporal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I had reached up and taken the revolver from her, and she was weak as
+ a kitten. Her nerve had forsaken her, and when I told her to dismount she
+ was like a rag, and had to be helped down. If she was beautiful before,
+ now that she had started her tear mill, she was ravishingly radiant, and I
+ felt like a villain. She leaned on my shoulder, and it was the loveliest
+ burden a soldier ever held. I seated her on the steps of the schoolhouse,
+ and I thought she would faint, but she didn't. She was evidently taken by
+ surprise, and wanted a little time to think it over, and form a plan. So
+ did I. As I looked her over, and thought what I was expected to do, I
+ wondered where it would be best to commence. She began to recover, smiled
+ at me and asked me to have the other soldiers go away, so she could talk
+ with me. I wished she wouldn't smile like that, because it unnerved me.
+ She asked me what I was going to do with her, what caused me to suspect
+ her, if I would not believe her if she told me she was not a smuggler, if
+ I had orders to arrest her, and all that. I said, &ldquo;Madame, my orders are
+ to arrest all quinine smugglers, and you are one. I am Hawkshaw, the
+ detective. For months I have shadowed you, and I know you have concealed
+ about your person a whole drug store. In that innocent looking bustle I
+ feel that there is quinine for the million. Your heaving bosom contains,
+ besides love for your friends and hatred of your enemies, a storehouse of
+ useful medicines, contraband of war. In your stockings there is much that
+ would interest the seeker after the truth, your corset that fits you so
+ beautifully is liable to be full of revolver cartridges, while in your
+ shoes there may be messages to the rebels. I shall search you from Genesis
+ to Revelations, and may the Lord have mercy on both of us. To begin,
+ please let me examine the hat you have on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With some reluctance she took off a sort of half-stovepipe hat, and
+ covered her face with her handkerchief while I looked into it. I found a
+ package of newly printed confederate bonds, and a quantity of court
+ plaster. That settled it. She cried a little, and wanted to go into the
+ schoolhouse. I went in with her, and two of my soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told her that it was a duty that was pretty tough, but it was necessary
+ for her to disrobe, as I must have every article she had. She cried, and
+ said if I searched her, or molested her, I would do it at my peril, and
+ that I wouldn't know how to go to work to take off her clothes, anyway,
+ and that I ought to be ashamed of myself. I told her I felt as ashamed as
+ any gentleman could, and though I knew little about the details of the
+ female apparel, I had some general ideas about bustles, polonaise, socks,
+ skirts, and so forth, and while I might be awkward, and uncouth, and
+ nervous, as long as there were buttons to unbutton, hooks to unhook, and
+ safety-pins to unpin, I thought I could eventually get to the quinine, if
+ she would give me time, and I did not faint by the wayside, but my idea
+ was that it would save all trouble, her modesty would not receive a shock,
+ nor mine either, if she would go behind the little pulpit in the
+ schoolhouse, out of sight of us, take off her clothes, and hand them over
+ the pulpit to us to examine. She said she would die first, besides, she
+ knew we would peek around the pulpit at her. I was getting very nervous,
+ and perspiring a good deal, and wishing it was over, and I swore, upon my
+ honor, that if she would go behind the pulpit and disrobe, she should be
+ as safe from intrusion as though she was in her own room. She swore she
+ would not, and I went up to her to commence unraveling the mystery. Her
+ dress hooked up in the back, which I always <i>did</i> think a great
+ nuisance, and I began to unhook it. I wondered that she stood so quietly
+ and let me unhook it, but after it was unhooked from the neck to the small
+ of her back, and I was wishing I was dead, she said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, now that you have got my dress unhooked, a feat I never could
+ accomplish myself, I will go behind the pulpit and take off my dress, if
+ you will promise not to look, and that you will help me hook up my dress
+ when this cruel quinine war is over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told her by the great Jehosephat, and the continental congress, I would
+ help her, and that I would kill anybody who looked, and she went behind
+ the schoolhouse pulpit, where a country preacher, very likely, preached on
+ Sundays, and bent over out of sight, and it wasn't half a minute before
+ she handed the dress over to me. In the pockets I found several papers of
+ some kind of medicine, and a few small bottles, sealed up with red
+ sealing-wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, the bustle, please, I said, in a voice trembling with emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take your old bustle,&rdquo; she said, as she whacked it on the top of the
+ pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, if anybody had told me that a bustle could be made to hold stuff
+ enough to fill a bushel-basket, I would not have believed it. We filled
+ three nose-bags, such as cavalrymen feed horses in, with paper packages
+ and bottles of quinine. There were thirty bottles of pills, and salves and
+ ointments, and plasters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is panning out first rate,&rdquo; I said, with less emotion. The emotion
+ was somehow getting out of me, and the affair was becoming more of a
+ mercantile transaction. It was like a young druggist going from the side
+ of his beloved, to the drug store, to take an inventory. &ldquo;Now hand out
+ that other lot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She evidently knew what I referred to, for she handed out over the pulpit
+ a package just exactly the shape of what I had supposed, in my guileless
+ innocence, was a portion of the female form. That is, I had suspected it
+ was not all human form, but didn't know. That was also full of medicines,
+ of which quinine was the larger part, though there was about a pint of gun
+ caps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speaking about stockings,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;please take them off and hand them
+ over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/185.jpg"
+ alt="Two Very Long Stockings, Came over the Pulpit 185 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She kicked about taking off her shoes and stockings, and said no gentleman
+ would compel a lady to do that. I said I would wait about two minutes, and
+ then, if it was too much trouble for her to take them off, I would come
+ around the pulpit and help. Bless you, I wouldn't have gone for the world,
+ as I was already more than satisfied with what I had found. She said I
+ needn't trouble myself, as she guessed she could take off her shoes
+ without my help. I heard her unlacing her shoes, and pretty soon two
+ dainty shoes and two very long stockings, came over the pulpit, the heel
+ of one shoe hitting me in the ear. As I picked up the shoes I heard the
+ crumpling of a letter behind the pulpit, and I told her I must have all
+ the messages she had. She said it was only a letter to one she loved. I
+ told her I must have it, and she handed it over. I read, &ldquo;My darling
+ husband,&rdquo; and handed it back, saying I would not pry into her family
+ secrets. She began to cry, and insisted on my reading it, which I did. It
+ was to her husband, an officer in the Confederate army, and was about as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;My Darling Husband:&mdash;This life of deception is killing me.
+ I want to do all in my power to help our cause, but I am
+ each day more nervous, and liable to detection. The Yankee
+ officers are frequently at our house, and I have to treat
+ them kindly, but it is all I can do to keep from crying, and
+ I am expected to laugh. I fear that I am suspected of
+ smuggling, as the subject is frequently brought up in
+ conversation, and I feel my face burn, though I try hard not
+ to show it. I think of you, away off in Virginia, with your
+ armless sleeve, our children in New Orleans, and I wonder if
+ we will ever be united again. O, God, when will this all
+ end. I have no fault to find with the Federal troops. The
+ officers are very kind and through one fatherly general I am
+ allowed to pass into our lines. I feel that I am betraying
+ his kindness every trip I make, and only the urgent need
+ that our dear boys have for medicines could induce me to do
+ as I do. After this trip I shall go to New Orleans,{*}
+ where I fear Madge is sick, as shew as not at all well the
+ last I heard from her. Pray earnestly, my dear husband,
+ every day, as I do, that this trouble may end soon, some
+ way, and I beg of you not to have a feeling of revenge in
+ your heart towards your enemies, on account of the loss of
+ your arm, as there are thousands of federals similarly
+ afflicted. I shall love you more, and I will wrap your empty
+ sleeve about my neck, and try never to miss the strong arm
+ that was my support. Adieu.
+
+ &ldquo;Your loving wife.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ That letter knocked me out in one round. I had begun to enjoy the
+ unpacking of the smuggled goods, and the discomfiture of my female
+ smuggler, but when I read that loving letter, breathing such a Christian
+ spirit, and thought of the poor wife-mother behind the pulpit unravelling
+ herself, I was ashamed, and I said to myself, &ldquo;she shall not take off
+ another rag. So I handed back the letter and the dress, and all of the
+ things she had taken off, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put everything right back onto yourself, and come out at your leisure,
+ and we took the medicines and went out of the schoolhouse. Presently She
+ came out, and I told her it was my duty to take her back to headquarters,
+ but if she had no objections to my taking the letter to the general, with
+ the medicines, she could go back to the house where she boarded, and I
+ thought if she took the first boat for New Orleans, it would be all right,
+ and I would see that the letter was sent through the lines to her husband.
+ I helped her on her horse, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can escape. Your horse is better than ours, and though you are a
+ prisoner, we would not shoot at you if you tried to escape. I hope your
+ prayers will have the effect you desire, and that the trouble will soon be
+ over. I hope you will and the children well, and that the husband will be
+ spared to be a comfort to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bowed her head, as she sat in the saddle, and the look of defiance
+ which she had shown, was gone, and one of thankfulness, peace, hope,
+ purity, took its place. She handed me the letter, and asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told, her she was free to go. She turned her horse; towards town,
+ touched him with the whip, and he was; away like the wind. I stood for two
+ minutes, watching her, when I was recalled to my senses by the Irishman,
+ who said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fhat are we to do wid the quinane and the gun caps?&rdquo; We packed the
+ smuggled goods in our saddle-bags and elsewhere, and rode back to
+ headquarters. The colonel and the general were in the colonel's tent, and
+ I took the &ldquo;stuff&rdquo; in and reported all the occurrences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where is the lady?&rdquo; inquired the general, after reading the letter
+ and wiping his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As we were about to start back,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;after taking the smuggled goods
+ from her, she gave her horse the whip, and rode away. I had no orders to
+ shoot a woman, and I let her go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank God,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;That's the best way,&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ &ldquo;She will quit smuggling and go to her children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Eighteen months after the lady rode away from me, &ldquo;leaving&rdquo;
+ her quinine, I was in New Orleans, to be mustered in as
+ Second Lieutenant, having received a commsssion. I had
+ bought me a fine uniform, and thought I was about as cunning
+ a looking officer as ever was. I was walking on Canal
+ street, looking in the windows, and finally went into a
+ store to buy some collars. A gentleman came in with a gray
+ uniform on, and one sleeve empty. He was evidently a
+ Confederate officer. He asked me if I did not belong to a
+ certain cavalry regiment, and if my name was not so and so.
+ I told him he was correct. He told me there was a lady in an
+ adjoining store that wanted to see me. I did not know a
+ soul, that is, a female soul, in New Orleans, but I went
+ with him. Any lady that wanted to see me, in my new uniform,
+ could see me. As we entered the store a lady left two little
+ girls and rushed up to me, threw her arms around my neck and
+ &mdash;(say, does a fellow have to tell everything, when he writes
+ a war history?) Well, she was awfully tickled to see me, and
+ she was my smuggler, the Confederate was her husband, and
+ the children were hers. The officer was as tickled as she
+ was, and they compelled me to go to their house to dinner,
+ and I enjoyed it very much. We talked over the arrest of the
+ &ldquo;female smuggler,&rdquo; and she said to her husband, &ldquo;Pa, it
+ was an awfully embarrassing situation for me and this
+ Yankee, but he treated me like a lady, and the only thing I
+ have to find fault about, is that he forgot to help me hook
+ up my dress, and I rode clear to town with it unhooked.&rdquo; The
+ Confederate had been discharged at the surrender, and I was
+ on my way to Texas, to serve another year, hunting Indians.
+ I left them very happy, and as I went out of their door she
+ wrapped his empty sleeve around her waist, drew the children
+ up to her, and said, &ldquo;Mr. Yankee, may you always be very
+ happy.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Female Smuggler Episode Makes Me Famous&mdash;I am Sent Forth
+ in Women's Clothes&mdash;My Interview with the Bad Corporal&mdash;A
+ Fist Fight&mdash;The Rebellion is Put Down Once More&mdash;I Reveal My
+ Identity.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not twenty-four hours before the news spread all over my regiment,
+ as well as several other regiments, that a certain corporal had captured a
+ female smuggler, while on picket, had searched her on the spot and found a
+ large quantity of quinine and other articles contraband of war, and there
+ was a general desire to look upon the features of a man, not a
+ commissioned officer who had gall enough to search a female rebel, from
+ top to toe, without orders from the commanding officer, and I was
+ constantly being visited by curiosity-seekers, who wanted to know all
+ about it. Of course it was not known that I had been ordered to do as I
+ did, and they all wondered why I was not made an example of; and many
+ privates, corporals and sergeants wondered if they would get out of it so
+ easily if they should do as I did. There were a great many women passing
+ through the lines, and I am sure many soldiers decided that the first
+ woman who attempted to pass through would get searched. It was talked
+ among the men, and for a day or two a lady would certainly have stood a
+ poor show to have rode up to a picket post with a pass to go outside. The
+ soldiers had so long been away from female society that it would have been
+ a picnic for them to have captured a suspicious looking woman who was
+ pretty. I was pointed out, down town, as the man who captured the woman
+ loaded with quinine, and women with rebel tendencies would look at me as
+ though I was a bold, bad man that ought to be killed, and they acted as
+ though they would like to eat me. But I tried to appear modest, and not as
+ though I had done anything I was particularly proud of. The next evening
+ the colonel sent for me and said he had got something for me to do that
+ required nerve. I told him that my experience in putting down the
+ rebellion had shown me that the whole thing required nerve. That I had
+ been on my nerve until my nerves were pretty near used up, and I asked him
+ if he couldn't let some of the other boys do a little of the nervous work.
+ He said he had one more woman job that he would like to have me undertake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was sick of the whole woman business, and told him I did not want to be
+ aggravated any more; that arresting women and searching them, was nothing
+ but an aggravation, and I wanted to be let out. He said in this case I
+ would not have to arrest anybody of the female persuasion, but that I
+ would have to be arrested, and that it would be the greatest joke that
+ ever was. I told him if there was any joke about it he could count me in.
+ Then he went on to say that my success with the female smuggler had
+ excited all the boys to emulate my deeds, and they were all laying for a
+ female smuggler, and that he feared it wouldn't be safe for a woman to be
+ caught on the picket line. There had got to be a stop put to it, and he
+ and the general had thought of a scheme. He said there was a corporal in
+ one of the companies who had made his brags that he would arrest the first
+ female that came to his picket post, and search her for smuggled goods,
+ and they wanted to make an example of him. He asked me if I wasn't
+ something of a boxer, and I told him for a light weight I was considered
+ pretty good. Then he asked me if I could ride on a side saddle. I told him
+ I could ride anything, from a hobby to an elephant. He said that was all
+ right, and I would fill the bill. Then he went into details. I was to go
+ to the town with him, and be fitted out with a riding habit of the female
+ persuasion, false hair, side saddle, and a bustle as big as a bushel
+ basket. That I was to ride out on a certain road, where the corporal would
+ be on picket with two men. He would stop me, and search me, I was to cry,
+ and beg, and all that, but finally submit to be searched, and after the
+ corporal had got started to search me, I was to haul off and give him one
+ &ldquo;biff&rdquo; in the nose, another if it was necessary to knock him down, paste
+ one of the men in the ear, if he showed any impudence, jump on my horse
+ and come back to town, and leave the corporal to find his mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I didn't half like the idea of dressing up in such a masquering costume,
+ but of course if I could help put down the rebellion that way, it was my
+ duty to do it, and besides, I had a grudge against that corporal, anyway,
+ because he called me a &ldquo;jay&rdquo; and a &ldquo;substitute,&rdquo; and a &ldquo;drafted man,&rdquo; when
+ I came to the regiment. The colonel took me to the residence of a lady
+ friend who rode on horseback a good deal, and as he let her into the
+ secret, she helped fix me up. All I had to do was to remove my cavalry
+ jacket, and she put the dress on over my head. I always supposed they put
+ on these dresses the same as men put on pants, by walking into them feet
+ first, but she said they went over the head. I felt as though my pants
+ were going to show, but she gave me some instructions about keeping the
+ dress down, and I began to feel a good deal like a woman. The dress fit me
+ around the waist as though it was made for me, and when it was all
+ buttoned up in front I felt stunning. She and the colonel made a bustle
+ out of newspapers, and a small sofa cushion of eider down was placed where
+ it would do the most good. After the dress was all fixed, she got a wig
+ and put it on my head, and a hat, with a feather in it, and then pinned a
+ veil on the hair, so it reached down to my rose-bud mouth. Then she took a
+ powder arrangement and powdered my face, put on a pair of long gauntlets
+ which she usually wore, and told me to look in the glass. When I looked
+ into the glass I almost fainted. The deception was so good that it would
+ have fooled the oldest man in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel said he was almost inclined to fall in love with me himself,
+ and he did put his arm around me and squeeze me, but I didn't notice any
+ particular feeling, such as I did when his lady friend was fooling around
+ me. That was different. Well, I was an inveterate smoker at that time, so
+ I took my pipe and a bag of tobacco, and put it in a pocket of the dress,
+ and some matches, and we went out doors. The colonel took my tiny number
+ eight boot in his hand and tossed me lightly into the saddle, then he
+ mounted his own horse and we rode around the suburbs of the town, so I
+ could get used to the side-saddle. I got him to stop behind a fence and
+ let me have a smoke out of my pipe, and then I told him I was ready. He
+ gave me a pass, and told me to go out on the road the corporal was on, and
+ if he let me pass out of the lines to go on to a turn in the road, where a
+ squad of our men were on a scout, and to report to the officer in charge,
+ who would bring me in all right, by another road, but if the corporal
+ attempted to search me, to do as I had been told to do. After I had
+ knocked the corporal down, if I would give a yell, the officer who was
+ outside would come and arrest us all and bring us to headquarters, where
+ the colonel could reprimand the corporal, etc. I threw a kiss to the
+ colonel and started out on the road. It was about a mile to the picket
+ post, and I had time to reflect on my position. This was putting down the
+ rebellion at a great rate. I was an ostensible female, liable to be
+ insulted at any moment, but I would maintain the dignity of my alleged sex
+ if I didn't lay up a cent. I put on a proud, haughty look, full of purity
+ and all that, and as I neared the picket post, I saw the corporal step out
+ into the road, and as I came up he told me to halt. I halted, and handed
+ him my pass, but he said it was a forgery, and ordered me to dismount. I
+ turned on the water, from my eyes, and began to cry, but it run off the
+ bad corporal like water off a duck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of your sniveling around me,&rdquo; said the vile man. &ldquo;Get down off that
+ horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; I said, with well feigned indignation, &ldquo;you would not molest a poor
+ girl who has no one to defend her. Let me go I prithe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had read that, &ldquo;Let me go I prithe,&rdquo; in a novel, and it seemed to me to
+ be the proper thing to say, though I couldn't hardly keep from laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prithe nothing,&rdquo; said the corporal. &ldquo;What you got in that bustle?&rdquo; said
+ the corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bustle,&rdquo; I said, blushing so you could have touched a match to my face.
+ &ldquo;Why speak of such a thing in the presence of a lady. I want you to let me
+ go or I shall think you are real mean, so now. Please, Mr. Soldier, let me
+ go,&rdquo; and I smiled at him and winked with my left eye in a manner that
+ ought to have paralyzed a marble statue. &ldquo;O, what you giving us,&rdquo; said the
+ vile man. &ldquo;Get down off that horse and let me go through you for quinine.
+ Do you hear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was afraid if he helped me down he would see my boots or pants, which
+ would be a give-away. So I gathered my dress in my hands and jumped down
+ in pretty good shape. I had sparred with the corporal several times in
+ camp, and I knew I could knock him out easy, and I made up my mind that
+ the first indignity he offered me I would just &ldquo;lam him one. It was all I
+ could do to keep from pasting him in the nose, when I first landed on the
+ ground, but I had a part to play, and it would not do to go off half
+ cocked. So I looked sad, pouted my lips, and wondered if he would kiss me,
+ and feel the beard where I had been shaved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, shuck yourself,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do what? I asked, with apparent alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peel,&rdquo; said he, as he put his hand on my back,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; I said with my eyes flashing fire, and my heart throbbing, and
+ almost bursting with suppressed laughter, &ldquo;you are insolent. I am a poor
+ orphan, unused to contact with coarse men. I have been raised a pet, and
+ no vile hand has ever been laid upon me until you just touched me. If you
+ touch me I shall scream. I shall call for help. What would you do, you
+ wicked, naughty man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unbutton,&rdquo; said he as he pointed to my dress in front. &ldquo;Call for help and
+ be darned. You are a smuggler, and I know it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, my God,&rdquo; said I, with a stage accent, &ldquo;has it come to this? Am I to be
+ robbed of all I hold dear, by a common Yankee corporal. Has a woman no
+ rights which are to be respected? Am I to be murdered in cold bel-lud,
+ with all my sins upon my head. O, Mr. Man, give me a moment to utter a
+ silent prayer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, hush,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and hold up your hands. There ain't going to be any
+ bel-lud. All I want is to go through you for quinine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spare me, I beseech you,&rdquo; I said, as I held up my hands, and got in
+ position to knock him silly the first move he made. &ldquo;I am no walking drug
+ store, I am a good girl.&rdquo; Around my awful form I draw an imaginary circle.
+ &ldquo;Step but one foot within that sacred circle, and on thy head I launch the
+ cu-r-r-r-se of Rome, Georgia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/203.jpg"
+ alt="Gave a Yell That Could Have Been Heard A Mile 203 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let up on this Shakespeare, and get to busiess, said the corporal, as he
+ reached up to my neck to unbutton the top button of my dress. He was
+ looking at my dress, and wondering what he would find concealed within,
+ when I brought down both fists and took him with one in each eye, with a
+ force that would have knocked a mule down. He fell backwards, and gave a
+ yell that could have been heard a mile. Then one of his men started for me
+ and I knocked him in the ear, and he fell beside the corporal. The other
+ man was going to come for his share, when the officer who had been
+ stationed outside the lines rode up with his men and asked what was the
+ matter. The soldier-who was not hit said I had assassinated the corporal.
+ The officer said that was wrong, and women who would go around killing off
+ the Union army with their fists ought to be arrested. Just then the
+ corporal raised up on his elbow and tried to open two of the blackest eyes
+ that ever were seen. Turning to the officer, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That woman is a smuggler, and she struck me with a brick house!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ancient female,&rdquo; said the officer, looking at me and laughing, &ldquo;why do
+ you go around like a besum of destruction, wiping out armies, one man at a
+ time. You ought to be ashamed of myself, and you should be muzzled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't call me a female,&rdquo; said I, in my natural hoarse voice. &ldquo;That is
+ something that I will not submit to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corporal looked up at me with one eye, the other being almost closed
+ from the effects of the fall of the brick house. He looked as though he
+ smelled woolen burning, as the old saying is. The officer said he guessed
+ he would take us all to headquarters, and inquire into the affair. The
+ corporal said that there was nothing to inquire into. That this female
+ came along and insisted on going outside of the lines, and when he asked
+ her, in a polite manner, to show her pass, she struck him down with a
+ billy, or some weapon she had concealed about her person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not much of a liar, either,&rdquo; said I, jumping on to my horse
+ astraddle, like a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corporal looked at me as though he would sink, but he maintained that
+ he had done nothing that should offend the most fastidious female. The
+ corporal and his men mounted, and we all started for headquarters. I rode
+ beside the officer, and the corporal was right behind me. After we had got
+ started I pulled out my pipe, filled it, lit a match as soldiers usually
+ do, though it was quite unhandy, and began to smoke. As the tobacco smoke
+ rolled out under my veil, from the alleged rosebud mouth, the scene was
+ one that the corporal and the most of the men had never thought of, though
+ the officer was &ldquo;on&rdquo; all right enough. The corporal could hardly believe
+ his eyes, or one eye, for the other one had gone closed. I was a fine
+ enough looking female as we rode through the regiment, except the pipe,
+ which I puffed along just as though I had no dress on. As we rode up to
+ the colonel's tent, it was noised around that a scout had captured a
+ daring female rebel, and she had almost killed a corporal, and the whole
+ regiment gathered around the colonel's tent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the trouble, corporal?&rdquo; asked the colonel of my black-eyed
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well this woman wanted to go outside, and when I objected, she knocked me
+ down with a rail off a fence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you offered her no indignity?&rdquo; the colonel asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the least,&rdquo; said the corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the colonel asked me to tell my story, which I did. The corporal said
+ it was a lie, but the other man, whom I did not hit, said I was right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you disrobe, before these soldiers, without getting off your horse?&rdquo;
+ asked the colonel, looking at me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him I could and he told me to proceed. I pulled the hat and hair
+ off first and appeared with my red hair clipped short. I then I threw the
+ dress over my head, and appeared in my cavalry pants, all dressed, except
+ my jacket and cap, which the colonel handed me, having brought it from the
+ house where I put on the dress. I put on the jacket, wiped the powder off
+ my face, and the corporal said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's that condemned raw recruit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the boys took in the transformation scene, and then the colonel told
+ them that he wanted this to be a lesson to all of them, to let all women
+ who came to the picket posts, or anywhere, who had passes, alone, and not
+ think because one woman had been caught smuggling, that all women were
+ smugglers. In fact he wanted every soldier to mind his own business. Then
+ he dismissed us, and we went to our quarters. On the way, the one-eyed
+ corporal touched me on the arm, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old man, you played it fine on me, but I will get even with you yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Military Attire&mdash;My Suit of Government Clothes&mdash;The Memory
+ of Them Saddens Me Still&mdash;The Dreadful March&mdash;The Adjutant
+ Appoints Me to Make Out a Monthly Report&mdash;The Report Is an
+ Astonishing One.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ About this time I received the greatest shock of the whole war. I had
+ prided myself upon my uniform that I brought from home, which was made by
+ a tailor, and fit me first rate. It was of as good cloth and as well made
+ as the uniforms of any of the officers, and I was not ashamed to go out
+ with a party of officers on a little evening tear, because there was
+ nothing about my uniform to distinguish me from an officer, except the
+ shoulder-straps, and many officers did not wear shoulder-straps at all,
+ except on dress parade or inspection. I took great pleasure in riding
+ around town, wherever the regiment was located, looking wise, and posing
+ as an officer. But the time came when my uniform, which came with me as a
+ recruit, became seedy, and badly worn, and it was necessary to discard it,
+ and draw some clothing of the quartermaster. That is a trying time for a
+ recruit. One day it was announced that the quartermaster sergeant had
+ received a quantity of clothing, and the men were ordered to go and draw
+ coats, pants, hats, shoes, overcoats, and underclothing, as winter was
+ coming on, and the regiment was liable to move at any time. Something
+ happened that I was unable to be present the first forenoon that clothing
+ was issued, and, when I did call upon the quartermaster-sergeant, there
+ was only two or three suits left, and they had been tumbled over till they
+ looked bad. I can remember now how my heart sank within me, as I picked up
+ a pair of pants that was left. They were evidently cut out with a
+ buzz-saw, and were made for a man that weighed three hundred. I held them
+ up in installments, and looked at them. Holding them by the top, as high
+ as I could, and the bottom of the legs of the pants laid on the ground.
+ The sergeant charged the pants to my account, and then handed me a jacket,
+ a small one, evidently made for a hump-backed dwarf. The jacket was
+ covered with yellow braid. O, so yellow, that it made me sick. The jacket
+ was charged to me, also. Then he handed me some undershirts and drawers,
+ so coarse and rough that it seemed to me they must have been made of rope,
+ and lined with sand-paper. Then came an overcoat, big enough for an
+ equestrian statue of George Washington, with a cape on it as big as a wall
+ tent. The hat I drew was a stiff, cheap, shoddy hat, as high as a tin camp
+ kettle, which was to take the place of my nobby, soft felt hat that I had
+ paid five dollars of my bounty money for. The hat was four sizes too large
+ for me. Then I took the last pair of army shoes there was, and they
+ weighed as much as a pair of anvils, and had raw-hide strings to fasten
+ them with. Has any old soldier of the army ever forgotten the clothing
+ that he drew from the quartermaster? These inverted pots for hats, the
+ same size all the way up, and the shoes that seemed to be made of sole
+ leather, and which scraped the skin off the ankles. O, if this government
+ ever does go to Gehenna, as some people contend it will, sometime, it will
+ be as a penalty for issuing such ill-fitting shoddy clothing to its brave
+ soldiers, who never did the government any harm. I carried the lot of
+ clothing to my tent, feeling sick and faint. The idea of wearing them
+ among folks was almost more than I could bear to think of. I laid them on
+ my bunk, and looked at them, and &ldquo;died right there.&rdquo; That hat was of a
+ style older than Methuselah. O, I could have stood it, all but the hat,
+ and pants, and shoes, but they killed me. While I was looking at the
+ lay-out, and trying to make myself believe that my old clothes that I
+ brought with me were good enough to last till the war was over, though the
+ seat of the pants, and the knees, and the sleeves of the coat were nearly
+ gone, an orderly came through the company and said the regiment would have
+ a dismounted dress parade at sundown, and every man must wear his new
+ clothes. Ye gods! that was too much! If I could have had a week or ten
+ days to get used to those new clothes, one article at a time, I could have
+ stood it, but to be compelled to put the pants, and jacket, shoes and hat
+ on all at once, was horrible to think of, and if I had not known that a
+ deserter was always caught, and punished, I would have deserted. But the
+ clothes must be put on, and I must go out into the world a spectacle to
+ behold. Believing that it is better to face the worst, and have it over, I
+ put on the pants first. If I could ever meet the army contractor who
+ furnished those pants to a government almost in the throes of dissolution,
+ I would kill him as I would an enemy of the human race. There was room
+ enough in those pants for a man and a horse. Yes, and a bale of hay. There
+ were no suspenders furnished to the men, and how to keep the pants from
+ falling from grace was a question, but I got a piece of tent rope, cut a
+ hole in the waist band, and run the rope around inside, and tied it around
+ my waist, puckering the top of the pants at proper intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I think of those pants now, after twenty-two years, I wonder that I
+ was not irretrievably lost in them. I would have been lost if I had not
+ stuck out of the top. But when I looked at the bottoms of the pants I
+ found at least a foot too much. If I had tied the rope around under my
+ arms, or buttoned them to my collar button, they would have been too long
+ at the bottom. I finally rolled them up at the bottom, and they rolled
+ clear up above my knees. But how they did bag around my body. There was
+ cloth enough to spare to have made a whole uniform for the largest man in
+ the regiment. At that time I was a slim fellow, that weighed less than 125
+ pounds, and there is no doubt I got the largest pair of pants that was
+ issued in the whole Union army. I only had a-small round mirror in my
+ tent, so I could not see how awfully I looked, only in installments, but
+ to a sensitive young man who had always dressed well, any one can see how
+ a pair of such pants would harrow up his soul. If the pants were too
+ large, you ought to have seen the jacket. The contractor who made the
+ clothes evidently took the measure of a monkey to make that jacket. It was
+ so small that I could hardly get it on. The sleeves were so tight that the
+ vaccination marks on my arm must have shown plainly. The sleeves were too
+ short, and my hands and half of my forearm riding outside. The body was so
+ tight that I had to use a monkey-wrench to button it, and then I couldn't
+ breathe without unbuttoning one button. It was so tight that my ribs
+ showed so plain they could be counted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I stuffed some pieces of grain sack in the shoes, and got them on, and
+ tied them, put on that awful hat, the bugle sounded to fall in, and I fell
+ out of my tent towards the place of assembly, with my carbine. If we had
+ been going out mounted, I could have managed to hide some of the pants
+ around the saddle, if I could have got my shoe over the horse's back, but
+ to walk out among men, stubbing my shoes against each other, and
+ interfering and knocking my ankles off, was pretty hard. The company was
+ about formed when I fell out of my tent, and when the men saw me they
+ snickered right out. I have heard a great many noises in my time that took
+ the life out of me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first shell that I heard whistle through the air, and shriek, and
+ explode, caused my hair to raise, and I was cold all up and down my spine.
+ The first flock of minnie bullets that sang about my vicinity caused my
+ flesh to creep and my heart's blood to stand still. Once I was near a saw
+ mill when the boiler exploded, and as the pieces of boiler began to rain
+ around me, I felt how weak and insignificant a small, red-headed,
+ freckled-faced man is. Once I heard a girl say &ldquo;no,&rdquo; when I had asked her
+ a civil question, and I was so pale and weak that I could hardly reply
+ that I didn't care a continental whether she married me or not, but I
+ never felt quite so weak, and powerless, and ashamed, and desperate as I
+ did when I came out, falling over myself and the men of my company
+ snickered at my appearance. The captain held his hand over his face and
+ laughed. I fell in at the left of my company, and the captain went to the
+ right and looked down the line, and seeing my pants out in front about a
+ foot, he ordered me to stand back. I stood back, and he looked at the rear
+ of the line, and I stuck out worse behind, and he made me move up. Finally
+ he came down to where I was and told me to throw out my chest. I tried to
+ throw it out, and busted a button off, but the pressure was too great, and
+ my chest went back. Finally the captain told me I could go to the right of
+ the company and act as orderly sergeant on dress parade. He said as our
+ company was on the right of the regiment, they could dress on my pants,
+ and I wouldn't be noticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I ought to have done, was to have committed suicide right there, but
+ I went to the right, trying to look innocent, and we moved off to the
+ field for dress parade. Everything went on well enough, except that in
+ coming to a &ldquo;carry arms,&rdquo; with my carbine, from a present, the muzzle of
+ the carbine knocked off my stiff hat, and the stock of the carbine went
+ into the pocket of my pants and run clear down my leg, before I could
+ rescue it. A file closer behind me picked up my hat and put it on me, with
+ the yellow cord tassels in front, and before I could fix it, the order
+ came, &ldquo;First sergeants to the front and center, march.&rdquo; Those who are
+ familiar with military matters, know that at dress parade the first
+ sergeants march a few paces to the front, then turn and march to the
+ center of the regiment, turn and face the adjutant, and each salutes that
+ officer in turn, and reports, &ldquo;Co. &mdash;&mdash;, all present or
+ accounted for.&rdquo; That was the hardest march I ever had in all of my army
+ experience. I knew that every eye of every soldier in the six companies at
+ the right of the regiment, would be on my pants, and the officers would
+ laugh at me, and the several hundred ladies and gentlemen from town, who
+ were back of the colonel, witnessing the dress parade, would laugh, too. A
+ man can face death, in the discharge of his duty, better than he can face
+ the laughter of a thousand people. I seemed to be the only soldier in the
+ whole regiment who had not got a pretty good fit in drawing his new
+ clothes, but I was a spectacle. As I marched to the front, with the other
+ eleven first sergeants, and stood still for them to dress on me, I felt as
+ though the piece of tent rope with which I had fastened my large pants up,
+ was becoming untied, and I began to perspire. What would become of me if
+ that rope <i>should</i> become untied? If that rope gave way, it seemed to
+ me it would break up the whole army, stampede the visitors, and cause me
+ to be court-martialed for conduct unbecoming any white man. I made up my
+ mind if the worst came, I would drop my carbine and grab the pants with
+ both hands, and save the day. At the command, right and left face, I
+ turned to the left, and I could feel the pants begin to droop, as it were,
+ so I took hold of the top of them with my left hand, and at the command,
+ march, I started for the center.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had got almost past my own company, and there had been no general laugh,
+ but when I passed an Irishman, named Mulcahy, I heard him whisper out loud
+ to the man next to him, &ldquo;Howly Jasus, luk at the pants.&rdquo; Then there was a
+ snicker all through the company, which was taken up by the next, and by
+ the time I got to the center, and &ldquo;front faced,&rdquo; a half of the regiment
+ were laughing, and the officers were scolding the men and whispering to
+ them to shut up. Just then I felt that the one hand that was trying to
+ hold the pants up, was never going to do the work in the world, so I
+ dropped my carbine behind me, said, &ldquo;Co. E, all present or accounted for,&rdquo;
+ and stood there like a stoughton bottle, holding the waist-band of those
+ pants with both hands, as pale as a ghost. I could see that the adjutant
+ and the colonel and two majors, were laughing, and many of the visitors
+ were trying to keep from laughing. I think I lived seventy years in five
+ minutes, while the other eleven orderlies were reporting, and when the
+ order came to return to our posts, I whispered to the next orderly to me,
+ and told him if he would pick up my carbine and bring it along, I would
+ die for him, and he picked it up. The dress parade was soon finished, but
+ instead of marching the companies back to their quarters, they were
+ ordered to break ranks on the parade ground, and for an hour I was
+ surrounded with officers and men, who laughed at me till I thought I would
+ die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel and adjutant finally told me that it was a put up job on me,
+ to make a little fun for the boys. They said I had often had fun at the
+ expense of the other boys, and they wanted to see if I could stand a joke
+ on myself, and they admitted that I had done it well. If I had known it
+ was a joke, I could have lived through it better. The adjutant said he had
+ got a little work for me that evening, and the next morning I could take
+ my clothes down town to the post quartermaster, and exchange them for a
+ suit that would fit me. I went to his tent, and he showed me a lot of
+ company reports, and wanted me to make out a consolidated monthly report,
+ for the assistant adjutant general of the brigade. I had done some work
+ for him before, and he left a blank signed by himself and colonel, and
+ told me to make out a report and send it to the brigade headquarters, as
+ he was going down town with a party of officers. I made up my mind that I
+ would get even with the adjutant and the colonel, so I took a pen and
+ filled out the blank. My idea was to put all the figures in the wrong
+ column, which I did, and send it to the brigade headquarters. The next
+ morning I went down town with the quartermaster, and got a suit of clothes
+ to fit me, and on the way back to camp I passed brigade headquarters, when
+ I saw our adjutant looking quite dejected. He called to me and said he had
+ been summoned to brigade headquarters to explain some inaccuracies in the
+ monthly report sent in the night before, and he wanted me to stay and see
+ what was the trouble, but I acted as though if there was a mistake, it was
+ an error of the head rather than of the feet. Pretty soon the old brigade
+ adjutant, who was a strict diciplinarian, and a man who never heard of a
+ joke, came in from the general's tent, with his brow corrugated. They had
+ evidently been brooding over the report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, adjutant,&rdquo; said he, with a preoccupied look, &ldquo;but in
+ your report I observe that your regiment contains forty-three enlisted
+ men, and nine hundred and twenty-six company cooks. This seems to me
+ improbable, and the general cannot seem to understand it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adjutant turned red in the face, and was about to stammer out
+ something, when the adjutant general continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again, we observe that your quartermaster has on hand nine hundred bales
+ of condition powders, which is placed in your report as rations for the
+ men, that you only have eleven horses in your regiment fit for duty, that
+ you have the same number of men, while the commissioned officers foot up
+ at nine hundred and twenty-six. Of your sick men there seems to be plenty,
+ some eight hundred, which would indicate an epidemic, of which these
+ headquarters had not been informed previously. In the column headed
+ &ldquo;officers detailed on other duty&rdquo; I find four &ldquo;six-mule teams,&rdquo; and one
+ &ldquo;spike team of five mules.&rdquo; In the column &ldquo;officers absent without leave&rdquo;
+ I find the entry &ldquo;all gone off on a drunk.&rdquo; This, sir, is the most
+ incongruous report that has ever been received at these head-quarters,
+ from a reputably sober officer. Can this affair be satisfactorily
+ explained, at once, or would you prefer to explain it to a court-martial?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said the adjutant in distress, and perspiring freely, &ldquo;my clerk
+ has made a mistake, and placed a piece of waste paper that has been
+ scribbled on, in the envelope, instead of the regular report. Let me take
+ it, and I will send the proper report to you in ten minutes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adjutant general handed over my report, after asking how it happened
+ that the signature of the colonel and adjutant was on the ridiculous
+ report, and the adjutant and the red-headed recruit went out, mounted and
+ rode away. On the way the adjutant said, &ldquo;I ought to kill you on the spot.
+ But I wont. You have only retaliated on us for playing them pants on you.
+ I hate a man that can't take a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we made out a new report, and I took it to headquarters, and all was
+ well. But the adjutant was not as kitteny with his jokes on the other
+ fellows for many moons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Experience as a Sick Man&mdash;Jim Thinks I Have Yellow Fever&mdash;
+ What I Suffered&mdash;A Rebel Angel&mdash;I am Sent to the Hospital.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time I had never been sick a day in my life, that is, sick
+ enough to ache and groan and grunt, and lay in bed. At home I had
+ occasionally had a cold, and I was put to bed at night, after drinking a
+ quart of ginger tea, and covered up with blankets in a warm room, and I
+ was fussed over by loving hands until I got to sleep, and in the morning I
+ would wake up as fresh as a daisy, with my cold all gone. Once or twice at
+ home I had a bilious attack that lasted me almost twenty-four hours; but
+ the old family doctor fired blue pills down me, and I came under the wire
+ an easy winner. I did have the mumps and the measles, of course before
+ enlisting, but the loving care I was given brought me out all right, and I
+ looked upon those little sicknesses as a sort of luxury. The people at
+ home would do everything to make sick experiences far from bitter
+ memories. It was getting along towards Christmas of my first year in the
+ army, and though it was the Sunny South we were in, I noticed that it was
+ pretty all-fired cold. The night rides were full of fog and malaria; and
+ one morning I came in from an all-night ride through the woods and swamps,
+ feeling pretty blue. The mud around my tent was frozen, and there was a
+ little snow around in spots. As I laid down in my bunk to take a snooze
+ before breakfast, I noticed how awfully thin an army blanket was. It was
+ good enough for summer, but when winter came the blanket seemed to have
+ lost its cunning. I was again doing duty as a private soldier, having
+ learned that my promotion to the position of corporal was only temporary.
+ I had been what is called a &ldquo;lance corpora,&rdquo; or a brevet corporal. It
+ seemed hard, after tasting of the sweets of official position, to be
+ returned to the ranks, but I had to take the bitter with the sweet, and a
+ soldier must not kick. I had never laid down to sleep before without
+ dropping off into the land of dreams right away, but now, though I was
+ tired enough, my eyes were wide open and I felt strange. At times I would
+ be so hot that I would throw the blanket off, and then I would be so cold
+ that it seemed as though I would freeze. I had taken a severe cold which
+ had settled everywhere, and there was not a bone in my body but what
+ ached; my lungs seemed of no use; I could not take a long breath without a
+ hacking cough, and I felt as though I should die. It was then that I
+ thought of the warm little room at home and the ginger tea, and the
+ soaking of my feet in mustard water and wrapping my body in a soft flannel
+ blanket, and the kindly faces of my parents, my sister, my wife&mdash;everybody
+ that had been kind to me. I would close my eyes and imagine I could see
+ them all, and open my eyes and see my cold little tent and shiver as I
+ thought of being sick away from home. I laid for an hour wishing I was
+ home again; and while alone there I made up my mind I would write home and
+ warn all the boys I knew against enlisting. The thought that I should die
+ there alone was too much, and I was about to yell for help when my tent
+ mate, who had been on a scout, came in. He was a big green Yankee, who had
+ a heart in him as big as a water pail, but he wasn't much, of a nurse. He
+ came in nearly frozen, threw his saddle down in a corner, took out a hard
+ tack and began to chew it, occasionally taking a drink of water out of a
+ canteen. That was his breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I've got just about enough of war,&rdquo; said he, as he picked his teeth
+ with a splinter off his bunk, and filled his pipe and lit it. &ldquo;They can't
+ wind up this business any too soon to suit the old man. War in the summer
+ is a picnic, but in winter it is wearin on the soldier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heretofore I had enjoyed tobacco smoke very much, both from my own pipe
+ and Jim's, but when he blew out the first whiff of smoke it went to my
+ head and stomach and all up and down me, and I yelled, in a hoarse,
+ pneumonia sort of voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim, for God's sake don't smoke. I am at death's door, and I don't want
+ to smell of tobacco smoke when St. Peter opens the gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, pard, you ain't sick,&rdquo; said Jim, putting his pipe outside of the
+ tent, and coming to me and putting his great big hand on my forehead, as
+ tender as a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great heavens! you have got the yellow fever. You won't live an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was where Jim failed as a nurse. He made things out worse than they
+ were. He, poor old fellow, thought it was sympathy, and if I had let him
+ go on he would have had me dead before night. I told him I was all right.
+ All I had was a severe cold, on my lungs, and pneumonia, and rheumatism,
+ and chills and fever, and a few such things, but I would be all right in a
+ day or two. I wanted to encourage Jim to think I was not very bad off, but
+ he wouldn't have it. He insisted that I had typhoid fever, and glanders,
+ and cholera. He went right out of the tent and called in the first man he
+ met, who proved to be the horse doctor. The horse doctor was a friend of
+ mine, and a mighty good fellow, but I had never meditated having him
+ called in to doctor me. However, he felt of my fore leg, looked at my
+ eyes, rubbed the hair the wrong way on my head, and told Jim to bleed me
+ in the mouth, and blanket me, and give me a bran mash, and rub some
+ mustang liniment on my chest and back. I didn't want to hurt the horse
+ doctor's feelings by going back on his directions, but I told him I only
+ wanted to soak my feet in mustard water, and take some ginger tea. He said
+ all right, if I knew more about it than he did, and that he said he would
+ skirmish around for some ginger, while Jim raised the mustard, and they
+ both went out and left me alone. It seemed an age before anybody come, and
+ I thought of home all the time, and of the folks who would know just what
+ to do if I was there. Pretty soon Jim came in with a camp kettle half full
+ of hot water, and a bottle of French mixed mustard which he had bought of
+ the sutler. I told him I wanted plain ground mustard, but he said there
+ wasn't any to be found, and French mustard was the best he could do. We
+ tried to dissolve it in the water, but it wouldn't work, and finally Jim
+ suggested that he take a mustard spoon and plaster the French mustard all
+ over my feet, and then put them to soak that way. He said that prepared
+ mustard was the finest kind for pigs feet and sausage, and he didn't know
+ why it was not all right to soak feet in. So he plastered it on and I
+ proceeded to soak my feet. I presume it was the most unsuccessful case of
+ soaking feet on record. The old camp kettle was greasy, and when the hot
+ water and French mustard began to get in their work on the kettle, the
+ odor was sickening, and I do not think I was improved at all in my
+ condition. I told Jim I guessed I would lay down and wait for the ginger
+ tea. Pretty soon the horse doctor came in with a tin cup full of hot
+ ginger tea. I took one swallow of it and I thought I had swallowed a
+ blacksmith's forge, with a coal fire in it. I gasped and tried to yell
+ murder. The horse doctor explained that he couldn't get any ginger, so he
+ had taken cayenne pepper, which, he added, could knock the socks off of
+ ginger any day in the week. I felt like murdering the horse doctor, and I
+ felt a little hard at Jim for playing French mustard on me, but when I
+ come to reflect, I could see that they had done the best they could, and I
+ thanked them, and told them to leave me alone and I would go to sleep.
+ They went out of the tent and I could hear them speculating on my case.
+ Jim said he knew I had diabetis, and lung fever combined, with sciatic
+ rheumatism, and brain fever, and if I lived till morning the horse doctor
+ could take it out of his wages. The horse doctor admitted that my case had
+ a hopeless look, but he once had a patient, a bay horse, sixteen hands
+ high, and as fine a saddle horse as a man ever threw a leg over, that was
+ troubled exactly the same as I was. He blistered his chest, gave him a
+ table-spoonful of condition powders three times a day in a bran mash, took
+ off his shoes and turned him out to grass, and in a week he sold him for
+ two hundred and fifty dollar. I laid there and tried to go to sleep
+ listening to that talk. Then, some of the boys who had heard that I was
+ sick, came along and inquired how I was, and I listened to the remarks
+ they made. One of them wanted to go and get some burdock leaves, and pound
+ them into a pulp, and bind them on me for a poultice. He said he had an
+ aunt in Wisconsin who had a milk sickness, and her left leg swelled up as
+ big as a post, and the doctors tried everything, and charged her over two
+ hundred dollars, and never did her any good, and one day an Indian doctor
+ came along and picked some burdock leaves and fixed a poultice for her,
+ and in a week she went to a hop-picker's dance, and was as kitteny as
+ anybody, and the Indian doctor only charged her a quarter. Jim was for
+ going out for burdock leaves at once, for me, but the horse doctor told
+ him I didn't have no milk sickness. He said all the milk soldiers got was
+ condensed milk, and mighty little of that, and he would defy the world to
+ show that a man could get milk sickness on condensed milk. That seemed to
+ settle the burdock remedy, and they went to inquiring of Jim if he knew
+ where my folks lived, so he could notify them, in case I was not there in
+ the morning. Jim couldn't remember whether it was Atchison, Kan., or Fort
+ Atkinson, Wis., but he said he would go and ask me, while I was alive, so
+ there would be no mistake, and the poor fellow, meaning as well as any man
+ ever did, came in and asked for the address of my father, saying it was of
+ no account, particularly, only he wanted to know. I gave him the address,
+ and then he asked me if he shouldn't get me something to eat. I told him I
+ couldn't eat anything to save me. He offered to fry me some bacon, and
+ make me a cup of coffee, but the thought of bacon and coffee made me wild.
+ I told him if he could make me a nice cup of green tea, and some milk
+ toast, or poach me an egg and place it on a piece of nice buttered toast,
+ and give me a little currant jelly, I thought I could swallow a mouthful.
+ Jim's eyes stuck out when I gave my order, which I had done while thinking
+ of home, and a tear rolled down his cheek, and he went out of the tent,
+ saying, &ldquo;All right, pard.&rdquo; I saw him tap his forehead with his finger,
+ point his thumb toward the tent, and say to the boys outside:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's got 'em! Head all wrong! Wants me to make him milk toast, poached
+ eggs, green tea, and currant jelly. And I offered him <i>bacon</i>. Sow
+ belly for a sick man! There isn't a loaf of bread in camp. Not an egg
+ within five miles. And milk! currant jelly! Why, he might as well ask for
+ Delmonico's bill of fare, but we have got to get 'em. I told him he should
+ have em, and, by mighty! he shall. Here, Mr. Horse-doctor, you stay and
+ watch him, and I and Company D here will saddle up and go out on the road
+ to a plantation, and raid it for delicacies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bet your life,&rdquo; says the Company &ldquo;D&rdquo; man, and pretty soon I heard a
+ couple of saddles thrown on two horses, and then there was a clatter of
+ horses feet on the frozen ground. I have thought of it since a good many
+ times, and have concluded that I must have dropped asleep. Any way, it
+ didn't seem more than five minutes before the tent nap opened and Jim came
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, straighten out here, now, you red-headed corpse, and try that
+ toast,&rdquo; said he, as he came in with a piece of hard-tack box for a tray,
+ and on it was a nice china plate, and a cup and saucer, an egg on toast,
+ and a little pitcher of milk, and some jelly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said, tasting of the tea, which was not much like army tea, &ldquo;you
+ never made this tea. A woman made that tea, or I'm a goat. And that toast
+ was toasted by a woman, and that egg was poached by a woman. Where am I?&rdquo;
+ I asked, imagining that I was home again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You guessed it the first time, pard,&rdquo; said Jim, as he threw the blanket
+ over my shoulders, as I sat up on the bunk to try and eat. &ldquo;The whole
+ thing was done by the rebel angel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rebel angel, Jim; what are you talking about? There ain't any rebel
+ angels,&rdquo; and I became weak and laid down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, there is a rebel angel, and she is a dandy,&rdquo; said Jim, as he covered
+ me up. &ldquo;She is out by the fire making milk toast for you. You see, I went
+ out to the Brown plantation, to try and steal an egg, and some bread, and
+ milk, but I thought, on the way out, as it was a case of life and death,
+ the stealing of it might rest heavy on your soul when you come to pass in
+ your chips, so I concluded to go to the house and ask for it. There was a
+ young woman there, and I told her the red-headed corporal that captured
+ the female smuggler, was dying, and couldn't eat any hard-tack and bacon,
+ and I wanted to fill him up on white folks food before he died, so he
+ could go to heaven or elsewhere, as the case might be, on a full stomach,
+ and she flew around like a kernel of pop-corn on a hot griddle, and picked
+ up a basket of stuff, and had the nigger saddle a mule for her, and she
+ came right to the camp with me, and said she would attend to everything.
+ She's a thoroughbred, and don't you make no mistake about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must have gone to sleep when Jim was talking about the girl, for I
+ dreamed that there was a million angels in rebel uniforms, poaching eggs
+ for me. Pretty soon I heard a rustle of female clothes, and a soft, cool
+ hand was placed on my forehead, my hair was brushed back, a perfumed
+ handkerchief wiped the cold perspiration from my face, and I heard the
+ rebel angel ask Jim what the doctor said about me. Jim told her what the
+ horse doctor had said about curing a horse that had been sick the same as
+ I was, and then she asked if we had not sent for the regular doc-doctor.
+ Jim said we had not thought of that. She asked what had been done for me,
+ and Jim told her about the French mustard episode, and the cayenne pepper
+ tea. I thought she laughed, but it had become dark in the tent, and I
+ couldn't see her face, but she told Jim to go after the regimental surgeon
+ at once, and Jim went out. The angel asked me how I felt, and I told her I
+ was all right, but she said I was all wrong. I thanked her for the trouble
+ she had taken to come so far, and she said not to mention it. She said she
+ had a brother who was a prisoner at the-North, and if somebody would only
+ be kind to him if he was sick, she would be well repaid. She said the last
+ she heard of him he was a prisoner of war at Madison, Wis., and she
+ wondered what kind of people lived there, away off on the frontier, and if
+ they could be kind to their enemies. That touched me where I lived, and I
+ raised up on my elbow, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why bless your heart, Miss, if your brother is a prisoner in old Camp
+ Randlll, in Madison, he has got a pic nic. That town was my home before I
+ came down here on this fool job. The people there are the finest in the
+ world. All of them, from old Grovernor Lewis, to the poorest man in town,
+ would set up nights with a sick person, whether he was a rebel or not.
+ Your brother couldn't be better fixed if he was at home. The idea of a man
+ suffering for food, clothing, or human sympathy in Madison, would be
+ ridiculous. There is not a family in that town,&rdquo; I said, becoming excited
+ from the feeling that any one doubted the humanity of the people of
+ Wisconsin, &ldquo;but would divide their breakfast, and their clothes, and their
+ money, with your brother, egad, I wish I was there myself. I will be
+ responsible for your brother, Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told me to lay down and be quiet, and not talk any more, as I was
+ becoming wild. She said she was glad to know what kind of people lived
+ there, as she had supposed it was a wilderness. In a few minutes Jim came
+ back and said the doctor was playing poker with some other officers, in a
+ captain's tent, and he didn't dare go in and break up the game, but he
+ spoke to the doctor's orderly, and he said I ought to take castor oil.
+ That didn't please the little woman at all, and she told Jim to go to the
+ poker tent and tell the doctor to come at once, or she would come after
+ him. It was not long before the doctor came stooping in to my pup tent.
+ His idea was to have all sick men attend surgeon's call in the morning,
+ and not go around visiting the sick in tents. He asked me what was the
+ matter, and I told him nothing much. Then he asked me why I wasn't at
+ surgeon's call in the morning. I told him the reason was that I was wading
+ in a swamp, after the rebels that ambushed some of our boys the day
+ before. &ldquo;Then you've got malaria,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Take some quinine tonight,
+ and come to surgeon's call in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/229.jpg" alt="She Gave Him a Piece of Her Mind 229 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The little woman, the rebel angel, got her back up at the coolness of the
+ doctor; and she gave him a piece of her mind, and then he called for a
+ candle, and he examined me carefully. When he got through, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is going to have a run of fever. He must be sent to the hospital. Jim,
+ go tell the driver to send the ambulance here at once, and you, Jim, go
+ along and see that this fellow gets to the hospital all right. He can't
+ live here in a tent, and I doubt if he will in the hospital.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That settled it. In a short time the ambulance came, and I got in and sat
+ on a seat, and the rebel angel got in with me, and we rode seven miles to
+ the hospital, over the roughest road a sick man ever jolted over, and I
+ would have died, if I could have had my own way about it, but the little
+ woman talked so cheerfully that when we arrived at the great building, I
+ should have considered myself well, only that my mind was wandering. All I
+ remember of my entrance to the hospital was that when we got out of the
+ ambulance Jim was there on his horse, leading the mule belonging to the
+ angel. Some attendants helped me up stairs, and down a corridor, where we
+ met two stretchers being carried out to the dead house with bodies on
+ them, and I had to sit in a chair and wait till clean sheets could be put
+ on one of the cots where a man had just died. The little woman told me to
+ keep up my courage, and she would come and see me often, Jim cried and
+ said he would come everyday, a man said, &ldquo;your bed is ready, No. 197,&rdquo; and
+ I laid down as No. 197, and didn't care whether I ever got up again or
+ not. I just had breath enough left to bid the angel good bye, and tell Jim
+ to see her safe home. Jim said, &ldquo;You bet your life I will,&rdquo; and the world
+ seemed blotted out, and for all I cared, I was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Varied Experiences in the Hospital&mdash;The Doctor Seems Sure
+ of My Death&mdash;I Suggest the Postponement of My Funeral&mdash;I Get
+ Very Sick of Gruel&mdash;I Go Back to my Regiment.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, last week I wound up in the hospital. When Jim, my old comrade,
+ and the rebel angel, left me, I to all intents and purposes. I supposed I
+ was going to sleep, but after I got well enough to know what was going on,
+ I found that for about ten days I had been out of my head. It was not much
+ of a head to get out of, but however small and insignificant a man's head
+ is, he had rather have it with him, keeping good time, than to have it
+ wandering around out of his reach. When I &ldquo;come to,&rdquo; as the saying is, it
+ only seemed as though I had been asleep over night, but I dreamed more
+ than any able-bodied man could have done in one night. I was what they
+ call un-. conscious, but I did a great deal of work during that period of
+ unconsciousness. One thing I did, which I was proud of, was to wind up the
+ war. I arranged it so that all of the bullets that were fired on each
+ side, were made of India-rubber, like those little toy balloons, and war
+ was just fun. The boys on both sides would fire at each other and watch
+ the rubber balloons hit the mark, and explode, and nobody was hurt, and
+ everybody laughed. There was no more blood. Everything was rubber and
+ wind. There was no one killed, no legs shot off, and the men on each side;
+ when not fighting with the harmless missiles, were gathered together, blue
+ and gray, having a regular picnic, and every evening there was a dance,
+ the rebels furnishing the girls. In my delirium I could see that my rebel
+ angel was dancing a good deal with the boys, and frequently with my
+ comrade, Jim, and I was pretty jealous. I made up my mind that I wouldn't
+ speak to either of them again. I would watch my balloon battles with a
+ good deal of interest, and think how much better and safer it was to fight
+ that way. Every day, when the battle was over, and the two sides would get
+ together for fun, I noticed when the bugle sounded for battle again, that
+ on each side the boys were terribly mixed, there being about as many
+ blue-coated Yankees among the gray rebels as there were rebels among the
+ Yankees, and after awhile it seemed as though all were dressed alike, in a
+ sort of &ldquo;blue-gray,&rdquo; and then they disappeared, and I recovered my senses.
+ Frequently, during my delerium and unconsciousness, I would feel my mouth
+ pulled open, and hear a spoon chink against my teeth, and I would taste
+ something bad going down my neck, and then my head would buzz as though a
+ swarm of bees had taken up their abode where my brain used to be.
+ Sometimes I would hear the clanking of a saber and a pair of Mexican
+ spurs, and feel a great big hand on my head, and I knew that was Jim, but
+ I couldn't move a muscle, or say a word. &ldquo;I guess he's dead, ain't he
+ doc?&rdquo; I would hear in Jim's voice, and the doc would say there was a
+ little life left, but not enough, to swear by. Then the doc would say,
+ &ldquo;You better come in about 10:30 tomorrow, as we bury them all at that
+ hour, and I guess he'll croak by that time.&rdquo; I tried to speak and tell
+ them that I was alive, and that I was going to get well, but it, wasn't
+ any use. I was tongue-tied. Again I would hear the sweet rustle of a
+ dress, and feel a warm hand on my head, and I knew that the rebel angel
+ had rode her mule to town to see me. Then I would try hard to tell her
+ that I was going to write a letter to the governor of Wisconsin, and ask
+ him to look out particularly for her brother, who was a rebel prisoner at
+ Madison, and take care of him if he was sick, but I couldn't say a word,
+ and after smoothing my hair a little while, she would give my cheek three
+ or four pats, just as a mother pats her child, and she would go away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning, a little after daylight, I woke up and looked around the ward
+ of the hospital. My eyes were weak, and I was hungry as a bear. I had to
+ try two or three times before I could raise my hand to my head, and when I
+ felt of my head it seemed awfully small. I could feel my cheek bones stick
+ out so that you could hang your hat on them. My cheeks were sunken, and my
+ fingers were like pipe-stems. I wondered how a man could change so in one
+ night. I saw two or three fellows over at the other end of the room, and I
+ thought I would get up and go over there and have some fun with them. I
+ wanted to know where my horse was, and where I was. I tried to raise up
+ and couldn't get any further than on my elbow. From that position I looked
+ around to see what was going on, and tried to attract the attention of
+ some attendant. Finally, I saw four fellows bringing a stretcher along
+ towards my cot. They had evidently been told by the doctor that I would be
+ dead in the morning, and having confidence in the word of the professional
+ man, had come to take me to the dead house, before the other sick man was
+ awake. As they came up to the foot of my cot and sat the stretcher down, I
+ thought I would play a joke on them. I pulled the sheet over my face, and
+ laid still. One of the men said, &ldquo;Two of us can lift it, as it is thinner
+ than a lathe.&rdquo; To be considered dead, when I was alive, was bad enough,
+ but to be called &ldquo;it&rdquo; was too much. I felt one of the men take hold of my
+ feet, and then I threw the sheet off my face and in a hoarse voice I said,
+ &ldquo;Say, Mr. Body-snotcher, you can postpone the funeral and bring me a
+ porter-house steak and some fried potatoes.&rdquo; Well, nobody ever saw a
+ couple of men fall over themselves and turn pale, as those fellows did.
+ Before I had given my order for breakfast, the two men had fallen back
+ over the stretcher and the two others were backing on as though a ghost
+ had appeared. But finally they came toward me and I convinced them that I
+ was not dead. They seemed hurt to know that I was still alive, and one of
+ them went off after the doctor, to enter a complaint, I supposed. The
+ doctor soon came and he was the only one that seemed pleased at my
+ recovery. He ordered some sort of gruel for me, but wouldn't let me have
+ meat and things. I took the gruel under protest but it did strengthen me.
+ I told the doctor I wanted him to send for my horse, because I wanted to
+ go out with the boys, but he said he guessed I wouldn't go out with the
+ boys very soon. He said I might sit up in bed a little while, and when I
+ did so I found that I did not have my clothes on, but was clothed in a
+ hospital night-gown, which was also used for a shroud for burial when a
+ fellow died. He said Jim and the girl would be in about 10 o clock, as he
+ had sent for them, and some of my comrades. I told him if I was going to
+ entertain company, and give a reception, I wanted my pants on, as I was
+ sure no gentleman could give a reception successfully without pants. The
+ doctor seemed sort of glad to see me taking an interest in human affairs
+ again, and so he let me put my pants and jacket on. I got a butcher to
+ shave me, and when ten o clock came I looked quite presentable for a
+ skeleton. I was sitting up in bed, with a little round zinc frame
+ looking-glass, noting the changes in my personal appearance, when a door
+ opened and Jim entered, dressed up in his best, with the rebel angel on
+ his arm, and followed by six boys from the regiment. They came in as
+ solemn as any party I ever saw. The angel looked as sad as I ever saw
+ anybody, and I thought she had probably heard that her brother was dead.
+ It did not occur to me that they had come to attend my funeral. They stood
+ there by the door, in that helpless manner that people always stand around
+ at a funeral, waiting for the master of ceremonies to tell them that they
+ can now pass in the other room and view the remains. I finally caught Jim
+ looking my way, and I waved a handkerchief at him. He gave me one look,
+ and jumped over two cots and came up to me with tears in his eyes, and a
+ package in his hand, and said, &ldquo;Pard, you ain't dead worth a cent,&rdquo; and
+ then he hugged me, and added, &ldquo;but there ain't enough left of you for a
+ full size funeral.&rdquo; Then he unrolled the package he had in his hand, and
+ dropped on the bed four silver-plated coffin handles. By that time the
+ girl, and the six boys had seen me, and they came over, and we had a
+ regular visit. They were all surprised to find me alive, as they had been
+ notified that I was on my last legs, and would be buried in the morning,
+ and the captain had detailed the six boys to act as pall-bearers and fire
+ a salute over the grave, while Jim and the girl were to act as mourners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it saves ammunition,&rdquo; said Jim. &ldquo;But how be I going to get these
+ coffin handles off my hands. There is no dependence to be placed on
+ doctors, anyway. When that doctor appointed this funeral, we thought he
+ knew his business, and I told the angel, say I, 'My pard ain't going to be
+ buried without any style, in one of those pine boxes that ain't planed,
+ and has got slivers on.' So I hired the hospital coffin-maker to
+ sand-paper the inside and outside of a box, and black it with
+ shoe-blacking, and I went to a store down town and bought these handles.
+ Of course, pard, I am glad you pulled through, and all that, but I want to
+ say to you, if you had croaked in the night, and been ready to bury this
+ A. m., you would have had a more stylish outfit than anybody, except
+ officers, usually get in this army, and the angel and I would have been a
+ pair of mourners that would have slung grief so your folks to home would
+ have felt proud of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The angel was tickled to see me alive, and suggested to Jim and the boys,
+ that it was easy to talk a fellow to death after he had been so sick, and
+ told them to go back to camp, and she would stay with me all day. So the
+ boys shook hands with me, and Jim had an attendant to roll my cot up to a
+ window, so I could see my horse when they rode away. The boys got on their
+ horses and Jim led my horse, and I could see that my pet had been fixed up
+ for the occasion. He had the saddle on, and it was draped with black, a
+ pair of boots were fastened in the stirrups, and my carbine was in the
+ socket. The idea was to have my horse, with empty boot and saddle tied
+ behind the wagon that took me to the cemetery where soldiers wind up their
+ career. It was not a cheerful thing to look at, and to think of, but it
+ did me good to see the old horse, and the boys ride away in good health,
+ and happy at my escape, and it encouraged me to make every effort to get
+ well, so I could ride with the gang. The rebel angel re-mained with me
+ till almost night, and superintended my eating. No person who has never
+ had a fever, can appreciate the appetite of a person when the fever
+ &ldquo;turns.&rdquo; I wanted everything that was ever eaten, and roast beef or turkey
+ was constantly in my mind. As anything of that kind would have made use
+ for Jim's coffin-handles, I had to put up with soups and gruels. The
+ doctor thought that this thin gruel was good enough, but it didn't seem to
+ hit the spot, and so the girl asked the doctor if he thought nice gumbo
+ soup and a weak milk punch wouldn't be pretty good for me. He said it
+ would, but nobody in the hospital could make gumbo soup, or milk punch.
+ She said she could, and she told me not to eat a thing until she came
+ back, and she would bring me a dish fit for the gods. She said she knew an
+ old colored woman in town, who cooked for a lady friend of hers, who had
+ some gumbo, and the lady had a little brandy that was seventy years old,
+ but she said the lady was a rebel, and I must overlook that. I told her I
+ didn't care, as I had got considerably mashed on all the rebels I had met
+ personally. She went out with a smile that would have knocked a stronger
+ man than I was silly, and I turned over and took a nap, the first real
+ sleep I had had in a week. I woke up finally smelling something that was
+ not gruel. O, I had got so sick of gruel. The angel handed me a glass of
+ milk punch, and told me to drink a swallow and a half. I have drank a
+ great many beverages in my lifetime, but I never swallowed anything that
+ was as good as the milk punch that rebel girl made for me. It seemed to go
+ clear to my toes, and I felt strong. Then she gave me a small soup plate
+ and told me to taste of the gumbo. I had never tasted gumbo soup before,
+ but I had no difficulty in mastering it. No description can do gumbo soup
+ justice, or explain to a person who has never tasted it the rich odor, and
+ palatable taste. The little that I ate seemed to make a man of me again,
+ instead of the weak invalid. Since then I have been loyal to southern
+ gumbo soup, and have always eaten it wherever it could be obtained, and I
+ never put a spoonful of it to my lips without thinking of the rebel girl
+ in the hospital, who prepared that dish for me. If I ever become a
+ glutton, it will be on gumbo soup, and if I am ever a drunkard, it will be
+ a milk-punch drunkard, and the soup and the punch must be prepared in the
+ South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, my experience after that, in the hospital, was about the same as a
+ hundred thousand other boys in blue, only few of the boys had such care,
+ and such food. The girl kept me supplied with gumbo soup and milk punch
+ until I could eat heartier food, and in a couple of days I got so I could
+ walk around the hospital. At home I had never been much of a hand to be
+ around with the sick, but experience had been a good teacher, and I found
+ that going around among the boys, and talking cheerfully did them good and
+ me too. I found men from my own regiment, that I did not know had been
+ sick. The custom was to make just as little show about sending sick men to
+ the hospital, as possible, hence they were often packed off in the night,
+ and the first their comrades would know of their illness would be a detail
+ to bury them, or a boy would suddenly appear in his company, looking pale
+ and sick, having been discharged from the hospital. If the men had known
+ how many of their comrades were sent to the hospital, it would have
+ demoralized the well ones. For ten days I visited around among the sick
+ men, telling a funny story to a group here and and cheering them up, and
+ writing letters home for fellows that were too weak to write. I learned to
+ lie a little bit in writing letters for the boys. One young fellow who had
+ his leg taken off, wanted me to write to his intended, and tell her all
+ about it, how the leg was taken off, and how he was sick and discouraged,
+ and would always be a cripple and a burden on his friends, etc. I wrote
+ the letter entirely different from the way he told me. I spoke of his
+ being wounded in the leg but that the care he received had made him all
+ right, and that he would probably soon have a discharge, and be home, and
+ make them all happy. I thought to myself that if she loved him as a girl
+ ought to, that a leg or two short wouldn't make any difference to her, and
+ there was no use of harrowing up her feelings in advance, and that he
+ could buy a cork leg before he got home, and may be she would never find
+ it out. I might have been wrong, but when he got an answer from that
+ letter he was the happiest fellow I ever saw in this world, and he
+ arranged at my suggestion, to stop over in New York and get a cork leg
+ before he went home. I have never learned whether the girl ever found out
+ that he had a cork leg, but if she did, and blames anybody, she can lay it
+ to me. Lots of the boys that wrote letters for wanted to detail all of
+ their calamities to their mothers and sisters and sweet-hearts, but I
+ worded the letters in a funny sort of way, so that the friends at home
+ would not be worried, and the answers the boys got would please them very
+ much. The hardest work I had was a couple of days writing letters for a
+ doctor, to relatives of boys who had died, detailing the sickness, death
+ and burial, and notifying friends that they could obtain the personal
+ effects of the deceased, clothing, money, pipes, knives, etc., by sending
+ express charges. It always seemed to me that if I had been running the
+ government I would have paid the express charges on the clothing of the
+ boys who had died, if I didn't lay up a cent. Finally I got well enough to
+ go back to my regiment, and one day I showed up at my company, and the
+ first man I met saluted me and said, &ldquo;Hello, Lieutenant.&rdquo; I told him he
+ did wrong to joke a sick man that way, and I went on to find Jim. He was
+ in our tent, greasing his shoes, and he looked up with a queer expression
+ on his face and said, &ldquo;Hello, Lieutenant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look a here.&rdquo; I said, as I grasped his greasy hand, &ldquo;what do you fellows
+ mean by calling me names, I have never done anything to deserve to be made
+ a fool of. Pard, what ails you anyway?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't they tell you,&rdquo; said Jim, as he scraped the mud on his other shoe
+ with a stick. &ldquo;The colonel has sent your name to the governor of Wisconsin
+ to be commissioned as second Lieutenant of the company. All the boys are
+ tickled to death, and they are going to whoop it up for you when your
+ commission comes. But this pup tent will not be good enough for you then,
+ and old Jim will have to pick up another pard. You won't have to cook your
+ bacon on a stick when you get your commsssion, and you can drink out of a
+ leather covered flask instead of a flannel covered canteen. But by the
+ great horn spoons I shall love you if you get to be a Jigadier Brindle,&rdquo;
+ and the old pard looked as though he wanted to cry like a baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I think the fellows are giving us taffy, and that there is
+ nothing in this Lieutenant business. But if there is, you will be my pard
+ till this cruel war is over, and don't you forget it,&rdquo; and I went along
+ the company street towards the colonel's tent, leaning on a cane, and all
+ the boys congratulated me, and I felt like a fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lieutenant, I am glad to see you back,&rdquo; said the Colonel, as I entered
+ his tent, and he showed it in his face. &ldquo;What is the foolishness, colonel?
+ I asked. The boys are all guying me. Can't I stay a private?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Thanksgiving Dinner with the &ldquo;Rebel Angel&rdquo;&mdash;She Gives Me a
+ World of Good Advice&mdash;Can an Officer be Detailed To Go And
+ Shovel Dirt?&mdash;My First Day As A Commissioned Officer.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last chapter of this history wound up in my interview with the
+ colonel, in which he told me that what the boys had said was true, and
+ that I had a right to to be called &ldquo;Lieutenant.&rdquo; He said there was a
+ vacancy in the commissioned officers of my company, caused, by some
+ discrepancy in regard to the ownership of a horse which an officer had
+ sold as belonging to him, when investigation showed that there was &ldquo;U. S.&rdquo;
+ branded on the horse. The colonel said he had looked over the company
+ pretty thoroughly, and while I was not all that he could desire in an
+ officer, there were less objections to me than to many others, and he had
+ recommended the governor of our state to commission me. He said he didn't
+ want me to run away with the idea that my promotion from private to a
+ commissioned office was for any particular gallantry, or that I was
+ particularly entitled to promotion, but I seemed the most available. It
+ was true, he said, that I had done everything I had been told to do, in a
+ cheerful manner, and had not displayed any cowardice, that he knew of,
+ though I had often admitted to him that I was a coward. He said he thought
+ few men knew whether they were cowards or not, until they got in a tight
+ place, and that most men honestly believed they were cowards, but they
+ didn't want others to know it, and they took pains to conceal the fact. He
+ said he had rather be considered a coward than a dare-devil of bravery,
+ for if he flunked when a chance come to show his metal, it wouldn't be
+ thought much of, and if he pulled through, and made a decent record for
+ bravery, he would get a heap of credit. He said he believed it took a man
+ with more nerve to do some things he had ordered me to do, than it did to
+ get behind a tree and shoot at the enemy, and he was willing to take his
+ chances on me. He congratulated me, and some of the other officers did the
+ same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was invited to sit into a game of draw poker with some of the officers.
+ I pleaded that I was not sufficiently recovered from my sickness to play
+ poker, and I went back to my tent to talk with Jim. I was thinking over
+ the new responsibilities that were about to come to me, and figuring on
+ the salary. A hundred and fifty dollars a month! It is cruel to raise the
+ salary of a poor devil from thirteen dollars a month to a hundred and
+ fifty. I wondered how in the world the government was ever going to get
+ that much out of me. Certainly I couldn't do any more than I had been
+ doing towards crushing the rebellion for thirteen dollars. And what would
+ I do with so much money? In my wildest dreams of promotion I had never
+ hoped to be a commissioned officer. I had thought sometimes, a week or two
+ after I enlisted, that if I was a general I could put down the rebellion
+ so quick the government would have lots of nations left on its hands to
+ spoil, but a few months active service had taken all that sort of nonsense
+ out of me, and I had been contented as a private. But here I was jumped
+ over everybody, and made an officer unbeknown to me, It made me dizzy. I
+ was not very strong anyway, and this thing had come upon me suddenly I was
+ thinking of the magnificent uniform I would have, and the fancy saddle and
+ bridle, and the regular officer's tent, with bottles of whiskey and
+ glasses, when Jim asked me if I wouldn't just hold that frying-pan of
+ bacon over the fire, while he cooked some coffee. He said we would just
+ eat a little to settle our stomachs, and then go out to Thanksgiving
+ dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanksgiving dinner,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;What are you talking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you know,&rdquo; said Jim, &ldquo;to-day is Thanksgiving? The 'angel' told me
+ last night to bring you out to the plantation to-day, and I was going
+ after you at the hospital if you hadn't showed up. She has received a
+ letter from her brother, who is a rebel prisoner at Madison, and he says a
+ Yankee hotel-keeper at Madison, that you had written to, had called at the
+ pen where they were kept, and had brought him a lot of turkey and fixings,
+ and offered to send him a lot for Thanksgiving, so the rebel boys could
+ have a big feed, and he says he is well and happy, and going to be
+ exchanged soon. And she wants us to come out and eat turkey and 'possum. I
+ had rather eat gray tom-cat than possum, but I told her we would come. So
+ we will eat a little bacon and bread, and ride out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all right Jim,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;We will go, but in my weak state I can't
+ be expected to eat possum. If there is anything of that kind to be eat,
+ Jim, you will have to eat it. However, I will do anything the rebel angel
+ asks me to do,&rdquo; I added, remembering her kindness to me when I was sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ride to the plantation, after several weeks confinement, was better
+ than medicine, and I enjoyed every step my proud horse took. The animal
+ acted as though he had been told of my promotion, but it was plain to me
+ that he acted proud, because he had been resting during my sickness. It
+ was all I could do to keep Jim alongside of me. He would fall back every
+ little while and try to act like an orderly riding behind an officer. I
+ had to discipline him before he would come up alongside like a &ldquo;partner.&rdquo;
+ I mention this Thanksgiving dinner in the army, in order to bring in a
+ little advice the rebel girl gave me, which I shall always remember. We
+ arrived at the old plantation house where the girl and her mother and some
+ servants were living, waiting for the war to close, so the men folks could
+ come back. The old lady welcomed us cordially, the girl warmly and the
+ servants effusively. The dinner was good, though not elaborate, except the
+ possum. That was elaborate, and next to gumbo soup, the finest dish I ever
+ tasted. After we had got seated at the table, the old lady asked a
+ blessing, and it was more like a prayer. She asked for a blessing upon all
+ of the men in both armies, and made us feel as though there was no
+ bitterness in her heart towards the enemies of her people. During the
+ dinner Jim told of my promotion, and the circumstance was commented on by
+ all, and after dinner the rebel angel took me one side, and said she had
+ got a few words of advice to give me. She commenced by saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now that you are to be a commissioned officer, don't get the big head.
+ During this war, we have had soldiers near us all the time, and I have
+ seen some splendid soldiers spoiled by being commsssioned. Nine out of ten
+ men that have received commissions in this locality, have been spoiled. I
+ am a few years older than you, and have seen much of the world. You are a
+ kind hearted man, and desire to treat everybody well, whether rich or
+ poor, yankee or confederate. If you let this commission spoil you, you are
+ not worthy of it. You will naturally feel as though you should associate
+ with officers entirely, but you will find in them no better companions
+ than you have found in the private soldiers, and I doubt if you will find
+ as true friends. Do not, under any circumstances, draw away from your old
+ friends, and let a barrier raise up between you and them. My observation
+ teaches me that the only difference between the officers and men in the
+ Union army, is that officers get more pay for doing less duty; they become
+ dissipated and fast because they can better afford it, they drink more,
+ put on style, play cards for money, and think the world revolves around
+ them, and that they are indispensible to success, and yet when they die,
+ or are discharged for cause, private soldiers take their place and become
+ better officers than they did, until they in turn become spoiled. I can
+ think of no position better calculated to ruin a young man than to
+ commission him in a cavalry regiment. Now take my advice. Do not run in
+ debt for a new uniform and a silver mounted sword, and don't put a stock
+ of whisky and cigars into your tent, and keep open house, because when
+ your whisky and cigars are gone, those who drank and smoked them will not
+ think as much of you as before, and you will have formed habits that will
+ illy prepare you for your work. You will not make any friends among good
+ officers, and you will lose the respect of the men who have known you when
+ you were one of them, but who will laugh at you for getting the big head
+ and going back on those who are just as good as you are, but who have not
+ yet attained the dignity of wearing shoulder straps. I meet officers every
+ day, who were good soldiers before they were raised from privates, and
+ they show signs of dissipation, and have a hard look, leering at women,
+ and trying to look <i>blasé</i>. They try to act as near like foreign
+ noblemen who are officers, as they can, from reading of their antics, but
+ Americans just from farms, workshops, commercial pursuits, and the back
+ woods and country villages of the north, are not of the material that
+ foreign officials are made of, and in trying to imitate them they only
+ show their shallowness. Do not, I beg of you, change one particle from
+ what you have been as a private soldier, unless it is to have your pants
+ fit better, and wear a collar. Of course, you will be thrown among
+ officers more than you have before. Imitate their better qualities, and do
+ not compete with them in vices. Always remember that when a volunteer army
+ is mustered out, all are alike. The private, who has business ability,
+ will become rich and respected, after the war, while the officer, who has
+ been promoted through favoritism, and who acquires bad habits, will keep
+ going down hill, and will be glad to drive a delivery wagon for the
+ successful private, whom he commanded and snubbed when he held a proud
+ position and got the big head. Now, my convalescent red-headed yankee, you
+ have the best advice, I know how to give a young man who has struck a
+ streak of luck. Go back to your friends, and may God bless you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I had never had any such advice as that before, and as Jim and me
+ rode back to camp that Thanksgiving evening, her words seemed to burn into
+ my alleged brain. I could see how easy it would be for a fellow to make a
+ spectacle of himself. What did a commission amount to, anyway, that a
+ fellow should feel above anybody. When we arrived in camp, and went into
+ our tent to have a smoke, the chaplain came in. I had not seen much of him
+ lately. When I was sick I felt the need of a chaplain considerably. Not
+ that I cared particularly to have him come and set up a howl over me, as
+ though I was going to die, and he was expected to steer me the right way.
+ But I felt as though it was his duty to look after the boys when they were
+ sick, and talk to them about something cheerful. But he did not show up
+ when I needed him, and when he called at our tent after I was well, there
+ wasn't that cordiality on my part that there ought to have been. He had a
+ package which he unrolled, after congratulating me on my recovery, and it
+ proved to be a new saber, with silver mounted scabbard and gold sword
+ handle. The chaplain said he had heard that I was to be commissioned, and
+ he had found that saber at a store down town, and thought I might want to
+ buy it. He said of course I would not want to wear a common government
+ saber, as it would look too rude..He said he could get that saber for
+ forty dollars, dirt cheap, and I could pay for it when I got my first pay
+ as an officer. I could see through the chaplain in a minute. He had
+ thought I would jump at the chance to put on style, and that he could make
+ ten or fifteen dollars selling me a gilt-edged saber. I thanked him
+ warmly, and a little sarcastically, for his great interest in the welfare
+ of my soul, in sickness and in health, but told him that I was going to
+ try and pull through with a common private's saber. I told him that the
+ few people I should kill with a saber, would enjoy it just as well to be
+ run through with a common saber. My only object was to help put down the
+ rebellion, and I could do it with ordinary plain cutlery, as well as
+ silver-mounted trappings. I said that to smear a silver-mounted saber all
+ over with gore, would spoil the looks of it. The chaplain went out, when a
+ drummer for a tailor shop came in with some samples, and wanted to make up
+ a new uniform for me, regardless of expense. I stood him off, and went to
+ bed, tired, and thought I had rather be a private than a general. The next
+ morning it was my turn to cook our breakfast, and I turned out and built a
+ fire, cut off some salt pork, and was frying it, when the orderly sergeant
+ came along and detailed Jim and me, with ten or a dozen others to go to
+ work on the fortifications. The rebels-were preparing to attack our
+ position, and the commanding officer had deemed it advisable to throw up
+ some earthworks. I told the orderly that he couldn't detail me to work
+ with a shovel, digging trenches, when I was an officer, but he said he
+ could, until I received my commission and was mustered in. I left my
+ cooking and went to the colonel's tent. He was just rolling out of his
+ bunk, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is it, Colonel? Can an officer be detailed to go and shovel dirt? I
+ have been detailed by the orderly, with a lot of privates, to report to
+ the engineer, to throw up fortifications. That does not strike me as
+ proper work for a commissioned officer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will have to go,&rdquo; said the colonel, as he stood on one leg while he
+ tried to lasso his other foot with a pants leg. &ldquo;It may be three months
+ before your commission will arrive, and then you will have to go to New
+ Orleans to be mustered out as a private and mustered in as an officer.
