Lee surrendered the remnant of his army at
Appomattox, April 9, 1865, and yet a couple of days later the old
Colonel's battery lay intrenched right in the mountain-pass where it had
halted three days before. Two weeks previously it had been detailed
with a light division sent to meet and repel a force which it was
understood was coming in by way of the southwest valley to strike Lee in
the rear of his long line from Richmond to Petersburg. It had done its
work. The mountain-pass had been seized and held, and the Federal force
had not gotten by that road within the blue rampart which guarded on
that
side the heart of Virginia. This pass, which was the key to the main line of passage over the mountains, had been assigned by the commander of the division to the old Colonel and his old battery, and they had held it. The position taken by the battery had been chosen with a soldier's eye. A better place could not have been selected to hold the pass. It was its highest point, just where the road crawled over the shoulder of the mountain along the limestone cliff, a hundred feet sheer above the deep river, where its waters had cut their way in ages past, and now lay deep and silent, as if resting after their arduous toil before they began to boil over the great bowlders which filled the bed a hundred.
side the heart of Virginia. This pass, which was the key to the main line of passage over the mountains, had been assigned by the commander of the division to the old Colonel and his old battery, and they had held it. The position taken by the battery had been chosen with a soldier's eye. A better place could not have been selected to hold the pass. It was its highest point, just where the road crawled over the shoulder of the mountain along the limestone cliff, a hundred feet sheer above the deep river, where its waters had cut their way in ages past, and now lay deep and silent, as if resting after their arduous toil before they began to boil over the great bowlders which filled the bed a hundred.
The little plateau at the top guarded the
descending road on either side for nearly a mile, and the mountain on
the other side of the river was the centre of a clump of rocky, heavily
timbered spurs, so inaccessible that no feet but those of wild animals
or of the hardiest hunter had ever climbed it. On the side of the river
on which the road lay, the only path out over the mountain except the
road itself was a charcoal-burner's track, dwindling at times to a
footway known only to the mountain-folk, which a picket at the top could
hold against an army. The position, well defended, was impregnable, and
it was well defended. This the general of the division knew when he
detailed the old Colonel and gave him his order to hold the pass until
relieved, and not let his guns fall into the hands of the enemy. He knew
both the Colonel and his battery. The battery was one of the oldest in
the army. It had been in the service since April, 1861, and its
commander had come to be known as "The Wheel Horse of his division". He
was, perhaps, the oldest officer of his rank in his branch of the
service. Although he had bitterly opposed secession, and was many years
past the age of service when the war came on, yet as soon as the
President called on the State for her quota of troops to coerce South
Carolina, he had raised and uniformed an artillery company, and offered
it, not to the President of the United States, but to the Governor of
Virginia.
It is just at this point that he suddenly looms
up to me as a soldier; the relation he never wholly lost to me
afterward, though I knew him for many, many years of peace. His gray
coat with the red facing and the bars on the collar; his military cap;
his gray flannel shirt -- it was the first time I ever saw him wear
anything but immaculate linen -- his high boots; his horse caparisoned with a black, high-peaked saddle, with crupper
and breast-girth, instead of the light English hunting-saddle to which I
had been accustomed, all come before me now as if it were but the other
day. I remember but little beyond it, yet I remember, as if it were
yesterday, his leaving home, and the scenes which immediately preceded
it; the excitement created by the news of the President's call for
troops; the unanimous judgment that it meant war; the immediate
determination of the old Colonel, who had hitherto opposed secession,
that it must be met; the suppressed agitation on the plantation,
attendant upon the tender of his services and the Governor's acceptance
of them. The prompt and continuous work incident to the enlistment of
the men, the bustle of preparation, and all the scenes of that time,
come before me now. It turned the calm current of the life of an old and
placid country neighborhood, far from any city or centre, and stirred
it into a boiling torrent, strong enough, or fierce enough to cut its
way and join the general torrent which was bearing down and sweeping
everything before it. It seemed but a minute before the quiet old
plantation, in which the harvest, the corn-shucking, and the Christmas
holidays alone marked the passage of the quiet seasons, and where a
strange carriage or a single horseman coming down the big road was an
event in life, was turned into a depot of war-supplies, and the
neighborhood became a parade-ground. The old Colonel, not a colonel yet,
nor even a captain, except by brevet,
was on his horse by daybreak and off on his rounds through the
plantations and the pines enlisting his company. The office in the yard,
heretofore one in name only, became one now in reality, and a table was
set out piled with papers, pens, ink, books of tactics and regulation,
at which men were accepted and enrolled. Soldiers seemed to spring from
the ground, as they did from the sowing of the dragon's teeth in the
days of Cadmus.
Men came up the high road or down the paths across the fields,
sometimes singly, but oftener in little parties of two or three, and,
asking for the Captain, entered the office as private citizens and came
out soldiers enlisted for the war. There was nothing heard of on the
plantation except fighting; white and black, all were at work, and all
were eager; the servants contended for the honor of going with their
master; the women flocked to the house to assist in the work of
preparation, cutting out and making under-clothes, knitting socks,
picking lint, preparing bandages, and sewing on uniforms; for many of
the men who had enlisted were of the poorest class, far too poor to
furnish anything themselves, and their equipment had to be contributed
mainly by wealthier neighbors. The work was carried on at night as well
as by day, for the occasion was urgent. Meantime the men were being
drilled by the Captain and his lieutenants, who had been militia
officers of old. We were carried to see the drill at the cross-roads,
and a brave sight it seemed to us: the lines marching and
countermarching in the field, with the horses galloping as they wheeled
amid clouds of dust, at the hoarse commands of the excited officers, and
the roadside lined with spectators of every age and condition. I recall
the arrival of the messenger one night, with the telegraphic order to
the Captain to report with his company at "Camp Lee" immediately; the
hush in the parlor that attended its reading; then the forced beginning
of the conversation afterwards in a somewhat strained and unnatural key,
and the Captain's quick and decisive outlining of his plans.
