The Major’s Tale
In the days of the Civil War practical joking had
not, I think, fallen into that disrepute which characterizes it
now. That, doubtless, was owing to our extreme youth—men were much
younger than now, and evermore your very young man has a boisterous
spirit, running easily to horse-play. You cannot think how young
the men were in the early sixties! Why, the average age of the
entire Federal Army was not more than twenty-five; I doubt if it
was more than twenty-three, but not having the statistics on that
point (if there are any) I want to be moderate: we will say
twenty-five. It is true a man of twenty-five was in that heroic
time a good deal more of a man than one of that age is now; you
could see that by looking at him. His face had nothing of that
unripeness so conspicuous in his successor. I never see a young
fellow now without observing how disagreebly young he really is;
but during the war we did not think of a man’s age at all unless he
happened to be pretty well along in life. In that case one could
not help it, for the unloveliness of age assailed the human
countenance then much earlier than now; the result, I suppose, of
hard service—perhaps, to some extent, of hard drink, for, bless my
soul! we did shed the blood of the grape and the grain abundantly
during the war. I remember thinking General Grant, who could not
have been more than forty, a pretty well preserved old chap,
considering his habits. As to men of middle age—say from fifty to
sixty—why, they all looked fit to personate the Last of the
Hittites,81 or the Madagascarene
Methuselah,82 in a museum. Depend upon it, my friends,
men of that time were greatly younger than men are to-day, but
looked much older. The change is quite remarkable.
I said that practical joking had not then gone out
of fashion. It had not, at least, in the army; though possibly in
the more serious life of the civilian it had no place except in the
form of tarring and feathering an occasional
“copperhead.”83 You all know, I suppose, what a
“copperhead” was, so I will go directly at my story without
introductory remark, as is my way.
It was a few days before the battle of Nashville.
The enemy had driven us up out of northern Georgia and Alabama. At
Nashville we had turned at bay and fortified, while old Pap Thomas,
our commander, hurried down reinforcements and supplies from
Louisville. Meantime Hood, the Confederate commander, had partly
invested us and lay close enough to have tossed shells into the
heart of the town. As a rule he abstained—he was afraid of killing
the families of his own soldiers, I suppose, a great many of whom
had lived there. I sometimes wondered what were the feelings of
those fellows, gazing over our heads at their own dwellings, where
their wives and children or their aged parents were perhaps
suffering for the necessaries of life, and certainly (so their
reasoning would run) cowering under the tyranny and power of the
barbarous Yankees.
To begin, then, at the beginning, I was serving at
that time on the staff of a division commander whose name I shall
not disclose, for I am relating facts, and the person upon whom
they bear hardest may have surviving relatives who would not care
to have him traced. Our headquarters were in a large dwelling which
stood just behind our line of works. This had been hastily
abandoned by the civilian occupants, who had left everything pretty
much as it was—had no place to store it, probably, and trusted that
Heaven would preserve it from Federal cupidity and Confederate
artillery. With regard to the latter we were as solicitous as
they.
Rummaging about in some of the chambers and closets
one evening, some of us found an abundant supply of
lady-gear—gowns, shawls, bonnets, hats, petticoats and the Lord
knows what; I could not at that time have named the half of it. The
sight of all this pretty plunder inspired one of us with what he
was pleased to call an “idea,” which, when submitted to the other
scamps and scapegraces of the staff, met with instant and
enthusiastic approval. We proceeded at once to act upon it for the
undoing of one of our comrades.
