The Winchester regiment had not suffered greatly. A dozen men who had
fallen were given speedy burial, and all the wounded were taken away on
horseback by their friends. Dick rejoiced greatly at their escape from
Forrest, and the daring and skill of Grierson. He felt anew that he was
in stronger hands in the West than he had been in the East. In the East
things seemed to go wrong nearly always, and the West they seemed to
go right nearly always. It could not be chance continued so long. He
believed in his soul that it was Grant, the heroic Thomas, and the great
fighting powers of the western men, used to all the roughness of life
out-of-doors and on the border.
They turned their course toward the Mississippi and that afternoon they
met a Union scout who told them that Grant, now in the very heart of the
far South, was gathering his forces for a daring attack upon Grand Gulf,
a Confederate fortress on the Mississippi. In the North and at
Washington his venture was regarded with alarm. There was a telegram
to him to stop, but it was sent too late. He had disappeared in the
Southern wilderness.
But Dick understood. He had both knowledge and intuition. Colonel
Winchester on his long and daring scout had learned that the Confederate
forces in the South were scattered and their leaders in doubt. Grant,
taking a daring offensive and hiding his movements, had put them on the
defensive, and there were so many points to defend that they did not know
which to choose. Joe Johnston, just recovered from his wound at Fair
Oaks the year before, and a general of the first rank, was coming,
but he was not yet here.
Meanwhile Pemberton held the chief command, but he seemed to lack energy
and decision. There were forces under other generals scattered along the
river, including eight thousand commanded by Bowen, who held Grand Gulf,
but concert of action did not exist among them.
This knowledge was not Dick's alone. It extended to every man in the
regiment, and when the colonel urged them to greater speed they responded
gladly.
"If we don't ride faster," he said, "we won't be up in time for the
taking of Grand Gulf."
No greater spur was needed and the Winchester regiment went forward as
fast as horses could carry them.
"I take it that Grant means to scoop in the Johnnies in detail," said
Warner.
"It seems so," said Pennington. "This is a big country down here,
and we can fight one Confederate army while another is mired up a hundred
miles away.
"That's General Grant's plan. He doesn't look like any hero of romance,
but he acts like one. He plunges into the middle of the enemy, and if he
gets licked he's up and at 'em again right away."
Night closed in, and they stopped at an abandoned plantation--it seemed
to Dick that the houses were abandoned everywhere--where they spent the
night. The troopers would have willingly pushed on through the darkness,
but the horses were so near exhaustion that another hour or two would
have broken them down permanently. Moreover, Colonel Winchester did not
feel much apprehension of an attack now. Forrest had certainly turned
in another direction, and they were too close to the Union lines to be
attacked by any other foe.
The house on this plantation was not by any means so large and fine as
Bellevue, but, like the other, it had broad piazzas all about it, and
Dick, in view of his strenuous experience, was allowed to take his
saddle as a pillow and his blankets and go to sleep soon after dark in a
comfortable place against the wall.
Never was slumber quicker or sweeter. There was not an unhealthy tissue
in his body, and most of his nerves had disappeared in a life amid
battles, scoutings, and marchings. He slept heavily all through the
night, inhaling new strength and vitality with every breath of the crisp,
fresh air. There was no interruption this time, and early in the morning
the regiment was up and away.
They descended now into lower grounds near the Mississippi. All around
them was a vast and luxuriant vegetation, cut by sluggish streams and
bayous. But the same desolation reigned everywhere. The people had fled
before the advance of the armies. Late in the afternoon they saw pickets
in blue, then the Mississippi, and a little later they rode into a Union
camp.
"Dick," said Colonel Winchester, "I shall want you to go with the senior
officers and myself to report to General Grant on the other side of the
Mississippi. You rode on that mission to Grierson and he may want to ask
you questions."
Dick was glad to go with them. He was eager to see once more the man who
had taken Henry and Donelson and who had hung on at Shiloh until Buell
came. The general's tent was in a grove on a bit of high ground, and
he was sitting before it on a little camp stool, smoking a short cigar,
and gazing reflectively in the direction of Grand Gulf.