Within the hour a dozen messengers were on their
way in various directions to notify the members of the command of the
summons, and to deliver the order for their attendance at a given point
next day. It seemed that a sudden and great change had come. It was the
actual appearance of what had hitherto only been theoretical -- war. The
next morning the Captain, in full uniform, took leave of the assembled
plantation, with a few solemn words commending all he left behind to
God, and galloped away up the big road to join and lead his battery to
the war, and to be gone just four years.
Within a month he was on "the Peninsula" with
Magruder, guarding Virginia on the east against the first attack. His
camp was first at Yorktown and then on Jamestown Island, the honor
having been assigned his battery of guarding the oldest cradle of the
race on this continent. It was at "Little Bethel" that his guns were
first trained on the enemy, and that the battery first saw what they had
to do, and from this time until the middle of April, 1865, they were in
service, and no battery saw more service or suffered more in it. Its
story was a part of the story of the Southern Army in Virginia. The
Captain was a rigid disciplinarian, and his company had more work to do
than most new companies. A pious churchman, of the old puritanical
type not uncommon to Virginia, he looked after the spiritual as well as
the physical welfare of his men, and his chaplain or he read prayers at
the head of his company every morning during the war. At first he was
not popular with the men, he made the duties of camp life so onerous to
them, it was "nothing but drilling and praying all the time," they said.
But he had not commanded very long before they came to know the stuff
that was in him. He had not been in service a year before he had had
four horses shot under him, and when later on he was offered the command
of a battalion, the old company petitioned to be one of his batteries,
and still remained under his command. Before the first year was out the
battery had, through its own elements, and the discipline of the
Captain, become a cohesive force, and a distinct integer in the Army of
Northern Virginia. Young farmer recruits knew of its prestige and
expressed preference for it of many batteries of rapidly growing or
grown reputation. Owing to its high stand, the old and clumsy guns with
which it had started out were taken from it, and in their place was
presented a battery of four fine, brass, twelve-pound Napoleons of the
newest and most approved kind, and two three-inch Parrotts, all
captured. The men were as pleased with them as children with new toys.
The care and attention needed to keep them in prime order broke the
monotony of camp life. They soon had abundant opportunities to test
their power. They worked admirably, carried far, and were
extraordinarily accurate in their aim. The men from admiration of their
guns grew to have first a pride in, and then an affection for, them, and
gave them nicknames as they did their comrades; the four Napoleons
being dubbed "The Evangelists", and the two rifles being "The Eagle",
because of its scream and force, and "The Cat", because when it became
hot from rapid firing "It jumped," they said, "like a cat." From many a
hill-top in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania "The Evangelists" spoke
their hoarse message of battle and death, "The Eagle" screamed her
terrible note, and "The Cat" jumped as she spat her deadly shot from her
hot throat. In the Valley of Virginia; on the levels of Henrico and
Hanover; on the slopes of Manassas; in the woods of Chancellorsville; on
the heights of Fredericksburg; at Antietam and Gettysburg; in the
Spottsylvania wilderness, and again on the Hanover levels and on the
lines before Petersburg, the old guns through nearly four years roared
from fiery throats their deadly messages. The history of the battery was
bound up with the history of Lee's army. A rivalry sprang up among the
detachments of the different guns, and their several records were
jealously kept. The number of duels each gun was in was carefully
counted, every scar got in battle was treasured, and the men around
their camp-fires, at their scanty messes, or on the march, bragged of
them among themselves and avouched them as witnesses. New recruits
coming in to fill the gaps made by the killed and disabled, readily fell
in with the common mood and caught the spirit like a contagion. It was
not an uncommon thing for a wheel to be smashed in by a shell, but if it
happened to one gun oftener than to another there was envy. Two of the
Evangelists seemed to be especially favored in this line, while the Cat
was so exempt as to become the subject of some derision. The men stood
by the guns till they were knocked to pieces, and when the fortune of
the day went against them, had with their own hands oftener than once
saved them after most of their horses were killed.
This had happened in turn to every gun, the men
at times working like beavers in mud up to their thighs and under a
murderous fire to get their guns out. Many a man had been killed tugging
at trail or wheel when the day was against them; but not a gun had ever
been lost. At last the evil day arrived. At Winchester a sudden and
impetuous charge for a while swept everything before it, and carried the
knoll where the old battery was posted; but all the guns were got out
by the toiling and rapidly dropping men, except the Cat, which was
captured with its entire detachment working at it until they were
surrounded and knocked from the piece by cavalrymen. Most of the men who
were not killed were retaken before the day was over, with many guns;
but the Cat was lost. She remained in the enemy's hands and probably was
being turned against her old comrades and lovers. The company was inconsolable.