+ Until that time you will have to do duty as a private.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then what the devil did you say anything about my being commissioned for,
+ until the commission got here,&rdquo; said I, and I went back and finished
+ cooking breakfast for myself and Jim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our detail went down to the river, at the left of the line, and reported
+ to the engineer, and were set to work cutting down trees, throwing up
+ dirt, and doing about the dirtiest and hardest work that I had ever done.
+ As a private I could have done anything that was asked of me, but the
+ thought of doing such work, while all the boys were calling me
+ &ldquo;Lieutenant,&rdquo; was too much. I never was so crushed in my life. How glad I
+ was that I did not buy that gilt-edged saber of the chaplain. We had to
+ wear our side arms while at work, fearing an attack at any minute, and I
+ thought how ridiculous I would have looked with that silver-mounted saber
+ hanging to me, while I was handling a shovel like a railroad laborer. If
+ that detail was made to humiliate me, and reduce my proud flesh, that had
+ appeared on me by my sudden promotion, it had the desired effect, for
+ before night I was as humble an amateur officer as ever lived. I had
+ chopped down trees until my hands were blistered, and had shoveled dirt
+ until my back was broke, and at night returned to my tent too tired to eat
+ supper, and went to bed too weary and disgusted to sleep. And that was my
+ first day as a commissioned officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Sickness and Hospital Experiences Have Spoiled Me for a
+ Soldier&mdash;I Am Full of Charity, and Hope the War Will Cease&mdash;
+ We Have a Grand Attack&mdash;The Battle Lasted Ten Minutes&mdash;The
+ Rebel Angel's Brother is Captured.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I became satisfied, more each day, that my sickness, and experience in the
+ hospital, had spoiled me for a soldier. Being attended to so kindly by a
+ rebel girl and getting acquainted with her people, and hearing her mother
+ pray earnestly that the bloodshed might cease, sort of knocked what little
+ fight there was in me, out, and I didn't hanker any more for blood. It
+ seemed to me as though I could meet any rebel on top of earth, and shake
+ hands with him, and ask him to share my tent, and help eat my rations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact of being promoted to a commissioned office, didn't make me feel
+ half as good as I thought it was going to, and I found myself wishing I
+ could be a he sister of charity, or something that did not have to shoot a
+ gun, or go into any fight. I got so I didn't care whether my commission
+ ever arrived or not. The idea of respectable men going out to hunt each
+ other, like game, became ridiculous to me, and I wondered why the
+ statesmen of the North and South did not get together and agree on some
+ sort of a compromise, and have the fighting stop. I would have agreed to
+ anything, only, of course, whatever arrangement was made, it must be
+ understood that the South had no right to secede. Then I would think, Why,
+ that is all the South is fighting for, and if they concede that they are
+ wrong it is the same as though they were whipped, and of course they could
+ not agree to that. I tried to think out lots of ways to wind the business
+ up without fighting any more, but all the plans I made, maintained that
+ our side was right, and I concluded to give up worrying about it. But I
+ made up my mind that I would not fight any more. I was still weak from
+ sickness, and there was no fight in me. I thought this over a good deal,
+ and concluded that if I was called upon to go into another fight, where
+ there was any chance of anybody being killed, I would just have a relapse,
+ and go to the hospital again till it was over. I had heard of fellows
+ being taken suddenly ill when a fight was in prospect, and I knew they
+ were always laughed at, but I made up my mind that I had rather be laughed
+ at than to hurt anybody. There was no thought of sneaking out of a fight
+ because of the danger of being killed myself, but I just didn't want to
+ shoot any friends of that girl who had nursed me when I was sick. These
+ thoughts kept coming to me for a week or more, and one evening it was
+ rumored around that we were liable to be attacked the next day. Some of
+ our regiments had been out all day, and they reported the enemy marching
+ on our position, in force. The rebels that lived in town could not conceal
+ their joy at the idea that we were to be cleaned out. They would hint that
+ there were enough Confederates concentrating at that point to drive every
+ Yankee into the river, and they were actually preparing bandages and lint,
+ to take care of the Confederates who might be wounded. If we had taken
+ their word for it there wouldn't be a Yankee left in town, when the
+ Confederate boys begun to get in their work. I went to bed that night
+ resolved that I should not be so well in the morning, and would go to
+ surgeon's call, and be sent to the hospital. But I didn't like the way
+ those rebels talked about the coming fight. Egad, if they were so sure our
+ fellows were going to be whipped, may be I would stay and see about it. If
+ they thought any of our fellows were going to slink out, when they made
+ their brags about whipping us, they would find their mistake. However, if
+ I didn't feel very well in the morning, I would go to surgeon's call, but
+ I wouldn't go to the hospital. In the meantime, I would just see if I had
+ cartridges enough for much of a row, and rub up the old carbine a little,
+ for luck. Not that. I wanted to shoot anybody dead, but I could shoot
+ their horses, and make the blasted rebels walk, anyway. And so all that
+ evening I was part of the time trying to see my way clear to get out of a
+ regular fight, where anybody would be liable to get hurt, and again I was
+ wondering if my sickness had injured my eyesight so I couldn't take good
+ aim at the buttons on a rebel's coat. I was about half and half. If the
+ rebels would let us alone, and not bring on a disturbance, I was for peace
+ at any price, but gol-blast them, if they come fooling around trying to
+ scare anybody, I wouldn't go to a hospital, not much. I talked with Jim
+ about it, and he felt about as I did. He didn't want any more fighting,
+ and while he couldn't go to the hospital, he was going to try and get
+ detailed to drive a six mule team for the quartermaster, but he cleaned up
+ his gun all the same, and looked over his cartridges to see if they were
+ all right. We got up next morning, got our breakfast, and Jim asked me if
+ I was going to the hospital and I told him I would wait till afternoon. I
+ asked him if he was going to drive mules, and he said not a condemned
+ mule, not until the fight was over. There was a good deal of riding
+ around, orderlies, staff officers, etc. Artillery was moving around, and
+ about eight o clock some of our boys who had been on picket all night,
+ came in looking tired and nervous, saying they had been shot at all night,
+ and that the rebels had got artillery and infantry till you couldn't rest,
+ and they would make it mighty warm for us before night. Orders come to
+ each company, that no soldier was to leave camp under any circumstances,
+ to go to town or anywhere. I told Jim if he was going to drive mules, he
+ better be seeing the quartermaster sergeant, but he said he never was much
+ gone on mule driving, anyhow. But he said if he looked as sick as I did he
+ would go to the hospital too quick. I told him there wasn't anything the
+ matter with me. Pretty soon, over to the right, near the river, there was
+ a cannon discharged. It was not long before another went off around to the
+ left, and then a dozen, twenty, a hundred, all along the line. They were
+ rebel cannon, and pretty soon they were answered by our batteries. Then
+ there was a rattling of infantry, and the noise was deafening. I expected
+ at the first fire that our bugler would come out in front of headquarters
+ and blow for heaven's sake, for us to saddle up, but for three hours we
+ loafed around camp and no move was made. It was tiresome. We started to
+ play cards several times, but nobody could remember what was trumps, and
+ we gave that up. Some of our boys would sneak up on to a hill for a few
+ minutes, against orders, and come back and say that they could see the
+ fight, and it was which and tother. Then a few more would sneak off, and
+ after awhile the whole regiment was up on the hill, looking off to the
+ hills and valleys, watching rebel shells strike our earth works and throw
+ up the dust, and watching our shells go over to the woods where the rebels
+ were. Then I found myself hoping our shells were just paralyzing the
+ Johnnies. Presently the ambulances began to come by us, loaded with
+ wounded, and that settled it. When there was no fighting, and I was half
+ sick, and felt under obligations to a Confederate girl for taking care of
+ me, I didn't want any of her friends hurt, but when her friends forgot
+ them-selves, and come to a peaceable place, and began to kill off our
+ boys, friendship ceased, and I wondered why we didn't get orders to saddle
+ up and go in. We were all on the hill watching things, when the colonel,
+ who had been riding off somewhere, came along. We thought he would order
+ us all under arrest for disobeying orders, but he rode up to us, and
+ pointing to a place off to the right a mile or so, where there was a sharp
+ infantry fight, he said, &ldquo;Boys, we shall probably go in right there about
+ 3 p.m., unless the rebels are reinforced,&rdquo; and he rode down to his tent.
+ Well, after about twenty ambulances had gone by us with wounded soldiers,
+ we didn't care how soon we went in there. We watched the infantry and
+ artillery for another hour, as pretty a sight as one often sees. It was so
+ far away we could not see men fall, and it was more like a celebration,
+ until one got near enough to see the dead. Presently the regimental bugle
+ sounded &ldquo;Boots and saddles,&rdquo; and in a minute every man on the hill had
+ rushed down to his tent, even before the notes had died away from the
+ bugle. Nothing was out of place. Every soldier had known that the bugle <i>would</i>
+ sound sooner or later, and we had everything ready. It did not seem five
+ minutes before every company was mounted, in its street, waiting for
+ orders. Jim leaned over towards me and said, &ldquo;Hospital?&rdquo; and I answered,
+ &ldquo;Not if I know myself,&rdquo; and I patted my carbine on the stock. I said to
+ him, &ldquo;Six mule team?&rdquo; and he whispered back, &ldquo;Nary six mule team for the
+ old man.&rdquo; Then the bugle sounded the &ldquo;Assembly,&rdquo; and each company rode up
+ on to the hill and formed in regimental front facing the battle. Every eye
+ was on the place where the colonel had said we would probably &ldquo;go in.&rdquo;
+ There never was a more beautiful sight, and every man in the cavalry
+ regiment looked at it till his eyes ached. Then came an order to dismount
+ and every man was ordered to tighten up his saddle girth as tight as the
+ horse would bear it, and be sure his stirrup straps were too short rather
+ than too long. To a cavalry man these orders mean business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we mounted again, and a few noticed a flag off to the right
+ signaling. The colonel noticed it and coolly gave the order, &ldquo;fours right,
+ march.&rdquo; We went off towards the fighting, then right down by our own
+ cannon and formed in line behind the infantry, that was at work with the
+ enemy, the artillery firing over our heads at the confederates in the
+ woods. The noise was so loud that one could not hear his neighbor speak;
+ but above it all came a buggle note, and glancing to the left, another
+ cavalry regiment, and another, formed on our left. Another bugle note, and
+ to the right another cavalry regiment formed, and for half a mile there
+ was a line of horsemen, deafened by the waiting the command of some man,
+ through a bugle. If the rebels had time to notice those four regiments of
+ cavalry, fresh and ready for a gallop, they must have known that it was a
+ good time to get away. Finally, our artillery ceased firing and it seemed
+ still as death, except for the rattling of infantry in front of us. The
+ rebel artillery had ceased firing also, and a great dust beyond the woods
+ showed that they were getting away. The bugle sounded &ldquo;forward&rdquo; and that
+ line of cavalry started on a walk. The infantry in front ceased firing,
+ and went to the right of us at a double-quick, and the field was clear of
+ our men. While our cavalry was walking, they kept a pretty good line, each
+ man glancing to the right for a guide. As we neared the place where our
+ infantry had been stationed, it was necessary to break up a little to pass
+ dead and wounded without riding over them, and when falling back to keep
+ from hurting a wounded comrade, a look at the line up and down showed that
+ it was almost a mob, with no shape, but after get-ing forty rods, we
+ passed the field where men had fallen, and the order to &ldquo;close up, guide
+ right,&rdquo; was given, and in an instant the line was perfect. Then came the
+ order to trot, and we went a short distance, until the rebels could be
+ plainly seen behind trees, logs, and in line, firing. We halted and fired
+ a few rounds from carbines, and then dropped the carbines, on orders. For
+ a moment nothing was done, when officers ordered every man to draw his
+ revolver, and when the six charges had been fired, after near-ing the
+ enemy, to drop the revolver in the holster, and draw sabers, and every man
+ for himself, but to rally on the colors, at the sound of the bugle, and
+ not to go too far. Talk about being sick, and going to the hospital, or
+ driving mules! Coward as I was, and I knew it, there was something about
+ the air that made me feel that I wouldn't be in the hospital that day for
+ all the money in the world. All idea of being sorry for the enemy, all
+ charity, all hope that the war might close before any more men were
+ killed, was gone. After looking in the upturned faces of our dead and
+ wounded on the field, the more of the enemy that were killed the better.
+ It is thus that war makes men brutal, while in active service. They think
+ of things and do things that they regret immediately after the firing
+ ceases. The next ten minutes was the nearest thing to hell that I ever
+ experienced, and it seemed as though my face must look like that of a
+ fiend. I felt like one. The bugle sounded &ldquo;forward,&rdquo; and then there was an
+ order to trot, and the revolver firing began, with the enemy so near that
+ you could see their countenances, their eyes. Some of them were mounted,
+ others were on foot, some on artillery caissons, and all full of fight. It
+ did not take long to exhaust the revolvers, and then the sabers began to
+ come out, and the horrible word &ldquo;charge,&rdquo; came from a thousand throats,
+ and every soldier yelled like a Comanche Indian, the line spread out like
+ a fan, and every soldier on his own hook. Sabers whacked, horses run,
+ everybody yelled. Men said &ldquo;I surrender,&rdquo; &ldquo;What you jabbing at me for when
+ I ain't fighting no moah,&rdquo; &ldquo;Drop that gun, you Johnnie, and go to the
+ rear.&rdquo; Ones of pain and anguish, and awful sounds that a man ought never
+ to hear but once. The business was all done in ten minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of our men were killed and wounded, and many of theirs were treated
+ the same way. Those who could get away, got, and those we passed without
+ happening to hit them, were prisoners, because the infantry followed and
+ took them back to the rear. Jim and me stayed as near together as
+ possible, and we noticed one young Confederate on a mule. His left arm was
+ hanging limp by his side, and as Jim passed on one side of him and I on
+ the other, he said, as he held up his right hand, &ldquo;I dun got enough, and I
+ surrender.&rdquo; The thing was about over, the bugle having sounded the
+ &ldquo;recall,&rdquo; and we turned and went back with this Confederate. He was as
+ handsome a boy as ever fired a gun, and while he was pale from his
+ shattered left arm, and weak, he said, &ldquo;You gentlemen are all fine riders,
+ sir. You fought as well as Southern men, sir.&rdquo; That was a compliment that
+ Jim and me acknowledged on behalf of the northern army. He couldn't have
+ paid our regiment a higher compliment if he had studied a week. Then he
+ said: &ldquo;I was a fool to be in this fight. I was a prisoner and was only
+ exchanged last week. I might have remained at home on a furlough, but when
+ our army came along yesterday, and the boys said there was going to be a
+ fight, I took my sisters mule, the only animal on the place, and came
+ along, and now I am a cripple.&rdquo; I looked at the mule, and I said to Jim,
+ in a whisper, &ldquo;I hope to die if it isn't the angel's mule. That must be
+ her brother.&rdquo; Jim was going to ask him what his name was, when we neared
+ the place, where our regiment was forming and the surgeon of our regiment
+ came along, and I said, &ldquo;Doc, I wish you would take this young fellow and
+ fix up his arm nice. He is a friend of mine. Take him to our regimental
+ hospital.&rdquo; Then we went back to the regiment, the prisoners were taken
+ away, and after marching around through the woods for an hour we rode back
+ to our camp, and the battle was over. Two or three hours later I went over
+ to the regimental hospital and found the black-eyed confederate with his
+ arm dressed, and he was talking with our boys as though he belonged there.
+ Some one asked how he happened to be there, and the old doctor said he
+ believed he was a relative of one of our officers. Anyway he was going to
+ stay there. I gave him a bunch of sutler cigars, and left him, and an hour
+ later the &ldquo;angel&rdquo; showed up, pale as death, and wanted some one to go with
+ her to the battle held to help find the body of her dead brother. She said
+ he had arrived home from the North the morning before, and had gone into
+ the fight, and when the Confederates came back, defeated, past their
+ plantation, her brother was not among them, and she knew he was dead. I
+ have done a great many things in my life that have given me pleasure, but
+ no one that I remember of that made me quite so happy as I was to escort
+ the girl who had been so kind to me, to the hospital where her brother
+ was. His wound was not serious, and he sat on a box, smoking a cigar,
+ telling the boys the news from Wisconsin. He had just come from there,
+ where he was a prisoner, and he couldn't talk enough about the kindness of
+ the &ldquo;people of the nowth.&rdquo; His sister almost fainted when she found him
+ alive, then hugged him until I was afraid she would disturb his arm, and
+ then she sat by him and heard him tell of his visit to Wisconsin. Before
+ night he was allowed to go home with his sister on parole, and Jim and I
+ were detailed to go and help bury the dead of the regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Detailed to Drive a Six-Mule Team&mdash;I am Covered with
+ Red Mud&mdash;I am Sent on an Expedition of Cold-Blooded Murder&mdash;
+ I Make a Dozen ex-Confederate Soldiers Happy by Setting Them
+ Up in Business.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After the battle alluded to in my last chapter, it took us a week or more
+ to get brushed up, the dead buried, and everything ready to go to living
+ again. A battle to a regiment in the field is a good deal like a funeral
+ in a family at home. When a member of a family is sick unto death, all
+ looks dark, and when the sick person dies it seems as though the world
+ could never look bright again. Every time the relatives and friends look
+ at any article belonging to a deceased friend, the agony comes back, and
+ it is quite a while before there is any brightness anywhere, but in time
+ the tear-stained faces become smiling, the lost friend is thought of only
+ occasionally, and the world moves along just the same. So in the army. For
+ a few days the thought of comrades being gone forever, was painful, and no
+ man wanted to ride the horse whose owner had been killed, but within a
+ week the feeling was all gone, and if a horse was a good one he didn't
+ stay in the corral very long on account of some good fellow having been
+ shot off his back. The boys who couldn't remember what was trumps on the
+ day of the battle&mdash;-(and a soldier has got to be greatly interested
+ in something else to forget what is trumps) returned to their
+ card-playing, and no one would know, to look at them, that they had passed
+ through a pretty serious scare, and seen their comrades fall all around.
+ We told stories of our experience in the army and at home, and entertained
+ each other. I couldn't tell much, except what a good shot I was with a
+ shotgun and rifle, and I told some marvelous stories about hitting the
+ bull's eye. It got to be tiresome waiting around for my commission to
+ arrive, and I did not quite enjoy being a commissioned high private.
+ Everybody knew I had been recommended for a commsssion, and they all
+ called me &ldquo;Lieutenant,&rdquo; but all the same I was doing duty as a private.
+ For two or three clays I was detailed to drive mules for the
+ quartermaster, and that was the worst service I ever did perform. It
+ seemed as though the colonel wanted to prepare me for any service that in
+ the nature of things I was liable to be called upon to perform. I kicked
+ some at being detailed to drive a six-mule team, but the colonel said I
+ might see the time when I could save the government a million dol-lars by
+ being able to jump on to a wheel mule and drive a wagon loaded with
+ ammunition, or paymaster's cash, out of danger of being captured by the
+ enemy. So I went to work and learned to gee-haw a six-mule team of the
+ stubbornest mules in the world, hauling bacon, but there was no romance in
+ taking care of six mules that would kick so you had to put the harness on
+ them with a pitchfork, for fear of having your head kicked off. If I ever
+ get a pension it will be for my loss of character and temper in driving
+ those mules. I have been in some dangerous places, but I was never in so
+ dangerous a place, in battle, as I was one day while driving those mules.
+ One of the lead mules got his forward foot over the bridle some way, and I
+ went to fix it, and the team started and &ldquo;straddled&rdquo; me. As soon as I saw
+ that I was between the two lead mules, and that the team had started, I
+ knew my only-safety was in laying down and taking the chances of the three
+ pairs of mules and wagon going straight over me. To attempt to get out
+ would mix them all up, so I fell right down in the mud, which was about a
+ foot deep, and just like soft mortar. As the mules passed on each side of
+ me, every last one of them kicked at me, and I was under the impression
+ that each wheel of the wagon kicked at me, but I escaped everything except
+ the mud, and when I got up on my feet behind the wagon, the quartermaster,
+ who was ahead on horseback, had stopped the team. He called a colored man
+ to drive, and told me I could go back to the regiment. I tried to sneak in
+ the back way, and not see anybody, but when I passed the chaplain's tent a
+ lot of officers, who had been sampling his sanitary stores, come out, and
+ one of them recognized me, and they insisted on my stopping and talking
+ something with them. Honestly, there was not an inch of my clothing but
+ was covered with, red mud, that every soldier remembers who has been
+ through Alabama. They had fun with me for half an hour and then let me go.
+ I have never been able to look at a mule since, without a desire to kill
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had said so much about my marksmanship with a rifle, that one day I was
+ sent for by the colonel. He said he had heard I was a crack shot with the
+ rifle, and I admitted that I was a pretty good shot. He asked me if I
+ could hit a man's eye every time at ten paces. I told him I was almost
+ sure I could. He said he had a duty that must be performed by some man
+ that was an excellent shot, and I might report at once with forty rounds
+ of ammunition. I don't know when I had been any more startled than I was
+ at the colonel's questions, and his manner. Could it be that he had some
+ secret expedition of murder that he wanted to send me on. I had never
+ deliberately aimed at a man's eye, and if there was anybody to be killed I
+ would be no hand to do it in cold blood. It seemed as though I had rather
+ give anything than to kill a man, but that was evidently the business the
+ colonel had in his mind. Was it a lot of prisoners that were to be killed
+ in retaliation for some of our men who had been treated badly by the
+ enemy. I reported shortly, with my carbine and forty cartridges, and the
+ colonel told me to go to a certain place on the bank of the river, a mile
+ away, and report to the chaplain, who would be there to see that
+ everything was done properly. Then when I started off I heard the colonel
+ say to the adjutant that there were about forty to be killed, and while it
+ seemed cruel, it had to be done, and he hoped they would suffer as little
+ as possible. If I could have had my way, I wouldn't have gone a step. I
+ reflected on the pained look on the colonel's face, and wondered why I was
+ picked out for all these sad events, but I thought if the chaplain was
+ there everything would be all right. Arriving at the placed I found the
+ chaplain sitting on a stump, on a big bluff overlooking the river. He
+ sighed as I came up and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Death is always a sad thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that no one appreciated it more than I did, and I sighed also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said he, as he took a chew of navy plug tobacco, &ldquo;when death is
+ necessary, we should make it as painless as possible, I have been studying
+ this matter over a good deal, and trying to figure out how to make the
+ death the least painful to these poor victims, and it has occurred to me
+ that if we place them on the edge of the precipice, and you shoot them
+ through the brain, while at the same time I push them, they will fall down
+ a hundred feet into the river, and if they are not killed instantly by
+ having the brain blown out, they will certainly drown. How does that
+ strike you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought the chaplain was about the most heartless cuss I ever heard talk
+ about killing people, but I said that seemed to me to be the best way, but
+ a cold chill went over me as I thought of shooting anybody through the
+ head and the chaplain pushing him down the cliff into the water. I was
+ just going to ask him what the men had done, when he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, there they come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked, and a lot of colored men were leading about forty old
+ back-number horses and mules, afflicted with glanders and other diseases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are the niggers to be killed?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; said the chaplain. &ldquo;The horses and mules.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was never so relieved in all my life as I was when I found that my
+ excellent marksmanship was to be expended on animals instead of human
+ beings. But I did feel hurt, the idea of a brevet officer, a man qualified
+ to do deeds of daring, being detailed one day to drive mules and the
+ next-to shoot sick horses. But I decided to do whatever I had to do, well,
+ and so preparations were made for the executions. The glandered horses
+ were brought out first, and then the ones with sore backs. Many of them
+ were first-rate horses, their only fault being sores made from the
+ saddles, and as it would take months to cure them up, and as the army was
+ going to move soon, it had been decided to kill them rather than leave
+ them to fall into the enemy's hands, or take them along to be cured on the
+ march. I shot about a dozen glandered horses, that being the largest game
+ I had ever killed, and the bodies fell down into the river. Then there was
+ a mule that was ugly, and it occurred to me I would have some fun with the
+ chaplain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were outside the lines, and quite a number of men had gathered from the
+ plantations, on hearing the firing, to see what was up. I suggested to the
+ chaplain that it was a shame to kill so many good horses, when they might
+ be of use to some of the planters, but he said they were all rebels, and
+ it was not the policy of the government to set them up in business, by
+ giving them horses to use tilling crops. I argued that the men had come
+ home from the confederate army&mdash;this was in 1864&mdash;either
+ discharged for wounds or disability, or paroled prisoners, and they were
+ anxious to go to work, but that they hadn't a dollar, and our army had
+ skinned every horse and mule on their places, and the niggers had gone, so
+ that a horse would be a God-send to them. But the chaplain wouldn't hear
+ to it. The men, who had collected, were mostly too proud to ask for a
+ horse from a Yankee, but I could see that they did not like to see the
+ animals killed. I thought if I could get the chaplain, who had been sent
+ out to the execution as a sort of humane society, to see that the animals
+ were killed easy, to go back to camp and leave me alone with the horses, I
+ could kill them or not, as I chose. They brought out the ugly mule next,
+ and my idea was to shoot the mule through the tip of the ear, while the
+ chaplain stood near with a rail to push it over the bank, and maybe the
+ mule would flax around and kick the chaplain up a tree, or scare him so he
+ would leave. I took deliberate aim at the mule's ear, told the chaplain to
+ push hard with the rail so the corpse would be sure to go over the cliff,
+ and fired. Well, I have never seen such a scene in all my life. The mule
+ seemed to squat down, when the bullet hit the top of his ear, then he
+ brayed so loud that it would raise your hat right off your head, then he
+ jumped into the air and whirled around and kicked in every direction with
+ all four feet at once, fell down and rolled over towards the chaplain, and
+ got up, and seeming to think the chaplain was the author of the misery,
+ started for him, and that good man dodged behind trees until he got a
+ chance to climb up one, which he did, and sat on a limb and shook his fist
+ at the mule and me. He used quite strong language at me for not killing
+ the animal dead. Finally the niggers caught the mule and the chaplain
+ dismounted from the limb, and came to me. I told him my carbine was out of
+ order, and I should have to take it apart and fix it, and that there was
+ no knowing whether it would shoot where I aimed it or not, after it was
+ fixed, and I might have trouble with the rest of the horses. It would take
+ an hour at least to fix the gun. He said he guessed he would go back to
+ camp, and leave me to finish up the slaughter, and that was what I wanted.
+ The colored men were anxious to go back too, so I let them tie the horses
+ to trees, and all go back except one, whom I knew. After they had all gone
+ I went up to the dozen southern men who had been watching the proceedings,
+ and asked one who was called colonel by the rest, if he didn't think it
+ was wrong to kill the horses when by a little care they could be of much
+ use in tilling crops. &ldquo;Well, sah,&rdquo; said he with dignity. &ldquo;If it is not
+ disloyalty, sah, for a southern gentleman to criticize anything that a
+ yankee does, I should say, sah, that it was a d&mdash;&mdash;d shame, sah,
+ to steal our horses, and after using them up, sah, kill them in cold
+ blood, sah. Each one of those animals sah, would be a gold mine, sah, at
+ this time, to us who have come from the wah, sah, destitute, with nothing
+ but our bare hands to make a crop, to keep our families from want, sah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other gentlemen nodded at what the colonel had said, as though that
+ was about their sentiments. I told him that I felt about that way myself,
+ but there was an objection. If I gave the horses away, for use on the
+ plantations, and the animals should be used hereafter in the confederate
+ army, it would not only be wrong, but I would be liable to be dismissed
+ from the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel said he should want to be dismissed from the Yankee army if he
+ was in it, but I might feel different about it. But he said he would
+ pledge me his word as a Southern gentleman, that if the animals could be
+ lent to them, they should never be used for war purposes. He said he was
+ poor, and his friends there were poor, but they would not take a horse as
+ a gift from a stranger, but if I would lend them the horses for a year,
+ they would use them, and return them to the proper officer a year hence,
+ if the army was yet in existence, or they would take them in exchange for
+ horses that had previously been stolen from them by our army. He said
+ there was not a gentleman present but had lost from two to a dozen horses
+ since the army had been in their vicinity. I admired the dignity and
+ honesty of the old gentleman, and I knew mighty well that we had picked up
+ every horse we could find, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, here are about thirty horses I have been ordered to kill. If I
+ do not kill them I take a certain responsibility. I feel under obligations
+ to many Southern people for courtesies, and I feel that the nursing I
+ received during a recent sickness, from one of your Southern ladies, about
+ the same as saved my life. I believe the war is very near over, and that
+ neither you nor our men will have occasion for much more active service.
+ You have come home to your desolate plantations, and found everything
+ gone. This is the fate of war, but it is unpleasant all the same. If you
+ can use these animals for your work, in raising crops, you may take them
+ in welcome, and if there is any cussing, I will stand it. My advice would
+ be to take them to some isolated place on your plantation, and keep them
+ out of sight for a time. Our army will move within a week, and perhaps
+ never come back here. The animals are branded 'U. S.' which will always
+ remain. If the horses are found in your possession, later, you may have to
+ say that they were given to you by an agent of the quartermaster. If they
+ are taken from you, grin and bear it. If you are permitted to keep them,
+ and they do you any good, I shall be very glad. If I get hauled over the
+ coals for giving aid and comfort to the enemy, I will lie out of it some
+ way, or stand my punishment like a little man. The horses are yours, as
+ far as I am concerned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sah, you are a perfect gentleman, sah,&rdquo; said the colonel, as he
+ took my hand and shook it cordially. &ldquo;And I should be proud to entertain
+ you at my place, sah. We have got little left, sah, but you are welcome to
+ our home at any time. I am an old man, with a bullet in my leg. Two of my
+ boys are dead, in Virginia, sah, and I have one boy who is a prisoner at
+ the north. If he comes home alive, we will be able to make a living and
+ have a home again. The war has been a terrible blow to us all, sah. I
+ reckon both sides, sah, have got about enough, and both sides have made
+ cussed, fools of themselves. When this affair is settled, sah, the north
+ and south will be better friends than ever, sah. I wish you a long life,
+ sah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other gentlemen expressed thanks, and they picked out two or three
+ horses apiece and led them away, it seemed to me as happy a lot of
+ gentlemen as I ever saw. I called the colored man, and we started for
+ camp. For a five dollar bill, and a promise to always take a deep interest
+ in the colored man's welfare, I got his promise that he would never tell
+ anybody about my giving the horses away, and for nearly a year he kept his
+ promise. I went back to headquarters and reported that the animals had
+ been disposed of, and that evening I was invited to set into a poker game
+ with some of the officers, and when we got up I had won over a hundred
+ dollars. I looked upon the streak of luck as a premium for my kindness to
+ the gentlemen who took the horses, but some of the officers seemed to have
+ a suspicion that I concealed cards up my sleeve. It is thus that the best
+ of us are misunderstood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Demonstrate that Gambling Does Not Pay&mdash;I Cause a General
+ Stampede&mdash;Christmas in the Pine Woods of Alabama&mdash;Millions
+ of Dollars, but no Christmas Dinner.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I went away from the party of officers, where we had been playing
+ draw-poker, with a hundred dollars in my pocket, which I had won from men
+ who thought they were pretty good poker players, I felt as though I owned
+ the earth. I had my hand in my pocket, hold of the roll of greenbacks, and
+ in that way constantly realized that I was no common pauper. I had never
+ thought that I was an expert at cards, but this triumph convinced me that
+ there was more money to be made playing poker than in any other way. I
+ figured up in my mind that if I could win a hundred dollars a night, and
+ only played five nights a week, I could lay up two thousand dollars a
+ month. To keep it up a year would make me rich, and if the war lasted a
+ couple of years I could go home with money enough to buy out the best
+ newspaper in Wisconsin. It is wonderful what a train of thought a young
+ man's first success in gambling, or speculation, brings to him. I went to
+ bed with my hundred dollars buttoned inside my flannel shirt, and dreamed
+ all night about holding four aces, full hands, and three of a kind. All
+ that night, in my sleep, I never failed to &ldquo;fill&rdquo; when I drew to a hand. I
+ made up my mind to break every officer in the regiment, at poker, and then
+ turn my attention to other regiments, and win all the money the paymaster
+ should bring to the brigade. I got up in the morning with a headache, and
+ thought how long it would be before night, when we could play poker again,
+ and I wondered why we couldn't play during the day, as there was nothing
+ else going on. It got rumored around the regiment that I had cleaned the
+ officers out at poker the night before, and the boys seemed glad that a
+ private had made them pay attention. I had not yet got my commsssion, and
+ so any victory I might achieve was considered a victory for a private
+ soldier. Several of the boys congratulated me. The nearest I ever come to
+ quarreling with my old partner, Jim, was over this poker business. I
+ showed him my roll, and told him how I had cleaned the officers out, and
+ instead of feeling good over it, Jim said I was a confounded fool. I tried
+ to argue the matter with Jim, but he couldn't be convinced, and insisted
+ that they had made a fool of me, and had let me win on purpose, and that
+ they would win it all back, and all I had besides. He said I had better
+ let the chaplain take the hundred dollars to keep for me, and stay away
+ from that poker game, and I would be a hundred ahead, but I didn't want
+ any second-class chaplain to be a guardian over me, and I told Jim I was
+ of age, and could take care of myself. Jim said he thought I had some
+ sense before I was commsssioned, but it had spoiled me. He said in less
+ than a week I would be borrowing money of him. I knew better, and went
+ around camp with my thumbs stuck in my armholes, and felt big. It was an
+ awful long day, but I put in the time thinking how I would draw cards, and
+ bet judiciously, and finally night came, and I went over to the major's
+ tent, where the officers usually congregated. I was early, and had to wait
+ half an hour before the crowd showed up. As they came in each had
+ something to say to me. &ldquo;Here's the man who walked off with our wealth
+ last night,&rdquo; said one. &ldquo;Here's our victim,&rdquo; said another. &ldquo;We will send
+ him to his tent tonight without a dollar.&rdquo; They chaffed me a good deal,
+ but I made up my mind that I could play as well as they could, and some of
+ them were old fellows that had played poker before I was born. Well, we
+ went to work, and the first hand I got I lost ten dollars. It was the
+ history of all smart Aleck's, and there is no use of going into details.
+ In less than an hour they had won the hundred dollars, and fifty that I
+ had sewed inside my shirt to keep for a rainy day, and they had joked me
+ every time I bet until I was exasperated to such an extent that I could
+ have killed them. Winning or losing money with them was a mere pastime,
+ and they seemed to enjoy losing about as much as winning. I was too proud,
+ or too big a fool to leave the game when I had lost all I had, and I
+ borrowed a little of each of them, and lost it, and then I said I was
+ tired and I guessed I would go to bed, and I went out, dizzy and sick at
+ heart, and the officers laughed so I could hear them clear to my tent. On
+ the way to my tent, and as I walked around for half an hour before going
+ there, I thought over what a fool I was, how I had forgotten all the good
+ advice ever given me by my friends. Knowing that I was not intended by
+ nature for a gambler, I had gone in with my eyes open, made a temporary
+ success, got the big head, as all boys do, and gone back and laid down my
+ bundle, and become the laughing stock of the whole crowd. I figured up
+ that I was just an even hundred dollars out of pocket, and decided that I
+ would never try to get it back. I would simply swear off gambling right
+ there, forget that I knew one card from another, pay up my gambling debts
+ when I got my first pay, and never touch a card again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the wisest conclusion that I ever come to. After I had walked
+ around until my head cleared off a little, I went in the tent sly and
+ still, to go to bed without letting Jim hear me. I was ashamed, and didn't
+ want to talk. I heard Jim roll over on his bunk, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bet ten dollars, pard, that you lost all you had.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim, I won't bet with you. I have sworn off betting intirely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help yourself,&rdquo; said Jim, as he reached over his greasy old pocketbook to
+ me. &ldquo;Take all you want, now that you have come to your senses. But you
+ must admit that what I said about your being a fool, was true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and an idiot, and an ass,&rdquo; I said, as I handed back Jim's money.
+ &ldquo;But that settles it. I will never gamble another cent's worth as long as
+ I live, and if I see a friend of mine gambling, I will try and break him
+ of the habit. There is nothing in it, and I went to sleep, and didn't
+ dream any more about winning all the money in camp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days before Christmas our cavalry, consisting of a full brigade,
+ started on a raid, or a march through the enemy's country, and as I could
+ not act as an officer very well, before my commission arrived, and as the
+ colonel seemed to hate to see me in the ranks when I was looked upon as an
+ officer, he sent me to brigade headquarters on a detail to carry the
+ brigade colors. The brigade colors consisted of a blue guidon, on a pole.
+ The butt end of the pole, or staff, was inserted in a socket of leather
+ fastened to my stirrup, and I held on to the staff with my right hand when
+ on the march, guiding my horse with my left hand, When the command halted
+ the colors were planted in the ground in front of the place which the
+ brigade commander had selected. On the march I rode right behind the
+ brigade commander and his staff, with the body guard to protect the
+ precious colors. I was glad of this position, because it took me among
+ high officials, and if there was anything I doted, on it was high
+ officers. The colonel had told me that I must be on my good behavior, and
+ salute the officers of the staff, whenever they came near me. He said the
+ brigade commander was a strict disciplinarian, and wouldn't put up with
+ any monkey business. The first hour of my service as color bearer came
+ near breaking up the brigade. I was perhaps forty feet behind the brigade
+ commander and his staff, riding as stiff as though I was a part of the
+ horse, and feeling as proud as though I owned the army. Suddenly the
+ colonel and staff turned out of the road, and faced to the rear, and
+ started to ride back to one of the regiments in the rear. I saw them
+ coming, and felt that I must salute them. How to do it was a puzzle to me.
+ If I saluted with my left hand, it would be wrong, besides I would have to
+ drop the reins, and my horse might start to run, as he was prancing and
+ putting on as much style as I was. If I saluted with my right hand, I
+ should have to let go the flag staff. The salute must be sudden, so I
+ could grasp the staff very quick, before it toppled over. It took a great
+ head to decide what to do, and I had to decide quick. Just as the brigade
+ commander got opposite me I let go the flag stair, brought my right hand
+ quickly to the right eye, as nice a salute as a man ever saw, and returned
+ it to grab the flag stall. But it was too late. As soon as my right hand
+ let go of the staff, it fell over and the gilt dart on the end of the
+ staff struck the general's horse in the flank, he jumped sideways against
+ the adjutant-general's horse, and his horse fell over the brigade
+ surgeon's horse, the general's horse run under a tree, and brushed the
+ general off, and the whole staff was wild trying to hold their horses, and
+ jumping to catch the general's horse, and pick the general off the ground.
+ In the meantime my horse had got frightened at the staff and flag that was
+ dragging on the ground, with one end in the socket in the stirrup, the
+ pole tickling him in the ribs, and he began to dance around, and whirl,
+ and knock members of the color-guard off their horses, and they stampeded
+ to the woods leaving me in the road, on a frightened horse, whirliing
+ around, unmanageable, the start striking trees and horses, until the staff
+ was broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regiment in the rear of us saw the commotion, saw the general
+ dismounted, and the colors on the ground, and a general stampede in front,
+ and, thinking the general and staff had been ambushed by the rebels, and
+ many killed, the colonel ordered his men forward on a charge, and, in less
+ time than it takes to write it, the woods were full of charging soldiers,
+ looking for an imaginary enemy, a surgeon had opened up a lot of remedies,
+ and all was confusion, and I was the innocent cause of it all. I had seen
+ my mistake as soon as the flag staff knocked the general off his horse,
+ and when I dismounted and picked up the flag, and the pieces of the staff,
+ and found myself surrounded by excited troops, I wondered if the general
+ would pull his revolver and shoot me himself, or order some of the
+ soldiers to kill me. For choice I had rather have been killed by a volley
+ from a platoon of soldiers, but I recognized the fact that the general had
+ a perfect right to kill me. In fact I wanted him to shoot me. I was
+ trimming the limbs off a sapling for a makeshift flag staff, when I saw
+ the crowd open, and the general walked towards me. His face was a trifle
+ pale, except where the red clay from the road covered it, and I felt that
+ the next moment or two would decide in what manner I was to meet my doom.
+ I remembered what the colonel had told me, about the general being a
+ strict disciplinarian, and wondered if it wouldn't help matters if I
+ should fall on my knees and say a little prayer, or ask him to spare my
+ life. I wondered if I would be justified in drawing my revolver and trying
+ to get the drop on the general. But I had no time to think it over, for he
+ come right up to me, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, my young friend, for the trouble and annoyance I have
+ caused you. I should have known better than to ride so near you, and
+ frighten your horse, when you had only one hand to guide the animal. Are
+ you hurt? No; well, I am very glad. Ah, the flag staff is broken! Let me
+ help you tack the flag on the sapling. Orderly, bring me some nails. Let
+ me whittle the bark off the sapling, so it will not hurt your hands. When
+ we get into camp tonight, and the wagons come up, I will see that you have
+ another staff. There, don't feel bad about it. There is no damage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bless his soul! I could, have hugged him for his kindness. When he came
+ towards me, I was mad and desperate, and when he spoke kind words to me,
+ my chin trembled, and I felt like a baby. He stopped the brigade for half
+ an hour, to help fix up my flag, and all the time talked so kindly to me,
+ that when the thing was fixed, I felt remorse of conscience, and said:
+ &ldquo;General, I am entirely to blame myself. I tried to perform the impossible
+ feat of saluting you and holding the colors at the same time, which I am
+ satisfied now cannot be done successfully. Lay it all to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew it,&rdquo; said the good old general, &ldquo;and I was going to tell you that
+ you are not expected to salute anybody when you have the colors. You are a
+ part of the flag, then. You will learn it all by and by,&rdquo; and he mounted
+ his horse and rode away about his business, as cool as though nothing had
+ happened, and left me feeling that he was the best man on earth. Further
+ acquaintance with the old man taught me that he was one of nature's
+ noblemen. He was an Illinois farmer, who had enlisted as a private, and
+ had in time become colonel of his regiment, and had been placed in command
+ of this brigade. Every evening he would take an axe and cut up fire-wood
+ enough for headquarters, and he was not above cleaning off his horse if
+ his servant was sick, or did not do it to suit, and frequently I have seen
+ him greasing his own boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days out, and we were in the pine woods of Alabama, with no habitation
+ within ten miles. After a day's march we went into camp in the woods, and
+ it was the afternoon before Christmas. The young pines, growing among the
+ larger ones, were just such little trees as were used at home for
+ Christmas trees, and within an hour after getting the camp made, every man
+ thought of Christmas at home. The boys went off into the woods and got
+ holly, and mistletoe, and every pup tent of the whole brigade was
+ decorated, and they hung nose bags, grain sacks, army socks and pants on
+ the trees. Around the fires stakes had been driven to hang clothes on to
+ dry, and as night came and the pitch pine fires blazed up to the tops of
+ the great pines, it actually looked like Christmas, though there was not a
+ Christmas present anywhere. After supper the brigade band began to play
+ patriotic airs, with occasionally an old fashioned tune, like &ldquo;Old
+ Hundred,&rdquo; the woods rung with music from the boys who could sing, and
+ everybody was as happy as I ever saw a crowd of people, and when it came
+ time to retire the band played &ldquo;Home, Sweet Home,&rdquo; and three thousand
+ rough soldiers went to bed with tears in their eyes, and every man dreamed
+ of the dear ones at home, and many prayed that the home ones might be
+ happy, and in the morning they all got up, stripped the empty Christmas
+ stockings off the evergreen trees, put them on, and went on down the red
+ road, and at noon the army entered Montgomery, Alabama, the first capital
+ of the confederate states, took possession of the capital building in
+ which were millions of dollars of confederate money and bonds. Every
+ soldier filled his pockets and saddle bags with bonds and bills of large
+ denominations. It was a poor soldier that could not count up his half a
+ million dollars, but with all the money no man could buy a Christmas
+ dinner. A dollar in greenbacks would buy more than all of the wagon loads
+ of confederate currency captured that day. And yet the people of
+ Montgomery looked upon the arrival of the Yankees much as they would the
+ arrival of a pestilence. However, it was not many days before a better
+ understanding was arrived at, and Yankee blue and Confederate gray got
+ mixed up, and acquaintances were made that ripened into mutual respect and
+ in some cases love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Go on a Scouting Expedition&mdash;My Horse Dies of Poison&mdash;
+ I Turn Horse-Thief&mdash;I Capture a Church, Congregation, and
+ Ministers, but I Spare the Communion Wine.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, the last chapter left me with a million dollars, more or less,
+ of confederate money in my possession, and yet I had not enough to buy a
+ square meal. I think there was no one thing that caused, the people of the
+ confederate states, outside of their army, to realize the hopelessness of
+ their cause, along in '64, as much as the relative value of confederate
+ money and greenbacks. Of course the confederate soldiers, poor fellows,
+ realized the difference some, when they could get hold of greenbacks, but
+ the people of the south who did not have rations furnished them, and who
+ had to skirmish around and buy something to live upon, early learned that
+ a greenback was worth &ldquo;two in the bush,&rdquo; as it were. No community in the
+ south was more loyal to the confederacy than the people of Montgomery,
+ Alabama. They tried to use confederate currency as long as there was any
+ hope, and they tried hard to despise the greenbacks; but when it got so
+ that a market basket full of their own currency was looked upon with
+ suspicion by their own dealers in eatables, and a greenback was sought
+ after by the dealer, and its possessor was greeted with a smile while the
+ overloaded possessor of confederate currency was frowned upon, more in
+ sorrow than in anger, however, a wild desire took possession of the people
+ to get hold of the hated greenbacks; and a soldier or army follower who
+ had a good supply of greenbacks was met more than half way in
+ reconciliation; and little jobs were put up to get the money that made
+ many ashamed, but they had to have greenbacks. Many would have given their
+ lives if confederate money could have been as good as the money of the
+ invaders, but it was not and never could be, and it was not an hour after
+ the enemy was in Montgomery before people who had been loyal to the south
+ up to that hour and believed in its currency, went back on it completely,
+ and they cherished the greenback and hugged it to their bosoms like an old
+ friend. They had rather had gold, but good green paper would buy so much
+ more than any currency they had known for years, that they snatched it
+ greedily. And many of them enjoyed the first real respect for the Union
+ that they had had for four years, when they met the well-fed and
+ well-clothed Union soldiers, who did not seem as bad as they had been
+ painted, the poorest one of which had more money in his pockets than the
+ richest citizen of supposed wealth. The people seemed surprised to meet
+ well-dressed private soldiers who could converse on any subject, and who
+ seemed capable of doing any kind of business. Fires broke out in many
+ places in the city, and Union soldiers went to work with the primitive
+ fire apparatus at hand and put out the fires. Locomotives had been thrown
+ from the track of the railroad in an attempt to destroy them, and private
+ soldiers were detailed to put the locomotives together and run them, which
+ they did, to the surprise of the people. An officer would take charge of a
+ quantity of captured property, and he would detail the first half-dozen
+ soldiers he met to go and make out an invoice of the property, and the
+ boys would do it as well as the oldest southern merchant. A planter that
+ could not speak anything but French would come to the captain, of a
+ company to complain of something, and the captain after vainly trying to
+ understand the man, would turn to some soldier in his company and say,
+ &ldquo;Here Frenchy, talk to this man, and see what he wants,&rdquo; and the soldier
+ would address the planter in French, politely, and in a moment the
+ difficulty would be settled, and the planter would go away bowing and
+ smiling. Any language could be spoken by the soldiers, and any business
+ that ever was transacted could be done by them. A soldier printer visited
+ the office of a city paper, and in a conversation with the editor informed
+ him that there were editors enough in his regiment to edit the New York <i>Herald</i>.
+ At first the better class of citizens, the old fathers in Israel, of the
+ confederacy, stood aloof from the new soldiers in blue, expecting them to
+ be insolent, as conquerors are sometimes supposed to be; but soon they saw
+ that the boys were as mild a mannered and friendly and jolly a lot as they
+ ever saw, not the least inclined to gloat over their fallen enemy, and at
+ times acting as though they were sorry to make any trouble; and it was not
+ long before boys in blue and citizens in gray were playing billiards
+ together, with old gentlemen keeping count for them, old fellows, who a
+ week before would have been insulted if any one had told them they would
+ ever speak to a Yankee soldier. The second day the southern ladies, who
+ had kept indoors, came out and promenaded the beautiful streets, and
+ seemed to enjoy the sight of the bright uniforms, and before night
+ acquaintances had been made, and it did not cause any remark to see Union
+ officers and soldiers waiting with ladies, talking with animation, and
+ laughing pleasantly. It almost seemed, as though the war was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about this time that I stole my first horse. I had ridden horses
+ that had been &ldquo;captured&rdquo; from the enemy, in fair fights, and that had been
+ accumulated in divers ways by the quartermaster, and issued to the men,
+ but I never deliberately stole a horse. Two or three companies of my
+ regiment had gone off on a scout, to be gone a couple of days, leaving the
+ command at Montgomery, and one day we were encamped on an old abandoned
+ field, taking dinner. The horses and mules were grazing near us, and there
+ was no indication that any epidemic was about to break out. We were about
+ sixty miles from Montgomery, and were cooking our last meal, expecting to
+ make a forced march and be back before morning. I had got the midday meal
+ for Jim and myself cooked, the bacon, sweet potatoes, coffee and so forth,
+ and spread upon a horse blanket on the ground, and we were just about to
+ sit down to eat, when a mule that had been browsing near us, and snooping
+ into our affairs, attracted our attention. All of a sudden the animal
+ became rigid, and stood up as stiff as possible, then its muscles relaxed,
+ and it became limber, and whirled around and brayed, backed up towards us,
+ and as we rushed away to keep from being kicked, the mule fell over in a
+ fit directly on our beautifully cooked dinner, rolled over on the bacon
+ and potatoes and coffee, and trembled and brayed, and died right there. I
+ looked at Jim and Jim looked at me. &ldquo;Well, condam a mule, anyway,&rdquo; said
+ Jim. &ldquo;That animal has been ready to die for two hours, and just to show
+ its cussedness, it waited until we had our dinner cooked, the last morsel
+ we had, and then it fell in a fit, and expired on our dining table.&rdquo; I
+ made some remark not complimentary to the mule as a member of society and
+ we went to the corpse and pulled it around to see if we couldn't save a
+ mouthful or two that could be eaten. We could not, as everything was
+ crushed into the ground. I suggested that we cut a steak out of the mule,
+ and broil it, but Jim said he was not going to be a cannibal, if he knew
+ his own heart. While we were looking at the remains of our meal, my horse,
+ the rebel horse that I had rode so many months, and loved so, which was
+ hitched near, lay down, began to groan and kick, and in two minutes he was
+ dead. Then Jim's horse went through the same performance and died, and by
+ that time there was a commotion all around camp, horses and mules dying
+ suddenly, until within half an hour there were only a dozen animals alive,
+ and forty cavalrymen, at least, were horseless. The camp looked like a
+ battle field. Nobody knew what was the matter of the animals, until an old
+ negro, who lived near, came out and said, &ldquo;You uns ought to know better
+ than to let you horses eat dat sneeze weed. Dat is poison. Kills animals,
+ just like rat poison.&rdquo; And then he showed us a weed, with a square stem,
+ that grew there, and which was called sneeze weed. He said native animals
+ would not touch it, but strange animals eat it because it was nice and
+ green. Well, we were in a fix. The men were called together, and the major
+ told them there was nothing to do but to take their saddles and bridles on
+ their backs and walk to Montgomery, unless they could steal a horse. He
+ advised us to scatter into parties of two or three, enough to protect
+ ourselves from possible attack, go on cross roads, and to plantations,
+ forage for something to eat, and take the first horse or mule we could
+ find, and report to Montgomery as soon as possible. Jim and I, of course,
+ decided to stand by each, other, and after the men who had not lost their
+ horses, had rode away, the forty dismounted men shouldered their saddles,
+ and started in different directions, seeking some other men's horses. I
+ never had realized that a cavalry saddle was so heavy, before. Mine seemed
+ to weigh a ton. We struck a cross road, and followed it for two or three
+ miles, when I called a council of war, with Jim. I told him that it was
+ all foolishness to lug those heavy saddles all over the Southern
+ Confederacy. If we succeeded in stealing horses, we could probably steal
+ saddles, also, or if not we could get a sheepskin. I told Jim I would
+ receipt to him for his saddle, and then I would leave them in a fence
+ corner, and if we ever got back to the regiment I would report the saddle
+ lost in action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jim said I had a great head, and he consented, and we left our saddles and
+ moved on. Jim said that now we had only a bridle and a pair of spurs, we
+ were more like regularly ordained horse-thieves. He said the most
+ successful horse-thief he ever knew in Wisconsin never had anything but a
+ halter as his stock in trade. He would go out with a halter, with a rope
+ on the end, pick up a horse, put the rope in the horse's mouth, and ride
+ away, and nobody could catch him. I asked Jim if he didn't feel
+ humiliated, a loyal soldier, to class himself with horse-thieves. He said
+ when he enlisted he made up his mind to do nothing but shoot rebels
+ through the heart or the left lung. It was his idea to be a sharpshooter,
+ and aim at the button on the left breast of the enemy, but when he found
+ that lots of the rebels didn't have any buttons on their coats and that he
+ might shoot all day at a single rebel and not hit him, and that shooting
+ into them in flocks didn't seem to diminish the enemy the least bit, he
+ had made up his mind to turn his hand to anything; and if the rebellion
+ could be put down easier by his stealing horses at thirteen dollars a
+ month, he would do it if ordered. He said we were only putting in time,
+ promenading around, and we should get our salary all the same. And so we
+ wandered on, talking the thing over. When we came to a plantation we would
+ walk all around it, and examine the woods and swamps adjacent, because the
+ people of the South had learned that a horse or a mule was not safe
+ anywhere out of the most impenetrable swamp. It was dark when Jim and I
+ decided to camp for the night, and we went into a deserted cotton gin and
+ prepared for a sleep. It was almost dark, and Jim said he had just seen a
+ chicken, near a cabin, fly up in a peach tree to roost, and he was going
+ to have the chicken as soon as it was dark. I laid down on some refuse
+ cotton, and Jim went out after the chicken. I had fallen asleep when Jim
+ returned, and he had the chicken, and a skillet, and a couple of canteens
+ of water. I crawled out of my nest and built a fire, while Jim dressed the
+ chicken, and got the water to boiling, and the chicken was put in. For
+ three hours we boiled the chicken, but each hour made it tougher. I told
+ Jim he might be a success as a horse-thief, but when it come to stealing
+ tender poultry he was a lamentable failure, but he said it was the only
+ hen on the place, and if I didn't want to eat it I could retire to my
+ couch and he would set up with the hen. I was so hungry, and the smell of
+ the boiling hen was so Savory, that I remained awake, and at about
+ midnight Jim announced that he had succeeded in prying off a piece of the
+ breast, so we speared the hen out of the water, laid it on the frame of a
+ grindstone in the gin-house, and sat down to the festive board. &ldquo;Will you
+ have the light or the dark meat,&rdquo; asked Jim, with a politeness that would
+ have done credit to a dancing-master. I told, him I preferred the dark
+ meat, so he took hold of one leg and I the other, and we pulled the hen
+ apart. The hen seemed to be copper-rivetted, for when I got a chunk of it
+ down, and it chinked up a vacant place in the stomach, it did seem as
+ though there was nothing like hen to save life. We eat sparingly that
+ night, because we were weak, and the hen was strong, and we laid down and
+ slept peacefully, and awoke in the morning hungry. When the hen became
+ cold, in the morning it <i>was</i> tough. &ldquo;Will you have some of the cold
+ chicken,&rdquo; said Jim, and I told him I would try a little. It was better
+ than India rubber, and we made a breakfast and started on. It was Sunday.
+ As we came out to the main road, we saw people dressed up, that is, with
+ clean shirts. As ten o clock approached we could see colored people and
+ white, wending their way to a little church in the pine woods. We kept out
+ of sight, and waited, several parties passed us on horseback, some in
+ carriages, and many on foot. Presently three soldiers of our scattered
+ party came along carrying saddles, and we called them into the woods,
+ where we were. I unfolded to them my scheme, which was to surround that
+ church, hold the worshippers as prisoners inside, while we stole the
+ horses that would be hitched to the fence. Jim kicked on it. He said he
+ had rather walk than to interfere with people who were enjoying their
+ religion. He said he was never very pious himself, but his parents were,
+ and he should always hate himself if he helped to raid that church. The
+ other fellows were for going for the horses. Pretty soon four more of our
+ boys came along, and we called them in. They had got on to the church
+ services, and had their eyes on the horses. That made nine of us, and as
+ we were armed, we believed we could capture those old men and women and
+ negroes, and get the horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being a brevet officer I was placed in command of the party, and a plan
+ was agreed upon. We were to scatter and surround the church, and ask the
+ people outside to step inside, and then lock the door, and place a guard
+ on three sides of the little old church where there were windows, but not
+ to fire a gun unless attacked, and not to speak disrespectfully to any
+ person. If there was any argument with anybody, I was to do the talking.
+ We decided to take about fifteen horses, if there were that number there,
+ because we would be sure to find some of our scattered boys dismounted
+ before we got far toward Montgomery, and it was a good idea to take horses
+ when we had a chance. Well, it was a job I did not like, but what was a
+ fellow to do. We were sixty miles from headquarters, on foot and out of
+ meat. I had never been in a church row before. It seemed as though
+ religious worshippers ought to be exempt from war, with its wide
+ desolation. But business was business. We surrounded the church, walking
+ up quietly from different directions, and as we closed up on the sacred
+ edifice half a dozen men, white and colored, were standing in front, and
+ two men were talking over a horse trade. The minister was expounding the
+ gospel, talking loud, and all else was still. We invited the outsiders to
+ go in, which they did with some reluctance, the door was fastened on the
+ outside, guards were placed, and the preaching stopped. The minister had
+ been informed that the yankees had captured the place. There were only two
+ sides of the church with windows, so two guards were sufficient, and the
+ rest of us went to work skinning the harnesses off the horses. A window
+ was raised and an old man stuck his head out and said, as one of the boys
+ was mounting an old mare belonging to him, &ldquo;I forbid you touching that
+ mare.&rdquo; A carbine was pointed at the window, and the old man drew in his
+ head, and the window was slammed down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/287.jpg" alt="I Forbid You Touching That Mare 287 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ We had got sixteen pretty good horses, when a window on the other side
+ opened, and the minister's head was put out, and he said, &ldquo;In the name of
+ the church I command you to desist.&rdquo; He looked so fierce that Jim, who was
+ on guard on that side, and who had objected to the scheme on account of
+ its being a church, cocked his carbine and pointed it at the minister and
+ said, &ldquo;gol darn you, dry up!&rdquo; He dried up, the window closed and except
+ for the heads at the windows, and faces looking very mad, all was quit.
+ When we had got the horses strung out, and the men were mounted, I looked
+ in a carriage, accidentally, and saw a basket, covered over with a paper.
+ The paper was a religious one, published at Savannah, and being a
+ newspaper man, I looked at the leading editorial, which was headed, &ldquo;The
+ Lord will provide.&rdquo; I never took much stock in regular stereotyped
+ editorials, but when I turned my eye from the editorial to the basket, I
+ realized than an editorial in a religious newspaper, was liable to contain
+ much truth, for the basket was filled with as fine a lunch as a man ever
+ saw. It seemed that the people came quite a long distance to church, and
+ brought their dinner, remaining to the afternoon services. O, but I was
+ hungry. I looked in several other carriages, and found baskets in each.
+ Every man in my party was as hungry as a she wolf, and I knew they would
+ not leave a mouthful if they once got to going on the lunches, and as it
+ wasn't the policy of my government to take the bread from the mouths of
+ Sunday-school children, I decided to divide the lunches. So I appointed
+ Jim and an Irishman to help me, and we opened all the baskets and took
+ half. Jim came to one basket with two loaves of bread and two bottles of
+ wine, and he stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said, &ldquo;Pard, that lay-out in the big basket, with the silver pitcher,
+ is for the communion. I'm a bold buccaneer of the Spanish main, but I'll
+ be cussed if I touch that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irishman said no power on earth could get him to touch it, and he
+ crossed himself reverently, and we left the communion lay-out, and passed
+ the half we had taken from the baskets around among the boys, and they eat
+ as though a special providence had provided them with appetites and means
+ of satisfying them. After enjoying the meal the boys said we ought to
+ return thanks for the good things the pious people had provided for us, so
+ I went to the door of the church, opened it, and faced the congregation.
+ There were old and young, and some of them looked mad, and I didn't blame
+ them. In a few well chosen remarks I addressed the minister, telling him I
+ regretted the circumstances, but it was necessary to do what we had done.
+ We had tried to do it as pleasantly as possible, but no doubt it seemed
+ hard to them. I said we had got to go to Montgomery, and that if any of
+ them who had lost their horses, would come there within a few days, I had
+ no doubt the proper authorities would return them their horses, but that
+ they must stand the loss of a half of their lunch, as we had divided it up
+ as square as we knew how. One young Confederate soldier, with an empty
+ sleeve, who had come to church with his mother, and who could, no doubt,
+ realize the situation better than the rest, said, &ldquo;That is all right, Mr.
+ Yankee. I would do the same thing, under the circumstances, if I was in
+ your country, horseless and hungry.&rdquo; There were some murmurs of
+ dissatisfaction, some smiled at the situation, and we mounted and rode
+ away. Before we were out of sight the whole congregation was out of the
+ church, under the pine trees, taking an account of stock, or lost stock,
+ and no doubt saying hard things of the Yankees. We traveled all day and
+ nearly all night, picked up some of our dismounted men, and arrived in
+ Montgomery the next day before noon. In a few days my one-armed
+ confederate soldier, who was home from the army in Virginia, having been
+ discharged for disability, came to Montgomery with the people who had lost
+ their horses at the church, and I had the satisfaction of seeing many of
+ them either receive their animals back, or vouchers from the
+ quartermaster, by which they got pay from the government for the animals.
+ And I entertained the one-armed confederate for two days, and we became
+ great friends. Two years ago I met him in Georgia, grown gray, and found
+ him connected with a Georgia railroad, and we had a great laugh over my
+ capture of the congregation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Spotted Horse&mdash;His Shameful Behaviour at a Funeral&mdash;I
+ was Tempted to Have My Horse Shot&mdash;But I Traded Him to the
+ Chaplain.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to me that my luck was the worst of any man's in the army, and I
+ was constantly getting into situations that caused, my conduct to be
+ talked about. When we raided the church, mentioned last week, for horses,
+ I saw a nice white horse with red spots on him, with a saddle, and being
+ the commander of the squad of horse-thieves, it was no more than right for
+ me to take my choice first, so I chose the spotted horse, and thought I
+ had the showiest horse in the army. The animal was a sort of Arabian, and
+ before I had rode him a mile I was in love with him. then I got to
+ Montgomery a man told me that horse used to belong to a circus that closed
+ up there the first year of the war, and was sold to a planter. He said the
+ horse was considered one of the finest ever seen in the South. I felt much
+ elated over my capture, and refused several offers to trade. I thought no
+ horse was too good for me, and for two or three days I did nothing but
+ feed and groom my spotted horse, until his coat shone like satin, and he
+ felt so kitteny that I was almost afraid to get on his back. One morning
+ an order was issued for the regiment to turn out in a body to attend the
+ funeral of a major of one of the regiments, who had died, and I was sent
+ for to carry the brigade colors, a position I had been relieved from after
+ we arrived at Montgomery. The boys all dressed up in their best, and I
+ looked about as slick as any of them, and with my spotted horse, I felt as
+ though I would attract about as much attention as any of the officers in
+ the procession. At the proper time I mounted my horse and rode over to
+ brigade headquarters, not without some difficulty, for my horse saw the
+ crowd on the streets, and evidently thought it was circus day, for he
+ pranced and snorted, and walked with one fore-foot at a time, pawing as
+ you have seen a horse in a circus, trained to walk that way. As I rode up
+ to brigade headquarters and stopped, I must have touched my horse with my
+ foot somewhere, for he got down on his knees, and as I got off, the horse
+ laid down right in front of the colonel's tent, just as he would in a
+ circus. Even then I did not realize that the confounded brute was a circus
+ trick-horse. He had been taught to lay down, evidently, at a certain
+ signal. And he laid there, looking up at me with his cunning eyes, waiting
+ for me to give the signal for him to get up, but I &ldquo;did not know the
+ combination,&rdquo; and he wouldn't get up for kicking, so I stood there like a
+ fool waiting to see what he would do next. The colonel commanding the
+ brigade, the nice old man who had helped me out of my difficulty with my
+ other horse, on the march when he got on a tantrum, come out of his tent
+ and said he guessed my horse was sick, and he told an orderly to go to the
+ cook house and get a little red pepper and let the horse take a snuff of
+ it. In the meantime my horse got up on his fore feet and sat on his
+ haunches, like a dog, just as circus horses always do, reached up his neck
+ and took a nice white silk handkerchief out of the breast of the colonel's
+ coat, and held it in his mouth. It was a circus trick, and I knew it, but
+ the colonel said, &ldquo;Poor horse, he is sick,&rdquo; and as the orderly come with
+ the red pepper the colonel held it to the horse's nose. The horse got up,
+ and I mounted, and it must have been about that time that the red pepper
+ began its work, for my horse stood on his fore feet and kicked up, then
+ got on his hind feet and reared up, and snorted, and come down on the
+ colonel's tent, and crushed it to the-ground, and broke the colonel's camp
+ cot, got tangled in the guy ropes, and tore everything loose and jumped
+ out in the street, and began to paw and snort. I suppose there was a
+ thousand people around by that time, soldiers and citizens, and I sat
+ there on that horse and wished I was dead, and I guess the colonel did so
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally it was time to move, and the colonel sent out the brigade colors
+ to me, and the start started up street towards the funeral. My horse
+ started with them, and seemed proud of the flag, and I guess he would have
+ gone along all right, only a band down the street began to play a waltz.
+ Do you know, that spotted horse began to waltz around just as though he
+ was in a circus, and I couldn't keep him straight to save me. The colonel
+ seemed mortified, as we were approaching the place where the services were
+ to be held, and it was necessary to appear solemn. Finally we began to get
+ out of hearing of the band, and my horse stopped waltzing, but he kept up
+ a-dancing, and snorting from the red pepper, until I could have killed
+ him. When the colonel and his staff, including myself and the
+ circus-horse, arrived at the place where the funeral was, another band was
+ playing a very solemn sort of a funeral tune, and for a wonder my horse
+ did not act up at all. He seemed to stand and think, as though trying to
+ make out what kind of music it was. He had evidently never heard such
+ music in the circus and did not know what to do. When the body was brought
+ out of the house, and the procession started down the street for the
+ grave, a drum major, with a staff in his hand, came along by me, and I
+ have always thought my horse took the drum major for the ring master of a
+ circus, for he reared up and walked on his hind feet, and pawed the air,
+ and made a spectacle of me that made me so ashamed that I wanted to be
+ killed. I had the brigade colors in one hand, and had only one hand and
+ two feet to cling on the horse by, and I must have looked like a cat
+ climbing the roof of a whitewashed barn. The drum major got scared at my
+ horse walking towards him in that way, and he lost his bear-skin cap off
+ and fell over it, and rolled in the sand, and the horse, thinking that was
+ a part of the circus turned and kicked at the drum major with both his
+ hind feet, until the poor assistant musician got up and climbed over a
+ fence. The horse got quiet then, only he began to nibble his fore leg, as
+ though trying to untie a handkerchief that the clown had tied on, as they
+ do in the circus. The colonel rode up to me, and with a good deal of
+ indignation, asked me what I. meant by causing ourselves to become a
+ spectacle for gods and men on so solemn an occasion. He said he was
+ tempted to have my horse shot, and me placed in the guard-house. I told
+ him I hoped to die if I could help it. I said the horse seemed to be
+ possessed to do some circus business wherever he went. I confided to the
+ colonel that the horse had been a circus-horse before the war, and the
+ music and tinsel, and crowd that he saw, had turned his head and made him
+ think that he was again with his beloved circus, where he had spent the
+ best years of his life. The colonel said I ought to have known better than
+ to bring a circus horse to a funeral. Well, when the drum major got out of
+ sight the horse acted better, and we went along all right, the solemn
+ music of the march to the grave seeming to take the circus out of him. He
+ didn't do anything out of the way on the march, except to put out his
+ fore-feet stiff, and keep time to the music, like a trained circus horse,
+ which attracted a good deal of attention among the citizens on the street,
+ who seemed to know the horse. Just as we got out at che edge of town he <i>did</i>
+ make one raw break. There was a colored drayman, with his dray backed up
+ towards the procession, and when my circus horse saw the dray, before I
+ could prevent him, he whirled around and put his fore feet upon the hind
+ end of the dray, put one foot on the top of a stake on the dray, and stood
+ there for a minute, like a horse statute, until I jerked him down off of
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/297.jpg"
+ alt="Stood There for a Minute, Like A Horse Statute 297 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ O, I was so mortified that my teeth fairly ached, and the perspiration
+ stood out on me in great beads. A staff officer of the general commanding,
+ came along to the colonel, presented the compliments of the general, and
+ asked if he could not do something to prevent that redheaded clown on the
+ spotted horse from doing any more circus acts until after the last sad
+ rites had been performed. The colonel said it should be stopped, and told
+ the start officer to present his compliments to the general and say that
+ he was humiliated beyond endurance by the performance of the horse, but
+ that the young man riding the horse was not to blame, as he had done all
+ in his power to keep the circus tendencies of the horse down, but he added
+ that he would have the horse shot if there was any more of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horse kept quiet until we had got to the cemetery, and returned to
+ town. As we got into a wide street there was an old circus ring, partly
+ grown up with weeds, near where the division quartermaster had a large
+ tent inside a picket fence, filled with quartermaster stores. If I had
+ known anything, I would have kept the horse's head turned away from the
+ circus ring, and the tent, but I thought there would be no more trouble.
+ Just as we got opposite the ring, the band, which had heretofore played
+ dead marches, struck up a regular ripety-rap-rap-boom-boom circus tune,
+ and I felt the horse tremble all over. Before I could think twice, the
+ confounded horse had tried to jump through the bass drum, had knocked the
+ drummer down, and jumped into the circus ring. I sawed on the bit and
+ tried to stop him, and dug into his ribs with the spurs, but he galloped
+ around the circus ring three or four times, and stopped still, as though
+ expecting a clown would come up and say, &ldquo;What will the little lady have
+ now?&rdquo; O, if I could have had one more hand to use, I would have drawn my
+ revolver and put a bullet through the brain of the wretched horse, who was
+ making me the laughing stock of the whole army, and the citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The procession moved on towards camp, the colonel seeming relieved to have
+ me out of sight, with my spotted horse, and a crowd of citizens, boys and
+ niggers collected around the ring, yelling and laughing. I made one
+ desperate effort and reined the horse out of the ring, and just then he
+ caught sight of the quartermaster's tent across the road, and evidently
+ thinking it was the dressing-room of the circus, he started for it on a
+ run, jumped the picket fence as though it was a circus hurdle, and rushed
+ in the door of the tent where a dozen clerks were weighing out commissary
+ stores, stopped suddenly, and I went over his head, into a barrel of
+ ground, coffee. The clerks picked me out of the coffee, and laid me on a
+ pile of corn sacks, and then the horse began to lay back his ears and
+ chase the clerks out of the tent, and it was awful the way the animal
+ acted. After I had recovered from the effects of my fall into the coffee
+ barrel, I got up and took the horse by the bridle, and led him out of the
+ gate, and up the street to headquarters, with the brigade flag in my hand.
+ I finally got to headquarters and left the flag, and the colonel told me
+ he never wanted me around brigade headquarters again. He said I was a
+ regular Jonah, that brought bad luck. I apologized the best I could, told
+ him I would never bother him again, and led my horse back to my regiment.
+ The chaplain of my regiment, who had not been to the funeral with us, and
+ knew nothing about the circus, met me, and, as usual, bantered me to trade
+ horses. I felt as though if I could saw that horse off on to the chaplain,
+ and fix him so he could engage in the circus business, life would yet have
+ some charms for me, so after some bantering we got down to business. The
+ chaplain asked me if I thought it would cause any remark if he should ride
+ a spotted horse, and I told him I did not know why it should, if the
+ chaplain behaved himself. He said he didn't know but the boys might think
+ that a spotted horse was too gay for a chaplain. I told him I didn't know
+ why a spotted horse couldn't be just as solemn as any horse. He asked me
+ if the horse had any tricks, and if he was sound. I told him I had not had
+ him long, but it seemed to me if the horse had any tricks I should have
+ found it out by this time, and I knew he was sound, because I jumped a
+ fence with him not an hour ago, and he took the fence just as though he
+ had jumped fences all his life. I asked ten dollars to boot, and the
+ chaplain said if I would warrant the horse not to have any tricks he would
+ take him. I told him I couldn't warrant the horse not to have any tricks,
+ but that the colonel commanding the brigade wanted my horse, and he
+ certainly would not want a horse that had tricks. What the colonel wanted
+ was a horse noted for its strict attention to business. Then the chaplain
+ said he would trade, and we changed saddles, and the chaplain led the
+ spotted horse away, and I was revenged for many things the chaplain had
+ done me. When the chaplain led the spotted horse to his tent, and all the
+ boys in the regiment saw that I had traded the brute off, and they thought
+ what a pic-nic they would have the first time the chaplain rode the horse
+ down town, there was a laugh all through the regiment, but nobody
+ squealed, or told the chaplain what a prize package he had secured. I
+ cannot account for it, how I could have coolly traded that dastardly horse
+ off on to the chaplain, but I was young then. Now, after arriving at a
+ ripe old age, I would not play such a trick on a chaplain. The next day
+ there was to be a review, and when the regiment was notified, I got sick
+ and could not go. I felt as though I did not want to be a witness of the
+ chaplain's attempt to exhibit a solemn demeanor, on that circus horse. I
+ thought I should probably die right in my tracks if the horse acted with
+ him as he did with me, so I remained in my tent with a wet towel on my
+ head, and saw the regiment ride out to review, the chaplain on the spotted
+ horse beside the colonel, not dreaming that it was going to be the most
+ eventful day of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells How the Chaplain was Paralyzed by the Spotted Circus-
+ Horse&mdash;I am Court Martialed&mdash;I Plead my own Case, and am
+ Acquitted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the last chapter I told of trading my circus-horse to the chaplain, and
+ how the chaplain had rode away with the regiment for review, and I
+ remained in camp, pretending to be sick. The result of that scheme on my
+ part was not all my fancy painted it. I stood in front of my tent with a
+ wet towel around my head, and saw the regiment return from review, the
+ chaplain's spotted circus horse with no rider, being led by a colored man,
+ the horse looking as innocent as any horse I ever saw. Where was the
+ 'chaplain? Had he been killed? I noticed half the men were laughing and it
+ seemed to me they wouldn't laugh if the good chaplain was dead. I also
+ noticed that the colonel and his staff wore faces clouded with anger, and
+ that they seemed as though they would like to kill somebody. Before the
+ regiment had got fairly dismounted, a sergeant and three men marched to my
+ tent, and I was arrested, and was informed that I would be tried at once,
+ by court-martial, for conduct prejudicial to good order and military
+ discipline. I knew the sergeant, and tried to joke with him, telling him
+ to &ldquo;go on with his old ark, as there wasn't going to be much of a shower,&rdquo;
+ but he wouldn't have any funny business, and kindly informed me that I had
+ probably got to the end of my rope, and that I would no doubt spend the
+ remainder of my term of enlistment in the military prison. I asked him
+ what the row was about, and he said. I would find out soon enough. One
+ soldier got on each side of me, and one behind with sabers drawn, to stick
+ me with if I attempted to get away, and we started for the colonel's tent.
+ On the way there, the chaplain came towards us, covered with red clay, and
+ begged the sergeant to allow him to kill me right there. He was the
+ maddest truly good man I ever saw. He fairly foamed at the mouth, and
+ said, &ldquo;O, sergeant, turn him loose, and let me chew him up.&rdquo; I said to the
+ sergeant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, look-a-here, don't you let that savage get at me, or he will get
+ hurt. I don't want to have any trouble with the church, but if any
+ regularly ordained ministerial cannibal of a sky pilot attempts to chew
+ me, he will find a good deal more gristle than tender loin, and I will
+ italicise his nose so he will look so crossed-eyed that he can't draw his
+ pay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My thus showing that I was not afraid of a non-combatant, seemed to have
+ the desired effect, for he spit on his hands, jumped up and cracked his
+ heels together, said he would wipe the Southern Confederacy with my
+ remains, and he went to his tent to change his clothes, and get ready for
+ the court-martial. The guard took me to the colonel's tent, and I walked
+ right in where the colonel and major and several others were, and I said
+ Hello, and smiled, and extended my hand to the colonel. None of them
+ helloed, and none of them returned my smile, and the colonel did not shake
+ hands with me. He said, however, that I had brought disgrace on the
+ regiment, and broken the heart of a noble man, the chaplain. I told him I
+ didn't think the chaplain's heart was very badly broke, as he had just
+ ottered to whip me in several languages, and threatened to eat me. The
+ colonel had me sit down on a trunk and keep still, while the court-martial
+ convened. It was not many minutes before the officers had arrived, and
+ organized, the adjutant read the charges and specifications against me.
+ Not to go into the military-form of charges and specifications, the
+ substance of them was that I had with malice aforethought, procured a
+ trick-horse from a circus, with the intention of inducing the chaplain to
+ trade for it, with the purpose of causing the aforesaid chaplain to become
+ a spectacle for laughter. When the charges were read I was asked what I
+ had to say, and I told the Judge Advocate it was a condemned lie. That
+ made him mad, and he was going to commence whipping me where the chaplain
+ left off, when the colonel smoothed matters over by asking me if I didn't
+ mean to plead &ldquo;not guilty.&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;Certainly, not guilty. It is false. I
+ did not secure the horse for the purpose of sawing it off on the chaplain.
+ I jayhawked it, and when I found it was not the kind of a horse for a
+ modest fellow like me, who didn't want to make any display, I thought I
+ would trade it to some officer with gall, and the chaplain was the first
+ man who struck me for a trade, and he got it, and from his remarks to me,
+ and from these court-martial proceedings, I was satisfied the chaplain did
+ not like the horse.&rdquo; The officers laughed then, and I suppose they were
+ thinking of something that happened to the chaplain on review. The colonel
+ asked me if I wanted anybody to defend me, and I told him I had a printing
+ office once next door to a lawyer's office, and I knew a little about law,
+ and would defend myself. The chaplain came soon, and began to tell his
+ story, but I insisted, that he be sworn, and then he proceeded to tell his
+ tale. He said that he was a God-fearing man, and meant to do right, and
+ was willing to take his chances in the lottery of war, but when a man got
+ him to ride a circus trick-horse, and bring upon his sacred calling the
+ ribald laughter of the wicked, he felt that civilization was a failure. He
+ said he traded for the spotted horse in good faith, and that he was
+ particular to ask me if the horse had any tricks, and I said he had none,
+ and he traded on that understanding, that he rode the afore&mdash;said
+ horse to the review, and as soon as the aforesaid horse heard the band
+ play, he waltzed out into the middle of the street, whirled around more
+ than fifty times, waltzed into an infantry regiment, breaking the ranks of
+ the soldiers just as the reviewing officer come along, causing the
+ reviewing officer to say, &ldquo;get out of the ranks, you d-d fool, and take
+ that horse back to the circus,&rdquo; thus causing him, the chaplain, to be
+ scandalized. He said he would have stood that, but the horse carried him
+ to a battery of artillery which was in position, and began to jump over
+ the guns, and that a gunner took a swab with which he had been cleaning a
+ gun, and punched him, the chaplain, in the face, covering his face with
+ burnt powder which smelled badly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the horse carried him out on the field in front of the reviewing
+ officers, got up on its hind feet and walked for half a block, making the
+ chaplain appear as though climbing up the horse's neck, and when some of
+ the general's staff came out to arrest him, the horse whirled around and
+ kicked, in every direction at once, and broke the saber of one of the
+ staff-officers. That the horse seemed to be possessed of the devil. That
+ he finally got the horse to go back to the regiment where he belonged, but
+ on the way he had to pass brigade headquarters, when the horse stopped in
+ front of the commanding officer and sat down like a dog, on his hind
+ parts, and tried to shake hands with the colonel commanding, who was
+ offended, and told the chaplain he was an ass, and to go away with his
+ museum, or he would have the chaplain put in the guard house. That a
+ colored man near the review ground had a ginger bread stand, with a sheet
+ tacked up to keep the sun off, and the spotted horse attempted to jump
+ through the sheet, evidently thinking it was a paper hoop in a circus. And
+ in conclusion, after making the chaplain so mortified and ashamed that he
+ wished he might die, the horse laid down in the road and rolled over the
+ aforsaid chaplain, leaving him in the road covered with dirt, while the
+ horse run across the street and walked up a pair of stairs, outside a
+ store, went into the rooms occupied by some milliners and scared the women
+ so they put their heads out of the windows and yelled fire, and said a
+ regiment of Yankee cavalry had raided their homes. That the review was
+ made a farce, the chaplain a laughing stock, and that it took ten men to
+ get the horse down stairs, and half the regiment to console the milliners,
+ and convince them that no harm was intended. He said he demanded that I be
+ sentenced to be shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel asked me if I had anything to say, and I asked permission to
+ cross-examine the witness. Permission being granted, I asked the chaplain
+ what his business was. He said he was a minister. I asked him if he didn't
+ consider trading horses one of the noblest professions extant. He said he
+ didn't know about that. Then I asked him if he didn't take advantage of me
+ when I came to the regiment, as a raw recruit, and trade me a kicking
+ mule, that made my life a burden. He said he remembered that he traded me
+ a mule. I asked him if he didn't know the mule was balky, vicious, and
+ spavined, that it would kick its best friend, bite anybody, that it was so
+ ugly that he had to put the saddle on with a long pole, that he warranted
+ the mule sound when he knew it had all the diseases that were going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said he objected to being asked such questions, but the judge-advocate
+ said I had a right to bring out any previous transactions in the
+ horse-trade line, as it would have some effect in this case. Then I asked
+ him if he didn't know the horse he beat me out of was sound, a splendid
+ rider, and that the mule was the worst one in the army. He admitted that
+ he knew the animal was not a desirable animal, but he thought a recruit
+ could get along with a kicking mule better than a chaplain. I had saved my
+ best shot for the last, and I said, &ldquo;knowing the mule was unsound, a
+ vicious animal, and that my horse was sound and desirable, and worth more
+ than a dozen such mules, did you consider that you was pursuing your
+ calling as a minister when you gained my confidence, and not only sawed
+ the mule off on to me, bereaved me of a fine horse, but took twenty
+ dollars of my hard-earned bounty money as boot in the trade? In doing that
+ to an innocent and fresh recruit who had confidence in you, did you not
+ pave the way for me to get even with you on a horse trade, and haven't I
+ got even, and do you blame me for doing it?&rdquo; The chaplain was perspiring
+ while I was asking the questions, and all the officers were looking at him
+ as though he had caught a tartar, but he blushed, choked, and finally
+ answered that perhaps he did wrong in trading me that mule, and he asked
+ to be forgiven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I turned to the officers and said, &ldquo;Gentlemen, I admit that I traded
+ the spotted circus-horse to the chaplain. I did it on purpose to show him
+ that there is a God in Israel. When I came to the regiment, right fresh
+ from the people, I needed salting. The boys all salted me whenever they
+ got a chance, and I took it like a little man. In turning to the chaplain
+ for comfort, I did not expect that he would salt me worse than all of the
+ boys combined, but when I found that he had gone through me, and taken
+ advantage of my guileless innocence, and laughed at my woe when I found
+ the confounded mule was not all his fancy had painted it, and that it laid
+ awake nights to devise ways to kick my head on, I took a blooded oath that
+ before the cruel war was over I would salt that chaplain on a horse trade,
+ until he would own up the corn. I leave it to you, gentlemen, if I have
+ done it or not. When that spotted horse fell to me, by the fortunes of
+ war, I was not long in learning that it was the relic of a circus. I rode
+ the horse one day last week at a funeral, and it acted in such a manner as
+ to almost wake up the late lamented. I was made the laughing stock of the
+ brigade, and of the town. It was government property, and I could not kill
+ the horse, and I thought the time had arrived for me to get even with my
+ old friend. He was mashed on my spotted horse, and bantered me for a
+ trade. Finally we traded, and I got ten dollars to boot. The result has
+ been all that I could desire. I have had the satisfaction of demonstrating
+ to this truly good man that all is not gold that glitters. I have shown
+ him that however spotted a man may be, if he rides a spotted circus horse,
+ he will get there. I will leave it to the chaplain, now, if I was not
+ justified in trading him that horse, after what he had done to me, and
+ will ask him if he was not served perfectly right, and if in trading me
+ that mule he did not do to others as he would have others do to him, and
+ if so, if he does not think the others did it to him in great shape. I am
+ done. I leave my life in your hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I quit they were all laughing except the chaplain, and there was a
+ quiet smile around his mouth, as he thought of his experience on the
+ spotted horse. The colonel asked the chaplain, if he had anything to say,
+ and he said he had just been thinking that he could go over to a New
+ Jersey regiment and trade that spotted horse to the chaplain of that
+ regiment, and if he could, he would be willing to drop the case. He said
+ that chaplain played a mean trick on him once, and he wanted to get even.
