<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<div class="note"><p class="hang">EVACUATION OF YORKTOWN—OUR ARMY ON THE DOUBLE QUICK—PURSUIT OF THE
FUGITIVES—THE ENEMY’S WORKS—A BATTLE—ON THE FIELD—A “WOUNDED,” AND
NOT INJURED COLONEL—CARRYING THE WOUNDED—FORT MAGRUDER SILENCED—THE
VICTORY WON—BURYING THE DEAD—STORY OF A RING—WOUNDED REBELS—A
BRAVE YOUNG SERGEANT—CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS—A SOLDIER’S
DEATH-BED—CLOSING SCENES—LAST WORDS.</p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> next day the continuous roar of cannon all along the lines of the
enemy was kept up incessantly. “Nor did it cease at night, for when
darkness settled over the encampment, from the ramparts that stretched
away from Yorktown there were constant gushes of flame, while the heavy
thunder rolled far away in the gloom.” A little after midnight the
cannonading ceased, and a strange silence rested upon hill and valley. The
first dawn of day which broke peacefully over the landscape discovered to
the practiced eye of Professor Lowe that the entrenchments of the enemy
were deserted; the rebels had abandoned their stronghold during the night
and had fled toward Richmond.</p>
<p>The news spread throughout the Federal army like lightning; from right to
left and from center<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span> to circumference the entire encampment was one wild
scene of joy. Music and cheering were the first items in the programme,
and then came the following order: “Commandants of regiments will prepare
to march with two days’ rations, with the utmost dispatch. Leave, not to
return.” At about eight o’clock in the morning our advance guard entered
Yorktown. There were nearly one hundred guns of different kinds and
calibers and a large quantity of ammunition. The road over which the
fugitive army passed during the night was beat up into mortar, knee deep,
and was strewn with fragments of army wagons, tents and baggage.</p>
<p>The Federal troops were in excellent spirits, and pushed on after the
retreating army almost on the double quick. In this manner they kept up
the pursuit until toward evening, when the cavalry came up with the
rear-guard of the enemy about two miles from Williamsburg, where a sharp
skirmish followed. Night came on and firing ceased; the rebels were behind
their entrenchments, and our army bivouaced for the night. The cavalry and
artillery forces were under command of General Stoneman; Generals
Heintzelman, Hooker and Smith were in command of the advance column of
infantry, while Generals Kearney, Couch and Casey brought up the rear.</p>
<p>The enemy’s works were four miles in extent, nearly three-fourths of their
front being covered by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span> the tributaries of Queen’s Creek and College
Creek. The main works were a large fortification, called Fort Magruder,
and twelve redoubts for field guns. The woods around and inside of those
works were felled, and the ground was thickly dotted with rifle pits. The
battle commenced the next morning at half-past seven o’clock. General
Hooker began the attack. The enemy were heavily reinforced, and made a
desperate resistance. Hooker lost a great number of men and five pieces of
artillery before Kearney, Couch or Casey came up. The roads were a perfect
sea of mud, and now it was raining in torrents. The roar of battle sounded
all along the lines; the thunder of cannon and the crash of musketry
reverberated through the woods and over the plain, assuring the advancing
troops that their companions were engaged in deadly strife.</p>
<p>The thick growth of heavy timber was felled in all directions, forming a
splendid ambush for the rebel sharpshooters. The Federals moved forward in
the direction of the enemy’s works, steadily, firmly, through ditch and
swamp, mud and mire, loading and firing as they went, and from every tree,
bush and covert, which could conceal a man, the rebels poured a deadly
fire into the ranks of our advancing troops. I was glad now that I had
postponed my second visit to the enemy, for there was plenty of work for
me to do here, as the ghastly faces of the wounded and dying testified.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span> I
was subject to all kinds of orders. One moment I was ordered to the front
with a musket in my hands; the next to mount a horse and carry an order to
some general, and very often to take hold of a stretcher with some strong
man and carry the wounded from the field.</p>
<p>I remember one little incident in connection with my experience that day
which I shall never forget, viz.: Colonel —— fell, and I ran to help put
him on a stretcher and carry him to a place of safety, or where the
surgeons were, which was more than I was able to do without overtaxing my
strength, for he was a very heavy man. A poor little stripling of a
soldier and myself carried him about a quarter of a mile through a
terrific storm of bullets, and he groaning in a most piteous manner. We
laid him down carefully at the surgeon’s feet, and raised him tenderly
from the stretcher, spread a blanket and laid him upon it, then lingered
just a moment to see whether the wound was mortal. The surgeon commenced
to examine the case; there was no blood to indicate where the wound was,
and the poor sufferer was in such agony that he could not tell where it
was. So the surgeon examined by piecemeal until he had gone through with a
thorough examination, and there was not even a scratch to be seen. Doctor
E. straightened himself up and said, “Colonel, you are not wounded at all;
you had better let these boys carry you back again.” The Colonel became<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>
indignant, and rose to his feet with the air of an insulted hero and said:
“Doctor, if I live to get out of this battle I’ll call you to account for
those words;” to which Doctor E. replied with decision, “Sir, if you are
not with your regiment in fifteen minutes I shall report you to General
H.”</p>
<p>I turned and left the spot in disgust, mentally regretting that the lead
or steel of the enemy had not entered the breast of one who seemed so
ambitious of the honor without the effect. As I returned to my post I made
up my mind in future to ascertain whether a man was wounded or not before
I did anything for him. The next I came to was Captain Wm. R. M., of the
—— Michigan. His leg was broken and shattered from the ankle to the
knee. As we went to lift him on a stretcher he said: “Just carry me out of
range of the guns, and then go back and look after the boys. Mc—— and L.
