some one else do it.â
He bellowed at the tottering crowd who blocked the quick march of his bearers. âSay, make way there, canât yeh? Make way, dickens take it all.â
They sulkily parted and went to the roadsides. As he was carried past they made pert remarks to him. When he raged in reply and threatened them, they told him to be damned.
The shoulder of one of the tramping bearers knocked heavily against the spectral soldier who was staring into the unknown.
The youth joined this crowd and marched along with it. The torn bodies expressed the awful machinery in which the men had been entangled.
Orderlies and couriers occasionally broke through the throng in the roadway, scattering wounded men right and left, galloping on followed by howls. The melancholy march was continually disturbed by the messengers, and sometimes by bustling batteries that came swinging and thumping down upon them, the officers shouting orders to clear the way.
There was a tattered man, fouled with dust, blood and powder stain from hair to shoes, who trudged quietly at the youthâs side. He was listening with eagerness and much humility to the lurid descriptions of a bearded sergeant. His lean features wore an expression of awe and admiration. He was like a listener in a country store to wondrous tales told among the sugar barrels. He eyed the story-teller with unspeakable wonder. His mouth was agape in yokel fashion.
The sergeant, taking note of this, gave pause to his elaborate history while he administered a sardonic comment. âBe keerful, honey, youâll be a-ketchinâ flies,â he said.
The tattered man shrank back abashed.
After a time he began to sidle near to the youth, and in a different way try to make him a friend. His voice was gentle as a girlâs voice and his eyes were pleading. The youth saw with surprise that the soldier had two wounds, one in the head, bound with a blood-soaked rag, and the other in the arm, making that member dangle like a broken bough.
After they had walked together for some time the tattered man mustered sufficient courage to speak. âWas pretty good fight, waânât it?â he timidly said. The youth, deep in thought, glanced up at the bloody and grim figure with its lamblike eyes. âWhat?â
âWas pretty good fight, waânât it?â
âYes,â said the youth shortly. He quickened his pace.
But the other hobbled industriously after him. There was an air of apology in his manner, but he evidently thought that he needed only to talk for a time, and the youth would perceive that he was a good fellow.
âWas pretty good fight, waânât it?â he began in a small voice, and then he achieved the fortitude to continue. âDern me if I ever see fellers fight so. Laws, how they did fight! I knowed thâ boysâd like when they onct got square at it. Thâ boys ainât had no fair chanct up tâ now, but this time they showed what they was. I knowed itâd turn out this way. Yeh canât lick them boys. No, sir! Theyâre fighters, they be.â
He breathed a deep breath of humble admiration. He had looked at the youth for encouragement several times. He received none, but gradually he seemed to get absorbed in his subject.
âI was talkinâ âcross pickets with a boy from Georgie, onct, anâ that boy, he ses, âYour fellersâll all run like hell when they onct hearn a gun,â he ses. âMebbe they will,â I ses, âbut I donât bâlieve none of it,â I ses; âanâ bâjiminey,â I ses back tâ âum, âmebbe your fellersâll all run like hell when they onct hearn a gun,â I ses. He larfed. Well, they didnât run tâday, did they, hey? No, sir! They fit, anâ fit, anâ fit.â
His homely face was suffused with a light of love for the army which was to him all things beautiful and