So they lay in the line, as the discord diminished, and almost
Seemed as a silence, to sense that was drowned with the sound of the cannon.
Hung on the spirits of all men a prescience of something impending
Great and strange, as at times when thick darkness possesses the noonday;
Yet was the sky most bright with its burning azure; and strangely
Shifted the wind, and lifted the lingering smoke as a curtain;
[Pg 23]
Reek of the powder drew off, and the valley was bare and apparent,
Dip of the hollowing plain, and the trampled green of the cornfields.
Suddenly out of the wood, with a swift and resolute movement,
Over the long slow slope of the hollowing plain to the eastward,
Swept the tried Virginians, the war-seasoned soldiers of Pickett.
Swinging with springing step, in the distance a rhythmic pulsation,
Blithely they marched as those who march in a holiday pageant;
Lightly they marched, and afar the foemen that looked on them loved them.
Rode at the head of the column Pickett the soldier intrepid,
Proudly, with cap a-slant, and cavalier locks free-floating;
Rode with their brave brigades Armistead, Kemper, and Garnett.
Joined the advance on the left, Pettigrew leading and Trimble,
Regiments grim and seared with the scorch of the two days’ battle,
Bleeding and torn with loss, but prompt to the fiery renewal:
Mississippians fierce, and the undismayed Tennesseans,
Valorous Alabamans, and soldiers of North Carolina.
Onward the long wave rolled, steadily, steadily onward,
[Pg 24]
Gray wave glinting with steel, and the battle-flags floating above it.
So have you seen on the shore the line of the billow advancing,
Fateful, unhasting, sure, to the charge uprearing exultant
Threaten the land with its strength; from its crest, for an exquisite instant,
Foam-bows backward stream,—in the next, it has vanished forever!
Onward the long wave rolled, steadily, steadily onward,
Over the hollowing plain, and the trampled green of the cornfields.
Stood the two armies at gaze; until, from the stronghold of Howard,
Hill of the Graves, and the ridge, and the shoulder of Round-Top the Lesser,
Burst the leashed lightnings anew, and the roars of the thunder ironic!
Forth from their hot black dens in the gorge of the cavernous cannon,—
Guns new-thrust into place,—freed for the service appointed,
Tigerish, Death and Fire leaped on the open arena.
One low sound was heard through the tumult, and deeply remembered,
Human, the moan of life mowed as the grass of the meadow.
One sharp shudder ran through the host of the South, the beholders.
(Over the mind of the Chief a memory, thrilling electric,
[Pg 25]
Flashed, the revenge of Time: and he saw the blue-coated battalions
Move through the winterly light of the cruel Thirteenth of December
Up to the sunken wall that was topped with the rifles of Georgia:
Stubborn and stern they came, to pile the bleak field with their bodies.
He, who had looked on that day, looked now on his own, his Virginians,
Drinking the cup of fire, like their brothers, their foemen, before them.
Sorrow and pride in his soul struggled; he suffered, and spoke not.)
Pain possessed the field, and the smoke-veil settled upon it;
Yet underneath the cloud, as a strong wave under the sea-mist,
Rolled the lessening line, steadily, steadily onward.
Rifle-bolt, round-shot, and shell, from the right, from the left of them raking,
Buzzing and screaming and bursting, harrowed the ranks of them redly;
Strangely the Centre was silent,—the Centre, and eyes of the captains
Fixed, in the storm, on the landmark, the dark little cluster of oak-trees
Faintly and fitfully seen, and the low stone wall through the smoke-veil.
Mingled anon in the whirl the whistle and whip of the bullets
Sped from the sharpshooters’ rifles; anon in the iron confusion,
Musketry crashed on the flank; and now on the breast of the column
[Pg 26]
Flamed the canister-fire from the gunners of Hays and of Gibbon.
Blending, the sheeted blaze of the heavily-volleying muskets
Suddenly fringed the front, from the regiments crouching expectant:
Almost with awe they awaited the furious onset of foemen
Tried in the five-fold fire, and from hell undaunted emerging.
Waited not long: with the crash of answering volley for volley,
Raising the yell of the charge, wild as the howl of the wolf-pack,
Surged up out of the smoke the first of the lean tanned faces,
Teeth half-bared as in joy, and the sunken eyes savagely gleaming
Under the old gray brims and the slant of the battered visors.
Man to man at last!
In the grip and the sway of the wrestle
Springing the regiments clinched, flinging away their formation,
Red-blind, sobbing for breath, mad in the terrible mellay,
Mad for the blood-bright flags, for the star-crossed flags of the Southland,
Borne on the crest of the wave through the broken lines of the Union—
Broken ——
Again to close; brief was the desperate triumph!
[Pg 27]
Happy the Southron who died as cheering he planted his colors,
Passed on the crest of the wave as it curved to the crash of its falling!
Happy, not knowing defeat, Garnett, the gallant, and happy
Armistead leaping the wall, lifting his cap on his sword-point,
Smiting his hand on the cannon, and suddenly sinking across it!
Not for them the crawl of the sick slow days of the captive,
Torture of wounds, nor bruit of the perishing cause that they fought for—
Rather swift conquest of Peace, and to enter the City of Silence!
Not for them be sorrow; but sorrow for such men as haply,
Flung on the flag of the South as it burst through the line of the Union,
Fell, and died in their doubt, and knew not the sweep of the darkness
Over their faces upturned was the passing of Victory’s garment!
Victory! Shattered supports reeled on the right, and rolled backward.
Islanded, closed in the copse, lost, without hope, the Virginian
Doggedly loaded once more, and the Tennessean beside him;
Thus had they chosen to die, each dealing death in his dying.
Sullen, some bowed them to fate, waved the white sign of surrender,
[Pg 28]
Droopingly trailed to the rear with the bayonet-glitter to guard them;
Brokenly over the plain receded the sorrowful remnant,
Choosing retreat through fire.
Even so, dragged back to the ocean,
So have you seen on the shore, reluctant, and leaving behind it
Swathes of the dark-red weed, and the beaten foam, and the leaping
Gasping silver life of the deep, and the tragical driftwood,
Some great wave withdrawn, at the turn of the tide, from the floodmark.
Sad it seethes back to the sea.
That was the turn of the war-tide,
Ebb of the hope of the South, end of the Battle of Battles!