have fallen, and perhaps they are worse off than I am.” Oh how glad I was
to hear those words from his lips. It confirmed the opinion I had formed
of him long before; he was one of my first acquaintances in the army, and,
though he was a strict disciplinarian, I had watched his christian
deportment and kind and affectionate manner toward his men with admiration
and interest. I believed him noble and brave, and those few words on the
battle-field at such a moment spoke volumes for that faithful captain’s
heroism and love for his men.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span>The battle was raging fiercely, the men were almost exhausted, the rebels
were fighting like demons, and were driving our troops back step by step,
while the space between the two lines was literally covered with dead and
wounded men and horses. One tremendous shout from the Federals rent the
air and fairly shook the earth. We all knew in an instant, as if by
intuition, what called forth such wild cheers from that weary and almost
overpowered army. “Kearney!” was shouted enthusiastically along the
Federal lines, while the fresh troops were hurled like thunderbolts upon
the foe. One battery after another was taken from the enemy, and charge
after charge was made upon their works, until the tide of battle was
turned, Fort Magruder silenced, and the stars and stripes were floating in
triumph over the rebel works.</p>
<p>The battle was won, and victory crowned the Union arms. The rebels were
flying precipitately from the field, and showers of bullets thick as hail
followed the retreating fugitives. Night closed around us, and a darkness
which almost equaled that of “Egypt” settled over the battle-field, and
the pitiless rain came down in torrents, drenching alike the living and
the dead. There lay upon that crimson field two thousand two hundred and
twenty-eight of our own men, and more than that number of the enemy. It
was indescribably sad to see our weary, exhausted men, with torches,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>
wading through mud to their knees piloting the ambulances over the field,
lest they should trample upon the bodies of their fallen comrades.</p>
<p>All night long we toiled in this manner, and when morning came still there
were hundreds found upon the field. Those of the enemy were found in
heaps, both dead and wounded piled together in ravines, among the felled
timber, and in rifle pits half covered with mud. Now the mournful duty
came of identifying and burying the dead. Oh, what a day was that in the
history of my life, as well as of thousands both North and South. It makes
me shudder now while I recall its scenes.</p>
<p class="poem">To see those fair young forms<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crushed by the war-horse tread,</span><br/>
The dear and bleeding ones<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stretched by the piled-up dead.</span></p>
<p>Oh, war, cruel war! Thou dost pierce the soul with untold sorrows, as well
as thy bleeding victims with death. How many joyous hopes and bright
prospects hast thou blasted; and how many hearts and homes hast thou made
desolate! “As we think of the great wave of woe and misery surging over
the land, we could cry out in very bitterness of soul—Oh God! how long,
how long!”</p>
<p>The dead lay in long rows on the field, their ghastly faces hid from view
by handkerchiefs or the capes of their overcoats, while the faithful
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span>soldiers were digging trenches in which to bury the mangled bodies of the
slain. I passed along the entire line and uncovered every face, in search
of one who had given me a small package the day before when going into
battle, telling me that if he should be killed to send it home; and, said
he, “here is a ring on my finger which I want you to send to ——. It has
never been off my finger since she placed it there the morning I started
for Washington. If I am killed please take it off and send it to her.” I
was now in search of him, but could find nothing of the missing one. At
last I saw a group of men nearly half a mile distant, who also seemed to
be engaged in burying the dead. I made my way toward them as fast as I
could, but when I reached them the bodies had all been lowered into the
trench, and they were already filling it up.</p>
<p>I begged them to let me go down and see if my friend was among the dead,
to which the kind hearted boys consented. His body lay there partially
covered with earth; I uncovered his face; he was so changed I should not
have recognized him, but the ring told me that it was he. I tried with all
my might to remove the ring, but could not. The fingers were so swollen
that it was impossible to get it off. In life it was a pledge of
faithfulness from one he loved, “and in death they were not divided.”</p>
<p>The dead having been buried and the wounded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span> removed to the churches and
college buildings in Williamsburg, the fatigued troops sought repose. Upon
visiting the wounded rebels I saw several whom I had met in Yorktown,
among them the sergeant of the picket post who had given me a friendly
shake and told me if I slept on my post he would shoot me like a dog. He
was pretty badly wounded, and did not seem to remember me. A little
farther on a young darkie lay groaning upon the floor. I went to look at
him, and asked if I could do anything for him. I recognized in the
distorted face before me the same darkie who had befriended me at
Yorktown, and to whom I had offered the five dollar greenback. I assure my
friends that I repaid that boy’s kindness with double interest; I told
Doctor E. what he had done for me when my “hands” turned traitors. He was