He greeted the three officers quietly but with warmth and then he
listened to Colonel Winchester's detailed account of what he had seen and
learned in his raid toward Jackson. It was a long narrative, showing how
the Southern forces were scattered, and, as he listened, Grant's face
began to show satisfaction.
But he seldom interrupted.
"And you think they have no large force at Jackson?" he said.
"I'm quite sure of it," replied Colonel Winchester.
Grant chewed his cigar a little while and then said:
"Grierson is doing well. It was an achievement for you and him to beat
off Forrest. It will raise the prestige of our cavalry, which needs it.
I believe it was you, Lieutenant Mason, who brought Grierson."
"It was chiefly, sir, a sergeant named Whitley. I rode with him and
outranked him, but he is a veteran of the plains, and it was he who did
the real work."
The general's stern features were lightened by a smile.
"I'm glad you give the sergeant credit," he said. "Not many officers
would do it."
He listened a while longer and then the three were permitted to withdraw
to their regiment, which was posted back of Grand Gulf, and which had
quickly become a part of an army flushed with victory and eager for
further action.
Before sunset Dick, Warner, and Pennington looked at Grand Gulf, a little
village standing on high cliffs overlooking the Mississippi, just below
the point where the dark stream known as the Big Black River empties into
the Father of Waters. Around the crown of the heights was a ring of
batteries and lower down, enclosing the town, was another ring.
Far off on the Mississippi the three saw puffing black smoke marking
the presence of a Union fleet, which never for one instant in the whole
course of the war relaxed its grip of steel upon the Confederacy.
Dick's heart thrilled at the sight of the brave ships. He felt then,
as most of us have felt since, that whatever happened the American navy
would never fail.
"I hear the ships are going to bombard," said Warner.
"I heard so, too," said Pennington, "and I heard also that they will have
to do it under the most difficult circumstances. The water in front
of Grand Gulf is so deep that the ships can't anchor. It has a swift
current, too, making at that point more than six knots an hour. There
are powerful eddies, too, and the batteries crowning the cliffs are so
high that the cannon of the gunboats will have trouble in reaching them."
"Still, Mr. Pessimist," said Dick, "remember what the gunboats did at
Fort Henry. You'll find the same kind of men here."
"I wasn't trying to discourage you. I was merely telling the worst
first. We're going to win. We nearly always win here in the West,
but it seems to me the country is against us now. This doesn't look much
like the plains, Dick, with its big, deep rivers, its high bluffs along
the banks, and its miles and miles of swamp or wet lowlands. How wide
would you say the Mississippi is here?"
"Somewhere between a mile and a mile and a half."
"And they say it's two or three hundred feet deep. Look at the steamers,
boys. How many are there?"
"I count seven pyramids of smoke," said Warner, "four in one group and
three in another. All the pyramids are becoming a little faint as the
twilight is advancing. Dick, you call me a cold mathematical person,
but this vast river flowing in its deep channel, the dark bluffs up there,
and the vast forests would make me feel mighty lonely if you fellows were
not here. It's a long way to Vermont."
"Fifteen hundred or maybe two thousand miles," said Dick, "but look how
fast the dark is coming. I was wrong in saying it's coming. It just
drops down. The smoke of the steamers has melted into the night, and you
don't see them any more. The surface of the river has turned black as
ink, the bluffs of Grand Gulf have gone, and we've turned back three or
four hundred years."
"What do you mean by going back three or four hundred years?" asked
Warner, looking curiously at Dick.
"Why, don't you see them out there?"
"See them out there? See what?"
"Why, the queer little ships with the high sides and prows! On my soul,
George, they're the caravels of Spain! Look, they're stopping! Now they
lower something in black over the side of the first caravel. I see a man
in a black robe like a priest, holding a cross in his hand and standing
at the ship's edge saying something. I think he's praying, boys.
Now sailors cut the ropes that hold the dark object. It falls into the
river and disappears. It's the burial of De Soto in the Father of Waters
which he discovered!"
"Dick, you're dreaming," exclaimed Pennington.
"Yes, I know, but once there was a Chinaman who dreamed that he was a
lily. When he woke up he didn't know whether he was a Chinaman who had
dreamed he was a lily or a lily now dreaming he was a Chinaman."
"I like that story, Dick, but you've got too much imagination. The tale
of the death and burial of De Soto has always been so vivid to you that
you just stood there and re-created the scene for yourself."
