THE LITTLE REGIMENT
I
The fog made the clothes of the
men of the column in the roadway seem of a luminous quality. It
imparted to the heavy infantry overcoats a new colour, a kind of
blue which was so pale that a regiment might have been merely a
long, low shadow in the mist. However, a muttering, one part
grumble, three parts joke, hovered in the air above the thick
ranks, and blended in an undertoned roar, which was the voice of
the column.
The town on the southern shore of
the little river loomed spectrally, a faint etching upon the grey
cloud-masses which were shifting with oily languor. A long row of
guns upon the northern bank had been pitiless in their hatred, but
a little battered belfry could be dimly seen still pointing with
invincible resolution toward the heavens.
The enclouded air vibrated with
noises made by hidden colossal things. The infantry tramplings, the
heavy rumbling of the artillery, made the earth speak of gigantic
preparation. Guns on distant heights thundered from time to time
with sudden, nervous roar, as if unable to endure in silence a
knowledge of hostile troops massing, other guns going to position.
These sounds, near and remote, defined an immense battle-ground,
described the tremendous width of the stage of the prospective
drama. The voices of the guns, slightly casual, unexcited in their
challenges and warnings, could not destroy the unutterable
eloquence of the word in the air, a meaning of impending struggle
which made the breath halt at the lips.
The column in the roadway was
ankle-deep in mud. The men swore piously at the rain which drizzled
upon them, compelling them to stand always very erect in fear of
the drops that would sweep in under their coat-collars. The fog was
as cold as wet cloths. The men stuffed their hands deep in their
pockets, and huddled their muskets in their arms. The machinery of
orders had rooted these soldiers deeply into the mud, precisely as
almighty nature roots mullein stalks.
They listened and speculated when
a tumult of fighting came from the dim town across the river. When
the noise lulled for a time they resumed their descriptions of the
mud and graphically exaggerated the number of hours they had been
kept waiting. The general commanding their division rode along the
ranks, and they cheered admiringly, affectionately, crying out to
him gleeful prophecies of the coming battle. Each man scanned him
with a peculiarly keen personal interest, and afterward spoke of
him with unquestioning devotion and confidence, narrating anecdotes
which were mainly untrue.
When the jokers lifted the shrill
voices which invariably belonged to them, flinging witticisms at
their comrades, a loud laugh would sweep from rank to rank, and
soldiers who had not heard would lean forward and demand
repetition. When were borne past them some wounded men with grey
and blood-smeared faces, and eyes that rolled in that helpless
beseeching for assistance from the sky which comes with supreme
pain, the soldiers in the mud watched intently, and from time to
time asked of the bearers an account of the affair. Frequently they
bragged of their corps, their division, their brigade, their
regiment. Anon they referred to the mud and the cold drizzle. Upon
this threshold of a wild scene of death they, in short, defied the
proportion of events with that splendour of heedlessness which
belongs only to veterans.
“Like a lot of wooden soldiers,”
swore Billie Dempster, moving his feet in the thick mass, and
casting a vindictive glance indefinitely: “standing in the mud for
a hundred years.”
“Oh, shut up!” murmured his
brother Dan. The manner of his words implied that this fraternal
voice near him was an indescribable bore.
“Why should I shut up?” demanded
Billie.
“Because you’re a fool,” cried
Dan, taking no time to debate it; “the biggest fool in the
regiment.”
There was but one man between
them, and he was habituated. These insults from brother to brother
had swept across his chest, flown past his face, many times during
two long campaigns. Upon this occasion he simply grinned first at
one, then at the other.
The way of these brothers was not
an unknown topic in regimental gossip. They had enlisted
simultaneously, with each sneering loudly at the other for doing
it. They left their little town, and went forward with the flag,
exchanging protestations of undying suspicion. In the camp life
they so openly despised each other that, when entertaining quarrels
were lacking, their companions often contrived situations
calculated to bring forth display of this fraternal dislike.
Both were large-limbed, strong
young men, and often fought with friends in camp unless one was
near to interfere with the other. This latter happened rather
frequently, because Dan, preposterously willing for any manner of
combat, had a very great horror of seeing Billie in a fight; and
Billie, almost odiously ready himself, simply refused to see Dan
stripped to his shirt and with his fists aloft. This sat queerly
upon them, and made them the objects of plots.
When Dan jumped through a ring of
eager soldiers and dragged forth his raving brother by the arm, a
thing often predicted would almost come to pass. When Billie
performed the same office for Dan, the prediction would again miss
fulfilment by an inch. But indeed they never fought together,
although they were perpetually upon the verge.
They expressed longing for such
conflict. As a matter of truth, they had at one time made full
arrangement for it, but even with the encouragement and interest of
half of the regiment they somehow failed to achieve
collision.
