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Battle Ground, The
BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter II - The Day's March
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ In the gray dawn tents were struck, and five days' rations were issued with
       the marching orders. As Dan packed his knapsack with trembling hands, he
       saw men stalking back and forth like gigantic shadows, and heard the hoarse
       shouting of the company officers through the thick fog which had rolled
       down from the mountains. There was a persistent buzz in the air, as if a
       great swarm of bees had settled over the misty valley. Each man was asking
       unanswerable questions of his neighbour.
       At a little distance Big Abel, with several of the company "darkies" was
       struggling energetically over the property of the mess, storing the cooking
       utensils into a stout camp chest, which the strength of several men would
       lift, when filled, into the wagon. Bland, who had just tossed his overcoat
       across to them, turned abruptly upon Dan, and demanded warmly "what had
       become of his case of razors?"
       "Where are we going?" was Dan's response, as he knelt down to roll up his
       oilcloth and blanket. "By Jove, it looks as if we'd gobble up Patterson for
       breakfast!"
       "I say, where's my case of razors?" inquired Bland, with irritation. "They
       were lying here a moment ago, and now they're gone. Dandy, have you got my
       razors?"
       "Look here, Beau, what are you going to leave behind?" asked Kemper over
       Bland's shoulder.
       "Leave behind? Why, dull care," rejoined Dan gayly. "By the way, Pinetop,
       why don't you save your appetite for Patterson's dainties?"
       Pinetop, who was leisurely eating his breakfast of "hardtack" and bacon,
       took a long draught from his tin cup, and replied, as he wiped his mouth on
       his shirt sleeve, that he "reckoned thar wouldn't be any trouble about
       finding room for them, too." The general gayety was reflected in his face;
       he laughed as he bit deeply into his half-cooked bacon.
       Dan stood up and nervously strapped on his knapsack; then he swung his
       canteen over his shoulder and carefully tightened his belt. His face was
       flushed, and when he spoke his voice quivered with emotion. It seemed to
       him that the delay of every instant was a reckless waste of time, and he
       trembled at the thought that the enemy might be preparing to fall upon them
       unawares; that while the camp was swarming like an ant's nest, Patterson
       and his men might be making good use of the fleeting moments.
       "Why the devil don't we move? We ought to move," he said angrily, as he
       glanced round the crowded field where the men were arraying themselves in
       all the useless trappings of the Southern volunteer. Kemper was busily
       placing his necessary toilet articles in his haversack, having thrown away
       half his rations for the purpose; Jack Powell, completely dressed for the
       march, was examining his heavy revolver, with the conscious pride a field
       officer might have felt in his sword. As he stuck it into his belt, he
       straightened himself with a laugh and jauntily set his small cap on his
       curling hair; he was clean, comely, and smooth-shaven as if he had just
       stepped from a hot bath and the hands of his barber.
       "You may roll Dandy in the dust and he'll come out washed," Baker had once
       forcibly remarked.
       "I say, boys, why don't we start?" persisted Dan impatiently, flicking with
       his handkerchief at a grain of sand on his high boots. Then, as Big Abel
       brought him a cup of coffee, he drank it standing, casting eager glances
       over the rim of his cup. He had an odd feeling that it was all a great fox
       hunt they were soon to start upon; that they were waiting only for the
       calling of the hounds. The Major's fighting blood had stirred within his
       grandson's veins, and generations of dead Lightfoots were scenting the
       coming battle from the dust. When Dan thought now of the end to which he
       should presently be marching, it suggested to him but a quickened
       exhilaration of the pulses and an old engraving of "Waterloo," which hung
       on the dining-room wall at Chericoke. That was war; and he remembered
       vividly the childish thrill with which he had first looked up at it. He saw
       the prancing horses, the dramatic gestures of the generals with flowing
       hair, the blur of waving flags and naked swords. It was like a page torn
       from the eternal Romance; a page upon which he and his comrades should play
       heroic parts; and it was white blood, indeed, that did not glow with the
       hope of sharing in that picture; of hanging immortal in an engraving on the
       wall.