The death of comrades was too natural and common a thing to depress the
men beyond what such occurrences necessarily did; but to lose a gun! It
was like losing the old Colonel; it was worse: a gun was ranked as a
brigadier; and the Cat was equal to a major-general. The other guns
seemed lost without her; the Eagle especially, which generally went next
to her, appeared to the men to have a lonely and subdued air. The
battery was no longer the same: it seemed broken and depleted, shrunken
to a mere section. It was worse than Cold Harbor, where over half the
men were killed or wounded. The old Captain, now Colonel of the
battalion, appreciated the loss and apprehended its effect on the men as
much as they themselves did, and application was made for a gun to take
the place of the lost piece; but there was none to be had, as the men
said they had known all along. It was added -- perhaps by a department
clerk -- that if they wanted a gun to take the place of the one they had
lost, they had better capture it. "By ----, we will," they said --
adding epithets, intended for the department clerk in his "bomb-proof",
not to be printed in this record -- and they did. For some time
afterwards in every engagement into which they got there used to be
speculation among them as to whether the Cat were not there on the other
side; some of the men swearing they could tell her report, and even
going to the rash length of offering bets on her presence.
By one of those curious coincidences, as strange
as anything in fiction, a new general had, in 1864, come down across the
Rapidan to take Richmond, and the old battery had found a hill-top in
the line in which Lee's army lay stretched across "the Wilderness"
country to stop him. The day, though early in May, was a hot one, and
the old battery, like most others, had suffered fearfully. Two of the
guns had had wheels cut down by shells and the men had been badly cut
up; but the fortune of the day had been with Lee, and a little before
nightfall, after a terrible fight, there was a rapid advance, Lee's
infantry sweeping everything before it, and the artillery, after opening
the way for the charge, pushing along with it; now unlimbering as some
vantage-ground was gained, and using canister with deadly effect; now
driving ahead again so rapidly that it was mixed up with the muskets
when the long line of breastworks was carried with a rush, and a line of
guns were caught still hot from their rapid work. As the old battery,
with lathered horses and smoke-grimed men, swung up the crest and
unlimbered on the captured breastwork, a cheer went up which was heard
even above the long general yell of the advancing line, and for a moment
half the men in the battery crowded together around some object on the
edge of the redoubt, yelling like madmen. The next instant they divided,
and there was the Cat, smoke-grimed and blood-stained and still
sweating hot from her last fire, being dragged from her muddy ditch by
as many men as could get hold of trail-rope or wheel, and rushed into
her old place beside the Eagle, in time to be double-shotted with
canister to the muzzle, and to pour it from among her old comrades into
her now retiring former masters. Still, she had a new carriage, and her
record was lost, while those of the other guns had been faithfully kept
by the men. This made a difference in her position for which even the
bullets in her wheels did not wholly atone; even Harris, the sergeant of
her detachment, felt that.
It was only a few days later, however, that
abundant atonement was made. The new general did not retire across the
Rapidan after his first defeat, and a new battle had to be fought: a
battle, if anything, more furious, more terrible than the first, when
the dead filled the trenches and covered the fields. He simply marched
by the left flank, and Lee marching by the right flank to head him,
flung himself upon him again at Spottsylvania Court-House. That day the
Cat, standing in her place behind the new and temporary breastwork
thrown up when the battery was posted, had the felloes of her wheels,
which showed above the top of the bank, entirely cut away by
Minie-bullets, so that when she jumped in the recoil her wheels smashed
and let her down. This covered all old scores. The other guns had been
cut down by shells or solid shot; but never before had one been gnawed
down by musket-balls. From this time all through the campaign the Cat
held her own beside her brazen and bloody sisters, and in the cold
trenches before Petersburg that winter, when the new general --
Starvation -- had joined the one already there, she made her bloody mark
as often as any gun on the long lines.
Thus the old battery had come to be known, as its
old commander, now colonel of a battalion, had come to be known by
those in yet higher command. And when in the opening spring of 1865 it
became apparent to the leaders of both armies that the long line could
not longer be held if a force should enter behind it, and, sweeping the
one partially unswept portion of Virginia, cut the railways in the
southwest, and a man was wanted to command the artillery in the
expedition sent to meet this force, it was not remarkable that the old
Colonel and his battalion should be selected for the work. The force
sent out was but small; for the long line was worn to a thin one in
those days, and great changes were taking place, the consequences of
which were known only to the commanders. In a few days the commander of
the expedition found that he must divide his small force for a time, at
least, to accomplish his purpose, and sending the old Colonel with one
battery of artillery to guard one pass, must push on over the mountain
by another way to meet the expected force, if possible, and repel it
before it crossed the farther range. Thus the old battery, on an April
evening of 1865, found itself toiling alone up the steep mountain road
which leads above the river to the gap, which formed the chief pass in
that part of the Blue Ridge. Both men and horses looked, in the dim and
waning light of the gray April day, rather like shadows of the beings
they represented than the actual beings themselves. And anyone seeing
them as they toiled painfully up, the thin horses floundering in the
mud, and the men, often up to their knees, tugging at the sinking
wheels, now stopping to rest, and always moving so slowly that they
seemed scarcely to advance at all, might have thought them the ghosts of
some old battery lost from some long gone and forgotten war on that
deep and desolate mountain road. Often, when they stopped, the blowing
of the horses and the murmuring of the river in its bed below were the
only sounds heard, and the tired voices of the men when they spoke among
themselves seemed hardly more articulate sounds than they. Then the
voice of the mounted figure on the roan horse half hidden in the mist
would cut in, clear and inspiring, in a tone of encouragement more than
of command, and everything would wake up: the drivers would shout and
crack their whips; the horses would bend themselves on the collars and
flounder in the mud; the men would spring once more to the mud-clogged
wheels, and the slow ascent would begin again.