"Of course that's it," said Pennington, "but why can't a fellow create
things with his mind, when things that don't exist jump right up before
his eyes? I've often seen the mirage, generally about dark, far out on
the western plains. I've seen a beautiful lake and green gardens where
there was nothing but the brown swells rolling on."
"I concede all you say," said Dick readily. "I have flashes sometimes,
and so does Harry Kenton and others I know."
"Flashes! What do you mean?" asked Warner.
"Why, a sort of lightning stroke out of the past. Something that lasts
only a second, but in which you have a share. Boys, one day I saw myself
a Carthaginian soldier following Hannibal over the Alps."
"Maybe," said Pennington, "we have lived other lives on this earth,
and sometimes a faint glimpse of them comes to us. It's just a guess."
"That's so," said Warner, "and we'd better be getting back to the
regiment. Grand Gulf defended by Bowen and eight thousand good men is
really enough for us. I think we're going to see some lively fighting
here."
The heavy boom of a cannon from the upper circle of batteries swept over
the vast sheet of water flowing so swiftly toward the Gulf. The sound
came back in dying echoes, and then there was complete silence among
besieged and besiegers.
The Winchesters had found a good solid place, a little hill among the
marshes, and they were encamped there with their horses. Dick had no
messages to carry, but he remained awake, while his comrades slept
soundly. He had slept so much the night before that he had no desire for
sleep now.
From his position he could see the Confederate bluffs and a few lights
moving there, but otherwise the two armies were under a blanket of
darkness. He again felt deeply the sense of isolation and loneliness,
not for himself alone, but for the whole army. Grant had certainly shown
supreme daring in pushing far into the South, and the government at
Washington had cause for alarm lest he be reckless. If there were any
strong hand to draw together the forces of the Confederacy they could
surely crush him. But he had already learned in this war that those who
struck swift and hard were sure to win. That was Stonewall Jackson's way,
and it seemed to be Grant's way, too.
Still unable to sleep, he walked to a better position, where he could see
the shimmering dark of the river and the misty heights with their two
circles of cannon. A tall figure standing there turned at his tread and
he recognized Colonel Winchester.
"Uneasy at our position, Dick?" said the colonel, fathoming his mind at
once.
"A little, sir, but I think General Grant will pull us through."
"He will, Dick, and he'll take this fort, too. Grant's the hammer we've
been looking for. Look at his record. He's had backsets, but in the end
he's succeeded in everything he's tried. The Confederate government and
leaders have made a mess of their affairs in the West and Southwest,
and General Grant is taking full advantage of it."
"Do we attack in the morning, sir?"
"We do, Dick, though not by land. Porter, with his seven gunboats,
is going to open on the fort, but it will be a hazardous undertaking."
"Because of the nature of the river, sir?"
"That's it. They can't anchor, and with full steam up, caught in all the
violent eddies that the river makes rounding the point, they'll have to
fire as best they can."
"But the gunboats did great work at Fort Henry, sir."
"So they did, Dick, and we've come a long way South since then, which
means that we're making progress and a lot of it here in the West.
Well, we'll see to-morrow."
They walked back to their own camp and sleep came to Dick at last.
But he awoke early and found that the thrill of expectation was running
through the whole army. Their position did not yet enable them to attack
on land, but far out on the river they saw the gunboats moving. Porter,
the commander, divided them into two groups. Four of the gunboats were
to attack the lower circle of batteries and three were to pour their fire
upon the upper ring.
Dick by day even more than by night recognized the difficulty of the
task. Before them flowed the vast swift current of the Mississippi,
gleaming now in the sunshine, and beyond were the frowning bluffs,
crested and ringed with cannon. Grant had with him twenty thousand men
and his seven gunboats, and Bowen, eight thousand troops. But if the
affair lasted long other Southern armies would surely come.
Dick and his comrades had little to do but watch and thousands watched
with them. When the sun was fully risen the seven boats steamed out in
two groups, four farther down the river in order to attack the lower
batteries, while the other three up the stream would launch their fire
against those on the summit.
