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<h2> CHAPTER IV. </h2>
<p>I Yearn for a Furlough—I Interview the General—I am<br/>
Detailed to Carry a Rail—I Make a Horse-trade With the<br/>
Chaplain—I am Put in Charge of a Funeral.<br/></p>
<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>“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.”</p>
<p>* I neglected to say, in my account of the battle at the<br/>
race-track, that when firing with my revolver, at my friend<br/>
the rebel, I put one bullet-hole through the right ear of my<br/>
horse. I was so excited at the time that I did not know it,<br/>
and only discovered it a week later when currying off my<br/>
horse, which I made a practice of doing once a week, with a<br/>
piece of barrel-stave, when I noticed the horse's ear was<br/>
swelled up about as big as a canvas ham. I took him to the<br/>
horse doctor, who reduced the swelling so we could find the<br/>
hole through the horse's ear, and the horse doctor tied a<br/>
blue ribbon in the hole. He said the blue ribbon would help<br/>
heal the sore, but later I found that he had put the ribbon<br/>
in the ear to call attention to my poor marksmanship, and<br/>
the boys got so they made comments and laughed at me every<br/>
time I appeared with the horse.<br/></p>
<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
“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
<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>“Hello, Boss, writing to your girl?”</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>“What will the little lady have next?”</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>“The banners, my lord.”</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>“What do you want, man?”</p>
<p>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:</p>
<p>“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?”</p>
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<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:
“Then I don't get any furlough?” “Not till the cruel war is over,” 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 “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!”</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>“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.”</p>
<p>“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.”</p>
<p>“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?”</p>
<p>“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.”</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>
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