The orders to the Colonel, as has been said, were
brief: To hold the pass until he received further instructions, and not
to lose his guns. To be ordered, with him, was to obey. The last streak
of twilight brought them to the top of the pass; his soldier's instinct
and a brief recognizance
made earlier in the day told him that this was his place, and before
daybreak next morning the point was as well fortified as a night's work
by weary and supperless men could make it. A prettier spot could not
have been found for the purpose; a small plateau, something over an acre
in extent, where a charcoal-burner's hut had once stood, lay right at
the top of the pass. It was a little higher on either side than in the
middle, where a small brook, along which the charcoal-burner's track was
yet visible, came down from the wooded mountain above, thus giving a
natural crest to aid the fortification on either side, with open space
for the guns, while the edge of the wood coming down from the mountain
afforded shelter for the camp.
As the battery was unsupported it had to rely on
itself for everything, a condition which most soldiers by this time were
accustomed to. A dozen or so of rifles were in the camp, and with these
pickets were armed and posted. The pass had been seized none too soon; a
scout brought in the information before nightfall that the invading
force had crossed the farther range before that sent to meet it could
get there, and taking the nearest road had avoided the main body
opposing it, and been met only by a rapidly moving detachment, nothing
more than a scouting party, and now were advancing rapidly on the road
on which they were posted, evidently meaning to seize the pass and cross
the mountain at this point. The day was Sunday; a beautiful Spring
Sunday; but it was no Sabbath for the old battery. All day the men
worked, making and strengthening their redoubt
to guard the pass, and by the next morning, with the old battery at the
top, it was impregnable. They were just in time. Before noon their vedettes
brought in word that the enemy were ascending the mountain, and the sun
had hardly turned when the advance guard rode up, came within range of
the picket, and were fired on.
It was apparent that they supposed the force
there only a small one, for they retired and soon came up again
reinforced in some numbers, and a sharp little skirmish ensued, hot
enough to make them more prudent afterwards, though the picket retired
up the mountain. This gave them encouragement and probably misled them,
for they now advanced boldly. They saw the redoubt on the crest as they
came on, and unlimbering a section or two, flung a few shells up at it,
which either fell short or passed over without doing material damage.
None of the guns was allowed to respond, as the distance was too great
with the ammunition the battery had, and, indifferent as it was, it was
too precious to be wasted in a duel at an ineffectual range. Doubtless
deceived by this, the enemy came on in force, being obliged by the
character of the ground to keep almost entirely to the road, which
really made them advance in column. The battery waited. Under orders of
the Colonel the guns standing in line were double-shotted with canister,
and, loaded to the muzzle, were trained down to sweep the road at from
four to five hundred yards' distance. And when the column reached this
point the six guns, aimed by old and skilful gunners, at a given word
swept road and mountain-side with a storm of leaden hail. It was a fire
no mortal man could stand up against, and the practised gunners rammed
their pieces full again, and before the smoke had cleared or the
reverberation had died away among the mountains, had fired the guns
again and yet again. The road was cleared of living things when the
draught setting down the river drew the smoke away; but it was no
discredit to the other force; for no army that was ever uniformed could
stand against that battery in that pass. Again and again the attempt was
made to get a body of men up under cover of the woods and rocks on the
mountain-side, while the guns below utilized their better ammunition
from longer range; but it was useless. Although one of the lieutenants
and several men were killed in the skirmish, and a number more were
wounded, though not severely, the old battery commanded the
mountain-side, and its skilful gunners swept it at every point the foot
of man could scale. The sun went down flinging his last flame on a
victorious battery still crowning the mountain pass. The dead were
buried by night in a corner of the little plateau, borne to their last bivouac on the old gun-carriages which they had stood by so often -- which the men said would "sort of ease their minds."
The next day the fight was renewed, and with the
same result. The old battery in its position was unconquerable. Only one
fear now faced them; their ammunition was getting as low as their
rations; another such day or half-day would exhaust it. A sergeant was
sent back down the mountain to try to get more, or, if not, to get
tidings. The next day it was supposed the fight would be renewed; and
the men waited, alert, eager, vigilant, their spirits high, their
appetite for victory whetted by success. The men were at their
breakfast, or what went for breakfast, scanty at all times, now doubly
so, hardly deserving the title of a meal, so poor and small were the
portions of cornmeal, cooked in their frying-pans, which went for their
rations, when the sound of artillery below broke on the quiet air. They
were on their feet in an instant and at the guns, crowding upon the breastwork
to look or to listen; for the road, as far as could be seen down the
mountain, was empty except for their own picket, and lay as quiet as if
sleeping in the balmy air. And yet volley after volley of artillery came
rolling up the mountain. What could it mean? That the rest of their
force had come up and was engaged with that at the foot of the mountain?
The Colonel decided to be ready to go and help them; to fall on the
enemy in the rear; perhaps they might capture the entire force. It
seemed the natural thing to do, and the guns were limbered up in an
incredibly short time, and a roadway made through the entrenchment, the
men working like beavers under the excitement. Before they had left the
redoubt, however, the vedettes sent out returned and reported that there
was no engagement going on, and the firing below seemed to be only practicing. There was quite a stir in the camp below; but they had not
even broken camp. This was mysterious. Perhaps it meant that they had
received reinforcements, but it was a queer way of showing it. The old
Colonel sighed as he thought of the good ammunition they could throw
away down there, and of his empty limber-chests. It was necessary to be
on the alert, however; the guns were run back into their old places, and
the horses picketed once more back among the trees. Meantime he sent
another messenger back, this time a courier, for he had but one
commissioned officer left, and the picket below was strengthened.