He watched the crest of the cliffs. He saw plainly through his glasses
the muzzles of cannon and men moving about the batteries. Then there
was a sudden blaze of fire and column of smoke and a shell struck in the
water near one of the gunboats. The boat replied and its comrades also
sent shot and shell toward the frowning summit. Then the batteries,
both lower and upper, replied with full vigor and all the cliffs were
wrapped in fire and smoke.
The boats steamed in closer and closer, pouring an incessant fire from
their heavy guns, and both rings of batteries on the cliffs responded.
The water of the river spouted up in innumerable little geysers and now
and then a boat was struck. Over both cliffs and river a great cloud of
smoke lowered. It grew so dense that Dick and his comrades, watching
with eagerness, were unable to tell much of what was happening.
Yet as the smoke lifted or was shot through with the blaze of cannon fire
they saw that their prophecies were coming true. The boats in water too
deep for anchorage were caught in the powerful eddies and their captains
had to show their best seamanship while they steamed back and forth.
The battle between ship and shore went on for a long time. It seemed at
last to the watching Union soldiers that the fire from the lower line of
batteries was diminishing.
"We're making some way," said Warner.
"It looks like it," said Dick. "Their lower batteries are not so well
protected as the upper."
"If we were only over there, helping with our own guns."
"But there's a big river in between, and we've got to leave it to the
boats for to-day, anyhow."
"Look again at those lower batteries. Their fire is certainly
decreasing. I can see it die down."
"Yes, and now it's stopped entirely. The boats have done good work!"
A tremendous cheer burst from the troops on the west shore as they saw
how much their gallant little gunboats had achieved. Every gun in the
lower batteries was silent now, but the top of the cliffs was still alive
with flame. The batteries there were far from silent. Instead their
fire was increasing in volume and power.
The four gunboats that had silenced the lower batteries now moved up to
the aid of their comrades, and the seven made a united effort, steaming
forward in a sort of half-moon, and raining shot and shell upon the
summits. But the guns there, well-sheltered and having every advantage
over rocking steamers, maintained an accurate and deadly fire. The decks
of the gunboats were swept more than once. Many men were killed or
wounded. Heavy shot crashed through their sides, and Dick expected every
instant to see some one of them sunk by a huge exploding shell.
"They can't win! They can't win!" he exclaimed. "They'd better draw off
before they're sunk!"
"So they had," said Warner sadly. "Boats are at a disadvantage fighting
batteries. The old darky was right when he preferred a train wreck to a
boat wreck, 'ef the train's smashed, thar you are on the solid ground,
but ef the boat blows up, whar is you?' That's sense. The boats are
retiring! It's sad, but it's sense. A boat that steams away will live
to fight another day."
Dick was dejected. He fancied he could hear the cheering of their foes
at what looked like a Union defeat, but he recalled that Grant, the
bulldog, led them. He would never think of retiring, and he was sure to
be ready with some new attempt.
The gunboats drew off to the far western shore and lay there, puffing
smoke defiantly. Their fight with the batteries had lasted five hours
and they had suffered severely. It seemed strange to Dick that none of
them had been sunk, and in fact it was strange. All had been hit many
times, and one had been pierced by nearly fifty shot or shell. Their
killed or wounded were numerous, but their commanders and crews were
still resolute, and ready to go into action whenever General Grant wished.
"Spunky little fellows," said Pennington. "We don't have many boats out
where I live, but I must hand a bunch of laurel to the navy every time."
"And you can bind wreaths around the hair of those navy fellows, too,"
said Warner, "and sing songs in their honor whether they win or lose."
"Now I wonder what's next," said Dick.
To their surprise the gunboats opened fire again just before sundown,
and the batteries replied fiercely. Rolling clouds of smoke mingled
with the advancing twilight, and the great guns from either side flashed
through the coming darkness. Then from a stray word or two dropped
by Colonel Winchester Dick surmised the reason of this new and rather
distant cannonade.
He knew that General Grant had transports up the river above Grand Gulf,
and he believed that they were now coming down the stream under cover
of the bombardment and the darkness. He confided his belief to Warner,
who agreed with him. Presently they saw new coils of smoke in the
darkness and knew they were right. The transports, steaming swiftly,
were soon beyond the range of the batteries, and then the gun boats,
drawing off, dropped down the river with them.