made an especial object of interest and care.</p>
<p>Some few of the rebel prisoners were gentlemanly and intelligent, and
their countenances betokened a high state of moral culture. Many were low,
insolent, bloodthirsty creatures, who “neither feared God nor regarded
man;” while others there were who seemed not to know enough to be either
one thing or the other, but were simply living, breathing animals, subject
to any order, and who would just as soon retreat as advance, so long as
they did not have to fight. They did not care which way the battle went.
On the whole<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span> there was a vast contrast between the northern and southern
soldiers as they appeared in the hospitals, but perhaps prejudice had
something to do in making the rebels appear so much inferior to our men.</p>
<p>In passing through the college building I noticed a young sergeant, a mere
boy, who was shot in the temple. He attracted my attention, and I made
some inquiry concerning him. He was a Federal, and belonged to the
—Massachusetts regiment. An old soldier sitting by him told me the
following: “That boy is not sixteen yet; he enlisted as a private, and
has, by his bravery and good conduct, earned the three stripes which you
see on his arm. He fought all day yesterday like a young lion, leading
charges again and again upon the enemy. After we lost our captain and
lieutenants he took command of the company, and led it through the battle
with the skill and courage of a young brigadier, until he fell stunned and
bleeding. I carried him off the field, but could not tell whether he was
dead or alive. I washed the blood from his face; the cold water had a
salutary effect upon him, for when Hancock and Kearney had completed their
work, and the cheers of victory rang over the bloody field, he was
sufficiently revived to hear the inspiring tones of triumph. Leaping to
his feet, faint and sick as he was, he took up the shout of victory in
unison with the conquerers on the field. But he had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span> scarcely uttered the
notes of victory and glory when his strength deserted him and he fell
insensible to the ground.” The old man added: “General —— says if he
lives through this he will go into the next battle with shoulder straps
on.” I went up to him, took his feverish hand, and told him that I was
glad that his wound was not mortal. He thanked me, and said with
enthusiasm, “I would rather have been killed than to have lost the
battle.”</p>
<p>There is one thing that I have noticed on the field in every battle that I
have witnessed, viz.: that the christian man is the best soldier. Says a
minister of the Gospel, writing upon this subject: “It is a common saying
among the officers that, as a class, the men who stand foremost when the
battle rages are the christian men. Many a time I have talked with them
about such scenes, and they have told me that their souls have stood firm
in that hour of strife, and that they have been perfectly calm. I have had
christian generals tell me this. I have heard General Howard often say
that in the midst of the most terrific portion of the battle, when his
heart for a moment quailed, he would pause, and lift up his soul to God
and receive strength. “And,” said he, “I have gone through battles without
a particle of fear. I have thought that God sent me to defend my country.
I believed it was a christian duty to stand in the foremost of the fight,
and why should I be afraid?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span>I once heard an eminently pious lady say that she never could reconcile
the idea in her mind of a christian going into the army to fight; it was
so inconsistent with the christian character that she was tempted to doubt
the piety of all fighting men. I respect the lady’s views upon the
subject, but beg leave to differ from her; for I believe that a man can
serve God just as acceptably in fighting the enemies of liberty, truth and
righteousness with the musket down South, as he can in the quiet pulpits
of the North; in fact I am inclined to think he can do so a little more
effectually in the former place. I only wish that there were more of our
holy men willing to take up the carnal weapons of warfare, forego the
luxuries of home, and, by setting examples worthy of emulation, both in
camp and on the battle field, thus strike a fatal blow at this unholy
rebellion.</p>
<p>The last night I spent in the hospital before leaving Williamsburg, I
witnessed the death of a christian soldier, a perfect description of which
I find in the “Memorials of the War:” “It was the hour of midnight, when
the chaplain was summoned to the cot of a wounded soldier. He had only
left him an hour before, with confident hopes of his speedy
recovery—hopes which were shared by the surgeon and the wounded man
himself. But a sudden change had taken place, and the surgeon had come to
say that the man could live but an hour or two at most, and to beg the
chaplain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span> to make the announcement to the dying man. He was soon at his
side, but overpowered by his emotions, was utterly unable to deliver his
message. The dying man, however, quickly read the solemn truth in the
altered looks of the chaplain, his faltering voice and ambiguous words. He
had not before entertained a doubt of his recovery. He was expecting soon
to see his mother, and with her kind nursing soon to be well. He was
therefore entirely unprepared for the announcement, and at first it was
overwhelming.</p>
<p>“‘I am to die then; and—how long?’ As he had before expressed hope in
Christ, the chaplain replied: ‘You have made your peace with God; let
death come as soon as it will, He will carry you safely over the river.’