The morning passed and no one came; the day wore
on and still no advance was made by the force below. It was suggested
that the enemy had left; he had, at least, gotten enough of that
battery. A reconnaissance,
however, showed that he was still encamped at the foot of the mountain.
It was conjectured that he was trying to find a way around to take them
in the rear, or to cross the ridge by the footpath. Preparation was
made to guard more closely the mountain-path across the spur, and a
detachment was sent up to strengthen the picket there. The waiting told
on the men and they grew bored and restless. They gathered about the
guns in groups and talked; talked of each piece some, but not with the
old spirit and vim; the loneliness of the mountain seemed to oppress
them; the mountains stretching up so brown and gray on one side of them,
and so brown and gray on the other, with their bare, dark forests
soughing from time to time as the wind swept up the pass. The minds of
the men seemed to go back to the time when they were not so alone, but
were part of a great and busy army, and some of them fell to talking of
the past, and the battles they had figured in, and of the comrades they
had lost. They told them off in a slow and colorless way, as if it were
all part of the past as much as the dead they named. One hundred and
nineteen times they had been in action. Only seventeen men were left of
the eighty odd who had first enlisted in the battery, and of these four
were at home crippled for life. Two of the oldest men had been among the
half-dozen who had fallen in the skirmish just the day before. It
looked tolerably hard to be killed that way after passing for four years
through such battles as they had been in; and both had wives and
children at home, too, and not a cent to leave them to their names. They
agreed calmly that they'd have to "sort of look after them a little" if
they ever got home. These were some of the things they talked about as
they pulled their old worn coats about them, stuffed their thin,
weather-stained hands in their ragged pockets to warm them, and squatted
down under the breastwork to keep a little out of the wind. One thing
they talked about a good deal was something to eat. They described meals
they had had at one time or another as personal adventures, and
discussed the chances of securing others in the future as if they were
prizes of fortune. One listening and seeing their thin, worn faces and
their wasted frames might have supposed they were starving, and they
were, but they did not say so.
Towards the middle of the afternoon there was a
sudden excitement in the camp. A dozen men saw them at the same time: a
squad of three men down the road at the farthest turn, past their
picket; but an advancing column could not have created as much
excitement, for the middle man carried a white flag. In a minute every
man in the battery was on the breastwork. What could it mean! It was a
long way off, nearly half a mile, and the flag was small: possibly only a
pocket-handkerchief or a napkin; but it was held aloft as a flag
unmistakably. A hundred conjectures were indulged in. Was it a summons
to surrender? A request for an armistice for some purpose? Or was it a
trick to ascertain their number and position? Some held one view, some
another. Some extreme ones thought a shot ought to be fired over them to
warn them not to come on; no flags of truce were wanted. The old
Colonel, who had walked to the edge of the plateau outside the redoubt
and taken his position where he could study the advancing figures with
his field-glass, had not spoken. The lieutenant who was next in command
to him had walked out after him, and stood near him, from time to time
dropping a word or two of conjecture in a half-audible tone; but the
Colonel had not answered a word; perhaps none was expected. Suddenly he
took his glass down, and gave an order to the lieutenant: "Take two men
and meet them at the turn yonder; learn their business; and act as your
best judgment advises. If necessary to bring the messenger farther,
bring only the officer who has the flag, and halt him at that rock
yonder, where I will join him." The tone was as placid as if such an
occurrence came every day. Two minutes later the lieutenant was on his
way down the mountain and the Colonel had the men in ranks. His face was
as grave and his manner as quiet as usual, neither more nor less so.
The men were in a state of suppressed excitement. Having put them in
charge of the second sergeant the Colonel returned to the breastwork.
The two officers were slowly ascending the hill, side by side, the
bearer of the flag, now easily distinguishable in his jaunty uniform as a
captain of cavalry, talking, and the lieutenant in faded gray, faced
with yet more faded red, walking beside him with a face white even at
that distance, and lips shut as though they would never open again. They
halted at the big bowlder which the Colonel had indicated, and the
lieutenant, having saluted ceremoniously, turned to come up to the camp;
the Colonel, however, went down to meet him. The two men met, but there
was no spoken question; if the Colonel inquired it was only with the
eyes. The lieutenant spoke, however. "He says," he began and stopped,
then began again -- "he says, General Lee --" again he choked, then
blurted out, "I believe it is all a lie -- a damned lie."
"Not dead? Not killed?" said the Colonel, quickly.
"No, not so bad as that; surrendered: surrendered
his entire army at Appomattox day before yesterday. I believe it is all
a damned lie," he broke out again, as if the hot denial relieved him.
The Colonel simply turned away his face and stepped a pace or two off,
and the two men stood motionless back to back for more than a minute.
Then the Colonel stirred.
"Shall I go back with you?" the lieutenant asked, huskily.
The Colonel did not answer immediately. Then he
said: "No, go back to camp and await my return." He said nothing about
not speaking of the report. He knew it was not needed. Then he went down
the hill slowly alone, while the lieutenant went up to the camp.