Long before the boats reached a point level with Grant's camp the army
was being formed in line for embarkation on the gunboats and transports.
The horses were to be placed on one or two of the transports and the men
filled all the other vessels.
"You can't down Grant," said Pennington. "A failure with him merely
means that he's going to try again."
"But don't forget the navy and the Father of Waters," said Dick, as their
transports swung from the shore upon the dark surface of the river.
"The mighty rivers help us. Look how we went up the Cumberland and the
Tennessee and now we've harnessed a flowing ocean for our service."
"Getting poetical, Dick," said Warner.
"I feel it and so do you. You can't see the bluffs any more. There's
nothing in sight, but the lights of the steamers and the transports.
We must be somewhere near the middle of the stream, because I can't make
out either shore."
There were two regiments aboard the transport, the Winchester and one
from Ohio, which had fought by their side at both Perryville and Stone
River. Usually these boys chattered much, but now they were silent,
permeated by the same feelings that had overwhelmed Dick. In the
darkness--all lights were concealed as much as possible--with both banks
of the vast river hidden from them, they felt that they were in very
truth afloat upon a flowing ocean.
They knew little about their journey, except that they were destined for
the eastern shore, the same upon which Grand Gulf stood, but they did not
worry about this lack of knowledge. They were willing to trust to Grant,
and most of them were already asleep, upon the decks, in the cabins,
or in any place in which a human body could secure a position.
Dick did not sleep. The feeling of mystery and might made by the
tremendous river remained longer in his sensitive and imaginative nature.
His mind, too, looked backward. He knew that the great grandfathers
of Harry Kenton and himself, the famous Henry Ware and the famous Paul
Cotter, had passed up and down this monarch of streams. He knew of their
adventures. How often had he and his cousin, who now, alas! was on the
other side, listened to the stories of those mighty days as they were
handed from father to son! Those lads had floated in little boats and
he was on a steamer, but it seemed to him that the river with its mighty
depths took no account of either, steamer or canoe being all the same to
its vast volume of water.
He was standing by the rail looking over, when happening to glance
back he saw by the ship's lantern what he thought was a familiar face.
A second glance and he was sure. He remembered that fair-haired Ohio lad,
and, smiling, he said:
"You're one of those Ohio boys who, marching southward from its mouth
in the Ohio, drank the tributary river dry clear to its source, the
mightiest achievement in quenching thirst the world has ever known.
You're the boy, too, who told about it."
The youth moved forward, gazed at him and said:
"Now I remember you, too. You're Dick Mason of the Winchester regiment.
I heard the Winchesters were on board, but I haven't had time to look
around. It was hot when we drank up the river, but it was hotter that
afternoon at Perryville. God! what a battle! And again at Stone River,
when the Johnnies surprised us and took us in flank. It was you
Kentuckians then who saved us."
"Just as you would have saved us, if it had been the other way."
"I hope so. But, Mason, we left a lot of the boys behind. A big crowd
stopped forever at Perryville, and a bigger at Stone River."
"And we left many of ours, too. I suppose we'll land soon, won't we,
and then take these Grand Gulf forts with troops."
"Yes, that's the ticket, but I hear, Mason, it's hard to find a landing
on the east side. The banks are low there and the river spreads out to a
vast distance. After the boats go as far as they can we'll have to get
off in water up to our waists and wade through treacherous floods."
The question of landing was worrying Grant at that time and worrying him
terribly. The water spread far out over the sunken lands and he might
have to drop down the river many miles before he could find a landing
on solid ground, a fact which would scatter his army along a long line,
and expose it to defeat by the Southern land forces. But his anxieties
were relieved early in the morning when a colored man taken aboard from
a canoe told him of a bayou not five miles below Grand Gulf up which his
gunboats and transports could go and find a landing for the troops on
solid ground.
Dick was asleep when the boats entered the bayou, but he was soon
awakened by the noise of landing. It was then that most of the
Winchester and of the Ohio regiment discovered that they were comrades,
thrown together again by the chances of war, and there was a mighty
welcome and shaking of hands. But it did not interfere with the rapidity
of the landing. The Winchester regiment was promptly ordered forward and,
advancing on solid ground, took a little village without firing a shot.