‘Yes; but this is so awfully sudden, awfully sudden!’ His lips quivered;
he looked up grievingly: ‘And I shall not see my mother.’ ‘Christ is
better than a mother,’ murmured the chaplain. ‘Yes.’ The word came in a
whisper. His eyes were closed; the lips still wore that trembling grief,
as if the chastisement were too sore, too hard to be borne; but as the
minutes passed, and the soul lifted itself up stronger and more steadily
upon the wings of prayer, the countenance grew calmer, the lips steadier,
and when the eyes opened again there was a light in their depths that
could have come only from heaven.</p>
<p>“‘I thank you for your courage,’ he said more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span> feebly, taking the
chaplain’s hand; ‘the bitterness is over now, and I feel willing to die.
Tell my mother’—he paused, gave one sob, dry, and full of the last
anguish of earth—‘tell her how I longed to see her; but if God will
permit me I will be near her. Tell her to comfort all who loved me; to say
that I thought of them all. Tell my father that I am glad that he gave his
consent. Tell my minister, by word or letter, that I thought of him, and
that I thank him for all his counsels. Tell him I find that Christ will
not desert the passing soul, and that I wish him to give my testimony to
the living, that nothing is of real worth but the religion of Jesus; and
now, will you pray with me?’ With swelling emotion and tender tones the
chaplain besought God’s grace and presence; then, restraining his sobs, he
bowed down and pressed upon the beautiful brow, already chilled with the
breath of the coming angel, twice, thrice, a fervent kiss. They might have
been as tokens from the father and mother, as well as for himself.</p>
<p>“So thought, perhaps, the dying soldier, for a heavenly smile touched his
face with new beauty, as he said, ‘Thank you; I won’t trouble you any
longer. You are wearied out; go to your rest.’ ‘The Lord God be with you!’
was the firm response. ‘Amen,’ trembled from the fast whitening lips.
Another hour passed, still the chaplain did not go to rest, but retired to
an adjoining room; he was about to return to the bedside of the dying<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
when the surgeon met him and whispered softly, ‘He is gone.’ Christ’s
soldier had found the captain of his salvation, and received his reward.”</p>
<p class="poem">Tell my mother, when you see her,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That I fell amid the strife;</span><br/>
And for freedom and my country<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I have given up my life;</span><br/>
Tell her that I sent this message<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ere my tongue refused to speak,</span><br/>
And you tell her, comrade, won’t you?<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tell my mother not to weep.</span><br/>
<br/>
Tell her, comrade, how we battled<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For our country and the right;</span><br/>
How I held the starry banner<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In the thickest of the fight;</span><br/>
Tell her how they struggled for it,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And, with curses loud and deep,</span><br/>
Took my bosom for their target—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But tell her not to weep.</span><br/>
<br/>
Tell her I held up the banner<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">’Mid the screaming shot and shell,</span><br/>
Till the fatal leaden missile<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pierced my side, and then I fell.</span><br/>
Tell her I was ready, waiting,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When my pulses ceased to beat,</span><br/>
And I longed once more to see her—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But you tell her not to weep.</span><br/>
<br/>
Tell her that the truths she taught me<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nerved my arm and led my feet,</span><br/>
And I trusted in the promise<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">’Mid the battle’s fiercest heat.</span><br/>
Tell her, while my life was ebbing,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That I kissed her face so sweet—</span><br/>
Kissed the picture that she gave me—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And you tell her not to weep.</span><br/>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span><br/>
Tell her, comrade, when you see her,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That my battlefields are o’er,</span><br/>
And I’ve gone to join an army<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where rebellion comes no more;</span><br/>
Tell her that I hope to greet her,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When together we shall meet,</span><br/>
In that better home in heaven,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where we never more shall weep.</span></p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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