The interview between the two officers beside the
bowlder was not a long one. It consisted of a brief statement by the
Federal envoy of the fact of Lee's surrender two days before near
Appomattox Court-House, with the sources of his information, coupled
with a formal demand on the Colonel for his surrender. To this the
Colonel replied that he had been detached and put under command of
another officer for a specific purpose, and that his orders were to hold
that pass, which he should do until he was instructed otherwise by his
superior in command. With that they parted, ceremoniously, the Federal
captain returning to where he had left his horse in charge of his
companions a little below, and the old Colonel coming slowly up the hill
to camp. The men were at once set to work to meet any attack which
might be made. They knew that the message was of grave import, but not
of how grave. They thought it meant that another attack would be made
immediately, and they sprang to their work with renewed vigor, and a
zeal as fresh as if it were but the beginning and not the end.
The time wore on, however, and there was no
demonstration below, though hour after hour it was expected and even
hoped for. Just as the sun sank into a bed of blue cloud a horseman was
seen coming up the darkened mountain from the eastward side, and in a
little while practised eyes reported him one of their own men -- the
sergeant who had been sent back the day before for ammunition. He was
alone, and had something white before him on his horse -- it could not
be the ammunition; but perhaps that might be coming on behind. Every
step of his jaded horse was anxiously watched. As he drew near, the
lieutenant, after a word with the Colonel, walked down to meet him, and
there was a short colloquy
in the muddy road; then they came back together and slowly entered the
camp, the sergeant handing down a bag of corn which he had got somewhere
below, with the grim remark to his comrades, "There's your rations,"
and going at once to the Colonel's camp-fire, a little to one side among
the trees, where the Colonel awaited him. A long conference was held,
and then the sergeant left to take his luck with his mess, who were
already parching the corn he had brought for their supper, while the
lieutenant made the round of the camp; leaving the Colonel seated alone
on a log by his camp-fire. He sat without moving, hardly stirring until
the lieutenant returned from his round. A minute later the men were
called from the guns and made to fall into line. They were silent, tremulous
with suppressed excitement; the most sun-burned and weather-stained of
them a little pale; the meanest, raggedest, and most insignificant not
unimpressive in the deep and solemn silence with which they stood, their
eyes fastened on the Colonel, waiting for him to speak. He stepped out
in front of them, slowly ran his eye along the irregular line, up and
down, taking in every man in his glance, resting on some longer than on
others, the older men, then dropped them to the ground, and then
suddenly, as if with an effort, began to speak. His voice had a somewhat
metallic sound, as if it were restrained; but it was otherwise the
ordinary tone of command. It was not much that he said: simply that it
had become his duty to acquaint them with the information which he had
received: that General Lee had surrendered two days before at Appomattox
Court-House, yielding to overwhelming numbers; that this afternoon when
he had first heard the report he had questioned its truth, but that it
had been confirmed by one of their own men, and no longer admitted of
doubt; that the rest of their own force, it was learned, had been
captured, or had disbanded, and the enemy was now on both sides of the
mountain; that a demand had been made on him that morning to surrender
too; but that he had orders which he felt held good until they were
countermanded, and he had declined. Later intelligence satisfied him
that to attempt to hold out further would be useless, and would involve
needless waste of life; he had determined, therefore, not to attempt to
hold their position longer; but to lead them out, if possible, so as to
avoid being made prisoners and enable them to reach home sooner and aid
their families. His orders were not to let his guns fall into the
enemy's hands, and he should take the only step possible to prevent it.
In fifty minutes he should call the battery into line once more, and
roll the guns over the cliff into the river, and immediately afterwards,
leaving the wagons there, he would try to lead them across the
mountain, and as far as they could go in a body without being liable to
capture, and then he should disband them, and his responsibility for
them would end. As it was necessary to make some preparations he would
now dismiss them to prepare any rations they might have and get ready to
march.
All this was in the formal manner of a common
order of the day; and the old Colonel had spoken in measured sentences,
with little feeling in his voice. Not a man in the line had uttered a
word after the first sound, half exclamation, half groan, which had
burst from them at the announcement of Lee's surrender. After that they
had stood in their tracks like rooted trees, as motionless as those on
the mountain behind them, their eyes fixed on their commander, and only
the quick heaving up and down the dark line, as of horses over-laboring,
told of the emotion which was shaking them. The Colonel, as he ended,
half-turned to his subordinate officer at the end of the dim line, as
though he were about to turn the company over to him to be dismissed;
then faced the line again, and taking a step nearer, with a sudden
movement of his hands towards the men as though he would have stretched
them out to them, began again:
"Men," he said, and his voice changed at the
word, and sounded like a father's or a brother's, "My men, I cannot let
you go so. We were neighbors when the war began -- many of us, and some
not here to-night; we have been more since then -- comrades, brothers in
arms; we have all stood for one thing -- for Virginia and the South; we
have all done our duty -- tried to do our duty; we have fought a good
fight, and now it seems to be over, and we have been overwhelmed by
numbers, not whipped -- and we are going home. We have the future before
us -- we don't know just what it will bring, but we can stand a good
deal. We have proved it. Upon us depends the South in the future as in
the past. You have done your duty in the past, you will not fail in the
future. Go home and be honest, brave, self-sacrificing, God-fearing
citizens, as you have been soldiers, and you need not fear for Virginia
and the South. The war may be over; but you will ever be ready to serve
your country. The end may not be as we wanted it, prayed for it, fought
for it; but we can trust God; the end in the end will be the best that
could be; even if the South is not free she will be better and stronger
that she fought as she did. Go home and bring up your children to love
her, and though you may have nothing else to leave them, you can leave
them the heritage that they are sons of men who were in Lee's army."