All that day troops came up and Grant's army, after having gone away from
Grand Gulf in darkness, was coming back to it in daylight.
"They say that Pemberton at Vicksburg could gather together fifty
thousand men and strike us, while we've only twenty thousand here,"
said Pennington.
"But he isn't going to do it," said Warner. "How do I know? No, I'm not
a prophet nor the son of a prophet. There's nothing mysterious about it.
This man Grant who leads us knows the value of time. He makes up his
mind fast and he acts fast. The Confederate commander doesn't do either.
So Grant is bound to win. Let z equal resolution and y equal speed and
we have z plus y which equals resolution and speed, that is victory."
"I hope it will work out that way," said Dick, "but war isn't altogether
mathematics."
"Not altogether, but that beautiful study plays a great part in every
campaign. People are apt to abuse mathematics, when they don't know what
they're talking about. The science of mathematics is the very basis of
music, divine melody, heaven's harmony."
"You needn't tell me," said Pennington, "that a plus b and z minus y
lie at the basis of 'Home, Sweet Home' and the 'Star Spangled Banner.'
I accept a lot of your tales because you come from an old state like
Vermont, but there's a limit, George."
Warner looked at him pityingly.
"Frank," he said, "I'm not arguing with you. I'm telling you. Haven't
you known me long enough to accept whatever I say as a fact, and to
accept it at once and without question? Not to do so is an insult to me
and to the truth. Now say over slowly with me: 'The basis of music is
mathematics.'"
They said slowly together:
"The basis of music is mathematics."
"Now I accept your apologies," said Warner loftily.
Pennington laughed.
"You're a queer fellow, George," he said. "When this war is over and I
receive my general's uniform I'm coming up into the Vermont mountains and
look your people over. Will it be safe?"
"Of course, if you learn to read and write by then, and don't come
wearing your buffalo robe. We're strong on education and manners."
"Why, George," said Pennington in the same light tone, "I could read when
I was two years old, and, as for writing, I wrote a lot of text-books for
the Vermont schools before I came to the war."
"Shut up, you two," said Dick. "Don't you know that this is a war and
not a talking match?"
"It's not a war just now, or at least there are a few moments between
battles," retorted Warner, "and the best way I can use them is in
instructing our ignorant young friend from Nebraska."
Their conversation was interrupted by Colonel Winchester, who ordered the
regiment to move to a new point. General Grant had decided to attack a
little town called Port Gibson, which commanded the various approaches to
Grand Gulf. If he could take that he might shut up Bowen and his force
in Grand Gulf. On the other hand, if he failed he might be shut in
himself by Confederate armies gathering from Jackson, Vicksburg, and
elsewhere. The region, moreover, was complicated for both armies by
the mighty Mississippi and the Big Black River, itself a large stream,
and there were deep and often unfordable bayous.
But Grant showed great qualities, and Dick, who was experienced enough
now to see and know, admired him more than ever. He pushed forward with
the utmost resolution and courage. His vanguard, led by McClernand,
and including the Winchester regiment, seized solid ground near Port
Gibson, but found themselves confronted by a formidable Southern force.
Bowen, who commanded in Grand Gulf, was brave and able. Seeing the Union
army marching toward his rear, and knowing that if Grant took it he would
be surrounded, both on land and water, by a force outnumbering his nearly
three to one, he marched out at once and took station two miles in front
of Port Gibson.
Dick was by the side of Colonel Winchester as he rode forward. The faint
echo of shots from the skirmishers far in front showed that they had
roused up an enemy. Glasses were put in use at once.
"The Confederates are before us," said Colonel Winchester.
"So they are, and we're going to have hard fighting," said a major.
"Look what a position!"
Dick said nothing, but he was using his glasses, too. He saw before him
rough ground, thickly sown with underbrush. There was also a deep ravine
or rather marsh choked with vines, bushes, reeds, and trees that like a
watery soil. The narrow road divided and went around either end of the
long work, where the two divisions united again on a ridge, on which
Bowen had placed his fine troops and artillery.
"I don't see their men yet, except a few skirmishers," said Dick.
"No, but we'll find them in some good place beyond it," replied Colonel
Winchester, divining Bowen's plan.
It was night when the army in two divisions, one turning to the right
and the other to the left, began the circuit of the great marshy ravine.