Our selected victim was an aide, Lieutenant
Haberton, so to call him. He was a good soldier—as gallant a chap
as ever wore spurs; but he had an intolerable weakness: he was a
lady-killer, and like most of his class, even in those days, eager
that all should know it. He never tired of relating his amatory
exploits, and I need not say how dismal that kind of narrative is
to all but the narrator. It would be dismal even if sprightly and
vivacious, for all men are rivals in woman’s favor, and to relate
your successes to another man is to rouse in him a dumb resentment,
tempered by disbelief. You will not convince him that you tell the
tale for his entertainment; he will hear nothing in it but an
expression of your own vanity. Moreover, as most men, whether rakes
or not, are willing to be thought rakes, he is very likely to
resent a stupid and unjust inference which he suspects you to have
drawn from his reticence in the matter of his own
adventures—namely, that he has had none. If, on the other hand, he
has had no scruple in the matter and his reticence is due to lack
of opportunity to talk, or of nimbleness in taking advantage of it,
why, then he will be surly because you “have the floor” when he
wants it himself. There are, in short, no circumstances under which
a man, even from the best of motives, or no motive at all, can
relate his feats of love without distinctly lowering himself in the
esteem of his male auditor; and herein lies a just punishment for
such as kiss and tell. In my younger days I was myself not entirely
out of favor with the ladies, and have a memory stored with much
concerning them which doubtless I might put into acceptable
narrative had I not undertaken another tale, and if it were not my
practice to relate one thing at a time, going straight away to the
end, without digression.
Lieutenant Haberton was, it must be confessed, a
singularly handsome man with engaging manners. He was, I suppose,
judging from the imperfect view-point of my sex, what women call
“fascinating.” Now, the qualities which make a man attractive to
ladies entail a double disadvantage. First, they are of a sort
readily discerned by other men, and by none more readily than by
those who lack them. Their possessor, being feared by all these, is
habitually slandered by them in self-defense. To all the ladies in
whose welfare they deem themselves entitled to a voice and interest
they hint at the voices and general unworth of the “ladies’ man” in
no uncertain terms, and to their wives relate without shame the
most monstrous falsehoods about him. Nor are they restrained by the
consideration that he is their friend; the qualities which have
engaged their own admiration make it necessary to warn away those
to whom the al lurement would be a peril. So the man of charming
personality, while loved by all the ladies who know him well, yet
not too well, must endure with such fortitude as he may the
consciousness that those others who know him only “by reputation”
consider him a shameless reprobate, a vicious and unworthy man—a
type and example of moral depravity. To name the second
disadvantage entailed by his charms: he commonly is.
In order to get forward with our busy story (and in
my judgment a story once begun should not suffer impedition) it is
necessary to explain that a young fellow attached to our
headquarters as an orderly was notably effeminate in face and
figure. He was not more than seventeen and had a perfectly smooth
face and large lustrous eyes, which must have been the envy of many
a beautiful woman in those days. And how beautiful the women of
those days were! and how gracious! Those of the South showed in
their demeanor toward us Yankees something of hauteur, but,
for my part, I found it less insupportable than the studious
indifference with which one’s attentions are received by the ladies
of this new generation, whom I certainly think destitute of
sentiment and sensibility.
This young orderly, whose name was Arman, we
persuaded—by what arguments I am not bound to say—to clothe himself
in female attire and personate a lady. When we had him arrayed to
our satisfaction—and a charming girl he looked—he was conducted to
a sofa in the office of the adjutant-general. That officer was in
the secret, as indeed were all excepting Haberton and the general;
within the awful dignity hedging the latter lay possibilities of
disapproval which we were unwilling to confront.
When all was ready I went to Haberton and said:
“Lieutenant, there is a young woman in the adjutant-general’s
office. She is the daughter of the insurgent gentleman who owns
this house, and has, I think, called to see about its present
occupancy. We none of us know just how to talk to her, but we think
perhaps you would say about the right thing—at least you will say
things in the right way. Would you mind coming down?”
The lieutenant would not mind; he made a hasty
toilet and joined me. As we were going along a passage toward the
Presence we encountered a formidable obstacle—the general.
“I say, Broadwood,” he said, addressing me in the
familiar manner which meant that he was in excellent humor,
“there’s a lady in Lawson’s office. Looks like a devilish fine
girl—came on some errand of mercy or justice, no doubt. Have the
goodness to conduct her to my quarters. I won’t saddle you
youngsters with all the business of this division,” he added
facetiously.
This was awkward; something had to be done.
“General,” I said, “I did not think the lady’s
business of sufficient importance to bother you with it. She is one
of the Sanitary Commission’s84 nurses, and merely wants
to see about some supplies for the smallpox hospital where she is
on duty. I’ll send her in at once.”
“You need not mind,” said the general, moving on;
“I dare say Lawson will attend to the matter.”