He stopped, looked up and down the ranks again,
which had instinctively crowded together and drawn around him in a
half-circle; made a sign to the lieutenant to take charge, and turned
abruptly on his heel to walk away. But as he did so, the long pent-up
emotion burst forth. With a wild cheer the men seized him, crowding
around and hugging him, as with protestations, prayers, sobs, oaths --
broken, incoherent, inarticulate -- they swore to be faithful, to live
loyal forever to the South, to him, to Lee. Many of them cried like
children; others offered to go down and have one more battle on the
plain. The old Colonel soothed them, and quieted their excitement, and
then gave a command about the preparations to be made. This called them
to order at once; and in a few minutes the camp was as orderly and quiet
as usual: the fires were replenished; the scanty stores were being
overhauled; the place was selected, and being got ready to roll the guns
over the cliff; the camp was being ransacked for such articles as could
be carried, and all preparations were being hastily made for their
march.
The old Colonel having completed his arrangements
sat down by his camp-fire with paper and pencil, and began to write;
and as the men finished their work they gathered about in groups, at
first around their camp-fires, but shortly strolled over to where the
guns still stood at the breastwork, black and vague in the darkness.
Soon they were all assembled about the guns. One after another they
visited, closing around it and handling it from muzzle to trail as a man
might a horse to try its sinew
and bone, or a child to feel its fineness and warmth. They were for the
most part silent, and when any sound came through the dusk from them to
the officers at their fire, it was murmurous and fitful as of men
speaking low and brokenly. There was no sound of the noisy controversy
which was generally heard, the give-and-take of the camp-fire, the
firing backwards and forwards that went on on the march; if a compliment
was paid a gun by one of its special detachment, it was accepted by the
others; in fact, those who had generally run it down now seemed most
anxious to accord the piece praise. Presently a small number of the men
returned to a camp-fire, and, building it up, seated themselves about
it, gathering closer and closer together until they were in a little
knot. One of them appeared to be writing, while two or three took up
flaming chunks from the fire and held them as torches for him to see by.
In time the entire company assembled about them, standing in respectful
silence, broken only occasionally by a reply from one or another to
some question from the scribe. After a little there was a sound of a
roll-call, and reading and a short colloquy followed, and then two men,
one with a paper in his hand, approached the fire beside which the
officers sat still engaged.
"What is it, Harris?" said the Colonel to the man
with the paper, who bore remnants of the chevrons of a sergeant on his
stained and faded jacket.
"If you please, sir," he said, with a salute, "we
have been talking it over, and we'd like this paper to go in along with
that you're writing." He held it out to the lieutenant, who was the
nearer and had reached forward to take it. "We s'pose you're agoin' to
bury it with the guns," he said, hesitatingly, as he handed it over.
"What is it?" asked the Colonel, shading his eyes with his hands.
"It's just a little list we made out in and among
us," he said, "with a few things we'd like to put in, so's if anyone
ever hauls 'em out they'll find it there to tell what the old battery
was, and if they don't, it'll be in one of 'em down thar 'til judgment,
an' it'll sort of ease our minds a bit." He stopped and waited as a man
who had delivered his message. The old Colonel had risen and taken the
paper, and now held it with a firm grasp, as if it might blow away with
the rising wind. He did not say a word, but his hand shook a little as
he proceeded to fold it carefully, and there was a burning gleam in his
deep-set eyes, back under his bushy, gray brows.
"Will you sort of look over it, sir, if you think
it's worth while? We was in a sort of hurry and we had to put it down
just as we come to it; we didn't have time to pick our ammunition; and
it ain't written the best in the world, nohow." He waited again, and the
Colonel opened the paper and glanced down at it mechanically. It
contained first a roster, headed by the list of six guns, named by name:
"Matthew", "Mark", "Luke", and "John", "The Eagle", and "The Cat"; then
of the men, beginning with the heading:
"Those killed".
Then had followed "Those wounded", but this was
marked out. Then came a roster of the company when it first entered
service; then of those who had joined afterward; then of those who were
present now. At the end of all there was this statement, not very well
written, nor wholly accurately spelt:
"To Whom it may Concern: We, the above members of
the old battery known, etc., of six guns, named, etc., commanded by the
said Col. etc., left on the 11th day of April, 1865, have made out this
roll of the battery, them as is gone and them as is left, to bury with
the guns which the same we bury this night. We're all volunteers, every
man; we joined the army at the beginning of the war, and we've stuck
through to the end; sometimes we aint had much to eat, and sometimes we
aint had nothin', but we've fought the best we could 119 battles and
skirmishes as near as we can make out in four years, and never lost a
gun. Now we're agoin' home. We aint surrendered; just disbanded, and we
pledges ourselves to teach our children to love the South and General
Lee; and to come when we're called anywheres an' anytime, so help us
God."
There was a dead silence whilst the Colonel read.
"'Taint entirely accurite, sir, in one
particular," said the sergeant, apologetically; "but we thought it would
be playin' it sort o' low down on the Cat if we was to say we lost her
unless we could tell about gittin' of her back, and the way she done
since, and we didn't have time to do all that." He looked around as if
to receive the corroboration of the other men, which they signified by
nods and shuffling.
The Colonel said it was all right, and the paper should go into the guns.
"If you please, sir, the guns are all loaded,"
said the sergeant; "in and about our last charge, too; and we'd like to
fire 'em off once more, jist for old times' sake to remember 'em by, if
you don't think no harm could come of it?"
