Chapter XIV
WHEN THE YOUTH awoke it seemed to him that he had been asleep for a thousand years, and he felt sure that he opened his eyes upon an unexpected world. Gray mists were slowly shifting before the first efforts of the sunrays. An impending splendor could be seen in the eastern sky. An icy dew had chilled his face, and immediately upon arousing he curled farther down into his blankets. He stared for a while at the leaves overhead, moving in a heraldic wind of the day.
The distance was splintering and blaring with the noise of fighting. There was in the sound an expression of a deadly persistency, as if it had not begun and was not to cease.
About him were the rows and groups of men that he had dimly seen the previous night. They were getting a last draught of sleep before the awakening. The gaunt, careworn features and dusty figures were made plain by this quaint light at the dawning, but it dressed the skin of the men in corpselike hues and made the tangled limbs appear pulseless and dead. The youth started up with a little cry when his eyes first swept over this motionless mass of men, thick-spread upon the ground, pallid, and in strange postures. His disordered mind interpreted the hall of the forest as a charnel place. He believed for an instant that he was in the house of the dead, and he did not dare to move lest these corpses start up, squalling and squawking. In a second, however, he achieved his proper mind. He swore a complicated oath at himself. He saw that this somber picture was not a fact of the present, but a mere prophecy.
He heard then the noise of a fire crackling briskly in the cold air, and, turning his head, he saw his friend pottering busily about a small blaze. A few other figures moved in the fog, and he heard the hard cracking of axe blows.
Suddenly there was a hollow rumble of drums. A distant bugle sang faintly. Similar sounds, varying in strength, came from near and far over the forest. The bugles called to each other like brazen gamecocks. The near thunder of the regimental drums rolled.
The body of men in the woods rustled. There was a general uplifting of heads. A murmuring of voices broke upon the air. In it there was much bass of grumbling oaths. Strange gods were addressed in condemnation of the early hours necessary to correct war. An officer's peremptory tenor rang out and quickened the stiffened movement of the men. The tangled limbs unraveled. The corpse-hued faces were hidden behind fists that twisted slowly in the eye sockets.
The youth sat up and gave vent to an enormous yawn. “Thunder!” he remarked petulantly. He rubbed his eyes, and then putting up his hand felt carefully of the bandage over his wound. His friend, perceiving him to be awake, came from the fire. “Well, Henry, ol' man, how do yeh feel this mornin'?” he demanded.
The youth yawned again. Then he puckered his mouth to a little pucker. His head, in truth, felt precisely like a melon, and there was an unpleasant sensation at his stomach.
“Oh, Lord, I feel pretty bad,” he said.
“Thunder!” exclaimed the other. “I hoped ye'd feel all right this mornin'. Let's see th' bandage—I guess it's slipped.” He began to tinker at the wound in rather a clumsy way until the youth exploded.
“Gosh-dern it!” he said in sharp irritation; “you're the hangdest man I ever saw! You wear muffs on your hands. Why in good thunderation can't you be more easy? I'd rather you'd stand off an' throw guns at it. Now, go slow, an' don't act as if you was nailing down carpet.”
He glared with insolent command at his friend, but the latter answered soothingly. “Well, well, come now, an' git some grub,” he said. “Then, maybe, yeh'll feel better.”
At the fireside the loud young soldier watched over his comrade's wants with tenderness and care. He was very busy marshaling the little black vagabonds of tin cups and pouring into them the streaming, iron colored mixture from a small and sooty tin pail. He had some fresh meat, which he roasted hurriedly upon a stick. He sat down then and contemplated the youth's appetite with glee.
The youth took note of a remarkable change in his comrade since those days of camp life upon the river bank. He seemed no more to be continually regarding the proportions of his personal prowess. He was not furious at small words that pricked his conceits. He was no more a loud young soldier. There was about him now a fine reliance. He showed a quiet belief in his purposes and his abilities. And this inward confidence evidently enabled him to be indifferent to little words of other men aimed at him.
The youth reflected. He had been used to regarding his comrade as a blatant child with an audacity grown from his inexperience, thoughtless, headstrong, jealous, and filled with a tinsel courage. A swaggering babe accustomed to strut in his own dooryard. The youth wondered where had been born these new eyes; when his comrade had made the great discovery that there were many men who would refuse to be subjected by him. Apparently, the other had now climbed a peak of wisdom from which he could perceive himself as a very wee thing. And the youth saw that ever after it would be easier to live in his friend's neighborhood.