+ The court martial acquitted me, and while we were all taking a drink with
+ the colonel, the chaplain went out, and pretty soon we saw his servant
+ leading the spotted horse over towards the camp of the New Jersey
+ regiment, and later the chaplain sauntered off in that direction on foot,
+ as though there was some weighty subject on his mind. The weighty subject
+ was the spotted circus-horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not suppose any incident ever caused so much talk as did the
+ chaplain's circus. The boys were talking and laughing about it in every
+ company all that afternoon, and when it was found that I had not been
+ punished, for trading the horse to him, the boys were wild. They wanted to
+ show their appreciation of the fun I had given them, so a lot of them got
+ together to give me a sort of reception. They sent for me to come over to
+ Co. D., and when I got over there they grabbed me and carried me off on
+ their shoulders. I felt proud to see them so joyous and friendly, until
+ they put me in a blanket and tossed me up into the trees, and caught me in
+ the blanket as I came down. Of all the sensations I ever experienced, that
+ of being tossed up in a blanket was the worst. I tried to laugh, at first,
+ but it became serious, as I went into the air twenty feet, let loose of
+ the air and came down, expecting to be crushed maimed, killed. My breath
+ forsook me, I was dizzy, but I struck the blanket easy, and after being
+ sent up a dozen times they let me go, and my reception was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mingled Reminiscences-I Relate a Mississippi River Steamboat
+ Experience.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Long before this I should have related a little experience I had on my
+ first journey south, when I was a fresh recruit. After leaving Wisconsin,
+ in the winter, a lot of us recruits were corralled at Benton Barracks, St.
+ Louis, and for six weeks we had a picnic. There were about fifty of us,
+ that belonged to the cavalry, our regiments being down the Mississippi
+ river, and the commanding officer of the barracks seemed to be waiting for
+ a chance to send us to our regiments. I have often wondered what he waited
+ six weeks for, when we were not doing any duty in camp, and were making
+ him trouble enough every day and every night to turn his hair gray. He was
+ a Colonel Bonneville, if I remember right, a regular army officer of
+ French extraction. Anyway, he always swore at us in French. The camp was
+ run in a slack sort of a way, and it was easy for us to get out and go
+ down town, or wander off into the country, and, as we had plenty of money,
+ and were dressed better than soldiers in active service, we were welcome
+ to all the saloons, and painted old St. Louis all the colors of the
+ rainbow, returned to the barracks at unseasonable hours, crawled through
+ the fence and went to our quarters howling, waking up the old general, who
+ invariably ordered the provost-guard to arrest us, which the provost-guard
+ invariably didn't do, for some reason or other. The old colonel was fast
+ aging, in trying to lead a quiet life in the vicinity of &ldquo;dose d&mdash;&mdash;-d
+ cavalry regruits,&rdquo; and he said he &ldquo;would order them all shot if they
+ didn't behave.&rdquo; Benton Barracks was the greatest place for the breeding of
+ rats that I ever saw. In every house there were millions of them, and at
+ night they were out in full force. One night our crowd of recruits, about
+ forty in number, had been down to St. Louis on a painting expedition, and
+ it was midnight when camp was reached. Every recruit had a revolver, and
+ it was decided that if the rats insulted us, as they had often done
+ before, we would shoot them. It was a beautiful moonlight night, as still
+ as death, and we could almost hear the snoring of the excitable colonel in
+ his house across the parade ground. As we came near our barrack, a few
+ thousand rats crossed our path, and I drew my revolver and fired at a
+ large one that seemed unusually impudent, and the rest of the crowd opened
+ fire, and there was a battle in no time. A bugler got out and blowed some
+ call that I did not know, a drum sounded a continuous roll, men rushed out
+ and formed in line, and before we had fired the six charges from our
+ revolvers, the Invalid Corps came hobbling across the parade ground, the
+ colonel behind them with his shirt on, his pants in his hand, and swearing
+ in French, and ordering the troops to arrest the whole crowd of recruits.
+ We went right in the barrack, and retired, as soon as the troops showed
+ up, and were snoring, with smoking revolvers under our pillows, when the
+ guard entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel came in with the guard, and then put on his pants, after which
+ he woke up some of us, and asked what was the cause of the firing. Every
+ recruit swore that he had not fired a shot, but that he had heard some
+ firing over the fence, on the outside, at a road-house and saloon, where
+ bad men from St. Louis congregated and drank to excess. It seemed very
+ hard to thus lie to so estimable a gentleman as the colonel, but as he was
+ only half-dressed, and sleepy, and excited, it didn't seem as though the
+ lies ought to count. But they did. The colonel apologized for waking us
+ up, when we were enjoying our much-needed rest, and he went away with the
+ guard. Then we all got up and danced a can-can, in our army underclothes,
+ passed a series of resolutions endorsing the colonel as one of the ablest
+ officers in the army, recommended that he be promoted to brigadier-general
+ at the first opportunity, gave three cheers and a tiger for the Union, and
+ went to bed. That is one thing that we recruits always come out strong in,
+ i. e., three cheers for the Union. We had enlisted to save the Union, and
+ as there was no fighting that we could do, during our stay at St. Louis,
+ whenever we got a chance we gave three cheers for the Union. Sometimes it
+ was not appreciated, however. I remember one evening our crowd went into a
+ saloon and ordered beer all around, and after we had drank it, I proposed
+ three cheers for the Union, which we gave in a hearty manner, and went out
+ without paying for the beer. You would hardly credit it, but the
+ saloonkeeper, an Irishman named Oppenheimer, became offended, and wanted
+ us to pay cash for the beer. The boys wanted me to reason with him, and I
+ began by asking him if he was a loyal man, and he said he was. Then I
+ asked him if he didn't believe in supporting the Union. He said he did,
+ but he couldn't pay the brewer for his beer by giving three cheers for the
+ Union. He had to put up cash. I confess that his remarks made quite an
+ impression on me, as I had not thought of it in that light before. I
+ proposed that we give three cheers for Oppenheimer, which was done, and I
+ thought that would settle it, but he insisted on having cash. I told the
+ boys, and they said he was a rebel. I told Oppenheimer, and he got out a
+ wooden bung-starter, and said he could clean out the whole party. Finally
+ we compromised, in this way. We had given two rounds of cheer, one for the
+ Union and one for Oppenheimer, which were a total loss, so it was agreed
+ that if Oppenheimer would give three cheers for the Union and three for us
+ we would pay him for the beer, if he would agree to set 'em up for us, at
+ his own expense. He agreed, and then we tried to get him to onset the beer
+ he was going to give us, for the beer we had drank, and not pay him for
+ that we had consumed. That, to any business man, we thought, would seem
+ fair, but he wouldn't have it. So, after he had returned our cheers to us,
+ we paid him, and then he treated. I mention this to show the hardships of
+ a soldier's life, and the difficulties of inculcating business methods
+ into the minds of the saloon-keepers. Oppenheimer meant well, but he did
+ not appreciate cheers for the Union. He got so, after that when we came in
+ his saloon, in a gang, he would say, &ldquo;Poys, of you dondt gif any jeers fun
+ dot Union, I set'em oop,&rdquo; and we would swallow our cheers for the Union,
+ and his beer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day after the battle of the rats, an order was issued for the
+ recruits to board the steamer &ldquo;City of Memphis,&rdquo; and go down the river to
+ join our several regiments, in the vicinity of New Orleans. In a few hours
+ we had drawn rations to last a week, and were on board the steamer, and
+ had started down stream. I think every soldier that is now alive will
+ remember that when he took his first trip on a transport, as a recruit,
+ during the war, he labored under the impression that he owned the boat, or
+ at least a controlling interest in it. That was a very natural feeling.
+ The opinions of the steamboat officials, it will be remembered, were
+ different. I had never been on a large steamboat before, and after tying
+ my knapsack and other baggage to a wood-pile on the lower deck, after I
+ had vainly attempted to induce the proper official to give me checks for
+ my baggage, I began to climb up stairs, and soon found myself on top of
+ the Texas, beside the smoke stack, viewing the ever changing scenery of
+ the grand old Mississippi. I was drinking in the scenery, and the fresh
+ air, and wondering if it could be possible that there could be war, and
+ killing, anywhere in this broad land, when all was so peace-ful and
+ beautiful on the river, when I felt something strike me on the pantaloons
+ most powerfully, and I looked around and a gentleman was just removing a
+ large sized boot from my person. I was about to reprove him for kicking
+ me, a total stranger, who had not even presented letters of introduction
+ to me, when he said, in a voice that was deep down in his chest, &ldquo;get down
+ below.&rdquo; I did not feel like arguing with a man of so violent a nature, and
+ I went down the narrow stairs, after he had said he would throw me
+ overboard if I did not hurry. I learned afterwards that he was the mate of
+ the steamboat. I could see that he had mistaken me for a common soldier,
+ which I would not admit was the case, but I went down stairs, probably
+ looking hurt. I was hurt. I went into the cabin and sat down on one of the
+ sofas, to think, when a colored person told me to get off the sofa. As he
+ seemed to know what he was talking about I got on. I saw a bar, where
+ officers of the army and passengers were drinking, and I went up and asked
+ for a whisky sour, thinking that would relieve the pain and cause my
+ injured feelings to improve. The bar tender told me to go out on deck and
+ I could get plain whisky through a window where the negro deck hands got
+ their drinks, but I could not drink with gentlemen. That was the first day
+ that I realized that in becoming a soldier I had descended to a level with
+ negro deck hands and roustabouts, and could not be allowed to associate
+ with gentlemen. Soon the gong rung for supper, and I went into the cabin
+ and sat down to the table for a square meal, the other seats being filled
+ with army officers and passengers. I was going to give my order to a
+ waiter, when he called an officer of the boat, who told me to get up from
+ the table and go below, as the cabin was intended for gentlemen and not
+ soldiers. My idea was to kick against being turned out, but I thought of
+ the mate's boot, and I went out, went down on the lower deck with the
+ recruits, and eat some bread and meat. I was rapidly becoming crushed. I
+ talked my experience over with the boys, and they all agreed with me that
+ the way we were treated was an outrage on American soldiers, which we
+ would not stand. We began to wonder where we were going to sleep, when I
+ remembered seeing state-rooms on the deck above, with berths, and it
+ seemed to me they must be intended for us, so we agreed to go up and go
+ into the state-rooms from the doors that opened out on deck, believing
+ that those who got in first would be allowed to occupy them. About fifty
+ of us got into state-rooms, while the officers and passengers were playing
+ poker in the cabin. I was asleep, when I heard a noise out on deck, and
+ raising up in my berth I looked over the transom and saw about twenty of
+ the recruits being driven along by officers of the boat, kicks and cuffs,
+ and loud talking being the order. &ldquo;I'll teach you brutes to steal the beds
+ of passengers on this boat. You dirty whelps, to presume to sleep in beds.
+ Get down stairs and sleep on the wood-pile with the niggers,&rdquo; shouted the
+ captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there was going to be any fuss about it, I didn't want to stay in the
+ state-room. I didn't want to be broke of my rest, of course, but if it was
+ not customary for common soldiers to indulge in such luxuries, I would go
+ out. Just then there was a knock at the door leading into the cabin, and I
+ heard a female voice say, &ldquo;Powtaw, I am afraid one of those dirty soljaws
+ has got into my state-room,&rdquo; and then I heard the mate's voice say, &ldquo;Wait
+ till I get at him.&rdquo; Of course, under those circumstances I could not
+ remain. No gentleman would occupy a lady's birth, and cause her to sit up
+ all night. To be sure there were two berths, and I could remain in the
+ upper one, and she could turn in below, and I would turn my face to the
+ wall and not look, but I doubted if a lady, who was a perfect stranger,
+ and whose opinion of soldiers was so pronounced, could compromise on such
+ a basis, so when the mate knocked at the door I took my pants and shoes
+ and went out the door leading on deck, and went below, without being
+ discovered. I found my companions, who had been routed out of their beds,
+ dressing themselves as best they could by the light from the furnace, when
+ the stokers would put in wood, and they were about as mad as I was. The
+ treatment we had received was not what we had a right to expect when we
+ enlisted. We decided to set up all night, and growl and discuss the
+ situation. Several of the recruits made remarks that were very scathing,
+ and the officials of the boat were held up to scorn, and charged with
+ inhumanity. We sat there till daylight, and then organized an indignation
+ meeting, and appointed a committee to draft resolutions indicative of the
+ sense of the meeting. I had been lightning on resolutions before I
+ enlisted, having attended several county conventions, and I was appointed
+ to draft the resolutions. As near as I can remember the following were the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;<i>Whereas</i>, The undersigned, members of the army of the
+ union, in the course of our duty as soldiers, have been
+ ordered to proceed to our several regiments down the
+ Mississippi river, on board of the 'City of Memphis,' and,
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Whereas</i>, We have been treated by the officers of the
+ aforesaid boat more like animals than human beings, in being
+ deprived of luxuries to which we have been accustomed, have
+ been driven from the public dining-table, driven from our
+ beds at the dead hour of night, that shoulder-strapped
+ officers might be made comfortable, and kicked down stairs,
+ therefore, be it
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Resolved</i>, That we demand of the captain of the steamer
+ 'City of Memphis,' that we be allowed the same privileges on
+ this boat that others enjoy. 'We hold these truths to be
+ self-evident,' that one man is just as good as another, no
+ matter what his rank. We demand that we be allowed to eat at
+ the table in the cabin, to sleep in the state-rooms, to
+ drink at the bar if we so elect, and to go to any place on
+ the boat that other passengers are allowed, and that we be
+ treated like white men, which we, have not up to the adoption
+ of these resolutions.
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Resolved</i>, That a copy of these resolutions be presented
+ to the captain of the boat, that a copy be sent to the
+ secretary of war, and that the resolutions be published in
+ the newspapers.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ When I read the resolutions to the boys they were passed unanimously,
+ after a few amendments had been voted down. One of the boys wanted a
+ resolution passed demanding that the mate be discharged, and one moved the
+ captain be requested to apologize. I argued that if the captain received
+ the resolutions in the proper spirit, and acceded to our demand, that
+ would be an apology in itself, and in that case the mate would probably
+ resign. I was appointed one of a committee of three to wait on the
+ captain, and read the resolutions to him, after the boys had all signed
+ them. I had rather some one else had been appointed, as I had been kicked
+ once already, but the boys said it needed somebody that was equal to
+ making a little speech, as it would be necessary to say something before
+ reading the resolutions. They also said, it needed a man with plenty of
+ gall, one that was not afraid to stand up be-fore the world and ask for
+ our rights. I felt flattered at being selected, but I took the precaution
+ to place a gunny-sack, nicely folded up, in the seat of my pants, because
+ I didn't know what might happen. After breakfast, I took the committee and
+ the resolutions, and went up into the cabin, and told a colored man that
+ he might tell the captain that a committee wished an audience with him. He
+ was playing poker in the ladies' cabin, and I have always thought he had
+ an idea there was a committee of passengers who wanted to present him with
+ a gold headed cane, a thing that was often done on the boats. Any way he
+ came along smiling, and when the nigger pointed me out, and the captain
+ noticed that I had a large paper in my hand, he said, &ldquo;What is it,
+ gentlemen?&rdquo; This was the first time I had been alluded to in that manner
+ since I enlisted. I asked him to be seated, and he sat down on a lounge,
+ and I proceeded. I forgot to make any speech, but went right at the <i>whereases</i>
+ at once. I say the captain smiled when he came up. Of course, reading the
+ resolutions, as I was, I could not see his face change, but afterwards one
+ of the committee told me about it. I could not tell that a storm was
+ coming. I noticed that quite a number of people had collected around the
+ captain, from curiosity, I supposed. I had just got to the last resolution
+ where it spoke of sending a copy to the secretary of war, when there was a
+ howl. The captain got up and grabbed me by the throat, while somebody else
+ took me by the hind legs. As we went towards the door, I noticed other men
+ were carrying the rest of the committee. My idea was that they would throw
+ us overboard, and as I could not swim, I closed my eyes and said, &ldquo;Now I
+ lay me.&rdquo; The stairs leading to the lower deck were covered with brass. I
+ remember that distinctly, because I rode down the stairs on the small of
+ my back, and we had a committee meeting at the foot of the stairs. I
+ brought up on top of the rest of the committee. We sat there a moment, and
+ decided, unanimously, that we had been unceremoniously chucked down
+ stairs, resolutions and all, and we picked ourselves up and limped back to
+ where our companions were, and so reported. The expedition was a total
+ failure, for in a short time a notice was tacked on the foot of the
+ stairs, stating that all enlisted men were forbidden from occupying any
+ portion of the boat except the lower deck, and if one was found above that
+ deck, he would be turned over to the first army post, a prisoner. So we
+ remained on the lower deck, and took it out abusing the officers, and
+ hoping the boat would blow up. But the scenery was just as nice from the
+ lower deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Our Party of Recruits own the Earth&mdash;We Live High, Give a
+ Ball, and go to the Guard-House&mdash;And are Arrested by Colored
+ Troops.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, I forget whether I have ever told about getting strung up on a
+ bayonet, near New Orleans, when I first went south as a recruit. It was
+ before I had joined my regiment, and I was with a gang of recruits, all
+ looking for the regiments we had enlisted in. We had come down from St.
+ Louis on a steamboat, our regiments being scattered all over the
+ Department of the Gulf. We were not in any particular hurry to find our
+ regiments, as the longer we kept away from them the less duty we would
+ have to do. I do not think, out of the whole forty recruits, there was one
+ who was in the least hurry to find his regiment, and none of them would
+ have known their regiments if they had seen them, unless somebody told
+ them. They had enlisted just as it happened, all of them hoping the war
+ would be over before they found where they belonged. They didn't know
+ anybody in their respective regiments, hence there were no ties binding
+ them. But they had been together for several months, as recruits, until
+ all had got well acquainted, and if they could have been formed into a
+ company, for service together, they might have done pretty good fighting.
+ The crowd was becoming smaller, as every day or two some recruit would
+ come and bid us all good bye. He had actually stumbled on to his regiment,
+ and when the officers of an old regiment, in examining recruits, found one
+ assigned to his regiment, he never took his eyes off the recruit until he
+ was landed. I have seen some very affecting partings, when one of our gang
+ would find where he belonged and had to leave us, perhaps never to meet
+ again. The gang was rapidly dropping apart, and when we got to New Orleans
+ there were only twenty or so left. We reported to the commanding officer,
+ and he quartered us at Carrollton, near the city, in what had once been a
+ beer-garden and dance-house. We slept on the floor of the dance-house,
+ cooked our meals out in the garden, spread our food on the old beer
+ tables, and imagined we were proprietors of the place, or guests of the
+ government. We always ordered beer or expensive wines with our meals. Not
+ that we ever got any beer or wine, because the beer garden was deserted,
+ but we put on a great deal of style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found a lot of champagne bottles out in the back yard, and I do not
+ think I ever took a meal there without having a champagne bottle sitting
+ beside me on the table, and when any citizens were passing along the
+ street we would take up the bottles, look at the label in a scrutinizing
+ way, as though not exactly certain in our minds whether we were getting as
+ good wine as we were paying for. The old empty bottles gave us a standing
+ in Carrollton society that nothing else could have given us. Some of the
+ boys got so they could imitate the popping of a champagne cork to
+ perfection, by placing one finger in the mouth, prying the cheek around on
+ one side, and letting it fly open suddenly. We would have several of the
+ boys with aprons on, and when anybody was passing on the street, one of us
+ would call, &ldquo;Waiter open a bottle of that extra dry.&rdquo; The waiter would
+ say, &ldquo;Certainly, sah,&rdquo; take a bottle between his knees, run his finger in
+ his mouth and make it pop, and then pretend to pour out the champagne in
+ glasses, imitating the &ldquo;fizzing&rdquo; perfectly. It was the extra dryest
+ champagne that I ever had. But all that foolishness had the desired
+ effect. It convinced the citizens of Carrollton that we were no ordinary
+ soldiers. We were all nicely dressed, had no guards, and apparently no
+ officers, had plenty of money, which we spent freely at the stores, and
+ the impression soon got out that we were on some special service, and
+ there was, of course, much curiosity to know our business. I learned that
+ we were looked upon as secret service men, and I told the boys about it,
+ and advised them not to tell that we were recruits, but to put on an air
+ of mystery, and we would have fun while we remained. One day an oldish
+ gentleman who lived near, and who had a fine orange plantation, or grove,
+ toward which we had cast longing eyes, called at the dance-house where we
+ were quartered. We had just finished our frugal meal, and the empty
+ bottles were being taken away. He addressed me, and said, &ldquo;Good day,
+ Colonel.&rdquo; I responded as best I could, and invited him to be seated. I
+ apologized for not offering him a glass of champagne, but told him we had
+ cracked the last bottle, and would not have any more until the next day,
+ as I had only that morning requested my friend, the general commanding at
+ New Orleans, to send me a fresh supply, which he would do at once, I had
+ no doubt. Well, you ought to have seen the boys try to keep from laughing,
+ stuffing handkerchiefs in their mouths, etc. But not a man laughed. The
+ old citizen said it was no matter, as he would drop in the next day, and
+ drink with us. We talked about the war, and it is my impression he was
+ anxious for us to believe he was a loyal man. But after a while he asked
+ me what particular duty I was on, there at Carrollton. I hesitated a
+ moment, and finally told him that I hoped he would excuse me for not
+ telling him, but the fact was it would be as much as my &ldquo;commission&rdquo; would
+ be worth to unfold any of my plans. I told him that time alone would
+ reveal the object of our being there, and until such time as my government
+ thought it best to make it public, it was my duty as an officer, to keep
+ silent. He said certainly, that was all right, and he admired me for
+ keeping my own counsel. (I was probably the highest private and rawest
+ recruit in the army.) He said there was a natural curiosity on the part of
+ the people of Carrollton to know who we were, as we lived so high, and
+ seemed such thorough gentlemen. I admitted that we were thorough
+ gentlemen, and thanked him for the high opinion that the cultured people
+ of Carrollton had of us. He wound up by pointing to his orange grove, and
+ said he-would consider it a special favor if we would consider ourselves
+ perfectly free to go there and help ourselves at any time, and
+ particularly that evening, as a number of young people would be at his
+ house for a quiet dance. I told him that a few of us would certainly be
+ present, and thanked him kindly. When he was gone I told the boys, and
+ they wanted to give three cheers, but I got them to keep still, and we
+ talked all the afternoon of the soft snap we had struck, and cleaned up
+ for the party. My intention was to pick out half a dozen of the best
+ dressed, recruits, those that could make a pretty fair showing in society
+ to go with me, but they all wanted to go, and there was no way to prevent
+ it, so all but one Irishman, that we hired to stay and watch our camp,
+ went. Well, we ate oranges fresh from the trees, joined in the dance, ate
+ refreshments, and drank the old gentleman's wine, and had a good time,
+ made a good impression on the ladies, and went back to camp at midnight.
+ On the way over to the party I told the boys the gentleman was coming to
+ see us the next day, and we should have to get a bottle of champagne
+ some-where, to treat him, as I had told him we expected, some more up from
+ the city. When we came back from the party a German recruit pulled a
+ bottle of champagne out of his pocket, which he had stolen from the man's
+ house in order to treat him with the next day. The gentleman came over to
+ our quarters the next day, and we opened our bottle, and he drank to our
+ very good health, though I thought he looked at the label on the bottle
+ pretty close. For a week we frequented the gentleman's orange grove every
+ day, and ate oranges to our heart's content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several times during the week we were invited to different houses, where
+ we boys became quite interested in the fair girls of Louisiana. It was ten
+ days from the time we settled in the beer garden, and we had kept our
+ secret well. Nobody in Carrollton knew that we were raw recruits that had
+ never seen a day of service, but the impression was still stronger than
+ ever that we were pets of the government. We had an old map of the United
+ States that we had borrowed at a saloon, and during the day we would hang
+ the map up and surround it, while I pointed out imaginary places to
+ attack. This we would do while people were passing. Everything was working
+ splendidly, and we decided to give a party. We hired a band to play in the
+ dance house, ordered refreshments, and invited about forty ladies and
+ gentlemen to attend. The day we were to give the party we sent a recruit
+ down town to draw rations, and he told everybody what a high old time we
+ recruits were having at Carrollton. The commanding officer heard of it,
+ and, probably having forgotten that we were up there waiting to be sent to
+ our regiments he sent a peremptory order for us to report at New Orleans
+ before noon of that day. How could we report at noon, when we were going
+ to give a party at night? It was simply impossible, and I, as a sort of
+ breast corporal in charge, sent a man down town to tell the commanding
+ officer that we had an engagement that night, and couldn't come before the
+ next day. I did not know that it was improper to send regrets to a
+ commanding officer when ordered to do anything. The man I sent down to New
+ Orleans came back and I asked him what the general said. The man said he
+ read the note and said, &ldquo;The hell they can't come till tomorrow. The
+ impudence of the recruits. They will come tonight!&rdquo; I did not believe we
+ would. In my freshness I did not believe that any commander of troops
+ would deliberately break up a ball, and humiliate brave soldiers. I
+ thought my explanation to the commander that we had an engagement, would
+ be sufficient, that he would see that it was impossible to hurry matters.
+ We had been to a good deal of expense, and it was our duty, after
+ accepting the hospitalities of those people, to pay our indebtedness in
+ the only way we knew how, and so, as the boys had gathered around me to
+ see what was to be done, I said, &ldquo;On with the dance. Let joy be
+ unconfined.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our guests arrived on time, and shortly after it became dark, the Dutch
+ band we had hired from, a beer hall down town, struck up some sort of
+ foreign music, and &ldquo;there was a sound of revelry by night.&rdquo; We danced half
+ a dozen times, smiled sweetly on our guests, walked around the paths of
+ the old garden, flirted a little perhaps, and talked big with the male
+ guests, and convinced them anew that we were regular old battle-scarred
+ vets, on detached duty of great importance. Near midnight we all set down
+ to lunch, around the beer tables, and everything was going along smooth.
+ The old gentleman who had been first to make our acquaintance, and who had
+ been the means of getting us into society, proposed as a toast, &ldquo;Our brave
+ and generous hosts,&rdquo; and the boys called upon me to respond. I got up on a
+ bench and was making a speech that, if I had been allowed to continue,
+ would have been handed down in history as one of the ablest of our time.
+ It was conciliatory in tone, calculated to cement a friendship between the
+ army and the citizens of the south, and show that while we were engaged in
+ war, there was nothing mean about us, and that we loved our neighbors as
+ ourselves. I was just getting warmed up, and our guests had spatted their
+ hands at some of my remarks, when I heard a tramp, tramp, tramp on the
+ sidewalk outside, and before I could breathe a squad of infantry soldiers
+ had filed into the garden, surrounded the dance-house, a dozen had formed
+ in line before the door, and a sergeant had walked in and ordered the
+ citizens to disperse, and said the recruits were under arrest. Well, I
+ have been in some tight places in my life, but that was the closest place
+ I ever struck. The old gentleman, the leader of our guests, turned to me
+ and asked what this all meant, and I told him to be calm, and I would fix
+ everything. I got down off the bench and approached the sergeant, to argue
+ the thing. I found that he was, a colored man, and that his soldiers were
+ also colored troops. This was the unkindest cut of all. I could stand it
+ to be arrested by white soldiers, but the sending of a lot of &ldquo;niggers&rdquo;
+ after us white fellows was more than human nature could bear. We had most
+ of us been Democrats before enlisting, and had never looked upon the
+ colored man with that respect that we learned to do, later. I went up to
+ the sergeant, as brave as I could, and said, &ldquo;Look-a-here, boss, you have
+ made a dreadful mistake. We are gentlemen, enjoying ourselves, and this
+ interruption on your part will cost you dear. Now go away with your men,
+ quietly, and I promise you, on the honor of a gentleman, that I will not
+ report you, and have you punished,&rdquo; and I looked at him in a tone of voice
+ that I thought would convince him that I was a friend if he should go
+ away, but if he remained it would be at his peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said he didn't want any foolishness, or some of us would get hurt, and
+ just then one of the Irish recruits, who had tried to skin out the back
+ way, got jabbed in the pants by a bayonet, and he began to howl and cuss
+ the &ldquo;niggers.&rdquo; The sergeant called up half a dozen of his sable guard, and
+ they surrounded me and some of the boys. Our guests were becoming
+ frightened, ladies had put on-their wraps, and there was a good deal of
+ confusion, when I shouted, &ldquo;Boys, are we going to submit to this insult on
+ the part of a lot of nigger field hands? Never! To the rescue!&rdquo; Well, they
+ didn't &ldquo;to the rescue&rdquo; worth a cent. A colored man with a bayonet had
+ every recruit's breast at the point of his weapon, three soldiers
+ surrounded me, and one run his bayonet through the breast of my coat and
+ out under my arm, and held me on my tip-toes, and I was powerless, except
+ with my mouth. The old gentleman, our most distinguished guest, came up to
+ me, and I said to him, in confidence, so our guests could hear, however,
+ with a smile, &ldquo;This may seem to you a singular proceeding. I cannot
+ explain it to you now, as I am pledged to secrecy by my government, but I
+ will say that the duty we are on here is part of a well-laid plan of our
+ commander, and this seeming arrest is a part of the plan. This colored
+ sergeant is innocent. He is simply obeying orders, and is a humble
+ instrument in carrying out our plan. I expected to be arrested before
+ morning, but hoped it would be after our party. However, we soldiers have
+ to go where ordered. We shall be thrown into prison for a time, but when
+ this detective or secret service work on which we are engaged is done, we
+ will take pleasure in calling upon you again, wearing such laurels as we
+ may win. We bid you good-night, and wish you much happiness.&rdquo; They all
+ shook hands with us, evidently believing what I had said, and even the
+ sergeant seemed to take it in, for, after the crowd had gone, the sergeant
+ said, &ldquo;You will excuse me, kernel, for what I have done. I didn't know
+ about any 'plan.' All I knew was dat the provost-marshal told me to go up
+ to Carrollton and pull dem recruits dat was camping at de beer garden, and
+ fotch 'em to de guard-house.&rdquo; I told him he did perfectly right, and then
+ we recruits packed up our things and marched with the colored soldiers to
+ New Orleans, about six miles, and we slept in the guard-house. The next
+ morning the provost-marshal called upon us, damned us a little for not
+ insisting on being sent to our regiments, found out that my regiment was
+ up the river two hundred miles, and seemed mad because I passed it when I
+ come from St. Louis. I told him I was not expected to go hunting around
+ for my regiment, like a lost calf. What I wanted was for my regiment to
+ hunt me up. That afternoon he put me on an up-river boat with a tag on my
+ baggage telling where I belonged, and I bid good-bye to the recruits,
+ after having had three months of fun at the expense of Uncle Sam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Strike Another Soft-Snap, Which is Harder Than Any Snap
+ Heretofore&mdash;I Begin Taking Music Lessons, and Fill Up a
+ Confederate Prisoner With Yankee Food.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last two chapters of this stuff has related to early experiences, but
+ now that it is probable the chaplain has got over being mad at my trading
+ him the circus-horse, I will resume the march with the regiment. For a
+ month or more I had been waiting for my commission to arrive, so that I
+ could serve as an officer, but it did not arrive while we were at
+ Montgomery, and we started away from that city towards Vicksburg, Miss.,
+ with a fair prospect of having hot work with strolling bands of the enemy.
+ I was much depressed. It had got so they didn't seem to want me anywhere.
+ It seemed that I was a sort of a Jonah, and wherever I was, something went
+ wrong. The chaplain wouldn't have me, because he had a suspicion that I
+ was giddy, and full of the devil, and I have thought he had an idea I
+ would sacrifice the whole army to perpetrate a practical joke, and he also
+ maintained that I would lie, if a lie would help me out of a scrape. I
+ never knew how such an impression could have been created. The colonel
+ said he would try and get along without me, the adjutant didn't want any
+ more of my mathematics in his reports and the brigade commander said he
+ would carry the brigade colors himself rather than have me around, as I
+ would bring headquarters into disgrace some way. So I had to serve as a
+ private in my own company, which was very hard on a man who had tasted the
+ sweets of official position. O, if my commission did not come soon I was
+ lost. After we had marched a couple of days it began to look as though we
+ were liable to have a fight on our hands. Every little while there would
+ be firing in advance, or on the flanks, and things looked blue for one who
+ did not want to have any trouble with anybody. One morning when we were
+ cooking our breakfast beside a pitch pine log, a little Irishman, who was
+ a friend of mine, as I always lent him my tobacco, said: &ldquo;There will be a
+ fight today, and some wan of the byes will sleep cold tonight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold chill came over me, and I wondered which of of the &ldquo;by's&rdquo; would
+ draw the ticket of death. The Irishman noticed that I was not feeling
+ perfectly easy, and he said, &ldquo;Sorrel top, wud yez take a bit of advice
+ from the loikes of me?&rdquo; I did not like to be called sorrel top, but if
+ there was any danger I would take advice from anybody, so I told him to
+ fire away. He told me that when we fell in, for the march of the day, to
+ arrange to be No. 4, as in case we were dismounted, to fight on foot,
+ number four would remain on his horse, and hold three other horses, and
+ keep in the rear, behind the trees, while the dismounted men went into the
+ fight. Great heavens, and that had never occurred to me before. Of course
+ number four would hold the horses, in case of a dismounted fight, and I
+ had never thought what a soft thing it was. It can be surmised by the
+ reader of profane history, that when our company formed that morning I was
+ number four. We marched a long for a couple of hours, when there was some
+ firing on the flanks, and a couple of companies were wheeled into line and
+ marched off into the woods for half a mile, and the order was given to
+ &ldquo;prepare to fight on foot.&rdquo; It was a momentous occasion for me, and when
+ the three men of our four dismounted and handed the bridle reins to me, I
+ was about the happiest man in the army. I did not want the boys to think I
+ was anxious to keep away from the front, so I said, &ldquo;Say, cap, don't I go
+ too?&rdquo; He said I could if I wanted to, as one of the other boys would hold
+ the horses if I was spoiling to be a corpse, but I told him I guessed,
+ seeing that I was already on the horse, I would stay, and the boys went
+ off laughing, leaving about twenty-five of us &ldquo;number fours&rdquo; holding
+ horses. Now, you may talk all you please about safe places in a fight, but
+ sitting on a horse in plain sight, holding three other prancing, kicking,
+ squalling horses, while the rest of the boys are behind trees, or behind
+ logs, popping at the enemy, is no soft thing. The bullets seemed to pass
+ right over our fellows on foot, and came right among the horses, who
+ twisted around and got tangled up, and made things unpleasant. I was
+ trying to get a stallion I was holding to quit biting my legs, when I saw
+ my little Irishman, who had steered me on to the soft snap, dodge down
+ behind his horse's head, to escape a bullet that killed one of the horses
+ he was holding, and I said, &ldquo;This is a fine arrangement you have got me
+ into. This is worse than being in front.&rdquo; He said he believed it was, as
+ he backed his other horses away from the dying horse, but he said as long
+ as they killed horses we had no cause to complain. There was a sergeant in
+ charge of us &ldquo;number fours,&rdquo; and he was as cool as any fellow I ever saw.
+ The sergeant was a nice man, but he was no musician. He was an Irishman,
+ also, and when any bugle-call and when any bugle-call sounded he had to
+ ask some one what it was. There was a great deal of uncertainty about
+ bugle-calls, I noticed, among officers as well as men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it could not be expected that every man in a cavalry regiment
+ would be a music teacher, and the calls sounded so much alike to the
+ uncultivated ear, that it was no wonder that everybody got the calls
+ mixed. In camp we got so we could tell &ldquo;assembly,&rdquo; and &ldquo;surgeon's call,&rdquo;
+ and &ldquo;tattoo,&rdquo; and quite a number of others, but the calls of battle were
+ Greek to us. The bugle sounded down in the woods, and the sergeant turned
+ to me and asked, &ldquo;Fhat the divil is that I dunno?&rdquo; I was satisfied it was
+ &ldquo;To horse,&rdquo; but when I saw our fellows come rushing back towards the
+ horses it looked as though the order was to fall back, and I suggested as
+ much to the sergeant. He thought it looked reasonable, too, and he ordered
+ us to fall back slowly toward the regiment. We didn't go so confounded
+ slow, and of course I was ahead with my three horses. The sergeant heard
+ the captain yell to him to hold on, and he got the most of the &ldquo;fours&rdquo; to
+ stop, and let the boys get on, but the little Irishman and myself couldn't
+ hold our extra horses, and they dragged us along over logs and through
+ brush, the regiment drew sabers to &ldquo;shoo&rdquo; the horses back, waived their
+ hats, my horse run his fore feet into a hole, fell down, and let me off
+ over his head, the other horses seemed to walk on me, I became insensible,
+ and the next thing I knew I was in an ambulance, behind the regiment,
+ which was on the march, as though nothing had happened. I felt of myself
+ to see if anything was broke, and finding I was all right I told the
+ driver of the ambulance I guessed I would get out and mount my horse, but
+ he said he guessed I wouldn t, because the colonel had told him if I died
+ to bury me beside the road, but if I lived to bring me to headquarters for
+ punishment. The driver said the boys whose horses I had stampeded, wanted
+ to kill me, but the colonel had said death was too good for me. Well,
+ nobody was hurt in the skirmish, and about noon we arrived at a camping
+ place for the night, and the ambulance drove up, and I was placed under
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems the sergeant had laid the whole thing to me. He had admitted to
+ the colonel that he didn't know one bugle call from another, and he
+ supposed I did, and when he asked me what it was, and I said it was to
+ retreat, he supposed I knew, and retreated. The colonel asked me what I
+ had to say, and I told him I didn't know any bugle call except get your
+ quinine, get your quinine. That when I enlisted there was nothing said
+ about my ability to read notes in music, and I had never learned, and
+ couldn't learn, as I had no more ear for music than a mule. I told him if
+ he would furnish a music teacher, I would study hard to try and master the
+ difference between &ldquo;forward and back,&rdquo; but that it didn't seem to me as
+ though I ought to be held responsible for an expression of opinion,
+ however erroneous, when asked for it by a superior officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that when the bugle sounded, and I saw the boys coming back on
+ a hop, skip and jump, it seemed to me the most natural thing in the world
+ that the bugle had sounded a retreat. That seemed the only direction we
+ could go, and as my natural inclination was to save those horses that had
+ been placed in my charge, of course I interpreted the bugle call to mean
+ for us to get out of there honorably, and as the only way to get out
+ honorably was to get out quick, we got up and dusted. The colonel always
+ gave me credit for being a good debater, and he smiled and said that as no
+ damage had been done, he would not insist that I be shot on the spot, but
+ he felt that an example should be made of me. He said I would be under
+ arrest until bed time, down under a tree, half a mile or so from
+ headquarters, in plain sight, and he would send music teachers there to
+ teach me the bugle calls. I thanked him, in a few well chosen remarks, and
+ the guard marched me to the tree, which was the guard-house. I found
+ another soldier there, under arrest, who had rode out of the ranks to
+ water his horse, while on the march, against orders, and a Confederate
+ prisoner that had been captured in the morning skirmish, a captain of a
+ Virginia regiment. The captain seemed real hurt at having been captured,
+ and was inclined to be uppish and distant. I tried two or three times to
+ get him into conversation on some subject connected with the war, but he
+ wouldn't have it. He evidently looked upon me as a horse-thief, a
+ deserter, and a bad man, or else a soldier who had been sent to pump
+ information out of him. I never was let alone quite as severely as I was
+ by our prisoner, at first. But I went to work and built a fire, and soon
+ had some coffee boiling, bacon frying, and sweet potatoes roasting, and
+ when I spread the lay out on the ground, and said, &ldquo;Colonel, this is on
+ me. Won't you join me?&rdquo; I think he was the most surprised man I ever saw,
+ He had watched every move I made, in cooking, with a yearning such as is
+ seldom seen, and he probably had no more idea that he was going to have a
+ mouthful of it, than that he should fly. His eyes might have been weak,
+ but if he had been a man I knew well, I should have said there were a
+ couple of tears gathering in his eyes, and I was quite sure of it when the
+ flood broke over the eye-lid dam, and rolled down among the underbrush
+ whiskers. He stopped the flood at once, by an effort of will, though there
+ seemed a something in his throat when he said, &ldquo;You don't mean it, do you,
+ kernel?&rdquo; I told him of course I meant it, and to slide right up and help
+ himself, and I speared a great big sweet potato, and some bacon, and
+ placed them on a big leaf, and poured coffee out in the only cup I had. He
+ kicked on using the cup, but I said we would both drink out of it. He
+ said, &ldquo;you are very kind, sir,&rdquo; and that was all he said during the meal.
+ But how he <i>did</i> eat. He tried to act as though he didn't care much
+ for dinner, and as though he was eating out of courtesy to me, but I could
+ tell by the way the sweet potato went down in the depths of my Confederate
+ friend, and by the joyous look when a swallow of coffee hit the right
+ place, that he was having a picnic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we were through with dinner and the guard and the other prisoner were
+ cooking theirs, he said, &ldquo;My friend, I do not mind telling you now that I
+ was much in need of food. I had not eaten since yesterday morning, as we
+ have been riding hard to intercept you gentlemen, sir. I trust I shall
+ live long enough to repay, you sir.&rdquo; I told him not to mention it, as all
+ our boys made it a point to divide when we captured a prisoner. He said he
+ believed his people felt the same way, but God knew they had little to
+ divide. He said he trembled when he thought that some of our men who were
+ prisoners in the south were faring very poorly, but it could not be
+ helped. &ldquo;Suppose I had captured you,&rdquo; he said, with a smile that was
+ forced, &ldquo;I could not have given you a mouthful of bread, until we had
+ found a southern family that 'had bread to spare.'&rdquo; I told him it was
+ pretty tough, but it would all be over before long, and then we would all
+ have plenty to eat. I got out a pack of cards, and the confederate captain
+ played seven-up with me, while we smoked. Presently nine buglers came down
+ to where we were, formed in line, and began to sound cavalry calls in
+ concert. I knew that they were the music teachers the colonel had sent to
+ teach me the calls. The confederate looked on in astonishment, while they
+ sounded a call, and when it was done I asked the chief bugler what it was,
+ and he told me, and I asked him to sound something else, which he did. My
+ idea was to convince the prisoner that this was a part of daily routine.
+ He got nervous and couldn't remember which was trumps; and finally said we
+ might talk all we pleased about the horrors of Andersonville, but to be
+ blowed to death with cavalry bugles was a fate that only the most hardened
+ criminals should suffer. The confederate evidently had no ear for music
+ more than I had, and he soon got enough. However the buglers kept up their
+ noise till about supper time, when they were called on. I got another meal
+ for the confederate, and he seemed to be actually getting fat. The colonel
+ of my regiment came down to where we were, and said, &ldquo;You fellows seem to
+ be doing pretty well,&rdquo; and then he had a long talk with the rebel
+ prisoner, invited him up to his tent to pass the night, apologized for the
+ concert he had been giving us, explained what it was for, told me I could
+ go to my company if I thought I could remember a bugle call in the future;
+ the captain shook hands with me and thanked me cordially, and we
+ separated. He was exchanged, the next day, and I never saw him for
+ twenty-two years, when I found him at the head of a manufacturing
+ enterprise in his loved Virginia, and he furnished me a more expensive
+ meal than I did him years before, but it didn't taste half as good as the
+ bacon dinner in Alabama under the guard-house tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A Short Story About a Pair of Boots, Showing the Monumental
+ Gall of their Owner.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I enlisted in the cavalry I bought a pair of top boots, of the
+ Wellington pattern, stitched with silk up and down the legs, which were of
+ shiny morocco. They came clear above my knees, and from the pictures I had
+ seen of cavalry soldiers, it struck me those boots would be a pass-port to
+ any society in the army. The first few months of my service, it seemed to
+ me, the boots gave me more tone than any one thing. I learned afterwards
+ that all new recruits came to the regiment with such boots, and that they
+ were the laughing stock of all the old veterans. I did not know that I was
+ being guyed by the boys, and I loved those boots above all things I had.
+ To be sure, when we struck an unusually muddy country, some idiot of an
+ officer seemed to be inspired to order us to dismount. The boys who had
+ common army boots would dismount anywhere, in mud or water, but it seemed
+ to me cruel for officers to order a dismount, when they knew I would have
+ to step in the mud half way up to my knees, with those morocco boots on.
+ Several times when ordered to dismount in the mud, I have ridden out of
+ the road, where it was not muddy, to dismount, but the boys would laugh so
+ loud, and the officers would swear so wickedly, that I got so I would
+ dismount wherever they told me, suppress my emotions, as I felt my
+ beautiful, shiny boots sink into the red clay, and when we got into camp I
+ would spend half the night cleaning my boots. The captain said if I would
+ spend half the time cleaning my carbine and saber that I did cleaning my
+ boots, I would have been a model soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think that for the first year of my service I had as elegant a pair of
+ boots as could be found in the army. But it was the hardest work to keep
+ track of them. The first three months it was all I could do to keep the
+ chaplain from trading me a pair of old army shoes for my boots. The
+ arguments he used to convince me that mo-. rocco boots were far above my
+ station, and that they were intended for a chaplain, were labored. If he
+ had used the same number of words in the right direction, he could have
+ converted the whole army. I had to sleep with my boots under my head every
+ night, to prevent them from being stolen and twice they were stolen from
+ my tent, but in each case recovered at the sutler's, where they had been
+ pawned for a bottle of brandy peaches, which I had to pay for to redeem
+ the boots. The boots had become almost a burden to me, in keeping them,
+ but I enjoyed them so much that money could not have bought them. When we
+ were in a town for a few days, and I rode around, it did not make any
+ difference whether I had any other clothes on, of any account, the morocco
+ boots captured the town. The natives could not see how a man who wore such
+ boots could be anything but a high-up thoroughbred. The last time I lost
+ my boots will always be remembered by those who were in the same command.
+ We were on the march with a Michigan and a New Jersey regiment, through
+ the dustiest country that ever was. The dust was eight inches deep in the
+ road, and just like fine ashes. Every time a horse put his foot down the
+ dust would raise above the trees, and as there were two thousand horses,
+ with four feet apiece, and each foot in constant motion, it can be
+ imagined that the troops were dusty. And it was so hot that the
+ perspiration oozed out of us, but the dust covered it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three regiments took turns in acting as rear guard, to pick up
+ stragglers, and on this hot and dusty day the New Jersey regiment was in
+ the rear. It was composed of Germans entirely, with a German colonel, a
+ man who had seen service in Europe, and he looked upon a soldier as a
+ machine, with no soul, fit only to obey orders. That was not the kind of a
+ soldier I was. During the day's march the boys stripped off everything
+ they could. I know all I had on was a shirt and pants, and a handkerchief
+ around my head. I took off my boots and coat and let the colored cook of
+ the company strap them on to his saddle with the camp kettles. He usually
+ rode right behind the company, and I thought I could get my things any
+ time if I wanted to dress up. It was the hardest day's march that I ever
+ experienced, lungs full of dust, and every man so covered with dust that
+ you could not recognize your nearest neighbor. Afternoon the command
+ halted beside a stream, and it was announced that we would go into camp
+ for the night. The colored cook came along soon after, and he was
+ perfectly pale, whether from dust or fright I could not tell, but he
+ announced to me, in a manner that showed that he appreciated the calamity
+ which had befallen the command, that he had lost my boots. I was going to
+ kill him, but my carbine was full of dust, and I made it a point never to
+ kill a man with a dirty gun, so I let him explain. He said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fell back to de rear, by dat plantation where de cotton gin was
+ burning, to see if I couldn't get a canteen of buttermilk to wash de dust
+ outen my froat, when dat Dutch Noo Jersey gang come along, and de boss he
+ said, 'nicker, you got back ahead fere you pelong, or I gick you in de
+ pack mit a saber, aind't it,' and when I get on my mule to come along he
+ grab de boots and he say, 'nicker, dot boots is better for me,' and when I
+ was going to take dem away from him he stick me in de pants wid a saber.
+ Den I come away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could have stood up under having an arm shot off, but to lose my boots
+ was more than I could bear. It never did take me long to decide on any
+ important matter, and in a moment I decided to invade the camp of that New
+ Jersey regiment, recapture my boots or annihilate every last foreigner on
+ our soil, so I started off, barefooted, without a coat, and covered with
+ dust, for the headquarters of the New Jersey fellows. They had been in
+ camp but a few minutes, but every last one of them had taken a bath in the
+ river, brushed the dust off his clothes, and looked ready for dress
+ parade. That was one fault of those foreigners, they were always clean, if
+ they had half a chance. I went right to the colonel's tent, and he was
+ surrounded with officers, and they were opening bottles of beer, and how
+ cool it looked. There was something peculiar about those foreigners, no
+ matter if they were doing duty in the most inaccessible place in the
+ south, and were short of transportation, you could always find beer at
+ their headquarters. I walked right in, and the colonel was just blowing
+ the foam off a glass of beer. He looked at me in astonishment, and I said
+ in a voice husky from dust down my neck:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel this is an important epoch in the history of our beloved country.
+ Events have transpired within the past hour, which leaves it an open
+ question whether, as a nation, we are afoot or on horseback.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great hefens,&rdquo; said the colonel, stopping with his glass of beer half
+ drank, &ldquo;you vrighten me. Vot has habbened. But vait, und dake a glass of
+ beer, as you seem exhausted, und proke up. Captain Ouskaspiel, hand the
+ shendleman some peer. Mine Gott, bud you look hard, strancher.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe that I ever drank anything that seemed to go right to the
+ spot, the way that beer did. It seemed to start a freshet of dust down my
+ neck, clear my throat, and brace me up. While I was drinking it I noticed
+ that the German colonel and his officers eyed me closely, my bare feet, my
+ flannel shirt full of dust, and my hair that looked as though I had stood
+ on my head in the road. They waited for me to continue, and after draining
+ the last drop in the glass, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, it was no ordinary circumstance that induced you brave
+ foreigners, holding allegiance to European sovereigns, to fly to arms to
+ defend this new nation from an internecine foe. While we natives, and to
+ the manor born, left our plows in the furrow, to spring to-arms, you left
+ your shoemaker shops, the spigots of your beer saloons, the marts of
+ commerce in which you were engaged, and stood shoulder to shoulder. Where
+ the bullets of the enemy whistled, there could be found the brave Dutchmen
+ of New Jersey. It brings tears to eyes unused to weeping, to think of the
+ German fathers and mothers of our land, who are waiting and watching for
+ the return of sons who will never come back, and this is, indeed, harder
+ for them to bear, when we reflect that these boys were not obliged to
+ fight for our country, holding allegiance, as I said before to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Waid a minute, of you blease,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;Dake von more drink,
+ and dell me, of you please, vot de hell you vos drying to get at. Capt.
+ Hemrech, gif der shendleman a glass of beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second glass of beer was given me, and I drank it. There was evidently a
+ suspicion on the part of the New Jersey officers that the importance of my
+ visit had been over-rated by them, and they seemed anxious to have me come
+ to the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the march today,&rdquo; said I, wiping the foam off my moustache on my
+ shirt-sleeve, &ldquo;one of your thieving soldiers stole my boots from our
+ nigger cook, who was conveying them for me. A cavalry soldier without
+ boots, is no good. I came after my boots, and I will have them or blood.
+ Return my boots, or by the eternal, the Wisconsin cavalry regiment will
+ come over here and everlastingly gallop over your fellows. The
+ constitution of the United States and the Declaration of Independence, are
+ on my side. In civil life a man's house is his castle. In the army a man's
+ boots is his castle. Give me my boots, sir, or the blood of the slain will
+ rest on your heads.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel was half mad and half pleased. He tapped his forehead with his
+ fore-finger, and looked at his officers in a manner that showed he
+ believed my head was wrong, but he said kindly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My man, you go oud and sit under a tree, in the shade, and I vill hafe
+ your poots found if they are in my rechiment,&rdquo; and I went out. I heard the
+ colonel say to one of his officers, &ldquo;It vas too pad dot two good glasses
+ of beer should be spoiled, giving them to dot grazy solcher. Ve must be
+ more careful mit de beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pretty soon an officer came out and asked me how the boots were taken, and
+ I gave him all the information I had, and he sent men all around the
+ regiment, and in an hour or so the boots were brought to me, the man who
+ stole them was arrested, the officers apologized to me, and I went back to
+ my regiment in triumph, with my boots under my arms. The incident got
+ noised around among the other regiments, and for months after that, when
+ the colonel of the New Jersey cavalry rode by another regiment, the boys
+ would yell out, &ldquo;Boots, boots,&rdquo; or when a company or squad of the New
+ Jersey fellows would pass along, it was &ldquo;Look out for your boots! The
+ shoemakers are coming.&rdquo; For stealing that one pair of boots, by one man, a
+ whole regiment got a reputation for stealing that hung to it a long time.
+ Ten years afterward I was connected with a New York daily paper, and one
+ evening I was detailed to go to a New Jersey city to report the
+ commencement exercises of a college. In the programme of exercises I
+ noticed that a man of the same name of that of the New Jersey colonel, was
+ one of the college professors, and I wondered if he was the same man.
+ During the evening he put in an appearance on the stage, and I could see
+ that he was the colonel who had given me the beer, and caused my boots to
+ be returned to me. After the exercises of the evening, the New York
+ newspaper men were invited to partake of a collation in the apartments of
+ the college officials, and the professors were introduced to the newspaper
+ men. When my turn came to be introduced, and the old colonel stood before
+ me, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;General, you were in the army, were you not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yezzer!&rdquo; said the old man. &ldquo;I am broud to say dot I fought for my adopted
+ country. But vy do you ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have met before. I, too, was a soldier. I was at your headquarters
+ once, on a very important mission. I was entertained, sir, in your tent,
+ permitted, to partake of the good, things you had, and sent away happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vell, you dond't say so,&rdquo; said the old man, as he pressed my hand warmly.
+ &ldquo;Vere vas dis dat you were my guest, and vot vas de important message?&rdquo;
+ and he smiled all over his face at the prospect of hearing something about
+ old times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was in Mississippi, between Montgomery, Ala., and Vicksburg. Do you
+ remember the hottest and dustiest day that ever was, when we camped on a
+ little stream?&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, yah!&rdquo; said the colonel; &ldquo;very well. It vas an awful time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I went to your headquarters with information of vital importance. One of
+ your soldiers <i>had stolen my boots</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gott in himmel!&rdquo; said the old colonel, now a college professor, as he
+ looked at me to see if there was any resemblance between the New York
+ reporter and the dusty, bare-footed soldier of ten years before. &ldquo;Vill I
+ never hear de last of dem dam boots? And you are de same veller, eh. I
+ have often thought, since dat day, vot an awful gall you had. But it is
+ all ofer now. You vatch your poots vile you are in New Chersey, for plenty
+ of dose cavalry-men are all around here. But do me a favor now, and don't
+ ever again say poots to me, dot's a good fellow,&rdquo; and then we all sat down
+ to lunch, and the old colonel told the newspaper boys from New York about
+ how I called at his tent on the march, looking for a pair of boots that
+ had eloped with one of his New Chersey dutchmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #25492 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/25492)
diff --git a/old/25492-h.htm.2021-01-25 b/old/25492-h.htm.2021-01-25
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ How Private George W. Peck Put Down the Rebellion, by George W. Peck
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
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+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
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+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of How Private George W. Peck Put Down The
+Rebellion, by George W. Peck
+
+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: How Private George W. Peck Put Down The Rebellion
+ or, The Funny Experiences of a Raw Recruit - 1887
+
+Author: George W. Peck
+
+Release Date: May 16, 2008 [EBook #25492]
+Last Updated: October 5, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img alt="titlepage (106K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ HOW PRIVATE GEORGE W. PECK PUT DOWN THE REBELLION
+ </h1>
+ <h1>
+ or, THE FUNNY EXPERIENCES OF A RAW RECRUIT.
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By George W. Peck
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ 1887
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Mounting a Horse from the Top of A Rail
+ Fence </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> On Went the Two Night Riders </a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> Never Did Know, How I Got out of the
+ General's Tent </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> A Solemn Funeral Oration </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> You Are a Darling Good Man </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> Engineer Threw a Lump of Coal and Hit Me
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> We Went Into the Camp That Way </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> Just Promoted to the Proud Position of
+ Corporal </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0010"> Xcuse Me, But What Kind of a Thing is
+ That? </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0011"> Two Very Long Stockings, Came over the
+ Pulpit </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0012"> Gave a Yell That Could Have Been Heard A
+ Mile </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0013"> She Gave Him a Piece of Her Mind </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014"> I Forbid You Touching That Mare </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0015"> Stood There for a Minute, Like A Horse
+ Statute </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The War Literature of the &ldquo;Century&rdquo; is very Confusing&mdash;I am
+ Resolved to tell the True Story of the War&mdash;How and Why I
+ Became a Raw Recruit&mdash;My Quarters&mdash;My Horse&mdash;My First Ride.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For the last year or more I have been reading the articles in the <i>Century</i>
+ magazine, written by generals and things who served on both the Union and
+ Confederate sides, and have been struck by the number of &ldquo;decisive
+ battles&rdquo; that were fought, and the great number of generals who fought
+ them and saved the country. It seems that each general on the Union side,
+ who fought a battle, and writes an article for the aforesaid magazine,
+ admits that his battle was the one which did the business. On the
+ Confederate side, the generals who write articles invariably demonstrate
+ that they everlastingly whipped their opponents, and drove them on in
+ disorder. To read those articles it seems strange that the Union generals
+ who won so many decisive battles, should not have ended the war much
+ sooner than they did, and to read the accounts of battles won by the
+ Confederates, and the demoralization that ensued in the ranks of their
+ opponents, it seems marvellous that the Union army was victorious. Any man
+ who has followed these generals of both sides, in the pages of that
+ magazine, must conclude that the war was a draw game, and that both sides
+ were whipped. Thus far no general has lost a battle on either side, and
+ all of them tacitly admit that the whole thing depended on them, and that
+ other commanders were mere ciphers. This is a kind of history that is
+ going to mix up generations yet unborn in the most hopeless manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has seemed to me as though the people of this country had got so mixed
+ up about the matter that it was the duty of some private soldier to write
+ a description of <i>the</i> decisive battle of the war, and as I was the
+ private soldier who fought that battle on the Union side, against fearful
+ odds, <i>viz</i>: against a Confederate soldier who was braver than I was,
+ a better horseback rider, and a better poker player, I feel it my duty to
+ tell about it. I have already mentioned it to a few veterans, and they
+ have advised me to write an article for the <i>Century</i>, but I have
+ felt a delicacy about entering the lists, a plain, unvarnished private
+ soldier, against those generals. While I am something of a liar myself,
+ and can do fairly well in my own class, I should feel that in the <i>Century</i>
+ I was entered in too fast a class of liars, and the result would be that I
+ should not only lose my entrance fee, but be distanced. So I have decided
+ to contribute this piece of history solely for the benefit of the readers
+ of my own paper, as they will believe me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1864 that I joined a cavalry regiment in the department of the
+ Gulf, a raw recruit in a veteran regiment. It may be asked why I waited so
+ long before enlisting, and why I enlisted at all, when the war was so near
+ over. I know that the most of the soldiers enlisted from patriotic
+ motives, and because they wanted to help shed blood, and wind up the war.
+ I did not. I enlisted for the bounty. I thought the war was nearly over,
+ and that the probabilities were that the regiment I had enlisted in would,
+ be ordered home before I could get to it. In fact the recruiting officer
+ told me as much, and he said I would get my bounty, and a few months' pay,
+ and it would be just like finding money. He said at that late day I would
+ never see a rebel, and if I did have to join the regiment, there would be
+ no fighting, and it would just be one continued picnic for two or three
+ months, and there would be no more danger than to go off camping for a
+ duck shoot. At my time of life, now that I have become gray, and bald, and
+ my eyesight is failing, and I have become a grandfather, I do not want to
+ open the sores of twenty-two years ago. I want a quiet life. So I would
+ not assert that the recruiting officer deliberately lied to me, but I was
+ the worst deceived man that ever enlisted, and if I ever meet that man, on
+ this earth, it will go hard with him. Of course, if he is dead, that
+ settles it, as I shall not follow any man after death, where I am in doubt
+ as to which road he has taken, but if he is alive, and reads these lines,
+ he can hear of something to his advantage by communicating with me. I
+ would probably kill him. As far as the bounty was concerned, I got that
+ all right, but it was only three-hundred dollars. Within twenty-four hours
+ after I had been credited to the town from which I enlisted, I heard of a
+ town that was paying as high as twelve-hundred dollars for recruits. I
+ have met with many reverses of fortune in the course of a short, but
+ brilliant career, have loaned money and never got it back, have been taken
+ in by designing persons on three card monte, and have been beaten trading
+ horses, but I never suffered much more than I did when I found that I had
+ got to go to war for a beggerly three-hundred dollars bounty, when I could
+ have had twelve hundred dollars by being credited to another town. I think
+ that during two years and a half of service nothing tended more to dampen
+ my ardor, make me despondent, and hate myself, than the loss of that
+ nine-hundred dollars bounty. There was not an hour of the day, in all of
+ my service, that I did not think of what might have been. It was a long
+ time before I brought to my aid that passage of scripture, &ldquo;There is no
+ use crying for spilled bounty,&rdquo; but when I did it helped me some. I
+ thought of the hundreds who didn't get any bounty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I joined my regiment, and had a cavalry horse issued to me, and was
+ assigned to a company. I went up to the captain of the company, whom I had
+ known as a farmer before the war commenced, and told him I had come to
+ help him put down the rebellion. I never saw a man so changed as he was. I
+ thought he would ask me to bring my things into his tent, and stay with
+ him, but he seemed to have forgotten that he had known me, when he worked
+ on the farm. He was dressed up nicely, and I thought he put on style, and
+ I could only think of him at home, with his overalls tucked in his boots,
+ driving a yoke of oxen to plow a field. He seemed to feel that I had known
+ him under unfavorable circumstances before the war, and acted as though he
+ wanted to shun me. I had drawn an infantry knapsack, at Madison, before I
+ left for the front, and had it full of things, besides a small trunk. The
+ captain called a soldier and told him to find quarters for me, and I went
+ out of his presence. At my quarters, which consisted of what was called a
+ pup-tent, I found no conveniences, and it soon dawned on me that war was
+ no picnic, as that lying recruiting officers had told me it was. I found
+ that I had got to throw away my trunk and knapsack, and all the articles
+ that I couldn't strap on a saddle, and when I asked for a mattress the men
+ laughed at me. I had always slept on a mattress, or a feather bed, and
+ when I was told that I would have to sleep on the ground, under that
+ little tent, I felt hurt. I had known the colonel when he used to teach
+ school at home, and I went to him and told him what kind of a way they
+ were treating me, but he only laughed. He had two nice cots in his tent,
+ and I told him I thought I ought to have a cot, too. He laughed some more.
+ Finally I asked him who slept in his extra cot, and intimated that I had
+ rather sleep in his tent than mine, but he sent me away, and said he would
+ see what could be done. I laid on the ground that night, but I didn't
+ sleep. If I ever get a pension it will be for rheumatism caught by
+ sleeping on the ground. The rheumatism has not got hold of me yet, though
+ twenty-two years have passed, but it may be lurking about my system, for
+ all I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never rode a horse, before enlisting. The only thing I had ever got
+ straddle of was a stool in a country printing office, and when I was first
+ ordered to saddle up my horse, I could not tell which way the saddle and
+ bridle went, and I got a colored man to help me, for which I paid him some
+ of the remains of my bounty. I hired him permanently, to take care of my
+ horse, but I soon learned that each soldier had to take care of his own
+ horse. That seemed pretty hard. I had been raised a pet, and had edited a
+ newspaper, which had been one of the most outspoken advocates of crushing
+ the rebellion, and it seemed to me, as much as I had done for the
+ government, in urging enlistments, I was entitled to more consideration
+ then to become my own hostler. However, I curbed my proud spirit, and
+ after the nigger cook had saddled my horse, I led the animal up to a fence
+ to climb on. From the remarks of the soldiers, and the general laugh all
+ around, it was easy to see that mounting a cavalry horse from off the top
+ of a rail fence was not according to tactics, but it was the only way I
+ could see to get on, in the absence of step-ladders. They let me ride into
+ the ranks, after mounting, and then they laughed. It was hard for me to be
+ obliged to throw away all the articles I had brought with me, so I
+ strapped them on the saddle in front and behind, and only my head stuck
+ out over them. There was one thing, it would be a practicable
+ impossibility to fall off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/021.jpg"
+ alt="Mounting a Horse from the Top of A Rail Fence 021 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The regiment started on a raid. The colonel came along by my company
+ during the afternoon, and I asked him where we were going. He gave me an
+ evasive answer, which hurt my feelings. I asked his pardon, but told him I
+ would like to know where we were going, so as to have my letters sent to
+ me, but he went off laughing, and never told me, while the old soldiers
+ laughed, though I couldn't see what they were laughing at. I did not
+ suppose there was so much difference between officers and privates, and
+ wondered if it was the policy of this government to have a cavalry
+ regiment to start off on a long raid and not let the soldiers know where
+ they were going, and during the afternoon I decided to write home to the
+ paper I formerly edited and give my opinion of such a fool way of running
+ a war. Suppose anybody at home was sick, they wouldn't know where to write
+ for me to come back. There is nothing that will give a man such an
+ appetite as riding on a galloping horse, and along about the middle of the
+ afternoon I began to get hungry, and asked the orderly sergeant when we
+ were going to get any dinner. He said there was a hotel a short distance
+ ahead, and the colonel had gone forward to order dinner for the regiment.
+ I believed him, because I had known the orderly before the war, when he
+ drove a horse in a brickyard, grinding clay. But he was a liar, too, as I
+ found out afterwards. There was not a hotel within fifty miles, and
+ soldiers did not stop at hotels, anyway. Finally the orderly sergeant came
+ along and announced that dinner was ready, and I looked for the hotel, but
+ the only dinner I saw was some raw pork that soldiers took out of their
+ saddle bags, with hard tack. We stopped in the woods, dismounted, and the
+ boys would cut off a slice of fat pork and spread it on the hard tack and
+ eat it. I had never supposed the government would subject its soldiers to
+ such fare as that, and I wouldn't eat. I did not dare dismount, as there
+ was no fence near that I could use to climb on to my horse, so I sat in
+ the saddle and let the horse eat some grass, while I thought of home, and
+ pie and cake, and what a condemned fool a man was to leave a comfortable
+ home to go and put down anybody's rebellion. The way I felt then I
+ wouldn't have touched a rebellion if one lay right in the road. What
+ business was it of mine if some people in the South wanted to dissolve
+ partnership and go set up business for themselves? How was I going to
+ prevent them from having a southern confederacy, by riding an old rack of
+ bones of a horse, that would reach his nose around every little while and
+ chew my legs? If the recruiting officer who inveigled me into the army had
+ come along then, his widow would now be drawing a pension. While I was
+ thinking, dreaming of home, and the horse was eating grass, the fool
+ animal suddenly took it into his head to lay down and roll, and before I
+ could kick any of his ribs in, he was down, and I was rolling off, with
+ one leg under him. The soldiers quit eating and pulled the horse of me,
+ and hoisted me up into the space between my baggage, and then they
+ laughed, lit their pipes and smoked, as happy as could be. I couldn t see
+ how they could be happy, and wondered if they were not sick of war. Then
+ they mounted, and on we went. My legs and body became chafed, and it
+ seemed as though I couldn t ride another minute, and when the captain came
+ along I told him about it, and asked him if I couldn t be relieved some
+ way. He said the only way was for me to stand on my head and ride, and he
+ winked at a soldier near me, and, do you know, that soldier actually
+ changed ends with himself and stood on his head and hands in the saddle
+ and rode quite a distance, and the captain said that was the way a cavalry
+ soldier rested himself. Gracious, I wouldn t have tried that for the
+ world, and I found out afterwards that the soldier who stood on his head
+ formerly belonged with a circus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose it was wrong to complain, but the horse they gave me was the
+ meanest horse in the regiment. He would bite and kick the other horses,
+ and they would kick back, and about half the time I was dodging the heels
+ of horses, and a good deal of the time I was wondering if a man would get
+ any pension if he was wounded that way. It would seem pretty tough to go
+ home on a stretcher, as a wounded soldier, and have people find out a
+ horse kicked you. I never had been a man of blood, and didn't enlist to
+ kill anybody, as I could prove by that recruiting officer, and I didn t
+ want to fight, but from what I could gather from the conversation of the
+ soldiers, fighting and killing people was about all they thought about.
+ They talked about this one and that one who had been killed, and the
+ hundreds of confederates they had all shot or killed with sabres, until my
+ hair just stood right up. It seems that twelve or fifteen men, more or
+ less, had been shot off the horse I was riding, and one fellow who rode
+ next to me said no man who ever rode that old yellow horse had escaped
+ alive. This was cheering to me, and I would have given my three hundred
+ dollars bounty, and all I could borrow, if I could get out of the army.
+ However, I found out afterwards that the soldier lied. In fact they all
+ lied, and they lied for my benefit. We struck into the woods, and traveled
+ until after dark, with no road, and the march was enlivened by remarks of
+ the soldiers near me to the effect that we would probably never get out of
+ the woods alive. They said we were trying to surround an army of rebels,
+ and cut them off from the main army, and the chances were that when
+ tomorrow's sun rose it would rise on the ghostly corpses of the whole
+ regiment, with jackals and buzzards eating us. One of the soldiers took
+ something from his pocket, about the size of a testament, pressed it to
+ his heart, and then kissed it, and I felt as though I was about to faint,
+ but by the light of a match which another soldier had scratched on his
+ pants to light his pipe, I saw that what I supposed to be a testament, was
+ a box of sardines the soldier had bought of the sutler. I was just about
+ to die of hunger, exhaustion, and fright at the fearful stories the
+ veterans had been telling, when there was a shout at the head of the
+ regiment, which was taken up all along the line, my horse run under the
+ limb of a tree and raked me out of the saddle, and I hung to the limb, my
+ legs hanging down, and
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Am Rudely Awakened from Dreams of Home&mdash;I Go on Picket&mdash;
+ The Foe Advances&mdash;A Desperate Conflict&mdash;The Union&mdash;
+ Confederate Breakfast on the Alabama Race-Track&mdash;A Friendly
+ Partin
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The careful readers of this history have no doubt been worried about the
+ manner in which the first chapter closed, leaving me hanging to a limb of
+ a tree, like Absalom weeping for her children, my horse having gone out
+ from under me. But I have not been hanging there all this time. The
+ soldiers took me down, and caught my horse, and the regiment dismounted
+ and a council of war was held. I suppose it was a council of war, as I
+ noticed the officers were all in a group under a tree, with a candle,
+ examining a map, and drinking out of a canteen. I had read of councils of
+ war, but I had never seen one, and so I walked over to the crowd of
+ officers and asked the colonel if there was anything particular the
+ matter. I never saw a crowd of men who seemed so astonished as those
+ officers were, and suddenly I felt myself going away from where they were
+ consulting, with somebody's strong hand on my collar, and an unmistakable
+ cavalry boot, with a man in it, in the vicinity of my pantaloons. I do not
+ know to this day, which officer it was that kicked me, but I went away and
+ sat under a tree in the dark, so hungry that I was near dead, and I wished
+ I <i>was</i> dead. I guess the officers wished that I was, too. The
+ soldiers tried to console me by telling me I was too fresh, but I couldn't
+ see why a private soldier, right from home, who knew all about the public
+ sentiment at the north in regard to the way the war was conducted, should
+ not have a voice in the consultations of officers. I had written many
+ editorials before I left home, criticising the manner in which many
+ generals had handled their commands, and pointed out to my readers how
+ defeat could have been turned into victory, if the generals had done as I
+ would have done in their places. It seemed to me the officers of my
+ regiment were taking a suicidal course in barring me out of their
+ consultations. A soldier had told me that we were lost in the woods, and
+ as I had studied geography when at school, and was well posted about
+ Alabama, it seemed as though a little advice from me would be worth a good
+ deal. But I concluded to let them stay lost forever before I would
+ volunteer any information. It was crawling along towards midnight, of my
+ first day in the army, and I had eaten nothing since morning. As I sat
+ there under the tree I fell asleep, and was dreaming of home, and warm
+ biscuit, with honey, and a feather bed, when I was rudely awakened by a
+ corporal who told me to mount. I asked him what for, and told him that I
+ didn t want to ride any more that night. What I wanted was to be let
+ alone, to sleep. He said to get on the horse too quick, and I found there
+ was no use arguing with a common corporal, so the boys hoisted me on to
+ the horse, and about nine of us started off through the woods in the
+ moonlight, looking for a main road. The corporal was kind enough to say
+ that as soon as we found a road we would put out a picket, and send a
+ courier back to the regiment to inform the colonel that we had got out of
+ the woods, and the rest of us would lay down and sleep till morning. I
+ don't think I was ever so anxious to see a road in all my life, because I
+ <i>did</i> want to lay down and sleep, and die. O, if I could have
+ telegraphed home, how I would have warned the youth of the land to beware
+ of the allurements held out by recruiting officers, and to let war alone.
+ In an hour or so we came to a clearing, and presently to a road, and we
+ stopped. The corporal detailed me to go up the road a short distance and
+ stand picket on my horse. That was not what I had expected of the
+ corporal. I used to know him before the war when he worked in a paint shop
+ in a wagon factory, and I had always treated him well, and it seemed as
+ though he ought to favor me by letting somebody else go on picket. I told
+ him that the other boys were more accustomed to such work than I was, and
+ that I would resign in their favor, because what I wanted was rest, but he
+ said I would have to go, and he called me &ldquo;Camp and Garrison Equipage,&rdquo;
+ because I carried so much luggage on my horse, a name that held to me for
+ months. I found that there was no use kicking against going on picket duty
+ that night, though I tried to argue with the corporal that it would be
+ just as well to all lay down and sleep till morning, and put out a picket
+ when it got light enough to see. I was willing to work during the day time
+ for the government, but it seemed as though it was rushing things a little
+ to make a man work day and night for thirteen dollars a month. So the
+ corporal went out on the road with me about a quarter of a mile, and
+ placed me in position and gave me my instructions. The instructions were
+ to keep a sharp lookout up and down the road for Confederate cavalry, and
+ if I saw anybody approaching to sing out &ldquo;halt!&rdquo; and if the party did not
+ halt to shoot him, and then call for the corporal of the guard, who would
+ come out to see what was the matter. I asked him what I should do if
+ anybody came along and shot me, and he said that would be all right, that
+ the boys would come out and bury me. He said I must keep awake, for if I
+ got to sleep on my post I would be court-martialed and shot, and then he
+ rode away and left me alone, on a horse that kept whinnying, and calling
+ the attention of possible Confederates to my position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not think any reader of these papers will envy me the position I was
+ in at that time. If I remained awake, I was liable to be killed by the
+ enemy, and if I fell asleep on my post I would be shot anyway. And if I
+ was not killed, it was probable I would be a murderer before morning.
+ Hunger was gnawing at my stomach, and the horse was gnawing at my legs,
+ and I was gnawing at a hard tack which I had found in the saddle-bag.
+ Every little while I would hear a noise, and my hair would raise my hat
+ up, and it would seem to me as though the next minute a volley would be
+ fired at me, and I shrunk down between the piles of baggage on my saddle
+ to be protected from bullets. Suddenly the moon came out from behind a
+ cloud and around a turn in the road a solitary horseman might have been
+ seen coming towards me. I never have seen a horse that looked as high as
+ that horse did. He seemed at least eighteen feet high, and the man on him
+ was certainly twelve feet high. My heart pounded against a tin canteen
+ that I had strung around my shoulder, so I could hear the beating
+ perfectly plain. The man was approaching, and I was trying to think
+ whether I had been instructed to shoot and then call for the corporal of
+ the guard, or call for the corporal and then ask him to halt. I knew there
+ was a halt in my instructions, and wondered if it would not conciliate the
+ enemy to a certain extent if I would say &ldquo;Please Halt.&rdquo; The fact was, I
+ didn t want to have any fuss. If I could have backed my horse up into the
+ woods, and let the man go by, it seemed as though it would save
+ precipitating a conflict. It is probable that no military man was ever in
+ so tight a place as I was that minute. The enemy was advancing, and I
+ wondered if, when he got near enough, I could say &ldquo;halt,&rdquo; in a commanding
+ tone of voice. I knew enough, then, to feel that to ask the stranger to
+ halt in a trembling and husky voice would give the whole thing away, that
+ I was a recruit and a coward. Ye gods, how I suffered! I wondered if I
+ could hit a man with a bullet. Before the war I was quite a good shot with
+ a shotgun, shooting into flocks of pigeons and ducks, and I thought what a
+ good idea it would be if I could get that approaching rebel into a flock.
+ The idea seemed so ridiculous that I laughed right out loud. It was not a
+ hearty, happy laugh, but it was a laugh all the same, and I was proud that
+ I could laugh in the face of danger, when I might be a corpse any minute.