       The "fall in" of the sergeant was already sounding from the road, and, with
       a last glance about the field, Dan ran down the gentle slope and across the
       little stream to take his place in the ranks of the forming column. An
       officer on a milk-white horse was making frantic gestures to the line, and
       the young man followed him an instant with his eyes. Then, as he stood
       there in the warm sunshine, he felt his impatience prick him like a needle.
       He wanted to push forward the regiments in front of him, to start in any
       direction--only to start. The suppressed excitement of the fox hunt was
       upon him, and the hoarse voices of the officers thrilled him as if they
       were the baying of the hounds. He heard the musical jingle of moving
       cavalry, the hurried tread of feet in the soft dust, the smothered oaths of
       men who stumbled over the scattered stones. And, at last, when the sun
       stood high above, the long column swung off toward the south, leaving the
       enemy and the north behind it.
       "By God, we're running away," said Bland in a whisper. With the words the
       gayety passed suddenly from the army, and it moved slowly with the
       dispirited tread of beaten men. The enemy lay to the north, and it was
       marching to the south and home.
       As it passed through the fragrant streets of Winchester, women, with
       startled eyes, ran from open doors into the deep old gardens, and watched
       it over the honeysuckle hedges. Under the fluttering flags, past the long
       blue shadows, with the playing of the bands and the clatter of the
       canteens--on it went into the white dust and the sunshine. From a wide
       piazza, a group of schoolgirls pelted the troops with roses, and as Dan
       went by he caught a white bud and stuck it into his cap. He looked back
       laughing, to meet the flash of laughing eyes; then the gray line swept out
       upon the turnpike and went down the broad road through the smooth green
       fields, over which the sunlight lay like melted gold.
       Dan, walking between Pinetop and Jack Powell, felt a sudden homesickness
       for the abandoned camp, which they were leaving with the gay little town
       and the red clay forts, naked to the enemy's guns. He saw the branching
       apple tree, the burned-out fires, the silvery fringe of willows by the
       stream; and he saw the men in blue already in possession of his woodpile,
       broiling their bacon by the logs that Big Abel had cut.
       At the end of three miles the brigades abruptly halted, and he listened,
       looking at the ground, to an order, which was read by a slim young officer
       who pulled nervously at his moustache. Down the column came a single
       ringing cheer, and, without waiting for the command, the men pushed eagerly
       forward along the road. What was a forced march of thirty miles to an army
       that had never seen a battle?
       As they went on a boyish merriment tripped lightly down the turnpike; jests
       were shouted, a wit began to tease a mounted officer who was trying to
       reach the front, and somebody with a tenor voice was singing "Dixie." A
       stray countryman, sitting upon the wall of loose stones, was greeted
       affectionately by each passing company. He was a big, stupid-looking man,
       with a gray fowl hanging, head downward, from his hand, and as he responded
       "Howdy," in an expressionless tone, the fowl craned its long neck upward
       and pecked at the creeper on the wall.
       "Howdy, Jim!" "Howdy, Peter!" "Howdy, Luke!" sang the first line. "How's
       your wife?" "How's your wife's mother?" "How's your sister-in-law's uncle?"
       inquired the next. The countryman spat into the ditch and stared solemnly
       in reply, and the gray fowl, still craning its neck, pecked steadily at the
       leaves upon the stones.
       Dan looked up into the blue sky, across the open meadows to the far-off low
       mountains, and then down the long turnpike where the dust hung in a yellow
       cloud. In the bright sunshine he saw the flash of steel and the glitter of
       gold braid, and the noise of tramping feet cheered him like music as he
       walked on gayly, filled with visions. For was he not marching to his chosen
       end--to victory, to Chericoke--to Betty? Or if the worst came to the
       worst--well, a man had but one life, after all, and a life was a little
       thing to give his country. Then, as always, his patriotism appealed to him
       as a romance rather than a religion--the fine Southern ardour which had
       sent him, at the first call, into the ranks, had sprung from an inward, not
       an outward pressure. The sound of the bugle, the fluttering of the flags,
       the flash of hot steel in the sunlight, the high old words that stirred
       men's pulses--these things were his by blood and right of heritage. He
       could no more have stifled the impulse that prompted him to take a side in
       any fight than he could have kept his heart cool beneath the impassioned
       voice of a Southern orator. The Major's blood ran warm through many
       generations.