Ah, the gallant general! how little I thought, as I
looked after his retreating figure and laughed at the success of my
ruse, that within the week he would be “dead on the field of
honor!” Nor was he the only one of our little military household
above whom gloomed the shadow of the death angel, and who might
almost have heard “the beating of his wings.” On that bleak
December morning a few days later, when from an hour before dawn
until ten o’clock we sat on horseback on those icy hills, waiting
for General Smith to open the battle miles away to the right, there
were eight of us. At the close of the fighting there were three.
There is now one. Bear with him yet a little while, oh, thrifty
generation; he is but one of the horrors of war strayed from his
era into yours. He is only the harmless skeleton at your feast and
peace-dance, responding to your laughter and your footing it
featly, with rattling fingers and bobbing skull—albeit upon
suitable occasion, with a partner of his choosing, he might do his
little dance with the best of you.
As we entered the adjutant-general’s office we
observed that the entire staff was there. The adjutant-general
himself was exceedingly busy at his desk. The commissary of
subsistence played cards with the surgeon in a bay window. The rest
were in several parts of the room, reading or conversing in low
tones. On a sofa in a half lighted nook of the room, at some
distance from any of the groups, sat the “lady,” closely veiled,
her eyes modestly fixed upon her toes.
“Madam,” I said, advancing with Haberton, “this
officer will be pleased to serve you if it is in his power. I trust
that it is.”
With a bow I retired to the farther corner of the
room and took part in a conversation going on there, though I had
not the faintest notion what it was about, and my remarks had no
relevancy to anything under the heavens. A close observer would
have noticed that we were all intently watching Haberton and only
“making believe” to do anything else.
He was worth watching, too; the fellow was simply
an édition de luxe of “Turveydrop85 on
Deportment.” As the “lady” slowly unfolded her tale of grievances
against our lawless soldiery and mentioned certain instances of
wanton disregard of property rights—among them, as to the imminent
peril of bursting our sides we partly overheard, the looting of her
own wardrobe—the look of sympathetic agony in Haberton’s handsome
face was the very flower and fruit of histrionic art. His
deferential and assenting nods at her several statements were so
exquisitely performed that one could not help regretting their
unsubstantial nature and the impossibility of preserving them under
glass for instruction and delight of posterity. And all the time
the wretch was drawing his chair nearer and nearer. Once or twice
he looked about to see if we were observing, but we were in
appearance blankly oblivious to all but one another and our several
diversions. The low hum of our conversation, the gentle tap-tap of
the cards as they fell in play and the furious scratching of the
adjutant-general’s pen as he turned off countless pages of words
without sense were the only sounds heard. No—there was another: at
long intervals the distant boom of a heavy gun, followed by the
approaching rush of the shot. The enemy was amusing himself.
On these occasions the lady was perhaps not the
only member of that company who was startled, but she was startled
more than the others, sometimes rising from the sofa and standing
with clasped hands, the authentic portrait of terror and
irresolution. It was no more than natural that Haberton should at
these times reseat her with infinite tenderness, assuring her of
her safety and regretting her peril in the same breath. It was
perhaps right that he should finally possess himself of her gloved
hand and a seat beside her on the sofa; but it certainly was highly
improper for him to be in the very act of possessing himself of
both hands when—boom, whiz, BANG!
We all sprang to our feet. A shell had crashed into
the house and exploded in the room above us. Bushels of plaster
fell among us. That modest and murmurous young lady sprang
erect.
“Jumping Jee-rusalem!” she cried.
Haberton, who had also risen, stood as one
petrified—as a statue of himself erected on the site of his
assassination. He neither spoke, nor moved, nor once took his eyes
off the face of Orderly Arman, who was now flinging his girl-gear
right and left, exposing his charms in the most shameless way;
while out upon the night and away over the lighted camps into the
black spaces between the hostile lines rolled the billows of our
inexhaustible laughter! Ah, what a merry life it was in the old
heroic days when men had not forgotten how to laugh!
Haberton slowly came to himself. He looked about
the room less blankly; then by degrees fashioned his visage into
the sickliest grin that ever libeled all smiling. He shook his head
and looked knowing.
“You can’t fool me!” he said.