+ The man on the horse stopped. Whether he heard me laugh it is impossible
+ to say, but he stopped. That relieved me a great deal. As he had stopped
+ it was unnecessary for me to invite him to halt. He was welcome to stay
+ there if he wanted to. I argued that it was not my place to go howling
+ around the Southern Confederacy, ordering people to halt, when they had
+ already halted. If he would let me alone and stay where he was, what sense
+ was there in picking a quarrel with him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should I want to shoot a total stranger, who might have a family at
+ home, somewhere in the South, who would mourn for him. He might be a dead
+ shot, as many Southern gentlemen were, and if I went to advising him about
+ halting, it would, very likely cause his hot Southern blood to boil, and
+ he would say he had just as much right to that road as I had. If it come
+ right down to the justice of the thing, I should have to admit that
+ Alabama was not my state. Wisconsin was my home, and if I was up there,
+ and a man should trespass on my property, it would be reasonable enough
+ for me to ask him to go away from there, and enforce my request by calling
+ a constable and having him put off the premises. But how did I know but he
+ owned property there, and was a tax-payer. I had it all figured out that I
+ was right in not disturbing that rebel, and I knew that I could argue with
+ my colonel for a week, if necessary, on the law points in the case, and
+ the courtesy that I deemed proper between gentlemen, if any complaint was
+ made for not doing my duty. But, lordy, how I <i>did</i> sweat while I was
+ deciding to let him alone if he would let me alone. The war might have
+ been going on now, and that rebel and myself might have been standing
+ there today, looking at each other, if it hadn't been for the action of
+ the fool horse that I rode. My horse had been evidently asleep for some
+ time, but suddenly he woke up, pricked up his ears, and began to prance,
+ and jump sideways like a race horse that is on the track, and wants to
+ run. The horse reared up and plunged, and kept working up nearer to my
+ Southern friend, and I tried to hold him, and keep him still, but suddenly
+ he got the best of me and started towards the other man and horse, and the
+ other horse started, as though some one had said &ldquo;go&rdquo;.{*}
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * [Before I get any further on this history of the war, it
+ is necessary to explain. The facts proved to be that my
+ regiment had got lost in the woods, and the scouting party,
+ under the corporal, who had been sent out to find a road,
+ had come upon the three-quarter stretch of an old private
+ race track on a deserted southern plantation, instead of a
+ main road, and I had been placed on picket near the last
+ turn before striking the quarter stretch. A small party of
+ Confederates, who had been out on a scout, and got lost, had
+ come on the track further down, near the judges' stand, and
+ they had put a man, on picket up near where I was, supposing
+ they had struck the road, and intending to wait until
+ morning so as to find out where they were. My horse was an
+ old race horse, and as soon as he saw the other horse, he
+ was in for a race and the other horse was willing. This will
+ show the situation as well as though I had a race track
+ engraved, showing the positions of the two armies. The
+ Confederates, except the man on picket, were asleep beside
+ the track near the quarter stretch, and our fellows, except
+ myself, were asleep over by the three-quarter pole.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I do not suppose any man on this earth, or any other earth, ever tried to
+ stop a fool horse quite as hard as I did that one. I pulled until my arms
+ ached, but he went for all that was out, and the horse ahead of me was
+ buckling in as fast as he could. I could not help wondering what would
+ happen if I should overtake that Southern man. I was gaining on him, when
+ suddenly eight or nine men who were sleeping beside the road, got up and
+ began to shoot at us. They were the friends of the rebel, who believed
+ that the whole Union army was making a charge on them. We got by the
+ shooters alive, and then, as we passed the rickety old judge's stand, I
+ realized that we were on a race track, and for a moment I forgot that I
+ was a soldier, and only thought of myself as a rider of a race horse, and
+ I gave the horse his head, and kicked him, and yelled like a Comanche
+ Indian, and I had the satisfaction of seeing my horse go by the rebel, and
+ I yelled some more. I got a glimpse of my rebel's, face as I went by him,
+ and he didn't look much more like a fighting man than I did, but he was,
+ for as soon as I had got ahead of him he drew a revolver and began firing
+ at me on the run. I thought that was a mean trick, and spoke to him about
+ it afterwards, but he said he only wanted me to stop so he could get
+ acquainted with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/039.jpg" alt="On Went the Two Night Riders 039 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Well, I never could find any bullets in any of the clothes strapped on the
+ back of my saddle, but it <i>did</i> seem to me as though every bullet
+ from his revolver hit very near my vital parts. But a new danger presented
+ itself. We were rapidly approaching the corporal and his men, with whose
+ command I belonged, and they would wake up and think the whole Confederate
+ army was charging them, and if I was not killed by the confounded rebel
+ behind me, I should probably be shot all to pieces by our own men. As we
+ passed our men they fired a few sleepy shots towards us, and took to the
+ woods. On went the two night riders, and when the rebel had exhausted his
+ revolver he began to urge his horse, and passed me, and I drew my revolver
+ and began to fire at him. As we passed the judge's stand the second time a
+ couple of shots from quite a distance in the woods showed that his rebel
+ friends had taken alarm at the frequent charges of cavalry, and had
+ skipped to the woods and were getting away as fast as possible. We went
+ around the track once more, and when near the judge's stand I was right
+ behind him, and his horse fell down and my horse stumbled over him, and I
+ guess we were both stunned. Finally I crawled out from under my horse, and
+ the rebel was trying to raise up, when I said, &ldquo;What in thunder you want
+ to chase a man all around the Southern Confederacy for, on a dark night,
+ trying to shoot him?&rdquo; He asked me to help him up, which I did, when he
+ said, &ldquo;Who commenced this here chasing? If you had kept whar you was, I
+ wouldn't a had no truck with you.&rdquo; Then I said, &ldquo;You are my prisoner,&rdquo; and
+ he said, &ldquo;No, you are my prisoner.&rdquo; I told him I was no hand to argue, but
+ it seemed to me it was about a stand off, as to which was 'tother's
+ prisoner. I told him that was my first day's service as a soldier, and I
+ was not posted as to the customs of civilized warfare, but I was willing
+ to wait till daylight, leaving matters just as they were, each of us on
+ the defensive, giving up none of our rights, and after daylight we would
+ play a game of seven-up to see which was the prisoner. That seemed fair to
+ him, and he accepted the situation, remarking that he had only been
+ conscripted a few days and didn't know any more about war than a cow. He
+ said he was a newspaper man from Georgia, and had been taken right from
+ the case in his office before his paper could be got out. I told him I was
+ only a few days out of a country printing office my-self, the sheriff
+ having closed out my business on an old paper bill. A bond of sympathy was
+ inaugurated at once between us, and when he limped along the track to the
+ fence, and found that his ankle was hurt by the fall, I brought a bottle
+ of horse liniment out of my saddle-bags, and a rag, and bound some
+ liniment on his ankle. He said he had never seen a Yankee soldier before,
+ and he was glad he had met me. I told him he was the first rebel I had
+ ever met, and I hoped he would be the last, until the war was over. By
+ this time our horses had gone to nibbling grass, as though there were no
+ such thing as war. We could hear occasional bugle calls off in the woods
+ in two directions, and knew that our respective commands had gone off and
+ got lost again, so we concluded to camp there till morning. After the
+ excitement was over I began to get hungry, and I asked him if he had
+ anything to eat. He said he had some corn bread and bacon, and he could
+ get some sweet potatoes over in a field. So I built a fire there on the
+ track, and he hobbled off after potatoes. Just about daylight breakfast
+ was served, consisting of coffee, which I carried in a sack, made in a pot
+ he carried, bacon fried in a half of a tin canteen, sweet potatoes roasted
+ in the ashes, and Confederate corn bread, warmed by holding it over the
+ fire on a sharp stick. My friend, the rebel, sat on my saddle, which I had
+ removed from my horse, after he had promised me on his honor to help me to
+ put it on when it was time to mount. He knew how to put on saddles, and I
+ didn t, and as his ankle was lame I gave him the best seat, he being my
+ guest, that is, he was my guest if I beat him in the coming game of
+ seven-up, which we were to play to see if he was my prisoner, or I was
+ his. It being daylight, I could see him, and study his character, and
+ honestly he was a mighty fine-looking fellow. As we eat our early
+ breakfast I began to think that the recruiting officer was more than half
+ right about war being a picnic. He talked about the newspaper business in
+ the South, and before breakfast was over we had formed a partnership to
+ publish a paper at Montgomery, Ala., after the war should be over. I have
+ eaten a great many first-class meals in my time, have feasted at
+ Delmonico's, and lived at the best hotels in the land, besides partaking
+ pretty fair food camping out, where an appetite was worked up by exercise
+ and sporting, but in all my life I have never had anything taste as good
+ as that combination Union-Confederate breakfast on the Alabama race track,
+ beside the judges stand. After the last potato peeling, and the last crumb
+ of corn bread had been &ldquo;sopped&rdquo; in the bacon gravy and eaten, we whittled
+ some tobacco off a plug, filled our pipes and leaned up against the fence
+ and smoked the most enjoyable smoke that ever was smoked. After smoking in
+ silence a few minutes my rebel friend said, as he blew the smoke from his
+ handsome mouth, &ldquo;War is not so unpleasant, after all.&rdquo; Then we fell to
+ talking about the manner in which the different generals on each side had
+ conducted things. He went on to show that if Lee had taken his advice, the
+ Yankees would then be on the run for the North, and I showed him, by a few
+ well-chosen remarks that if I could have been close to Grant, and given
+ him some pointers, that the Confederates would be hunting their holes. We
+ were both convinced that it was a great mistake that we were nothing but
+ private soldiers, but felt that it would not be long before we were called
+ to occupy high places. It seemed to stand to reason that true merit would
+ find its reward. Then he knocked the ashes out of his pipe and said if I
+ had a pack of cards we would go up in the judges stand and play seven-up
+ to see whether I was his prisoner, or he was mine. I wanted to take a
+ prisoner back to the regiment, at I thought it would make me solid with
+ the colonel, and I played a strong game of seven-up, but before we got
+ started to playing he suggested that we call it a stand-off, and agree
+ that neither of us should be a prisoner, but that when we got ready to
+ part each should go hunt up his own command, and tell the biggest lie we
+ could think of as to the fight we had had. That was right into my hand,
+ and I agreed, and then my friend suggested that we play poker for money. I
+ consented and he put up Confederate money, against my greenbacks, ten to
+ one. We played about an hour, and at the close he had won the balance of
+ my bounty, except what I had given to the chaplain for safe keeping, and a
+ pair of pants, and a blouse, and a flannel shirt, and a pair of shoes,
+ which I had on my saddle. I was rather glad to get rid of some of my extra
+ baggage, and when he put on the clothes he had won from me, blessed if I
+ wasn t rather proud of him. A man could wear any kind of clothes in the
+ Confederate army, and my rebel looked real comfortable in my clothes, and
+ I felt that it was a real kind act to allow him to win a blue suit that I
+ did not need. If the men of both the armies, and the people of both
+ sections of the distracted country could have seen us two soldiers
+ together, there in the judges stand, peacefully playing poker, while the
+ battles were raging in the East and in the West, that would have felt that
+ an era of good feeling was about to dawn on the country. After we had
+ played enough poker, and I had lost everything I had that was loose, I
+ suggested that he sing a song, so he sung the &ldquo;Bonnie Blue Flag.&rdquo; I did
+ not think it was right for him to work in a rebel song on me, but it did
+ sound splendid, and I forgot that there was any war, in listening to the
+ rich voice of my new friend. When he got through he asked me to sing
+ something. I never <i>could</i> sing, anyway. My folks had always told me
+ that my voice sounded like a corn sheller, but he urged me at his own
+ peril, and I sung, or tried to, &ldquo;We'll Hang Jeff Davis to a Sour Apple
+ Tree.&rdquo; I had no designs on Mr. Davis, honestly I hadn't, and it was the
+ farthest thing from my thoughts to hurt the feelings of that young man,
+ but before I had finished the first verse he took his handkerchief out and
+ placed it to his eyes. I stopped and apologized, but he said not to mind
+ him, as he was better now. He told me, afterwards, in the strictest
+ confidence, that my singing was the worst he ever heard, and gave it as
+ his opinion that if Jeff Davis could hear me sing he would be willing,
+ even anxious, to be hung. If I had been sensitive about my musical
+ talents, probably there would have been hard feelings, and possibly
+ bloodshed, right there, but I told him I always knew I couldn't sing, and
+ he said that I was in luck. Well, we fooled around there till about ten
+ o'clock in the morning, and decided that we would part, and each seek our
+ respective commands, so I put some more horse liniment on his sprained
+ ankle, and he saddled my horse for me, and after expressions of mutual
+ pleasure at meeting each other, and promises that after the war we would
+ seek each other out, we mounted, he gave three cheers for the Yanks, and I
+ gave three cheers for the Johnnies, he divided his plug of tobacco with
+ me, and I gave him the bottle of horse liniment, he turned his horse
+ towards the direction his gray coats had taken the night before, while I
+ turned my horse towards the hole in the woods our fellows had made, and we
+ left the race track where we had fought so gamely, eat so heartily, and
+ played poker so disastrously, to me. As we were each about going into the
+ woods, half a mile apart, he waved his handkerchief at me, and I waved
+ mine at him, and we plunged into the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After riding for an hour or so, alone in the woods, thinking up a good lie
+ to tell about where I had been, and what I had been doing, I heard horses
+ neighing, and presently I came upon my regiment, just starting out to hunt
+ me up. The colonel looked at me and said, &ldquo;Kill the fat prodigal, the calf
+ has got back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Describe a Deadly Encounter&mdash;Am Congratulated as a Warrior
+ With a Big &ldquo;W&rdquo;&mdash;The Chaplain Gives Good Advice&mdash;I Attend
+ Surgeon's Call&mdash;Castor Oil out of a Dirty Bottle&mdash;Back to
+ the Chaplain's Tent&mdash;I am Wounded in the Canteen.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last chapter of this history left me facing my regiment, which had
+ started out to hunt me up, after my terrible fight with that Confederate.
+ The colonel rode up to me and shook me by the hand, and congratulated me,
+ and the major and adjutant said they had never expected to see me alive,
+ and the soldiers looked at me as one returned from the grave, and from
+ what I could gather by the looks of the boys, I was something of a hero,
+ even before I had told my story. The colonel asked me what had become of
+ all the baggage I had on my saddle when I went away, and I told him that I
+ had thrown ballast over-board all over the Southern Confederacy, when I
+ was charging the enemy, because I found my horse drew too much water for a
+ long run. He said something about my being a Horse-Marine, and sent me
+ back to my company, telling me that when we got into camp that night he
+ would send for me and I could tell the story of my capture and escape. I
+ rode back into my company, and you never saw such a change of sentiment
+ towards a raw recruit, as there was towards me, and they asked me
+ questions about my first fight. The corporal who had placed me on picket,
+ and stampeded at the first fire, was unusually gracious to me, and said
+ when he saw a hundred and fifty rebels come charging down the road,
+ yelling and firing, he knew it was no place for his small command, so he
+ lit out. He said he supposed of course I was shot all to pieces. I didn't
+ tell him that it was me that did all the yelling, and that there was only
+ one rebel, and that he was perfectly harmless, but I told him that he
+ miscalculated the number of the enemy, as there were, all told, at least
+ five hundred, and that I had killed fourteen that I knew of, besides a
+ number had been taken away in ambulances, wounded. The boys opened their
+ eyes, and nothing was too good for me during that march. We went into camp
+ in the pine woods late in the afternoon, and after supper the colonel sent
+ for me, and I went to his tent. All the officers were there, and as many
+ soldiers as dared crowd around. The colonel said the corporal had reported
+ where he left me, and how the enemy had charged in force, and he supposed
+ that I had been promptly killed. That he felt that he could not hold his
+ position against such immense odds, so he had fallen back slowly, firing
+ as he did so, until the place was too hot for him, and now he wanted to
+ hear my story. I told the colonel that I was new at the business, and may
+ be I did not use the best judgment in the world, by remaining to fight
+ against such odds, but I meant well. I told him I did not wish to complain
+ of the corporal, who no doubt was an able fighter, but it did seem to me
+ that he ought at least to have waited till the battle had actually
+ commenced. I said that the first charge, which stampeded the corporal and
+ his men, was not a marker to what took place afterwards. I said when the
+ enemy first appeared, I dismounted, got behind a tree, and poured a
+ murderous fire into the ranks of the rebels, and that they fell all
+ around. I could not tell how many were killed, but probably ten, as I
+ fired eleven shots from, my carbine, and I usually calculated on missing
+ one out of ten, when shooting at a mark. Then they fell back and I mounted
+ my horse and rode to their right flank and poured it into them red hot
+ from my revolver, and that I saw several fall from their horses, when they
+ stampeded, and I drew my saber and charged them, and after cutting down
+ several, I was surrounded by the whole rebel army and captured. They tied
+ me to the wheel of a gun carriage, and after trying to pump me as to the
+ number of men I had fighting against them, they left me to hold a council
+ of war, when I untied myself, mounted my horse, and cut my way out, and
+ took to the woods. I apologized to the colonel for running away from the
+ enemy, but told him it seemed to me, after the number I had killed, and
+ the length of time I had held them at bay, it was no more than right to
+ save my own life, as I had use for it in my business. During my recital of
+ the lie I had made up, the officers and soldiers stood around with mouths
+ open, and when I had concluded my story, there was silence for a moment,
+ when the colonel stepped forward and took me by the hand, and in a few
+ well chosen remarks congratulated me on my escape, and thanked me for so
+ valiantly standing my ground against such fearful odds, and he said I had
+ reflected credit upon my regiment, and that hereafter I would be classed
+ as a veteran instead of a recruit. He said he had never known a man to
+ come right from the paths of peace, and develop into a warrior with a big
+ &ldquo;W&rdquo; so short a time. The other officers congratulated me, and the soldiers
+ said I was a bully boy. The colonel treated to some commissary whisky, and
+ then the business of the evening commenced, which I found to be draw
+ poker. I sat around for some time watching the officers play poker, when
+ the chaplain, who was a nice little pious man, asked me to step outside
+ the tent, as he wished to converse with me. I went out into the moonlight
+ with him, and he took me away from the tents, under a tree, and told me he
+ had been much interested in my story. I thanked him, and said I had been
+ as brief as possible. He said, &ldquo;I was interested, because I used to be
+ something of a liar myself, before I reformed, and studied for the
+ ministry.&rdquo; It occurred to me that possibly the chaplain did not believe my
+ simple tale, and I asked him if he doubted my story. &ldquo;That is about the
+ size of it,&rdquo; says he. I told him I was sorry I had not told the story in
+ such a manner that he would believe it, because I valued the opinion of
+ the chaplain above all others. He said he had known a good many star liars
+ in his time, some that had national reputations, but he had never seen one
+ that could hold a candle to me in telling a colossal lie, or aggregation
+ of lies, and tell them so easy. I thanked him for his good opinion, and
+ told him that I flattered myself that for a recruit, right fresh from the
+ people, who had never had any experience as a military liar, I had done
+ pretty well. He said I certainly had, and he was glad to make my
+ acquaintance. I asked him to promise not to give it away to the other
+ officers, which he did, and then I told him the whole story, as it was,
+ and that I was probably the biggest coward that ever lived, and that I was
+ only afraid that my story of blood-letting would encourage the officers to
+ be constantly putting me into places of danger, which I did not want to be
+ in. I told him I believed this war could be ended without killing any more
+ men, and cited the fact that I had been a soldier nearly forty-eight
+ hours, and nobody had been killed, and the enemy was on the run. I told
+ the chaplain that if there was one thing I didn't want to see, it was
+ blood. Others might have an insatiable appetite for gore, but I didn't
+ want any at all. I was willing to do anything for this government but
+ fight; and if he could recommend to me any line of action by which I could
+ pull through without being sent out to do battle with strangers who could
+ shoot well, I should consider it a favor. What I wanted was a soft job,
+ where there was no danger. The chaplain looked thoughtful a moment, and
+ then took me over to his tent, where he opened a bottle of blackberry
+ brandy. He took a small dose, after placing his hand on his stomach and
+ groaning a little. He asked me if I did not sometimes have a pain under my
+ vest. I told him I never had a pain anywhere. Then he said I couldn't have
+ any brandy. He said the brandy came from the sanitary commsssion, and was
+ controlled entirely by the chaplains of the different regiments, and the
+ instructions were to only use it in case of sickness. He said a great many
+ of the boys had pains regularly, and came to him for relief. He smacked
+ his lips and said if I felt any pain coming on, to help myself to the
+ brandy. It is singular how a pain will sometimes come on when you least
+ expect it. It was not a minute before I began to feel a small pain, not
+ bigger than a man's hand, and as I looked at the bottle the pain
+ increased, and I had to tell the chaplain that I must have relief before
+ it was everlastingly too late, so he poured out a dose of brandy for me. I
+ could see that I was becoming a veteran very fast, as I could work the
+ chaplain for sanitary stores pretty early in the game. Well, the chaplain
+ and me had pains off and on, for an hour or two, and became good friends.
+ He told me of quite a number of methods of shirking active duty, such as
+ being detailed to take care of baggage, acting as orderly, and going to
+ surgeon's call. He said if a man went to surgeon's call, the doctor would
+ report him sick, and he could not be sent out on duty. The next day we
+ went back to our post, where the regiment was stationed, and where they
+ had barracks, that they wintered in, and remained there several weeks,
+ drilling. I was drilled in mounting and dismounting, and soon got so I
+ could mount a horse without climbing on to him from a fence. But the drill
+ became irksome, and I decided to try the chaplain's suggestion about going
+ to surgeon's call. I got in line with about twenty other soldiers, and we
+ marched over to the surgeon's quarters. I supposed the doctor would take
+ each soldier into a private room, feel of his pulse, look at his tongue,
+ and say that what he needed was rest, and give him some powders to be
+ taken in wafers, or in sugar. But all he did was to say &ldquo;What's the
+ matter?&rdquo; and the sick man would tell him, when the doctor would tell his
+ assistant to give the man something, and pass on to the next. I was the
+ last one to be served, and the interview was about as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doc.&mdash;What's the matter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Me&mdash;Bilious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doc.&mdash;Run out your tongue. Take a swallow out of the black bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That seems very simple, indeed, but it nearly killed me. When he told me
+ to run out my tongue, I run out perhaps six inches of the lower end of it,
+ the doctor glanced at it as though it was nothing to him anyway, and then
+ he told me to take a swallow out of the bottle. In all my life I had never
+ taken four doses of medicine, and when I did the medicine was disguised in
+ preserves or something. The hospital steward handed me the bottle that a
+ dozen other sick soldiers had drank out of, and it was sticky all around
+ the top, and contained something that looked like castor oil, for greasing
+ a buggy. He told me to take a good big swallow, and I tried to do so. Talk
+ about the suffering brought on by the war, it seems to me nobody ever
+ suffered as I did, trying to drink a swallow of that castor oil out of a
+ two quart bottle, that was dirty. It run so slow that it seemed, an age
+ before I got enough to swallow, and then it seemed another age before the
+ oil could pass a given point in my neck. And great Caesar's ghost how it
+ <i>did</i> taste. I think it went down my neck, and I just had strength
+ enough to ask the steward to give me something to take the taste out of my
+ mouth. He handed me a blue pill. O, I could have killed him. I rushed to
+ the chaplain's tent and took a drink of blackberry brandy, and my life was
+ saved, but for three years after that I was never sick enough to get
+ farther than the chaplain's quarters.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ I suppose the meanest trick that was ever played on a raw recruit, was
+ played on me while we were in camp at that place. It seemed to me that
+ some of the boys got jealous of me, because I had become a hero,
+ accidentally. May be some of them did not believe I had killed as many of
+ the enemy as I had owned up to having killed. Anyway every little while
+ some soldier would say that he thought it was a mean man that would go out
+ and kill a lot of rebels and not bury them. He said a man that would do
+ that was a regular pot-hunter, who killed game and left it on the ground
+ to spoil. They made lots of such uncharitable remarks, but I did not pay
+ much attention to to them. I had a tent-mate who took a great interest in
+ me, and he said no soldier's life was safe who did not wear a
+ breast-plate, and he asked me if I did not bring any breast-plate with me.
+ I told him I never heard of a breastplate, and asked him what it was. He
+ said it was a vest made of the finest spring steel, that could be worn
+ under the clothes, which was so strong that a bullet could not penetrate
+ it. He supposed of course I had one, when he heard of the fight I had, and
+ said none of the old boys would go into a fight without one, as it covered
+ the vital parts, and saved many a life. I bit like a bass. If there was
+ anything I wanted more than a discharge, it was a breast-plate. If the
+ chaplain should succeed in getting me a soft job, where there was no
+ danger, I could get along without my breast-plate, but there was no sure
+ thing about the chaplain, so I asked the soldier where I could get a
+ breastplate. He said the quartermaster used to issue them, but he didn't
+ have any on hand now, but he said he knew where there was one that once
+ belonged to a soldier who was killed, and he thought he could get it for
+ me. I asked him how it happened that the soldier was killed, when he had a
+ breast-plate, and he told me the man was killed by eating green peaches.
+ Of course I couldn't expect a breastplate to save me from the effects of
+ eating unripe fruit, and I felt that if it would save me from bullets it
+ would be worth all it cost, so I told the soldier to get it for me. That
+ evening he brought it around, and he helped me put it on. I learned
+ afterwards that it was an old breast-plate that an officer had brought to
+ the regiment when the war broke out, and that it had been played on raw
+ recruits for two years. After I had got it on, the soldier suggested that
+ we go out with several other dare devils, and run the guard and go down
+ town and play billiards, and have a jolly time. I asked him if the guard
+ would not shoot at us, and he said the guards would be all right, and if
+ they did shoot they would shoot at the breast-plates, as all the boys had
+ them on. So about six of us sneaked through the guards, went to town and
+ had a big time, and came back along towards morning, each with a canteen
+ of whisky. It was not easy getting back inside the lines, as the moon was
+ shining, but we got by the guards, and then my friends suggested that we
+ take our breast-plates off and put them on behind us, as the guards, if
+ they shot at all, would be firing in our rear. I took mine off and put it
+ on behind my pants, and just then somebody fired a gun, and the boys said
+ &ldquo;run,&rdquo; and I started ahead, and the firing continued, and about every jump
+ I could hear and feel something striking my breast-plate behind, which
+ seemed to me to be bullets, and I was glad I had the breast-plate on,
+ though afterwards I found that the boys behind me were firing off their
+ revolvers in the air, and throwing small stones at my breast-plate.
+ Presently a bullet, as I supposed, struck me in the back above the
+ breast-plate, and I could feel blood trickling down my back, and I knew I
+ was wounded. O, I hankered for gore, before enlisting, and while editing a
+ paper, and now I had got it, got gore till I couldn't rest. The blood run
+ down my side, down my leg, into my boot, and I could feel I was wading in
+ my own blood. And great heaven's, how it did smell. I had never smelled
+ blood before, that I knew of, and I thought it had the most peculiar,
+ pungent, intoxicating odor. I ran towards my quarters as fast as possible,
+ fainting almost, from imaginary loss of blood, and finally rushed into my
+ tent, threw myself on my bunk and called loudly for the doctor and
+ chaplain, and then I fainted. When I came to I was surrounded by the
+ doctor, and a lot of the boys, all laughing, and the chaplain was trying
+ to say something pious, while trying to keep a straight face. &ldquo;Have you
+ succeeded in staunching the blood, doc?&rdquo; I asked, in a trembling voice. He
+ said the blood was quite staunch, but the whisky could never be saved. I
+ did not know what he meant, and I turned to the chaplain and asked him if
+ he wouldn't be kind enough to say something appropriate to the occasion. I
+ told him I had been a bad man, had lied some, as he well knew, and had
+ been guilty of things that would bar me out of the angel choir, but that
+ if he had any influence at the throne of grace, and could manage to sneak
+ me in under the canvass anyway, he could have the balance of my bounty,
+ and all the pay that might be coming to me. The chaplain held up the
+ breast-plate that had been removed by kind hands, from the back portion of
+ my person, and said I had better take that along with me, as it would be
+ handy to wear when I wanted to stand with my back to the fire in hades. I
+ could not understand why the good man should joke me, on my death bed, and
+ I rolled over with my back to the wall, to weep, unobserved, and I felt
+ the blood sticking to my clothes and person, and I asked the doctor why he
+ did not dress my wound. He said he should have to send the wound to the
+ tin-shop to be dressed, and then they all laughed. This made me indignant,
+ and I turned over and faced the crowd, and asked them if they had no
+ hearts, that they could thus mock at a dying man. The doctor held up my
+ canteen with a hole in it, made by a stone thrown by one of my companions,
+ and said, &ldquo;You d&mdash;&mdash;d fool, you are not wounded. Somebody busted
+ your canteen, and the whiskey run down your leg and into your boot, and
+ you, like an idiot, thought it was your life blood ebbing away. Couldn't
+ you tell that it was whiskey by the smell?&rdquo; I felt of myself, where I
+ thought I was wounded, and couldn't find any hole, and then I took off my
+ boot, and emptied the whisky out, and felt stronger, and finally I got up,
+ and the boys went away laughing at me, leaving the chaplain, who was kind
+ enough to tell me that of all the raw recruits that had ever come to the
+ regiment, he thought I was the biggest idiot of the lot, to let the boys
+ play that ancient breast-plate and canteen joke on me. I asked him if the
+ boys didn't all wear breast-plates, and he said &ldquo;naw!&rdquo; He told me that was
+ the only breast-plate in the whole Department of the Gulf, and it was kept
+ to play on recruits, and that I must keep it until a new recruit came that
+ was green enough to allow the boys to do him up. So I hid the breast-plate
+ under my bunk, and went to bed and tried to dream out some method of
+ getting even with my persecutors, while the chaplain went out, after
+ offering to hold himself in readiness, day or night, to come and pray for
+ me, if I was wounded in the canteen any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Yearn for a Furlough&mdash;I Interview the General&mdash;I am
+ Detailed to Carry a Rail&mdash;I Make a Horse-trade With the
+ Chaplain&mdash;I am Put in Charge of a Funeral.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I had now been fighting the battles of my country for two weeks, and felt
+ that I needed rest, and one day I became so homesick that it <i>did</i>
+ seem as though it would kill me. Including the week it had taken me to get
+ from home to my regiment, three weeks had elapsed since I bid good-bye to
+ my friends, and I wanted to go home. I would lay awake nights and think of
+ people at home and wonder what they were doing, and if they were laying
+ awake nights thinking of me, or caring whether I was alive, or buried in
+ the swamps of the South. It was about the time of year when at home we
+ always went off shooting, and I thought how much better it was to go off
+ shooting ducks and geese, and chickens, that could not shoot back, than to
+ be hunting bloodthirsty Confederates that were just as liable to hunt us,
+ and who could kill, with great ease. I thought of a pup I had at home that
+ was just the right age to train, and that he would be spoiled if he was
+ not trained that season. O, how I did want to train that pup. The news
+ that one of my comrades had been granted a furlough, after three years'
+ service, and that he was going home, made me desperate, and I dreamed that
+ I had waylaid and murdered the fortunate soldier, and gone home on his
+ furlough. The idea of getting a furlough was the one idea in my mind, and
+ the next morning as I took my horse to the veterinary surgeon for
+ treatment,{*} I had a talk with the horse doctor about the possibilities
+ of getting a furlough. I had known him before the war, when he kept a
+ livery stable, and as I owed him a small livery bill, I thought he would
+ give it to me straight. The horse doctor had his sleeves rolled up, and
+ was holding a horse's tongue in one hand while he poured some medicine
+ down the animal's throat out of a bottle with the other hand, which made
+ me sorry for the horse, as I remembered my experience at surgeon's call,
+ in drinking a dose of castor oil out of a bottle, and I was mean-enough to
+ be glad they played it on horses as well as the soldiers. The horse doctor
+ returned the horse's tongue to it's mouth, kicked the animal in the ribs,
+ turned and wiped his hands on a bale of hay, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, George, to get a furlough a man has got to have plenty of gall,
+ especially a man who has only been to the front a couple of weeks. There
+ is no use making an application in the regular way, to your captain, have
+ him endorse it and send it to regimental headquarters, and so on to
+ brigade headquarters, because you would never hear of it again. My idea
+ would be for you to go right to the general commanding the division, and
+ tell him you have got to go home. But you mustn't go crawling to him, and
+ whining. He is a quick-tempered man, and he hates a coward. Go to him and
+ talk familiar with him, and act as though you had always associated with
+ him, and slap him on the shoulder, and make yourself at home. Just make up
+ a good, plausible story, and give it to him, and if he seems irritated,
+ give him to understand that he can t frighten you, and just as likely as
+ not he will give you a furlough. I don't say he will, mind you, but it
+ would be just like him. But he does like to be treated familiar like, by
+ the boys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I neglected to say, in my account of the battle at the
+ race-track, that when firing with my revolver, at my friend
+ the rebel, I put one bullet-hole through the right ear of my
+ horse. I was so excited at the time that I did not know it,
+ and only discovered it a week later when currying off my
+ horse, which I made a practice of doing once a week, with a
+ piece of barrel-stave, when I noticed the horse's ear was
+ swelled up about as big as a canvas ham. I took him to the
+ horse doctor, who reduced the swelling so we could find the
+ hole through the horse's ear, and the horse doctor tied a
+ blue ribbon in the hole. He said the blue ribbon would help
+ heal the sore, but later I found that he had put the ribbon
+ in the ear to call attention to my poor marksmanship, and
+ the boys got so they made comments and laughed at me every
+ time I appeared with the horse.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I thanked the horse doctor and went away with my horse, resolved to have a
+ furlough or know the reason why. The general's headquarters were about
+ half a mile from our camp, and after drill that morning I went to see him.
+ I had seen him several times, at the colonel's headquarters, and he always
+ seemed mad about something, and I had thought he was about the crossest
+ looking man I ever saw, but if there was any truth in what the horse
+ doctor had told me, he was easily reached if a man went at him right, and
+ I resolved that if pure, unadulterated cheek and monumental gall would
+ accomplish anything, I would have a furlough before night, for a
+ homesicker man never lived than I was. I went up to the general's tent and
+ a guard halted me and asked me what I wanted, and I said I wanted to see
+ &ldquo;his nibs,&rdquo; and I walked right by the guard, who seemed stunned by my
+ cheek. I saw the general in his tent, with his coat off, writing, and he
+ <i>did</i> look savage. Without taking off my hat, or saluting him, I went
+ right up to him and sat down on the end of a trunk that was in the tent,
+ and with a tremendous effort to look familiar, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hello, Boss, writing to your girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen a good many men in my time who were pretty mad, but I have
+ never seen a man who appeared to be as mad as the general did. He was a
+ regular army officer, I found afterwards, and hated a volunteer as he did
+ poison. He turned red in the face and pale, and I thought he frothed at
+ the mouth, but may be he didn't. He seemed to try to control himself, and
+ said through his clenched teeth, in a sarcastic manner, I thought, in
+ imitation of a ring master in a circus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What will the little lady have next?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been in circuses myself, and when the general said that I answered
+ the same as a clown always does, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The banners, my lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought he would be pleased at my joking with him, but he looked around
+ as though he was seeking a revolver or a saber with which to kill me
+ finnally he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want, man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a little tough to be called plain &ldquo;man,&rdquo; but I swallowed it. I made
+ up my mind it was time to act, so I stood up, put my hand on the shoulder
+ of the general familiarly, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fact is, old man, I want a furlough to go home. I have got business
+ that demands my attention; I am sick of this inactivity in camp, and
+ besides the shooting season is just coming on at home, and I have got a
+ setter pup that will be spoiled if he is not trained this season. I came
+ down here two weeks ago, to help put down the rebellion; but all we have
+ done since I got here is to monkey around drilling and cleaning off
+ horses, while the officers play poker for red chips. Let me go home till
+ the poker season is over, and I will be back in time for the fall
+ fighting. What do you say, old apoplexy. Can I go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/059.jpg"
+ alt="Never Did Know, How I Got out of the General's Tent 059 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ I do not now, and never did know, how I got out of the general's tent,
+ whether he kicked me out, or threw his trunk at me, or whether there was
+ an explosion, but when I got outside there were two soldiers trying to
+ untangle me from the guy ropes of the general's tent, his wash basin and
+ pail of water were tipped over, and a cord that was strung outside with a
+ lot of uniforms, shirts, sabers, etc., had fallen down, and the general
+ was walking up and down his tent in an excited manner, calling me an
+ escaped lunatic, and telling the guards to tie me up by the thumbs, and
+ buck and gag me. They led me away, and from their conversation I concluded
+ I had committed an unpardonable offense, and would probably be hung,
+ though I couldn't see as I had done much more than the horse doctor told
+ me to. Finally the officer of the day came along and told the guards to
+ get a rail and make me carry it. So they got a rail and put it on my
+ shoulder, and I carried it up and down the camp, as a punishment for
+ insulting the general. I thought they picked out a pretty heavy rail, but
+ I carried it the best I could for an hour, when I threw it down and told
+ the guards I didn't enlist to carry rails. If the putting down of this
+ rebellion depended on carrying fence rails around the Southern
+ Confederacy, and I had to carry the rails, the aforesaid rebellion never
+ would be put down. I said I would fight if I had to, and be a hostler, and
+ cook my own food, and sleep on the ground, and try to earn my thirteen
+ dollars a month, but there must be a line drawn somewhere, and I drew it
+ at transporting fences around the sunny South. The guards were inclined to
+ laugh at my determination, but they said I could carry the rail or be tied
+ up by the thumbs; and I said they could go ahead, but if they hurt me I
+ would bring suit against the government. They were fixing to tie me up
+ when the colonel of my regiment rode up to see the general, and he got the
+ guards to let up on me till he could see the general. The general sent for
+ me after the colonel had talked with him, and they called me in and asked
+ me how I happened to be so fresh with the general; and I told them about
+ the horse doctors' advice as to how to get a furlough; and then they both
+ laughed, and said I owed the horse doctor one, and I must get even with
+ him. The colonel told the general who I was, that he had known me before
+ the war, and that I was all right only a little green, and that the boys
+ were having fun with me. The colonel told the general about my first fight
+ the first day of my service, and how I had, single-handed, put to flight a
+ large number of rebels, and the general got up and shook hands with me,
+ and said he forgave me for my impertinence, and gave me some advice about
+ letting the boys play it on me, and said I might go back to my company. He
+ was all smiles, and insisted on my taking a drink with himself and the
+ colonel. When I was about leaving his tent, I turned to him and said:
+ &ldquo;Then I don't get any furlough?&rdquo; &ldquo;Not till the cruel war is over,&rdquo; said
+ the general, with a laugh, and I went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guards treated me like a gentleman when they saw me taking a drink
+ with the general, and I went back to my regiment, resolved not to go home,
+ and to get even with the horse doctor for causing me to make a fool of
+ myself. However, I was glad I visited the general, for, after getting
+ acquainted with him, he seemed a real nice man, and he kept a better
+ article of liquor than the chaplain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For several days nothing occurred that was worthy of note, except that the
+ chaplain took a liking to my horse, and wanted to trade a mule for him. I
+ never did like a mule, and didn't really want to trade, but the chaplain
+ argued his case so eloquently that I was half persuaded. He said the horse
+ I rode, from its friskiness, and natural desire to &ldquo;get there, Eli!&rdquo; would
+ eventually get me killed, for if I ever got in sight of the enemy the
+ horse would rush to the front, and I couldn't hold him. He said he didn't
+ want to have me killed, and with the mule there would be no danger, as the
+ mule knew enough to keep away from a fight. The chaplain said he had
+ always rode a mule, because he thought the natural solemnity of a mule was
+ in better keeping with a pious man, but lately he had begun to go into
+ society some, in the town near where we were camped, and sometimes had to
+ preach to different regiments, so he thought he ought to have a horse that
+ put on a little more style, and as he knew I wanted an animal that would
+ keep as far from the foe as possible, and not lose its head and go chasing
+ around after rebels, and running me into danger, as my spiritual adviser
+ he would recommend the mule to me. He warranted the mule sound in every
+ particular, and as a mule was worth more than a horse he would trade with
+ me for ten dollars to boot. He said there was not another man in the
+ regiment he would trade with on such terms, but he had taken a liking to
+ me, and would part with his mule to me, though it broke his heart. At home
+ there was a sentiment against trading horses with a minister, as men who
+ did so always got beat, but I thought it would be an insult to the
+ chaplain to refuse to trade, when he seemed to be working for my
+ interests, to prevent me from being killed in a fight by the actions of my
+ horse, so I concluded to trade, though it seemed to me that if I couldn't
+ shoot off a horse without hitting its ears, I would fill a mule's ears
+ full of bullets. I spoke to the chaplain about that, and he said there was
+ no danger, because whenever fighting commenced the mule always wore his
+ ears lopped down below the line of fire. He said the mule had been trained
+ to that, and I would find him a great comfort in time of trial, and a
+ sympathizing companion always, one that I would become attached to. I told
+ him there was one thing I wanted to know, and that was if the mule would
+ kick. I had always been prejudiced against mules because they kicked. He
+ said he knew mules had been traduced, and that their reputations were not
+ good, but he believed this mule was as free from the habit of kicking as
+ any mule he had ever met. He said he would not deny that this mule could
+ kick, and in fact he had kicked a little, but he would warrant the mule
+ not to kick unless something unusual happened. He said I wouldn't want a
+ mule that had no individuality at all, one that hadn't sand enough to
+ protect itself. What I wanted, the chaplain said, was a mule that would
+ treat everybody right, but that would, if imposed upon, stand up for its
+ rights and kick. I told the chaplain that was about the kind of mule I
+ wanted, if I had any mule at all, and we traded. The chaplain rode off to
+ town on my horse, on a canter, as proud as a peacock, while I climbed on
+ to the solemn, lop-eared mule and went out to drill with my company. I do
+ not know what it was that went wrong with the mule while we were drilling,
+ but as we were wheeling in company front, the mule began to &ldquo;assert his
+ individuality,&rdquo; as the chaplain said he probably would, and he whirled
+ around sideways and kicked three soldiers off their horses; then he backed
+ up the other way and broke up the second platoon, kicked four horses in
+ the ribs, stampeded the company, and stood there alone kicking at the air.
+ The major rode down to where I was and began to swear at me, but I told
+ him I couldn't help it. He told me to dismount and lead the mule away, but
+ I couldn't dismount until the mule stopped kicking, and he seemed to be
+ wound up for all day. The major got too near and the mule kicked him on
+ the shin, and then started for the company again, which had got into
+ ranks, kicking all the way, and the company broke ranks and started for
+ camp, the mule following, kicking and braying all the way. I never was so
+ helpless in all my life. The more I spurred the mule, the more it kicked,
+ and if I stopped spurring it, it kicked worse. When we got to camp, I fell
+ off some way, and rushed into the chaplain's tent, and the mule kicked the
+ tent down, and some boys drove the mule away, and while I was fixing up
+ the tent the chaplain came back looking happy, and asked me how I liked
+ the mule. I never was a hypocrite, anyway, and I was mad, so I said: &ldquo;Oh,
+ dam that mule!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it is wrong to use such language, especially in the presence of
+ a minister, but I couldn't help it. I could see it hurt the chaplain, for
+ he sighed and said he was sorry to hear such words from me, inasmuch as he
+ had just got me detailed as his clerk, where I would have a soft thing,
+ and no drilling or fighting. He said he had wanted a clerk, one who was a
+ good-hearted, true man, and he had picked me out, but if I used such
+ language, that settled it. He said he didn't expect to find a private
+ soldier that was as pious as he was, but he did think I would be the best
+ man he could find. I wanted a soft job, with no fighting, as bad as any
+ man ever did, and I told the chaplain that he need not fear as to my
+ swearing again, as it was foreign to my nature, but I told him if he had
+ been on the hurricane deck of a kicking mule for an hour, and seen
+ comrades fall one by one, and bite the dust, and be carried on with marks
+ of mule shoes all over their persons, he would swear, and I would bet on
+ it. So it was arranged that I was to be the chaplain's clerk, and I moved
+ my outfit over to his tent, and for the first time since I had been a
+ soldier, I was perfectly happy. There was no danger of being detached for
+ guard duty, police duty, drilling, or fighting, and the only boss I had
+ was the chaplain. The chaplain and myself sat that evening in his tent,
+ and ate sanitary stores, drank wine for sickess, and smoked pipes, and
+ didn't care whether school kept or not, and that night I slept on a cot,
+ and had the first good night's rest, and in the morning I awoke refreshed,
+ and with no fear of orderly sergeants, or anybody. I had a soft snap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning I asked the chaplain what my duties were to be, and he
+ said I was to take care of the tent, write letters for him, issue sanitary
+ stores to deserving soldiers who might need them, ride with him sometimes
+ when he went to town, or to preach, go to funerals with him occasionally,
+ set a good example to the other soldiers, and make myself generally
+ useful. He said I would have to attend to the burial of the colored people
+ who died, and any such little simple details. He went out and left me
+ pondering over my duties. I liked it all except the nigger funerals. I had
+ always been a Democrat, at home, and not very much mashed on our colored
+ brothers, and one thing that prevented me from enlisting before I did was
+ the idea of making the colored men free. I had nothing against a colored
+ man, and got to think a great deal of them afterwards, but the idea of
+ acting as an undertaker for the colored race never occurred to me. I made
+ up my mind to kick on that part of the duties, when the chaplain came in
+ and said the colored cook of one of the companies was dead, and would be
+ buried that afternoon, and as he had to go to a meeting of chaplains down
+ town, I would have to go and conduct the services, and I better prepare
+ myself with a little speech. I was in a fix. I told the chaplain that it
+ might not have occurred to him, but honestly, I couldn't pray. He said
+ that didn't make any difference. I told him I couldn't preach hardly at
+ all. He said I didn't need to. All I had to do was to go and find out
+ something about the life of the deceased, what kind of a man he was, and
+ say a few words at the grave complimentary of him, console the mourners,
+ if there were any, and counsel them to try to lead a different life, that
+ they might eventually enter into the glory of the New Jerusalem, or words
+ to that effect. Well, this made me perspire. This was a tighter place than
+ I was in when I met the rebel. The idea of my conducting the funeral
+ exercises of such a black-burying party, made me tired. The chaplain said
+ a good deal depended on how I got through this first case, as if I
+ succeeded well, it would be a great feather in my cap. His idea, he said,
+ was to try me first on a nigger, and if I was up to snuff, and carried
+ myself like a thoroughbred, there would be nothing too good for me in that
+ regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I went to the orderly sergeant of the company where the man died, to get
+ some points as to his career, in order to work in a few remarks
+ appropriate to the occasion, and I said to the orderly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand your company cook has gone to that bourne from whence no
+ traveler returns. I thought that was pretty good for a green hand, for a
+ starter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the orderly, as he looked solemn, &ldquo;The old son-of-a-gun has
+ passed in his chips, and is now walking in green pastures, beside still
+ waters, but he will not drink any of the aforesaid still waters, if he can
+ steal any whisky to drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You astonish, me,&rdquo; said I to the orderly. &ldquo;The fact is, the chaplain has
+ sawed off on to me the duty of seeing to the burial of our deceased
+ friend, and I called to gather some few facts as to his characteristics as
+ a man and a brother. Can you tell me of anything that would interest those
+ who may attend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, I don't know,&rdquo; said the orderly. &ldquo;The deceased was a liar, a thief,
+ and a drunkard. He would steal anything that was not chained down. He
+ would murder a man for a dollar. He was the worst nigger that ever was. If
+ there was a medical college here that wanted bodies, it would be a waste
+ of money to bury him. But when he was sober he could bake beans for all
+ that was out, and there was no man that could boil corned mule so as to
+ take the taste of the saltpetre out, as he could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not a very good send off for my first funeral, but I clung to the
+ good qualities possessed by the late lamented. Though he might have been a
+ bad man, all was not lost if he could bake beans well, and boil the salt
+ horse or corned mule that soldiers had to eat, so they were appetizing.
+ Many truly good men of national reputation, could not have excelled him in
+ his chosen specialties, and I made a memorandum of that for future use. I
+ made further inquiries in the company, and found that the deceased had a
+ bad reputation, owed everybody, had five wives living that he had
+ deserted, and was suspected of having murdered two or three colored men
+ for their money. His death was caused by delirium tremens. He had stole a
+ jug of whisky from the major's tent, laid drunk a week, and when the
+ whisky was gone he had tremens, and had gone to the horse doctor for
+ something to quiet his nerves, and the horse doctor had given him a
+ condition powder to take, to be followed with a swallow of mustang
+ liniment, and the man died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the information I got to use in my remarks at the grave of the
+ deceased, and I went back to my tent to think it over. I thought perhaps I
+ had better work in the horse doctor for mal-practice, in my discourse, and
+ thus get even with him for sending me to the general after a furlough.
+ While I was thinking over the things I would say, and trying to forget the
+ bad things about the man, the orderly sent word that the funeral cortege
+ was ready to proceed to the bone yard. I looked down the company street
+ and saw the remains being lifted into a cart, and I went out and put the
+ saddle on my mule, and with a mental prayer that the confounded mule
+ wouldn't get to kicking till the funeral was over, started to do the
+ honors at the grave of the late company cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Funeral of the Colored Cook&mdash;I Plead for a Larger
+ Procession&mdash;The Funeral Oration&mdash;The Funeral Disturbed&mdash;I am
+ Arrested&mdash;My Fortunate Escape.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This last chapter of these celebrated war papers closed with me saddling
+ my mule to ride to the funeral of the colored cook, at which I was to act
+ as chaplain. The mule evidently knew that it was a solemn occasion, for
+ there was a mournful look on its otherwise placid face, the ears drooped
+ more than usual, and there seemed a sweet peace stealing over the animal,
+ which well became a funeral, until I began to buckle up the saddle, when
+ the long-eared brute began to paw and kick and bite, and it took six men
+ to get me into the saddle. I rode down the company street where the cart
+ stood with the remains, and a colored driver sitting on the foot of the
+ plain pine box, asleep. I woke the driver up with the point of my saber,
+ when another colored man came out of a tent with a shovel in one hand, and
+ a hardtack with a piece of bacon in the other. He climbed into the cart,
+ sat down on the coffin and began to eat his dinner. This was my funeral.
+ All that seemed necessary for a funeral was a corpse, a driver of a cart,
+ and a man with a shovel. I rode up to the orderly's tent and asked him
+ where the mourners were, and he laughed at me. The idea of mourners seemed
+ to be ridiculous. I had never, in all my life, seen so slim a funeral, and
+ it hurt me. In the meantime the nigger with the shovel had woke up the
+ driver of the cart, and he had followed me, with the remains. I told them
+ to halt the funeral right there, until I could skirmish around and pick up
+ mourners enough for a mess, and a choir, and some bearers. As I rode away
+ to the colonel's tent, the driver of the cart and the man with the shovel
+ were playing &ldquo;mumbleypeg,&rdquo; with a jack-knife, on the coffin, which shocked
+ me very much, as I was accustomed to living where more respect was paid to
+ the dead. I went to the colonel's tent and yelled &ldquo;Say! The colonel, who
+ was changing his shirt, came to the door with his eyes full of soap,
+ rubbing his neck with a towel, and asked what was the row. I told him I
+ would like to have him detail me six bearers, seven or eight mourners, a
+ few singers, and fifteen or twenty men for a congregation. He asked me
+ what on earth I was talking about, and just then the cart with the corpse
+ in was driven up to where I was, the orderly having told the driver to
+ follow me with the late lamented. I pointed to the outfit, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, in that box lie the remains of a colored cook. The chaplain has
+ appointed me to conduct the funeral service, and I find that the two
+ colored men on the cart are the only ones to accompany the remains to
+ their last resting place. No man can successfully run a funeral on three
+ niggers, one of whom is dead, one liable to go to sleep any minute, and
+ the other with an abnormal appetite for hardtack. It is a disgrace to
+ civilization to give a dead man such a send off, and I want you to detail
+ me some men to see me through. I have loaded myself with some interesting
+ remarks befitting the occasion, and I do not want to fire them off into
+ space, with no audience except these two coons. Give me some mourners and
+ things, or I drop this funeral right where it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I was speaking the general rode up to visit with the colonel, with
+ his staff, and the colonel came out with his undershirt on, and his
+ suspenders hanging down, and he and the general consulted for a minute,
+ and laughed a little, which I thought was disgraceful. Then the colonel
+ sent for the sergeant-major and told, him to detail all the company cooks
+ and officer's servants, to attend the funeral with me, and he said I could
+ divide them off into reliefs, letting a few be mourners at a time. In the
+ meantime, he said, I could move my procession off down by the
+ horse-doctor's quarter's, as he did not want it in front of his tent. That
+ reminded me that the horse-doctor had prescribed for the deceased, and had
+ given him condition powders, and I asked the colonel to compel the
+ horse-doctor to go with me. It had always seemed to me at home that the
+ attending physician, under whose auspices the person died, should attend
+ the funeral of his patient, and when I told the colonel about it, he
+ called the horse-doctor and told him he would have to go. It took half an
+ hour or so to get the colored cooks and servants together, but when all
+ was ready to move, it was quite a respectable funeral, except that I could
+ not help noticing a spirit of levity on the part of the mourners. All the
+ followers were mounted, the officer's servant's on officer's horses, and
+ the cooks on mules, and it required all the presence of mind I possessed
+ to keep the coons from turning the sad occasion into a horse race, as they
+ would drop back, in squads, a quarter of a mile or so, and then come
+ whooping up to the cart containing the remains, and each vowing that his
+ horse could clean out the others. I rode in front of the remains with the
+ horse-doctor, and tried to conduct myself in as solemn a manner as
+ befitted the occasion, and tried to reason with the horse-doctor against
+ his unseemly jokes, which he was constantly getting on. He told several
+ stories, better calculated for a gathering where bacchanalian revelry was
+ the custom, and I told him that while I respected his calling, he must
+ respect mine. He said something about calling a man on a full hand,
+ against a flush, but I did not pretend to know what he meant. We had to go
+ out of town about two miles, to the cemetery. Unfortunately we were in the
+ watermelon growing section, and the horse-doctor called my attention to
+ the fact that my procession was becoming scarce, when I looked around, and
+ every blessed one of the cooks and servants, and the man with the shovel,
+ had gone on into the field after melons, and I stopped the cart and yelled
+ to them to come back to the funeral. Pretty soon they all rode back, each
+ with a melon under his arm, and every face looked as though there was no
+ funeral that could prevent a nigger from stealing a watermelon. After
+ several stops, to round up my mourners, from corn fields and horse racing,
+ we arrived at the cemetery, and while the grave was being dug the niggers
+ went for the melons, and if it had been a picnic there couldn't have been
+ much more enjoyment. The horse-doctor took out a big knife that he used to
+ bleed horses, and cut a melon, and offered me a slice, and while I did not
+ feel that it was just the place to indulge in melon, it looked so good
+ that I ate some, with a mental reservation, however. It was all a new
+ experience to me. I had never believed that in the presence of death, or
+ at a funeral, people could be anything but decorous and solemn. I had
+ never attended a funeral before, except where all present were friends of
+ the deceased, and sorry, but here all seemed different. They all seemed to
+ look upon the thing as a good joke. I had read that in New York and other
+ large cities, those who attended funerals had a horse race on the way
+ back, and stopped at beer saloons and filled up, but I never believed that
+ people could be so depraved. I tried to talk to the coons, and get them to
+ show proper respect for the occasion, but they laughed and threw melon
+ rinds at each other. Finnally the colonel and the general, with quite a
+ lot of soldiers, who were out reconnoitering, rode to where we were, and
+ the coons acted a little better, but I could see that the officers were
+ not particularly solemn. They seemed to expect something rich. They
+ evidently looked upon me as a star idiot, who would make some blunder, or
+ say something to make them laugh: I made up my mind that in my new
+ position I would act just as decorous, and speak as kindly as though the
+ deceased was the president. During all my life I had made it a practice
+ never to speak ill of any person on earth, and if I could not say a good
+ word for a person I would say nothing, a practice which I have kept up
+ until this writing, with much success, and I decided that the words spoken
+ on that occasion should not reflect against the poor man who had passed in
+ his checks, and laid down the burden of life. The grave was completed, and
+ with a couple of picket ropes the body was let down, and there was for a
+ moment a sort of solemnity. I arose, and as near as I can remember at this
+ late day, spoke about as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/077.jpg" alt="A Solemn Funeral Oration 077" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friends: We have met here today to conduct the last rites over a man, who
+ but yesterday was among us but who, in an unguarded moment drank too much
+ whisky, and paid the penalty. (There was a smile perceptible on the faces
+ on the officers.) The ignorant man who died, did not know any better, but
+ I see around me men who know better, but who drink more than this man did,
+ and if they are not careful they will go the same way. (There was less
+ smiling among the officers.) It is said of this man that he was bad, that
+ he would steal. I have investigated, and have found that it is true, but
+ that his peculations consisted of small things, of little value, and I am
+ convinced that the habit was not worse with him than with any of us. In
+ war times, everybody steals. We are all thieves to a certain extent. The
+ soldier will not go hungry if he can jay-hawk anything to eat. The officer
+ will not go thirsty if he can capture whisky, nor will anybody walk if he
+ can steal a horse. The higher a man gets the more he will steal. Shall we
+ harbor unkind thoughts against this dead man for stealing a pair of boots,
+ and honor a general who steals a thousand bales of cotton? (No! no!
+ shouted the cooks and servants, while the officers looked as though they
+ were sorry they attended the funeral.) Friends let us look at the good
+ qualities of our friend. I say, without fear of successful contradiction,
+ that a man, however humble his station, who can bake beans as well as the
+ remains could bake them, is entitled to a warm place in the heart of every
+ soldier, and if he goes to the land that is fairer than this,-and who can
+ say that he will not,&mdash;he is liable to be welcomed with 'well done,
+ good and faithful servant,' and he will be received where horse doctors
+ can never enter with their condition powders, and where there will never
+ be war any more. To his family, or several families, as the case may be, I
+ would say&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point I had noticed an uneasiness on the part of my mourners and
+ bearers, as well as the officers. Nine of the negroes fell down on the
+ ground and groaned as if in pain, and the general and his stall looked off
+ to a piece of woods where a few shots had been fired, and rode away
+ hurriedly, the colonel telling me I had better hurry up that funeral or it
+ was liable to be interrupted. The horse-doctor went to the negroes who
+ were sick, and after examining them he said they had been poisoned by
+ eating melons that had been doctored, and he advised them to get to town
+ as quick as possible. They scrambled on their horses the best way they
+ could, and just then there was a yell, and out of the woods came half a
+ dozen Union soldiers followed by fifteen or twenty Confederates, and all
+ was confusion. The niggers scattered towards town, the driver of the cart
+ taking the lead, trying to catch the general and his start, who were
+ hurrying away, leaving the horse-doctor, myself and the deceased. The
+ horse-doctor seized the shovel and threw a little dirt on the coffin, then
+ mounted his horse, I mounted my mule, and away we went towards town, with
+ the rebels gaining on us every jump. The horse-doctor soon left me, and
+ with a picket I had pulled off the fence of the cemetery, I worked my
+ passage on that mule. I mauled the mule, and the more I pounded the slower
+ it went. There was never a more deliberate mule in the world. I forgot all
+ the solemn thoughts that possessed me at the grave, and tried to talk to
+ the mule like a mule-driver, but the animal just fooled along, as though
+ there was no especial hurry. Occasionally I could hear bullets 'zipping'
+ along by me, and the rebels were yelling for all that was out. O, how I
+ did wish I had my old race horse that the chaplain had beat me out of. In
+ my first engagement my horse was too fast, and there was danger that I
+ would catch my friend, the rebel, and I complained of the horse. Now I had
+ a mule that was too slow. What I wanted was a 'middling' horse, one that
+ was not too confounded fast when after the enemy, and one not so all-fired
+ slow when being pursued. The Johnnies were coming closer, but we were only
+ half a mile from town. Would they chase us clear into town? At that
+ critical moment the blasted mule stopped short, never to go again, and
+ began to kick. What on earth possessed that fool mule to take a notion to
+ stop right there and kick, is more than I shall ever know, but it simply
+ kicked, and I felt that my time had come. The Union soldiers that were
+ being chased by the Confederates passed me, and told me I better light out
+ or I would be captured, but I couldn't get the mule to budge an inch. It
+ just kicked. The good Lord only knows, what that mule was kicking at, or
+ why it should have been scheduled to stop and kick at that particular
+ time, when every minute was precious. I saw the rebels very near me, and
+ as it was impossible to get the mule to go a step farther, I raised the
+ large, flat, white-washed picket which I had torn on the cemetery fence to
+ maul the mule with, in token of surrender, and the Confederate boys
+ surrounded me, though they kept a safe distance, after my mule had kicked
+ in the ribs of one of their horses. The rebs had gone about as far towards
+ the town as it was safe to go, and and they knew the whole garrison would
+ be out after them pretty soon, so they laughed at me for being armed with
+ a whitewashed picket, and asked me if I expected to put down the rebellion
+ by stabbing the enemy with such things. I told them I had been burying a
+ nigger. One of my captors run the point of his saber into my mule, to stop
+ its kicking, and then he said to his comrades, &ldquo;Boys, we came out here
+ with the glorious prospect of capturing a Yankee general and his staff,
+ and instead of getting him, we have broken up a nigger funeral and
+ captured the gospel sharp, armed with a picket fence, and a kicking mule.
+ Shall we hang him for engaging in uncivilized, warfare, by stabbing us
+ with pickets poisoned with whitewash, or shall we take the red-headed
+ slim-jim back with us as a curiosity.&rdquo; The boys all said not to hang me,
+ but to take me along. I saw that it was all day with me this time. I felt
+ that I was helping put down the rebellion rapidly, as I had been a soldier
+ four weeks, been captured twice, and not a drop of blood had been spilled.
+ The rebels started back, with me and my mule ahead of them, and they kept
+ the mule ahead by jabbing it with a saber occasionally. I felt humiliated
+ and indignant at being called slim-jim, sorrel-top, and elder. They seemed
+ to think I was a preacher. I stood it all until a cuss reached into my
+ pocket and took my meershaum pipe and a bag of tobacco, filled the pipe
+ and lit it, then I was mad. I had paid eight dollars of my bounty for that
+ pipe, and I said to the leader: &ldquo;Boss, I can stand a joke as well as
+ anybody, but when you capture me, in a fair fight, you have no right to
+ jab my mule with a saber, or call me names. I am a meek and lowly soldier
+ of the army of the right, and want to so live that I can meet you all in
+ the great hereafter, but by the gods I can whip the condemned galoot that
+ stole my meershaum pipe. You think I am pious, and a non-combatant, but I
+ am a fighter from away back, and don't you forget it.&rdquo; The young man who
+ seemed to be in command told me to dry up, and he would get my pipe. He
+ went and took it away from the one who had stolen it, filled it and lit it
+ himself, and said it was a good pipe, and then he passed it around among
+ them all. We moved on at a trot, and were getting far away from my
+ regiment, and I realized that I was a captive, and that I should probably
+ die in Andersonville prison. I looked at the dozen stalwart rebels that
+ were riding behind me, and knew I could not whip them all with one picket
+ off the cemetery fence, and so I resolved to remain a captive, and die for
+ my country, of scurvey, if necessary. I turned around in my saddle to ask
+ if it wasn t about time for me to have a smoke out of my own pipe, and as
+ I looked up the road we had come over I saw a large body of our own
+ cavalry, coming like the wind toward us. I said nothing, but my face gave
+ me away. I looked so tickled to see the boys coming that the rebels
+ noticed it, and they looked back and saw the soldiers in pursuit, they
+ yelled, &ldquo;The Yanks are coming!&rdquo; put spurs to their horses, stabbed my mule
+ and told me to pound it with the picket, and hurry up, and then they
+ passed me, and away they went, leaving me in the road alone between them
+ and my own soldiers, I yelled to the leader to give me back my pipe, and I
+ can hear his mocking laugh to this day, as he told me to &ldquo;go to hell.&rdquo;
+ This made me mad, and drawing my picket I dashed after the retreating
+ rebels, knowing that the men of my regiment would soon overtake me, and
+ they would think I had chased the rebels three miles from town, armed only
+ with a picket off the fence, and saved the garrison from capture. The
+ thing worked to perfection, and when our command came up, the horses
+ panting and perspiring, and the boys looking wild, the captain in command
+ asked me how many there was of em, and I told him about forty, and he said
+ I had done well to drive them so far, and he charged by me after them. I
+ yelled to the captain to try and kill that long-legged rebel on the sorrel
+ horse, and get my meershaum pipe, but he didn't hear me. I hurried along
+ as fast as I could, but before I caught up, there was a good deal of
+ firing, and when I got there flankers were out in the woods, and there was
+ sorrow, for three or four boys in blue had been killed in an ambush, and
+ the rebels had got away across a bayou. As I rode up on my mule, with the
+ picket still in my hand, I saw the three soldiers of my regiment lying
+ dead under a tree, two others were wounded and had bandages around their
+ heads, and for the first time since I had been a soldier, I realized that
+ war was not a picnic. I could not keep my eyes off the faces of my dead
+ comrades, the best and bravest boys in the regiment, boys who always got
+ to the front when there was a skirmish. To think that I had been riding
+ right amongst the rebels who had done this thing but a few minutes before,
+ and never thought that death would claim anybody so soon. I wondered if
+ those rebels were not sorry they had killed such good boys. I wondered, as
+ I thought of the fathers and mothers, and sisters of my dead companions,
+ whether the rebels would not sympathize with them, and then I thought
+ suppose our fellows had not been killed, and we had killed some of the
+ Confederates, wouldn't it have been just as sorrowful, wouldn't <i>their</i>
+ fathers, mothers and sisters have mourned the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I made a resolve that I would never kill anybody if I could help it;
+ I even decided that if I should meet the rebel that had my meershaum pipe,
+ I would not fight him to get it. If he wasn't gentleman enough to give it
+ up peaceably, he could keep it, and be darned. Just then some of our
+ skirmishers came in carrying another dead body, and we were all
+ speculating as to which one of our poor boys had fallen, when we noticed
+ that the dead soldier had on a gray suit, and it was soon found that he
+ was one of the Confederates. He was laid down beside our dead boys, and I
+ don't know but I felt about as bad to see him dead, as it was possible to
+ feel. It is true he had told me, half an hour before, when I asked him for
+ my pipe, to go to hades, but I did not have to go unless I wanted to. And
+ he was gone first. I saw something sticking out of the breast pocket of
+ the dead Confederate, and could see that it was my pipe. Then I thought of
+ the foolish remark I made to the captain, to kill that long-legged rebel
+ and get my meershaum. God bless him, I didn't want anybody to kill him for
+ a bad smelling old pipe, and I wondered if that remark would be registered
+ up against me, in the great book above, when I didn't mean it. I tried to
+ make myself believe that my remark did not have any influence on the man's
+ fate. He just took his chances with his comrades, and was killed, no
+ doubt, and yet it was impossible to get the idea off my mind that I was
+ responsible for his death. Anyway, I would never touch the confounded old
+ pipe again, and if I ever heard of his mother or sister, after the war was
+ over, I would stand by them as long as I had a nickel. An ambulance was
+ sent for and the dead and wounded were placed in it, and we went back to
+ town, a sad procession. There was no need to detail any mourners for this
+ occasion, and there was no straggling for watermelons. Everybody was full
+ of sorrow. The next day there was a Union funeral in that Southern town,
+ and the three Union boys were laid side by side, while a little, to one
+ side my Confederate was buried, receiving the same kind words from the
+ chaplains. As a volley was about to be fired over the graves, I picked a
+ handful of roses, buds and blossoms, from a rose bush in the cemetery, and
+ went to the grave of the Confederate and tenderly tossed them upon the
+ coffin. The horse doctor saw me do it, and in his rough manner said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you about there? It ain t necessary to plant flowers on the graves
+ of rebels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, no, it isn't necessary, I said, as the volley was fired over the
+ graves, but it will make his mother or his sister feel better to know that
+ there are a few roses in there, and it won't hurt anybody. I will just
+ play that I am the authorized agent of that Confederate soldier's sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, all right if you say so, said the horse-doctor, as he drew the sleeve
+ of his blue blouse across his eyes, which were wet. The last volley was
+ fired, and the soldiers returned to camp, leaving the dead of two armies
+ sleeping together. As I went in the chaplain's tent and sat down to think,
+ the chaplain handed me something, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here's your pipe. They found it on that Confederate soldier that captured
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pushed it away and said, &ldquo;I don't want it. I have quit smoking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Capture &ldquo;Jeff&rdquo;&mdash;I Get Back at the Chaplain&mdash;The Chaplain
+ Arrested&mdash;Off on a Raid&mdash;I Meet the Relatives of the Dead
+ Confederate&mdash;My Powers of Lying are Brought into Play.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The winding up of the last chapter of this history, with its sad
+ incidents, deaths and burials, was unavoidable, but it shall not occur
+ again. The true historian has got to get in all the particulars. I think I
+ never felt quite as downhearted as I did the day or two after the
+ skirmish, when our boys were killed. It had seemed as though there was no
+ danger of anybody getting hurt, as long as they looked out for themselves,
+ but now there was a feeling that anybody was liable to be killed, any
+ time, and why not me? Of course the old veterans of the regiment were the
+ ones who would naturally be expected to take the brunt of the battle, but
+ there was a habit of sending raw recruits into places of danger that
+ struck me as being mighty careless, as well as very bad judgment. Then
+ there were great preparations being made for an advance movement, or a
+ retreat, or something, and my mind was constantly occupied in trying to
+ find out whether it was to be an advance or a retreat. If it was an
+ advance, I wanted to arrange to be in the rear, and if it was a retreat,
+ it seemed to me as as though the proper place for a man who wanted to live
+ to go home, was in front. And yet what chance was there for a common
+ private soldier to find out whether it was an advance or a retreat.
+ Finally I decided that when the regiment <i>did</i> start out, I would
+ manage to be about the middle, so it wouldn't make much difference which
+ way we went. When that idea occurred to me I pondered over it a good deal
+ and told the chaplain, and he said it was a piece of as brilliant strategy
+ as he had ever heard of, and he was willing to adopt it, only being a
+ staff officer it was necessary for him and me to ride with the colonel,
+ and the colonel most always rode at the head, though his place was about
+ the middle. He said he would speak to the colonel about it. It made my
+ hair stand to see the preparations that were being made for carnage.
+ Ammunition enough was issued to kill a million men, and the doctors were
+ packing bandages and plasters, and physic, and splints and probes, until
+ it made me sick to look at them. When I thought of actual war, my mind
+ reverted to my mule, the kicking brute that was no good, and I decided to
+ get a horse. I had got so, actually, that I could hear bullets whistle
+ without turning pale and having cold chills run over me, and it seemed as
+ though a horse was none too good for me, so I went to the colonel and told
+ him that a soldier couldn't make no show on a kicking mule and I wanted a
+ horse. I told him I supposed, as chaplain's clerk. I should have to ride
+ with him and his staff on the march, and he didn't want to see as nice a
+ looking fellow as I was riding a kicking mule that would kick the ribs of
+ the officers horses, and break the officers legs. The colonel said he had
+ not thought of that contingency. He had enjoyed seeing me ride the mule,
+ because I was so patient when the mule kicked. He said they used that mule
+ in the regiment to teach recruits to ride. A man who could stay on that
+ mule could ride any horse in the regiment, and as I had been successful,
+ and had displayed splendid mulemanship, I should be promoted to ride a
+ horse, and he told the quartermaster to exchange with me and give me the
+ chestnut-sorrel horse that the Confederate was shot off of. I went with
+ the quartermaster to the corral, turned out my mule, and cornered the
+ beautiful horse that had been rode so proudly a few days before by my
+ friend, the rebel. It took six of us to catch the horse, and bridle and
+ saddle him, and the men about the corral said the horse was no good. He
+ hadn't eaten anything since being captured, and his eyes looked bad, and
+ he wanted to kick and bite everybody. I told them the poor horse was
+ homesick, that was all that ailed him. The horse was a Confederate at
+ heart, and he naturally had no particular love for Yankees. I remembered
+ that once or twice when I was riding with the rebels, after they captured
+ me, the young fellow on this horse patted him on the neck and called him
+ &ldquo;Jeff&rdquo;, so I knew that was his name, so I led him out of the corral away
+ from the other fellows, where there was some grass growing, and made up my
+ mind I would &ldquo;mash&rdquo; him. After he had eaten grass a little while, looking
+ at me out of the corner of his eyes as though he didn't know whether to
+ kick my head on, or walk on me, as I sat under a tree, I got up and patted
+ him on the neck and said, &ldquo;Well, Jeff, old boy, how does the grass fit
+ your stomach?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may talk about brute intelligence, but that horse was human. He
+ stopped eating, with his mouth full of grass, looked astonished at being
+ addressed by a stranger without an introduction, and turned a pair of eyes
+ as beautiful and soft as a woman's upon me, and then began to chew slowly,
+ as though thinking. I rubbed his sleek coat with, my bare hands, and did
+ not say much, desiring to have Jeff make the first advances. He looked me
+ over, and finally put his nose on my sleeve, and rubbed me, and looked in
+ my face, and acted as though he would say, &ldquo;Well, of course this
+ red-headed fellow is no comparison to my dead master, but evidently he's
+ no slouch, and if I have got to be bossed around by a Yankee, as he is the
+ only one that has spoken a kind word to me since I was captured, and he
+ seems to know my name, I guess I will tie to him,&rdquo; and the intelligent
+ animal rubbed his nose all over me, and licked my hand. I rubbed the horse
+ all over, petted him, took up his feet and looked at them, and spoke his
+ name, and pretty soon we were the best of friends. I mounted him and rode
+ around and it was just like a rocking chair. That poor, dead Confederate
+ had probably rode Jeff since he was a kid and Jeff was a colt, and had
+ broken him well, and I was awfully sorry that the original owner was not
+ alive, riding his horse home safe and sound, to be greeted by his family
+ with loving embraces. But he was dead and buried, and his horse belonged
+ to me, by all the laws of war. And yet I had not become a hardened warrior
+ to such an extent that I could forget the hearts that would ache at his
+ home, and I made up mind that horse would be treated as tenderly as though
+ he was one of my family. I rode Jeff around for an hour or two, found that
+ he was trained to jump fences, stand on his hind feet, trot, pace, rack,
+ and that he could run like a scared wolf, and everything the horse did he
+ would sort of look around at me with one eye as much as to say, &ldquo;Boss, you
+ will find I have got all the modern improvements, and you needn't be
+ afraid that I will disgrace you in any society.&rdquo; I was fairly in love with
+ my new horse, and, except for a feeling that I was an interloper with the
+ horse, and sorry for the poor boy that had been shot off him, I should
+ have been perfectly happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain had got in the habit of wearing a nice, blue broadcloth
+ blouse which I had brought from home, which had two rows of brass buttons
+ on it. I had paid about twenty dollars of my bounty for the blouse, and
+ had found that the private soldiers did not wear such elaborate uniforms
+ in active duty, so I kept it in the chaplain's tent. I thought if I was
+ killed and my body was sent home, the blouse would come handy. The
+ chaplain wore it occasionally, and he said any time I wanted to wear any
+ of his clothes to just help myself. An order had been issued to move the
+ following day, with ten days' rations, and some of the boys asked for
+ passes to go down town and have a little blow-out before we started. They
+ wanted me to go along, and so I got a pass, too. We were to go down town
+ in the afternoon and stay till nine o clock at night, when we had to be in
+ camp. I saddled up Jeff and looked for my blouse, but it was gone, the
+ chaplain having worn it to visit the chaplain of some other regiment, so I
+ took his coat and put it on, as he had told me to. The coat had the
+ chaplain's shoulder-straps on, but I thought there would be no harm in
+ wearing it, so about a dozen of us privates started for town to have a
+ good time, and I with chaplain's-straps on. It was customary, when
+ soldiers went to town on a pass, to partake of intoxicating beverages more
+ or less, as that was about the only form of enjoyment, and I blush now,
+ twenty-two years afterward, to write the fact that we all got pretty full.
+ It seemed so like home to be able to go into a saloon and drink beer, good
+ old northern beer, and who knew but tomorrow we would be killed. So we
+ ate, drank, and were merry. One of the boys said when the officers got on
+ a tear, they would ride right into billiard saloons, and sometime shoot at
+ decanters of red liquor behind the bar, and he said a private was just as
+ good as an officer any day, and suggested that we mount our horses and
+ paint the town. We mounted, and rode about town, racing up and down the
+ streets, and finally we came to a billiard saloon, and half a dozen of us
+ rode right in, took cues out of the rack, and tried to play billiards on
+ horse-back. It was a grand picnic then, though it seems foolish now. My
+ horse Jeff would do anything I asked him, and when I rode up to the bar
+ and told him to rear up, he put both fore feet on the bar, and looked at
+ the bartender as much as to say, &ldquo;set up the best you have got.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain's shoulder-straps gave the crowd a sort of confidence that
+ everything was all right, and after exhibiting in a saloon for a time,
+ there was something said about horse-racing, and I said my horse could
+ beat anything on four legs, so we adjourned to the outskirts of town for a
+ race, followed by half the people in town. We had a horse-race, and Jeff
+ beat them all, and wherever I went the crowd would cheer the chaplain.
+ They said they liked to see a man in that position who could unbend
+ himself and mix up with the boys. There never was a chaplain more popular
+ than the &ldquo;Wisconsin preacher&rdquo; was. It did not occur to me that I was
+ placing the chaplain in an unfavorable position before the public, by
+ wearing his coat. <i>Nothing</i> occurred to me, that day, except that we
+ were having a high old time. Finally, after dark, one of our boys got into
+ a row with a loafer in a saloon, and picked the loafer up and tossed him
+ through the window, to the sidewalk. This was very wrong, but it couldn't
+ be helped. There was a great noise, cries for the provost guard, and we
+ knew that the only way to get out of the scrape honorably, would be to get
+ out real quick, so we mounted and rode to our camp. My horse was the
+ fastest and I got home first, unsaddled my horse and went to the tent,
+ took off the chaplain's coat and hung it up carefully, and was at work
+ writing a letter, and thinking how my horse acted as though he had been on
+ sprees before, he enjoyed it so, when I heard a noise outside, and it was
+ evident that the provost guard had followed us to camp, and were making
+ complaint to the colonel about our conduct down town. Finally the guard
+ went away, and shortly the colonel and the adjutant called at our tent and
+ inquired for the chaplain. I told them the chaplain had been away most of
+ the day, and had not returned. The colonel and the adjutant winked at each
+ other, and asked me if he wasn t away a good deal. I told them that he was
+ away some. They asked me if I never noticed that his breath had a peculiar
+ smell. I told them that it was occasionally a little loud. They went away
+ thoughtfully. Now that I think of it I ought to have explained that the
+ peculiarity of the chaplain's breath was caused from eating pickled onions
+ of the sanitary stores, but it did not occur to me at the time. After a
+ while the chaplain came back, asked me if anybody had died during the day,
+ took a drink of blackberry brandy for what ailed him, and we retired. The
+ next morning there was a circus. The little town boasted, a daily paper,
+ and it contained the following:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The community is prepared to overlook an occasional scene
+ of hilarity among the Federal soldiers stationed in this
+ vicinity, but when a gang of roysterers is led by a
+ chaplain, as was the case yesterday, all right-minded people
+ will be indignant. It is said by our informant that the
+ chaplain of a certain cavalry regiment was the liveliest one
+ of the crowd, that he rode into a billiard room, caused his
+ horse to place its forefeet on the bar, and that he played a
+ better game of billiards on horseback than many worldly men
+ can play on foot. It is the duty of the commanding officer
+ to discipline his chaplain. The chaplain also beat the boys
+ several horse races while in town, and they say he is a
+ perfect horseman, and has one of the finest horses ever
+ seen here, which he probably stole.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ I had a boy bring me a paper every morning, and I read the article before
+ the chaplain awoke, and destroyed the paper. Early the next morning the
+ colonel sent for the chaplain, placed him under arrest, and the good man
+ came back to the tent feeling pretty bad. I asked him what was wrong, and
+ he said he was under arrest for conduct unbecoming an officer and a
+ gentleman. He said charges were preferred against him for drunkenness and
+ disorderly conduct, horse-racing, playing billiards on horse-back, riding
+ his horse into a saloon and trying to jump him over the bar, and lots of
+ things too numerous to mention. I felt sorry for him, and told him I had
+ been fearful all along that he would get into trouble by going away from
+ me so much, and associating with the chaplains of the other regiments, but
+ I had never supposed it would come to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wine is a mocker,&rdquo; said I, becoming warmed up, &ldquo;and none of us can afford
+ to tamper with it. With me, it does not make so much difference, as I have
+ no reputation but that which is already lost, but you, my dear sir, think
+ of your position. Go to the colonel and confess all, and ask him to
+ forgive you,&rdquo; and I wiped my eyes on my coat sleeve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I was not drunk,&rdquo; said the chaplain, indignantly. &ldquo;I was not in a
+ saloon, and never saw a game of billiards in my life. I was over to the
+ New Jersey regiment, talking with their chaplain about getting up a
+ revival, among the soldiers,&rdquo; and the good man groaned as he said, &ldquo;it is
+ a case of mistaken identity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bully, elder,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;If you can make the court-martial believe you,
+ you will be all right, and you will not be cashiered. But it looks dark,
+ very dark, for you. May heaven help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaplain was worried all the morning, and the officers and men joked
+ him unmercifully. At noon the chaplain was released from arrest, as we
+ were to move at four p. m., and he begged so to be allowed to accompany
+ the regiment. The colonel told him he could be tried when we got back, and
+ he was happy. There was a great commotion as the regiment broke up its
+ camp and got ready to move. There was the usual crowd of negresses who had
+ been doing washing for the soldiers, to be paid on pay day, and we were
+ going away, no one knew where, and no one knew when we would meet pay day.
+ There were saloon-keepers with bills against officers, and standing-off
+ creditors was just about as hard in the army as at home. I couldn't see
+ much difference. But finally everything was ready, the ammunition wagons,
+ wagon train of stores, and a battery of little guns, about three pounders,
+ had been added. I didn't like the battery. It seemed to me hard enough to
+ kill our fellow citizens with revolver balls, without shooting them with
+ cannon. At 4 p.m. the bugle sounded &ldquo;forward,&rdquo; and with the clanking of
+ sabers, rattling of hoofs and wagons, we marched outside the picket line,
+ past the cemetery where my deceased friends were buried, and were going
+ towards the enemy. The chaplain and myself were riding behind the colonel,
+ when the colonel asked the good man to ride up to a log that was beside
+ the road, and make his horse put his forefeet upon it, as he did on the
+ bar in the saloon. I felt sorry for the chaplain, and I rode up to the
+ log, and had Jeff put his feet up on it. Then I rode back and saluted the
+ colonel and told him it was I who had done the wicked things the chaplain
+ was accused of, and I told him how the chaplain was using my coat, so I
+ put on his, with the shoulder straps on, and all about it. He laughed at
+ first and then said, &ldquo;Then you are under arrest. You may dismount and walk
+ and lead your horse until further orders.&rdquo; I dismounted, like a little
+ man, and for five miles I walked, keeping up with the regiment. Finally
+ the colonel sung out, &ldquo;gallop, march,&rdquo; and I got on my horse. I reasoned
+ that the order to gallop was &ldquo;further orders,&rdquo; and that as he knew I
+ couldn't very well gallop on foot he must have meant for me to get on. We
+ galloped for about ten miles, and were ordered to halt, when I dismounted
+ and led my horse up to the colonel, and saluted him. &ldquo;Well, you must have
+ had a hard time keeping up with us on foot,&rdquo; said he. I told him it rested
+ me to go on foot. We were just going into camp for the night, and the
+ colonel said, &ldquo;Well, as you are rested so much from your walk, you may go
+ out with the foraging party and get some feed for your horse and the
+ chaplain's.&rdquo; I was willing to do anything for a quiet life, so I fell in
+ with a party of about forty, under a lieutenant, and we rode off into the
+ country to steal forage from a plantation, keeping a sharp lookout for
+ Confederates who might object. I guess we rode away from camp two or three
+ miles, when we came to a magnificent plantation house, and outhouses,
+ negro quarters, etc. The house was on a hill, in a grove of live oaks, and
+ had immense white pillars, or columns in front. As we rode up to the
+ plantation the boys scattered all over the premises. This was the first
+ foraging expedition I had ever been with, and I thought all we went for
+ was to get forage for our horses, so I went to a shock of corn fodder and
+ took all that I could strap on my saddle, and was ready to go, when I
+ passed a smoke house and found some of the boys taking smoked hams and
+ sides of bacon. I asked one of the boys if they had permission to take
+ hams and things, and he laughed and said, &ldquo;everything goes,&rdquo; and he handed
+ me a ham which I hung on to my saddle. Then the lieutenant told me to go
+ up in front of the house and stand guard, and prevent any soldier from
+ entering the house. I rode up to the house, where there was an old lady
+ and a young married woman with a little girl by her side. They were
+ evidently much annoyed and frightened, though too proud to show it, and I
+ told them they need have no fear, as the men were only after a little
+ forage for their horses. The old lady looked at the ham on my saddle and
+ asked me if the horses eat meat, and I said, &ldquo;No, but sometimes the men
+ eat horses.&rdquo; I thought that was funny. The young woman was beautiful, and
+ the child was perfectly enchanting. They were on the opposite side of the
+ railing from me, and my horse kept working up towards them, rubbing his
+ nose on the pickets, and finally his nose touched the clasped hands of the
+ mother and child. The little girl laughed and patted the horse on the
+ nose, while the mother drew back. It was almost dark and the horse was
+ almost covered with corn fodder, but the little girl screamed and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mamma, that is Jeff, papa's horse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mamma looked at me with a wild, hunted look, then at the horse, rushed
+ down the steps and threw her arms around the neck of the horse and sobbed
+ in a despairing manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, where is my husband? Where is he? Is he dead?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son, my son!&rdquo; cried the old lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bring me my papa, you bad man!&rdquo; said the little child, and I was
+ surrounded by the three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gentle reader, I have been through many scenes in my life, and have been
+ many times where it was not the toss of a copper whether death or life was
+ my portion, and I had some nerve to help me through, but I never was in a
+ place that tried me like that one. I had been captured by the father of
+ this little child, the husband of this beautiful, proud woman, the son of
+ this charming old lady. I had seen him brought in, dead, had seen him
+ buried, and had thrown a bunch of roses in his grave. Now I was surrounded
+ by these mourners, mourners when they should know the worst. Cold chills
+ run all over me, and cold perspiration was on my brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he dead?&rdquo; they all shouted together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hate a liar, on general principles, and yet there are times when a lie
+ is so much easier to tell than truth. I did not want to be a murderer, and
+ I knew, by the dreadful light in the eyes of that lovely wife, as she
+ looked up at me from the neck of the horse, her face as white as snow,
+ that if I told the truth she would fall dead right where she was. If I
+ told the truth that blessed old lady's heart would be broken, and that
+ little child's face would not have any more smiles, during the war, for
+ mamma and grandma, and, with a hoarse voice, and choking, and trying to
+ swallow something that seemed as big as a baseball in my throat, I
+ deliberately lied to them. I told them the young man who rode this horse
+ had been captured, after a gallant fight, unharmed, and sent north. That
+ he was so brave that our boys fell in love with him, and there was nothing
+ too good for him in our army, and that he would be well taken care of, and
+ exchanged soon, I had no doubt, and bade them not to worry, but to look at
+ the discomforts and annoyances of war as leniently as possible, and all
+ would be well soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank heaven! Take all we have got in welcome,&rdquo; said the old lady, as a
+ heavenly smile came over her face. &ldquo;My boy is safe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, thank you, sir,&rdquo; said the little mother, as a lovely smile chased a
+ dimple all around her mouth, and corraled it in her left cheek, while a
+ pair of navy-blue eyes looked up at me as though she would hug me if I was
+ not a Yankee, eyes that I have seen a thousand times since, in dreams,
+ often with tears in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/103.jpg" alt="You Are a Darling Good Man 103 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a darling good man,&rdquo; said the little girl, dancing on the gravel
+ path. The mother blushed and said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Maudie, don't be so rude;&rdquo; and there was a shout:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fall in!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lieutenant rode up to me and asked, as he noticed the glad smiles on
+ the faces of the ladies, if this was a family reunion, and, apologizing
+ for being compelled to raid the plantation, we rode away. I was afraid
+ they would mention the news I had brought them, and the lieutenant would
+ tell the truth, so I was glad to move. I was glad to go, for if I had
+ remained longer I would have cried like a baby, and given them back the
+ horse, and walked to camp. As we moved away, I took out my knife and cut
+ the string that held the smoked ham on my saddle, and had the satisfaction
+ of hearing it drop on the path before the house. I could not give back the
+ husband of the blue-eyed woman, the son of the saintly Southern mother,
+ the father of the sweet child, but I <i>could</i> leave that ham. As we
+ rode back to camp that beautiful moonlight night, I did not join in the
+ singing of the boys, or the jokes. I just thought of that happy home I had
+ left, and how it would be stricken, later, when the news was brought them,
+ and wondered if that fearful lie I had been telling, them was justifiable,
+ under the circumstances, and it it would be laid up against me, charged up
+ in the book above. That night I slept on the ground on some corn fodder
+ and dreamed of nothing but blue-eyed mamma's and golden-haired Maudie's
+ and white-haired angel grandmothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Boots and Saddles&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I am the Colonel's Orderly&rdquo;&mdash;Riding
+ Fifty Miles on an Empty Stomach&mdash;The Chaplain Appears&mdash;I am
+ Wounded by a Locomotive and a Piece of Coal&mdash;I Nearly Kill
+ an Old Man.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When our foraging party got back to camp, and I unloaded the corn fodder
+ from my horse, I was about as disgusted with war as a man could be. The
+ faces of those people I had met at the plantation rose up before me, and I
+ could imagine how they would look when they heard that the Confederate
+ soldier who was their all, was dead. I hoped that they would never hear of
+ it. While I was thinking the matter over, and grooming my horse, the
+ chaplain came along and took nearly all the fodder I had brought in, and
+ fed it to his horse, and asked me where the chickens and hams, and sweet
+ potatoes were. I told him I didn't get any. Then he spoke very plainly to
+ me, plainer than he had ever spoken before, and told me that fodder for
+ horses was not all that soldiers got when they went out foraging. He said
+ I wanted to snatch anything that was lying around loose, that could be
+ eaten. I asked him if the government did not furnish rations enough for
+ him to live comfortably, in addition to the sanitary stores. He said
+ sometimes he yearned for chicken. Then I told him his salary was
+ sufficient to buy such luxuries. He was hot, and talked back to me, and
+ told me he didn't propose to be lectured by no red-headed private as to
+ his duties, or his conduct, and he wanted me to understand that I was
+ expected to forage for him as well as myself, and not to let another
+ soldier come into camp with a better assortment of the luxuries afforded
+ by the country, than I did. He said that he picked me out as a man that
+ would fill the bill, and do his duty. I told him if he had selected me
+ from all the men in the regiment as being the most expert sneak thief, he
+ had made a mistake, and I would be teetotally d&mdash;&mdash;d if I would
+ go through the country stealing hens and chickens for any chaplain that
+ ever lived, and he could put that in his pipe and smoke it. It was pretty
+ sassy talk for a private soldier to indulge in towards a chaplain, but I
+ was so disgusted to hear a man who should discountenance anything
+ unsoldierly, talk so flippantly about taking from the women and children
+ of the country what little they had to live on, because we had the power,
+ their men folks being away in the army, that I got on my ear, as it were.