Dick noticed that the troops who had struggled so long in mud and water
were eager. Here, west of the Alleghanies, the men in blue were always
expecting to win.
The sky was sown with stars, casting a filmy light over the marching
columns. Dick was with the troops passing to the right, and he observed
again their springy and eager tread.
Nor was the night without a lively note. Skirmishers, eager riflemen
prowling among the bushes, fired often at one another, and now and then
a Union cannon sent a shell screaming into some thick clump of forest,
lest a foe be lurking there for ambush.
The reports of the rifles and cannon kept every one alert and watchful.
Early in the night while it was yet clear Dick often saw the flashes from
the firing, but, as the morning hours approached, heavy mists began to
rise from that region of damp earth and great waters. He shivered more
than once, and on the advice of Sergeant Whitley wrapped his cavalry
cloak about him.
"Chills and fever," said the sergeant sententiously. "So much water and
marsh it's hard to escape it. The sooner we fight the better."
"Well, that's what General Grant thinks already," said Dick; "so I
suppose he doesn't need chills and fever to drive him on. All the same,
Sergeant, I'll wrap up as you say."
All the men in the Winchester regiment were soon doing the same. The
mists of the Mississippi, the Big Black and the bayous were raw and cold,
although it would be hot later on. But the period of coldness did not
last long. Soon the low sun showed in the east and the warm daylight
came. In the new light they saw the Confederate forces strongly posted
on the ridge where the halves of the road rejoined. As the Union column
came into view a cannon boomed and a shell burst in the road so near
that dirt was thrown upon them as it exploded and one man was wounded.
At the same time the column on the left under Osterhaus appeared, having
performed its semicircle about the marsh, and the whole Union army,
weary of body but eager of soul, pressed forward. The Winchester
regiment and the Ohio regiment beside it charged hotly, but were received
with a fire of great volume and accuracy that swept them from the road.
Another battery on their far left also raked them with a cross fire,
and so terrible was their reception that they were compelled to abandon
some of their own cannon and seek shelter.
The Winchester regiment, except the officers, were not mounted in this
march, as Grant would not wait for their horses, which were on another
transport. The very fact saved from death many who would have made a
more shining target. Dick's own horse was killed at the first fire,
and as he leaped clear to escape he went down to his waist in a marsh,
another fact which saved his life a second time as the new volleys swept
over his head. The horses of other officers also were killed, and the
remainder, finding themselves such conspicuous targets, sprang to the
ground. The frightened animals, tearing the reins from their hands,
raced through the thickets or fell into the marsh.
All the time Dick heard the shells and bullets shrieking and whining over
his head. But, regaining his courage and presence of mind, he slowly
pulled himself out of the marsh, taking shelter behind a huge cypress
that grew at its very edge. As he dashed the mud out of his eyes he
heard a voice saying:
"Don't push! There's room enough here for the three of us. In fact,
there's room enough behind the big trees for all the officers."
It was Warner who was speaking with such grim irony, and Pennington by
his side was hugging the tree. Shells and shot shrieked over their heads
and countless bullets hummed about them. The soldiers also had taken
shelter behind the trees, and Warner's jest about the officers was a jest
only. Nevertheless the Southern fire was great in volume and accuracy.
Bowen was an able commander with excellent men, and from his position
that covered the meeting of the roads he swept both Union columns with a
continuous hail of death.
"We must get out of this somehow," said Dick. "If we're held here in
these swamps and thickets any longer the Johnnies can shoot us down at
their leisure."
"But we won't be held!" exclaimed Pennington. "Look! One of our
brigades is through, and it's charging the enemy on the right!"
It was Hovey who had forced his way through a thicket, supposed to be
impenetrable, and who now, with a full brigade behind him, was rushing
upon Bowen's flank. Then, while the Southern defense was diverted to
this new attack, the Winchester and the Ohio regiment attacked in front,
shouting with triumph.
Hovey's rush was overpowering. He drove in the Southern flank, taking
four cannon and hundreds of prisoners, but the dauntless Confederate
commander, withdrawing his men in perfect order, retreated to a second
ridge, where he took up a stronger position than the first.