His comrade balanced his ebony coffeecup on his knee. “Well, Henry,” he said, “what d'yeh think th' chances are? D'yeh think we'll wallop 'em?”
The youth considered for a moment. “Day-b'fore-yesterday,” he finally replied, with boldness, “you would 'a' bet you'd lick the hull kit-an'-boodle all by yourself.”
His friend looked a trifle amazed. “Would I?” he asked. He pondered. “Well, perhaps I would,” he decided at last. He stared humbly at the fire.
The youth was quite disconcerted at this surprising reception of his remarks. “Oh, no, you wouldn't either,” he said, hastily trying to retrace.
But the other made a deprecating gesture. “Oh, yeh needn't mind, Henry,” he said. “I believe I was a pretty big fool in those days.” He spoke as after a lapse of years.
There was a little pause.
“All th' officers say we've got th' rebs in a pretty tight box,” said the friend, clearing his throat in a commonplace way. “They all seem t' think we've got 'em jest where we want 'em.”
“I don't know about that,” the youth replied. “What I seen over on th' right makes me think it was th' other way about. From where I was, it looked as if we was gettin' a good poundin' yestirday.”
“D'yeh think so?” inquired the friend. “I thought we handled 'em pretty rough yestirday.”
“Not a bit,” said the youth. “Why, lord, man, you didn't see nothing of the fight. Why!” Then a sudden thought came to him. “Oh! Jim Conklin's dead.”
His friend started. “What? Is he? Jim Conklin?”
The youth spoke slowly. “Yes. He's dead. Shot in th' side.”
“Yeh don't say so. Jim Conklin…poor cuss!”
All about them were other small fires surrounded by men with their little black utensils. From one of these near came sudden sharp voices in a row. It appeared that two light-footed soldiers had been teasing a huge, bearded man, causing him to spill coffee upon his blue knees. The man had gone into a rage and had sworn comprehensively. Stung by his language, his tormentors had immediately bristled at him with a great show of resenting unjust oaths. Possibly there was going to be a fight.
The friend arose and went over to them, making pacific motions with his arms. “Oh, here, now, boys, what's th' use?” he said. “We'll be at th' rebs in less'n an hour. What's th' good fightin' 'mong ourselves?”
One of the light-footed soldiers turned upon him red-faced and violent. “Yeh needn't come around here with yer preachin'. I s'pose yeh don't approve 'a fightin' since Charley Morgan licked yeh; but I don't see what business this here is 'a yours or anybody else.”
“Well, it ain't,” said the friend mildly. “Still I hate t' see—”
There was a tangled argument.
“Well, he—,” said the two, indicating their opponent with accusative forefingers.
The huge soldier was quite purple with rage. He pointed at the two soldiers with his great hand, extended clawlike. “Well, they—”
But during this argumentative time the desire to deal blows seemed to pass, although they said much to each other. Finally the friend returned to his old seat. In a short while the three antagonists could be seen together in an amiable bunch.
“Jimmie Rogers ses I'll have t' fight him after th' battle t'-day,” announced the friend as he again seated himself. “He ses he don't allow no interferin' in his business. I hate t' see th' boys fightin' 'mong themselves.”
The youth laughed. “Yer changed a good bit. Yeh ain't at all like yeh was. I remember when you an' that Irish feller—” He stopped and laughed again.
“No, I didn't use t' be that way,” said his friend thoughtfully. “That's true 'nough.”
“Well, I didn't mean—” began the youth.
The friend made another deprecatory gesture. “Oh, yeh needn't mind, Henry.”
There was another little pause.
“Th' reg'ment lost over half th' men yestirday,” remarked the friend eventually. “I thought 'a course they was all dead, but, laws, they kep' a-comin' back last night until it seems, after all, we didn't lose but a few. They'd been scattered all over, wanderin' around in th' woods, fightin' with other reg'ments, an' everything. Jest like you done.”
“So?” said the youth.
-
— Stephen Holliday
Crane clearly refers to a fictitious enlisted soldier here, but he may also be paying homage to a Federal officer named Charles Hale Morgan, who commanded the artillery of the Second Corps at Chancellorsville.
-
— Stephen Holliday
Crane appears to be poking fun at a comment made by General Joseph Hooker in which he said that "I have got Lee just where I want him." Hooker bore much of the responsibility for the Federal disaster at Chancellorsville because he underestimated the strength of Lee's defensive position.