+ I told him that I was not much mashed on war, and hoped I would never have
+ to fire a gun at a human being, but now that I was into the business, I
+ would fight if I had to, or do any duty of a soldier, but I would be
+ cussed if I would rob henroosts, and he didn't weigh enough to compel me
+ to. Then he said I could go back to my company, as he didn't want a man
+ around him that hadn't sand enough to do his duty. I asked him if I hadn't
+ better wait till after supper, it being after dark, but he said I could go
+ right away, and he would have another man detailed to take my place. I was
+ discharged, because I struck against stealing hens. I saddled my horse,
+ took my share of the fodder, and started for my company to return to duty
+ as a soldier. On the way to my company I saw a half a dozen soldiers,
+ covered with mud, and their horses covered with foam, ride up to the
+ colonel's tent, and I stopped to see what was the matter. A sergeant gave
+ the colonel a dispatch, which he tore open, read it, looked excited, and
+ then he turned to 'me and said, &ldquo;Ride to every commanding officer of a
+ company and say with my compliments, that 'Boots and Saddles' will be
+ sounded in ten minutes, and every man must be in line, mounted, within
+ five minutes after the call is sounded, then come back here.&rdquo; Well, I was
+ about as excited as the colonel, and I rode to every captain's tent and
+ gave the command. Some of the captains, who were just sitting down to
+ supper, asked, &ldquo;What you giving us,&rdquo; thinking it was some foolishness on
+ my part. One captain said if I came around with any more such orders he
+ would run a saber through me and turn it around a few times; another said
+ to his lieutenant, &ldquo;That is the chaplains idiot, that the boys play jokes
+ on; some corporal has probably told him to carry that message.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I got all around the companies, and went back to the colonel, and told him
+ that I had delivered his invitation, but the most of the captains sent
+ regrets in one way and another, and one was going to jab me with a saber.
+ He called the bugler, and told him to blow &ldquo;Boots and Saddles,&rdquo; and in
+ five minutes to sound, &ldquo;To Horse;&rdquo; then he turned to me and said, &ldquo;You
+ will be my orderly tonight, and you will have the liveliest ride you ever
+ experienced. Buckle up your saddle girth and lead my horse out here.&rdquo; I
+ told the colonel I should have to buckle up my own belt a few holes, as I
+ hadn't had any supper, when he told his servant to bring me out what was
+ left of his supper, which he did, one small hard tack. I eat pretty
+ hearty, and let my horse fill himself all he could on corn stalks, and in
+ a short time the bugle calls were echoing through the woods, men were
+ saddling up and mounting, and picking up camp utensils in the dark, and
+ swearing some at being ordered out in that unceremonious manner when they
+ had got all ready to have a night's rest. There was not near as much
+ swearing as I had supposed there would be, but there was enough. The
+ chaplain came rushing up to where I was with his coat off, and asked me
+ what was the matter, and the colonel having gone to the major's tent, I
+ answered him that we were going to have the liveliest ride he ever
+ experienced, and not to forget it, and that probably before morning we
+ would have the biggest fight of the season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come and help me catch my horse,&rdquo; said the chaplain, &ldquo;I turned him loose
+ so he could roll over, and he has stampeded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go catch your own horse,&rdquo; said I with lofty dignity, &ldquo;and steal your own
+ chickens. I am serving on the start of the commanding officer, sir. I am
+ the colonel's orderly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought that would break the chaplain all up, but it didn't. &ldquo;The devil
+ you say,&rdquo; remarked the chaplain, as he went off in the darkness, whistling
+ for his horse. Gentle reader, did you ever ride on horseback fifty miles
+ in one night, on an empty stomach, after having ridden thirty miles during
+ the day? If you never have accomplished such a feat, you don't know
+ anything about suffering. O, to this day I can feel my stomach freeze
+ itself to my backbone. We started soon after orders were given on a
+ gallop, and if we walked our horses a minute during the whole night, I did
+ not know it. We marched by &ldquo;fours,&rdquo; but I had the whole road to myself, as
+ I rode behind the colonel. I wanted to know where we were going and what
+ for, and once, when the colonel fell back to where I was, while he was
+ taking a drink out of a canteen, I said, &ldquo;This is a little sudden, ain't
+ it?&rdquo; My idea was to draw him out, and get him to tell me all about the
+ destination of the expedition, and its object. The colonel got through
+ drinking, and as he knocked the cork into the canteen, he said, &ldquo;Yes, this
+ <i>is</i> a little spry.&rdquo; That was all he said, and evidently he wanted me
+ to draw my own inference, which I did. Pretty soon the orderly sergeant of
+ the company that was on the advance, directly behind the colonel, rode up
+ to me and asked me if I had any idea where we were going. He said he had
+ seen me talking with the colonel, and thought maybe he had told me the
+ programme. He added that he thought it was a shame that men couldn't be
+ allowed a little rest. I told him that I had just been talking with the
+ colonel about it, but I had no authority to communicate what he said.
+ However, I would assure the orderly that we were going to have the
+ liveliest ride he ever experienced. I knew I was safe in saying that, and
+ the orderly remarked that he had about come to that conclusion himself,
+ and he left me. I had never expected to rise, on pure merit, to that proud
+ position of colonel's orderly, and I made up my mind if that night's ride
+ did not founder me, or drive my spine up into the top of my hat, or glue
+ the two sides of my empty stomach together, so they would never come
+ apart, that I would try to conduct myself so that the commanding officers
+ would all cry for me and want me on their starts. I argued, to myself, as
+ we rode along, that the position of colonel's orderly could not be so very
+ unsafe, as it did not stand to reason that a colonel would go into any
+ place that was particularly dangerous, as long as he could send other
+ officers. I knew that colonels in action should ride behind their
+ regiments, and wondered if this colonel knew his place, or would he be
+ fool enough to go right ahead of his men? I was going to speak to him
+ about it, if we ever stopped galloping long enough, but everything was
+ jarred out of my head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fellow can think of a good many things, riding on a gallop at night, and
+ I guess I thought of about everything that night. There were few
+ interruptions of the march. There were about four stops, two being caused
+ by horses falling down and being run over by those behind them, and two by
+ carbines going off accidentally. One man was dismounted and run over by
+ half the horses in the regiment, and when he was pulled out from under the
+ horses he asked for a chew of tobacco, and saying he was marked for life
+ by horse shoes, he kicked his horse in the ribs for falling down, climbed
+ on and said the procession might move on. He was all cut to pieces by
+ horse's hoofs, but he was full of fight the next morning. Another soldier
+ had his big toe shot off by the accidental discharge of a carbine, and
+ when the regiment stopped, and the colonel asked him if he wanted to stop
+ there and wait for an ambulance to overtake him, he said, not if there is
+ going to be a fight. I don't use a big toe much, anyway, and if there is a
+ fight ahead, I want to be there, if I haven't got a toe left on my feet.
+ The colonel smiled and said, all right, boy. I never saw fellows who were
+ so anxious to fight, and I wondered how much money it would take to induce
+ me to go into a fight when I was crippled up enough to be excused. Along
+ toward morning everybody felt that we were so far into the enemy's lines
+ that there must be some object in the long ride, and the probabilities of
+ a fight seemed to be settled in every man's mind. Up hill and down we
+ galloped, until it seemed to me I should fall off my horse and die. About
+ half an hour before daylight the command was halted, and the officers of
+ each company were sent for, and they surrounded the colonel, separated
+ from the men, and he said: &ldquo;There is a town ahead, about four miles,
+ garrisoned by confederate troops. We are to charge it at daylight, drive
+ the enemy out the other side of town, kill as many as possible, and when
+ they go out they will be attacked by another Union regiment that has been
+ sent around to the rear. There is a railroad there, and a bridge across a
+ river, Confederate stores of ammunition, provisions, cotton, etc. The
+ stores are to be burned, the railroad bridge destroyed, the track torn up,
+ engines, if there are any, are to be ditched, and everything destroyed
+ except private residences. You understand?&rdquo; The officers said they did,
+ and they went back to their companies and ordered the men to get a bite to
+ eat. When the officers had gone I was pretty scared, and I said, &ldquo;Colonel,
+ suppose the rebels do not get out of that town.&rdquo; The colonel was chewing a
+ hard-tack when he answered. Daylight was just streaking up from the East,
+ and he held a piece of the hard-tack up to the light to pick a worm out of
+ it, after which he answered: &ldquo;If they don't get out, we will, those of us
+ who are not killed. I always like to eat hard-tack in the dark, then I
+ can't see the worms.&rdquo; To say that I was reassured would be untrue. I
+ admired a man who could mingle business with pleasure, as he did when
+ talking of possible death and worms in hard-tack, but death was never an
+ interesting subject to me. I wanted to talk with the colonel more, and
+ asked him if colonels often get killed, and if an orderly was exactly safe
+ in his immediate vicinity, but he leaned against a tree and went to sleep,
+ and I stood near, as wide awake as any man ever was. I wondered whose idea
+ it was to send us fifty miles into the Confederacy to destroy provisions
+ and railroads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did they suppose the Confederates didn't want anything to eat. I thought
+ it was a mean man or government that would burn up good wholesome
+ provisions because they couldn't eat them themselves. And who owned this
+ railroad that was going to be torn up? Why burn a bridge that probably
+ cost several hundred thousand dollars. As I was thinking these things over
+ and finding fault with the persons responsible for such foolishness, the
+ chaplain, who had not showed up during the night, came up to where I was,
+ without any hat, leading his horse, which was lame. The first thing he
+ asked me how I would trade horses. They all wanted my Jen, but he was not
+ in the market. The chaplain said he had caught up with the regiment about
+ midnight, and had rode at the rear, with the horse-doctor. He said this
+ expedition was foolish, and had no object except to try the endurance of
+ the horses and men. I told him that we were going to have a fight in less
+ than an hour, and burn a town, and probably we would all be killed. The
+ chaplain turned pale and looked faint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had read about hell, and seen pictures of it, from the imagination of
+ some eminent artist, but the hell I had read of, and seen pictured, was
+ not a marker to the experience of the next three hours. In a few minutes
+ the colonel woke up, and the regiment mounted and moved on. An advance
+ guard was put further out than before, with orders to charge the rebel
+ picket almost into town, and then hold up for the rest of us. As we neared
+ the town it was just light enough to see. The advance captured the picket
+ post without a shot being fired, and moved right into town, followed by
+ the regiment, and we actually rode right into the camp of the boys in
+ gray, and woke them up by firing. They scattered, coatless and shoeless,
+ firing as they ran, and in five minutes they were all captured, killed,
+ gone out of town, or were in hiding in the buildings. Then began the
+ conflagration. Immense buildings, filled with goods, or bales of cotton,
+ were fired, and soon the black smoke and falling walls made a scene that
+ was enough to set a recruit crazy. A train came in just as the fire was at
+ its greatest, and a squad of men was sent to burn it, and the colonel told
+ me to go and capture the engineer and bring him to the headquarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/113.jpg"
+ alt="Engineer Threw a Lump of Coal and Hit Me 113 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ I rode up as near to the engine as my horse would go and told the engineer
+ I wanted him. He turned a cock somewhere, and a jet of steam came out
+ towards me that fairly blinded me and the horse, and I couldn't see the
+ engine any more. My horse turned tail, the engineer threw a lump of coal
+ and hit me on the head, and I went away and told the colonel the engineer
+ wouldn't come, and beside had scalded me with steam, and hit me with a
+ lump of coal. The colonel said the engineer could be arrested for such
+ conduct. Pretty soon the train was on fire, and one of our boys clubbed
+ the engineer, got on the engine and run it on to a side track and ditched
+ it, and brought the engineer up to headquarters, where I had quite a talk
+ with him about squirting steam and throwing lumps of coal at peaceable
+ persons. Then the railroad, bridge was set on fire, and it looked cruel to
+ see the timbers licked up by flames, but when the burning trestle fell
+ into the river below, it was a grand, an awful sight. I came out of the
+ fight alive, but with a lump on my head as big as a hen's egg, so big I
+ couldn't wear my hat, and a firm determination to whip that engineer who
+ threw the lump of coal when I could catch him alone. We cooked a late
+ breakfast on the embers of the ruins, and after eating, I noticed a sign,
+ &ldquo;Printing Office,&rdquo; in front of a residence just outside the burnt
+ district, and asked permission to go there and print a paper, with an
+ account of the fight, and the destruction of the town. Permission was
+ granted, and I went to the office and found an old man and two daughters,
+ beautiful girls, but intensely bitter rebels. The old man was near eighty
+ years old, and he said he could whip any dozen yankees. I told him I would
+ like to use his type and press, but he said if I touched a thing I did it
+ at my peril, as he should consider the type contaminated by the touch of a
+ yankee. The girls felt the same way, but I talked nice to them, and they
+ didn't kick much when I took a &ldquo;stick&rdquo; and began to set type. I worked
+ till dinner time, when they asked me to take dinner with them, which I
+ did. During the conversation I convinced them that I was practically a
+ non-combatant, and wouldn't hurt anybody for the world. I worked till
+ about the middle of the afternoon, when I noticed that the girls, who had
+ been up on the house, looked tickled about something, and presently I
+ heard some firing at the edge of the town, some yelling, more firing,
+ bugle calls among our soldiers, and finally there was an absence of blue
+ coats, and I looked for my horse, and found the old man leading him away.
+ I halted the old man, and he stopped and told me that the Confederates had
+ come into town from the East and driven our cavalry out on the other side,
+ and I would be a prisoner in about five minutes, and he laughed, and the
+ girls clapped their hands, and I felt as though my time had come. I had
+ never killed an old man in my life, but I made up my mind to have my horse
+ or kill him in his traces, so I drew my revolver and told him to let go
+ the horse or he was a dead man. It was a question with me whether I could
+ hold my hand still-enough to kill him, if he didn't let go the horse, and
+ I hoped to heaven he would drop the bridle. He looked so much like my
+ father at home that it seemed like killing a near relative, and when I
+ looked at the two beautiful daughters on the gallery, looking at us, pale
+ as death, I almost felt as though it would be better to lose the horse and
+ be captured, then to put a bullet through the gray head of that beautiful
+ old man. How I wished that he was a young fellow, and had a gun, and had
+ it pointed at me. Then I could kill him and feel as though it was
+ self-defense. But the rebels were yelling and firing over the hill, and my
+ regiment was going the other way on important business, and it was a
+ question with me whether I should kill the old man, and see his life-blood
+ ebb out there in front of his children, or be captured, and perhaps shot
+ for burning buildings. I decided that it was my duty to murder him, and
+ get my horse. So I rested my revolver across my left forearm, and took
+ deliberate aim at his left eye, a beautiful, large, expressive gray eye,
+ so much like my father's at home that I almost imagined I was about to
+ kill the father who loved me. I heard, a scream on the gallery, and the
+ blonde girl fainted in the arms of her brunette sister. The sister said to
+ me, &ldquo;Please don't kill my father.&rdquo; He was not ten feet from me, and I
+ said, &ldquo;Drop the horse or you die.&rdquo; The old man trembled, the girl said:
+ &ldquo;Pa, give the man his horse,&rdquo; the old man dropped the bridle and walked
+ towards the house. I mounted the horse and rode off towards the direction
+ my regiment had taken, thanking heaven that the girl had spoken just in
+ time, and that I had not been compelled to put a bullet through that
+ noble-looking gray head. The face haunted me all the way, as I rode along
+ to catch my regiment, and when I overtook it, and rode up to the colonel,
+ and asked him what in thunder he wanted to go off and leave me to fight
+ the whole southern Confederacy for, he said, &ldquo;O, get out! There were no
+ rebels there. That was the Indiana regiment that started out day before
+ yesterday, to get on the other side of the town. The fellows were shooting
+ some cattle for food. What makes you look-so pale?&rdquo; I was thinking of
+ whether a man ever prospered who killed old people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Three Days Without Food!&mdash;The Value of Hard Tack&mdash;A Silver
+ Watch for a Pint of Meal&mdash;I Steal Corn from a Hungry Mule&mdash;
+ The Delirium of Hunger&mdash;I Dine on Mule&mdash;I Capture a Rebel
+ Ram.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After overtaking my regiment, and enjoying a feeling of safety which I did
+ not feel in the presence of that violent old man who laid savage hands on
+ my horse, and the girls, I began to reflect. Of course the old man was not
+ armed, and I was, but how did I know but those Confederate girls had
+ revolvers concealed about their persons, and might have killed me. To feel
+ that I was once more safe with my regiment, where there was no danger as
+ long as they did not get into a fight, was bliss indeed, and I rode along
+ in silence, wondering when the cruel war would be over, and what all this
+ riding around the country, burning buildings and tearing up railroad
+ tracks amounted to, anyway. I didn't enlist as a section hand, nor a
+ railroad wrecker, and there was nothing in my enlistment papers that said
+ anything about my being compelled to commit arson. The recruit-officer
+ who, by his glided picture of the beauties of a soldier's life, induced me
+ to enlist as a soldier, never mentioned anything that would lead me to
+ believe that one of my duties would be to touch a match to another man's
+ bales of cotton, or ditch a locomotive belonging to parties who never did
+ me any harm, and who had a right to expect dividends from their railroad
+ stock. If I had the money, that was represented in the stuff destroyed by
+ our troops that day, I could run a daily newspaper for years, if it didn't
+ have a subscriber or a patent medicine advertisement. And who was
+ benefitted by such wanton destruction of property. As we rode along I told
+ the colonel I thought it was a confounded shame to do as we had done, and
+ that such a use of power, because we had the power, was unworthy of
+ American soldiers. He said it was a soldier's duty to obey orders and not
+ talk back, and if he heard any more moralizing on my part he would send me
+ back to my company, where I would have to do duty like the rest. I told
+ him I was one of the talking backest fellows he ever saw, and that one of
+ my duties as a newspaper man was to criticise the conduct of the war. Then
+ he said I might report to the captain of my company. It seemed hard to go
+ into the ranks, after having had a soft job with the chaplain, and again
+ as colonel's orderly, but I thought if I got my back up and showed the
+ captain that I was no ordinary soldier, but one who was qualified for any
+ position, that maybe he would be afraid to monkey too much with me. I knew
+ the captain would be a candidate for some office when the war was over,
+ and if he knew I was on to him, and that I should very likely publish a
+ paper that could warm him up quite lively, he would see to it that I
+ wasn't compelled to do very hard work. So I rode back to my company and
+ told the captain that the colonel and the chaplain had got through with
+ me, and I had come back to stay, and would be glad to do any light work he
+ might have for me. The captain heaved a sigh, as though he was not
+ particularly tickled to have me back, and told me to fall in, in the rear
+ of the company. I asked if I couldn't ride at the head of the company. He
+ said no, there was more room at the rear. I tried to tell him that I was
+ accustomed to riding at the head of the regiment, but he told me to shut
+ up my mouth and get back there, and I got back, and fell in at the tail
+ end of the company, with the cook and an officer's servant, and the
+ orderly sergeant came back and wanted to know if the company had got to
+ have me around again. Here was promotion with a vengeance. From the proud
+ pinnacle from which I had soared, as chaplain's clerk, and colonel's
+ orderly, I had dropped with one fell swoop to the rear end of my company,
+ and nobody wanted me, because I had kicked against stealing hens in one
+ instance, and burning buildings and tearing up railroads in the other. We
+ rode all day, and at night laid down in the woods and slept, after eating
+ the last of our rations. I slept beside a log, and before going to sleep
+ and after waking, I swore by the great horn spoons I would not steal
+ anything more while I was in the army, nor do any damage to property. In
+ the morning the soldiers had scarcely a mouthful to eat, and an order was
+ read to each company that for three or four days it would be necessary to
+ live off the country, foraging for what we had to eat. I asked the captain
+ what we would do for something to eat if we didn't find anything in the
+ country to gobble up. He said we would starve. That was an encouraging
+ prospect for a man who had taken a solemn oath not to steal any more. I
+ told the captain I did not intend to steal any more, as I did not think it
+ right. Then he said I better begin to eat the halter off my horse, because
+ leather would be the only thing I would have to stay my stomach. The first
+ day I did not eat a mouthful, except half of a hard-tack that I had a
+ quarrel with my horse to get. In throwing the saddle on my horse, one
+ solitary hard-tack that was in the saddle-bag, fell out upon the ground,
+ and the horse picked it up. I did not know the hard-tack was in the
+ saddle, and when it fell upon the ground I was as astonished as I would
+ have been had a clap of thunder come from the clear sky, and when the
+ horse went for it, my stomach rebelled and I grabbed one side of the
+ hard-tack while the horse held the other side in his teeth. Something had
+ to give, and as the horse's teeth nor my hands would give, the hard-tack
+ had to, and I saved half of it, and placed it in the inside pocket of my
+ vest, as choice as though it were a thousand dollar bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have listened to music, in my time, that has been pretty bad, and which
+ has sent cold chills up my back, and caused me pain, but I never heard any
+ bad music that seemed to grate on my nerves as did the noise my horse made
+ in chewing the half of my last hard-tack, and the look of triumph the
+ animal gave me was adding insult to injury. Several times during the day I
+ took that piece of hard-tack from my pocket carefully, wiped it on my
+ coat-sleeve, and took a small bite, and the horse would look around at me
+ wickedly, as though he would like to divide it with me again. People talk
+ about guarding riches carefully, and of placing diamonds in a safe place,
+ but no riches were ever guarded as securely as was that piece of
+ hard-tack, and riches never took to themselves wings and new, regretted
+ more than did my last hard-tack. Each bite made it smaller, and finally,
+ the last bite was taken, with a sigh, and nothing remained for me to eat
+ but the halter. Some of the boys went out foraging, and were moderately
+ successful, while others did not get a thing to eat. The country was pine
+ woods, with few settlers, and those that lived there were so poor that it
+ seemed murder to take what they had. One of the men of our company came
+ back with about two quarts of corn meal, that night, and I traded him a
+ silver watch for about a pint of it. I mixed it up in some water, and
+ after the most of the men had fallen asleep, I made two pancakes of the
+ wet meal, and put them in the ashes of the camp-fire to bake, but fell
+ asleep before it was done, and when I woke up and reached into the ashes
+ for the first pancake, it was gone. Some Union soldier, whom it were base
+ flattery to call a thief, had watched me, and stole my riches as I slept,
+ robbed me of all I held dear in life. With trembling hands I raked the
+ ashes for my other pancake, hopelessly, because I thought that, too, was
+ gone, but to my surprise I found it. The villain who had pursued me as I
+ slept, had failed to discover the second pancake, and I was safe, and my
+ life was saved. I have seen a play in a theater in which a miser hides his
+ gold, first in one place, then in another, looking to the right and to the
+ left to see if anybody was watching him. I was the same kind of a miser
+ about my pancake. If I hid it in the woods I might fail to find the place,
+ in the morning, where I had hid it, and besides, some soldier that was
+ peacefully snoring near me, apparently, might have one eye on me, and
+ commit burglary. If I put it in my pocket, and went to sleep, I might have
+ my pocket picked, so I concluded to remain awake and hold it in my hands.
+ There appeared to be nothing between me and death by starvation, except
+ that cornmeal pancake, and I sat there for an hour, beside the dying
+ embers of the campfire, trying to make up my mind who stole my other
+ pancake, and what punishment should be meted out to him if I ever found
+ him out. I would follow him to my dying day. I suspected the captain, the
+ colonel, the chaplain, and six hundred soldiers, any one of whom was none
+ too good to steal a man's last pancake if he was hungry. To this day I
+ have never found out who stole my pancake, but I have not given up the
+ search, and if I live to be as old as Methuselah, and I find out the
+ fellow that put himself outside my pancake that dark night in the pine
+ woods, I will gallop all over that old soldier, if he is older than I am.
+ That is the kind of avenger that is on the track of that pancake-eater. I
+ sat there and nodded over my remaining pancake, clutched in my hands, and
+ finally started to my feet in alarm. Suppose I should fall asleep, and be
+ robbed? The thought was maddening. I have read of Indians who would eat
+ enough at one sitting to last them several days, and the thought occurred
+ to me that if I ate the pancake my enemies could not get it away from me,
+ and perhaps it would digest gradually, a little each day, and brace me up
+ until we got where there were rations plenty. So I sat there and
+ deliberately eat every mouthful of it, and looked around at the sleeping
+ companions with triumph, laid down and slept as peacefully on the ground
+ as I ever slept in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There may be truth in the story about Indians eating enough to last them a
+ week, but it did not work in my case, for in the morning I was hungry as a
+ she wolf. The pancake had gone to work and digested itself right at once,
+ as though there was no end of food, and my stomach yearned for something.
+ I walked down by the quartermaster's wagons, about daylight, and there was
+ a four-mule team, each with a nose bag on, with corn in it. The mules were
+ eating corn, unconscious of a robber being near. At home, where I had
+ lived on good fresh meat, bread, pie, everything that was good, nobody
+ could have made me believe that I would steal corn from a government mule,
+ but when I heard the mules eating that corn a demon possessed me, and I
+ meditated robbery. I did not want to take all the corn I wanted from one
+ mule, so I decided to take toll from all of them. I went up to the first
+ one, and reached my hand down into the nose bag beside the mule's mouth
+ and rescued a handful of corn, then went to another to do the same, but
+ that mule kicked at the scheme. I went to two others, and they laid their
+ ears back and began to kick at the trace chains, so I went back to my
+ first love, the patient mule, and took every last kernel of corn in the
+ bag, and as I went away with a pocket full of corn the mule looked at me
+ with tears in its eyes, but I couldn't be moved by no mule tears, with
+ hunger gnawing at my vitals, so I hurried away like a guilty thing. While
+ I was parching the corn stolen from the mule, in a half of a tin canteen,
+ over the fire, the chaplain came along and wanted to sample it. He was
+ pretty hungry, but I wasn't running a free boarding house for chaplains
+ any more, and I told him he must go forage for himself. He said he would
+ give his birthright for a pocket full of corn. I told him I didn't want
+ any birthright, unless a birthright would stay a man's stomach, but if he
+ would promise to always love, honor and obey me, I would tell him where he
+ could get some corn. He swore by the great bald headed Elijah that if I
+ would steer him onto some corn he would remember me the longest day he
+ lived, and pray for me. I never was very much, mashed on the chaplain's
+ influence at the throne, but I didn't want to see him starve, while
+ government mules were living on the fat of the land, so I told him to go
+ down to the quartermaster's corral and rob the mules as I had done. He bit
+ like a bass, and started for the mules. Honestly, I had no designs on the
+ chaplain, but he traded me a kicking mule once, and got a good horse of
+ me, because I thought he wanted to do me a favor. As he was familiar with
+ mules, I supposed he would know how to steal a little corn. Pretty soon I
+ heard a great commotion down there, and presently the chaplain came out
+ with a mule chasing him, its ears laid back, and blood in its eyes. The
+ chaplain was white as a sheet, and yelling for help. Before I could knock
+ the mule down with a neck-yoke, the animal had grabbed the chaplain by the
+ coat tail, with its mouth, taking some of his pants, also, and perhaps a
+ little skin, raised him up into the air, about seven feet, let go of him,
+ and tried to turn around and kick the good man on the fly as he came down.
+ We drove the mule away, rescued the chaplain, tied his pants together with
+ a piece of string, cut off the tail of his coat which the mule had not
+ torn off, so it was the same length as the other one, and made him look
+ quite presentable, though he said he <i>knew</i> he could never ride a
+ horse again. It seems that instead of reaching into the nose bag, and
+ taking a little corn, he had unbuckled the nose bag and taken it off. I
+ told him he was a hog, and ought to have known better than take the nose
+ bag off, thus leaving the mule's mouth unmuzzled, while the animal was
+ irritated. He accused me of knowing that the mule was vicious, and
+ deliberately sending him there to be killed, so rather than have any hard
+ feelings I gave him a handful of my parched corn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few Sundays afterwards I heard him preach a sermon on the sin of
+ covetousness, and I thought how beautifully he could have illustrated his
+ sermon if he had turned around and showed his soldier audience where the
+ mule eat his coat tail. Soon we saddled up and marched another day without
+ food. Reader, were you ever so hungry that you could see, as plain as
+ though it was before you, a dinner-table set with a full meal, roast beef,
+ mashed potatoes, pie, all steaming hot, ready to sit down to? If you have
+ not been very hungry in your life, you can not believe that one can be in
+ a condition to see things. The man with delirium tremens can see snakes,
+ while the hungry man, in his delirium, can see things he would like to
+ eat. Many times during that day's ride through the deserted pine-woods,
+ with my eyes wide open, I could see no trees, no ground, no horses and men
+ around me, but there seemed a film over the eyes, and through it I could
+ see all of the good things I ever had eaten. One moment there would be a
+ steaming roast turkey, on a platter, ready to be carved. Again I could see
+ a kettle over a cook-stove, with a pigeon pot-pie cooking, the dumpings,
+ light as a feather, bobbing up and down with the steam, and I could
+ actually smell the odor of the cooking pot-pie. It seems strange, and
+ unbelievable to those who have never experienced extreme hunger or thirst,
+ that the imagination can picture eatables and streams of running water, so
+ plain that one will almost reach for the eatables, or rush for the
+ imaginary stream, to plunge in and quench thirst, but I have experienced
+ both of those sensations for thirteen dollars a month, and nary a pension
+ yet. It is such experiences that bring gray hairs to the temples of young
+ soldiers, and cause eyes to become hollow and sunken in the head. Today,
+ your Uncle Samuel has not got silver dollars enough in his treasury to
+ hire me to suffer one day of such hunger as to make me see things that
+ were not there, but twenty-two years ago it was easy to have fun over it,
+ and to laugh it off the next day. When we stopped that day, at noon, to
+ rest, the company commissary sergeant came up to the company, with two men
+ carrying the hind quarter of an animal that had been slaughtered, and he
+ began to cut it up and issue it out to the men. It was peculiar looking
+ meat, but it was meat, and every fellow took his ration, and it was not
+ long before the smell of broiled fresh meat could be &ldquo;heard&rdquo; all around.
+ When I took my meat I asked the sergeant what it was, and where he got it.
+ I shall always remember his answer. It was this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man, when you are starving, and the means of sustaining life are
+ given you, take your rations and go away, and don't ask any fool
+ questions. If you don't want it, leave it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leave it? Egad, I would have eaten it if it had been a Newfoundland dog,
+ and I took it, and cooked it, and ate it. I do not know, and never did,
+ what it was, but when the quartermaster's mule teams pulled out after
+ dinner, there were two &ldquo;spike teams;&rdquo;&mdash;that is, two wheel mules and a
+ single leader, instead of four-mule teams. After I saw the teams move out,
+ each mule looking mournful, as though each one thought his time might come
+ next, I didn't want to ask any questions about that meat, though I know
+ there wasn't a beef critter within fifty miles of us. I have had my
+ children ask me, many times, if I ever eat any mule in the army, and I
+ have always said that I did not know. And I don't. But I am a great hand
+ to mistrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on this hungry day, when filled with meat such as I had never met
+ before that I did a thing I shall always regret. The captain came down to
+ the rear of the company and said, so we could all hear it. &ldquo;I want two men
+ to volunteer for a perilous mission. I want two as brave men as ever
+ lived. Who will volunteer? Don't all speak at once. Take plenty of time,
+ for your lives may pay the penalty!&rdquo; I had been feeling for some days as
+ though there was not the utmost confidence in my bravery, among the men,
+ and I had been studying as to whether I would desert, and become a
+ wanderer on the face of the earth, or do some desperate deed that would
+ make me solid with the boys, and when the captain called for volunteers, I
+ swallowed a large lump in my throat, and said, &ldquo;Captain, <i>here is your
+ mule</i>. I will go!&rdquo; Whether it was that confounded meat I had eaten that
+ had put a seeming bravery into me, or desperation at the hunger of the
+ past few days, I do not know, but I volunteered for a perilous mission. A
+ little Irishman named McCarty spoke up, and said, &ldquo;Captain, I will go
+ anywhere that red headed recruit will go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was settled that McCarty and myself should go, and with some
+ misgivings on my part we rode up to the front and reported. I thought what
+ a fool I was to volunteer, when I was liable to be killed, but I was in
+ for it, and there was no use squealing now. We came to a cross road, and
+ the captain whispered to us that we should camp there, and that he had
+ been told by a reliable contraband that up the cross road about two miles
+ was a house at which there was a sheep, and he wanted us to go and take
+ it. He said there might be rebels anywhere, and we were liable to be
+ ambushed and killed, but we must never come back alive without sheep meat.
+ Well, we started off. McCarty said I better ride a little in advance so if
+ we were ambushed, I would be killed first, and he would rush back and
+ inform the captain. I tried to argue with McCarty that I being a recruit,
+ and he a veteran, it would look better for him to lead, but he said I
+ volunteered first, and he would waive his rights of precedence, and ride
+ behind me. So we rode along, and I reflected on my changed condition. A
+ few short weeks ago I was a respected editor of a country newspaper in
+ Wisconsin, looked up to, to a certain extent, by my neighbors, and now I
+ had become a sheep thief. At home the occupation of stealing sheep was
+ considered pretty low down, and no man who followed the business was
+ countenanced by the best society. A sheep thief, or one who was suspected
+ of having a fondness for mutton not belonging to him, was talked about.
+ And for thirteen dollars a month, and an insignificant bounty, I had
+ become a sheep thief. If I ever run another newspaper, after the war, how
+ did I know but a vile contemporary across the street would charge me with
+ being a sheep thief, and prove it by McCarty. May be this was a conspiracy
+ on the part of the captain, whom I suspected of a desire to run for office
+ when we got home, to get me in his power, so that if I went for him in my
+ paper, he could charge me with stealing sheep. It worked me up
+ considerable, but we were out of meat, and if there was a sheep in the
+ vicinity, and I got it, there was one thing sure, they couldn't get any
+ more mule down me. So we rode up to the plantation, which was apparently
+ deserted. There was a lamb about two-thirds grown, in the front yard, and
+ McCarty and myself dismounted and proceeded to surround the young sheep.
+ As we walked up to it, the lamb came up to me bleating, licked my hand,
+ and then I noticed there was a little sleigh-bell tied to its neck with a
+ blue ribbon. The lamb looked up at us with almost human eyes, and I was
+ going to suggest that we let it alone, when McCarty grabbed it by the hind
+ legs and was going to strap it to his saddle, when it set up a bleating,
+ and a little boy come rushing out of the house, a bright little fellow
+ about three years old, who could hardly talk plain. I wanted to hug him,
+ he looked so much like a little black-eyed baby at home, that was too
+ awfully small to say &ldquo;good bye, papa&rdquo; when I left. The little fellow, with
+ the dignity of an emperor, said, &ldquo;Here, sir, you must not hurt my little
+ pet lamb. Put him down, sir, or I will call the servants and have you put
+ off the premises.&rdquo; McCarty laughed, and said the lamb would be fine 'atin
+ for the boy's, and was pulling the little thing up, when the tears came
+ into the boy's eyes, and that settled it. I said, &ldquo;Mac, for heaven's sake,
+ drop that lamb. I wouldn't break that little boy's heart for all the
+ sheep-meat on earth. I will eat mule, or dog, but I draw the line at
+ children's household pets. Let the lamb go.&rdquo; &ldquo;Begorra, yer right,&rdquo; said
+ McCarty, as he let the lamb down. &ldquo;Luk at how the shep runs to the little
+ bye. Ah, me little mon, yer pet shall not be taken away from yez,&rdquo; and a
+ big tear ran down McCarty's face. The boy said there was a great big sheep
+ in the back yard we could have, if we were hungry, and we went around the
+ house to see. There was an old black ram that looked as though he could
+ whip a regiment of soldiers, but we decided that he was our meat. McCarty
+ suggested that I throw a lariet rope around his horns, and lead him,
+ whiles, he would go behind and drive the animal. That looked feasible, and
+ taking a horse-hair picket rope off my saddle, with a slip noose in the
+ end, I tossed it over the horns of the ram, tied the rope to the saddle,
+ and started. The ram went along all right till we got out to the road,
+ when he held back a little. Mac jabbed the ram in the rear with his saber,
+ and he came along all right, only a little too sudden. That was one of the
+ mistakes of the war, Mac's pricking that ram, and it has been the source
+ of much study on my part, for twenty-two years, as to whether the Irishman
+ did it on purpose, knowing the ram would charge on my horse, and butt my
+ steed in the hind legs. If that was the plan of the Irishman, it worked
+ well, for the first thing I knew my horse jumped about eighteen feet, and
+ started down the road towards camp, on a run, dragging the ram, which was
+ bellowing for all that was out. I tried to hold the horse in a little, but
+ every time he slackened up the ram would gather himself and run his head
+ full tilt against the horse, and away he would go again. Sometimes the ram
+ was flying through the air, at the end of the rope, then it would be
+ dragged in the sand, and again it would strike on its feet, and all the
+ time the ram was blatting, and the confounded Irishman was yelling and
+ laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/131.jpg" alt="We Went Into the Camp That Way 131 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ We went into the camp that way, and the whole regiment, hearing the noise,
+ turned out to see us come in. As my horse stopped, and the ram was caught
+ by a colored man, who tied its legs, I realized the ridiculousness of the
+ scene, and would have gone off somewhere alone and hated myself, or killed
+ the Irishman, but just then I saw the captain, and I said, &ldquo;Captain, I
+ have to report that the perilous expedition was a success. There's your
+ sheep,&rdquo; and I rode away, resolved that that was the last time I should
+ ever volunteer for perilous duty. The Irishman was telling a crowd of boys
+ the particulars, and they were having a great laugh, when I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;McCarty, you are a villain. I believe you set that ram on to me on
+ purpose. Henceforth we are strangers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be gob,&rdquo; said the Irishman, as he held his sides with laughter, &ldquo;yez
+ towld me to drive the shape, and didn't I obey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bacon and Hard-tack&mdash;In Danger of Ague&mdash;In Search of Whisky
+ and Quinine&mdash;I Am Appointed Corporal&mdash;I Make a Speech&mdash;I Am
+ the Leader of Ten Picked Men&mdash;I Am Willing to Resign.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The next day we arrived at a post where rations were plenty, and where it
+ was announced we should remain for a week or two, so we drew tents and
+ made ourselves as comfortable as possible. It did seem good to again be
+ where we did not have to depend on our own resources, of stealing, for
+ what we wanted to eat. To be able to draw from the commissary regular
+ rations of meat, tea, coffee, sugar, baker's bread, and beans, was joy
+ indeed, after what we had gone through, and we almost made hogs of
+ ourselves. There was one thing&mdash;those few days of starvation taught
+ us a lesson, and that was, when ordered on a trip with two days' rations,
+ to take at least enough for six days, especially of coffee and salt pork
+ or bacon. With coffee and a piece of old smoked bacon, a man can exist a
+ long time. I remember after that trip, wherever I went, there was a chunk
+ of bacon in one of my saddle-bags that nobody knew anything about, and
+ many a time, on long marches, when hunger would have been experienced
+ almost as severe as the time written about last week, I would take out my
+ chunk of bacon, cut off a piece and spread it on a hard-tack, and eat a
+ meal that was more strengthening than any meal Delmonico ever spread. It
+ was at this post that the boys in the regiment played a trick that caused
+ much fun throughout all the army. There were a few men in each company who
+ had the chills and fever, or ague, and the surgeon gave them each morning,
+ a dose of whisky and quinine. It was interesting to see a dozen soldiers
+ go to surgeon's call, take their &ldquo;bitters,&rdquo; and return to their quarters.
+ The boys would go to the surgeon's tent sort of languid, and drag along,
+ and after swallowing a good swig of whisky and quinine they would walk
+ back to their quarters swinging their arms like Pat Rooney on the stage,
+ and act as though they could whip their weight in wild cats. I got
+ acquainted with the hospital steward, and he said if the boys were not
+ careful they would all be down with the ague, and that an ounce of
+ prevention was worth more than a pound of cure. I thought I would take
+ advantage of his advice, so I fell in with the sick fellows the next
+ morning, and when the doctor asked, &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; I said &ldquo;chills,&rdquo;
+ and he said, &ldquo;Take a swallow out of the red bottle.&rdquo; I took a swallow, and
+ it <i>was</i> bitter, but it had whisky in it, more than quinine, and the
+ idea of beating the government out of a drink of whisky was pleasure
+ enough to overcome the bitter taste. I took a big swallow, and before I
+ got back to my quarters I had had a fight with a mule-driver, and when the
+ quartermaster interfered I had insulted him by telling him I knew him when
+ he carried a hod, before the war, and I shouted, &ldquo;Mort, more mort!&rdquo; until
+ he was going to lather me with a mule whip, but he couldn't catch me. As I
+ run by the surgeon's tent, somebody remarked that I had experienced a
+ remarkably sudden cure for chills. The whisky was not real good, but as I
+ had heard the hospital steward say they had just put in a requisition for
+ two barrels of it, to be prepared for an epidemic of chills, I thought the
+ boys ought to know it, so that day I went around to the different
+ companies and told the boys how to play it for a drink. There are very few
+ soldiers, in the best regiment, that will not take a drink of whisky when
+ far away from home, discouraged, and worn out by marching, and our fellows
+ looked favorably upon the proposition to all turn out to surgeon's call
+ the next morning. I shall never forget the look on the face of the good
+ old surgeon, as the boys formed in line in front of his tent the next
+ morning. The last time I saw him, he was in his coffin, about five years
+ ago, at the soldier's home, and a few of the survivors of the regiment
+ that lived here had gone out to the home to take a last look at him, and
+ act as mourners at the funeral. He looked much older than when he used to
+ ask us fellows the conumdrum, &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; but there was that same
+ look on his white, cold face that there was the morning that nearly the
+ whole regiment reported for &ldquo;bitters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There must have been four hundred men in line, and it happened that I was
+ the first to be called. When he asked me about my condition, and I told
+ him of the chills, he studied a minute, then looked at me, and said, You
+ are bilious, David, give him a dose of castor oil. I know I turned pale,
+ for it was a great come down from quinine and whisky to castor oil, for a
+ healthy man, and I kicked. I told him I had the shakes awfully, and all I
+ wanted was a quinine powder. I knew they had put all their quinine into a
+ barrel of whisky, so I was safe in asking for dry quinine. The good old
+ gentleman finally relented on the castor oil, and told David to give me a
+ swallow of the quinine bitters, but there was a twinkle in his eye, as he
+ noticed what a big swallow I took, and then he said, &ldquo;You will be well
+ tomorrow; you needn't come again.&rdquo; I dropped out of the ranks, with my
+ skin full of quinine and whisky, and watched the other fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were men in the line who had never been sick a day since they
+ enlisted, big fellows that would fight all day, and stand picket all
+ night, and who never knew what it was to have an ache. And it was amusing
+ to see them appear to shake, and to act as though they had chills. Some of
+ them could not keep from laughing, and it was evident that the doctor had
+ his doubts about there being so many cases of chills, but he dosed out the
+ quinine and whisky as long as there was a man who shook. As each man took
+ his dose, he would show two expressions on his face. One was an expression
+ of hilarity at putting himself outside of a good swig of whisky, and the
+ other was an expression of contempt for the bitter quinine, and an evident
+ wish that the drug might be left out. When all had been served, they
+ lingered around the surgeon's quarters, talking with each other and
+ laughing, others formed on for a stag quadrille, and danced, while a
+ nigger fiddled. Some seemed to feel as though they wanted some one to
+ knock a chip off their shoulders, old grudges were talked over, and
+ several fights were prevented by the interference of friends who were
+ jolly and happy, and who did not believe in fighting for fun, when there
+ was so much fighting to be done in the way of business. The old doctor
+ walked up and down in front of his tent in a deep study. He was evidently
+ thinking over the epidemic of ague that had broken out in a healthy
+ regiment, and speculating as to its cause. Suddenly an idea seemed to
+ strike him, and he walked up to a crowd of his patients, who were watching
+ a couple of athletes, who had just taken their quinine, and who had put on
+ boxing gloves and were pasting each other in the nose. &ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; said
+ the old doctor. The boys stopped boxing, and every last &ldquo;sick&rdquo; man
+ listened respectfully to what the old doctor said; &ldquo;Boys,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you
+ have got it on me this time. I don't believe a confounded one of you have
+ got ague at all. You 'shook me' for the whisky. After this, quinine will
+ be dealt out raw, without any whisky, and now you can shake all you
+ please.&rdquo; Some one proposed three cheers for the boys that had made Uncle
+ Sam stand treat, and the cheers were given, and the boys separated to talk
+ over the event. The next morning only the usual number of sick were in
+ attendance at surgeon's call. The healthy fellows didn't want to take
+ quinine raw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time an incident occurred that was fraught with great
+ importance to the country and to me, though the historians of the war have
+ been silent about it in their histories, whether through jealousy or
+ something else I do not know, and modesty has prevented me from making any
+ inquiries as to the cause. The incident alluded to was my appointment as
+ corporal of my company. I say the incident was &ldquo;fraught&rdquo; with importance.
+ I do not know the meaning of the word fraught, but it is frequently used
+ in history in that connection, and I throw it in, believing that it is a
+ pretty good word. The appointment came to me like a stroke of paralysis. I
+ was not conscious that my career as a soldier had been such as to merit
+ promotion, I could not recall my particularly brilliant military
+ achievement that would warrant my government selecting me from the ranks
+ and conferring honors upon me, unless it was my lasooing that ram and
+ dragging him into camp, when we were out of meat. But it was not my place
+ to inquire into the cause that had led to my sudden promotion over the
+ rank and file. I thought if I made too many inquiries it would be
+ discovered that I was not such an all-fired great soldier after all. If
+ the government had somehow got the impression that I was well calculated
+ to lead hosts to victory, and it was an erroneous impression, it was the
+ governments' place to find it out without any help on my part. I would
+ accept the position with a certain dignity, as though I knew that it was
+ inevitable that I must sooner or later come to the front. So when the
+ captain informed me that he should appoint me Corporal, I told him that I
+ thanked him, and through him, the Nation, and would try and perform the
+ duties of the exacting and important position to the best of my ability,
+ and hoped that I might not do anything that would bring discredit upon our
+ distracted country. He said that would be all right, that he had no doubt
+ the country would pull through. That evening at dress parade the
+ appointment was read, and I felt elated. I thought it singular that the
+ regiment did not break out into cheers, and make the welkin ring, though
+ they may not have had any welkin to ring. However, I thought it was my
+ duty to make a little speech, acknowledging the honor conferred upon me,
+ as I had read that generals and colonels did when promoted. I took off my
+ hat and said, &ldquo;Fellow soldiers.&rdquo; That was the end of my speech, for the
+ captain turned around and said to the orderly sergeant, &ldquo;Stop that
+ red-headed cusses mouth some way,&rdquo; and the orderly told me to dry up.
+ Everybody was laughing, I supposed, at the captain. Anyway, I felt hurt,
+ and when we got back to camp the boys of all the companies surrounded me
+ to offer congratulations, and I was called on for a speech. Not being in
+ the ranks, nobody could prevent me from speaking, so I got up on a barrel,
+ and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow Soldiers:&mdash;As I was about to remark, when interrupted by the
+ captain, on dress parade, this office has come to me entirely unsought. It
+ has not been my wish to wear the gilded trappings of office and command
+ men, but rather to fight in the ranks, a private soldier. I enlisted as a
+ private, and my ambition has been to remain in the ranks to the end of the
+ war. But circumstances over which I have no control has taken me and
+ placed me on the high pinnacle of Corporal, and I must bow to the decree
+ of fate. Of course, in my new position there must necessarily be a certain
+ gulf between us. I have noticed that there has been a gulf between me and
+ the officers, and I have thought it wrong. I have thought that privates
+ and officers should mingle together freely, and share each others secrets,
+ privations and rations. But since being promoted I can readily see that
+ such things cannot be. The private has his position and the officer has
+ his, and each must be separate. It is not my intention to make any radical
+ changes in the conduct of military affairs at present, allowing things to
+ go along about as they have, but as soon as I have a chance to look about
+ me, certain changes will be made. All I ask is that you, my fellow
+ soldiers, shall stand by me, follow where I shall lead and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point in my address the head of the barrel on which I stood fell
+ in with a dull thud, and I found myself up to the neck in corned-beef
+ brine. The boys set up a shout, some fellow kicked over the barrel, and
+ they began to roll it around the camp with me in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/141.jpg"
+ alt="Just Promoted to the Proud Position of Corporal 141 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This was a pretty position for a man just promoted to the proud position
+ of Corporal. As they rolled me about and yelled like Indians, I could see
+ that an official position in that regiment was to be no sinecure. All
+ official positions have more or less care and responsibility, but this one
+ seemed to me to have too much. Finally they spilled me out of the barrel,
+ and I was a sight to behold. My first idea was to order the whole two
+ hundred fellows under arrest, and have them court-martialed for conduct
+ unbecoming soldiers; but on second thought I concluded that would seem an
+ arbitrary use of power, so I concluded to laugh it off. One fellow said
+ they begged pardon for any seeming disrespect to an official; but it had
+ always been customary in the regiment to initiate a corporal who was new
+ and too fresh with salt brine. I said that was all right, and I invited
+ them all up to the chaplain's tent to join me in a glass of wine. The
+ chaplain was away, and I knew he had received a keg of wine from the
+ sanitary commission that day, so we went up to his tent and drank it, and
+ everything passed off pleasantly until the chaplain happened in. The boys
+ dispersed as soon as he came, and left me to fight it out with the good
+ man. He was the maddest truly good man I have ever seen. I tried to
+ explain about my promotion, and that it was customary to set em up for the
+ boys, and that there was no saloon near, and that he had always told me to
+ help myself to anything I wanted; but he wouldn't be calm at all. I tried
+ to quote from Paul's epistle about taking a little wine for the
+ stomach-ache; but he just raved around and called me names, until I had to
+ tell him that if he kept on I would, in my official capacity as corporal,
+ place him under arrest. That seemed to calm him a little, for he laughed,
+ and finally he said I smelled of stale corned-beef, and he kicked me out
+ of his tent, and I retired to my quarters to study over the mutability of
+ human affairs, and the unpleasant features of holding official position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night I dreamed that General Grant and myself were running the army
+ in splendid shape, and that we were in-receipt of constant congratulations
+ from a grateful country, for victories. He and I seemed to be great chums.
+ I dreamed of engagements with the enemy, in which I led men against
+ fearful odds, and always came out victorious. I woke up before daylight
+ and was wondering what dangerous duty I would be detailed to lead men
+ upon, when the orderly poked his head in my tent and told me I was
+ detailed to take ten picked men, at daylight, for hard service, and to
+ report at once. I felt that my time had come to achieve renown, and I
+ dressed myself with unusual care, putting on the blouse with two rows of
+ buttons, which I had brought from home. I borrowed a pair of Corporal's
+ chevrons and sewed them to the sleeves of my blouse, and was ready to die,
+ if need be. I placed a Testament I had brought from home, inside my
+ blouse, in a breast pocket, as I had read of many cases where a Testament
+ had been struck with a bullet and saved a soldier's life. I placed all my
+ keepsakes in a package, and told my tent mate that I was going out with
+ ten picked men, and it was possible I might never show up again, and if I
+ fell he was to send the articles to my family. I wondered that I did not
+ feel afraid to die. I was no professor of religion, though I had always
+ tried to do the square thing all around, but with no consolation of
+ religion at all, I felt a sweet peace that was indescribable. If it was my
+ fate to fall in defence of my country, at the head of ten picked men, so
+ be it. Somebody must die, and why not me. I was no better than thousands
+ of others, and while life was sweet to me, and I had anticipated much
+ pleasure in life, after the war, in shooting ducks and holding office, I
+ was willing to give up all hope of pleasure in the future, and die like a
+ thoroughbred. I was glad that I had been promoted, and wondered if they
+ would put &ldquo;Corporal&rdquo; on my tombstone. I wondered, if I fell that day at
+ the head of my mem, if the papers at the North, and particularly in
+ Wisconsin, would say &ldquo;The deceased had just been promoted, for gallant
+ conduct, to the position of Corporal, and it will be hard to fill his
+ place.&rdquo; With these thoughts I sadly reported to the orderly. The ten
+ picked men were in line. They were four of them Irishmen, two Yankees, two
+ Germans, a Welshman and a Scotchman. The orderly gave me a paper, sealed
+ in an envelope. I turned to my men, and said, &ldquo;Boys, whatever happens
+ today, I don't want to see any man show the white feather. The world will
+ read the accounts of this day's work with feelings of awe, and the country
+ will care for those we leave behind.&rdquo; We started off, and it occurred to
+ me to read my instructions. I opened the envelope with the air of a
+ general who was accustomed to receive important messages. I read it, and
+ almost fainted, It read &ldquo;Report to the quartermaster, at the steamboat
+ landing, to unload quartermaster's stores from steamer Gazelle.&rdquo; Ye gods!
+ And this was the hard service that I was to lead ten picked men into. They
+ had picked out ten stevedores, to carry sacks of corn, and hard-tack
+ boxes, and barrels of pork, and that was the action I was to engage in as
+ my first duty as corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I almost cried. We rode down to the landing, where a dozen teams were
+ waiting to be loaded. It was all I could do to break the news to my picked
+ men that they were expected to lug sacks of corn instead of fight, and
+ when I did they kicked at once. One of the Irishmen said he would be
+ teetotally d&mdash;&mdash;d if he enlisted to carry corn for mules, and he
+ would lay in the guard-house till the war was over before he would lift a
+ sack. There was a strike on my hands to start on. I was sorry that I had
+ permitted myself to be promoted to Corporal. Trouble from the outset. One
+ of the Yankees suggested that we hold an indignation meeting, so we rode
+ up in front of a cotton warehouse and dismounted. The Scotchman was
+ appointed chairman, and for half an hour the ten picked men discussed the
+ indignity that was attempted to be heaped upon them, by compelling them to
+ do the work of niggers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They argued that a cavalry soldier's duty was exclusively to ride on
+ horseback, and that there was no power on earth to compel them to carry
+ sacks of corn. One of the Dutchmen said he could never look a soldier in
+ the face again after doing such menial duty, and he would not submit to
+ it. The Scotch chairman said if he had read the articles of war right
+ there was no clause that said that the cavalry man should leave his horse
+ and carry corn. I was called upon for my opinion, and said that I was a
+ little green as to the duties of a soldier, but supposed we had to do
+ anything we were ordered to do, but it seemed a little tough. I told them
+ I didn't want any mutiny, and it would be a plain case of mutiny if they
+ refused to work. One of the Irishmen asked if I would help carry sacks of
+ corn, and I told him that as commander of the expedition it would be
+ plainly improper for me to descend to a common day laborer. I held it to
+ be the duty of a corporal to stand around and see the men work. They all
+ said that was too thin, and I would have to peel on my coat and work if
+ they did. I told them I couldn't lift a sack of corn to save me, but they
+ said if that was the case I ought not to have come. The quartermaster was
+ looking around for the detail that was to unload the boat, and he asked me
+ if I had charge of the men detailed to unload. I told him that I <i>did</i>
+ have charge of them when we left camp, but that they had charge of me now,
+ and said they wouldn't lift a pound. He thought a minute, and said, &ldquo;I
+ don't like to see you boys carrying corn sacks, and rolling pork barrels.
+ Why don't you chip in and hire some niggers.&rdquo; The idea seemed inspired.
+ There were plenty of niggers around that would work for a little money.
+ One of the Irishmen moved that the Corporal hire ten niggers to unload the
+ quartermasters stores, and the motion was carried unanimously. I would
+ have voted against it, but the Scotchman, who was chairman, ruled that I
+ had no right to vote. So I went and found ten niggers that agreed to work
+ for fifty cents each, and they were set to work, the quartermaster
+ promising not to tell in camp about my hiring the work done. One of my
+ Dutchmen moved that, inasmuch as we had nothing to do all day, that we
+ take in the town, and play billiards, and whoop it up until the boat was
+ unloaded. That seemed a reasonable proposition, and the motion carried,
+ after an amendment had been added to the effect that the Corporal stay on
+ the boat and watch the niggers, and see that they didn't shirk. So my
+ first command, my ten picked men, rode off up town, and I set on a wagon
+ and watched my hired men. It was four o clock in the afternoon before the
+ stuff was all loaded, and after paying the niggers five dollars out of my
+ own pocket, some of my bounty money, I went up to town to round up my
+ picked men to take them to camp. I found the Scotchman pretty full of
+ Scotch whisky. He had found a countryman who kept a tailor shop, who had a
+ bag pipe, and they were having a high old time playing on the instrument,
+ and singing Scotch songs. I got him on his horse, and we looked for the
+ rest. The two Germans were in a saloon playing pee-nuckel, and singing
+ German songs, and their skins were pretty full of beer and cheese. They
+ were got into the ranks, and we found the Irishmen playing forty-five in a
+ saloon kept by a countryman of theirs, and they had evidently had a
+ shindig, as one of them had a black eye and a scratch on his nose, and
+ they were full of fighting whisky. The Yankees had swelled up on some kind
+ of benzine and had hired a hack and taken two women out riding, and when
+ we rounded them up each one had his feet out of the window of the hack,
+ and they were enjoying themselves immensely. The Welchman was the only one
+ that was sober, but the boys said there was not enough liquor in the South
+ to get him drunk. When I got them all mounted they looked as though they
+ had been to a banquet. We started for camp, but I did not want to take
+ them in until after dark, so we rode around the suburbs of the town until
+ night drew her sable mantle over the scene. They insisted on singing until
+ within half a mile of camp, and it would no doubt have been good music,
+ only the Scotchman insisted on singing &ldquo;The March of the Cameron Men,&rdquo;
+ while the Irishmen sung &ldquo;Lots of fun at Finnegan's Wake,&rdquo; and the German's
+ sung &ldquo;Wacht am Rhine.&rdquo; The Yankees sung the &ldquo;Star Spangled Banner,&rdquo; and
+ the Welchman sung something in the Welch language which was worse than
+ all. All the songs being sung together, of course I couldn't enjoy either
+ of them as well as a Corporal ought to enjoy the music of his command.
+ Arriving near camp, the music was hushed, and we rode in, and up to the
+ captain's tent, where I reported that the corn was unloaded, all right. He
+ said that was all right. Everything would have passed off splendidly, only
+ one of the Irishmen proposed &ldquo;three cheers&rdquo; for the dandy Corporal of the
+ regiment, and those inebriated, picked men, gave three cheers that raised
+ the roof of the colonel's tent near by, because I had hired niggers to do
+ the work, and let the men have a holiday. I dismissed them as quick as I
+ could, but the colonel sent for me, and I had to tell him the whole story.
+ He said I would demoralize the whole regiment in a week more, and I better
+ let up or he would have to discipline me. I offered to resign my
+ commission as Corporal, but he said I better hold on till we could have a
+ fight, and may be I would get killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yearnings for Military Fame&mdash;What I Want is a Chance&mdash;I Feel
+ I Could Crush the Rebellion&mdash;My Chance Arrives&mdash;I am
+ Crushed&mdash;The Rebellion Remains Pretty Well.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As I could get no one to accept my resignation as corporal, which I
+ tendered after my first service in that capacity, unloading a steamboat, I
+ decided to post myself as to the duties of the position, so I borrowed a
+ copy of &ldquo;Hardee's Tactics,&rdquo; and studied a good deal. Every place in the
+ book that mentioned the word &ldquo;corporal,&rdquo; had a particular and thrilling
+ interest for me, and I soon got so it would have been easy for me to have
+ done almost anything that a corporal would have to do. But I was not
+ contented to study the duty of a corporal. I read about the &ldquo;school of the
+ company,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;school of the regiment,&rdquo; and &ldquo;battalion drills,&rdquo; and
+ everything, until I could handle a regiment, or a brigade, for that
+ matter, as well as any officer in the army, in my mind. This led me to go
+ farther, and I borrowed a copy of a large blue book the colonel had, the
+ name of which I do not remember now, but it was all military, and told how
+ to conduct a battle successfully. I studied that book until I got the
+ thing down so fine that I could have fought the battle of Gettysburg
+ successfully, and I longed for a chance to show what I knew about military
+ science and strategy. It seemed wonderful to me that one small red-head
+ could contain so much knowledge about military affairs, and I felt a pity
+ for some officers I knew who never had studied at all, and did not know
+ anything except what they had picked up. I fought battles in my mind, day
+ and night. Some nights I would lay awake till after midnight, planning
+ campaigns, laying out battle-fields, and marching men against the enemy,
+ who fought stubbornly, but I always came out victorious, and then I would
+ go to sleep and dream that the President and secretary of war had got on
+ to me, as it were, and had offered me high positions, and I would wake up
+ in the morning the same red-headed corporal, and cook my breakfast.
+ Sometimes I thought it my duty to inform the government, in some round
+ about way, what a bonanza the country had in me, if my talent could only
+ be utilized by placing me where I would have a chance to distinguish
+ myself, and bring victory to our arms. I reflected that Grant, and
+ Sherman, and Sheridan, and all of the great generals, were once corporals,
+ and by study they had risen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not one of them that could dream out a battle, and a victory any
+ better that I could. All I wanted was a chance. Just give me men enough,
+ and turn me loose in the Southern Confederacy, with that head of mine, and
+ the result would be all an anxious nation could desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first chance came sooner than I expected. The next day a part of the
+ regiment went out on a scout, to be gone a couple of days, and my company
+ was along. I was unusually absorbed in thought, and wondered if I would be
+ given a chance to do anything. It seemed reasonable that if any corporal
+ was sent out with a squad of men, to fight, it would be an old corporal,
+ while if there was any duty that was menial, the new corporals would get
+ it. The second day out we stopped at noon to let our horses rest, when
+ little scouting parties that had been sent out on different roads during
+ the forenoon, began to come in. Many of them had picked up straggling
+ rebels, and brought them to damp, and they were carefully guarded, and the
+ major, who was in command of our party, was asking them questions, and
+ pumping them to find out all he could. I went over and looked at them, and
+ they were quite a nice looking lot of fellows, some being officers, with
+ plenty of gold lace on their gray suits. They were home from the
+ Confederate army on a leave of absence, probably recruiting. After talking
+ with a rebel officer for a time the major turned to the adjutant and said,
+ &ldquo;send me a corporal and ten men.&rdquo; The adjutant started, on, and I followed
+ him. I used to know the adjutant when he taught a district school, before
+ the war, and I asked him as a special favor to let me be the corporal. He
+ said the detail would be from my company, and if I could fix it with the
+ orderly sergeant of my company it was all right. I rushed to my company
+ and found the orderly, and got him to promise if there was a detail from
+ the company that day, I could go. Before the words were out of his mouth
+ the detail came, and in five minutes I reported to the major with ten men.
+ The major simply told me that a certain rebel captain, from Lee's army,
+ was reported to be at home, and his plantation was about four miles east,
+ and he described it to me. He told me to ride out there, surround the
+ house, capture the captain, and bring him into camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No general ever received his orders in regard to fighting a battle, with a
+ feeling of greater pride and responsibililty than I did my orders to
+ capture that rebel. We started out, and then for the first time I noticed
+ that there was another corporal in the squad with, me, and at once it
+ occurred to me that he might claim a part of the glory of capturing the
+ rebel. I had heard of the jealousy existing between generals, and how the
+ partisans of different generals filled the newspapers, after a battle,
+ with accounts of the part taken by their favorites, and that the accounts
+ got so mixed, up that the reader couldn't tell to whom the credit of
+ success was due, and I decided to take prompt measure with this
+ supernumerary corporal, who had evidently got in by mistake, so I told him
+ he might go back to the regiment. He said he guessed not. He had been
+ detailed to go on the scout, and he was going, if he knew himself, and he
+ thought he did. He said when it come right down to rank, he was an older
+ corporal than I was, and could take command of the squad if he wanted to.
+ I told him he was mistaken as to his position. That if the major had
+ wanted him to take charge of the expedition, he would have given him the
+ instructions, but as the major had given me the instructions, in a low
+ tone of voice, nobody but myself knew where we were going or what we were
+ going for, and that I was responsible, and the first intimation I had from
+ him that he wanted to mutiny, or relieve me from my command, I would have
+ him shot at once. I told him he could go along, but he must keep his mouth
+ shut, and obey orders. He said he would obey, if he felt like it. We moved
+ on, and I would have given a month's pay if that corporal had not been
+ there. In a short time we were in sight of the house, and at a cross road
+ I told the corporal to take one man and stop there, until further orders,
+ and if any rebel came along, to capture him. He was willing enough to stay
+ there, because there was a patch, of musk melons just over the fence. I
+ moved my remaining eight men to a high piece of ground near the house, and
+ halted, to look over the field of battle. Pulling a spy glass from my
+ pocket, which I had borrowed from the sutler, I surveyed, as near like a
+ general as possible, the situation. On one side of the house was a ravine,
+ which I decided must be held at all hazards, and after studying my copy of
+ tactics a moment, I sent an Irishman over there to hold the key to the
+ situation, and told him he might consider himself the Iron Brigade. The
+ lay of the ground reminded me much of pictures I had seen of the battle of
+ Bull Run, and the road on which I had left the corporal and one man, was
+ the road to Washington, on which we would retreat, if overcome by the
+ enemy. To the right of the ravine, which was held by the Iron Brigade, I
+ noticed a hen-house with a gate leading back to the nigger quarters, and I
+ called a soldier and told him to make a detour behind a piece of woods,
+ and at a signal from me, the waving of my right arm, to charge directly to
+ the gate of the hen-house, and hold it against any force that might
+ attempt to carry it, and to let no guilty man escape. Fifteen years
+ afterwards Gen. Grant used those self-same words, &ldquo;Let no guilty man
+ escape,&rdquo; and they became historic, but I will take my oath I was the first
+ commander to use the words, when I sent that man to hold the gate of the
+ hen-house. That man I denominated the First Division. Farther to the right
+ was a field of sweet potatoes, in which was a colored man digging the
+ potatoes. I sent a Dutchman to hold that field, with their right resting
+ on the left of the First Division, located at the gate of the hen-house,
+ whose right was supposed to rest on the left of the Iron Brigade, the
+ Irishman who commanded the ravine. Then I turned my attention to the left
+ of the battle-field, placed one man at the milk-house, with his left
+ resting on the right of the Irishman, and a man at the smoke-house. This
+ left three men, one of whom I appointed an aid de camp, one an orderly and
+ the other I held as a reserve, at a cotton gin. When I had got my army
+ into position, I sat under a tree and reflected a little, and concluded
+ that the Iron Brigade was in rather too exposed a position, so I sent my
+ aid de camp to order the Iron Brigade to move forward, under cover of the
+ ravine, and take a position behind a mule-shed. The aide soon returned and
+ reported that the Iron Brigade had taken off his shirt and kanoodled a
+ negro woman to wash it for him, and would not be able to move until the
+ shirt was dry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This altered my plans a little, but I was equal to the emergency, and
+ ordered my reserve to make a detour and take the mule-shed, and hold it
+ until relieved by the Iron Brigade, which would be as soon as his shirt
+ was dry, and then to report to me on the field. Then I took my aide and
+ orderly, and galloped around the lines, to see that all was right. I found
+ that the First Division, holding the gate of the hen-house, was well in
+ hand, though he had killed five chickens, and had them strapped on his
+ saddle, and was trying to cut off the head of another with his sabre. He
+ said he thought I said to let no guilty hen escape. I found the Iron
+ Brigade dismounted, his shirt hung on a line to dry, and the colored woman
+ had been pressed into the Federal service, and was frying a chicken for
+ the Brigade. I told him to get his shirt on as soon as it was dry, and
+ move by forced marches, to relieve the force holding the mule-shed, and
+ the Iron Brigade said he would as soon as he had his dinner. I found the
+ Division composed of the Dutchman, stubbornly holding the sweet-potato
+ field, and he was eating some boiled ham and corn-bread he had sent the
+ nigger to the house after, and he had a bushel of sweet-potatoes in a sack
+ strapped to his saddle. The force at the milk-house had a fine position,
+ and gave me a pitcher of butter-milk, which I drank with great gusto. I do
+ not know as there is anything in butter-milk that is stimulating, but
+ after drinking it my head seemed clearer, and I could see the whole
+ battle-field, and anticipate each movement I should cause to be made. I
+ was so pleased with the butter-milk, on the eve of battle, that I ordered
+ the second Division to fill my canteen with it, which he did. Then I rode
+ back to my headquarters, where I started from, having ridden clear around
+ the beleaguered plantation. Presently the reserve returned to me and
+ reported that he had been relieved by the Iron Brigade at the mule-shed,
+ whose shirt had become dry, and who had given the reserve a leg of fried
+ chicken, and a corn dodger. I took the leg of chicken away from my
+ reserve, eat it with great relish, and prepared for the onslaught, the
+ reserve picking some persimmons off a tree and eating them for lunch. I
+ was about to order the different divisions and brigades of my army to
+ advance from their different positions, and close in on the enemy, when a
+ colored man came out of the house and moved toward me, signalling that he
+ would fain converse with me. I struck a dignified attitude, by throwing my
+ right leg over the pommel of the saddle, like a hired girl riding a
+ plow-horse to town after a doctor, and waited. When he came up to me, he
+ said, &ldquo;Massa wants to know what all dis darn foolishness is about. He says
+ if you all don't go away from here he will shoot de liver outen you all.&rdquo;
+ I told the negro to be calm, and not cause me to resort to extreme
+ measures, and I asked him if his master was at home. He said he was, and
+ he was a bad man wid a gun. He had killed plenty of men before the war,
+ and since the war he had killed more Yankees than enough to build a
+ rail-fence around the plantation. I did not exactly like the reports in
+ regard to the enemy. I told the colored man to take a flag of truce to his
+ master, and tell him I would like an interview. The colored man went to
+ the house, and I sent for the Iron Brigade to report to me at once, in
+ light marching order, and the Irishman came riding up without any shirt
+ on. I caused the Brigade to put on his shirt, when I sent him to the
+ house, to follow the nag of truce and feel of the enemy. He went to the
+ house, and was evidently invited in, for he disappeared. I waited half an
+ hour for him, and as he did not show up, I called the Second Division, and
+ sent the Dutchman to the house. The Second Division went in, and did not
+ come out. I ordered the whole right wing of my army to deploy to my
+ support, and the fellow at the hen-house gate came, and I sent him in
+ after the Irishman and the Dutchman. He didn't come back, and I sent an
+ orderly after the force stationed at the milk-house, and he came, and I
+ sent him, with the same result. It was evident I was frittering away my
+ command, with no good result, so I looked at my tactics, and decided to
+ hold a council of war. My aide, orderly, and reserve, three besides
+ myself, composed the council of war. We three were in favor of ordering up
+ the other corporal and man from the cross-roads, but I opposed it. I did
+ not want the other corporal to have any finger in the pie. So I decided
+ that the four of us would go in a body to the house and demand the
+ surrender of the rebel captain. We rode down the lane where the other men
+ had gone, and it was a question whether we ever came back alive. I thought
+ they had a trap door in the house, which probably let the soldiers down
+ suddenly into a dungeon. Certainly unless there was something of the kind
+ my men would have come back. As we dismounted at the door; and walked up
+ the steps, the door opened and a fine looking rebel officer appeared
+ smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come in, Captain, with your men, and join me in a glass of wine,&rdquo; said
+ the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had never been called &ldquo;Captain&rdquo; before, and it touched me in a tender
+ spot. The rebel evidently thought I looked like a captain, and I was
+ proud. He had probably watched my maneuvers, and the way I handled my men,
+ and thought I was no common soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don't care if I do,&rdquo; said I, and we walked into a splendid old
+ room, and were bidden to be seated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hello, Corp,&rdquo; said my Iron Brigade, as he took his legs down from a
+ table, and poured out a glass of whisky from a bottle near him, &ldquo;This is
+ the divil's own place for an aisy life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gorporal,&rdquo; said my Dutch fellow soldier, as he poured out a glass of
+ schnapps, &ldquo;Led me indroduce you mit dot repel. He is a tasy, und don'd you
+ forgot aboud it. Mishder repel, dot ish der gorporal fun my gumpany.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebel smiled and said he was glad to see me, and hoped I was well, and
+ would I take wine, or something stronger. I took a small glass of wine,
+ but the rest of the fellows took strong drink, and my Iron Brigade was
+ already full, and the Dutchman was getting full rapidly. Finally I told
+ the rebel officer that I did not like to accept a man's hospitality when I
+ had such an unpleasant duty to perform as to arrest him, but circumstances
+ seemed to make it necessary. He said that was all right. In times of war
+ we must do many things that were unpleasant. We took another drink, and
+ then I told him I was sorry to inconvenience him, but he would have to
+ accompany me to camp. He said certainly, he had expected to be captured
+ ever since he saw that the house was surrounded, and while at first he had
+ made up his mind to take his rifle and kill us all from the gallery of the
+ house, he had thought better of it, and would surrender without bloodshed.
+ What was the use of killing any more men? The war was nearly over, and why
+ not submit, and save carnage. I told him that was the way I felt about it.
+ Then he said if I would wait until he retired to an adjoining room and
+ changed his linen, he would be ready. I said of course, certainly, and he
+ went out of a door. I waited about half an hour, until it seemed to me the
+ rebel had had time to change all the linen in the state of Alabama. The
+ Iron Brigade had gone to sleep on a lounge, and the German troop was full
+ as a goat, and some of the others were beginning to feel the hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon for intruding,&rdquo; said I, as I opened the door and walked
+ into the room the rebel had entered. &ldquo;Great Scott, he is gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My army, all except the Iron Brigade and the Dutchman, followed me, and
+ the room was empty. A window was up, through which he had escaped. We
+ searched the house, but there was no rebel captain. On going to the front
+ door I found that the horse belonging to the iron brigade was gone, and
+ that the saddle girths of all the other horses had been unbuckled, so we
+ would be delayed in following him. The Irishman was awakened, and when he
+ found his horse was gone, he sobered up and went to the pasture and
+ borrowed a mule to ride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took us half an hour to fix our saddles, so we could ride, and then we
+ sadly started for camp. How could I face the major, and report to him that
+ I had met the rebel captain, talked with him, drank with him, enjoyed his
+ hospitality, and then let him escape? I felt that my military career had
+ come to an inglorious ending. &ldquo;We rode slow, because the Iron Brigade was
+ insecurely mounted on a slippery bare-backed mule. As we neared the
+ corporal and one man, that I had left to guard the cross-roads, I noticed
+ that there was a stranger with them, and on riding closer what was my
+ surprise to find that it was the rebel captain, under arrest. So the
+ confounded corporal, whom I had left there so he would be out of the way,
+ and not get any of the glory of capturing the rebel, had captured him, and
+ got <i>all</i> the glory. I was hurt, but putting on a bold military air,
+ like a general who has been whipped, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, corporal, I see my plan has worked successfully. I arranged it so
+ this prisoner would run right into the trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the corporal, throwing away a melon rind that he had been
+ chewing the meat off of, &ldquo;I saw his nibs coming down the road, and I
+ thought may be he was the one you wanted, so I told him to halt or I would
+ fill his lungs full of lead pills, and he said he guessed he would halt.
+ He said it was a nice day, and he was only trying one of the Yankee
+ cavalry horses, to see how he liked it.&rdquo; &ldquo;Here, you murdherin' divil, get
+ down aff that harse,&rdquo; said the Iron Brigade, who had got awake enough to
+ see that the rebel was on his horse. &ldquo;Take this mule, and lave a dacent
+ gintleman's harse alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebel smiled, dismounted, gave the Irishman his horse, mounted the
+ mule, and we started for camp. I was never so elated in my life as I was
+ when I rode into camp with that rebel captain beside me on the mule. The
+ object of the expedition had been accomplished, a little different, it is
+ true, from what I had expected and planned, but who knew that it was not a
+ part of my plan to have it turn out as it did? I reflected much, and
+ wondered if it was right for me to report the capture of the Confederate
+ and say nothing about the part played by the other corporal. That corporal
+ was no military strategist, like me. It was just a streak of luck, his
+ capturing the rebel. He was leaning against the fence where I left him,
+ eating melons, and the rebel came along, and the corporal quit chewing
+ melon long enough to obey my orders and arrest the fellow. By all rules of
+ military law I was entitled to the credit, and I would take it, though it
+ made me ashamed to do so. How-ever, generals did the same thing. If a
+ major-general was in command, and ordered a brigadier-general to do a
+ thing and it was a success, the major-general got the credit in the
+ newspapers. So I rode into camp and turned my prisoner over to the major
+ as modestly as possible, with a few words of praise of my gallant command.