Resolute and dangerous, the men in gray turned their faces anew to the
enemy and sent back a withering fire that burned away the front ranks of
the Union army. Osterhaus, in spite of every effort, was driven back,
and the Winchesters and their Ohio friends were compelled to give ground
too. It seemed that the utmost of human effort and defiance of death
could not force the narrow passage.
But a new man, a host in himself, came upon the field. Grant, who had
been on foot for two days, endeavoring to get his army through the
thickets and morasses, heard the booming of the cannon and he knew that
the vanguards had clashed. He borrowed a cavalry horse and, galloping
toward the sound of the guns, reached the field at mid-morning. Grant
was not impressive in either figure or manner, but the soldiers had
learned to believe in him as they always believe in one who leads them
to victory.
A tremendous shout greeted his coming and the men, snatching off their
hats and caps, waved them aloft. Grant took no notice but rapidly
disposed his troops for a new and heavier battle. Dick felt the strong
and sure hand over them. The Union fire grew in might and rapidity.
McPherson arrived with two brigades to help Osterhaus, and the
strengthened division was able to send a brigade across a ravine, where
it passed further around Bowen's flank and assailed him with fury.
Dick felt that their own division under McClernand was also making
progress. Although many men were falling they pressed slowly forward,
and Grant brought up help for them too. For a long time the struggle was
carried on. It was one of the little battles of the war, but its results
were important and few were fought with more courage and resolution.
Bowen, with only eight thousand against twenty thousand, held fast
throughout all the long hot hours of the afternoon. Grant, owing to the
nature of the field, was unable to get all his numbers into battle at
once.
But when the twilight began to show Dick believed that victory was at
hand. They had not yet driven Bowen out, but they were pressing him so
close and hard, and Grant was securing so many new positions of advantage,
that the Southern leader could not make another such fight against
superior numbers in the morning.
Twilight turned into night and Bowen and his men, who had shown so much
heroism, retreated in the dark, leaving six guns and many prisoners as
trophies of the victors.
It was night when the battle ceased. Cannon and rifles flashed at fitful
intervals, warning skirmishers to keep away, but after a while they too
ceased and the Union army, exhausted by the long march of the night
before and the battle of the day, threw itself panting upon the ground.
The officers posted the sentinels in triple force, but let the remainder
of the men rest.
As Dick lay down in the long grass two or three bullets dropped from
his clothes and he became conscious, too, that a bullet had grazed his
shoulder. But these trifles did not disturb him. It was so sweet to
rest! Nothing could be more heavenly than merely to lie there in the
long, soft grass and gaze up at the luminous sky, into which the stars
now stole to twinkle down at him peacefully.
"Don't go to sleep, Dick," said a voice near him. "I admit the
temptation is strong. I feel it myself, but General Grant may have to
send you and me forward to-night to win another battle."
"George, I'm glad to hear your preachy voice over there. Hurt any?"
"No. A million cannon balls brushed my right cheek and another million
brushed my left cheek, but they didn't touch me. They scared me to death,
but in the last few minutes I've begun to come back to life. In a
quarter of an hour I'll be just as much alive as I ever was."
"Do you know anything of Pennington?"
"Yes. The rascal is lying about six feet beyond me, sound asleep.
In spite of all I could do he wouldn't stay awake. I've punched him all
over to see if he was wounded, but as he didn't groan at a single punch,
he's all right."
"That being the case, I'm going to follow Pennington's example. You may
lecture me as much as you please, George, but you'll lecture only the
night, because I'll be far away from here in a land of sweet dreams."
"All right, if you're going to do it, I will too. You'll hear my snore
before I hear yours."
Both sank in a few minutes into a deep slumber, and when they awoke the
next morning they found that Bowen had abandoned Port Gibson and had
retreated into Grand Gulf again. There was great elation among the lads
and Dick began to feel that the position of the Union army in the far
South was strengthened immeasurably. He heard that Sherman, who had
stood so staunchly at Shiloh, was on his way to join Grant. Their united
forces would press the siege of Grand Gulf and would also turn to strike
at any foe who might approach from the rear.
Never since the war began had Dick felt so elated as he did that morning.
When he saw the short, thick-set figure of Grant riding by he believed
that the Union, in the West at least, had found its man at last.