If Dan became a victim of police
duty, no jeering was so destructive to the feelings as Billie’s
comment. If Billie got a call to appear at the headquarters, none
would so genially prophesy his complete undoing as Dan. Small
misfortunes to one were, in truth, invariably greeted with hilarity
by the other, who seemed to see in them great re-enforcement of his
opinion.
As soldiers, they expressed each
for each a scorn intense and blasting. After a certain battle,
Billie was promoted to corporal. When Dan was told of it, he seemed
smitten dumb with astonishment and patriotic indignation. He stared
in silence, while the dark blood rushed to Billie’s forehead, and
he shifted his weight from foot to foot. Dan at last found his
tongue, and said: “Well, I’m durned!” If he had heard that an army
mule had been appointed to the post of corps commander, his tone
could not have had more derision in it. Afterward, he adopted a
fervid insubordination, an almost religious reluctance to obey the
new corporal’s orders, which came near to developing the desired
strife.
It is here finally to be recorded
also that Dan, most ferociously profane in speech, very rarely
swore in the presence of his brother; and that Billie, whose oaths
came from his lips with the grace of falling pebbles, was seldom
known to express himself in this manner when near his brother
Dan.
At last the afternoon contained a
suggestion of evening. Metallic cries rang suddenly from end to end
of the column. They inspired at once a quick, business-like
adjustment. The long thing stirred in the mud. The men had hushed,
and were looking across the river. A moment later the shadowy mass
of pale blue figures was moving steadily toward the stream. There
could be heard from the town a clash of swift fighting and
cheering. The noise of the shooting coming through the heavy air
had its sharpness taken from it, and sounded in thuds.
There was a halt upon the bank
above the pontoons. When the column went winding down the incline,
and streamed out upon the bridge, the fog had faded to a great
degree, and in the clearer dusk the guns on a distant ridge were
enabled to perceive the crossing. The long whirling outcries of the
shells came into the air above the men. An occasional solid shot
struck the surface of the river, and dashed into view a sudden
vertical jet. The distance was subtly illuminated by the lightning
from the deep-booming guns. One by one the batteries on the
northern shore aroused, the innumerable guns bellowing in angry
oration at the distant ridge. The rolling thunder crashed and
reverberated as a wild surf sounds on a still night, and to this
music the column marched across the pontoons.
The waters of the grim river
curled away in a smile from the ends of the great boats, and slid
swiftly beneath the planking. The dark, riddled walls of the town
upreared before the troops, and from a region hidden by these
hammered and tumbled houses came incessantly the yells and firings
of a prolonged and close skirmish.
When Dan had called his brother a
fool, his voice had been so decisive, so brightly assured, that
many men had laughed, considering it to be great humour under the
circumstances. The incident
happened to rankle deep in
Billie. It was not any strange thing that his brother had called
him a fool. In fact, he often called him a fool with exactly the
same amount of cheerful and prompt conviction, and before large
audiences, too. Billie wondered in his own mind why he took such
profound offence in this case; but, at any rate, as he slid down
the bank and on to the bridge with his regiment, he was searching
his knowledge for something that would pierce Dan’s blithesome
spirit. But he could contrive nothing at this time, and his
impotency made the glance which he was once able to give his
brother still more malignant.
The guns far and near were
roaring a fearful and grand introduction for this column which was
marching upon the stage of death. Billie felt it, but only in a
numb way. His heart was cased in that curious dissonant metal which
covers a man’s emotions at such times. The terrible voices from the
hills told him that in this wide conflict his life was an
insignificant fact, and that his death would be an insignificant
fact. They portended the whirlwind to which he would be as
necessary as a butterfly’s waved wing. The solemnity, the sadness
of it came near enough to make him wonder why he was neither solemn
nor sad. When his mind vaguely adjusted events according to their
importance to him, it appeared that the uppermost thing was the
fact that upon the eve of battle, and before many comrades, his
brother had called him a fool.
Dan was in a particularly happy
mood. “Hurray! Look at ‘em shoot,” he said, when the long witches’
croon of the shells came into the air. It enraged Billie when he
felt the little thorn in him, and saw at the same time that his
brother had completely forgotten it.
The column went from the bridge
into more mud. At this southern end there was a chaos of hoarse
directions and commands. Darkness was coming upon the earth, and
regiments were being hurried up the slippery bank. As Billie
floundered in the black mud, amid the swearing, sliding crowd, he
suddenly resolved that, in the absence of other means of hurting
Dan, he would avoid looking at him, refrain from speaking to him,
pay absolutely no heed to his existence; and this done skilfully
would, he imagined, soon reduce his brother to a poignant
sensitiveness.
At the top of the bank the column
again halted and rearranged itself, as a man after a climb
rearranges his clothing. Presently the great steel-backed brigade,
an infinitely graceful thing in the rhythm and ease of its veteran
movement, swung up a little narrow, slanting street.
Evening had come so swiftly that
the fighting on the remote borders of the town was indicated by
thin flashes of flame. Some building was on fire, and its
reflection upon the clouds was an oval of delicate pink.
II