+ Hello, Jim, said the major to the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hello, Maje, said the rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better take off them togs now, and join your company, said the major.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guess so,&rdquo; said the rebel, and he took off his rebel uniform, and the
+ major handed him a blue coat and pair of pants, and he put them on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was petrified. The fact was, the rebel was a sergeant in our regiment,
+ who had been detailed as a scout, and had been making a trip into the
+ rebel lines as a spy. I had made an ass of myself in the whole business,
+ and he would tell all the boys about it. I went back to my company
+ crushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Detailed to Build a Bridge-It Was a Good Bridge, but
+ Over the Wrong Stream&mdash;The General Appears&mdash;I am Crushed, in
+ Fact Pulverized!&mdash;I am Attacked with Rheumatism.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After the episode, related last week, in which I foolishly organized a
+ regular battle, to capture a supposed rebel, who turned out to be a member
+ of my own regiment, I expected to be the laughing stock of all the
+ soldiers, and that my commission as corporal would be taken away from me,
+ and that I would be reduced to the ranks, and when, the next morning, the
+ colonel sent for me to come to his tent, it was a stand-off with me
+ whether I would take to the woods and desert, in disgrace, and never show
+ up again, or go to the colonel, face the music, and admit that I had made
+ an ass of myself. Finally I decided to visit the colonel. On the way to
+ his tent I noticed that our force had been augmented greatly. The road was
+ full of wagons, the fields near us were filled with infantry and
+ artillery, and there were fifty wagons or more loaded with pontoons, great
+ boats, or the frame-work of boats, which were to be covered with canvass,
+ which was water-proof, and the boats were to be used for bridges across
+ streams. The colonel had not told me anything about the expected arrival
+ of more troops, and it worried me a good deal. May be there was a big
+ battle coming off, and I might blunder into it unconscious of danger, and:
+ get the liver blowed out of me by a cannon. I felt that the colonel had
+ not treated me right in keeping me in ignorance of all this preparation. I
+ went to the colonel's tent and there was quite a crowd of officers, some
+ with artillery uniforms, several colonels, and one general with a star on
+ his shoulder straps, and a crooked sword with a silver scabbard, covered
+ with gold trimmings. I felt quite small with those big officers, but I
+ tried to look brave, and as though I was accustomed to attending councils
+ of war. The colonel smiled at me as I came in which braced me up a good
+ deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General, this is the sergeant I spoke to you about, said the colonel, as
+ he turned from a map they had been looking at. I felt pale when the
+ colonel addressed me as sergeant, and was going to call his attention to
+ the mistake, when the general said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sergeant, the colonel tells me that you can turn your hand to almost
+ anything. What line of business have you worked at previous to your
+ enlistment?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I guess there is nothing that is usually done in a country village
+ that I have not done. I have clerked in a grocery, tended bar, drove team
+ on a threshing machine, worked in a slaughter house, drove omnibus, worked
+ in a-saw-mill, learned the printing trade, rode saw-logs, worked in a
+ pinery, been brakeman on a freight train, acted as assistant chambermaid
+ in a livery stable, clerked in a hotel, worked on a farm, been an
+ auctioneer, edited a newspaper, took up the collection in church,
+ canvassed for books, been life-insurance agent, worked at bridge-building,
+ took tintypes, sat on a jury, been constable, been deck-hand on a
+ steamboat, chopped cord-wood, run a cider-mill, and drove a stallion in a
+ four-minute race at a county fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will do,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;You will be placed in charge of a
+ pioneer corps, and you will go four miles south, on the road, where a
+ bridge has been destroyed across a small bayou, build a new bridge strong
+ enough to cross artillery, then move on two miles to a river you will
+ find, and look out a good place to throw a pontoon bridge across. The
+ first bridge you will build under an artillery fire from the rebels, and
+ when it is done let a squad of cavalry cross, then the pontoon train, and
+ a regiment of infantry. Then light out for the river ahead of the pontoon
+ train, with the cavalry. The pioneer corps will be ready in fifteen
+ minutes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel told me to hurry up, but I called him out of his tent and
+ asked him if I was really a sergeant, or if it was a mirage. He said if I
+ made a success of that bridge, and the command got across, and I was not
+ killed I would be appointed sergeant. He said the general would try me as
+ a bridge-builder, and if I was a success he would try me, no doubt, in
+ other capacities, such as driving team on a threshing machine, and editing
+ a newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, I went on after my horse, being pretty proud. The idea of being
+ picked out of so many non-commissioned officers, and placed in charge of a
+ pioneer corps, and sent ahead of the army to rebuild a bridge that had
+ been destroyed, with a prospect of being promoted or killed, was glory
+ enough for one day, and I rode back to headquarters feeling that the
+ success of the whole expedition rested on me. If I built a corduroy bridge
+ that would pass that whole army safely over, artillery and all, would
+ anybody enquire who built the bridge. Of course, if I built a bridge that
+ would break down, and drown somebody, everybody would know who built it.
+ The twenty men were mounted, and ready, and the general told me to go to
+ the quartermaster and get all the tools I wanted, and I took twenty axes,
+ ten shovels, two log chains, and was riding away, when the general said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you get there, and look the ground over, make up your mind exactly
+ at what hour and minute you can have the bridge completed, and send a
+ courier back to inform me, and at that hour the head of the column will be
+ there, and the bridge must be ready to cross on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said that would be all right, and we started out. In about forty minutes
+ we had arrived, at the bayou, and I called a private soldier who used to
+ do logging in the woods, and we looked the thing over. The timber
+ necessary was right on the bank of the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said to the private, &ldquo;I have got to build a bridge across this
+ stream strong enough to cross artillery. I shall report to the general
+ that he can send, along his artillery at seventeen minutes after eight o
+ clock this evening. Am I right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Jim, as he looked at the standing timber, at the stream, and
+ spit some black tobacco juice down on the red ground, &ldquo;I should make it
+ thirty-seven minutes after eight. You see, a shell may drop in here and
+ kill a mule, or something, and delay us. Make it thirty-seven, and I will
+ go you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We finally compromised by splitting the difference, and I sent a courier
+ back to the general, with my compliments, and with the information that at
+ precisely eight o clock and twenty-seven minutes he could start across.
+ Then we fell to work. Large, long trees were cut for stringers, and hewn
+ square, posts were made to prop up the stringers, though the stringers
+ would have held any weight. Then small trees were cut and flattened on two
+ sides, for the road-bed, holes bored in them and pegs made to drive
+ through them into the stringers. A lot of cavalry soldiers never worked as
+ those men did. Though there was only twenty of them, it seemed as though
+ the woods were full of men. Trees were falling, and axes resounding, and
+ men yelling at mules that were hauling logs, and the scene reminded me of
+ logging in the Wisconsin pineries, only these were men in uniform doing
+ the work. About the middle of the afternoon we had the stringers across,
+ when there was a half dozen shots heard down the stream, and bullets began
+ &ldquo;zipping&rdquo; all around the bridge, and we knew the rebels were onto the
+ scheme, and wanted it stopped. I got behind a tree when the bullets began
+ to come, to think it over. My first impulse was to leave the bridge and go
+ back and tell the general that I couldn't build no bridge unless
+ everything was quiet. That I had never built bridges where people objected
+ to it. I asked the private what we had better do. He said his idea was to
+ knock off work on the bridge for just fifteen minutes, cross the stream on
+ the stringers, and go down there in the woods and scare the life out of
+ those rebels, drive them away, and make them think the whole army was
+ after them, then cross back and finish the bridge. That seemed feasible
+ enough, so about a dozen of us squirreled across the stringers with our
+ carbines, and the rest went down the stream on our side, and all of us
+ fired a dozen rounds from our Spencer repeaters, right into the woods
+ where the rebels seemed to be. When we did so, the rebels must have
+ thought there was a million of us, for they scattered too quick, and we
+ had a quiet life for two hours. We had got the bridge nearly completed,
+ when there was a hissing sound in the air, a streak of smoke, and a powder
+ magazine seemed to explode right over us. I suppose I turned pale, for I
+ had never heard anything like it. Says I, &ldquo;Jim, excuse me, but what kind
+ of a thing is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/175.jpg"
+ alt="Xcuse Me, But What Kind of a Thing is That? 175 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Jim kept on at work, remarking, O, nothing only they are a shellin on us.
+ And so that was a shell. I had read of shells and seen pictures of them in
+ <i>Harper's Weekly</i>, but I never supposed I would hear one. Presently
+ another came, and I wanted to pack up and go away. I looked at my
+ pioneers, and they did not pay any more attention to the shells than they
+ would, to the braying of mules. I asked Jim if there wasn't more or less
+ danger attached to the building of bridges, in the South, and he, the old
+ veteran, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Corp, don't worry as long as they hain't got our range. Them 'ere shell
+ are going half a mile beyond us, and we don't need to worry. Just let em
+ think they are killing us off by the dozen, and they will keep on sending
+ shells right over us. If we had a battery here to shell back, they would
+ get our range, and make it pretty warm for us. But now it is all guess
+ work with them, and we are as safe as we would be in Oshkosh. Let's keep
+ right on with the bridge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never can explain what a comfort Jim's remarks were to me. After
+ listening to him, I could work right along, driving pegs in the bridge,
+ and pay no attention to the shells that were going over us. In fact, I lit
+ my pipe and smoked, and began to figure how much it was going to cost the
+ Confederacy to &ldquo;celebrate&rdquo; that way. It was costing them at the rate of
+ fourteen dollars a minute, and I actually found myself laughing at the
+ good joke on the rebels. Pretty soon a courier rode up, from the general,
+ asking if the shelling was delaying the bridge. I sent word back that it
+ was not delaying us in the least; in fact, it was hurrying us a little, if
+ anything, and he could send along his command twenty-seven minutes sooner
+ than I had calculated, as the bridge would be ready to cross on at eight
+ o'clock sharp. At a quarter to eight, just as the daylight was fading, and
+ we had lighted pine torches to see to eat our supper, an orderly rode up
+ and said the general and staff had been looking for me for an hour, and
+ were down at the forks of the road. I told the orderly to bring the
+ general and staff right up to the headquarters, and we would entertain
+ them to the best of our ability, and he rode off. Then we sat down under a
+ tree and smoked and played seven up by the light of pine torches, and
+ waited. I was never so proud of anything in my life, as I was of that
+ bridge, and it did not seem to me as though a promotion to the position of
+ sergeant was going to be sufficient recompense for that great feat of
+ engineering. It was as smooth as though sawed plank had covered it, and
+ logs were laid on each side to keep wagons from running off. I could see,
+ in my mind, hundreds of wagons, and thousands of soldiers, crossing
+ safely, and I would be a hero. My breast swelled so my coat was too tight.
+ Presently I heard some one swearing down the road, the clanking of sabres,
+ and in a few moments the general rode into the glare of the torch-light. I
+ had struck an attitude at the approach of the bridge, and thought that I
+ would give a good deal if an artist could take a picture of my bridge,
+ with me, the great engineer, standing upon it, and the head of the column
+ just ready to cross. I was just getting ready to make a little speech to
+ the general, presenting the bridge to him, as trustee of the nation, for
+ the use of the army, when I got a sight of his face, as a torch flared up
+ and lit the surroundings. It was pale, and if he was not a madman, I never
+ saw one. He fairly frothed at the mouth, as he said, addressing a soldier
+ who had fallen in the stream, during the afternoon, and who was putting on
+ his shirt, which he had dried by a fire:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is the corporal, the star idiot, who built that bridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I couldn't have been more surprised if he had killed me. This was a nice
+ way to inquire for a gentleman who had done as much for the country as I
+ had, in so short a time. I felt hurt, but, summoning to my aid all the
+ gall I possessed, I stepped forward, and, in as sarcastic a manner as I
+ could assume, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am the sergeant, sir, who has wrought this work, made a highway in
+ twelve hours, across a torrent, and made is possible for your army to
+ cross.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, what do you suppose my army wants to cross this confounded ditch
+ for? What business has the army got in that swamp over there? You have
+ gone off the main road, where I wanted a bridge built, and built one on a
+ private road to a plantation, where nobody wants to cross. This bridge is
+ of no more use to me than a bridge across the Mississippi river at its
+ source. You, sir, have just simply raised hell, that's what you have
+ done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Talk about being crushed! I was pulverized. I felt like jumping into the
+ stream and drowning myself. For a moment I could not speak, because I
+ hadn't anything to say. Then I thought that it would be pretty tough to go
+ off and leave that bridge without the general's seeing what a good job it
+ was, so I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, general, I am sorry you did not give me more explicit instructions,
+ but I wish you would get down and examine this bridge. It is a daisy, and
+ if it is not in the right place we can move it anywhere you want it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That seemed to give the general an idea, and he dismounted and examined
+ it. He said it was as good a job as he ever saw, and if it was a mile down
+ the road, across another bayou, where he wanted to cross, he would give a
+ fortune. I told him if he would give me men enough and wagons enough, I
+ would move it to where he wanted it, and have it ready by daylight the
+ next morning. He agreed, and that was the hardest nights work I ever did.
+ Every stick of timber in my pet bridge had to be taken off separately, and
+ moved over a mile, but it was done, and at daylight the next morning I had
+ the pleasure of calling the general and telling him that the bridge was
+ ready. I thought he was a little mean when he woke up and rubbed his eyes,
+ and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, you are sure you have got it in the right place this time, for if
+ that bridge has strayed away onto anybody's plantation this time, you
+ die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army crossed all right, and I had the proud pleasure of standing by
+ the bridge until the last man was across, when I rode up to my regiment
+ and reported to the colonel, pretty tired.{*} He was superintending the
+ laying of a pontoon bridge across a large river, a few miles from my
+ bridge, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;George, the general was pretty hot last night, but he was to blame about
+ the mistake in the location, and he says he is going to try and get you a
+ commission as lieutenant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A few weeks ago I met a member of my old regiment, who is
+ traveling through the South as agent for a beer bottling
+ establishment in the North. He was with me when we built the
+ corduroy bridge twenty-two years ago. As we were talking
+ over old-times he asked me if I remembered that bridge we
+ built one day in Alabama, in the wrong place, and moved it
+ during the night. I told him I wished I had as many dollars
+ as I remembered that bridge. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said my comrade, &ldquo;on
+ my last trip through Alabama I crossed that bridge, and paid
+ two bits for the privilege of crossing. A man has
+ established a toll-gate at the bridge, and they say he has
+ made a fortune. I asked him how much his bridge cost him,
+ and he said it didn't cost him a cent, as the Yankees built
+ it during the war. He said they cut the timber on his land,
+ and when he got out of the Confederate army he was busted,
+ and he claimed the bridge, and got a charter to keep a toll-
+ gate.&rdquo; My comrade added that the bridge was as sound as it
+ was when it was built. He said he asked the toll-gate keeper
+ if he knew the bridge was first built a mile away, and he
+ said he knew the timber was cut up there, and he wondered
+ what the confounded Yankees went away off there to cut the
+ timber for, when they could get it right on the bank. Then
+ my comrade told the toll-gate keeper that he helped build
+ the bridge, the rebel thanked him, and wanted to pay back
+ the two bits. Some day I am going down to Alabama and cross
+ on that bridge again, the bridge that almost caused me to
+ commit suicide, and if that old rebel-for he must be an old
+ rebel now&mdash;charges me two bits toll, I shall very likely
+ pull off my coat and let him whip me, and then as likely as
+ not there will be another war.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I felt faint, but I said, &ldquo;How can he recommend a star idiot for a
+ commissioned office?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, that is all right,&rdquo; said, the colonel, &ldquo;some of the greatest idiots in
+ the army have received commisssions.&rdquo; As he spoke the rebels began to
+ shell the place where the pontoon bridge was being built, and I went
+ hunting for a place to borrow an umbrella to hold over me, to ward off the
+ pieces of shell. Then a battery of our own opened on the rebels, so near
+ me that every time a gun was discharged I could, feel the roof of my head
+ raise up like the cover to a band box. It was the wildest time I ever saw.
+ Cavalry was swimming the river to charge the rebel battery, shells were
+ exploding all around, and it seemed to me as though if I was to lay a
+ pontoon bridge I would go off somewhere out of the way, where it would be
+ quiet. Finally my regiment was ordered to swim the river, and we rode in.
+ The first lunge my horse made he went under water about a mile, and when
+ we came up I was not on him, but catching hold of his tail I was dragged
+ across the river nearly drowned, and landed on the bank like a dog that
+ has been after a duck I shook myself, we mounted and without waiting to
+ dry out our clothes we went into the fight, before I could realize it, or
+ back out. Scared! I was so scared it is a wonder I did not die. That was
+ more excitement than a county fair. Bullets whizzing, shells shrieking,
+ smoke stifling, yelling that was deafening. It seemed as though I was
+ crazy. I must have been or I could never, as a raw recruit, with no
+ experience, have ridden right toward those guns that were belching forth
+ sulphur and pieces of blacksmith shop. I didn't dare look anywhere except
+ right ahead. All thought of being hit by bullets or anything was
+ completely out of my mind. Occasionally something would go over me that
+ sounded as though a buzz saw had been fired from a saw mill explosion.
+ Presently the firing on the rebel side ceased, and it was seen they were
+ in retreat. I was never so glad of anything in my life. We stopped, and I
+ examined my clothes, and they were perfectly dry. The excitement and
+ warmth of the body had acted like a drying-room in a laundry. Then I laid
+ down under a fence and went to sleep, and dreamed I was in hades, building
+ a corduroy bridge across the Styx, and that the devil repremanded me for
+ building it in the wrong place. When I awoke I was so stiff with
+ rheumatism that I had to be helped up from under the fence, and they put
+ me in an ambulance with a soldier who had his jaw shot off. He was not
+ good company, because I had to do all the talking. And in that way we
+ moved towards the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Instructed to Capture and Search a Female Smuggler&mdash;
+ I Protest in Vain&mdash;The Terrible Ordeal&mdash;Beauty Behind the
+ Pulpit&mdash;Pills, Plasters, Quinine&mdash;The Pathetic Letter&mdash;
+ We Meet Under Happier Stars.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that the hardest duty that it was my lot to perform
+ during my service, fell to me, and the only wonder to me is that I am
+ alive today to tell of it. If I ever get a pension it will be on account
+ of night sweats, caused by the terrible and trying work that was assigned
+ to me. One day the colonel sent for me, and I knew at once that there was
+ something unusual in the wind. After seating myself in his tent he opened
+ the subject by asking me if I wasn't something of a hand to be agreeable
+ to the ladies. I told him, with many blushes, that if there was one thing
+ on this earth that I thought was nicer than everything else, it was a
+ lady, and that a good woman was the noblest work of God. He said he was on
+ to all of that, but it wasn't a good woman that he was after. That
+ startled me a little. I had heard the officers had a habit of fooling
+ around a good deal with certain females, and I told the colonel that any
+ duty that I was assigned to I would perform to the best of my poor
+ ability, but I could not go around with the girls as officers did, because
+ I couldn't afford it, and it was against my principles, anyway. He showed
+ me a picture of a beautiful woman, and asked me if I would know her if I
+ saw her again. I told him I could pick her out of a thousand. He said she
+ was a smuggler. She had a pass from a general, who seemed to be under her
+ influence to a certain extent, for some reason, and went in and out of the
+ lines freely. The general didn't want to order her arrest, because she
+ would squeal on him, but he wanted her arrested all the same, and the idea
+ was to have some corporal in charge of a picket post take the
+ responsibility of arresting her without orders, refuse to recognize her
+ pass, take the quinine and other medicines, and money away from her, and
+ then be arrested himself for exceeding his authority. He said they wanted
+ a corporal who had every appearance of being a big-headed idiot, and yet
+ who knew what he was about, who knew something about women, and who could
+ do such a job up in shape, and never let the woman know that the general
+ or anybody had anything to do with her arrest. The idea was to catch her
+ in the act of smuggling quinine through the lines to the rebels, by the
+ act of a fresh corporal who took the matter into his own hands, and who
+ claimed that the pass she had from the general was a forgery. When the
+ general could, when the woman was brought before him, be indignant at the
+ corporal for insulting a woman, and order him arrested, and he could also
+ go back on the woman, and have her sent away, after which he would release
+ the corporal, and perhaps promote him, and all would be well. It was as
+ pretty a scheme as I ever listened to, and I consented to do the duty,
+ though I wouldn't do it again for a million dollars. The colonel told me
+ to take four men and go to a particular place on an unfrequented road,
+ near a school house, and put out a picket. The female would be along
+ during the afternoon, on horseback, and when she showed her pass, one of
+ the men must take hold of her horse and hold him, while I kicked about the
+ pass, made her dismount, and searched her for quinine. I turned ashy pale
+ when the colonel said that, and I said to him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, for heaven's sake don't compel me to search a woman. I have a
+ family at home, and they will hear of it. My political enemies will use it
+ against me at home when I run for office, after the war. Let me bring her
+ here to your tent, and you search her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, that would spoil all,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;We want her searched right
+ there at the little school house, by a corporal without apparent
+ authority, and every last quinine pill taken off of her. If she was
+ brought here she would cry, and rave, and we should weaken, because we
+ know her, and have been entertained at her house. You are supposed to be a
+ heartless corporal, with no sentiment, no mercy, no nothing, just a delver
+ after smuggled quinine. Besides, I too, have a family, and I don't want to
+ search no females. By the way, one of the general's start saw her last
+ night, and drew the cartridges from her revolver, and put in some blank
+ cartridges. If the worst comes, she will draw her revolver on you, and
+ perhaps fire at you, but there are no balls in her revolver, so you
+ needn't be afraid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose she has two revolvers,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;and one is loaded with
+ bullets?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think she has,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;But we have to take some
+ chances, you know. Now go right along. Treat her like a lady, disbelieve
+ everything she says and insist on searching her. The general says she
+ wears an enormous bustle, and probably that is full of quinine. Use your
+ judgement, but get it all. Pretend to be an ignorant sort of a corporal
+ who feels that the success of the war depends on him, act as though you
+ outranked the general, and tell her you would not let her pass with that
+ quinine if the general himself was present. Just display plenty gall and
+ when you have go the quinine, bring the girl here, and I will abuse you,
+ and you take it like a little man, and all will be well. If she bites and
+ scratches, some of you will have to hold her, but the best way will be to
+ argue with her, and persuade her by honied words, to come down with the
+ quinine. Go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One word, colonel, before I go,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;About how many men should you
+ think it would take to hold this woman? You suggested three, but if one
+ holds her horse, it seems to me, from my knowledge of female kicking,
+ biting and scratching, that I would need one man for each arm and foot,
+ one to hold her head and choke her, if necessary, and one with a roving
+ commission to work around where he would be apt to make himself useful.
+ What do you say if I take five men!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, take six,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;One may be disabled, or have his
+ jaw kicked off, or something. But don't detail anybody to search her. Do
+ that yourself, and do it like a gentleman. And above all things, do not
+ let her kanoodle you with soft words and looks of love, because she is
+ full of em. If she can't scare you, with her indignation at the outrage of
+ arresting and searching her, she will try to capture you and make you love
+ her. You must be as firm as adamant. Now hurry up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I picked out six men, four of whom were young Americans, rather handsome,
+ and very polite, regular mashers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I had an Irishman named Duffy, and a German named Holzmeyer, who was
+ a butcher. We went out on the road, to the school house, and I put the
+ Irishman on picket, and instructed the German about taking the horse by
+ the bridle at the proper time. Then the rest of us got behind the school
+ house and waited. For two hours we waited, and I had a chance to think
+ over the situation. Here I was, putting down the rebellion, laying for a
+ woman, who was loaded. At home, I was a polite man, and full of fun, a
+ person any lady might be proud to meet and talk with, but here I was
+ expected to do something, for thirteen dollars a month, to put down the
+ rebellion, which there was not money enough in the whole state of
+ Wisconsin to hire me to do. Was it such a crime to carry a little quinine
+ to a sick friend? Suppose a rebel was sick with ague, and I had quinine,
+ would I see him shake himself out of his boots and not give him medicine?
+ No, I would divide my last quinine powder with him. So would any soldier.
+ If it was not treason to give one rebel a quinine powder, when he was
+ sick, why should it be treason to take along enough for a whole lot of
+ sick rebels? Did our government want to put down the rebellion by keeping
+ medicines away from a sick enemy? Were we to gloat over the number of
+ rebels who died of disease, that we could save by sending them medicines?
+ It seemed to me, if I was in command of the army, instead of arresting
+ women for carrying medicine to their sick brothers, I would load up a
+ wagon with medicine and send it to them, and say, &ldquo;Here, you fellows, fire
+ this quinine down your necks, and get well, and then if you want to fight
+ any more, come out on the field and we will give you the best turn in the
+ wheel-house.&rdquo; It seemed to me that would be the way to win the enemy over,
+ and that they would be thankful, take the medicine, get well, and then
+ say, &ldquo;Boys, these Yankees are pretty good fellows after all. Let's quit
+ fighting, and call it quits.&rdquo; But I was not running the war, and had got
+ to obey orders, if I broke heartstrings and corset strings. I would have
+ given anything to have got out of the job. The idea of arresting a woman
+ and searching her, and seeing her cry, and have her think me a
+ hard-hearted wretch, was revolting, and I found myself wishing she would
+ take some other road. May be she looked like somebody that I knew at home,
+ and may be she had a big brother in the Confederate army who would look me
+ up after the war and everlastingly maul the life out of me for insulting
+ his sister. I made up my mind if anything of that kind happened I would
+ tell on the general and the colonel, and get them whipped, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Phat the divil is it coming,&rdquo; said the Irishman. &ldquo;Corporal of the guaod,
+ the quane of all the South is coming down the road, riding a high stepper.
+ Phat will I do, I dunno?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop her,&rdquo; I yelled with my teeth chattering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halt right fhere yez are,&rdquo; said the Irishman, with a look on his face
+ that showed he was&mdash;well, that he was an Irishman, and had an eye for
+ beauty. The German had taken the horse by the bit, and I stepped out from
+ behind the school house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great heavens, but she was a beautiful woman, and she sat on her horse
+ like a statue. I had never seen a more beautiful woman. She was a
+ brunette, with large black eyes, and her face was flushed with the
+ exercise of riding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled and showed two rows of the prettiest teeth that ever were put
+ into a female mouth, and one ungloved hand, with which she handed me the
+ pass had a dimple at every knuckle, and was as white as paper, and soft as
+ silk. I know it was soft, because it touched my red, freckled hand when I
+ took the pass. I did not blame the general for being in love with her, or
+ for wanting to saw off the unpleasant duty of breaking up her smuggling,
+ on to a poor orphan like me. She said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain, I have a pass from the general, to go through the lines at any
+ time, unmollested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no good,&rdquo; I said, examining it. &ldquo;This pass is evidently a forgery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear captain,&rdquo; she said, with a smile that I would give ten
+ dollars for a picture of, &ldquo;The pass is not a forgery. I have used it for
+ months.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a dear captain, only a cheap corporal,&rdquo; I said, with an attempt
+ to be at my ease, which I wasn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There has been at least a wagon load of quinine smuggled through the
+ lines on this pass, and it has got to stop; you cannot go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dickens you say,&rdquo; said she as she drew her revolver, and sung out,
+ &ldquo;let go that horse,&rdquo; and firing at the German.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kritz-dunnerwetter,&rdquo; said the German, as he got down by the horse's fore
+ feet, and held on to the bridle, &ldquo;vot vor you choot a man ven he holt your
+ horse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;your revolver is loaded with blank cartridges, and you
+ can do no harm. Try another one on the Irishman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold on,&rdquo; said the Irishman, &ldquo;and don't experiment on a poor man who has
+ a wife and six children. Shoot the corporal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I had reached up and taken the revolver from her, and she was weak as
+ a kitten. Her nerve had forsaken her, and when I told her to dismount she
+ was like a rag, and had to be helped down. If she was beautiful before,
+ now that she had started her tear mill, she was ravishingly radiant, and I
+ felt like a villain. She leaned on my shoulder, and it was the loveliest
+ burden a soldier ever held. I seated her on the steps of the schoolhouse,
+ and I thought she would faint, but she didn't. She was evidently taken by
+ surprise, and wanted a little time to think it over, and form a plan. So
+ did I. As I looked her over, and thought what I was expected to do, I
+ wondered where it would be best to commence. She began to recover, smiled
+ at me and asked me to have the other soldiers go away, so she could talk
+ with me. I wished she wouldn't smile like that, because it unnerved me.
+ She asked me what I was going to do with her, what caused me to suspect
+ her, if I would not believe her if she told me she was not a smuggler, if
+ I had orders to arrest her, and all that. I said, &ldquo;Madame, my orders are
+ to arrest all quinine smugglers, and you are one. I am Hawkshaw, the
+ detective. For months I have shadowed you, and I know you have concealed
+ about your person a whole drug store. In that innocent looking bustle I
+ feel that there is quinine for the million. Your heaving bosom contains,
+ besides love for your friends and hatred of your enemies, a storehouse of
+ useful medicines, contraband of war. In your stockings there is much that
+ would interest the seeker after the truth, your corset that fits you so
+ beautifully is liable to be full of revolver cartridges, while in your
+ shoes there may be messages to the rebels. I shall search you from Genesis
+ to Revelations, and may the Lord have mercy on both of us. To begin,
+ please let me examine the hat you have on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With some reluctance she took off a sort of half-stovepipe hat, and
+ covered her face with her handkerchief while I looked into it. I found a
+ package of newly printed confederate bonds, and a quantity of court
+ plaster. That settled it. She cried a little, and wanted to go into the
+ schoolhouse. I went in with her, and two of my soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told her that it was a duty that was pretty tough, but it was necessary
+ for her to disrobe, as I must have every article she had. She cried, and
+ said if I searched her, or molested her, I would do it at my peril, and
+ that I wouldn't know how to go to work to take off her clothes, anyway,
+ and that I ought to be ashamed of myself. I told her I felt as ashamed as
+ any gentleman could, and though I knew little about the details of the
+ female apparel, I had some general ideas about bustles, polonaise, socks,
+ skirts, and so forth, and while I might be awkward, and uncouth, and
+ nervous, as long as there were buttons to unbutton, hooks to unhook, and
+ safety-pins to unpin, I thought I could eventually get to the quinine, if
+ she would give me time, and I did not faint by the wayside, but my idea
+ was that it would save all trouble, her modesty would not receive a shock,
+ nor mine either, if she would go behind the little pulpit in the
+ schoolhouse, out of sight of us, take off her clothes, and hand them over
+ the pulpit to us to examine. She said she would die first, besides, she
+ knew we would peek around the pulpit at her. I was getting very nervous,
+ and perspiring a good deal, and wishing it was over, and I swore, upon my
+ honor, that if she would go behind the pulpit and disrobe, she should be
+ as safe from intrusion as though she was in her own room. She swore she
+ would not, and I went up to her to commence unraveling the mystery. Her
+ dress hooked up in the back, which I always <i>did</i> think a great
+ nuisance, and I began to unhook it. I wondered that she stood so quietly
+ and let me unhook it, but after it was unhooked from the neck to the small
+ of her back, and I was wishing I was dead, she said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, now that you have got my dress unhooked, a feat I never could
+ accomplish myself, I will go behind the pulpit and take off my dress, if
+ you will promise not to look, and that you will help me hook up my dress
+ when this cruel quinine war is over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told her by the great Jehosephat, and the continental congress, I would
+ help her, and that I would kill anybody who looked, and she went behind
+ the schoolhouse pulpit, where a country preacher, very likely, preached on
+ Sundays, and bent over out of sight, and it wasn't half a minute before
+ she handed the dress over to me. In the pockets I found several papers of
+ some kind of medicine, and a few small bottles, sealed up with red
+ sealing-wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, the bustle, please, I said, in a voice trembling with emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take your old bustle,&rdquo; she said, as she whacked it on the top of the
+ pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, if anybody had told me that a bustle could be made to hold stuff
+ enough to fill a bushel-basket, I would not have believed it. We filled
+ three nose-bags, such as cavalrymen feed horses in, with paper packages
+ and bottles of quinine. There were thirty bottles of pills, and salves and
+ ointments, and plasters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is panning out first rate,&rdquo; I said, with less emotion. The emotion
+ was somehow getting out of me, and the affair was becoming more of a
+ mercantile transaction. It was like a young druggist going from the side
+ of his beloved, to the drug store, to take an inventory. &ldquo;Now hand out
+ that other lot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She evidently knew what I referred to, for she handed out over the pulpit
+ a package just exactly the shape of what I had supposed, in my guileless
+ innocence, was a portion of the female form. That is, I had suspected it
+ was not all human form, but didn't know. That was also full of medicines,
+ of which quinine was the larger part, though there was about a pint of gun
+ caps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speaking about stockings,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;please take them off and hand them
+ over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/185.jpg"
+ alt="Two Very Long Stockings, Came over the Pulpit 185 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She kicked about taking off her shoes and stockings, and said no gentleman
+ would compel a lady to do that. I said I would wait about two minutes, and
+ then, if it was too much trouble for her to take them off, I would come
+ around the pulpit and help. Bless you, I wouldn't have gone for the world,
+ as I was already more than satisfied with what I had found. She said I
+ needn't trouble myself, as she guessed she could take off her shoes
+ without my help. I heard her unlacing her shoes, and pretty soon two
+ dainty shoes and two very long stockings, came over the pulpit, the heel
+ of one shoe hitting me in the ear. As I picked up the shoes I heard the
+ crumpling of a letter behind the pulpit, and I told her I must have all
+ the messages she had. She said it was only a letter to one she loved. I
+ told her I must have it, and she handed it over. I read, &ldquo;My darling
+ husband,&rdquo; and handed it back, saying I would not pry into her family
+ secrets. She began to cry, and insisted on my reading it, which I did. It
+ was to her husband, an officer in the Confederate army, and was about as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;My Darling Husband:&mdash;This life of deception is killing me.
+ I want to do all in my power to help our cause, but I am
+ each day more nervous, and liable to detection. The Yankee
+ officers are frequently at our house, and I have to treat
+ them kindly, but it is all I can do to keep from crying, and
+ I am expected to laugh. I fear that I am suspected of
+ smuggling, as the subject is frequently brought up in
+ conversation, and I feel my face burn, though I try hard not
+ to show it. I think of you, away off in Virginia, with your
+ armless sleeve, our children in New Orleans, and I wonder if
+ we will ever be united again. O, God, when will this all
+ end. I have no fault to find with the Federal troops. The
+ officers are very kind and through one fatherly general I am
+ allowed to pass into our lines. I feel that I am betraying
+ his kindness every trip I make, and only the urgent need
+ that our dear boys have for medicines could induce me to do
+ as I do. After this trip I shall go to New Orleans,{*}
+ where I fear Madge is sick, as shew as not at all well the
+ last I heard from her. Pray earnestly, my dear husband,
+ every day, as I do, that this trouble may end soon, some
+ way, and I beg of you not to have a feeling of revenge in
+ your heart towards your enemies, on account of the loss of
+ your arm, as there are thousands of federals similarly
+ afflicted. I shall love you more, and I will wrap your empty
+ sleeve about my neck, and try never to miss the strong arm
+ that was my support. Adieu.
+
+ &ldquo;Your loving wife.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ That letter knocked me out in one round. I had begun to enjoy the
+ unpacking of the smuggled goods, and the discomfiture of my female
+ smuggler, but when I read that loving letter, breathing such a Christian
+ spirit, and thought of the poor wife-mother behind the pulpit unravelling
+ herself, I was ashamed, and I said to myself, &ldquo;she shall not take off
+ another rag. So I handed back the letter and the dress, and all of the
+ things she had taken off, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put everything right back onto yourself, and come out at your leisure,
+ and we took the medicines and went out of the schoolhouse. Presently She
+ came out, and I told her it was my duty to take her back to headquarters,
+ but if she had no objections to my taking the letter to the general, with
+ the medicines, she could go back to the house where she boarded, and I
+ thought if she took the first boat for New Orleans, it would be all right,
+ and I would see that the letter was sent through the lines to her husband.
+ I helped her on her horse, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can escape. Your horse is better than ours, and though you are a
+ prisoner, we would not shoot at you if you tried to escape. I hope your
+ prayers will have the effect you desire, and that the trouble will soon be
+ over. I hope you will and the children well, and that the husband will be
+ spared to be a comfort to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bowed her head, as she sat in the saddle, and the look of defiance
+ which she had shown, was gone, and one of thankfulness, peace, hope,
+ purity, took its place. She handed me the letter, and asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told, her she was free to go. She turned her horse; towards town,
+ touched him with the whip, and he was; away like the wind. I stood for two
+ minutes, watching her, when I was recalled to my senses by the Irishman,
+ who said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fhat are we to do wid the quinane and the gun caps?&rdquo; We packed the
+ smuggled goods in our saddle-bags and elsewhere, and rode back to
+ headquarters. The colonel and the general were in the colonel's tent, and
+ I took the &ldquo;stuff&rdquo; in and reported all the occurrences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where is the lady?&rdquo; inquired the general, after reading the letter
+ and wiping his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As we were about to start back,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;after taking the smuggled goods
+ from her, she gave her horse the whip, and rode away. I had no orders to
+ shoot a woman, and I let her go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank God,&rdquo; said the general. &ldquo;That's the best way,&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ &ldquo;She will quit smuggling and go to her children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Eighteen months after the lady rode away from me, &ldquo;leaving&rdquo;
+ her quinine, I was in New Orleans, to be mustered in as
+ Second Lieutenant, having received a commsssion. I had
+ bought me a fine uniform, and thought I was about as cunning
+ a looking officer as ever was. I was walking on Canal
+ street, looking in the windows, and finally went into a
+ store to buy some collars. A gentleman came in with a gray
+ uniform on, and one sleeve empty. He was evidently a
+ Confederate officer. He asked me if I did not belong to a
+ certain cavalry regiment, and if my name was not so and so.
+ I told him he was correct. He told me there was a lady in an
+ adjoining store that wanted to see me. I did not know a
+ soul, that is, a female soul, in New Orleans, but I went
+ with him. Any lady that wanted to see me, in my new uniform,
+ could see me. As we entered the store a lady left two little
+ girls and rushed up to me, threw her arms around my neck and
+ &mdash;(say, does a fellow have to tell everything, when he writes
+ a war history?) Well, she was awfully tickled to see me, and
+ she was my smuggler, the Confederate was her husband, and
+ the children were hers. The officer was as tickled as she
+ was, and they compelled me to go to their house to dinner,
+ and I enjoyed it very much. We talked over the arrest of the
+ &ldquo;female smuggler,&rdquo; and she said to her husband, &ldquo;Pa, it
+ was an awfully embarrassing situation for me and this
+ Yankee, but he treated me like a lady, and the only thing I
+ have to find fault about, is that he forgot to help me hook
+ up my dress, and I rode clear to town with it unhooked.&rdquo; The
+ Confederate had been discharged at the surrender, and I was
+ on my way to Texas, to serve another year, hunting Indians.
+ I left them very happy, and as I went out of their door she
+ wrapped his empty sleeve around her waist, drew the children
+ up to her, and said, &ldquo;Mr. Yankee, may you always be very
+ happy.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Female Smuggler Episode Makes Me Famous&mdash;I am Sent Forth
+ in Women's Clothes&mdash;My Interview with the Bad Corporal&mdash;A
+ Fist Fight&mdash;The Rebellion is Put Down Once More&mdash;I Reveal My
+ Identity.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not twenty-four hours before the news spread all over my regiment,
+ as well as several other regiments, that a certain corporal had captured a
+ female smuggler, while on picket, had searched her on the spot and found a
+ large quantity of quinine and other articles contraband of war, and there
+ was a general desire to look upon the features of a man, not a
+ commissioned officer who had gall enough to search a female rebel, from
+ top to toe, without orders from the commanding officer, and I was
+ constantly being visited by curiosity-seekers, who wanted to know all
+ about it. Of course it was not known that I had been ordered to do as I
+ did, and they all wondered why I was not made an example of; and many
+ privates, corporals and sergeants wondered if they would get out of it so
+ easily if they should do as I did. There were a great many women passing
+ through the lines, and I am sure many soldiers decided that the first
+ woman who attempted to pass through would get searched. It was talked
+ among the men, and for a day or two a lady would certainly have stood a
+ poor show to have rode up to a picket post with a pass to go outside. The
+ soldiers had so long been away from female society that it would have been
+ a picnic for them to have captured a suspicious looking woman who was
+ pretty. I was pointed out, down town, as the man who captured the woman
+ loaded with quinine, and women with rebel tendencies would look at me as
+ though I was a bold, bad man that ought to be killed, and they acted as
+ though they would like to eat me. But I tried to appear modest, and not as
+ though I had done anything I was particularly proud of. The next evening
+ the colonel sent for me and said he had got something for me to do that
+ required nerve. I told him that my experience in putting down the
+ rebellion had shown me that the whole thing required nerve. That I had
+ been on my nerve until my nerves were pretty near used up, and I asked him
+ if he couldn't let some of the other boys do a little of the nervous work.
+ He said he had one more woman job that he would like to have me undertake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was sick of the whole woman business, and told him I did not want to be
+ aggravated any more; that arresting women and searching them, was nothing
+ but an aggravation, and I wanted to be let out. He said in this case I
+ would not have to arrest anybody of the female persuasion, but that I
+ would have to be arrested, and that it would be the greatest joke that
+ ever was. I told him if there was any joke about it he could count me in.
+ Then he went on to say that my success with the female smuggler had
+ excited all the boys to emulate my deeds, and they were all laying for a
+ female smuggler, and that he feared it wouldn't be safe for a woman to be
+ caught on the picket line. There had got to be a stop put to it, and he
+ and the general had thought of a scheme. He said there was a corporal in
+ one of the companies who had made his brags that he would arrest the first
+ female that came to his picket post, and search her for smuggled goods,
+ and they wanted to make an example of him. He asked me if I wasn't
+ something of a boxer, and I told him for a light weight I was considered
+ pretty good. Then he asked me if I could ride on a side saddle. I told him
+ I could ride anything, from a hobby to an elephant. He said that was all
+ right, and I would fill the bill. Then he went into details. I was to go
+ to the town with him, and be fitted out with a riding habit of the female
+ persuasion, false hair, side saddle, and a bustle as big as a bushel
+ basket. That I was to ride out on a certain road, where the corporal would
+ be on picket with two men. He would stop me, and search me, I was to cry,
+ and beg, and all that, but finally submit to be searched, and after the
+ corporal had got started to search me, I was to haul off and give him one
+ &ldquo;biff&rdquo; in the nose, another if it was necessary to knock him down, paste
+ one of the men in the ear, if he showed any impudence, jump on my horse
+ and come back to town, and leave the corporal to find his mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I didn't half like the idea of dressing up in such a masquering costume,
+ but of course if I could help put down the rebellion that way, it was my
+ duty to do it, and besides, I had a grudge against that corporal, anyway,
+ because he called me a &ldquo;jay&rdquo; and a &ldquo;substitute,&rdquo; and a &ldquo;drafted man,&rdquo; when
+ I came to the regiment. The colonel took me to the residence of a lady
+ friend who rode on horseback a good deal, and as he let her into the
+ secret, she helped fix me up. All I had to do was to remove my cavalry
+ jacket, and she put the dress on over my head. I always supposed they put
+ on these dresses the same as men put on pants, by walking into them feet
+ first, but she said they went over the head. I felt as though my pants
+ were going to show, but she gave me some instructions about keeping the
+ dress down, and I began to feel a good deal like a woman. The dress fit me
+ around the waist as though it was made for me, and when it was all
+ buttoned up in front I felt stunning. She and the colonel made a bustle
+ out of newspapers, and a small sofa cushion of eider down was placed where
+ it would do the most good. After the dress was all fixed, she got a wig
+ and put it on my head, and a hat, with a feather in it, and then pinned a
+ veil on the hair, so it reached down to my rose-bud mouth. Then she took a
+ powder arrangement and powdered my face, put on a pair of long gauntlets
+ which she usually wore, and told me to look in the glass. When I looked
+ into the glass I almost fainted. The deception was so good that it would
+ have fooled the oldest man in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel said he was almost inclined to fall in love with me himself,
+ and he did put his arm around me and squeeze me, but I didn't notice any
+ particular feeling, such as I did when his lady friend was fooling around
+ me. That was different. Well, I was an inveterate smoker at that time, so
+ I took my pipe and a bag of tobacco, and put it in a pocket of the dress,
+ and some matches, and we went out doors. The colonel took my tiny number
+ eight boot in his hand and tossed me lightly into the saddle, then he
+ mounted his own horse and we rode around the suburbs of the town, so I
+ could get used to the side-saddle. I got him to stop behind a fence and
+ let me have a smoke out of my pipe, and then I told him I was ready. He
+ gave me a pass, and told me to go out on the road the corporal was on, and
+ if he let me pass out of the lines to go on to a turn in the road, where a
+ squad of our men were on a scout, and to report to the officer in charge,
+ who would bring me in all right, by another road, but if the corporal
+ attempted to search me, to do as I had been told to do. After I had
+ knocked the corporal down, if I would give a yell, the officer who was
+ outside would come and arrest us all and bring us to headquarters, where
+ the colonel could reprimand the corporal, etc. I threw a kiss to the
+ colonel and started out on the road. It was about a mile to the picket
+ post, and I had time to reflect on my position. This was putting down the
+ rebellion at a great rate. I was an ostensible female, liable to be
+ insulted at any moment, but I would maintain the dignity of my alleged sex
+ if I didn't lay up a cent. I put on a proud, haughty look, full of purity
+ and all that, and as I neared the picket post, I saw the corporal step out
+ into the road, and as I came up he told me to halt. I halted, and handed
+ him my pass, but he said it was a forgery, and ordered me to dismount. I
+ turned on the water, from my eyes, and began to cry, but it run off the
+ bad corporal like water off a duck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of your sniveling around me,&rdquo; said the vile man. &ldquo;Get down off that
+ horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; I said, with well feigned indignation, &ldquo;you would not molest a poor
+ girl who has no one to defend her. Let me go I prithe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had read that, &ldquo;Let me go I prithe,&rdquo; in a novel, and it seemed to me to
+ be the proper thing to say, though I couldn't hardly keep from laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prithe nothing,&rdquo; said the corporal. &ldquo;What you got in that bustle?&rdquo; said
+ the corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bustle,&rdquo; I said, blushing so you could have touched a match to my face.
+ &ldquo;Why speak of such a thing in the presence of a lady. I want you to let me
+ go or I shall think you are real mean, so now. Please, Mr. Soldier, let me
+ go,&rdquo; and I smiled at him and winked with my left eye in a manner that
+ ought to have paralyzed a marble statue. &ldquo;O, what you giving us,&rdquo; said the
+ vile man. &ldquo;Get down off that horse and let me go through you for quinine.
+ Do you hear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was afraid if he helped me down he would see my boots or pants, which
+ would be a give-away. So I gathered my dress in my hands and jumped down
+ in pretty good shape. I had sparred with the corporal several times in
+ camp, and I knew I could knock him out easy, and I made up my mind that
+ the first indignity he offered me I would just &ldquo;lam him one. It was all I
+ could do to keep from pasting him in the nose, when I first landed on the
+ ground, but I had a part to play, and it would not do to go off half
+ cocked. So I looked sad, pouted my lips, and wondered if he would kiss me,
+ and feel the beard where I had been shaved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, shuck yourself,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do what? I asked, with apparent alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peel,&rdquo; said he, as he put his hand on my back,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; I said with my eyes flashing fire, and my heart throbbing, and
+ almost bursting with suppressed laughter, &ldquo;you are insolent. I am a poor
+ orphan, unused to contact with coarse men. I have been raised a pet, and
+ no vile hand has ever been laid upon me until you just touched me. If you
+ touch me I shall scream. I shall call for help. What would you do, you
+ wicked, naughty man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unbutton,&rdquo; said he as he pointed to my dress in front. &ldquo;Call for help and
+ be darned. You are a smuggler, and I know it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, my God,&rdquo; said I, with a stage accent, &ldquo;has it come to this? Am I to be
+ robbed of all I hold dear, by a common Yankee corporal. Has a woman no
+ rights which are to be respected? Am I to be murdered in cold bel-lud,
+ with all my sins upon my head. O, Mr. Man, give me a moment to utter a
+ silent prayer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, hush,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and hold up your hands. There ain't going to be any
+ bel-lud. All I want is to go through you for quinine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spare me, I beseech you,&rdquo; I said, as I held up my hands, and got in
+ position to knock him silly the first move he made. &ldquo;I am no walking drug
+ store, I am a good girl.&rdquo; Around my awful form I draw an imaginary circle.
+ &ldquo;Step but one foot within that sacred circle, and on thy head I launch the
+ cu-r-r-r-se of Rome, Georgia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/203.jpg"
+ alt="Gave a Yell That Could Have Been Heard A Mile 203 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let up on this Shakespeare, and get to busiess, said the corporal, as he
+ reached up to my neck to unbutton the top button of my dress. He was
+ looking at my dress, and wondering what he would find concealed within,
+ when I brought down both fists and took him with one in each eye, with a
+ force that would have knocked a mule down. He fell backwards, and gave a
+ yell that could have been heard a mile. Then one of his men started for me
+ and I knocked him in the ear, and he fell beside the corporal. The other
+ man was going to come for his share, when the officer who had been
+ stationed outside the lines rode up with his men and asked what was the
+ matter. The soldier-who was not hit said I had assassinated the corporal.
+ The officer said that was wrong, and women who would go around killing off
+ the Union army with their fists ought to be arrested. Just then the
+ corporal raised up on his elbow and tried to open two of the blackest eyes
+ that ever were seen. Turning to the officer, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That woman is a smuggler, and she struck me with a brick house!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ancient female,&rdquo; said the officer, looking at me and laughing, &ldquo;why do
+ you go around like a besum of destruction, wiping out armies, one man at a
+ time. You ought to be ashamed of myself, and you should be muzzled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't call me a female,&rdquo; said I, in my natural hoarse voice. &ldquo;That is
+ something that I will not submit to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corporal looked up at me with one eye, the other being almost closed
+ from the effects of the fall of the brick house. He looked as though he
+ smelled woolen burning, as the old saying is. The officer said he guessed
+ he would take us all to headquarters, and inquire into the affair. The
+ corporal said that there was nothing to inquire into. That this female
+ came along and insisted on going outside of the lines, and when he asked
+ her, in a polite manner, to show her pass, she struck him down with a
+ billy, or some weapon she had concealed about her person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not much of a liar, either,&rdquo; said I, jumping on to my horse
+ astraddle, like a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corporal looked at me as though he would sink, but he maintained that
+ he had done nothing that should offend the most fastidious female. The
+ corporal and his men mounted, and we all started for headquarters. I rode
+ beside the officer, and the corporal was right behind me. After we had got
+ started I pulled out my pipe, filled it, lit a match as soldiers usually
+ do, though it was quite unhandy, and began to smoke. As the tobacco smoke
+ rolled out under my veil, from the alleged rosebud mouth, the scene was
+ one that the corporal and the most of the men had never thought of, though
+ the officer was &ldquo;on&rdquo; all right enough. The corporal could hardly believe
+ his eyes, or one eye, for the other one had gone closed. I was a fine
+ enough looking female as we rode through the regiment, except the pipe,
+ which I puffed along just as though I had no dress on. As we rode up to
+ the colonel's tent, it was noised around that a scout had captured a
+ daring female rebel, and she had almost killed a corporal, and the whole
+ regiment gathered around the colonel's tent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the trouble, corporal?&rdquo; asked the colonel of my black-eyed
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well this woman wanted to go outside, and when I objected, she knocked me
+ down with a rail off a fence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you offered her no indignity?&rdquo; the colonel asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the least,&rdquo; said the corporal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the colonel asked me to tell my story, which I did. The corporal said
+ it was a lie, but the other man, whom I did not hit, said I was right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you disrobe, before these soldiers, without getting off your horse?&rdquo;
+ asked the colonel, looking at me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him I could and he told me to proceed. I pulled the hat and hair
+ off first and appeared with my red hair clipped short. I then I threw the
+ dress over my head, and appeared in my cavalry pants, all dressed, except
+ my jacket and cap, which the colonel handed me, having brought it from the
+ house where I put on the dress. I put on the jacket, wiped the powder off
+ my face, and the corporal said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's that condemned raw recruit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the boys took in the transformation scene, and then the colonel told
+ them that he wanted this to be a lesson to all of them, to let all women
+ who came to the picket posts, or anywhere, who had passes, alone, and not
+ think because one woman had been caught smuggling, that all women were
+ smugglers. In fact he wanted every soldier to mind his own business. Then
+ he dismissed us, and we went to our quarters. On the way, the one-eyed
+ corporal touched me on the arm, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old man, you played it fine on me, but I will get even with you yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Military Attire&mdash;My Suit of Government Clothes&mdash;The Memory
+ of Them Saddens Me Still&mdash;The Dreadful March&mdash;The Adjutant
+ Appoints Me to Make Out a Monthly Report&mdash;The Report Is an
+ Astonishing One.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ About this time I received the greatest shock of the whole war. I had
+ prided myself upon my uniform that I brought from home, which was made by
+ a tailor, and fit me first rate. It was of as good cloth and as well made
+ as the uniforms of any of the officers, and I was not ashamed to go out
+ with a party of officers on a little evening tear, because there was
+ nothing about my uniform to distinguish me from an officer, except the
+ shoulder-straps, and many officers did not wear shoulder-straps at all,
+ except on dress parade or inspection. I took great pleasure in riding
+ around town, wherever the regiment was located, looking wise, and posing
+ as an officer. But the time came when my uniform, which came with me as a
+ recruit, became seedy, and badly worn, and it was necessary to discard it,
+ and draw some clothing of the quartermaster. That is a trying time for a
+ recruit. One day it was announced that the quartermaster sergeant had
+ received a quantity of clothing, and the men were ordered to go and draw
+ coats, pants, hats, shoes, overcoats, and underclothing, as winter was
+ coming on, and the regiment was liable to move at any time. Something
+ happened that I was unable to be present the first forenoon that clothing
+ was issued, and, when I did call upon the quartermaster-sergeant, there
+ was only two or three suits left, and they had been tumbled over till they
+ looked bad. I can remember now how my heart sank within me, as I picked up
+ a pair of pants that was left. They were evidently cut out with a
+ buzz-saw, and were made for a man that weighed three hundred. I held them
+ up in installments, and looked at them. Holding them by the top, as high
+ as I could, and the bottom of the legs of the pants laid on the ground.
+ The sergeant charged the pants to my account, and then handed me a jacket,
+ a small one, evidently made for a hump-backed dwarf. The jacket was
+ covered with yellow braid. O, so yellow, that it made me sick. The jacket
+ was charged to me, also. Then he handed me some undershirts and drawers,
+ so coarse and rough that it seemed to me they must have been made of rope,
+ and lined with sand-paper. Then came an overcoat, big enough for an
+ equestrian statue of George Washington, with a cape on it as big as a wall
+ tent. The hat I drew was a stiff, cheap, shoddy hat, as high as a tin camp
+ kettle, which was to take the place of my nobby, soft felt hat that I had
+ paid five dollars of my bounty money for. The hat was four sizes too large
+ for me. Then I took the last pair of army shoes there was, and they
+ weighed as much as a pair of anvils, and had raw-hide strings to fasten
+ them with. Has any old soldier of the army ever forgotten the clothing
+ that he drew from the quartermaster? These inverted pots for hats, the
+ same size all the way up, and the shoes that seemed to be made of sole
+ leather, and which scraped the skin off the ankles. O, if this government
+ ever does go to Gehenna, as some people contend it will, sometime, it will
+ be as a penalty for issuing such ill-fitting shoddy clothing to its brave
+ soldiers, who never did the government any harm. I carried the lot of
+ clothing to my tent, feeling sick and faint. The idea of wearing them
+ among folks was almost more than I could bear to think of. I laid them on
+ my bunk, and looked at them, and &ldquo;died right there.&rdquo; That hat was of a
+ style older than Methuselah. O, I could have stood it, all but the hat,
+ and pants, and shoes, but they killed me. While I was looking at the
+ lay-out, and trying to make myself believe that my old clothes that I
+ brought with me were good enough to last till the war was over, though the
+ seat of the pants, and the knees, and the sleeves of the coat were nearly
+ gone, an orderly came through the company and said the regiment would have
+ a dismounted dress parade at sundown, and every man must wear his new
+ clothes. Ye gods! that was too much! If I could have had a week or ten
+ days to get used to those new clothes, one article at a time, I could have
+ stood it, but to be compelled to put the pants, and jacket, shoes and hat
+ on all at once, was horrible to think of, and if I had not known that a
+ deserter was always caught, and punished, I would have deserted. But the
+ clothes must be put on, and I must go out into the world a spectacle to
+ behold. Believing that it is better to face the worst, and have it over, I
+ put on the pants first. If I could ever meet the army contractor who
+ furnished those pants to a government almost in the throes of dissolution,
+ I would kill him as I would an enemy of the human race. There was room
+ enough in those pants for a man and a horse. Yes, and a bale of hay. There
+ were no suspenders furnished to the men, and how to keep the pants from
+ falling from grace was a question, but I got a piece of tent rope, cut a
+ hole in the waist band, and run the rope around inside, and tied it around
+ my waist, puckering the top of the pants at proper intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I think of those pants now, after twenty-two years, I wonder that I
+ was not irretrievably lost in them. I would have been lost if I had not
+ stuck out of the top. But when I looked at the bottoms of the pants I
+ found at least a foot too much. If I had tied the rope around under my
+ arms, or buttoned them to my collar button, they would have been too long
+ at the bottom. I finally rolled them up at the bottom, and they rolled
+ clear up above my knees. But how they did bag around my body. There was
+ cloth enough to spare to have made a whole uniform for the largest man in
+ the regiment. At that time I was a slim fellow, that weighed less than 125
+ pounds, and there is no doubt I got the largest pair of pants that was
+ issued in the whole Union army. I only had a-small round mirror in my
+ tent, so I could not see how awfully I looked, only in installments, but
+ to a sensitive young man who had always dressed well, any one can see how
+ a pair of such pants would harrow up his soul. If the pants were too
+ large, you ought to have seen the jacket. The contractor who made the
+ clothes evidently took the measure of a monkey to make that jacket. It was
+ so small that I could hardly get it on. The sleeves were so tight that the
+ vaccination marks on my arm must have shown plainly. The sleeves were too
+ short, and my hands and half of my forearm riding outside. The body was so
+ tight that I had to use a monkey-wrench to button it, and then I couldn't
+ breathe without unbuttoning one button. It was so tight that my ribs
+ showed so plain they could be counted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I stuffed some pieces of grain sack in the shoes, and got them on, and
+ tied them, put on that awful hat, the bugle sounded to fall in, and I fell
+ out of my tent towards the place of assembly, with my carbine. If we had
+ been going out mounted, I could have managed to hide some of the pants
+ around the saddle, if I could have got my shoe over the horse's back, but
+ to walk out among men, stubbing my shoes against each other, and
+ interfering and knocking my ankles off, was pretty hard. The company was
+ about formed when I fell out of my tent, and when the men saw me they
+ snickered right out. I have heard a great many noises in my time that took
+ the life out of me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first shell that I heard whistle through the air, and shriek, and
+ explode, caused my hair to raise, and I was cold all up and down my spine.
+ The first flock of minnie bullets that sang about my vicinity caused my
+ flesh to creep and my heart's blood to stand still. Once I was near a saw
+ mill when the boiler exploded, and as the pieces of boiler began to rain
+ around me, I felt how weak and insignificant a small, red-headed,
+ freckled-faced man is. Once I heard a girl say &ldquo;no,&rdquo; when I had asked her
+ a civil question, and I was so pale and weak that I could hardly reply
+ that I didn't care a continental whether she married me or not, but I
+ never felt quite so weak, and powerless, and ashamed, and desperate as I
+ did when I came out, falling over myself and the men of my company
+ snickered at my appearance. The captain held his hand over his face and
+ laughed. I fell in at the left of my company, and the captain went to the
+ right and looked down the line, and seeing my pants out in front about a
+ foot, he ordered me to stand back. I stood back, and he looked at the rear
+ of the line, and I stuck out worse behind, and he made me move up. Finally
+ he came down to where I was and told me to throw out my chest. I tried to
+ throw it out, and busted a button off, but the pressure was too great, and
+ my chest went back. Finally the captain told me I could go to the right of
+ the company and act as orderly sergeant on dress parade. He said as our
+ company was on the right of the regiment, they could dress on my pants,
+ and I wouldn't be noticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I ought to have done, was to have committed suicide right there, but
+ I went to the right, trying to look innocent, and we moved off to the
+ field for dress parade. Everything went on well enough, except that in
+ coming to a &ldquo;carry arms,&rdquo; with my carbine, from a present, the muzzle of
+ the carbine knocked off my stiff hat, and the stock of the carbine went
+ into the pocket of my pants and run clear down my leg, before I could
+ rescue it. A file closer behind me picked up my hat and put it on me, with
+ the yellow cord tassels in front, and before I could fix it, the order
+ came, &ldquo;First sergeants to the front and center, march.&rdquo; Those who are
+ familiar with military matters, know that at dress parade the first
+ sergeants march a few paces to the front, then turn and march to the
+ center of the regiment, turn and face the adjutant, and each salutes that
+ officer in turn, and reports, &ldquo;Co. &mdash;&mdash;, all present or
+ accounted for.&rdquo; That was the hardest march I ever had in all of my army
+ experience. I knew that every eye of every soldier in the six companies at
+ the right of the regiment, would be on my pants, and the officers would
+ laugh at me, and the several hundred ladies and gentlemen from town, who
+ were back of the colonel, witnessing the dress parade, would laugh, too. A
+ man can face death, in the discharge of his duty, better than he can face
+ the laughter of a thousand people. I seemed to be the only soldier in the
+ whole regiment who had not got a pretty good fit in drawing his new
+ clothes, but I was a spectacle. As I marched to the front, with the other
+ eleven first sergeants, and stood still for them to dress on me, I felt as
+ though the piece of tent rope with which I had fastened my large pants up,
+ was becoming untied, and I began to perspire. What would become of me if
+ that rope <i>should</i> become untied? If that rope gave way, it seemed to
+ me it would break up the whole army, stampede the visitors, and cause me
+ to be court-martialed for conduct unbecoming any white man. I made up my
+ mind if the worst came, I would drop my carbine and grab the pants with
+ both hands, and save the day. At the command, right and left face, I
+ turned to the left, and I could feel the pants begin to droop, as it were,
+ so I took hold of the top of them with my left hand, and at the command,
+ march, I started for the center.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had got almost past my own company, and there had been no general laugh,
+ but when I passed an Irishman, named Mulcahy, I heard him whisper out loud
+ to the man next to him, &ldquo;Howly Jasus, luk at the pants.&rdquo; Then there was a
+ snicker all through the company, which was taken up by the next, and by
+ the time I got to the center, and &ldquo;front faced,&rdquo; a half of the regiment
+ were laughing, and the officers were scolding the men and whispering to
+ them to shut up. Just then I felt that the one hand that was trying to
+ hold the pants up, was never going to do the work in the world, so I
+ dropped my carbine behind me, said, &ldquo;Co. E, all present or accounted for,&rdquo;
+ and stood there like a stoughton bottle, holding the waist-band of those
+ pants with both hands, as pale as a ghost. I could see that the adjutant
+ and the colonel and two majors, were laughing, and many of the visitors
+ were trying to keep from laughing. I think I lived seventy years in five
+ minutes, while the other eleven orderlies were reporting, and when the
+ order came to return to our posts, I whispered to the next orderly to me,
+ and told him if he would pick up my carbine and bring it along, I would
+ die for him, and he picked it up. The dress parade was soon finished, but
+ instead of marching the companies back to their quarters, they were
+ ordered to break ranks on the parade ground, and for an hour I was
+ surrounded with officers and men, who laughed at me till I thought I would
+ die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel and adjutant finally told me that it was a put up job on me,
+ to make a little fun for the boys. They said I had often had fun at the
+ expense of the other boys, and they wanted to see if I could stand a joke
+ on myself, and they admitted that I had done it well. If I had known it
+ was a joke, I could have lived through it better. The adjutant said he had
+ got a little work for me that evening, and the next morning I could take
+ my clothes down town to the post quartermaster, and exchange them for a
+ suit that would fit me. I went to his tent, and he showed me a lot of
+ company reports, and wanted me to make out a consolidated monthly report,
+ for the assistant adjutant general of the brigade. I had done some work
+ for him before, and he left a blank signed by himself and colonel, and
+ told me to make out a report and send it to the brigade headquarters, as
+ he was going down town with a party of officers. I made up my mind that I
+ would get even with the adjutant and the colonel, so I took a pen and
+ filled out the blank. My idea was to put all the figures in the wrong
+ column, which I did, and send it to the brigade headquarters. The next
+ morning I went down town with the quartermaster, and got a suit of clothes
+ to fit me, and on the way back to camp I passed brigade headquarters, when
+ I saw our adjutant looking quite dejected. He called to me and said he had
+ been summoned to brigade headquarters to explain some inaccuracies in the
+ monthly report sent in the night before, and he wanted me to stay and see
+ what was the trouble, but I acted as though if there was a mistake, it was
+ an error of the head rather than of the feet. Pretty soon the old brigade
+ adjutant, who was a strict diciplinarian, and a man who never heard of a
+ joke, came in from the general's tent, with his brow corrugated. They had
+ evidently been brooding over the report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, adjutant,&rdquo; said he, with a preoccupied look, &ldquo;but in
+ your report I observe that your regiment contains forty-three enlisted
+ men, and nine hundred and twenty-six company cooks. This seems to me
+ improbable, and the general cannot seem to understand it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adjutant turned red in the face, and was about to stammer out
+ something, when the adjutant general continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again, we observe that your quartermaster has on hand nine hundred bales
+ of condition powders, which is placed in your report as rations for the
+ men, that you only have eleven horses in your regiment fit for duty, that
+ you have the same number of men, while the commissioned officers foot up
+ at nine hundred and twenty-six. Of your sick men there seems to be plenty,
+ some eight hundred, which would indicate an epidemic, of which these
+ headquarters had not been informed previously. In the column headed
+ &ldquo;officers detailed on other duty&rdquo; I find four &ldquo;six-mule teams,&rdquo; and one
+ &ldquo;spike team of five mules.&rdquo; In the column &ldquo;officers absent without leave&rdquo;
+ I find the entry &ldquo;all gone off on a drunk.&rdquo; This, sir, is the most
+ incongruous report that has ever been received at these head-quarters,
+ from a reputably sober officer. Can this affair be satisfactorily
+ explained, at once, or would you prefer to explain it to a court-martial?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said the adjutant in distress, and perspiring freely, &ldquo;my clerk
+ has made a mistake, and placed a piece of waste paper that has been
+ scribbled on, in the envelope, instead of the regular report. Let me take
+ it, and I will send the proper report to you in ten minutes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adjutant general handed over my report, after asking how it happened
+ that the signature of the colonel and adjutant was on the ridiculous
+ report, and the adjutant and the red-headed recruit went out, mounted and
+ rode away. On the way the adjutant said, &ldquo;I ought to kill you on the spot.
+ But I wont. You have only retaliated on us for playing them pants on you.
+ I hate a man that can't take a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we made out a new report, and I took it to headquarters, and all was
+ well. But the adjutant was not as kitteny with his jokes on the other
+ fellows for many moons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Experience as a Sick Man&mdash;Jim Thinks I Have Yellow Fever&mdash;
+ What I Suffered&mdash;A Rebel Angel&mdash;I am Sent to the Hospital.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time I had never been sick a day in my life, that is, sick
+ enough to ache and groan and grunt, and lay in bed. At home I had
+ occasionally had a cold, and I was put to bed at night, after drinking a
+ quart of ginger tea, and covered up with blankets in a warm room, and I
+ was fussed over by loving hands until I got to sleep, and in the morning I
+ would wake up as fresh as a daisy, with my cold all gone. Once or twice at
+ home I had a bilious attack that lasted me almost twenty-four hours; but
+ the old family doctor fired blue pills down me, and I came under the wire
+ an easy winner. I did have the mumps and the measles, of course before
+ enlisting, but the loving care I was given brought me out all right, and I
+ looked upon those little sicknesses as a sort of luxury. The people at
+ home would do everything to make sick experiences far from bitter
+ memories. It was getting along towards Christmas of my first year in the
+ army, and though it was the Sunny South we were in, I noticed that it was
+ pretty all-fired cold. The night rides were full of fog and malaria; and
+ one morning I came in from an all-night ride through the woods and swamps,
+ feeling pretty blue. The mud around my tent was frozen, and there was a
+ little snow around in spots. As I laid down in my bunk to take a snooze
+ before breakfast, I noticed how awfully thin an army blanket was. It was
+ good enough for summer, but when winter came the blanket seemed to have
+ lost its cunning. I was again doing duty as a private soldier, having
+ learned that my promotion to the position of corporal was only temporary.
+ I had been what is called a &ldquo;lance corpora,&rdquo; or a brevet corporal. It
+ seemed hard, after tasting of the sweets of official position, to be
+ returned to the ranks, but I had to take the bitter with the sweet, and a
+ soldier must not kick. I had never laid down to sleep before without
+ dropping off into the land of dreams right away, but now, though I was
+ tired enough, my eyes were wide open and I felt strange. At times I would
+ be so hot that I would throw the blanket off, and then I would be so cold
+ that it seemed as though I would freeze. I had taken a severe cold which
+ had settled everywhere, and there was not a bone in my body but what
+ ached; my lungs seemed of no use; I could not take a long breath without a
+ hacking cough, and I felt as though I should die. It was then that I
+ thought of the warm little room at home and the ginger tea, and the
+ soaking of my feet in mustard water and wrapping my body in a soft flannel
+ blanket, and the kindly faces of my parents, my sister, my wife&mdash;everybody
+ that had been kind to me. I would close my eyes and imagine I could see
+ them all, and open my eyes and see my cold little tent and shiver as I
+ thought of being sick away from home. I laid for an hour wishing I was
+ home again; and while alone there I made up my mind I would write home and
+ warn all the boys I knew against enlisting. The thought that I should die
+ there alone was too much, and I was about to yell for help when my tent
+ mate, who had been on a scout, came in. He was a big green Yankee, who had
+ a heart in him as big as a water pail, but he wasn't much, of a nurse. He
+ came in nearly frozen, threw his saddle down in a corner, took out a hard
+ tack and began to chew it, occasionally taking a drink of water out of a
+ canteen. That was his breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I've got just about enough of war,&rdquo; said he, as he picked his teeth
+ with a splinter off his bunk, and filled his pipe and lit it. &ldquo;They can't
+ wind up this business any too soon to suit the old man. War in the summer
+ is a picnic, but in winter it is wearin on the soldier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heretofore I had enjoyed tobacco smoke very much, both from my own pipe
+ and Jim's, but when he blew out the first whiff of smoke it went to my
+ head and stomach and all up and down me, and I yelled, in a hoarse,
+ pneumonia sort of voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim, for God's sake don't smoke. I am at death's door, and I don't want
+ to smell of tobacco smoke when St. Peter opens the gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, pard, you ain't sick,&rdquo; said Jim, putting his pipe outside of the
+ tent, and coming to me and putting his great big hand on my forehead, as
+ tender as a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great heavens! you have got the yellow fever. You won't live an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was where Jim failed as a nurse. He made things out worse than they
+ were. He, poor old fellow, thought it was sympathy, and if I had let him
+ go on he would have had me dead before night. I told him I was all right.
+ All I had was a severe cold, on my lungs, and pneumonia, and rheumatism,
+ and chills and fever, and a few such things, but I would be all right in a
+ day or two. I wanted to encourage Jim to think I was not very bad off, but
+ he wouldn't have it. He insisted that I had typhoid fever, and glanders,
+ and cholera. He went right out of the tent and called in the first man he
+ met, who proved to be the horse doctor. The horse doctor was a friend of
+ mine, and a mighty good fellow, but I had never meditated having him
+ called in to doctor me. However, he felt of my fore leg, looked at my
+ eyes, rubbed the hair the wrong way on my head, and told Jim to bleed me
+ in the mouth, and blanket me, and give me a bran mash, and rub some
+ mustang liniment on my chest and back. I didn't want to hurt the horse
+ doctor's feelings by going back on his directions, but I told him I only
+ wanted to soak my feet in mustard water, and take some ginger tea. He said
+ all right, if I knew more about it than he did, and that he said he would
+ skirmish around for some ginger, while Jim raised the mustard, and they
+ both went out and left me alone. It seemed an age before anybody come, and
+ I thought of home all the time, and of the folks who would know just what
+ to do if I was there. Pretty soon Jim came in with a camp kettle half full
+ of hot water, and a bottle of French mixed mustard which he had bought of
+ the sutler. I told him I wanted plain ground mustard, but he said there
+ wasn't any to be found, and French mustard was the best he could do. We
+ tried to dissolve it in the water, but it wouldn't work, and finally Jim
+ suggested that he take a mustard spoon and plaster the French mustard all
+ over my feet, and then put them to soak that way. He said that prepared
+ mustard was the finest kind for pigs feet and sausage, and he didn't know
+ why it was not all right to soak feet in. So he plastered it on and I
+ proceeded to soak my feet. I presume it was the most unsuccessful case of
+ soaking feet on record. The old camp kettle was greasy, and when the hot
+ water and French mustard began to get in their work on the kettle, the
+ odor was sickening, and I do not think I was improved at all in my
+ condition. I told Jim I guessed I would lay down and wait for the ginger
+ tea. Pretty soon the horse doctor came in with a tin cup full of hot
+ ginger tea. I took one swallow of it and I thought I had swallowed a
+ blacksmith's forge, with a coal fire in it. I gasped and tried to yell
+ murder. The horse doctor explained that he couldn't get any ginger, so he
+ had taken cayenne pepper, which, he added, could knock the socks off of
+ ginger any day in the week. I felt like murdering the horse doctor, and I
+ felt a little hard at Jim for playing French mustard on me, but when I
+ come to reflect, I could see that they had done the best they could, and I
+ thanked them, and told them to leave me alone and I would go to sleep.
+ They went out of the tent and I could hear them speculating on my case.
+ Jim said he knew I had diabetis, and lung fever combined, with sciatic
+ rheumatism, and brain fever, and if I lived till morning the horse doctor
+ could take it out of his wages. The horse doctor admitted that my case had
+ a hopeless look, but he once had a patient, a bay horse, sixteen hands
+ high, and as fine a saddle horse as a man ever threw a leg over, that was
+ troubled exactly the same as I was. He blistered his chest, gave him a
+ table-spoonful of condition powders three times a day in a bran mash, took
+ off his shoes and turned him out to grass, and in a week he sold him for
+ two hundred and fifty dollar. I laid there and tried to go to sleep
+ listening to that talk. Then, some of the boys who had heard that I was
+ sick, came along and inquired how I was, and I listened to the remarks
+ they made. One of them wanted to go and get some burdock leaves, and pound
+ them into a pulp, and bind them on me for a poultice. He said he had an
+ aunt in Wisconsin who had a milk sickness, and her left leg swelled up as
+ big as a post, and the doctors tried everything, and charged her over two
+ hundred dollars, and never did her any good, and one day an Indian doctor
+ came along and picked some burdock leaves and fixed a poultice for her,
+ and in a week she went to a hop-picker's dance, and was as kitteny as
+ anybody, and the Indian doctor only charged her a quarter. Jim was for
+ going out for burdock leaves at once, for me, but the horse doctor told
+ him I didn't have no milk sickness. He said all the milk soldiers got was
+ condensed milk, and mighty little of that, and he would defy the world to
+ show that a man could get milk sickness on condensed milk. That seemed to
+ settle the burdock remedy, and they went to inquiring of Jim if he knew
+ where my folks lived, so he could notify them, in case I was not there in
+ the morning. Jim couldn't remember whether it was Atchison, Kan., or Fort
+ Atkinson, Wis., but he said he would go and ask me, while I was alive, so
+ there would be no mistake, and the poor fellow, meaning as well as any man
+ ever did, came in and asked for the address of my father, saying it was of
+ no account, particularly, only he wanted to know. I gave him the address,
+ and then he asked me if he shouldn't get me something to eat. I told him I
+ couldn't eat anything to save me. He offered to fry me some bacon, and
+ make me a cup of coffee, but the thought of bacon and coffee made me wild.
+ I told him if he could make me a nice cup of green tea, and some milk
+ toast, or poach me an egg and place it on a piece of nice buttered toast,
+ and give me a little currant jelly, I thought I could swallow a mouthful.
+ Jim's eyes stuck out when I gave my order, which I had done while thinking
+ of home, and a tear rolled down his cheek, and he went out of the tent,
+ saying, &ldquo;All right, pard.&rdquo; I saw him tap his forehead with his finger,
+ point his thumb toward the tent, and say to the boys outside:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's got 'em! Head all wrong! Wants me to make him milk toast, poached
+ eggs, green tea, and currant jelly. And I offered him <i>bacon</i>. Sow
+ belly for a sick man! There isn't a loaf of bread in camp. Not an egg
+ within five miles. And milk! currant jelly! Why, he might as well ask for
+ Delmonico's bill of fare, but we have got to get 'em. I told him he should
+ have em, and, by mighty! he shall. Here, Mr. Horse-doctor, you stay and
+ watch him, and I and Company D here will saddle up and go out on the road
+ to a plantation, and raid it for delicacies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bet your life,&rdquo; says the Company &ldquo;D&rdquo; man, and pretty soon I heard a
+ couple of saddles thrown on two horses, and then there was a clatter of
+ horses feet on the frozen ground. I have thought of it since a good many
+ times, and have concluded that I must have dropped asleep. Any way, it
+ didn't seem more than five minutes before the tent nap opened and Jim came
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, straighten out here, now, you red-headed corpse, and try that
+ toast,&rdquo; said he, as he came in with a piece of hard-tack box for a tray,
+ and on it was a nice china plate, and a cup and saucer, an egg on toast,
+ and a little pitcher of milk, and some jelly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said, tasting of the tea, which was not much like army tea, &ldquo;you
+ never made this tea. A woman made that tea, or I'm a goat. And that toast
+ was toasted by a woman, and that egg was poached by a woman. Where am I?&rdquo;
+ I asked, imagining that I was home again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You guessed it the first time, pard,&rdquo; said Jim, as he threw the blanket
+ over my shoulders, as I sat up on the bunk to try and eat. &ldquo;The whole
+ thing was done by the rebel angel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rebel angel, Jim; what are you talking about? There ain't any rebel
+ angels,&rdquo; and I became weak and laid down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, there is a rebel angel, and she is a dandy,&rdquo; said Jim, as he covered
+ me up. &ldquo;She is out by the fire making milk toast for you. You see, I went
+ out to the Brown plantation, to try and steal an egg, and some bread, and
+ milk, but I thought, on the way out, as it was a case of life and death,
+ the stealing of it might rest heavy on your soul when you come to pass in
+ your chips, so I concluded to go to the house and ask for it. There was a
+ young woman there, and I told her the red-headed corporal that captured
+ the female smuggler, was dying, and couldn't eat any hard-tack and bacon,
+ and I wanted to fill him up on white folks food before he died, so he
+ could go to heaven or elsewhere, as the case might be, on a full stomach,
+ and she flew around like a kernel of pop-corn on a hot griddle, and picked
+ up a basket of stuff, and had the nigger saddle a mule for her, and she
+ came right to the camp with me, and said she would attend to everything.
+ She's a thoroughbred, and don't you make no mistake about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must have gone to sleep when Jim was talking about the girl, for I
+ dreamed that there was a million angels in rebel uniforms, poaching eggs
+ for me. Pretty soon I heard a rustle of female clothes, and a soft, cool
+ hand was placed on my forehead, my hair was brushed back, a perfumed
+ handkerchief wiped the cold perspiration from my face, and I heard the
+ rebel angel ask Jim what the doctor said about me. Jim told her what the
+ horse doctor had said about curing a horse that had been sick the same as
+ I was, and then she asked if we had not sent for the regular doc-doctor.
+ Jim said we had not thought of that. She asked what had been done for me,
+ and Jim told her about the French mustard episode, and the cayenne pepper
+ tea. I thought she laughed, but it had become dark in the tent, and I
+ couldn't see her face, but she told Jim to go after the regimental surgeon
+ at once, and Jim went out. The angel asked me how I felt, and I told her I
+ was all right, but she said I was all wrong. I thanked her for the trouble
+ she had taken to come so far, and she said not to mention it. She said she
+ had a brother who was a prisoner at the-North, and if somebody would only
+ be kind to him if he was sick, she would be well repaid. She said the last
+ she heard of him he was a prisoner of war at Madison, Wis., and she
+ wondered what kind of people lived there, away off on the frontier, and if
+ they could be kind to their enemies. That touched me where I lived, and I
+ raised up on my elbow, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why bless your heart, Miss, if your brother is a prisoner in old Camp
+ Randlll, in Madison, he has got a pic nic. That town was my home before I
+ came down here on this fool job. The people there are the finest in the
+ world. All of them, from old Grovernor Lewis, to the poorest man in town,
+ would set up nights with a sick person, whether he was a rebel or not.
+ Your brother couldn't be better fixed if he was at home. The idea of a man
+ suffering for food, clothing, or human sympathy in Madison, would be
+ ridiculous. There is not a family in that town,&rdquo; I said, becoming excited
+ from the feeling that any one doubted the humanity of the people of
+ Wisconsin, &ldquo;but would divide their breakfast, and their clothes, and their
+ money, with your brother, egad, I wish I was there myself. I will be
+ responsible for your brother, Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told me to lay down and be quiet, and not talk any more, as I was
+ becoming wild. She said she was glad to know what kind of people lived
+ there, as she had supposed it was a wilderness. In a few minutes Jim came
+ back and said the doctor was playing poker with some other officers, in a
+ captain's tent, and he didn't dare go in and break up the game, but he
+ spoke to the doctor's orderly, and he said I ought to take castor oil.
+ That didn't please the little woman at all, and she told Jim to go to the
+ poker tent and tell the doctor to come at once, or she would come after
+ him. It was not long before the doctor came stooping in to my pup tent.
+ His idea was to have all sick men attend surgeon's call in the morning,
+ and not go around visiting the sick in tents. He asked me what was the
+ matter, and I told him nothing much. Then he asked me why I wasn't at
+ surgeon's call in the morning. I told him the reason was that I was wading
+ in a swamp, after the rebels that ambushed some of our boys the day
+ before. &ldquo;Then you've got malaria,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Take some quinine tonight,
+ and come to surgeon's call in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/229.jpg" alt="She Gave Him a Piece of Her Mind 229 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The little woman, the rebel angel, got her back up at the coolness of the
+ doctor; and she gave him a piece of her mind, and then he called for a
+ candle, and he examined me carefully. When he got through, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is going to have a run of fever. He must be sent to the hospital. Jim,
+ go tell the driver to send the ambulance here at once, and you, Jim, go
+ along and see that this fellow gets to the hospital all right. He can't
+ live here in a tent, and I doubt if he will in the hospital.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That settled it. In a short time the ambulance came, and I got in and sat
+ on a seat, and the rebel angel got in with me, and we rode seven miles to
+ the hospital, over the roughest road a sick man ever jolted over, and I
+ would have died, if I could have had my own way about it, but the little
+ woman talked so cheerfully that when we arrived at the great building, I
+ should have considered myself well, only that my mind was wandering. All I
+ remember of my entrance to the hospital was that when we got out of the
+ ambulance Jim was there on his horse, leading the mule belonging to the
+ angel. Some attendants helped me up stairs, and down a corridor, where we
+ met two stretchers being carried out to the dead house with bodies on
+ them, and I had to sit in a chair and wait till clean sheets could be put
+ on one of the cots where a man had just died. The little woman told me to
+ keep up my courage, and she would come and see me often, Jim cried and
+ said he would come everyday, a man said, &ldquo;your bed is ready, No. 197,&rdquo; and
+ I laid down as No. 197, and didn't care whether I ever got up again or
+ not. I just had breath enough left to bid the angel good bye, and tell Jim
+ to see her safe home. Jim said, &ldquo;You bet your life I will,&rdquo; and the world
+ seemed blotted out, and for all I cared, I was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Varied Experiences in the Hospital&mdash;The Doctor Seems Sure
+ of My Death&mdash;I Suggest the Postponement of My Funeral&mdash;I Get
+ Very Sick of Gruel&mdash;I Go Back to my Regiment.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, last week I wound up in the hospital. When Jim, my old comrade,
+ and the rebel angel, left me, I to all intents and purposes. I supposed I
+ was going to sleep, but after I got well enough to know what was going on,
+ I found that for about ten days I had been out of my head. It was not much
+ of a head to get out of, but however small and insignificant a man's head
+ is, he had rather have it with him, keeping good time, than to have it
+ wandering around out of his reach. When I &ldquo;come to,&rdquo; as the saying is, it
+ only seemed as though I had been asleep over night, but I dreamed more
+ than any able-bodied man could have done in one night. I was what they
+ call un-. conscious, but I did a great deal of work during that period of
+ unconsciousness. One thing I did, which I was proud of, was to wind up the
+ war. I arranged it so that all of the bullets that were fired on each
+ side, were made of India-rubber, like those little toy balloons, and war
+ was just fun. The boys on both sides would fire at each other and watch
+ the rubber balloons hit the mark, and explode, and nobody was hurt, and
+ everybody laughed. There was no more blood. Everything was rubber and
+ wind. There was no one killed, no legs shot off, and the men on each side;
+ when not fighting with the harmless missiles, were gathered together, blue
+ and gray, having a regular picnic, and every evening there was a dance,
+ the rebels furnishing the girls. In my delirium I could see that my rebel
+ angel was dancing a good deal with the boys, and frequently with my
+ comrade, Jim, and I was pretty jealous. I made up my mind that I wouldn't
+ speak to either of them again. I would watch my balloon battles with a
+ good deal of interest, and think how much better and safer it was to fight
+ that way. Every day, when the battle was over, and the two sides would get
+ together for fun, I noticed when the bugle sounded for battle again, that
+ on each side the boys were terribly mixed, there being about as many
+ blue-coated Yankees among the gray rebels as there were rebels among the
+ Yankees, and after awhile it seemed as though all were dressed alike, in a
+ sort of &ldquo;blue-gray,&rdquo; and then they disappeared, and I recovered my senses.
