He did not yet know how it had been done. He did
not know how the Northern charges had broken in vain on the ranks of
Stonewall Jackson's men. He did not know how the fresh Southern troops
from the Valley of Virginia had hurled themselves so fiercely on the
Union flank. But he did know that his army had been defeated and was
retreating on the capital.
Cannon still thundered to right and left, and now and then showers of
bursting shell sprayed over the heads of the tired and gloomy soldiers.
Dick, thoughtful and scholarly, was in the depths of a bitterness and
despair reached by few of those around him. The Union, the Republic,
had appealed to him as the most glorious of experiments. He could not
bear to see it broken up for any cause whatever. It had been founded
with too much blood and suffering and labor to be dissolved in a day on
a Virginia battlefield.
But the army that had almost grasped victory was retreating, and the
camp followers, the spectators who had come out to see an easy triumph,
and some of the raw recruits were running. A youth near Dick cried that
the rebels fifty thousand strong with a hundred guns were hot upon their
heels. A short, powerful man, with a voice like the roar of thunder,
bade him hush or he would feel a rifle barrel across his back. Dick
had noticed this man, a sergeant named Whitley, who had shown singular
courage and coolness throughout the battle, and he crowded closer to him
for companionship.
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