       "I say, Beau, did you put a millstone in my knapsack?" inquired Bland
       suddenly. His face was flushed, and there was a streak of wet dust across
       his forehead. "If you did, it was a dirty joke," he added irritably. Dan
       laughed. "Now that's odd," he replied, "because there's one in mine also,
       and, moreover, somebody has stuck penknives in my boots. Was it you,
       Pinetop?"
       But the mountaineer shook his head in silence, and then, as they halted to
       rest upon the roadside, he flung himself down beneath the shadow of a
       sycamore, and raised his canteen to his lips. He had come leisurely at his
       long strides, and as Dan looked at him lying upon the short grass by the
       wall, he shook his own roughened hair, in impatient envy. "Why, you've
       stood it like a Major, Pinetop," he remarked.
       Pinetop opened his eyes. "Stood what?" he drawled.
       "Why, this heat, this dust, this whole confounded march. I don't believe
       you've turned a hair, as Big Abel says."
       "Good Lord," said Pinetop. "I don't reckon you've ever ploughed up hill
       with a steer team."
       Without replying, Dan unstrapped his knapsack and threw it upon the
       roadside. "What doesn't go in my haversack, doesn't go, that's all," he
       observed. "How about you, Dandy?"
       "Oh, I threw mine away a mile after starting," returned Jack Powell, "my
       luxuries are with a girl I left behind me. I've sacrificed everything to
       the cause except my toothbrush, and, by Jove, if the weight of that goes on
       increasing, I shall be forced to dispense with it forever. I got rid of my
       rations long ago. Pinetop says a man can't starve in blackberry season, and
       I hope he's right. Anyway, the Lord will provide--or he won't, that's
       certain."
       "Is this the reward of faith, I wonder?" said Dan, as he looked at a lame
       old negro who wheeled a cider cart and a tray of green apple pies down a
       red clay lane that branched off under thick locust trees. "This way, Uncle,
       here's your man."
       The old negro slowly approached them to be instantly surrounded by the
       thirsty regiment.
       "Howdy, Marsters? howdy?" he began, pulling his grizzled hair. "Dese yer's
       right nice pies, dat dey is, suh."
       "Look here, Uncle, weren't they made in the ark, now?" inquired Bland
       jestingly, as he bit into a greasy crust.
       "De ark? naw, suh; my Mehaley she des done bake 'em in de cabin over
       yonder." He lifted his shrivelled hand and pointed, with a tremulous
       gesture, to a log hut showing among the distant trees.
       "What? are you a free man, Uncle?"
       "Free? Go 'way f'om yer! ain' you never hyearn tell er Marse Plunkett?"
       "Plunkett?" gravely repeated Bland, filling his canteen with cider. "Look
       here, stand back, boys, it's my turn now.--Plunkett--Plunkett--can I have a
       long-lost friend named Plunkett? Where is he, Uncle? has he gone to fight?"
       "Marse Plunkett? Naw, suh, he ain' fit nobody."
       "Well, you tell him from me that he'd better enlist at once," put in Jack
       Powell. "This isn't the time for skulkers, Uncle; he's on our side, isn't
       he?" The old negro shook his head, looking uneasily at the froth that
       dripped from the keg into the dust.
       "Naw, suh, Marse Plunkett, he's fur de Un'on, but he's pow'ful feared er de
       Yankees," he returned.
       Bland broke into a laugh. "Oh, come, that's downright treason," he
       protested merrily. "Your Marse Plunkett's a skulker sure enough, and you
       may tell him so with my compliments. You're on the Yankee side, too, I
       reckon, and there're bullets in these pies, sure as I live."