+ Frequently, during my delerium and unconsciousness, I would feel my mouth
+ pulled open, and hear a spoon chink against my teeth, and I would taste
+ something bad going down my neck, and then my head would buzz as though a
+ swarm of bees had taken up their abode where my brain used to be.
+ Sometimes I would hear the clanking of a saber and a pair of Mexican
+ spurs, and feel a great big hand on my head, and I knew that was Jim, but
+ I couldn't move a muscle, or say a word. &ldquo;I guess he's dead, ain't he
+ doc?&rdquo; I would hear in Jim's voice, and the doc would say there was a
+ little life left, but not enough, to swear by. Then the doc would say,
+ &ldquo;You better come in about 10:30 tomorrow, as we bury them all at that
+ hour, and I guess he'll croak by that time.&rdquo; I tried to speak and tell
+ them that I was alive, and that I was going to get well, but it, wasn't
+ any use. I was tongue-tied. Again I would hear the sweet rustle of a
+ dress, and feel a warm hand on my head, and I knew that the rebel angel
+ had rode her mule to town to see me. Then I would try hard to tell her
+ that I was going to write a letter to the governor of Wisconsin, and ask
+ him to look out particularly for her brother, who was a rebel prisoner at
+ Madison, and take care of him if he was sick, but I couldn't say a word,
+ and after smoothing my hair a little while, she would give my cheek three
+ or four pats, just as a mother pats her child, and she would go away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning, a little after daylight, I woke up and looked around the ward
+ of the hospital. My eyes were weak, and I was hungry as a bear. I had to
+ try two or three times before I could raise my hand to my head, and when I
+ felt of my head it seemed awfully small. I could feel my cheek bones stick
+ out so that you could hang your hat on them. My cheeks were sunken, and my
+ fingers were like pipe-stems. I wondered how a man could change so in one
+ night. I saw two or three fellows over at the other end of the room, and I
+ thought I would get up and go over there and have some fun with them. I
+ wanted to know where my horse was, and where I was. I tried to raise up
+ and couldn't get any further than on my elbow. From that position I looked
+ around to see what was going on, and tried to attract the attention of
+ some attendant. Finally, I saw four fellows bringing a stretcher along
+ towards my cot. They had evidently been told by the doctor that I would be
+ dead in the morning, and having confidence in the word of the professional
+ man, had come to take me to the dead house, before the other sick man was
+ awake. As they came up to the foot of my cot and sat the stretcher down, I
+ thought I would play a joke on them. I pulled the sheet over my face, and
+ laid still. One of the men said, &ldquo;Two of us can lift it, as it is thinner
+ than a lathe.&rdquo; To be considered dead, when I was alive, was bad enough,
+ but to be called &ldquo;it&rdquo; was too much. I felt one of the men take hold of my
+ feet, and then I threw the sheet off my face and in a hoarse voice I said,
+ &ldquo;Say, Mr. Body-snotcher, you can postpone the funeral and bring me a
+ porter-house steak and some fried potatoes.&rdquo; Well, nobody ever saw a
+ couple of men fall over themselves and turn pale, as those fellows did.
+ Before I had given my order for breakfast, the two men had fallen back
+ over the stretcher and the two others were backing on as though a ghost
+ had appeared. But finally they came toward me and I convinced them that I
+ was not dead. They seemed hurt to know that I was still alive, and one of
+ them went off after the doctor, to enter a complaint, I supposed. The
+ doctor soon came and he was the only one that seemed pleased at my
+ recovery. He ordered some sort of gruel for me, but wouldn't let me have
+ meat and things. I took the gruel under protest but it did strengthen me.
+ I told the doctor I wanted him to send for my horse, because I wanted to
+ go out with the boys, but he said he guessed I wouldn't go out with the
+ boys very soon. He said I might sit up in bed a little while, and when I
+ did so I found that I did not have my clothes on, but was clothed in a
+ hospital night-gown, which was also used for a shroud for burial when a
+ fellow died. He said Jim and the girl would be in about 10 o clock, as he
+ had sent for them, and some of my comrades. I told him if I was going to
+ entertain company, and give a reception, I wanted my pants on, as I was
+ sure no gentleman could give a reception successfully without pants. The
+ doctor seemed sort of glad to see me taking an interest in human affairs
+ again, and so he let me put my pants and jacket on. I got a butcher to
+ shave me, and when ten o clock came I looked quite presentable for a
+ skeleton. I was sitting up in bed, with a little round zinc frame
+ looking-glass, noting the changes in my personal appearance, when a door
+ opened and Jim entered, dressed up in his best, with the rebel angel on
+ his arm, and followed by six boys from the regiment. They came in as
+ solemn as any party I ever saw. The angel looked as sad as I ever saw
+ anybody, and I thought she had probably heard that her brother was dead.
+ It did not occur to me that they had come to attend my funeral. They stood
+ there by the door, in that helpless manner that people always stand around
+ at a funeral, waiting for the master of ceremonies to tell them that they
+ can now pass in the other room and view the remains. I finally caught Jim
+ looking my way, and I waved a handkerchief at him. He gave me one look,
+ and jumped over two cots and came up to me with tears in his eyes, and a
+ package in his hand, and said, &ldquo;Pard, you ain't dead worth a cent,&rdquo; and
+ then he hugged me, and added, &ldquo;but there ain't enough left of you for a
+ full size funeral.&rdquo; Then he unrolled the package he had in his hand, and
+ dropped on the bed four silver-plated coffin handles. By that time the
+ girl, and the six boys had seen me, and they came over, and we had a
+ regular visit. They were all surprised to find me alive, as they had been
+ notified that I was on my last legs, and would be buried in the morning,
+ and the captain had detailed the six boys to act as pall-bearers and fire
+ a salute over the grave, while Jim and the girl were to act as mourners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it saves ammunition,&rdquo; said Jim. &ldquo;But how be I going to get these
+ coffin handles off my hands. There is no dependence to be placed on
+ doctors, anyway. When that doctor appointed this funeral, we thought he
+ knew his business, and I told the angel, say I, 'My pard ain't going to be
+ buried without any style, in one of those pine boxes that ain't planed,
+ and has got slivers on.' So I hired the hospital coffin-maker to
+ sand-paper the inside and outside of a box, and black it with
+ shoe-blacking, and I went to a store down town and bought these handles.
+ Of course, pard, I am glad you pulled through, and all that, but I want to
+ say to you, if you had croaked in the night, and been ready to bury this
+ A. m., you would have had a more stylish outfit than anybody, except
+ officers, usually get in this army, and the angel and I would have been a
+ pair of mourners that would have slung grief so your folks to home would
+ have felt proud of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The angel was tickled to see me alive, and suggested to Jim and the boys,
+ that it was easy to talk a fellow to death after he had been so sick, and
+ told them to go back to camp, and she would stay with me all day. So the
+ boys shook hands with me, and Jim had an attendant to roll my cot up to a
+ window, so I could see my horse when they rode away. The boys got on their
+ horses and Jim led my horse, and I could see that my pet had been fixed up
+ for the occasion. He had the saddle on, and it was draped with black, a
+ pair of boots were fastened in the stirrups, and my carbine was in the
+ socket. The idea was to have my horse, with empty boot and saddle tied
+ behind the wagon that took me to the cemetery where soldiers wind up their
+ career. It was not a cheerful thing to look at, and to think of, but it
+ did me good to see the old horse, and the boys ride away in good health,
+ and happy at my escape, and it encouraged me to make every effort to get
+ well, so I could ride with the gang. The rebel angel re-mained with me
+ till almost night, and superintended my eating. No person who has never
+ had a fever, can appreciate the appetite of a person when the fever
+ &ldquo;turns.&rdquo; I wanted everything that was ever eaten, and roast beef or turkey
+ was constantly in my mind. As anything of that kind would have made use
+ for Jim's coffin-handles, I had to put up with soups and gruels. The
+ doctor thought that this thin gruel was good enough, but it didn't seem to
+ hit the spot, and so the girl asked the doctor if he thought nice gumbo
+ soup and a weak milk punch wouldn't be pretty good for me. He said it
+ would, but nobody in the hospital could make gumbo soup, or milk punch.
+ She said she could, and she told me not to eat a thing until she came
+ back, and she would bring me a dish fit for the gods. She said she knew an
+ old colored woman in town, who cooked for a lady friend of hers, who had
+ some gumbo, and the lady had a little brandy that was seventy years old,
+ but she said the lady was a rebel, and I must overlook that. I told her I
+ didn't care, as I had got considerably mashed on all the rebels I had met
+ personally. She went out with a smile that would have knocked a stronger
+ man than I was silly, and I turned over and took a nap, the first real
+ sleep I had had in a week. I woke up finally smelling something that was
+ not gruel. O, I had got so sick of gruel. The angel handed me a glass of
+ milk punch, and told me to drink a swallow and a half. I have drank a
+ great many beverages in my lifetime, but I never swallowed anything that
+ was as good as the milk punch that rebel girl made for me. It seemed to go
+ clear to my toes, and I felt strong. Then she gave me a small soup plate
+ and told me to taste of the gumbo. I had never tasted gumbo soup before,
+ but I had no difficulty in mastering it. No description can do gumbo soup
+ justice, or explain to a person who has never tasted it the rich odor, and
+ palatable taste. The little that I ate seemed to make a man of me again,
+ instead of the weak invalid. Since then I have been loyal to southern
+ gumbo soup, and have always eaten it wherever it could be obtained, and I
+ never put a spoonful of it to my lips without thinking of the rebel girl
+ in the hospital, who prepared that dish for me. If I ever become a
+ glutton, it will be on gumbo soup, and if I am ever a drunkard, it will be
+ a milk-punch drunkard, and the soup and the punch must be prepared in the
+ South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, my experience after that, in the hospital, was about the same as a
+ hundred thousand other boys in blue, only few of the boys had such care,
+ and such food. The girl kept me supplied with gumbo soup and milk punch
+ until I could eat heartier food, and in a couple of days I got so I could
+ walk around the hospital. At home I had never been much of a hand to be
+ around with the sick, but experience had been a good teacher, and I found
+ that going around among the boys, and talking cheerfully did them good and
+ me too. I found men from my own regiment, that I did not know had been
+ sick. The custom was to make just as little show about sending sick men to
+ the hospital, as possible, hence they were often packed off in the night,
+ and the first their comrades would know of their illness would be a detail
+ to bury them, or a boy would suddenly appear in his company, looking pale
+ and sick, having been discharged from the hospital. If the men had known
+ how many of their comrades were sent to the hospital, it would have
+ demoralized the well ones. For ten days I visited around among the sick
+ men, telling a funny story to a group here and and cheering them up, and
+ writing letters home for fellows that were too weak to write. I learned to
+ lie a little bit in writing letters for the boys. One young fellow who had
+ his leg taken off, wanted me to write to his intended, and tell her all
+ about it, how the leg was taken off, and how he was sick and discouraged,
+ and would always be a cripple and a burden on his friends, etc. I wrote
+ the letter entirely different from the way he told me. I spoke of his
+ being wounded in the leg but that the care he received had made him all
+ right, and that he would probably soon have a discharge, and be home, and
+ make them all happy. I thought to myself that if she loved him as a girl
+ ought to, that a leg or two short wouldn't make any difference to her, and
+ there was no use of harrowing up her feelings in advance, and that he
+ could buy a cork leg before he got home, and may be she would never find
+ it out. I might have been wrong, but when he got an answer from that
+ letter he was the happiest fellow I ever saw in this world, and he
+ arranged at my suggestion, to stop over in New York and get a cork leg
+ before he went home. I have never learned whether the girl ever found out
+ that he had a cork leg, but if she did, and blames anybody, she can lay it
+ to me. Lots of the boys that wrote letters for wanted to detail all of
+ their calamities to their mothers and sisters and sweet-hearts, but I
+ worded the letters in a funny sort of way, so that the friends at home
+ would not be worried, and the answers the boys got would please them very
+ much. The hardest work I had was a couple of days writing letters for a
+ doctor, to relatives of boys who had died, detailing the sickness, death
+ and burial, and notifying friends that they could obtain the personal
+ effects of the deceased, clothing, money, pipes, knives, etc., by sending
+ express charges. It always seemed to me that if I had been running the
+ government I would have paid the express charges on the clothing of the
+ boys who had died, if I didn't lay up a cent. Finally I got well enough to
+ go back to my regiment, and one day I showed up at my company, and the
+ first man I met saluted me and said, &ldquo;Hello, Lieutenant.&rdquo; I told him he
+ did wrong to joke a sick man that way, and I went on to find Jim. He was
+ in our tent, greasing his shoes, and he looked up with a queer expression
+ on his face and said, &ldquo;Hello, Lieutenant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look a here.&rdquo; I said, as I grasped his greasy hand, &ldquo;what do you fellows
+ mean by calling me names, I have never done anything to deserve to be made
+ a fool of. Pard, what ails you anyway?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't they tell you,&rdquo; said Jim, as he scraped the mud on his other shoe
+ with a stick. &ldquo;The colonel has sent your name to the governor of Wisconsin
+ to be commissioned as second Lieutenant of the company. All the boys are
+ tickled to death, and they are going to whoop it up for you when your
+ commission comes. But this pup tent will not be good enough for you then,
+ and old Jim will have to pick up another pard. You won't have to cook your
+ bacon on a stick when you get your commsssion, and you can drink out of a
+ leather covered flask instead of a flannel covered canteen. But by the
+ great horn spoons I shall love you if you get to be a Jigadier Brindle,&rdquo;
+ and the old pard looked as though he wanted to cry like a baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I think the fellows are giving us taffy, and that there is
+ nothing in this Lieutenant business. But if there is, you will be my pard
+ till this cruel war is over, and don't you forget it,&rdquo; and I went along
+ the company street towards the colonel's tent, leaning on a cane, and all
+ the boys congratulated me, and I felt like a fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lieutenant, I am glad to see you back,&rdquo; said the Colonel, as I entered
+ his tent, and he showed it in his face. &ldquo;What is the foolishness, colonel?
+ I asked. The boys are all guying me. Can't I stay a private?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Thanksgiving Dinner with the &ldquo;Rebel Angel&rdquo;&mdash;She Gives Me a
+ World of Good Advice&mdash;Can an Officer be Detailed To Go And
+ Shovel Dirt?&mdash;My First Day As A Commissioned Officer.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last chapter of this history wound up in my interview with the
+ colonel, in which he told me that what the boys had said was true, and
+ that I had a right to to be called &ldquo;Lieutenant.&rdquo; He said there was a
+ vacancy in the commissioned officers of my company, caused, by some
+ discrepancy in regard to the ownership of a horse which an officer had
+ sold as belonging to him, when investigation showed that there was &ldquo;U. S.&rdquo;
+ branded on the horse. The colonel said he had looked over the company
+ pretty thoroughly, and while I was not all that he could desire in an
+ officer, there were less objections to me than to many others, and he had
+ recommended the governor of our state to commission me. He said he didn't
+ want me to run away with the idea that my promotion from private to a
+ commissioned office was for any particular gallantry, or that I was
+ particularly entitled to promotion, but I seemed the most available. It
+ was true, he said, that I had done everything I had been told to do, in a
+ cheerful manner, and had not displayed any cowardice, that he knew of,
+ though I had often admitted to him that I was a coward. He said he thought
+ few men knew whether they were cowards or not, until they got in a tight
+ place, and that most men honestly believed they were cowards, but they
+ didn't want others to know it, and they took pains to conceal the fact. He
+ said he had rather be considered a coward than a dare-devil of bravery,
+ for if he flunked when a chance come to show his metal, it wouldn't be
+ thought much of, and if he pulled through, and made a decent record for
+ bravery, he would get a heap of credit. He said he believed it took a man
+ with more nerve to do some things he had ordered me to do, than it did to
+ get behind a tree and shoot at the enemy, and he was willing to take his
+ chances on me. He congratulated me, and some of the other officers did the
+ same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was invited to sit into a game of draw poker with some of the officers.
+ I pleaded that I was not sufficiently recovered from my sickness to play
+ poker, and I went back to my tent to talk with Jim. I was thinking over
+ the new responsibilities that were about to come to me, and figuring on
+ the salary. A hundred and fifty dollars a month! It is cruel to raise the
+ salary of a poor devil from thirteen dollars a month to a hundred and
+ fifty. I wondered how in the world the government was ever going to get
+ that much out of me. Certainly I couldn't do any more than I had been
+ doing towards crushing the rebellion for thirteen dollars. And what would
+ I do with so much money? In my wildest dreams of promotion I had never
+ hoped to be a commissioned officer. I had thought sometimes, a week or two
+ after I enlisted, that if I was a general I could put down the rebellion
+ so quick the government would have lots of nations left on its hands to
+ spoil, but a few months active service had taken all that sort of nonsense
+ out of me, and I had been contented as a private. But here I was jumped
+ over everybody, and made an officer unbeknown to me, It made me dizzy. I
+ was not very strong anyway, and this thing had come upon me suddenly I was
+ thinking of the magnificent uniform I would have, and the fancy saddle and
+ bridle, and the regular officer's tent, with bottles of whiskey and
+ glasses, when Jim asked me if I wouldn't just hold that frying-pan of
+ bacon over the fire, while he cooked some coffee. He said we would just
+ eat a little to settle our stomachs, and then go out to Thanksgiving
+ dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanksgiving dinner,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;What are you talking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you know,&rdquo; said Jim, &ldquo;to-day is Thanksgiving? The 'angel' told me
+ last night to bring you out to the plantation to-day, and I was going
+ after you at the hospital if you hadn't showed up. She has received a
+ letter from her brother, who is a rebel prisoner at Madison, and he says a
+ Yankee hotel-keeper at Madison, that you had written to, had called at the
+ pen where they were kept, and had brought him a lot of turkey and fixings,
+ and offered to send him a lot for Thanksgiving, so the rebel boys could
+ have a big feed, and he says he is well and happy, and going to be
+ exchanged soon. And she wants us to come out and eat turkey and 'possum. I
+ had rather eat gray tom-cat than possum, but I told her we would come. So
+ we will eat a little bacon and bread, and ride out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all right Jim,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;We will go, but in my weak state I can't
+ be expected to eat possum. If there is anything of that kind to be eat,
+ Jim, you will have to eat it. However, I will do anything the rebel angel
+ asks me to do,&rdquo; I added, remembering her kindness to me when I was sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ride to the plantation, after several weeks confinement, was better
+ than medicine, and I enjoyed every step my proud horse took. The animal
+ acted as though he had been told of my promotion, but it was plain to me
+ that he acted proud, because he had been resting during my sickness. It
+ was all I could do to keep Jim alongside of me. He would fall back every
+ little while and try to act like an orderly riding behind an officer. I
+ had to discipline him before he would come up alongside like a &ldquo;partner.&rdquo;
+ I mention this Thanksgiving dinner in the army, in order to bring in a
+ little advice the rebel girl gave me, which I shall always remember. We
+ arrived at the old plantation house where the girl and her mother and some
+ servants were living, waiting for the war to close, so the men folks could
+ come back. The old lady welcomed us cordially, the girl warmly and the
+ servants effusively. The dinner was good, though not elaborate, except the
+ possum. That was elaborate, and next to gumbo soup, the finest dish I ever
+ tasted. After we had got seated at the table, the old lady asked a
+ blessing, and it was more like a prayer. She asked for a blessing upon all
+ of the men in both armies, and made us feel as though there was no
+ bitterness in her heart towards the enemies of her people. During the
+ dinner Jim told of my promotion, and the circumstance was commented on by
+ all, and after dinner the rebel angel took me one side, and said she had
+ got a few words of advice to give me. She commenced by saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now that you are to be a commissioned officer, don't get the big head.
+ During this war, we have had soldiers near us all the time, and I have
+ seen some splendid soldiers spoiled by being commsssioned. Nine out of ten
+ men that have received commissions in this locality, have been spoiled. I
+ am a few years older than you, and have seen much of the world. You are a
+ kind hearted man, and desire to treat everybody well, whether rich or
+ poor, yankee or confederate. If you let this commission spoil you, you are
+ not worthy of it. You will naturally feel as though you should associate
+ with officers entirely, but you will find in them no better companions
+ than you have found in the private soldiers, and I doubt if you will find
+ as true friends. Do not, under any circumstances, draw away from your old
+ friends, and let a barrier raise up between you and them. My observation
+ teaches me that the only difference between the officers and men in the
+ Union army, is that officers get more pay for doing less duty; they become
+ dissipated and fast because they can better afford it, they drink more,
+ put on style, play cards for money, and think the world revolves around
+ them, and that they are indispensible to success, and yet when they die,
+ or are discharged for cause, private soldiers take their place and become
+ better officers than they did, until they in turn become spoiled. I can
+ think of no position better calculated to ruin a young man than to
+ commission him in a cavalry regiment. Now take my advice. Do not run in
+ debt for a new uniform and a silver mounted sword, and don't put a stock
+ of whisky and cigars into your tent, and keep open house, because when
+ your whisky and cigars are gone, those who drank and smoked them will not
+ think as much of you as before, and you will have formed habits that will
+ illy prepare you for your work. You will not make any friends among good
+ officers, and you will lose the respect of the men who have known you when
+ you were one of them, but who will laugh at you for getting the big head
+ and going back on those who are just as good as you are, but who have not
+ yet attained the dignity of wearing shoulder straps. I meet officers every
+ day, who were good soldiers before they were raised from privates, and
+ they show signs of dissipation, and have a hard look, leering at women,
+ and trying to look <i>blasé</i>. They try to act as near like foreign
+ noblemen who are officers, as they can, from reading of their antics, but
+ Americans just from farms, workshops, commercial pursuits, and the back
+ woods and country villages of the north, are not of the material that
+ foreign officials are made of, and in trying to imitate them they only
+ show their shallowness. Do not, I beg of you, change one particle from
+ what you have been as a private soldier, unless it is to have your pants
+ fit better, and wear a collar. Of course, you will be thrown among
+ officers more than you have before. Imitate their better qualities, and do
+ not compete with them in vices. Always remember that when a volunteer army
+ is mustered out, all are alike. The private, who has business ability,
+ will become rich and respected, after the war, while the officer, who has
+ been promoted through favoritism, and who acquires bad habits, will keep
+ going down hill, and will be glad to drive a delivery wagon for the
+ successful private, whom he commanded and snubbed when he held a proud
+ position and got the big head. Now, my convalescent red-headed yankee, you
+ have the best advice, I know how to give a young man who has struck a
+ streak of luck. Go back to your friends, and may God bless you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I had never had any such advice as that before, and as Jim and me
+ rode back to camp that Thanksgiving evening, her words seemed to burn into
+ my alleged brain. I could see how easy it would be for a fellow to make a
+ spectacle of himself. What did a commission amount to, anyway, that a
+ fellow should feel above anybody. When we arrived in camp, and went into
+ our tent to have a smoke, the chaplain came in. I had not seen much of him
+ lately. When I was sick I felt the need of a chaplain considerably. Not
+ that I cared particularly to have him come and set up a howl over me, as
+ though I was going to die, and he was expected to steer me the right way.
+ But I felt as though it was his duty to look after the boys when they were
+ sick, and talk to them about something cheerful. But he did not show up
+ when I needed him, and when he called at our tent after I was well, there
+ wasn't that cordiality on my part that there ought to have been. He had a
+ package which he unrolled, after congratulating me on my recovery, and it
+ proved to be a new saber, with silver mounted scabbard and gold sword
+ handle. The chaplain said he had heard that I was to be commissioned, and
+ he had found that saber at a store down town, and thought I might want to
+ buy it. He said of course I would not want to wear a common government
+ saber, as it would look too rude..He said he could get that saber for
+ forty dollars, dirt cheap, and I could pay for it when I got my first pay
+ as an officer. I could see through the chaplain in a minute. He had
+ thought I would jump at the chance to put on style, and that he could make
+ ten or fifteen dollars selling me a gilt-edged saber. I thanked him
+ warmly, and a little sarcastically, for his great interest in the welfare
+ of my soul, in sickness and in health, but told him that I was going to
+ try and pull through with a common private's saber. I told him that the
+ few people I should kill with a saber, would enjoy it just as well to be
+ run through with a common saber. My only object was to help put down the
+ rebellion, and I could do it with ordinary plain cutlery, as well as
+ silver-mounted trappings. I said that to smear a silver-mounted saber all
+ over with gore, would spoil the looks of it. The chaplain went out, when a
+ drummer for a tailor shop came in with some samples, and wanted to make up
+ a new uniform for me, regardless of expense. I stood him off, and went to
+ bed, tired, and thought I had rather be a private than a general. The next
+ morning it was my turn to cook our breakfast, and I turned out and built a
+ fire, cut off some salt pork, and was frying it, when the orderly sergeant
+ came along and detailed Jim and me, with ten or a dozen others to go to
+ work on the fortifications. The rebels-were preparing to attack our
+ position, and the commanding officer had deemed it advisable to throw up
+ some earthworks. I told the orderly that he couldn't detail me to work
+ with a shovel, digging trenches, when I was an officer, but he said he
+ could, until I received my commission and was mustered in. I left my
+ cooking and went to the colonel's tent. He was just rolling out of his
+ bunk, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is it, Colonel? Can an officer be detailed to go and shovel dirt? I
+ have been detailed by the orderly, with a lot of privates, to report to
+ the engineer, to throw up fortifications. That does not strike me as
+ proper work for a commissioned officer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will have to go,&rdquo; said the colonel, as he stood on one leg while he
+ tried to lasso his other foot with a pants leg. &ldquo;It may be three months
+ before your commission will arrive, and then you will have to go to New
+ Orleans to be mustered out as a private and mustered in as an officer.
+ Until that time you will have to do duty as a private.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then what the devil did you say anything about my being commissioned for,
+ until the commission got here,&rdquo; said I, and I went back and finished
+ cooking breakfast for myself and Jim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our detail went down to the river, at the left of the line, and reported
+ to the engineer, and were set to work cutting down trees, throwing up
+ dirt, and doing about the dirtiest and hardest work that I had ever done.
+ As a private I could have done anything that was asked of me, but the
+ thought of doing such work, while all the boys were calling me
+ &ldquo;Lieutenant,&rdquo; was too much. I never was so crushed in my life. How glad I
+ was that I did not buy that gilt-edged saber of the chaplain. We had to
+ wear our side arms while at work, fearing an attack at any minute, and I
+ thought how ridiculous I would have looked with that silver-mounted saber
+ hanging to me, while I was handling a shovel like a railroad laborer. If
+ that detail was made to humiliate me, and reduce my proud flesh, that had
+ appeared on me by my sudden promotion, it had the desired effect, for
+ before night I was as humble an amateur officer as ever lived. I had
+ chopped down trees until my hands were blistered, and had shoveled dirt
+ until my back was broke, and at night returned to my tent too tired to eat
+ supper, and went to bed too weary and disgusted to sleep. And that was my
+ first day as a commissioned officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My Sickness and Hospital Experiences Have Spoiled Me for a
+ Soldier&mdash;I Am Full of Charity, and Hope the War Will Cease&mdash;
+ We Have a Grand Attack&mdash;The Battle Lasted Ten Minutes&mdash;The
+ Rebel Angel's Brother is Captured.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I became satisfied, more each day, that my sickness, and experience in the
+ hospital, had spoiled me for a soldier. Being attended to so kindly by a
+ rebel girl and getting acquainted with her people, and hearing her mother
+ pray earnestly that the bloodshed might cease, sort of knocked what little
+ fight there was in me, out, and I didn't hanker any more for blood. It
+ seemed to me as though I could meet any rebel on top of earth, and shake
+ hands with him, and ask him to share my tent, and help eat my rations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact of being promoted to a commissioned office, didn't make me feel
+ half as good as I thought it was going to, and I found myself wishing I
+ could be a he sister of charity, or something that did not have to shoot a
+ gun, or go into any fight. I got so I didn't care whether my commission
+ ever arrived or not. The idea of respectable men going out to hunt each
+ other, like game, became ridiculous to me, and I wondered why the
+ statesmen of the North and South did not get together and agree on some
+ sort of a compromise, and have the fighting stop. I would have agreed to
+ anything, only, of course, whatever arrangement was made, it must be
+ understood that the South had no right to secede. Then I would think, Why,
+ that is all the South is fighting for, and if they concede that they are
+ wrong it is the same as though they were whipped, and of course they could
+ not agree to that. I tried to think out lots of ways to wind the business
+ up without fighting any more, but all the plans I made, maintained that
+ our side was right, and I concluded to give up worrying about it. But I
+ made up my mind that I would not fight any more. I was still weak from
+ sickness, and there was no fight in me. I thought this over a good deal,
+ and concluded that if I was called upon to go into another fight, where
+ there was any chance of anybody being killed, I would just have a relapse,
+ and go to the hospital again till it was over. I had heard of fellows
+ being taken suddenly ill when a fight was in prospect, and I knew they
+ were always laughed at, but I made up my mind that I had rather be laughed
+ at than to hurt anybody. There was no thought of sneaking out of a fight
+ because of the danger of being killed myself, but I just didn't want to
+ shoot any friends of that girl who had nursed me when I was sick. These
+ thoughts kept coming to me for a week or more, and one evening it was
+ rumored around that we were liable to be attacked the next day. Some of
+ our regiments had been out all day, and they reported the enemy marching
+ on our position, in force. The rebels that lived in town could not conceal
+ their joy at the idea that we were to be cleaned out. They would hint that
+ there were enough Confederates concentrating at that point to drive every
+ Yankee into the river, and they were actually preparing bandages and lint,
+ to take care of the Confederates who might be wounded. If we had taken
+ their word for it there wouldn't be a Yankee left in town, when the
+ Confederate boys begun to get in their work. I went to bed that night
+ resolved that I should not be so well in the morning, and would go to
+ surgeon's call, and be sent to the hospital. But I didn't like the way
+ those rebels talked about the coming fight. Egad, if they were so sure our
+ fellows were going to be whipped, may be I would stay and see about it. If
+ they thought any of our fellows were going to slink out, when they made
+ their brags about whipping us, they would find their mistake. However, if
+ I didn't feel very well in the morning, I would go to surgeon's call, but
+ I wouldn't go to the hospital. In the meantime, I would just see if I had
+ cartridges enough for much of a row, and rub up the old carbine a little,
+ for luck. Not that. I wanted to shoot anybody dead, but I could shoot
+ their horses, and make the blasted rebels walk, anyway. And so all that
+ evening I was part of the time trying to see my way clear to get out of a
+ regular fight, where anybody would be liable to get hurt, and again I was
+ wondering if my sickness had injured my eyesight so I couldn't take good
+ aim at the buttons on a rebel's coat. I was about half and half. If the
+ rebels would let us alone, and not bring on a disturbance, I was for peace
+ at any price, but gol-blast them, if they come fooling around trying to
+ scare anybody, I wouldn't go to a hospital, not much. I talked with Jim
+ about it, and he felt about as I did. He didn't want any more fighting,
+ and while he couldn't go to the hospital, he was going to try and get
+ detailed to drive a six mule team for the quartermaster, but he cleaned up
+ his gun all the same, and looked over his cartridges to see if they were
+ all right. We got up next morning, got our breakfast, and Jim asked me if
+ I was going to the hospital and I told him I would wait till afternoon. I
+ asked him if he was going to drive mules, and he said not a condemned
+ mule, not until the fight was over. There was a good deal of riding
+ around, orderlies, staff officers, etc. Artillery was moving around, and
+ about eight o clock some of our boys who had been on picket all night,
+ came in looking tired and nervous, saying they had been shot at all night,
+ and that the rebels had got artillery and infantry till you couldn't rest,
+ and they would make it mighty warm for us before night. Orders come to
+ each company, that no soldier was to leave camp under any circumstances,
+ to go to town or anywhere. I told Jim if he was going to drive mules, he
+ better be seeing the quartermaster sergeant, but he said he never was much
+ gone on mule driving, anyhow. But he said if he looked as sick as I did he
+ would go to the hospital too quick. I told him there wasn't anything the
+ matter with me. Pretty soon, over to the right, near the river, there was
+ a cannon discharged. It was not long before another went off around to the
+ left, and then a dozen, twenty, a hundred, all along the line. They were
+ rebel cannon, and pretty soon they were answered by our batteries. Then
+ there was a rattling of infantry, and the noise was deafening. I expected
+ at the first fire that our bugler would come out in front of headquarters
+ and blow for heaven's sake, for us to saddle up, but for three hours we
+ loafed around camp and no move was made. It was tiresome. We started to
+ play cards several times, but nobody could remember what was trumps, and
+ we gave that up. Some of our boys would sneak up on to a hill for a few
+ minutes, against orders, and come back and say that they could see the
+ fight, and it was which and tother. Then a few more would sneak off, and
+ after awhile the whole regiment was up on the hill, looking off to the
+ hills and valleys, watching rebel shells strike our earth works and throw
+ up the dust, and watching our shells go over to the woods where the rebels
+ were. Then I found myself hoping our shells were just paralyzing the
+ Johnnies. Presently the ambulances began to come by us, loaded with
+ wounded, and that settled it. When there was no fighting, and I was half
+ sick, and felt under obligations to a Confederate girl for taking care of
+ me, I didn't want any of her friends hurt, but when her friends forgot
+ them-selves, and come to a peaceable place, and began to kill off our
+ boys, friendship ceased, and I wondered why we didn't get orders to saddle
+ up and go in. We were all on the hill watching things, when the colonel,
+ who had been riding off somewhere, came along. We thought he would order
+ us all under arrest for disobeying orders, but he rode up to us, and
+ pointing to a place off to the right a mile or so, where there was a sharp
+ infantry fight, he said, &ldquo;Boys, we shall probably go in right there about
+ 3 p.m., unless the rebels are reinforced,&rdquo; and he rode down to his tent.
+ Well, after about twenty ambulances had gone by us with wounded soldiers,
+ we didn't care how soon we went in there. We watched the infantry and
+ artillery for another hour, as pretty a sight as one often sees. It was so
+ far away we could not see men fall, and it was more like a celebration,
+ until one got near enough to see the dead. Presently the regimental bugle
+ sounded &ldquo;Boots and saddles,&rdquo; and in a minute every man on the hill had
+ rushed down to his tent, even before the notes had died away from the
+ bugle. Nothing was out of place. Every soldier had known that the bugle <i>would</i>
+ sound sooner or later, and we had everything ready. It did not seem five
+ minutes before every company was mounted, in its street, waiting for
+ orders. Jim leaned over towards me and said, &ldquo;Hospital?&rdquo; and I answered,
+ &ldquo;Not if I know myself,&rdquo; and I patted my carbine on the stock. I said to
+ him, &ldquo;Six mule team?&rdquo; and he whispered back, &ldquo;Nary six mule team for the
+ old man.&rdquo; Then the bugle sounded the &ldquo;Assembly,&rdquo; and each company rode up
+ on to the hill and formed in regimental front facing the battle. Every eye
+ was on the place where the colonel had said we would probably &ldquo;go in.&rdquo;
+ There never was a more beautiful sight, and every man in the cavalry
+ regiment looked at it till his eyes ached. Then came an order to dismount
+ and every man was ordered to tighten up his saddle girth as tight as the
+ horse would bear it, and be sure his stirrup straps were too short rather
+ than too long. To a cavalry man these orders mean business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we mounted again, and a few noticed a flag off to the right
+ signaling. The colonel noticed it and coolly gave the order, &ldquo;fours right,
+ march.&rdquo; We went off towards the fighting, then right down by our own
+ cannon and formed in line behind the infantry, that was at work with the
+ enemy, the artillery firing over our heads at the confederates in the
+ woods. The noise was so loud that one could not hear his neighbor speak;
+ but above it all came a buggle note, and glancing to the left, another
+ cavalry regiment, and another, formed on our left. Another bugle note, and
+ to the right another cavalry regiment formed, and for half a mile there
+ was a line of horsemen, deafened by the waiting the command of some man,
+ through a bugle. If the rebels had time to notice those four regiments of
+ cavalry, fresh and ready for a gallop, they must have known that it was a
+ good time to get away. Finally, our artillery ceased firing and it seemed
+ still as death, except for the rattling of infantry in front of us. The
+ rebel artillery had ceased firing also, and a great dust beyond the woods
+ showed that they were getting away. The bugle sounded &ldquo;forward&rdquo; and that
+ line of cavalry started on a walk. The infantry in front ceased firing,
+ and went to the right of us at a double-quick, and the field was clear of
+ our men. While our cavalry was walking, they kept a pretty good line, each
+ man glancing to the right for a guide. As we neared the place where our
+ infantry had been stationed, it was necessary to break up a little to pass
+ dead and wounded without riding over them, and when falling back to keep
+ from hurting a wounded comrade, a look at the line up and down showed that
+ it was almost a mob, with no shape, but after get-ing forty rods, we
+ passed the field where men had fallen, and the order to &ldquo;close up, guide
+ right,&rdquo; was given, and in an instant the line was perfect. Then came the
+ order to trot, and we went a short distance, until the rebels could be
+ plainly seen behind trees, logs, and in line, firing. We halted and fired
+ a few rounds from carbines, and then dropped the carbines, on orders. For
+ a moment nothing was done, when officers ordered every man to draw his
+ revolver, and when the six charges had been fired, after near-ing the
+ enemy, to drop the revolver in the holster, and draw sabers, and every man
+ for himself, but to rally on the colors, at the sound of the bugle, and
+ not to go too far. Talk about being sick, and going to the hospital, or
+ driving mules! Coward as I was, and I knew it, there was something about
+ the air that made me feel that I wouldn't be in the hospital that day for
+ all the money in the world. All idea of being sorry for the enemy, all
+ charity, all hope that the war might close before any more men were
+ killed, was gone. After looking in the upturned faces of our dead and
+ wounded on the field, the more of the enemy that were killed the better.
+ It is thus that war makes men brutal, while in active service. They think
+ of things and do things that they regret immediately after the firing
+ ceases. The next ten minutes was the nearest thing to hell that I ever
+ experienced, and it seemed as though my face must look like that of a
+ fiend. I felt like one. The bugle sounded &ldquo;forward,&rdquo; and then there was an
+ order to trot, and the revolver firing began, with the enemy so near that
+ you could see their countenances, their eyes. Some of them were mounted,
+ others were on foot, some on artillery caissons, and all full of fight. It
+ did not take long to exhaust the revolvers, and then the sabers began to
+ come out, and the horrible word &ldquo;charge,&rdquo; came from a thousand throats,
+ and every soldier yelled like a Comanche Indian, the line spread out like
+ a fan, and every soldier on his own hook. Sabers whacked, horses run,
+ everybody yelled. Men said &ldquo;I surrender,&rdquo; &ldquo;What you jabbing at me for when
+ I ain't fighting no moah,&rdquo; &ldquo;Drop that gun, you Johnnie, and go to the
+ rear.&rdquo; Ones of pain and anguish, and awful sounds that a man ought never
+ to hear but once. The business was all done in ten minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of our men were killed and wounded, and many of theirs were treated
+ the same way. Those who could get away, got, and those we passed without
+ happening to hit them, were prisoners, because the infantry followed and
+ took them back to the rear. Jim and me stayed as near together as
+ possible, and we noticed one young Confederate on a mule. His left arm was
+ hanging limp by his side, and as Jim passed on one side of him and I on
+ the other, he said, as he held up his right hand, &ldquo;I dun got enough, and I
+ surrender.&rdquo; The thing was about over, the bugle having sounded the
+ &ldquo;recall,&rdquo; and we turned and went back with this Confederate. He was as
+ handsome a boy as ever fired a gun, and while he was pale from his
+ shattered left arm, and weak, he said, &ldquo;You gentlemen are all fine riders,
+ sir. You fought as well as Southern men, sir.&rdquo; That was a compliment that
+ Jim and me acknowledged on behalf of the northern army. He couldn't have
+ paid our regiment a higher compliment if he had studied a week. Then he
+ said: &ldquo;I was a fool to be in this fight. I was a prisoner and was only
+ exchanged last week. I might have remained at home on a furlough, but when
+ our army came along yesterday, and the boys said there was going to be a
+ fight, I took my sisters mule, the only animal on the place, and came
+ along, and now I am a cripple.&rdquo; I looked at the mule, and I said to Jim,
+ in a whisper, &ldquo;I hope to die if it isn't the angel's mule. That must be
+ her brother.&rdquo; Jim was going to ask him what his name was, when we neared
+ the place, where our regiment was forming and the surgeon of our regiment
+ came along, and I said, &ldquo;Doc, I wish you would take this young fellow and
+ fix up his arm nice. He is a friend of mine. Take him to our regimental
+ hospital.&rdquo; Then we went back to the regiment, the prisoners were taken
+ away, and after marching around through the woods for an hour we rode back
+ to our camp, and the battle was over. Two or three hours later I went over
+ to the regimental hospital and found the black-eyed confederate with his
+ arm dressed, and he was talking with our boys as though he belonged there.
+ Some one asked how he happened to be there, and the old doctor said he
+ believed he was a relative of one of our officers. Anyway he was going to
+ stay there. I gave him a bunch of sutler cigars, and left him, and an hour
+ later the &ldquo;angel&rdquo; showed up, pale as death, and wanted some one to go with
+ her to the battle held to help find the body of her dead brother. She said
+ he had arrived home from the North the morning before, and had gone into
+ the fight, and when the Confederates came back, defeated, past their
+ plantation, her brother was not among them, and she knew he was dead. I
+ have done a great many things in my life that have given me pleasure, but
+ no one that I remember of that made me quite so happy as I was to escort
+ the girl who had been so kind to me, to the hospital where her brother
+ was. His wound was not serious, and he sat on a box, smoking a cigar,
+ telling the boys the news from Wisconsin. He had just come from there,
+ where he was a prisoner, and he couldn't talk enough about the kindness of
+ the &ldquo;people of the nowth.&rdquo; His sister almost fainted when she found him
+ alive, then hugged him until I was afraid she would disturb his arm, and
+ then she sat by him and heard him tell of his visit to Wisconsin. Before
+ night he was allowed to go home with his sister on parole, and Jim and I
+ were detailed to go and help bury the dead of the regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I am Detailed to Drive a Six-Mule Team&mdash;I am Covered with
+ Red Mud&mdash;I am Sent on an Expedition of Cold-Blooded Murder&mdash;
+ I Make a Dozen ex-Confederate Soldiers Happy by Setting Them
+ Up in Business.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After the battle alluded to in my last chapter, it took us a week or more
+ to get brushed up, the dead buried, and everything ready to go to living
+ again. A battle to a regiment in the field is a good deal like a funeral
+ in a family at home. When a member of a family is sick unto death, all
+ looks dark, and when the sick person dies it seems as though the world
+ could never look bright again. Every time the relatives and friends look
+ at any article belonging to a deceased friend, the agony comes back, and
+ it is quite a while before there is any brightness anywhere, but in time
+ the tear-stained faces become smiling, the lost friend is thought of only
+ occasionally, and the world moves along just the same. So in the army. For
+ a few days the thought of comrades being gone forever, was painful, and no
+ man wanted to ride the horse whose owner had been killed, but within a
+ week the feeling was all gone, and if a horse was a good one he didn't
+ stay in the corral very long on account of some good fellow having been
+ shot off his back. The boys who couldn't remember what was trumps on the
+ day of the battle&mdash;-(and a soldier has got to be greatly interested
+ in something else to forget what is trumps) returned to their
+ card-playing, and no one would know, to look at them, that they had passed
+ through a pretty serious scare, and seen their comrades fall all around.
+ We told stories of our experience in the army and at home, and entertained
+ each other. I couldn't tell much, except what a good shot I was with a
+ shotgun and rifle, and I told some marvelous stories about hitting the
+ bull's eye. It got to be tiresome waiting around for my commission to
+ arrive, and I did not quite enjoy being a commissioned high private.
+ Everybody knew I had been recommended for a commsssion, and they all
+ called me &ldquo;Lieutenant,&rdquo; but all the same I was doing duty as a private.
+ For two or three clays I was detailed to drive mules for the
+ quartermaster, and that was the worst service I ever did perform. It
+ seemed as though the colonel wanted to prepare me for any service that in
+ the nature of things I was liable to be called upon to perform. I kicked
+ some at being detailed to drive a six-mule team, but the colonel said I
+ might see the time when I could save the government a million dol-lars by
+ being able to jump on to a wheel mule and drive a wagon loaded with
+ ammunition, or paymaster's cash, out of danger of being captured by the
+ enemy. So I went to work and learned to gee-haw a six-mule team of the
+ stubbornest mules in the world, hauling bacon, but there was no romance in
+ taking care of six mules that would kick so you had to put the harness on
+ them with a pitchfork, for fear of having your head kicked off. If I ever
+ get a pension it will be for my loss of character and temper in driving
+ those mules. I have been in some dangerous places, but I was never in so
+ dangerous a place, in battle, as I was one day while driving those mules.
+ One of the lead mules got his forward foot over the bridle some way, and I
+ went to fix it, and the team started and &ldquo;straddled&rdquo; me. As soon as I saw
+ that I was between the two lead mules, and that the team had started, I
+ knew my only-safety was in laying down and taking the chances of the three
+ pairs of mules and wagon going straight over me. To attempt to get out
+ would mix them all up, so I fell right down in the mud, which was about a
+ foot deep, and just like soft mortar. As the mules passed on each side of
+ me, every last one of them kicked at me, and I was under the impression
+ that each wheel of the wagon kicked at me, but I escaped everything except
+ the mud, and when I got up on my feet behind the wagon, the quartermaster,
+ who was ahead on horseback, had stopped the team. He called a colored man
+ to drive, and told me I could go back to the regiment. I tried to sneak in
+ the back way, and not see anybody, but when I passed the chaplain's tent a
+ lot of officers, who had been sampling his sanitary stores, come out, and
+ one of them recognized me, and they insisted on my stopping and talking
+ something with them. Honestly, there was not an inch of my clothing but
+ was covered with, red mud, that every soldier remembers who has been
+ through Alabama. They had fun with me for half an hour and then let me go.
+ I have never been able to look at a mule since, without a desire to kill
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had said so much about my marksmanship with a rifle, that one day I was
+ sent for by the colonel. He said he had heard I was a crack shot with the
+ rifle, and I admitted that I was a pretty good shot. He asked me if I
+ could hit a man's eye every time at ten paces. I told him I was almost
+ sure I could. He said he had a duty that must be performed by some man
+ that was an excellent shot, and I might report at once with forty rounds
+ of ammunition. I don't know when I had been any more startled than I was
+ at the colonel's questions, and his manner. Could it be that he had some
+ secret expedition of murder that he wanted to send me on. I had never
+ deliberately aimed at a man's eye, and if there was anybody to be killed I
+ would be no hand to do it in cold blood. It seemed as though I had rather
+ give anything than to kill a man, but that was evidently the business the
+ colonel had in his mind. Was it a lot of prisoners that were to be killed
+ in retaliation for some of our men who had been treated badly by the
+ enemy. I reported shortly, with my carbine and forty cartridges, and the
+ colonel told me to go to a certain place on the bank of the river, a mile
+ away, and report to the chaplain, who would be there to see that
+ everything was done properly. Then when I started off I heard the colonel
+ say to the adjutant that there were about forty to be killed, and while it
+ seemed cruel, it had to be done, and he hoped they would suffer as little
+ as possible. If I could have had my way, I wouldn't have gone a step. I
+ reflected on the pained look on the colonel's face, and wondered why I was
+ picked out for all these sad events, but I thought if the chaplain was
+ there everything would be all right. Arriving at the placed I found the
+ chaplain sitting on a stump, on a big bluff overlooking the river. He
+ sighed as I came up and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Death is always a sad thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that no one appreciated it more than I did, and I sighed also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said he, as he took a chew of navy plug tobacco, &ldquo;when death is
+ necessary, we should make it as painless as possible, I have been studying
+ this matter over a good deal, and trying to figure out how to make the
+ death the least painful to these poor victims, and it has occurred to me
+ that if we place them on the edge of the precipice, and you shoot them
+ through the brain, while at the same time I push them, they will fall down
+ a hundred feet into the river, and if they are not killed instantly by
+ having the brain blown out, they will certainly drown. How does that
+ strike you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought the chaplain was about the most heartless cuss I ever heard talk
+ about killing people, but I said that seemed to me to be the best way, but
+ a cold chill went over me as I thought of shooting anybody through the
+ head and the chaplain pushing him down the cliff into the water. I was
+ just going to ask him what the men had done, when he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, there they come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked, and a lot of colored men were leading about forty old
+ back-number horses and mules, afflicted with glanders and other diseases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are the niggers to be killed?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; said the chaplain. &ldquo;The horses and mules.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was never so relieved in all my life as I was when I found that my
+ excellent marksmanship was to be expended on animals instead of human
+ beings. But I did feel hurt, the idea of a brevet officer, a man qualified
+ to do deeds of daring, being detailed one day to drive mules and the
+ next-to shoot sick horses. But I decided to do whatever I had to do, well,
+ and so preparations were made for the executions. The glandered horses
+ were brought out first, and then the ones with sore backs. Many of them
+ were first-rate horses, their only fault being sores made from the
+ saddles, and as it would take months to cure them up, and as the army was
+ going to move soon, it had been decided to kill them rather than leave
+ them to fall into the enemy's hands, or take them along to be cured on the
+ march. I shot about a dozen glandered horses, that being the largest game
+ I had ever killed, and the bodies fell down into the river. Then there was
+ a mule that was ugly, and it occurred to me I would have some fun with the
+ chaplain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were outside the lines, and quite a number of men had gathered from the
+ plantations, on hearing the firing, to see what was up. I suggested to the
+ chaplain that it was a shame to kill so many good horses, when they might
+ be of use to some of the planters, but he said they were all rebels, and
+ it was not the policy of the government to set them up in business, by
+ giving them horses to use tilling crops. I argued that the men had come
+ home from the confederate army&mdash;this was in 1864&mdash;either
+ discharged for wounds or disability, or paroled prisoners, and they were
+ anxious to go to work, but that they hadn't a dollar, and our army had
+ skinned every horse and mule on their places, and the niggers had gone, so
+ that a horse would be a God-send to them. But the chaplain wouldn't hear
+ to it. The men, who had collected, were mostly too proud to ask for a
+ horse from a Yankee, but I could see that they did not like to see the
+ animals killed. I thought if I could get the chaplain, who had been sent
+ out to the execution as a sort of humane society, to see that the animals
+ were killed easy, to go back to camp and leave me alone with the horses, I
+ could kill them or not, as I chose. They brought out the ugly mule next,
+ and my idea was to shoot the mule through the tip of the ear, while the
+ chaplain stood near with a rail to push it over the bank, and maybe the
+ mule would flax around and kick the chaplain up a tree, or scare him so he
+ would leave. I took deliberate aim at the mule's ear, told the chaplain to
+ push hard with the rail so the corpse would be sure to go over the cliff,
+ and fired. Well, I have never seen such a scene in all my life. The mule
+ seemed to squat down, when the bullet hit the top of his ear, then he
+ brayed so loud that it would raise your hat right off your head, then he
+ jumped into the air and whirled around and kicked in every direction with
+ all four feet at once, fell down and rolled over towards the chaplain, and
+ got up, and seeming to think the chaplain was the author of the misery,
+ started for him, and that good man dodged behind trees until he got a
+ chance to climb up one, which he did, and sat on a limb and shook his fist
+ at the mule and me. He used quite strong language at me for not killing
+ the animal dead. Finally the niggers caught the mule and the chaplain
+ dismounted from the limb, and came to me. I told him my carbine was out of
+ order, and I should have to take it apart and fix it, and that there was
+ no knowing whether it would shoot where I aimed it or not, after it was
+ fixed, and I might have trouble with the rest of the horses. It would take
+ an hour at least to fix the gun. He said he guessed he would go back to
+ camp, and leave me to finish up the slaughter, and that was what I wanted.
+ The colored men were anxious to go back too, so I let them tie the horses
+ to trees, and all go back except one, whom I knew. After they had all gone
+ I went up to the dozen southern men who had been watching the proceedings,
+ and asked one who was called colonel by the rest, if he didn't think it
+ was wrong to kill the horses when by a little care they could be of much
+ use in tilling crops. &ldquo;Well, sah,&rdquo; said he with dignity. &ldquo;If it is not
+ disloyalty, sah, for a southern gentleman to criticize anything that a
+ yankee does, I should say, sah, that it was a d&mdash;&mdash;d shame, sah,
+ to steal our horses, and after using them up, sah, kill them in cold
+ blood, sah. Each one of those animals sah, would be a gold mine, sah, at
+ this time, to us who have come from the wah, sah, destitute, with nothing
+ but our bare hands to make a crop, to keep our families from want, sah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other gentlemen nodded at what the colonel had said, as though that
+ was about their sentiments. I told him that I felt about that way myself,
+ but there was an objection. If I gave the horses away, for use on the
+ plantations, and the animals should be used hereafter in the confederate
+ army, it would not only be wrong, but I would be liable to be dismissed
+ from the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel said he should want to be dismissed from the Yankee army if he
+ was in it, but I might feel different about it. But he said he would
+ pledge me his word as a Southern gentleman, that if the animals could be
+ lent to them, they should never be used for war purposes. He said he was
+ poor, and his friends there were poor, but they would not take a horse as
+ a gift from a stranger, but if I would lend them the horses for a year,
+ they would use them, and return them to the proper officer a year hence,
+ if the army was yet in existence, or they would take them in exchange for
+ horses that had previously been stolen from them by our army. He said
+ there was not a gentleman present but had lost from two to a dozen horses
+ since the army had been in their vicinity. I admired the dignity and
+ honesty of the old gentleman, and I knew mighty well that we had picked up
+ every horse we could find, and I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, here are about thirty horses I have been ordered to kill. If I
+ do not kill them I take a certain responsibility. I feel under obligations
+ to many Southern people for courtesies, and I feel that the nursing I
+ received during a recent sickness, from one of your Southern ladies, about
+ the same as saved my life. I believe the war is very near over, and that
+ neither you nor our men will have occasion for much more active service.
+ You have come home to your desolate plantations, and found everything
+ gone. This is the fate of war, but it is unpleasant all the same. If you
+ can use these animals for your work, in raising crops, you may take them
+ in welcome, and if there is any cussing, I will stand it. My advice would
+ be to take them to some isolated place on your plantation, and keep them
+ out of sight for a time. Our army will move within a week, and perhaps
+ never come back here. The animals are branded 'U. S.' which will always
+ remain. If the horses are found in your possession, later, you may have to
+ say that they were given to you by an agent of the quartermaster. If they
+ are taken from you, grin and bear it. If you are permitted to keep them,
+ and they do you any good, I shall be very glad. If I get hauled over the
+ coals for giving aid and comfort to the enemy, I will lie out of it some
+ way, or stand my punishment like a little man. The horses are yours, as
+ far as I am concerned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sah, you are a perfect gentleman, sah,&rdquo; said the colonel, as he
+ took my hand and shook it cordially. &ldquo;And I should be proud to entertain
+ you at my place, sah. We have got little left, sah, but you are welcome to
+ our home at any time. I am an old man, with a bullet in my leg. Two of my
+ boys are dead, in Virginia, sah, and I have one boy who is a prisoner at
+ the north. If he comes home alive, we will be able to make a living and
+ have a home again. The war has been a terrible blow to us all, sah. I
+ reckon both sides, sah, have got about enough, and both sides have made
+ cussed, fools of themselves. When this affair is settled, sah, the north
+ and south will be better friends than ever, sah. I wish you a long life,
+ sah.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other gentlemen expressed thanks, and they picked out two or three
+ horses apiece and led them away, it seemed to me as happy a lot of
+ gentlemen as I ever saw. I called the colored man, and we started for
+ camp. For a five dollar bill, and a promise to always take a deep interest
+ in the colored man's welfare, I got his promise that he would never tell
+ anybody about my giving the horses away, and for nearly a year he kept his
+ promise. I went back to headquarters and reported that the animals had
+ been disposed of, and that evening I was invited to set into a poker game
+ with some of the officers, and when we got up I had won over a hundred
+ dollars. I looked upon the streak of luck as a premium for my kindness to
+ the gentlemen who took the horses, but some of the officers seemed to have
+ a suspicion that I concealed cards up my sleeve. It is thus that the best
+ of us are misunderstood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Demonstrate that Gambling Does Not Pay&mdash;I Cause a General
+ Stampede&mdash;Christmas in the Pine Woods of Alabama&mdash;Millions
+ of Dollars, but no Christmas Dinner.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I went away from the party of officers, where we had been playing
+ draw-poker, with a hundred dollars in my pocket, which I had won from men
+ who thought they were pretty good poker players, I felt as though I owned
+ the earth. I had my hand in my pocket, hold of the roll of greenbacks, and
+ in that way constantly realized that I was no common pauper. I had never
+ thought that I was an expert at cards, but this triumph convinced me that
+ there was more money to be made playing poker than in any other way. I
+ figured up in my mind that if I could win a hundred dollars a night, and
+ only played five nights a week, I could lay up two thousand dollars a
+ month. To keep it up a year would make me rich, and if the war lasted a
+ couple of years I could go home with money enough to buy out the best
+ newspaper in Wisconsin. It is wonderful what a train of thought a young
+ man's first success in gambling, or speculation, brings to him. I went to
+ bed with my hundred dollars buttoned inside my flannel shirt, and dreamed
+ all night about holding four aces, full hands, and three of a kind. All
+ that night, in my sleep, I never failed to &ldquo;fill&rdquo; when I drew to a hand. I
+ made up my mind to break every officer in the regiment, at poker, and then
+ turn my attention to other regiments, and win all the money the paymaster
+ should bring to the brigade. I got up in the morning with a headache, and
+ thought how long it would be before night, when we could play poker again,
+ and I wondered why we couldn't play during the day, as there was nothing
+ else going on. It got rumored around the regiment that I had cleaned the
+ officers out at poker the night before, and the boys seemed glad that a
+ private had made them pay attention. I had not yet got my commsssion, and
+ so any victory I might achieve was considered a victory for a private
+ soldier. Several of the boys congratulated me. The nearest I ever come to
+ quarreling with my old partner, Jim, was over this poker business. I
+ showed him my roll, and told him how I had cleaned the officers out, and
+ instead of feeling good over it, Jim said I was a confounded fool. I tried
+ to argue the matter with Jim, but he couldn't be convinced, and insisted
+ that they had made a fool of me, and had let me win on purpose, and that
+ they would win it all back, and all I had besides. He said I had better
+ let the chaplain take the hundred dollars to keep for me, and stay away
+ from that poker game, and I would be a hundred ahead, but I didn't want
+ any second-class chaplain to be a guardian over me, and I told Jim I was
+ of age, and could take care of myself. Jim said he thought I had some
+ sense before I was commsssioned, but it had spoiled me. He said in less
+ than a week I would be borrowing money of him. I knew better, and went
+ around camp with my thumbs stuck in my armholes, and felt big. It was an
+ awful long day, but I put in the time thinking how I would draw cards, and
+ bet judiciously, and finally night came, and I went over to the major's
+ tent, where the officers usually congregated. I was early, and had to wait
+ half an hour before the crowd showed up. As they came in each had
+ something to say to me. &ldquo;Here's the man who walked off with our wealth
+ last night,&rdquo; said one. &ldquo;Here's our victim,&rdquo; said another. &ldquo;We will send
+ him to his tent tonight without a dollar.&rdquo; They chaffed me a good deal,
+ but I made up my mind that I could play as well as they could, and some of
+ them were old fellows that had played poker before I was born. Well, we
+ went to work, and the first hand I got I lost ten dollars. It was the
+ history of all smart Aleck's, and there is no use of going into details.
+ In less than an hour they had won the hundred dollars, and fifty that I
+ had sewed inside my shirt to keep for a rainy day, and they had joked me
+ every time I bet until I was exasperated to such an extent that I could
+ have killed them. Winning or losing money with them was a mere pastime,
+ and they seemed to enjoy losing about as much as winning. I was too proud,
+ or too big a fool to leave the game when I had lost all I had, and I
+ borrowed a little of each of them, and lost it, and then I said I was
+ tired and I guessed I would go to bed, and I went out, dizzy and sick at
+ heart, and the officers laughed so I could hear them clear to my tent. On
+ the way to my tent, and as I walked around for half an hour before going
+ there, I thought over what a fool I was, how I had forgotten all the good
+ advice ever given me by my friends. Knowing that I was not intended by
+ nature for a gambler, I had gone in with my eyes open, made a temporary
+ success, got the big head, as all boys do, and gone back and laid down my
+ bundle, and become the laughing stock of the whole crowd. I figured up
+ that I was just an even hundred dollars out of pocket, and decided that I
+ would never try to get it back. I would simply swear off gambling right
+ there, forget that I knew one card from another, pay up my gambling debts
+ when I got my first pay, and never touch a card again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the wisest conclusion that I ever come to. After I had walked
+ around until my head cleared off a little, I went in the tent sly and
+ still, to go to bed without letting Jim hear me. I was ashamed, and didn't
+ want to talk. I heard Jim roll over on his bunk, and he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bet ten dollars, pard, that you lost all you had.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jim, I won't bet with you. I have sworn off betting intirely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help yourself,&rdquo; said Jim, as he reached over his greasy old pocketbook to
+ me. &ldquo;Take all you want, now that you have come to your senses. But you
+ must admit that what I said about your being a fool, was true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and an idiot, and an ass,&rdquo; I said, as I handed back Jim's money.
+ &ldquo;But that settles it. I will never gamble another cent's worth as long as
+ I live, and if I see a friend of mine gambling, I will try and break him
+ of the habit. There is nothing in it, and I went to sleep, and didn't
+ dream any more about winning all the money in camp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days before Christmas our cavalry, consisting of a full brigade,
+ started on a raid, or a march through the enemy's country, and as I could
+ not act as an officer very well, before my commission arrived, and as the
+ colonel seemed to hate to see me in the ranks when I was looked upon as an
+ officer, he sent me to brigade headquarters on a detail to carry the
+ brigade colors. The brigade colors consisted of a blue guidon, on a pole.
+ The butt end of the pole, or staff, was inserted in a socket of leather
+ fastened to my stirrup, and I held on to the staff with my right hand when
+ on the march, guiding my horse with my left hand, When the command halted
+ the colors were planted in the ground in front of the place which the
+ brigade commander had selected. On the march I rode right behind the
+ brigade commander and his staff, with the body guard to protect the
+ precious colors. I was glad of this position, because it took me among
+ high officials, and if there was anything I doted, on it was high
+ officers. The colonel had told me that I must be on my good behavior, and
+ salute the officers of the staff, whenever they came near me. He said the
+ brigade commander was a strict disciplinarian, and wouldn't put up with
+ any monkey business. The first hour of my service as color bearer came
+ near breaking up the brigade. I was perhaps forty feet behind the brigade
+ commander and his staff, riding as stiff as though I was a part of the
+ horse, and feeling as proud as though I owned the army. Suddenly the
+ colonel and staff turned out of the road, and faced to the rear, and
+ started to ride back to one of the regiments in the rear. I saw them
+ coming, and felt that I must salute them. How to do it was a puzzle to me.
+ If I saluted with my left hand, it would be wrong, besides I would have to
+ drop the reins, and my horse might start to run, as he was prancing and
+ putting on as much style as I was. If I saluted with my right hand, I
+ should have to let go the flag staff. The salute must be sudden, so I
+ could grasp the staff very quick, before it toppled over. It took a great
+ head to decide what to do, and I had to decide quick. Just as the brigade
+ commander got opposite me I let go the flag stair, brought my right hand
+ quickly to the right eye, as nice a salute as a man ever saw, and returned
+ it to grab the flag stall. But it was too late. As soon as my right hand
+ let go of the staff, it fell over and the gilt dart on the end of the
+ staff struck the general's horse in the flank, he jumped sideways against
+ the adjutant-general's horse, and his horse fell over the brigade
+ surgeon's horse, the general's horse run under a tree, and brushed the
+ general off, and the whole staff was wild trying to hold their horses, and
+ jumping to catch the general's horse, and pick the general off the ground.
+ In the meantime my horse had got frightened at the staff and flag that was
+ dragging on the ground, with one end in the socket in the stirrup, the
+ pole tickling him in the ribs, and he began to dance around, and whirl,
+ and knock members of the color-guard off their horses, and they stampeded
+ to the woods leaving me in the road, on a frightened horse, whirliing
+ around, unmanageable, the start striking trees and horses, until the staff
+ was broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regiment in the rear of us saw the commotion, saw the general
+ dismounted, and the colors on the ground, and a general stampede in front,
+ and, thinking the general and staff had been ambushed by the rebels, and
+ many killed, the colonel ordered his men forward on a charge, and, in less
+ time than it takes to write it, the woods were full of charging soldiers,
+ looking for an imaginary enemy, a surgeon had opened up a lot of remedies,
+ and all was confusion, and I was the innocent cause of it all. I had seen
+ my mistake as soon as the flag staff knocked the general off his horse,
+ and when I dismounted and picked up the flag, and the pieces of the staff,
+ and found myself surrounded by excited troops, I wondered if the general
+ would pull his revolver and shoot me himself, or order some of the
+ soldiers to kill me. For choice I had rather have been killed by a volley
+ from a platoon of soldiers, but I recognized the fact that the general had
+ a perfect right to kill me. In fact I wanted him to shoot me. I was
+ trimming the limbs off a sapling for a makeshift flag staff, when I saw
+ the crowd open, and the general walked towards me. His face was a trifle
+ pale, except where the red clay from the road covered it, and I felt that
+ the next moment or two would decide in what manner I was to meet my doom.
+ I remembered what the colonel had told me, about the general being a
+ strict disciplinarian, and wondered if it wouldn't help matters if I
+ should fall on my knees and say a little prayer, or ask him to spare my
+ life. I wondered if I would be justified in drawing my revolver and trying
+ to get the drop on the general. But I had no time to think it over, for he
+ come right up to me, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, my young friend, for the trouble and annoyance I have
+ caused you. I should have known better than to ride so near you, and
+ frighten your horse, when you had only one hand to guide the animal. Are
+ you hurt? No; well, I am very glad. Ah, the flag staff is broken! Let me
+ help you tack the flag on the sapling. Orderly, bring me some nails. Let
+ me whittle the bark off the sapling, so it will not hurt your hands. When
+ we get into camp tonight, and the wagons come up, I will see that you have
+ another staff. There, don't feel bad about it. There is no damage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bless his soul! I could, have hugged him for his kindness. When he came
+ towards me, I was mad and desperate, and when he spoke kind words to me,
+ my chin trembled, and I felt like a baby. He stopped the brigade for half
+ an hour, to help fix up my flag, and all the time talked so kindly to me,
+ that when the thing was fixed, I felt remorse of conscience, and said:
+ &ldquo;General, I am entirely to blame myself. I tried to perform the impossible
+ feat of saluting you and holding the colors at the same time, which I am
+ satisfied now cannot be done successfully. Lay it all to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew it,&rdquo; said the good old general, &ldquo;and I was going to tell you that
+ you are not expected to salute anybody when you have the colors. You are a
+ part of the flag, then. You will learn it all by and by,&rdquo; and he mounted
+ his horse and rode away about his business, as cool as though nothing had
+ happened, and left me feeling that he was the best man on earth. Further
+ acquaintance with the old man taught me that he was one of nature's
+ noblemen. He was an Illinois farmer, who had enlisted as a private, and
+ had in time become colonel of his regiment, and had been placed in command
+ of this brigade. Every evening he would take an axe and cut up fire-wood
+ enough for headquarters, and he was not above cleaning off his horse if
+ his servant was sick, or did not do it to suit, and frequently I have seen
+ him greasing his own boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days out, and we were in the pine woods of Alabama, with no habitation
+ within ten miles. After a day's march we went into camp in the woods, and
+ it was the afternoon before Christmas. The young pines, growing among the
+ larger ones, were just such little trees as were used at home for
+ Christmas trees, and within an hour after getting the camp made, every man
+ thought of Christmas at home. The boys went off into the woods and got
+ holly, and mistletoe, and every pup tent of the whole brigade was
+ decorated, and they hung nose bags, grain sacks, army socks and pants on
+ the trees. Around the fires stakes had been driven to hang clothes on to
+ dry, and as night came and the pitch pine fires blazed up to the tops of
+ the great pines, it actually looked like Christmas, though there was not a
+ Christmas present anywhere. After supper the brigade band began to play
+ patriotic airs, with occasionally an old fashioned tune, like &ldquo;Old
+ Hundred,&rdquo; the woods rung with music from the boys who could sing, and
+ everybody was as happy as I ever saw a crowd of people, and when it came
+ time to retire the band played &ldquo;Home, Sweet Home,&rdquo; and three thousand
+ rough soldiers went to bed with tears in their eyes, and every man dreamed
+ of the dear ones at home, and many prayed that the home ones might be
+ happy, and in the morning they all got up, stripped the empty Christmas
+ stockings off the evergreen trees, put them on, and went on down the red
+ road, and at noon the army entered Montgomery, Alabama, the first capital
+ of the confederate states, took possession of the capital building in
+ which were millions of dollars of confederate money and bonds. Every
+ soldier filled his pockets and saddle bags with bonds and bills of large
+ denominations. It was a poor soldier that could not count up his half a
+ million dollars, but with all the money no man could buy a Christmas
+ dinner. A dollar in greenbacks would buy more than all of the wagon loads
+ of confederate currency captured that day. And yet the people of
+ Montgomery looked upon the arrival of the Yankees much as they would the
+ arrival of a pestilence. However, it was not many days before a better
+ understanding was arrived at, and Yankee blue and Confederate gray got
+ mixed up, and acquaintances were made that ripened into mutual respect and
+ in some cases love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Go on a Scouting Expedition&mdash;My Horse Dies of Poison&mdash;
+ I Turn Horse-Thief&mdash;I Capture a Church, Congregation, and
+ Ministers, but I Spare the Communion Wine.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, the last chapter left me with a million dollars, more or less,
+ of confederate money in my possession, and yet I had not enough to buy a
+ square meal. I think there was no one thing that caused, the people of the
+ confederate states, outside of their army, to realize the hopelessness of
+ their cause, along in '64, as much as the relative value of confederate
+ money and greenbacks. Of course the confederate soldiers, poor fellows,
+ realized the difference some, when they could get hold of greenbacks, but
+ the people of the south who did not have rations furnished them, and who
+ had to skirmish around and buy something to live upon, early learned that
+ a greenback was worth &ldquo;two in the bush,&rdquo; as it were. No community in the
+ south was more loyal to the confederacy than the people of Montgomery,
+ Alabama. They tried to use confederate currency as long as there was any
+ hope, and they tried hard to despise the greenbacks; but when it got so
+ that a market basket full of their own currency was looked upon with
+ suspicion by their own dealers in eatables, and a greenback was sought
+ after by the dealer, and its possessor was greeted with a smile while the
+ overloaded possessor of confederate currency was frowned upon, more in
+ sorrow than in anger, however, a wild desire took possession of the people
+ to get hold of the hated greenbacks; and a soldier or army follower who
+ had a good supply of greenbacks was met more than half way in
+ reconciliation; and little jobs were put up to get the money that made
+ many ashamed, but they had to have greenbacks. Many would have given their
+ lives if confederate money could have been as good as the money of the
+ invaders, but it was not and never could be, and it was not an hour after
+ the enemy was in Montgomery before people who had been loyal to the south
+ up to that hour and believed in its currency, went back on it completely,
+ and they cherished the greenback and hugged it to their bosoms like an old
+ friend. They had rather had gold, but good green paper would buy so much
+ more than any currency they had known for years, that they snatched it
+ greedily. And many of them enjoyed the first real respect for the Union
+ that they had had for four years, when they met the well-fed and
+ well-clothed Union soldiers, who did not seem as bad as they had been
+ painted, the poorest one of which had more money in his pockets than the
+ richest citizen of supposed wealth. The people seemed surprised to meet
+ well-dressed private soldiers who could converse on any subject, and who
+ seemed capable of doing any kind of business. Fires broke out in many
+ places in the city, and Union soldiers went to work with the primitive
+ fire apparatus at hand and put out the fires. Locomotives had been thrown
+ from the track of the railroad in an attempt to destroy them, and private
+ soldiers were detailed to put the locomotives together and run them, which
+ they did, to the surprise of the people. An officer would take charge of a
+ quantity of captured property, and he would detail the first half-dozen
+ soldiers he met to go and make out an invoice of the property, and the
+ boys would do it as well as the oldest southern merchant. A planter that
+ could not speak anything but French would come to the captain, of a
+ company to complain of something, and the captain after vainly trying to
+ understand the man, would turn to some soldier in his company and say,
+ &ldquo;Here Frenchy, talk to this man, and see what he wants,&rdquo; and the soldier
+ would address the planter in French, politely, and in a moment the
+ difficulty would be settled, and the planter would go away bowing and
+ smiling. Any language could be spoken by the soldiers, and any business
+ that ever was transacted could be done by them. A soldier printer visited
+ the office of a city paper, and in a conversation with the editor informed
+ him that there were editors enough in his regiment to edit the New York <i>Herald</i>.
+ At first the better class of citizens, the old fathers in Israel, of the
+ confederacy, stood aloof from the new soldiers in blue, expecting them to
+ be insolent, as conquerors are sometimes supposed to be; but soon they saw
+ that the boys were as mild a mannered and friendly and jolly a lot as they
+ ever saw, not the least inclined to gloat over their fallen enemy, and at
+ times acting as though they were sorry to make any trouble; and it was not
+ long before boys in blue and citizens in gray were playing billiards
+ together, with old gentlemen keeping count for them, old fellows, who a
+ week before would have been insulted if any one had told them they would
+ ever speak to a Yankee soldier. The second day the southern ladies, who
+ had kept indoors, came out and promenaded the beautiful streets, and
+ seemed to enjoy the sight of the bright uniforms, and before night
+ acquaintances had been made, and it did not cause any remark to see Union
+ officers and soldiers waiting with ladies, talking with animation, and
+ laughing pleasantly. It almost seemed, as though the war was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about this time that I stole my first horse. I had ridden horses
+ that had been &ldquo;captured&rdquo; from the enemy, in fair fights, and that had been
+ accumulated in divers ways by the quartermaster, and issued to the men,
+ but I never deliberately stole a horse. Two or three companies of my
+ regiment had gone off on a scout, to be gone a couple of days, leaving the
+ command at Montgomery, and one day we were encamped on an old abandoned
+ field, taking dinner. The horses and mules were grazing near us, and there
+ was no indication that any epidemic was about to break out. We were about
+ sixty miles from Montgomery, and were cooking our last meal, expecting to
+ make a forced march and be back before morning. I had got the midday meal
+ for Jim and myself cooked, the bacon, sweet potatoes, coffee and so forth,
+ and spread upon a horse blanket on the ground, and we were just about to
+ sit down to eat, when a mule that had been browsing near us, and snooping
+ into our affairs, attracted our attention. All of a sudden the animal
+ became rigid, and stood up as stiff as possible, then its muscles relaxed,
+ and it became limber, and whirled around and brayed, backed up towards us,
+ and as we rushed away to keep from being kicked, the mule fell over in a
+ fit directly on our beautifully cooked dinner, rolled over on the bacon
+ and potatoes and coffee, and trembled and brayed, and died right there. I
+ looked at Jim and Jim looked at me. &ldquo;Well, condam a mule, anyway,&rdquo; said
+ Jim. &ldquo;That animal has been ready to die for two hours, and just to show
+ its cussedness, it waited until we had our dinner cooked, the last morsel
+ we had, and then it fell in a fit, and expired on our dining table.&rdquo; I
+ made some remark not complimentary to the mule as a member of society and
+ we went to the corpse and pulled it around to see if we couldn't save a
+ mouthful or two that could be eaten. We could not, as everything was
+ crushed into the ground. I suggested that we cut a steak out of the mule,
+ and broil it, but Jim said he was not going to be a cannibal, if he knew
+ his own heart. While we were looking at the remains of our meal, my horse,
+ the rebel horse that I had rode so many months, and loved so, which was
+ hitched near, lay down, began to groan and kick, and in two minutes he was
+ dead. Then Jim's horse went through the same performance and died, and by
+ that time there was a commotion all around camp, horses and mules dying
+ suddenly, until within half an hour there were only a dozen animals alive,
+ and forty cavalrymen, at least, were horseless. The camp looked like a
+ battle field. Nobody knew what was the matter of the animals, until an old
+ negro, who lived near, came out and said, &ldquo;You uns ought to know better
+ than to let you horses eat dat sneeze weed. Dat is poison. Kills animals,
+ just like rat poison.&rdquo; And then he showed us a weed, with a square stem,
+ that grew there, and which was called sneeze weed. He said native animals
+ would not touch it, but strange animals eat it because it was nice and
+ green. Well, we were in a fix. The men were called together, and the major
+ told them there was nothing to do but to take their saddles and bridles on
+ their backs and walk to Montgomery, unless they could steal a horse. He
+ advised us to scatter into parties of two or three, enough to protect
+ ourselves from possible attack, go on cross roads, and to plantations,
+ forage for something to eat, and take the first horse or mule we could
+ find, and report to Montgomery as soon as possible. Jim and I, of course,
+ decided to stand by each, other, and after the men who had not lost their
+ horses, had rode away, the forty dismounted men shouldered their saddles,
+ and started in different directions, seeking some other men's horses. I
+ never had realized that a cavalry saddle was so heavy, before. Mine seemed
+ to weigh a ton. We struck a cross road, and followed it for two or three
+ miles, when I called a council of war, with Jim. I told him that it was
+ all foolishness to lug those heavy saddles all over the Southern
+ Confederacy. If we succeeded in stealing horses, we could probably steal
+ saddles, also, or if not we could get a sheepskin. I told Jim I would
+ receipt to him for his saddle, and then I would leave them in a fence
+ corner, and if we ever got back to the regiment I would report the saddle
+ lost in action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jim said I had a great head, and he consented, and we left our saddles and
+ moved on. Jim said that now we had only a bridle and a pair of spurs, we
+ were more like regularly ordained horse-thieves. He said the most
+ successful horse-thief he ever knew in Wisconsin never had anything but a
+ halter as his stock in trade. He would go out with a halter, with a rope
+ on the end, pick up a horse, put the rope in the horse's mouth, and ride
+ away, and nobody could catch him. I asked Jim if he didn't feel
+ humiliated, a loyal soldier, to class himself with horse-thieves. He said
+ when he enlisted he made up his mind to do nothing but shoot rebels
+ through the heart or the left lung. It was his idea to be a sharpshooter,
+ and aim at the button on the left breast of the enemy, but when he found
+ that lots of the rebels didn't have any buttons on their coats and that he
+ might shoot all day at a single rebel and not hit him, and that shooting
+ into them in flocks didn't seem to diminish the enemy the least bit, he
+ had made up his mind to turn his hand to anything; and if the rebellion
+ could be put down easier by his stealing horses at thirteen dollars a
+ month, he would do it if ordered. He said we were only putting in time,
+ promenading around, and we should get our salary all the same. And so we
+ wandered on, talking the thing over. When we came to a plantation we would
+ walk all around it, and examine the woods and swamps adjacent, because the
+ people of the South had learned that a horse or a mule was not safe
+ anywhere out of the most impenetrable swamp. It was dark when Jim and I
+ decided to camp for the night, and we went into a deserted cotton gin and
+ prepared for a sleep. It was almost dark, and Jim said he had just seen a
+ chicken, near a cabin, fly up in a peach tree to roost, and he was going
+ to have the chicken as soon as it was dark. I laid down on some refuse
+ cotton, and Jim went out after the chicken. I had fallen asleep when Jim
+ returned, and he had the chicken, and a skillet, and a couple of canteens
+ of water. I crawled out of my nest and built a fire, while Jim dressed the
+ chicken, and got the water to boiling, and the chicken was put in. For
+ three hours we boiled the chicken, but each hour made it tougher. I told
+ Jim he might be a success as a horse-thief, but when it come to stealing
+ tender poultry he was a lamentable failure, but he said it was the only
+ hen on the place, and if I didn't want to eat it I could retire to my
+ couch and he would set up with the hen. I was so hungry, and the smell of
+ the boiling hen was so Savory, that I remained awake, and at about
+ midnight Jim announced that he had succeeded in prying off a piece of the
+ breast, so we speared the hen out of the water, laid it on the frame of a
+ grindstone in the gin-house, and sat down to the festive board. &ldquo;Will you
+ have the light or the dark meat,&rdquo; asked Jim, with a politeness that would
+ have done credit to a dancing-master. I told, him I preferred the dark
+ meat, so he took hold of one leg and I the other, and we pulled the hen
+ apart. The hen seemed to be copper-rivetted, for when I got a chunk of it
+ down, and it chinked up a vacant place in the stomach, it did seem as
+ though there was nothing like hen to save life. We eat sparingly that
+ night, because we were weak, and the hen was strong, and we laid down and
+ slept peacefully, and awoke in the morning hungry. When the hen became
+ cold, in the morning it <i>was</i> tough. &ldquo;Will you have some of the cold
+ chicken,&rdquo; said Jim, and I told him I would try a little. It was better
+ than India rubber, and we made a breakfast and started on. It was Sunday.
+ As we came out to the main road, we saw people dressed up, that is, with
+ clean shirts. As ten o clock approached we could see colored people and
+ white, wending their way to a little church in the pine woods. We kept out
+ of sight, and waited, several parties passed us on horseback, some in
+ carriages, and many on foot. Presently three soldiers of our scattered
+ party came along carrying saddles, and we called them into the woods,
+ where we were. I unfolded to them my scheme, which was to surround that
+ church, hold the worshippers as prisoners inside, while we stole the
+ horses that would be hitched to the fence. Jim kicked on it. He said he
+ had rather walk than to interfere with people who were enjoying their
+ religion. He said he was never very pious himself, but his parents were,
+ and he should always hate himself if he helped to raid that church. The
+ other fellows were for going for the horses. Pretty soon four more of our
+ boys came along, and we called them in. They had got on to the church
+ services, and had their eyes on the horses. That made nine of us, and as
+ we were armed, we believed we could capture those old men and women and
+ negroes, and get the horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being a brevet officer I was placed in command of the party, and a plan
+ was agreed upon. We were to scatter and surround the church, and ask the
+ people outside to step inside, and then lock the door, and place a guard
+ on three sides of the little old church where there were windows, but not
+ to fire a gun unless attacked, and not to speak disrespectfully to any
+ person. If there was any argument with anybody, I was to do the talking.