The Colonel reflected a moment and said it might
be done; they might fire each gun separately as they rolled it over, or
might get all ready and fire together, and then roll them over,
whichever they wished. This was satisfactory.
The men were then ordered to prepare to march
immediately, and withdrew for the purpose. The pickets were called in.
In a short time they were ready, horses and all, just as they would have
been to march ordinarily, except that the wagons and caissons
were packed over in one corner by the camp with the harness hung on
poles beside them, and the guns stood in their old places at the
breastwork ready to defend the pass. The embers of the sinking
camp-fires threw a faint light on them standing so still and silent. The
old Colonel took his place, and at a command from him in a somewhat low
voice, the men, except a detail left to hold the horses, moved into
company-front facing the guns. Not a word was spoken, except the words
of command. At the order each detachment went to its gun; the guns were
run back and the men with their own hands ran them up on the edge of the
perpendicular bluff above the river, where, sheer below, its waters
washed its base, as if to face an enemy on the black mountain the other
side. The pieces stood ranged in the order in which they had so often
stood in battle, and the gray, thin fog rising slowly and silently from
the river deep down between the cliffs, and wreathing the mountain-side
above, might have been the smoke from some unearthly battle fought in
the dim pass by ghostly guns, yet posted there in the darkness, manned
by phantom gunners, while phantom horses stood behind, lit vaguely up by
phantom camp-fires. At the given word the larniard were pulled together, and together as one the six black guns, belching
flame and lead, roared their last challenge on the misty night, sending a
deadly hail of shot and shell, tearing the trees and splintering the
rocks of the farther side, and sending the thunder reverberating through
the pass and down the mountain, startling from its slumber the sleeping
camp on the hills below, and driving the browsing deer and the prowling
mountain-fox in terror up the mountain.
There was silence among the men about the guns
for one brief instant and then such a cheer burst forth as had never
broken from them even in battle: cheer on cheer, the long, wild, old
familiar rebel yell for the guns they had fought with and loved.
The noise had not died away and the men behind
were still trying to quiet the frightened horses when the sergeant, the
same who had written, received from the hand of the Colonel a long
package or roll which contained the records of the battery furnished by
the men and by the Colonel himself, securely wrapped to make them
water-tight, and it was rammed down the yet warm throat of the nearest
gun: the Cat, and then the gun was tamped to the muzzle to make her
water-tight, and, like her sisters, was spiked, and her vent tamped
tight. All this took but a minute, and the next instant the guns were
run up once more to the edge of the cliff; and the men stood by them
with their hands still on them. A deadly silence fell on the men, and
even the horses behind seemed to feel the spell. There was a long pause,
in which not a breath was heard from any man, and the soughing of the
tree-tops above and the rushing of the rapids below were the only
sounds. They seemed to come from far, very far away.
Then the Colonel said, quietly, "Let them go, and God be our helper, Amen." There was the noise in the darkness of trampling and scraping on the cliff-top for a second; the sound as of men straining hard together, and then with a pant it ceased all at once, and the men held their breath to hear. One second of utter silence; then one prolonged, deep, resounding splash sending up a great mass of white foam as the brass-pieces together plunged into the dark water below, and then the soughing of the trees and the murmur of the river came again with painful distinctness. It was full ten minutes before the Colonel spoke, though there were other sounds enough in the darkness, and some of the men, as the dark, outstretched bodies showed, were lying on the ground flat on their faces. Then the Colonel gave the command to fall in in the same quiet, grave tone he had used all night. The line fell in, the men getting to their horses and mounting in silence; the Colonel put himself at their head and gave the order of march, and the dark line turned in the darkness, crossed the little plateau between the smouldering camp-fires and the spectral caissons with the harness hanging beside them, and slowly entered the dim charcoal-burner's track. Not a word was spoken as they moved off. They might all have been phantoms. Only, the sergeant in the rear, as he crossed the little breastwork which ran along the upper side and marked the boundary of the little camp, half turned and glanced at the dying fires, the low, newly made mounds in the corner, the abandoned caissons, and the empty redoubt, and said, slowly, in a low voice to himself,
Then the Colonel said, quietly, "Let them go, and God be our helper, Amen." There was the noise in the darkness of trampling and scraping on the cliff-top for a second; the sound as of men straining hard together, and then with a pant it ceased all at once, and the men held their breath to hear. One second of utter silence; then one prolonged, deep, resounding splash sending up a great mass of white foam as the brass-pieces together plunged into the dark water below, and then the soughing of the trees and the murmur of the river came again with painful distinctness. It was full ten minutes before the Colonel spoke, though there were other sounds enough in the darkness, and some of the men, as the dark, outstretched bodies showed, were lying on the ground flat on their faces. Then the Colonel gave the command to fall in in the same quiet, grave tone he had used all night. The line fell in, the men getting to their horses and mounting in silence; the Colonel put himself at their head and gave the order of march, and the dark line turned in the darkness, crossed the little plateau between the smouldering camp-fires and the spectral caissons with the harness hanging beside them, and slowly entered the dim charcoal-burner's track. Not a word was spoken as they moved off. They might all have been phantoms. Only, the sergeant in the rear, as he crossed the little breastwork which ran along the upper side and marked the boundary of the little camp, half turned and glanced at the dying fires, the low, newly made mounds in the corner, the abandoned caissons, and the empty redoubt, and said, slowly, in a low voice to himself,
"Well, by God!"
Written by Thomas Nelson (1853-1922)
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