       The old man shuffled nervously on his bare feet.
       "Go 'way, Marster, w'at I know 'bout 'sides'?" he replied, tilting his keg
       to drain the last few drops into the canteen of a thirsty soldier. "I'se on
       de Lawd's side, dat's whar I is."
       He fell back startled, for the call of "Column, forward!" was shouted down
       the road, and in an instant the men had left the emptied cart, and were
       marching on into the sunny distance.
       As the afternoon lengthened the heat grew more oppressive. Straight ahead
       there was dust and sunshine and the ceaseless tramp, and on either side the
       fresh fields were scorched and whitened by a powdering of hot sand. Beyond
       the rise and dip of the hills, the mountains burned like blue flames on the
       horizon, and overhead the sky was hard as an inverted brazier.
       Dan had begun to limp, for his stiff boots galled his feet. His senses were
       blunted by the hot sand which filled his eyes and ears and nostrils, and
       there was a shimmer over all the broad landscape. When he shook his hair
       from his forehead, the dust floated slowly down and settled in a scorching
       ring about his neck.
       The day closed gradually, and as they neared the river, the mountains
       emerged from obscure outlines into wooded heights upon which the trees
       showed soft and gray in the sunset. A cool breath was blown through a strip
       of damp woodland, where the pale bodies of the sycamores were festooned in
       luxuriant vines, and from the twilight long shadows stretched across the
       red clay road. Then, as they went down a rocky slope, a fringe of willows
       appeared suddenly from the blur of green, and they saw the Shenandoah
       running between falling banks, with the colours of the sunset floating like
       pink flowers upon its breast.
       With a shout the front line plunged into the stream, holding its heavy
       muskets high above the current of the water, and filing upon the opposite
       bank, into a rough road which wound amid the ferns.
       Midway of the river, near the fording point, there was a little island
       which lay like a feathery tree-top upon the tinted water; and as Dan went
       by, he felt the brush of willows on his face and heard the soft lapping of
       the small waves upon the shore. The keen smell of the sycamores drifted to
       him from the bank that he had left, and straight up stream he saw a single
       peaked blue hill upon which a white cloud rested. For a moment he lingered,
       breathing in the fragrance, then the rear line pressed upon him, and,
       crossing rapidly, he stood on the rocky edge, shaking the water from his
       clothes. Out of the after-glow came the steady tramp of tired feet, and
       with aching limbs, he turned and hastened with the column into the mountain
       pass. _
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BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter I - "De Hine Foot er a He Frawg"
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter II - At the Full of the Moon
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter III - The Coming of the Boy
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter IV - A House with an Open Door
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter V - The School for Gentlemen
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter VI - College Days
BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter I - The Major's Christmas
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter II - Betty dreams by the Fire
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter III - Dan and Betty
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter IV - Love in a Maze
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter V - The Major loses his Temper
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VI - The Meeting in the Turnpike
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VII - If this be Love
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VIII - Betty's Unbelief
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter IX - The Montjoy Blood
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter X - The Road at Midnight
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XI - At Merry Oaks Tavern
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XII - The Night of Fear
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XIII - Crabbed Age and Callow Youth
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XIV - The Hush before the Storm
BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter I - How Merry Gentlemen went to War
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter II - The Day's March
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter III - The Reign of the Brute
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter IV - After the Battle
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter V - The Woman's Part
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VI - On the Road to Romney
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VII - "I wait my Time"
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VIII - The Altar of the War God
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter IX - The Montjoy Blood again
BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter I - The Ragged Army
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter II - A Straggler from the Ranks
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter III - The Cabin in the Woods
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter IV - In the Silence of the Guns
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter V - "The Place Thereof"
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VI - The Peaceful Side of War -
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VII - The Silent Battle
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VIII - The Last Stand
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter IX - In the Hour of Defeat
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter X - On the March again
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter XI - The Return