+ We decided to take about fifteen horses, if there were that number there,
+ because we would be sure to find some of our scattered boys dismounted
+ before we got far toward Montgomery, and it was a good idea to take horses
+ when we had a chance. Well, it was a job I did not like, but what was a
+ fellow to do. We were sixty miles from headquarters, on foot and out of
+ meat. I had never been in a church row before. It seemed as though
+ religious worshippers ought to be exempt from war, with its wide
+ desolation. But business was business. We surrounded the church, walking
+ up quietly from different directions, and as we closed up on the sacred
+ edifice half a dozen men, white and colored, were standing in front, and
+ two men were talking over a horse trade. The minister was expounding the
+ gospel, talking loud, and all else was still. We invited the outsiders to
+ go in, which they did with some reluctance, the door was fastened on the
+ outside, guards were placed, and the preaching stopped. The minister had
+ been informed that the yankees had captured the place. There were only two
+ sides of the church with windows, so two guards were sufficient, and the
+ rest of us went to work skinning the harnesses off the horses. A window
+ was raised and an old man stuck his head out and said, as one of the boys
+ was mounting an old mare belonging to him, &ldquo;I forbid you touching that
+ mare.&rdquo; A carbine was pointed at the window, and the old man drew in his
+ head, and the window was slammed down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/287.jpg" alt="I Forbid You Touching That Mare 287 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ We had got sixteen pretty good horses, when a window on the other side
+ opened, and the minister's head was put out, and he said, &ldquo;In the name of
+ the church I command you to desist.&rdquo; He looked so fierce that Jim, who was
+ on guard on that side, and who had objected to the scheme on account of
+ its being a church, cocked his carbine and pointed it at the minister and
+ said, &ldquo;gol darn you, dry up!&rdquo; He dried up, the window closed and except
+ for the heads at the windows, and faces looking very mad, all was quit.
+ When we had got the horses strung out, and the men were mounted, I looked
+ in a carriage, accidentally, and saw a basket, covered over with a paper.
+ The paper was a religious one, published at Savannah, and being a
+ newspaper man, I looked at the leading editorial, which was headed, &ldquo;The
+ Lord will provide.&rdquo; I never took much stock in regular stereotyped
+ editorials, but when I turned my eye from the editorial to the basket, I
+ realized than an editorial in a religious newspaper, was liable to contain
+ much truth, for the basket was filled with as fine a lunch as a man ever
+ saw. It seemed that the people came quite a long distance to church, and
+ brought their dinner, remaining to the afternoon services. O, but I was
+ hungry. I looked in several other carriages, and found baskets in each.
+ Every man in my party was as hungry as a she wolf, and I knew they would
+ not leave a mouthful if they once got to going on the lunches, and as it
+ wasn't the policy of my government to take the bread from the mouths of
+ Sunday-school children, I decided to divide the lunches. So I appointed
+ Jim and an Irishman to help me, and we opened all the baskets and took
+ half. Jim came to one basket with two loaves of bread and two bottles of
+ wine, and he stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said, &ldquo;Pard, that lay-out in the big basket, with the silver pitcher,
+ is for the communion. I'm a bold buccaneer of the Spanish main, but I'll
+ be cussed if I touch that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irishman said no power on earth could get him to touch it, and he
+ crossed himself reverently, and we left the communion lay-out, and passed
+ the half we had taken from the baskets around among the boys, and they eat
+ as though a special providence had provided them with appetites and means
+ of satisfying them. After enjoying the meal the boys said we ought to
+ return thanks for the good things the pious people had provided for us, so
+ I went to the door of the church, opened it, and faced the congregation.
+ There were old and young, and some of them looked mad, and I didn't blame
+ them. In a few well chosen remarks I addressed the minister, telling him I
+ regretted the circumstances, but it was necessary to do what we had done.
+ We had tried to do it as pleasantly as possible, but no doubt it seemed
+ hard to them. I said we had got to go to Montgomery, and that if any of
+ them who had lost their horses, would come there within a few days, I had
+ no doubt the proper authorities would return them their horses, but that
+ they must stand the loss of a half of their lunch, as we had divided it up
+ as square as we knew how. One young Confederate soldier, with an empty
+ sleeve, who had come to church with his mother, and who could, no doubt,
+ realize the situation better than the rest, said, &ldquo;That is all right, Mr.
+ Yankee. I would do the same thing, under the circumstances, if I was in
+ your country, horseless and hungry.&rdquo; There were some murmurs of
+ dissatisfaction, some smiled at the situation, and we mounted and rode
+ away. Before we were out of sight the whole congregation was out of the
+ church, under the pine trees, taking an account of stock, or lost stock,
+ and no doubt saying hard things of the Yankees. We traveled all day and
+ nearly all night, picked up some of our dismounted men, and arrived in
+ Montgomery the next day before noon. In a few days my one-armed
+ confederate soldier, who was home from the army in Virginia, having been
+ discharged for disability, came to Montgomery with the people who had lost
+ their horses at the church, and I had the satisfaction of seeing many of
+ them either receive their animals back, or vouchers from the
+ quartermaster, by which they got pay from the government for the animals.
+ And I entertained the one-armed confederate for two days, and we became
+ great friends. Two years ago I met him in Georgia, grown gray, and found
+ him connected with a Georgia railroad, and we had a great laugh over my
+ capture of the congregation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Spotted Horse&mdash;His Shameful Behaviour at a Funeral&mdash;I
+ was Tempted to Have My Horse Shot&mdash;But I Traded Him to the
+ Chaplain.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to me that my luck was the worst of any man's in the army, and I
+ was constantly getting into situations that caused, my conduct to be
+ talked about. When we raided the church, mentioned last week, for horses,
+ I saw a nice white horse with red spots on him, with a saddle, and being
+ the commander of the squad of horse-thieves, it was no more than right for
+ me to take my choice first, so I chose the spotted horse, and thought I
+ had the showiest horse in the army. The animal was a sort of Arabian, and
+ before I had rode him a mile I was in love with him. then I got to
+ Montgomery a man told me that horse used to belong to a circus that closed
+ up there the first year of the war, and was sold to a planter. He said the
+ horse was considered one of the finest ever seen in the South. I felt much
+ elated over my capture, and refused several offers to trade. I thought no
+ horse was too good for me, and for two or three days I did nothing but
+ feed and groom my spotted horse, until his coat shone like satin, and he
+ felt so kitteny that I was almost afraid to get on his back. One morning
+ an order was issued for the regiment to turn out in a body to attend the
+ funeral of a major of one of the regiments, who had died, and I was sent
+ for to carry the brigade colors, a position I had been relieved from after
+ we arrived at Montgomery. The boys all dressed up in their best, and I
+ looked about as slick as any of them, and with my spotted horse, I felt as
+ though I would attract about as much attention as any of the officers in
+ the procession. At the proper time I mounted my horse and rode over to
+ brigade headquarters, not without some difficulty, for my horse saw the
+ crowd on the streets, and evidently thought it was circus day, for he
+ pranced and snorted, and walked with one fore-foot at a time, pawing as
+ you have seen a horse in a circus, trained to walk that way. As I rode up
+ to brigade headquarters and stopped, I must have touched my horse with my
+ foot somewhere, for he got down on his knees, and as I got off, the horse
+ laid down right in front of the colonel's tent, just as he would in a
+ circus. Even then I did not realize that the confounded brute was a circus
+ trick-horse. He had been taught to lay down, evidently, at a certain
+ signal. And he laid there, looking up at me with his cunning eyes, waiting
+ for me to give the signal for him to get up, but I &ldquo;did not know the
+ combination,&rdquo; and he wouldn't get up for kicking, so I stood there like a
+ fool waiting to see what he would do next. The colonel commanding the
+ brigade, the nice old man who had helped me out of my difficulty with my
+ other horse, on the march when he got on a tantrum, come out of his tent
+ and said he guessed my horse was sick, and he told an orderly to go to the
+ cook house and get a little red pepper and let the horse take a snuff of
+ it. In the meantime my horse got up on his fore feet and sat on his
+ haunches, like a dog, just as circus horses always do, reached up his neck
+ and took a nice white silk handkerchief out of the breast of the colonel's
+ coat, and held it in his mouth. It was a circus trick, and I knew it, but
+ the colonel said, &ldquo;Poor horse, he is sick,&rdquo; and as the orderly come with
+ the red pepper the colonel held it to the horse's nose. The horse got up,
+ and I mounted, and it must have been about that time that the red pepper
+ began its work, for my horse stood on his fore feet and kicked up, then
+ got on his hind feet and reared up, and snorted, and come down on the
+ colonel's tent, and crushed it to the-ground, and broke the colonel's camp
+ cot, got tangled in the guy ropes, and tore everything loose and jumped
+ out in the street, and began to paw and snort. I suppose there was a
+ thousand people around by that time, soldiers and citizens, and I sat
+ there on that horse and wished I was dead, and I guess the colonel did so
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally it was time to move, and the colonel sent out the brigade colors
+ to me, and the start started up street towards the funeral. My horse
+ started with them, and seemed proud of the flag, and I guess he would have
+ gone along all right, only a band down the street began to play a waltz.
+ Do you know, that spotted horse began to waltz around just as though he
+ was in a circus, and I couldn't keep him straight to save me. The colonel
+ seemed mortified, as we were approaching the place where the services were
+ to be held, and it was necessary to appear solemn. Finally we began to get
+ out of hearing of the band, and my horse stopped waltzing, but he kept up
+ a-dancing, and snorting from the red pepper, until I could have killed
+ him. When the colonel and his staff, including myself and the
+ circus-horse, arrived at the place where the funeral was, another band was
+ playing a very solemn sort of a funeral tune, and for a wonder my horse
+ did not act up at all. He seemed to stand and think, as though trying to
+ make out what kind of music it was. He had evidently never heard such
+ music in the circus and did not know what to do. When the body was brought
+ out of the house, and the procession started down the street for the
+ grave, a drum major, with a staff in his hand, came along by me, and I
+ have always thought my horse took the drum major for the ring master of a
+ circus, for he reared up and walked on his hind feet, and pawed the air,
+ and made a spectacle of me that made me so ashamed that I wanted to be
+ killed. I had the brigade colors in one hand, and had only one hand and
+ two feet to cling on the horse by, and I must have looked like a cat
+ climbing the roof of a whitewashed barn. The drum major got scared at my
+ horse walking towards him in that way, and he lost his bear-skin cap off
+ and fell over it, and rolled in the sand, and the horse, thinking that was
+ a part of the circus turned and kicked at the drum major with both his
+ hind feet, until the poor assistant musician got up and climbed over a
+ fence. The horse got quiet then, only he began to nibble his fore leg, as
+ though trying to untie a handkerchief that the clown had tied on, as they
+ do in the circus. The colonel rode up to me, and with a good deal of
+ indignation, asked me what I. meant by causing ourselves to become a
+ spectacle for gods and men on so solemn an occasion. He said he was
+ tempted to have my horse shot, and me placed in the guard-house. I told
+ him I hoped to die if I could help it. I said the horse seemed to be
+ possessed to do some circus business wherever he went. I confided to the
+ colonel that the horse had been a circus-horse before the war, and the
+ music and tinsel, and crowd that he saw, had turned his head and made him
+ think that he was again with his beloved circus, where he had spent the
+ best years of his life. The colonel said I ought to have known better than
+ to bring a circus horse to a funeral. Well, when the drum major got out of
+ sight the horse acted better, and we went along all right, the solemn
+ music of the march to the grave seeming to take the circus out of him. He
+ didn't do anything out of the way on the march, except to put out his
+ fore-feet stiff, and keep time to the music, like a trained circus horse,
+ which attracted a good deal of attention among the citizens on the street,
+ who seemed to know the horse. Just as we got out at che edge of town he <i>did</i>
+ make one raw break. There was a colored drayman, with his dray backed up
+ towards the procession, and when my circus horse saw the dray, before I
+ could prevent him, he whirled around and put his fore feet upon the hind
+ end of the dray, put one foot on the top of a stake on the dray, and stood
+ there for a minute, like a horse statute, until I jerked him down off of
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:60%">
+ <img src="images/297.jpg"
+ alt="Stood There for a Minute, Like A Horse Statute 297 " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ O, I was so mortified that my teeth fairly ached, and the perspiration
+ stood out on me in great beads. A staff officer of the general commanding,
+ came along to the colonel, presented the compliments of the general, and
+ asked if he could not do something to prevent that redheaded clown on the
+ spotted horse from doing any more circus acts until after the last sad
+ rites had been performed. The colonel said it should be stopped, and told
+ the start officer to present his compliments to the general and say that
+ he was humiliated beyond endurance by the performance of the horse, but
+ that the young man riding the horse was not to blame, as he had done all
+ in his power to keep the circus tendencies of the horse down, but he added
+ that he would have the horse shot if there was any more of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horse kept quiet until we had got to the cemetery, and returned to
+ town. As we got into a wide street there was an old circus ring, partly
+ grown up with weeds, near where the division quartermaster had a large
+ tent inside a picket fence, filled with quartermaster stores. If I had
+ known anything, I would have kept the horse's head turned away from the
+ circus ring, and the tent, but I thought there would be no more trouble.
+ Just as we got opposite the ring, the band, which had heretofore played
+ dead marches, struck up a regular ripety-rap-rap-boom-boom circus tune,
+ and I felt the horse tremble all over. Before I could think twice, the
+ confounded horse had tried to jump through the bass drum, had knocked the
+ drummer down, and jumped into the circus ring. I sawed on the bit and
+ tried to stop him, and dug into his ribs with the spurs, but he galloped
+ around the circus ring three or four times, and stopped still, as though
+ expecting a clown would come up and say, &ldquo;What will the little lady have
+ now?&rdquo; O, if I could have had one more hand to use, I would have drawn my
+ revolver and put a bullet through the brain of the wretched horse, who was
+ making me the laughing stock of the whole army, and the citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The procession moved on towards camp, the colonel seeming relieved to have
+ me out of sight, with my spotted horse, and a crowd of citizens, boys and
+ niggers collected around the ring, yelling and laughing. I made one
+ desperate effort and reined the horse out of the ring, and just then he
+ caught sight of the quartermaster's tent across the road, and evidently
+ thinking it was the dressing-room of the circus, he started for it on a
+ run, jumped the picket fence as though it was a circus hurdle, and rushed
+ in the door of the tent where a dozen clerks were weighing out commissary
+ stores, stopped suddenly, and I went over his head, into a barrel of
+ ground, coffee. The clerks picked me out of the coffee, and laid me on a
+ pile of corn sacks, and then the horse began to lay back his ears and
+ chase the clerks out of the tent, and it was awful the way the animal
+ acted. After I had recovered from the effects of my fall into the coffee
+ barrel, I got up and took the horse by the bridle, and led him out of the
+ gate, and up the street to headquarters, with the brigade flag in my hand.
+ I finally got to headquarters and left the flag, and the colonel told me
+ he never wanted me around brigade headquarters again. He said I was a
+ regular Jonah, that brought bad luck. I apologized the best I could, told
+ him I would never bother him again, and led my horse back to my regiment.
+ The chaplain of my regiment, who had not been to the funeral with us, and
+ knew nothing about the circus, met me, and, as usual, bantered me to trade
+ horses. I felt as though if I could saw that horse off on to the chaplain,
+ and fix him so he could engage in the circus business, life would yet have
+ some charms for me, so after some bantering we got down to business. The
+ chaplain asked me if I thought it would cause any remark if he should ride
+ a spotted horse, and I told him I did not know why it should, if the
+ chaplain behaved himself. He said he didn't know but the boys might think
+ that a spotted horse was too gay for a chaplain. I told him I didn't know
+ why a spotted horse couldn't be just as solemn as any horse. He asked me
+ if the horse had any tricks, and if he was sound. I told him I had not had
+ him long, but it seemed to me if the horse had any tricks I should have
+ found it out by this time, and I knew he was sound, because I jumped a
+ fence with him not an hour ago, and he took the fence just as though he
+ had jumped fences all his life. I asked ten dollars to boot, and the
+ chaplain said if I would warrant the horse not to have any tricks he would
+ take him. I told him I couldn't warrant the horse not to have any tricks,
+ but that the colonel commanding the brigade wanted my horse, and he
+ certainly would not want a horse that had tricks. What the colonel wanted
+ was a horse noted for its strict attention to business. Then the chaplain
+ said he would trade, and we changed saddles, and the chaplain led the
+ spotted horse away, and I was revenged for many things the chaplain had
+ done me. When the chaplain led the spotted horse to his tent, and all the
+ boys in the regiment saw that I had traded the brute off, and they thought
+ what a pic-nic they would have the first time the chaplain rode the horse
+ down town, there was a laugh all through the regiment, but nobody
+ squealed, or told the chaplain what a prize package he had secured. I
+ cannot account for it, how I could have coolly traded that dastardly horse
+ off on to the chaplain, but I was young then. Now, after arriving at a
+ ripe old age, I would not play such a trick on a chaplain. The next day
+ there was to be a review, and when the regiment was notified, I got sick
+ and could not go. I felt as though I did not want to be a witness of the
+ chaplain's attempt to exhibit a solemn demeanor, on that circus horse. I
+ thought I should probably die right in my tracks if the horse acted with
+ him as he did with me, so I remained in my tent with a wet towel on my
+ head, and saw the regiment ride out to review, the chaplain on the spotted
+ horse beside the colonel, not dreaming that it was going to be the most
+ eventful day of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells How the Chaplain was Paralyzed by the Spotted Circus-
+ Horse&mdash;I am Court Martialed&mdash;I Plead my own Case, and am
+ Acquitted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the last chapter I told of trading my circus-horse to the chaplain, and
+ how the chaplain had rode away with the regiment for review, and I
+ remained in camp, pretending to be sick. The result of that scheme on my
+ part was not all my fancy painted it. I stood in front of my tent with a
+ wet towel around my head, and saw the regiment return from review, the
+ chaplain's spotted circus horse with no rider, being led by a colored man,
+ the horse looking as innocent as any horse I ever saw. Where was the
+ 'chaplain? Had he been killed? I noticed half the men were laughing and it
+ seemed to me they wouldn't laugh if the good chaplain was dead. I also
+ noticed that the colonel and his staff wore faces clouded with anger, and
+ that they seemed as though they would like to kill somebody. Before the
+ regiment had got fairly dismounted, a sergeant and three men marched to my
+ tent, and I was arrested, and was informed that I would be tried at once,
+ by court-martial, for conduct prejudicial to good order and military
+ discipline. I knew the sergeant, and tried to joke with him, telling him
+ to &ldquo;go on with his old ark, as there wasn't going to be much of a shower,&rdquo;
+ but he wouldn't have any funny business, and kindly informed me that I had
+ probably got to the end of my rope, and that I would no doubt spend the
+ remainder of my term of enlistment in the military prison. I asked him
+ what the row was about, and he said. I would find out soon enough. One
+ soldier got on each side of me, and one behind with sabers drawn, to stick
+ me with if I attempted to get away, and we started for the colonel's tent.
+ On the way there, the chaplain came towards us, covered with red clay, and
+ begged the sergeant to allow him to kill me right there. He was the
+ maddest truly good man I ever saw. He fairly foamed at the mouth, and
+ said, &ldquo;O, sergeant, turn him loose, and let me chew him up.&rdquo; I said to the
+ sergeant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, look-a-here, don't you let that savage get at me, or he will get
+ hurt. I don't want to have any trouble with the church, but if any
+ regularly ordained ministerial cannibal of a sky pilot attempts to chew
+ me, he will find a good deal more gristle than tender loin, and I will
+ italicise his nose so he will look so crossed-eyed that he can't draw his
+ pay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My thus showing that I was not afraid of a non-combatant, seemed to have
+ the desired effect, for he spit on his hands, jumped up and cracked his
+ heels together, said he would wipe the Southern Confederacy with my
+ remains, and he went to his tent to change his clothes, and get ready for
+ the court-martial. The guard took me to the colonel's tent, and I walked
+ right in where the colonel and major and several others were, and I said
+ Hello, and smiled, and extended my hand to the colonel. None of them
+ helloed, and none of them returned my smile, and the colonel did not shake
+ hands with me. He said, however, that I had brought disgrace on the
+ regiment, and broken the heart of a noble man, the chaplain. I told him I
+ didn't think the chaplain's heart was very badly broke, as he had just
+ ottered to whip me in several languages, and threatened to eat me. The
+ colonel had me sit down on a trunk and keep still, while the court-martial
+ convened. It was not many minutes before the officers had arrived, and
+ organized, the adjutant read the charges and specifications against me.
+ Not to go into the military-form of charges and specifications, the
+ substance of them was that I had with malice aforethought, procured a
+ trick-horse from a circus, with the intention of inducing the chaplain to
+ trade for it, with the purpose of causing the aforesaid chaplain to become
+ a spectacle for laughter. When the charges were read I was asked what I
+ had to say, and I told the Judge Advocate it was a condemned lie. That
+ made him mad, and he was going to commence whipping me where the chaplain
+ left off, when the colonel smoothed matters over by asking me if I didn't
+ mean to plead &ldquo;not guilty.&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;Certainly, not guilty. It is false. I
+ did not secure the horse for the purpose of sawing it off on the chaplain.
+ I jayhawked it, and when I found it was not the kind of a horse for a
+ modest fellow like me, who didn't want to make any display, I thought I
+ would trade it to some officer with gall, and the chaplain was the first
+ man who struck me for a trade, and he got it, and from his remarks to me,
+ and from these court-martial proceedings, I was satisfied the chaplain did
+ not like the horse.&rdquo; The officers laughed then, and I suppose they were
+ thinking of something that happened to the chaplain on review. The colonel
+ asked me if I wanted anybody to defend me, and I told him I had a printing
+ office once next door to a lawyer's office, and I knew a little about law,
+ and would defend myself. The chaplain came soon, and began to tell his
+ story, but I insisted, that he be sworn, and then he proceeded to tell his
+ tale. He said that he was a God-fearing man, and meant to do right, and
+ was willing to take his chances in the lottery of war, but when a man got
+ him to ride a circus trick-horse, and bring upon his sacred calling the
+ ribald laughter of the wicked, he felt that civilization was a failure. He
+ said he traded for the spotted horse in good faith, and that he was
+ particular to ask me if the horse had any tricks, and I said he had none,
+ and he traded on that understanding, that he rode the afore&mdash;said
+ horse to the review, and as soon as the aforesaid horse heard the band
+ play, he waltzed out into the middle of the street, whirled around more
+ than fifty times, waltzed into an infantry regiment, breaking the ranks of
+ the soldiers just as the reviewing officer come along, causing the
+ reviewing officer to say, &ldquo;get out of the ranks, you d-d fool, and take
+ that horse back to the circus,&rdquo; thus causing him, the chaplain, to be
+ scandalized. He said he would have stood that, but the horse carried him
+ to a battery of artillery which was in position, and began to jump over
+ the guns, and that a gunner took a swab with which he had been cleaning a
+ gun, and punched him, the chaplain, in the face, covering his face with
+ burnt powder which smelled badly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the horse carried him out on the field in front of the reviewing
+ officers, got up on its hind feet and walked for half a block, making the
+ chaplain appear as though climbing up the horse's neck, and when some of
+ the general's staff came out to arrest him, the horse whirled around and
+ kicked, in every direction at once, and broke the saber of one of the
+ staff-officers. That the horse seemed to be possessed of the devil. That
+ he finally got the horse to go back to the regiment where he belonged, but
+ on the way he had to pass brigade headquarters, when the horse stopped in
+ front of the commanding officer and sat down like a dog, on his hind
+ parts, and tried to shake hands with the colonel commanding, who was
+ offended, and told the chaplain he was an ass, and to go away with his
+ museum, or he would have the chaplain put in the guard house. That a
+ colored man near the review ground had a ginger bread stand, with a sheet
+ tacked up to keep the sun off, and the spotted horse attempted to jump
+ through the sheet, evidently thinking it was a paper hoop in a circus. And
+ in conclusion, after making the chaplain so mortified and ashamed that he
+ wished he might die, the horse laid down in the road and rolled over the
+ aforsaid chaplain, leaving him in the road covered with dirt, while the
+ horse run across the street and walked up a pair of stairs, outside a
+ store, went into the rooms occupied by some milliners and scared the women
+ so they put their heads out of the windows and yelled fire, and said a
+ regiment of Yankee cavalry had raided their homes. That the review was
+ made a farce, the chaplain a laughing stock, and that it took ten men to
+ get the horse down stairs, and half the regiment to console the milliners,
+ and convince them that no harm was intended. He said he demanded that I be
+ sentenced to be shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel asked me if I had anything to say, and I asked permission to
+ cross-examine the witness. Permission being granted, I asked the chaplain
+ what his business was. He said he was a minister. I asked him if he didn't
+ consider trading horses one of the noblest professions extant. He said he
+ didn't know about that. Then I asked him if he didn't take advantage of me
+ when I came to the regiment, as a raw recruit, and trade me a kicking
+ mule, that made my life a burden. He said he remembered that he traded me
+ a mule. I asked him if he didn't know the mule was balky, vicious, and
+ spavined, that it would kick its best friend, bite anybody, that it was so
+ ugly that he had to put the saddle on with a long pole, that he warranted
+ the mule sound when he knew it had all the diseases that were going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said he objected to being asked such questions, but the judge-advocate
+ said I had a right to bring out any previous transactions in the
+ horse-trade line, as it would have some effect in this case. Then I asked
+ him if he didn't know the horse he beat me out of was sound, a splendid
+ rider, and that the mule was the worst one in the army. He admitted that
+ he knew the animal was not a desirable animal, but he thought a recruit
+ could get along with a kicking mule better than a chaplain. I had saved my
+ best shot for the last, and I said, &ldquo;knowing the mule was unsound, a
+ vicious animal, and that my horse was sound and desirable, and worth more
+ than a dozen such mules, did you consider that you was pursuing your
+ calling as a minister when you gained my confidence, and not only sawed
+ the mule off on to me, bereaved me of a fine horse, but took twenty
+ dollars of my hard-earned bounty money as boot in the trade? In doing that
+ to an innocent and fresh recruit who had confidence in you, did you not
+ pave the way for me to get even with you on a horse trade, and haven't I
+ got even, and do you blame me for doing it?&rdquo; The chaplain was perspiring
+ while I was asking the questions, and all the officers were looking at him
+ as though he had caught a tartar, but he blushed, choked, and finally
+ answered that perhaps he did wrong in trading me that mule, and he asked
+ to be forgiven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I turned to the officers and said, &ldquo;Gentlemen, I admit that I traded
+ the spotted circus-horse to the chaplain. I did it on purpose to show him
+ that there is a God in Israel. When I came to the regiment, right fresh
+ from the people, I needed salting. The boys all salted me whenever they
+ got a chance, and I took it like a little man. In turning to the chaplain
+ for comfort, I did not expect that he would salt me worse than all of the
+ boys combined, but when I found that he had gone through me, and taken
+ advantage of my guileless innocence, and laughed at my woe when I found
+ the confounded mule was not all his fancy had painted it, and that it laid
+ awake nights to devise ways to kick my head on, I took a blooded oath that
+ before the cruel war was over I would salt that chaplain on a horse trade,
+ until he would own up the corn. I leave it to you, gentlemen, if I have
+ done it or not. When that spotted horse fell to me, by the fortunes of
+ war, I was not long in learning that it was the relic of a circus. I rode
+ the horse one day last week at a funeral, and it acted in such a manner as
+ to almost wake up the late lamented. I was made the laughing stock of the
+ brigade, and of the town. It was government property, and I could not kill
+ the horse, and I thought the time had arrived for me to get even with my
+ old friend. He was mashed on my spotted horse, and bantered me for a
+ trade. Finally we traded, and I got ten dollars to boot. The result has
+ been all that I could desire. I have had the satisfaction of demonstrating
+ to this truly good man that all is not gold that glitters. I have shown
+ him that however spotted a man may be, if he rides a spotted circus horse,
+ he will get there. I will leave it to the chaplain, now, if I was not
+ justified in trading him that horse, after what he had done to me, and
+ will ask him if he was not served perfectly right, and if in trading me
+ that mule he did not do to others as he would have others do to him, and
+ if so, if he does not think the others did it to him in great shape. I am
+ done. I leave my life in your hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I quit they were all laughing except the chaplain, and there was a
+ quiet smile around his mouth, as he thought of his experience on the
+ spotted horse. The colonel asked the chaplain, if he had anything to say,
+ and he said he had just been thinking that he could go over to a New
+ Jersey regiment and trade that spotted horse to the chaplain of that
+ regiment, and if he could, he would be willing to drop the case. He said
+ that chaplain played a mean trick on him once, and he wanted to get even.
+ The court martial acquitted me, and while we were all taking a drink with
+ the colonel, the chaplain went out, and pretty soon we saw his servant
+ leading the spotted horse over towards the camp of the New Jersey
+ regiment, and later the chaplain sauntered off in that direction on foot,
+ as though there was some weighty subject on his mind. The weighty subject
+ was the spotted circus-horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not suppose any incident ever caused so much talk as did the
+ chaplain's circus. The boys were talking and laughing about it in every
+ company all that afternoon, and when it was found that I had not been
+ punished, for trading the horse to him, the boys were wild. They wanted to
+ show their appreciation of the fun I had given them, so a lot of them got
+ together to give me a sort of reception. They sent for me to come over to
+ Co. D., and when I got over there they grabbed me and carried me off on
+ their shoulders. I felt proud to see them so joyous and friendly, until
+ they put me in a blanket and tossed me up into the trees, and caught me in
+ the blanket as I came down. Of all the sensations I ever experienced, that
+ of being tossed up in a blanket was the worst. I tried to laugh, at first,
+ but it became serious, as I went into the air twenty feet, let loose of
+ the air and came down, expecting to be crushed maimed, killed. My breath
+ forsook me, I was dizzy, but I struck the blanket easy, and after being
+ sent up a dozen times they let me go, and my reception was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mingled Reminiscences-I Relate a Mississippi River Steamboat
+ Experience.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Long before this I should have related a little experience I had on my
+ first journey south, when I was a fresh recruit. After leaving Wisconsin,
+ in the winter, a lot of us recruits were corralled at Benton Barracks, St.
+ Louis, and for six weeks we had a picnic. There were about fifty of us,
+ that belonged to the cavalry, our regiments being down the Mississippi
+ river, and the commanding officer of the barracks seemed to be waiting for
+ a chance to send us to our regiments. I have often wondered what he waited
+ six weeks for, when we were not doing any duty in camp, and were making
+ him trouble enough every day and every night to turn his hair gray. He was
+ a Colonel Bonneville, if I remember right, a regular army officer of
+ French extraction. Anyway, he always swore at us in French. The camp was
+ run in a slack sort of a way, and it was easy for us to get out and go
+ down town, or wander off into the country, and, as we had plenty of money,
+ and were dressed better than soldiers in active service, we were welcome
+ to all the saloons, and painted old St. Louis all the colors of the
+ rainbow, returned to the barracks at unseasonable hours, crawled through
+ the fence and went to our quarters howling, waking up the old general, who
+ invariably ordered the provost-guard to arrest us, which the provost-guard
+ invariably didn't do, for some reason or other. The old colonel was fast
+ aging, in trying to lead a quiet life in the vicinity of &ldquo;dose d&mdash;&mdash;-d
+ cavalry regruits,&rdquo; and he said he &ldquo;would order them all shot if they
+ didn't behave.&rdquo; Benton Barracks was the greatest place for the breeding of
+ rats that I ever saw. In every house there were millions of them, and at
+ night they were out in full force. One night our crowd of recruits, about
+ forty in number, had been down to St. Louis on a painting expedition, and
+ it was midnight when camp was reached. Every recruit had a revolver, and
+ it was decided that if the rats insulted us, as they had often done
+ before, we would shoot them. It was a beautiful moonlight night, as still
+ as death, and we could almost hear the snoring of the excitable colonel in
+ his house across the parade ground. As we came near our barrack, a few
+ thousand rats crossed our path, and I drew my revolver and fired at a
+ large one that seemed unusually impudent, and the rest of the crowd opened
+ fire, and there was a battle in no time. A bugler got out and blowed some
+ call that I did not know, a drum sounded a continuous roll, men rushed out
+ and formed in line, and before we had fired the six charges from our
+ revolvers, the Invalid Corps came hobbling across the parade ground, the
+ colonel behind them with his shirt on, his pants in his hand, and swearing
+ in French, and ordering the troops to arrest the whole crowd of recruits.
+ We went right in the barrack, and retired, as soon as the troops showed
+ up, and were snoring, with smoking revolvers under our pillows, when the
+ guard entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel came in with the guard, and then put on his pants, after which
+ he woke up some of us, and asked what was the cause of the firing. Every
+ recruit swore that he had not fired a shot, but that he had heard some
+ firing over the fence, on the outside, at a road-house and saloon, where
+ bad men from St. Louis congregated and drank to excess. It seemed very
+ hard to thus lie to so estimable a gentleman as the colonel, but as he was
+ only half-dressed, and sleepy, and excited, it didn't seem as though the
+ lies ought to count. But they did. The colonel apologized for waking us
+ up, when we were enjoying our much-needed rest, and he went away with the
+ guard. Then we all got up and danced a can-can, in our army underclothes,
+ passed a series of resolutions endorsing the colonel as one of the ablest
+ officers in the army, recommended that he be promoted to brigadier-general
+ at the first opportunity, gave three cheers and a tiger for the Union, and
+ went to bed. That is one thing that we recruits always come out strong in,
+ i. e., three cheers for the Union. We had enlisted to save the Union, and
+ as there was no fighting that we could do, during our stay at St. Louis,
+ whenever we got a chance we gave three cheers for the Union. Sometimes it
+ was not appreciated, however. I remember one evening our crowd went into a
+ saloon and ordered beer all around, and after we had drank it, I proposed
+ three cheers for the Union, which we gave in a hearty manner, and went out
+ without paying for the beer. You would hardly credit it, but the
+ saloonkeeper, an Irishman named Oppenheimer, became offended, and wanted
+ us to pay cash for the beer. The boys wanted me to reason with him, and I
+ began by asking him if he was a loyal man, and he said he was. Then I
+ asked him if he didn't believe in supporting the Union. He said he did,
+ but he couldn't pay the brewer for his beer by giving three cheers for the
+ Union. He had to put up cash. I confess that his remarks made quite an
+ impression on me, as I had not thought of it in that light before. I
+ proposed that we give three cheers for Oppenheimer, which was done, and I
+ thought that would settle it, but he insisted on having cash. I told the
+ boys, and they said he was a rebel. I told Oppenheimer, and he got out a
+ wooden bung-starter, and said he could clean out the whole party. Finally
+ we compromised, in this way. We had given two rounds of cheer, one for the
+ Union and one for Oppenheimer, which were a total loss, so it was agreed
+ that if Oppenheimer would give three cheers for the Union and three for us
+ we would pay him for the beer, if he would agree to set 'em up for us, at
+ his own expense. He agreed, and then we tried to get him to onset the beer
+ he was going to give us, for the beer we had drank, and not pay him for
+ that we had consumed. That, to any business man, we thought, would seem
+ fair, but he wouldn't have it. So, after he had returned our cheers to us,
+ we paid him, and then he treated. I mention this to show the hardships of
+ a soldier's life, and the difficulties of inculcating business methods
+ into the minds of the saloon-keepers. Oppenheimer meant well, but he did
+ not appreciate cheers for the Union. He got so, after that when we came in
+ his saloon, in a gang, he would say, &ldquo;Poys, of you dondt gif any jeers fun
+ dot Union, I set'em oop,&rdquo; and we would swallow our cheers for the Union,
+ and his beer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day after the battle of the rats, an order was issued for the
+ recruits to board the steamer &ldquo;City of Memphis,&rdquo; and go down the river to
+ join our several regiments, in the vicinity of New Orleans. In a few hours
+ we had drawn rations to last a week, and were on board the steamer, and
+ had started down stream. I think every soldier that is now alive will
+ remember that when he took his first trip on a transport, as a recruit,
+ during the war, he labored under the impression that he owned the boat, or
+ at least a controlling interest in it. That was a very natural feeling.
+ The opinions of the steamboat officials, it will be remembered, were
+ different. I had never been on a large steamboat before, and after tying
+ my knapsack and other baggage to a wood-pile on the lower deck, after I
+ had vainly attempted to induce the proper official to give me checks for
+ my baggage, I began to climb up stairs, and soon found myself on top of
+ the Texas, beside the smoke stack, viewing the ever changing scenery of
+ the grand old Mississippi. I was drinking in the scenery, and the fresh
+ air, and wondering if it could be possible that there could be war, and
+ killing, anywhere in this broad land, when all was so peace-ful and
+ beautiful on the river, when I felt something strike me on the pantaloons
+ most powerfully, and I looked around and a gentleman was just removing a
+ large sized boot from my person. I was about to reprove him for kicking
+ me, a total stranger, who had not even presented letters of introduction
+ to me, when he said, in a voice that was deep down in his chest, &ldquo;get down
+ below.&rdquo; I did not feel like arguing with a man of so violent a nature, and
+ I went down the narrow stairs, after he had said he would throw me
+ overboard if I did not hurry. I learned afterwards that he was the mate of
+ the steamboat. I could see that he had mistaken me for a common soldier,
+ which I would not admit was the case, but I went down stairs, probably
+ looking hurt. I was hurt. I went into the cabin and sat down on one of the
+ sofas, to think, when a colored person told me to get off the sofa. As he
+ seemed to know what he was talking about I got on. I saw a bar, where
+ officers of the army and passengers were drinking, and I went up and asked
+ for a whisky sour, thinking that would relieve the pain and cause my
+ injured feelings to improve. The bar tender told me to go out on deck and
+ I could get plain whisky through a window where the negro deck hands got
+ their drinks, but I could not drink with gentlemen. That was the first day
+ that I realized that in becoming a soldier I had descended to a level with
+ negro deck hands and roustabouts, and could not be allowed to associate
+ with gentlemen. Soon the gong rung for supper, and I went into the cabin
+ and sat down to the table for a square meal, the other seats being filled
+ with army officers and passengers. I was going to give my order to a
+ waiter, when he called an officer of the boat, who told me to get up from
+ the table and go below, as the cabin was intended for gentlemen and not
+ soldiers. My idea was to kick against being turned out, but I thought of
+ the mate's boot, and I went out, went down on the lower deck with the
+ recruits, and eat some bread and meat. I was rapidly becoming crushed. I
+ talked my experience over with the boys, and they all agreed with me that
+ the way we were treated was an outrage on American soldiers, which we
+ would not stand. We began to wonder where we were going to sleep, when I
+ remembered seeing state-rooms on the deck above, with berths, and it
+ seemed to me they must be intended for us, so we agreed to go up and go
+ into the state-rooms from the doors that opened out on deck, believing
+ that those who got in first would be allowed to occupy them. About fifty
+ of us got into state-rooms, while the officers and passengers were playing
+ poker in the cabin. I was asleep, when I heard a noise out on deck, and
+ raising up in my berth I looked over the transom and saw about twenty of
+ the recruits being driven along by officers of the boat, kicks and cuffs,
+ and loud talking being the order. &ldquo;I'll teach you brutes to steal the beds
+ of passengers on this boat. You dirty whelps, to presume to sleep in beds.
+ Get down stairs and sleep on the wood-pile with the niggers,&rdquo; shouted the
+ captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there was going to be any fuss about it, I didn't want to stay in the
+ state-room. I didn't want to be broke of my rest, of course, but if it was
+ not customary for common soldiers to indulge in such luxuries, I would go
+ out. Just then there was a knock at the door leading into the cabin, and I
+ heard a female voice say, &ldquo;Powtaw, I am afraid one of those dirty soljaws
+ has got into my state-room,&rdquo; and then I heard the mate's voice say, &ldquo;Wait
+ till I get at him.&rdquo; Of course, under those circumstances I could not
+ remain. No gentleman would occupy a lady's birth, and cause her to sit up
+ all night. To be sure there were two berths, and I could remain in the
+ upper one, and she could turn in below, and I would turn my face to the
+ wall and not look, but I doubted if a lady, who was a perfect stranger,
+ and whose opinion of soldiers was so pronounced, could compromise on such
+ a basis, so when the mate knocked at the door I took my pants and shoes
+ and went out the door leading on deck, and went below, without being
+ discovered. I found my companions, who had been routed out of their beds,
+ dressing themselves as best they could by the light from the furnace, when
+ the stokers would put in wood, and they were about as mad as I was. The
+ treatment we had received was not what we had a right to expect when we
+ enlisted. We decided to set up all night, and growl and discuss the
+ situation. Several of the recruits made remarks that were very scathing,
+ and the officials of the boat were held up to scorn, and charged with
+ inhumanity. We sat there till daylight, and then organized an indignation
+ meeting, and appointed a committee to draft resolutions indicative of the
+ sense of the meeting. I had been lightning on resolutions before I
+ enlisted, having attended several county conventions, and I was appointed
+ to draft the resolutions. As near as I can remember the following were the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;<i>Whereas</i>, The undersigned, members of the army of the
+ union, in the course of our duty as soldiers, have been
+ ordered to proceed to our several regiments down the
+ Mississippi river, on board of the 'City of Memphis,' and,
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Whereas</i>, We have been treated by the officers of the
+ aforesaid boat more like animals than human beings, in being
+ deprived of luxuries to which we have been accustomed, have
+ been driven from the public dining-table, driven from our
+ beds at the dead hour of night, that shoulder-strapped
+ officers might be made comfortable, and kicked down stairs,
+ therefore, be it
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Resolved</i>, That we demand of the captain of the steamer
+ 'City of Memphis,' that we be allowed the same privileges on
+ this boat that others enjoy. 'We hold these truths to be
+ self-evident,' that one man is just as good as another, no
+ matter what his rank. We demand that we be allowed to eat at
+ the table in the cabin, to sleep in the state-rooms, to
+ drink at the bar if we so elect, and to go to any place on
+ the boat that other passengers are allowed, and that we be
+ treated like white men, which we, have not up to the adoption
+ of these resolutions.
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Resolved</i>, That a copy of these resolutions be presented
+ to the captain of the boat, that a copy be sent to the
+ secretary of war, and that the resolutions be published in
+ the newspapers.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ When I read the resolutions to the boys they were passed unanimously,
+ after a few amendments had been voted down. One of the boys wanted a
+ resolution passed demanding that the mate be discharged, and one moved the
+ captain be requested to apologize. I argued that if the captain received
+ the resolutions in the proper spirit, and acceded to our demand, that
+ would be an apology in itself, and in that case the mate would probably
+ resign. I was appointed one of a committee of three to wait on the
+ captain, and read the resolutions to him, after the boys had all signed
+ them. I had rather some one else had been appointed, as I had been kicked
+ once already, but the boys said it needed somebody that was equal to
+ making a little speech, as it would be necessary to say something before
+ reading the resolutions. They also said, it needed a man with plenty of
+ gall, one that was not afraid to stand up be-fore the world and ask for
+ our rights. I felt flattered at being selected, but I took the precaution
+ to place a gunny-sack, nicely folded up, in the seat of my pants, because
+ I didn't know what might happen. After breakfast, I took the committee and
+ the resolutions, and went up into the cabin, and told a colored man that
+ he might tell the captain that a committee wished an audience with him. He
+ was playing poker in the ladies' cabin, and I have always thought he had
+ an idea there was a committee of passengers who wanted to present him with
+ a gold headed cane, a thing that was often done on the boats. Any way he
+ came along smiling, and when the nigger pointed me out, and the captain
+ noticed that I had a large paper in my hand, he said, &ldquo;What is it,
+ gentlemen?&rdquo; This was the first time I had been alluded to in that manner
+ since I enlisted. I asked him to be seated, and he sat down on a lounge,
+ and I proceeded. I forgot to make any speech, but went right at the <i>whereases</i>
+ at once. I say the captain smiled when he came up. Of course, reading the
+ resolutions, as I was, I could not see his face change, but afterwards one
+ of the committee told me about it. I could not tell that a storm was
+ coming. I noticed that quite a number of people had collected around the
+ captain, from curiosity, I supposed. I had just got to the last resolution
+ where it spoke of sending a copy to the secretary of war, when there was a
+ howl. The captain got up and grabbed me by the throat, while somebody else
+ took me by the hind legs. As we went towards the door, I noticed other men
+ were carrying the rest of the committee. My idea was that they would throw
+ us overboard, and as I could not swim, I closed my eyes and said, &ldquo;Now I
+ lay me.&rdquo; The stairs leading to the lower deck were covered with brass. I
+ remember that distinctly, because I rode down the stairs on the small of
+ my back, and we had a committee meeting at the foot of the stairs. I
+ brought up on top of the rest of the committee. We sat there a moment, and
+ decided, unanimously, that we had been unceremoniously chucked down
+ stairs, resolutions and all, and we picked ourselves up and limped back to
+ where our companions were, and so reported. The expedition was a total
+ failure, for in a short time a notice was tacked on the foot of the
+ stairs, stating that all enlisted men were forbidden from occupying any
+ portion of the boat except the lower deck, and if one was found above that
+ deck, he would be turned over to the first army post, a prisoner. So we
+ remained on the lower deck, and took it out abusing the officers, and
+ hoping the boat would blow up. But the scenery was just as nice from the
+ lower deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Our Party of Recruits own the Earth&mdash;We Live High, Give a
+ Ball, and go to the Guard-House&mdash;And are Arrested by Colored
+ Troops.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let's see, I forget whether I have ever told about getting strung up on a
+ bayonet, near New Orleans, when I first went south as a recruit. It was
+ before I had joined my regiment, and I was with a gang of recruits, all
+ looking for the regiments we had enlisted in. We had come down from St.
+ Louis on a steamboat, our regiments being scattered all over the
+ Department of the Gulf. We were not in any particular hurry to find our
+ regiments, as the longer we kept away from them the less duty we would
+ have to do. I do not think, out of the whole forty recruits, there was one
+ who was in the least hurry to find his regiment, and none of them would
+ have known their regiments if they had seen them, unless somebody told
+ them. They had enlisted just as it happened, all of them hoping the war
+ would be over before they found where they belonged. They didn't know
+ anybody in their respective regiments, hence there were no ties binding
+ them. But they had been together for several months, as recruits, until
+ all had got well acquainted, and if they could have been formed into a
+ company, for service together, they might have done pretty good fighting.
+ The crowd was becoming smaller, as every day or two some recruit would
+ come and bid us all good bye. He had actually stumbled on to his regiment,
+ and when the officers of an old regiment, in examining recruits, found one
+ assigned to his regiment, he never took his eyes off the recruit until he
+ was landed. I have seen some very affecting partings, when one of our gang
+ would find where he belonged and had to leave us, perhaps never to meet
+ again. The gang was rapidly dropping apart, and when we got to New Orleans
+ there were only twenty or so left. We reported to the commanding officer,
+ and he quartered us at Carrollton, near the city, in what had once been a
+ beer-garden and dance-house. We slept on the floor of the dance-house,
+ cooked our meals out in the garden, spread our food on the old beer
+ tables, and imagined we were proprietors of the place, or guests of the
+ government. We always ordered beer or expensive wines with our meals. Not
+ that we ever got any beer or wine, because the beer garden was deserted,
+ but we put on a great deal of style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found a lot of champagne bottles out in the back yard, and I do not
+ think I ever took a meal there without having a champagne bottle sitting
+ beside me on the table, and when any citizens were passing along the
+ street we would take up the bottles, look at the label in a scrutinizing
+ way, as though not exactly certain in our minds whether we were getting as
+ good wine as we were paying for. The old empty bottles gave us a standing
+ in Carrollton society that nothing else could have given us. Some of the
+ boys got so they could imitate the popping of a champagne cork to
+ perfection, by placing one finger in the mouth, prying the cheek around on
+ one side, and letting it fly open suddenly. We would have several of the
+ boys with aprons on, and when anybody was passing on the street, one of us
+ would call, &ldquo;Waiter open a bottle of that extra dry.&rdquo; The waiter would
+ say, &ldquo;Certainly, sah,&rdquo; take a bottle between his knees, run his finger in
+ his mouth and make it pop, and then pretend to pour out the champagne in
+ glasses, imitating the &ldquo;fizzing&rdquo; perfectly. It was the extra dryest
+ champagne that I ever had. But all that foolishness had the desired
+ effect. It convinced the citizens of Carrollton that we were no ordinary
+ soldiers. We were all nicely dressed, had no guards, and apparently no
+ officers, had plenty of money, which we spent freely at the stores, and
+ the impression soon got out that we were on some special service, and
+ there was, of course, much curiosity to know our business. I learned that
+ we were looked upon as secret service men, and I told the boys about it,
+ and advised them not to tell that we were recruits, but to put on an air
+ of mystery, and we would have fun while we remained. One day an oldish
+ gentleman who lived near, and who had a fine orange plantation, or grove,
+ toward which we had cast longing eyes, called at the dance-house where we
+ were quartered. We had just finished our frugal meal, and the empty
+ bottles were being taken away. He addressed me, and said, &ldquo;Good day,
+ Colonel.&rdquo; I responded as best I could, and invited him to be seated. I
+ apologized for not offering him a glass of champagne, but told him we had
+ cracked the last bottle, and would not have any more until the next day,
+ as I had only that morning requested my friend, the general commanding at
+ New Orleans, to send me a fresh supply, which he would do at once, I had
+ no doubt. Well, you ought to have seen the boys try to keep from laughing,
+ stuffing handkerchiefs in their mouths, etc. But not a man laughed. The
+ old citizen said it was no matter, as he would drop in the next day, and
+ drink with us. We talked about the war, and it is my impression he was
+ anxious for us to believe he was a loyal man. But after a while he asked
+ me what particular duty I was on, there at Carrollton. I hesitated a
+ moment, and finally told him that I hoped he would excuse me for not
+ telling him, but the fact was it would be as much as my &ldquo;commission&rdquo; would
+ be worth to unfold any of my plans. I told him that time alone would
+ reveal the object of our being there, and until such time as my government
+ thought it best to make it public, it was my duty as an officer, to keep
+ silent. He said certainly, that was all right, and he admired me for
+ keeping my own counsel. (I was probably the highest private and rawest
+ recruit in the army.) He said there was a natural curiosity on the part of
+ the people of Carrollton to know who we were, as we lived so high, and
+ seemed such thorough gentlemen. I admitted that we were thorough
+ gentlemen, and thanked him for the high opinion that the cultured people
+ of Carrollton had of us. He wound up by pointing to his orange grove, and
+ said he-would consider it a special favor if we would consider ourselves
+ perfectly free to go there and help ourselves at any time, and
+ particularly that evening, as a number of young people would be at his
+ house for a quiet dance. I told him that a few of us would certainly be
+ present, and thanked him kindly. When he was gone I told the boys, and
+ they wanted to give three cheers, but I got them to keep still, and we
+ talked all the afternoon of the soft snap we had struck, and cleaned up
+ for the party. My intention was to pick out half a dozen of the best
+ dressed, recruits, those that could make a pretty fair showing in society
+ to go with me, but they all wanted to go, and there was no way to prevent
+ it, so all but one Irishman, that we hired to stay and watch our camp,
+ went. Well, we ate oranges fresh from the trees, joined in the dance, ate
+ refreshments, and drank the old gentleman's wine, and had a good time,
+ made a good impression on the ladies, and went back to camp at midnight.
+ On the way over to the party I told the boys the gentleman was coming to
+ see us the next day, and we should have to get a bottle of champagne
+ some-where, to treat him, as I had told him we expected, some more up from
+ the city. When we came back from the party a German recruit pulled a
+ bottle of champagne out of his pocket, which he had stolen from the man's
+ house in order to treat him with the next day. The gentleman came over to
+ our quarters the next day, and we opened our bottle, and he drank to our
+ very good health, though I thought he looked at the label on the bottle
+ pretty close. For a week we frequented the gentleman's orange grove every
+ day, and ate oranges to our heart's content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several times during the week we were invited to different houses, where
+ we boys became quite interested in the fair girls of Louisiana. It was ten
+ days from the time we settled in the beer garden, and we had kept our
+ secret well. Nobody in Carrollton knew that we were raw recruits that had
+ never seen a day of service, but the impression was still stronger than
+ ever that we were pets of the government. We had an old map of the United
+ States that we had borrowed at a saloon, and during the day we would hang
+ the map up and surround it, while I pointed out imaginary places to
+ attack. This we would do while people were passing. Everything was working
+ splendidly, and we decided to give a party. We hired a band to play in the
+ dance house, ordered refreshments, and invited about forty ladies and
+ gentlemen to attend. The day we were to give the party we sent a recruit
+ down town to draw rations, and he told everybody what a high old time we
+ recruits were having at Carrollton. The commanding officer heard of it,
+ and, probably having forgotten that we were up there waiting to be sent to
+ our regiments he sent a peremptory order for us to report at New Orleans
+ before noon of that day. How could we report at noon, when we were going
+ to give a party at night? It was simply impossible, and I, as a sort of
+ breast corporal in charge, sent a man down town to tell the commanding
+ officer that we had an engagement that night, and couldn't come before the
+ next day. I did not know that it was improper to send regrets to a
+ commanding officer when ordered to do anything. The man I sent down to New
+ Orleans came back and I asked him what the general said. The man said he
+ read the note and said, &ldquo;The hell they can't come till tomorrow. The
+ impudence of the recruits. They will come tonight!&rdquo; I did not believe we
+ would. In my freshness I did not believe that any commander of troops
+ would deliberately break up a ball, and humiliate brave soldiers. I
+ thought my explanation to the commander that we had an engagement, would
+ be sufficient, that he would see that it was impossible to hurry matters.
+ We had been to a good deal of expense, and it was our duty, after
+ accepting the hospitalities of those people, to pay our indebtedness in
+ the only way we knew how, and so, as the boys had gathered around me to
+ see what was to be done, I said, &ldquo;On with the dance. Let joy be
+ unconfined.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our guests arrived on time, and shortly after it became dark, the Dutch
+ band we had hired from, a beer hall down town, struck up some sort of
+ foreign music, and &ldquo;there was a sound of revelry by night.&rdquo; We danced half
+ a dozen times, smiled sweetly on our guests, walked around the paths of
+ the old garden, flirted a little perhaps, and talked big with the male
+ guests, and convinced them anew that we were regular old battle-scarred
+ vets, on detached duty of great importance. Near midnight we all set down
+ to lunch, around the beer tables, and everything was going along smooth.
+ The old gentleman who had been first to make our acquaintance, and who had
+ been the means of getting us into society, proposed as a toast, &ldquo;Our brave
+ and generous hosts,&rdquo; and the boys called upon me to respond. I got up on a
+ bench and was making a speech that, if I had been allowed to continue,
+ would have been handed down in history as one of the ablest of our time.
+ It was conciliatory in tone, calculated to cement a friendship between the
+ army and the citizens of the south, and show that while we were engaged in
+ war, there was nothing mean about us, and that we loved our neighbors as
+ ourselves. I was just getting warmed up, and our guests had spatted their
+ hands at some of my remarks, when I heard a tramp, tramp, tramp on the
+ sidewalk outside, and before I could breathe a squad of infantry soldiers
+ had filed into the garden, surrounded the dance-house, a dozen had formed
+ in line before the door, and a sergeant had walked in and ordered the
+ citizens to disperse, and said the recruits were under arrest. Well, I
+ have been in some tight places in my life, but that was the closest place
+ I ever struck. The old gentleman, the leader of our guests, turned to me
+ and asked what this all meant, and I told him to be calm, and I would fix
+ everything. I got down off the bench and approached the sergeant, to argue
+ the thing. I found that he was, a colored man, and that his soldiers were
+ also colored troops. This was the unkindest cut of all. I could stand it
+ to be arrested by white soldiers, but the sending of a lot of &ldquo;niggers&rdquo;
+ after us white fellows was more than human nature could bear. We had most
+ of us been Democrats before enlisting, and had never looked upon the
+ colored man with that respect that we learned to do, later. I went up to
+ the sergeant, as brave as I could, and said, &ldquo;Look-a-here, boss, you have
+ made a dreadful mistake. We are gentlemen, enjoying ourselves, and this
+ interruption on your part will cost you dear. Now go away with your men,
+ quietly, and I promise you, on the honor of a gentleman, that I will not
+ report you, and have you punished,&rdquo; and I looked at him in a tone of voice
+ that I thought would convince him that I was a friend if he should go
+ away, but if he remained it would be at his peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said he didn't want any foolishness, or some of us would get hurt, and
+ just then one of the Irish recruits, who had tried to skin out the back
+ way, got jabbed in the pants by a bayonet, and he began to howl and cuss
+ the &ldquo;niggers.&rdquo; The sergeant called up half a dozen of his sable guard, and
+ they surrounded me and some of the boys. Our guests were becoming
+ frightened, ladies had put on-their wraps, and there was a good deal of
+ confusion, when I shouted, &ldquo;Boys, are we going to submit to this insult on
+ the part of a lot of nigger field hands? Never! To the rescue!&rdquo; Well, they
+ didn't &ldquo;to the rescue&rdquo; worth a cent. A colored man with a bayonet had
+ every recruit's breast at the point of his weapon, three soldiers
+ surrounded me, and one run his bayonet through the breast of my coat and
+ out under my arm, and held me on my tip-toes, and I was powerless, except
+ with my mouth. The old gentleman, our most distinguished guest, came up to
+ me, and I said to him, in confidence, so our guests could hear, however,
+ with a smile, &ldquo;This may seem to you a singular proceeding. I cannot
+ explain it to you now, as I am pledged to secrecy by my government, but I
+ will say that the duty we are on here is part of a well-laid plan of our
+ commander, and this seeming arrest is a part of the plan. This colored
+ sergeant is innocent. He is simply obeying orders, and is a humble
+ instrument in carrying out our plan. I expected to be arrested before
+ morning, but hoped it would be after our party. However, we soldiers have
+ to go where ordered. We shall be thrown into prison for a time, but when
+ this detective or secret service work on which we are engaged is done, we
+ will take pleasure in calling upon you again, wearing such laurels as we
+ may win. We bid you good-night, and wish you much happiness.&rdquo; They all
+ shook hands with us, evidently believing what I had said, and even the
+ sergeant seemed to take it in, for, after the crowd had gone, the sergeant
+ said, &ldquo;You will excuse me, kernel, for what I have done. I didn't know
+ about any 'plan.' All I knew was dat the provost-marshal told me to go up
+ to Carrollton and pull dem recruits dat was camping at de beer garden, and
+ fotch 'em to de guard-house.&rdquo; I told him he did perfectly right, and then
+ we recruits packed up our things and marched with the colored soldiers to
+ New Orleans, about six miles, and we slept in the guard-house. The next
+ morning the provost-marshal called upon us, damned us a little for not
+ insisting on being sent to our regiments, found out that my regiment was
+ up the river two hundred miles, and seemed mad because I passed it when I
+ come from St. Louis. I told him I was not expected to go hunting around
+ for my regiment, like a lost calf. What I wanted was for my regiment to
+ hunt me up. That afternoon he put me on an up-river boat with a tag on my
+ baggage telling where I belonged, and I bid good-bye to the recruits,
+ after having had three months of fun at the expense of Uncle Sam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I Strike Another Soft-Snap, Which is Harder Than Any Snap
+ Heretofore&mdash;I Begin Taking Music Lessons, and Fill Up a
+ Confederate Prisoner With Yankee Food.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last two chapters of this stuff has related to early experiences, but
+ now that it is probable the chaplain has got over being mad at my trading
+ him the circus-horse, I will resume the march with the regiment. For a
+ month or more I had been waiting for my commission to arrive, so that I
+ could serve as an officer, but it did not arrive while we were at
+ Montgomery, and we started away from that city towards Vicksburg, Miss.,
+ with a fair prospect of having hot work with strolling bands of the enemy.
+ I was much depressed. It had got so they didn't seem to want me anywhere.
+ It seemed that I was a sort of a Jonah, and wherever I was, something went
+ wrong. The chaplain wouldn't have me, because he had a suspicion that I
+ was giddy, and full of the devil, and I have thought he had an idea I
+ would sacrifice the whole army to perpetrate a practical joke, and he also
+ maintained that I would lie, if a lie would help me out of a scrape. I
+ never knew how such an impression could have been created. The colonel
+ said he would try and get along without me, the adjutant didn't want any
+ more of my mathematics in his reports and the brigade commander said he
+ would carry the brigade colors himself rather than have me around, as I
+ would bring headquarters into disgrace some way. So I had to serve as a
+ private in my own company, which was very hard on a man who had tasted the
+ sweets of official position. O, if my commission did not come soon I was
+ lost. After we had marched a couple of days it began to look as though we
+ were liable to have a fight on our hands. Every little while there would
+ be firing in advance, or on the flanks, and things looked blue for one who
+ did not want to have any trouble with anybody. One morning when we were
+ cooking our breakfast beside a pitch pine log, a little Irishman, who was
+ a friend of mine, as I always lent him my tobacco, said: &ldquo;There will be a
+ fight today, and some wan of the byes will sleep cold tonight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold chill came over me, and I wondered which of of the &ldquo;by's&rdquo; would
+ draw the ticket of death. The Irishman noticed that I was not feeling
+ perfectly easy, and he said, &ldquo;Sorrel top, wud yez take a bit of advice
+ from the loikes of me?&rdquo; I did not like to be called sorrel top, but if
+ there was any danger I would take advice from anybody, so I told him to
+ fire away. He told me that when we fell in, for the march of the day, to
+ arrange to be No. 4, as in case we were dismounted, to fight on foot,
+ number four would remain on his horse, and hold three other horses, and
+ keep in the rear, behind the trees, while the dismounted men went into the
+ fight. Great heavens, and that had never occurred to me before. Of course
+ number four would hold the horses, in case of a dismounted fight, and I
+ had never thought what a soft thing it was. It can be surmised by the
+ reader of profane history, that when our company formed that morning I was
+ number four. We marched a long for a couple of hours, when there was some
+ firing on the flanks, and a couple of companies were wheeled into line and
+ marched off into the woods for half a mile, and the order was given to
+ &ldquo;prepare to fight on foot.&rdquo; It was a momentous occasion for me, and when
+ the three men of our four dismounted and handed the bridle reins to me, I
+ was about the happiest man in the army. I did not want the boys to think I
+ was anxious to keep away from the front, so I said, &ldquo;Say, cap, don't I go
+ too?&rdquo; He said I could if I wanted to, as one of the other boys would hold
+ the horses if I was spoiling to be a corpse, but I told him I guessed,
+ seeing that I was already on the horse, I would stay, and the boys went
+ off laughing, leaving about twenty-five of us &ldquo;number fours&rdquo; holding
+ horses. Now, you may talk all you please about safe places in a fight, but
+ sitting on a horse in plain sight, holding three other prancing, kicking,
+ squalling horses, while the rest of the boys are behind trees, or behind
+ logs, popping at the enemy, is no soft thing. The bullets seemed to pass
+ right over our fellows on foot, and came right among the horses, who
+ twisted around and got tangled up, and made things unpleasant. I was
+ trying to get a stallion I was holding to quit biting my legs, when I saw
+ my little Irishman, who had steered me on to the soft snap, dodge down
+ behind his horse's head, to escape a bullet that killed one of the horses
+ he was holding, and I said, &ldquo;This is a fine arrangement you have got me
+ into. This is worse than being in front.&rdquo; He said he believed it was, as
+ he backed his other horses away from the dying horse, but he said as long
+ as they killed horses we had no cause to complain. There was a sergeant in
+ charge of us &ldquo;number fours,&rdquo; and he was as cool as any fellow I ever saw.
+ The sergeant was a nice man, but he was no musician. He was an Irishman,
+ also, and when any bugle-call and when any bugle-call sounded he had to
+ ask some one what it was. There was a great deal of uncertainty about
+ bugle-calls, I noticed, among officers as well as men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it could not be expected that every man in a cavalry regiment
+ would be a music teacher, and the calls sounded so much alike to the
+ uncultivated ear, that it was no wonder that everybody got the calls
+ mixed. In camp we got so we could tell &ldquo;assembly,&rdquo; and &ldquo;surgeon's call,&rdquo;
+ and &ldquo;tattoo,&rdquo; and quite a number of others, but the calls of battle were
+ Greek to us. The bugle sounded down in the woods, and the sergeant turned
+ to me and asked, &ldquo;Fhat the divil is that I dunno?&rdquo; I was satisfied it was
+ &ldquo;To horse,&rdquo; but when I saw our fellows come rushing back towards the
+ horses it looked as though the order was to fall back, and I suggested as
+ much to the sergeant. He thought it looked reasonable, too, and he ordered
+ us to fall back slowly toward the regiment. We didn't go so confounded
+ slow, and of course I was ahead with my three horses. The sergeant heard
+ the captain yell to him to hold on, and he got the most of the &ldquo;fours&rdquo; to
+ stop, and let the boys get on, but the little Irishman and myself couldn't
+ hold our extra horses, and they dragged us along over logs and through
+ brush, the regiment drew sabers to &ldquo;shoo&rdquo; the horses back, waived their
+ hats, my horse run his fore feet into a hole, fell down, and let me off
+ over his head, the other horses seemed to walk on me, I became insensible,
+ and the next thing I knew I was in an ambulance, behind the regiment,
+ which was on the march, as though nothing had happened. I felt of myself
+ to see if anything was broke, and finding I was all right I told the
+ driver of the ambulance I guessed I would get out and mount my horse, but
+ he said he guessed I wouldn t, because the colonel had told him if I died
+ to bury me beside the road, but if I lived to bring me to headquarters for
+ punishment. The driver said the boys whose horses I had stampeded, wanted
+ to kill me, but the colonel had said death was too good for me. Well,
+ nobody was hurt in the skirmish, and about noon we arrived at a camping
+ place for the night, and the ambulance drove up, and I was placed under
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems the sergeant had laid the whole thing to me. He had admitted to
+ the colonel that he didn't know one bugle call from another, and he
+ supposed I did, and when he asked me what it was, and I said it was to
+ retreat, he supposed I knew, and retreated. The colonel asked me what I
+ had to say, and I told him I didn't know any bugle call except get your
+ quinine, get your quinine. That when I enlisted there was nothing said
+ about my ability to read notes in music, and I had never learned, and
+ couldn't learn, as I had no more ear for music than a mule. I told him if
+ he would furnish a music teacher, I would study hard to try and master the
+ difference between &ldquo;forward and back,&rdquo; but that it didn't seem to me as
+ though I ought to be held responsible for an expression of opinion,
+ however erroneous, when asked for it by a superior officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that when the bugle sounded, and I saw the boys coming back on
+ a hop, skip and jump, it seemed to me the most natural thing in the world
+ that the bugle had sounded a retreat. That seemed the only direction we
+ could go, and as my natural inclination was to save those horses that had
+ been placed in my charge, of course I interpreted the bugle call to mean
+ for us to get out of there honorably, and as the only way to get out
+ honorably was to get out quick, we got up and dusted. The colonel always
+ gave me credit for being a good debater, and he smiled and said that as no
+ damage had been done, he would not insist that I be shot on the spot, but
+ he felt that an example should be made of me. He said I would be under
+ arrest until bed time, down under a tree, half a mile or so from
+ headquarters, in plain sight, and he would send music teachers there to
+ teach me the bugle calls. I thanked him, in a few well chosen remarks, and
+ the guard marched me to the tree, which was the guard-house. I found
+ another soldier there, under arrest, who had rode out of the ranks to
+ water his horse, while on the march, against orders, and a Confederate
+ prisoner that had been captured in the morning skirmish, a captain of a
+ Virginia regiment. The captain seemed real hurt at having been captured,
+ and was inclined to be uppish and distant. I tried two or three times to
+ get him into conversation on some subject connected with the war, but he
+ wouldn't have it. He evidently looked upon me as a horse-thief, a
+ deserter, and a bad man, or else a soldier who had been sent to pump
+ information out of him. I never was let alone quite as severely as I was
+ by our prisoner, at first. But I went to work and built a fire, and soon
+ had some coffee boiling, bacon frying, and sweet potatoes roasting, and
+ when I spread the lay out on the ground, and said, &ldquo;Colonel, this is on
+ me. Won't you join me?&rdquo; I think he was the most surprised man I ever saw,
+ He had watched every move I made, in cooking, with a yearning such as is
+ seldom seen, and he probably had no more idea that he was going to have a
+ mouthful of it, than that he should fly. His eyes might have been weak,
+ but if he had been a man I knew well, I should have said there were a
+ couple of tears gathering in his eyes, and I was quite sure of it when the
+ flood broke over the eye-lid dam, and rolled down among the underbrush
+ whiskers. He stopped the flood at once, by an effort of will, though there
+ seemed a something in his throat when he said, &ldquo;You don't mean it, do you,
+ kernel?&rdquo; I told him of course I meant it, and to slide right up and help
+ himself, and I speared a great big sweet potato, and some bacon, and
+ placed them on a big leaf, and poured coffee out in the only cup I had. He
+ kicked on using the cup, but I said we would both drink out of it. He
+ said, &ldquo;you are very kind, sir,&rdquo; and that was all he said during the meal.
+ But how he <i>did</i> eat. He tried to act as though he didn't care much
+ for dinner, and as though he was eating out of courtesy to me, but I could
+ tell by the way the sweet potato went down in the depths of my Confederate
+ friend, and by the joyous look when a swallow of coffee hit the right
+ place, that he was having a picnic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we were through with dinner and the guard and the other prisoner were
+ cooking theirs, he said, &ldquo;My friend, I do not mind telling you now that I
+ was much in need of food. I had not eaten since yesterday morning, as we
+ have been riding hard to intercept you gentlemen, sir. I trust I shall
+ live long enough to repay, you sir.&rdquo; I told him not to mention it, as all
+ our boys made it a point to divide when we captured a prisoner. He said he
+ believed his people felt the same way, but God knew they had little to
+ divide. He said he trembled when he thought that some of our men who were
+ prisoners in the south were faring very poorly, but it could not be
+ helped. &ldquo;Suppose I had captured you,&rdquo; he said, with a smile that was
+ forced, &ldquo;I could not have given you a mouthful of bread, until we had
+ found a southern family that 'had bread to spare.'&rdquo; I told him it was
+ pretty tough, but it would all be over before long, and then we would all
+ have plenty to eat. I got out a pack of cards, and the confederate captain
+ played seven-up with me, while we smoked. Presently nine buglers came down
+ to where we were, formed in line, and began to sound cavalry calls in
+ concert. I knew that they were the music teachers the colonel had sent to
+ teach me the calls. The confederate looked on in astonishment, while they
+ sounded a call, and when it was done I asked the chief bugler what it was,
+ and he told me, and I asked him to sound something else, which he did. My
+ idea was to convince the prisoner that this was a part of daily routine.
+ He got nervous and couldn't remember which was trumps; and finally said we
+ might talk all we pleased about the horrors of Andersonville, but to be
+ blowed to death with cavalry bugles was a fate that only the most hardened
+ criminals should suffer. The confederate evidently had no ear for music
+ more than I had, and he soon got enough. However the buglers kept up their
+ noise till about supper time, when they were called on. I got another meal
+ for the confederate, and he seemed to be actually getting fat. The colonel
+ of my regiment came down to where we were, and said, &ldquo;You fellows seem to
+ be doing pretty well,&rdquo; and then he had a long talk with the rebel
+ prisoner, invited him up to his tent to pass the night, apologized for the
+ concert he had been giving us, explained what it was for, told me I could
+ go to my company if I thought I could remember a bugle call in the future;
+ the captain shook hands with me and thanked me cordially, and we
+ separated. He was exchanged, the next day, and I never saw him for
+ twenty-two years, when I found him at the head of a manufacturing
+ enterprise in his loved Virginia, and he furnished me a more expensive
+ meal than I did him years before, but it didn't taste half as good as the
+ bacon dinner in Alabama under the guard-house tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A Short Story About a Pair of Boots, Showing the Monumental
+ Gall of their Owner.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I enlisted in the cavalry I bought a pair of top boots, of the
+ Wellington pattern, stitched with silk up and down the legs, which were of
+ shiny morocco. They came clear above my knees, and from the pictures I had
+ seen of cavalry soldiers, it struck me those boots would be a pass-port to
+ any society in the army. The first few months of my service, it seemed to
+ me, the boots gave me more tone than any one thing. I learned afterwards
+ that all new recruits came to the regiment with such boots, and that they
+ were the laughing stock of all the old veterans. I did not know that I was
+ being guyed by the boys, and I loved those boots above all things I had.
+ To be sure, when we struck an unusually muddy country, some idiot of an
+ officer seemed to be inspired to order us to dismount. The boys who had
+ common army boots would dismount anywhere, in mud or water, but it seemed
+ to me cruel for officers to order a dismount, when they knew I would have
+ to step in the mud half way up to my knees, with those morocco boots on.
+ Several times when ordered to dismount in the mud, I have ridden out of
+ the road, where it was not muddy, to dismount, but the boys would laugh so
+ loud, and the officers would swear so wickedly, that I got so I would
+ dismount wherever they told me, suppress my emotions, as I felt my
+ beautiful, shiny boots sink into the red clay, and when we got into camp I
+ would spend half the night cleaning my boots. The captain said if I would
+ spend half the time cleaning my carbine and saber that I did cleaning my
+ boots, I would have been a model soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think that for the first year of my service I had as elegant a pair of
+ boots as could be found in the army. But it was the hardest work to keep
+ track of them. The first three months it was all I could do to keep the
+ chaplain from trading me a pair of old army shoes for my boots. The
+ arguments he used to convince me that mo-. rocco boots were far above my
+ station, and that they were intended for a chaplain, were labored. If he
+ had used the same number of words in the right direction, he could have
+ converted the whole army. I had to sleep with my boots under my head every
+ night, to prevent them from being stolen and twice they were stolen from
+ my tent, but in each case recovered at the sutler's, where they had been
+ pawned for a bottle of brandy peaches, which I had to pay for to redeem
+ the boots. The boots had become almost a burden to me, in keeping them,
+ but I enjoyed them so much that money could not have bought them. When we
+ were in a town for a few days, and I rode around, it did not make any
+ difference whether I had any other clothes on, of any account, the morocco
+ boots captured the town. The natives could not see how a man who wore such
+ boots could be anything but a high-up thoroughbred. The last time I lost
+ my boots will always be remembered by those who were in the same command.
+ We were on the march with a Michigan and a New Jersey regiment, through
+ the dustiest country that ever was. The dust was eight inches deep in the
+ road, and just like fine ashes. Every time a horse put his foot down the
+ dust would raise above the trees, and as there were two thousand horses,
+ with four feet apiece, and each foot in constant motion, it can be
+ imagined that the troops were dusty. And it was so hot that the
+ perspiration oozed out of us, but the dust covered it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three regiments took turns in acting as rear guard, to pick up
+ stragglers, and on this hot and dusty day the New Jersey regiment was in
+ the rear. It was composed of Germans entirely, with a German colonel, a
+ man who had seen service in Europe, and he looked upon a soldier as a
+ machine, with no soul, fit only to obey orders. That was not the kind of a
+ soldier I was. During the day's march the boys stripped off everything
+ they could. I know all I had on was a shirt and pants, and a handkerchief
+ around my head. I took off my boots and coat and let the colored cook of
+ the company strap them on to his saddle with the camp kettles. He usually
+ rode right behind the company, and I thought I could get my things any
+ time if I wanted to dress up. It was the hardest day's march that I ever
+ experienced, lungs full of dust, and every man so covered with dust that
+ you could not recognize your nearest neighbor. Afternoon the command
+ halted beside a stream, and it was announced that we would go into camp
+ for the night. The colored cook came along soon after, and he was
+ perfectly pale, whether from dust or fright I could not tell, but he
+ announced to me, in a manner that showed that he appreciated the calamity
+ which had befallen the command, that he had lost my boots. I was going to
+ kill him, but my carbine was full of dust, and I made it a point never to
+ kill a man with a dirty gun, so I let him explain. He said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fell back to de rear, by dat plantation where de cotton gin was
+ burning, to see if I couldn't get a canteen of buttermilk to wash de dust
+ outen my froat, when dat Dutch Noo Jersey gang come along, and de boss he
+ said, 'nicker, you got back ahead fere you pelong, or I gick you in de
+ pack mit a saber, aind't it,' and when I get on my mule to come along he
+ grab de boots and he say, 'nicker, dot boots is better for me,' and when I
+ was going to take dem away from him he stick me in de pants wid a saber.
+ Den I come away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could have stood up under having an arm shot off, but to lose my boots
+ was more than I could bear. It never did take me long to decide on any
+ important matter, and in a moment I decided to invade the camp of that New
+ Jersey regiment, recapture my boots or annihilate every last foreigner on
+ our soil, so I started off, barefooted, without a coat, and covered with
+ dust, for the headquarters of the New Jersey fellows. They had been in
+ camp but a few minutes, but every last one of them had taken a bath in the
+ river, brushed the dust off his clothes, and looked ready for dress
+ parade. That was one fault of those foreigners, they were always clean, if
+ they had half a chance. I went right to the colonel's tent, and he was
+ surrounded with officers, and they were opening bottles of beer, and how
+ cool it looked. There was something peculiar about those foreigners, no
+ matter if they were doing duty in the most inaccessible place in the
+ south, and were short of transportation, you could always find beer at
+ their headquarters. I walked right in, and the colonel was just blowing
+ the foam off a glass of beer. He looked at me in astonishment, and I said
+ in a voice husky from dust down my neck:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel this is an important epoch in the history of our beloved country.
+ Events have transpired within the past hour, which leaves it an open
+ question whether, as a nation, we are afoot or on horseback.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great hefens,&rdquo; said the colonel, stopping with his glass of beer half
+ drank, &ldquo;you vrighten me. Vot has habbened. But vait, und dake a glass of
+ beer, as you seem exhausted, und proke up. Captain Ouskaspiel, hand the
+ shendleman some peer. Mine Gott, bud you look hard, strancher.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe that I ever drank anything that seemed to go right to the
+ spot, the way that beer did. It seemed to start a freshet of dust down my
+ neck, clear my throat, and brace me up. While I was drinking it I noticed
+ that the German colonel and his officers eyed me closely, my bare feet, my
+ flannel shirt full of dust, and my hair that looked as though I had stood
+ on my head in the road. They waited for me to continue, and after draining
+ the last drop in the glass, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Colonel, it was no ordinary circumstance that induced you brave
+ foreigners, holding allegiance to European sovereigns, to fly to arms to
+ defend this new nation from an internecine foe. While we natives, and to
+ the manor born, left our plows in the furrow, to spring to-arms, you left
+ your shoemaker shops, the spigots of your beer saloons, the marts of
+ commerce in which you were engaged, and stood shoulder to shoulder. Where
+ the bullets of the enemy whistled, there could be found the brave Dutchmen
+ of New Jersey. It brings tears to eyes unused to weeping, to think of the
+ German fathers and mothers of our land, who are waiting and watching for
+ the return of sons who will never come back, and this is, indeed, harder
+ for them to bear, when we reflect that these boys were not obliged to
+ fight for our country, holding allegiance, as I said before to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Waid a minute, of you blease,&rdquo; said the colonel. &ldquo;Dake von more drink,
+ and dell me, of you please, vot de hell you vos drying to get at. Capt.
+ Hemrech, gif der shendleman a glass of beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second glass of beer was given me, and I drank it. There was evidently a
+ suspicion on the part of the New Jersey officers that the importance of my
+ visit had been over-rated by them, and they seemed anxious to have me come
+ to the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the march today,&rdquo; said I, wiping the foam off my moustache on my
+ shirt-sleeve, &ldquo;one of your thieving soldiers stole my boots from our
+ nigger cook, who was conveying them for me. A cavalry soldier without
+ boots, is no good. I came after my boots, and I will have them or blood.
+ Return my boots, or by the eternal, the Wisconsin cavalry regiment will
+ come over here and everlastingly gallop over your fellows. The
+ constitution of the United States and the Declaration of Independence, are
+ on my side. In civil life a man's house is his castle. In the army a man's
+ boots is his castle. Give me my boots, sir, or the blood of the slain will
+ rest on your heads.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel was half mad and half pleased. He tapped his forehead with his
+ fore-finger, and looked at his officers in a manner that showed he
+ believed my head was wrong, but he said kindly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My man, you go oud and sit under a tree, in the shade, and I vill hafe
+ your poots found if they are in my rechiment,&rdquo; and I went out. I heard the
+ colonel say to one of his officers, &ldquo;It vas too pad dot two good glasses
+ of beer should be spoiled, giving them to dot grazy solcher. Ve must be
+ more careful mit de beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pretty soon an officer came out and asked me how the boots were taken, and
+ I gave him all the information I had, and he sent men all around the
+ regiment, and in an hour or so the boots were brought to me, the man who
+ stole them was arrested, the officers apologized to me, and I went back to
+ my regiment in triumph, with my boots under my arms. The incident got
+ noised around among the other regiments, and for months after that, when
+ the colonel of the New Jersey cavalry rode by another regiment, the boys
+ would yell out, &ldquo;Boots, boots,&rdquo; or when a company or squad of the New
+ Jersey fellows would pass along, it was &ldquo;Look out for your boots! The
+ shoemakers are coming.&rdquo; For stealing that one pair of boots, by one man, a
+ whole regiment got a reputation for stealing that hung to it a long time.
+ Ten years afterward I was connected with a New York daily paper, and one
+ evening I was detailed to go to a New Jersey city to report the
+ commencement exercises of a college. In the programme of exercises I
+ noticed that a man of the same name of that of the New Jersey colonel, was
+ one of the college professors, and I wondered if he was the same man.
+ During the evening he put in an appearance on the stage, and I could see
+ that he was the colonel who had given me the beer, and caused my boots to
+ be returned to me. After the exercises of the evening, the New York
+ newspaper men were invited to partake of a collation in the apartments of
+ the college officials, and the professors were introduced to the newspaper
+ men. When my turn came to be introduced, and the old colonel stood before
+ me, I said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;General, you were in the army, were you not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yezzer!&rdquo; said the old man. &ldquo;I am broud to say dot I fought for my adopted
+ country. But vy do you ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have met before. I, too, was a soldier. I was at your headquarters
+ once, on a very important mission. I was entertained, sir, in your tent,
+ permitted, to partake of the good, things you had, and sent away happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vell, you dond't say so,&rdquo; said the old man, as he pressed my hand warmly.
+ &ldquo;Vere vas dis dat you were my guest, and vot vas de important message?&rdquo;
+ and he smiled all over his face at the prospect of hearing something about
+ old times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was in Mississippi, between Montgomery, Ala., and Vicksburg. Do you
+ remember the hottest and dustiest day that ever was, when we camped on a
+ little stream?&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, yah!&rdquo; said the colonel; &ldquo;very well. It vas an awful time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I went to your headquarters with information of vital importance. One of
+ your soldiers <i>had stolen my boots</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gott in himmel!&rdquo; said the old colonel, now a college professor, as he
+ looked at me to see if there was any resemblance between the New York
+ reporter and the dusty, bare-footed soldier of ten years before. &ldquo;Vill I
+ never hear de last of dem dam boots? And you are de same veller, eh. I
+ have often thought, since dat day, vot an awful gall you had. But it is
+ all ofer now. You vatch your poots vile you are in New Chersey, for plenty
+ of dose cavalry-men are all around here. But do me a favor now, and don't
+ ever again say poots to me, dot's a good fellow,&rdquo; and then we all sat down
+ to lunch, and the old colonel told the newspaper boys from New York about
+ how I called at his tent on the march, looking for a pair of boots that
+ had eloped with one of his New Chersey dutchmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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