Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War. Herman Melville

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War - Herman Melville страница 9

Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War - Herman Melville

Скачать книгу

stung us; frozen shores

      Snow-clad, and through the drear defiles

      And over the desolate ridges blew

      A Lapland wind.

      The main affair

      Was a good two hours' steady fight

      Between our gun-boats and the Fort.

      The Louisville's wheel was smashed outright.

      A hundred-and-twenty-eight-pound ball

      Came planet-like through a starboard port,

      Killing three men, and wounding all

      The rest of that gun's crew,

      (The captain of the gun was cut in two);

      Then splintering and ripping went—

      Nothing could be its continent.

      In the narrow stream the Louisville,

      Unhelmed, grew lawless; swung around,

      And would have thumped and drifted, till

      All the fleet was driven aground,

      But for the timely order to retire.

      Some damage from our fire, 'tis thought,

      Was done the water-batteries of the Fort.

      Little else took place that day,

      Except the field artillery in line

      Would now and then—for love, they say—

      Exchange a valentine.

      The old sharpshooting going on.

      Some plan afoot as yet unknown;

      So Friday closed round Donelson.

      Later.

      Great suffering through the night—

      A stinging one. Our heedless boys

      Were nipped like blossoms. Some dozen

      Hapless wounded men were frozen.

      During day being struck down out of sight,

      And help-cries drowned in roaring noise,

      They were left just where the skirmish shifted—

      Left in dense underbrush now-drifted.

      Some, seeking to crawl in crippled plight,

      So stiffened—perished.

      Yet in spite

      Of pangs for these, no heart is lost.

      Hungry, and clothing stiff with frost,

      Our men declare a nearing sun

      Shall see the fall of Donelson.

      And this they say, yet not disown

      The dark redoubts round Donelson,

      And ice-glazed corpses, each a stone—

      A sacrifice to Donelson;

      They swear it, and swerve not, gazing on

      A flag, deemed black, flying from Donelson.

      Some of the wounded in the wood

      Were cared for by the foe last night,

      Though he could do them little needed good,

      Himself being all in shivering plight.

      The rebel is wrong, but human yet;

      He's got a heart, and thrusts a bayonet.

      He gives us battle with wondrous will—

      The bluff's a perverted Bunker Hill.

      The stillness stealing through the throng

      The silent thought and dismal fear revealed;

      They turned and went,

      Musing on right and wrong

      And mysteries dimly sealed—

      Breasting the storm in daring discontent;

      The storm, whose black flag showed in heaven,

      As if to say no quarter there was given

      To wounded men in wood,

      Or true hearts yearning for the good—

      All fatherless seemed the human soul.

      But next day brought a bitterer bowl—

      On the bulletin-board this stood;

      Saturday morning at 3 A.m.

      A stir within the Fort betrayed

      That the rebels were getting under arms;

      Some plot these early birds had laid.

      But a lancing sleet cut him who stared

      Into the storm. After some vague alarms,

      Which left our lads unscared,

      Out sallied the enemy at dim of dawn,

      With cavalry and artillery, and went

      In fury at our environment.

      Under cover of shot and shell

      Three columns of infantry rolled on,

      Vomited out of Donelson—

      Rolled down the slopes like rivers of hell,

      Surged at our line, and swelled and poured

      Like breaking surf. But unsubmerged

      Our men stood up, except where roared

      The enemy through one gap. We urged

      Our all of manhood to the stress,

      But still showed shattered in our desperateness.

      Back

Скачать книгу