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The Deserter

Page 23

by Jane Langton


  —SARAH BROADHEAD

  Gettysburg, 7 July, 1863

  … There in the room as I wake from sleep this vision presses upon me;

  … All the scenes at the batteries rise in detail before me again,

  The crashing and smoking, the pride of the men in their pieces,

  The chief-gunner ranges and sights his piece and selects a fuse of the right time,

  After firing I see him lean aside and look eagerly off to note the effect …

  And ever the sound of the cannon far or near, (rousing even in dreams a devilish exultation and all the old mad joy in the depths of my soul.)

  —WALT WHITMAN

  I told him of the woman in the cracker bonnet at the depot at Charlotte who signaled to her husband as they dragged him off, “Take it easy, Jake—you desert agin, quick as you kin—come back to your wife and children.” And she continued to yell, “Desert, Jake! desert again,Jake!”

  —MARY CHESNUT,

  South Carolina diarist

  Regiment marched at ten about two miles toward new Baltimore where Jewett, 5th Maine, was shot for desertion.… The division formed three sides of a square.… The prisoner was finally brought out sitting on his coffin in an open army wagon drawn by four horses.… He was then taken out and shot in the open side of the square.… The body was lying on its face, the balls had come through the back of his head.… I came back with a terrible headache.

  —EDMUND HALSEY

  Lieutenant, 15th New Jersey, Sixth Corps,

  Army of the Potomac

  If at any one time of my life, more than another, I was made to drink the bitterest dregs of slavery, that time was during the first six months of my stay with Mr. Covey.… It was never too hot or too cold; it could never rain, blow, snow, or hail too hard for us to work in the field. Work, work, work, was scarcely more than the order of the day than of the night. The longest days were too short for him, and the shortest nights were too long for him. I was somewhat unmanageable when I first went there: but a few months of this discipline tamed me. Mr. Covey succeeded in breaking me. I was broken in body, soul and spirit … the dark night of slavery closed in upon me; and behold a man transformed into a brute!

  —FREDERICK DOUGLASS

  Stupidity, that’s all it was, four years of stupidity.

  —MRS. AUGUSTA MORGAN

  The battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864—

  Hood’s whole army was routed and in full retreat. Nearly every man in the entire army had thrown away his guns and accoutrements. More than ten thousand had stopped and allowed themselves to be captured, while many, dreading the horrors of a Northern prison, kept on, and I saw many … even thousands, broken down from sheer exhaustion, with despair and pity written on their features.… Broken down and jaded horses and mules refused to pull.… Wagon wheels, interlocking each other, soon clogged the road.… My boot was full of blood, and my clothing saturated with it. I was at General Hood’s headquarters. He was as much agitated and affected, pulling his hair with his one hand (he had but one) and crying like his heart would break.…

  —SAM WATKINS, “COMPANY AYTCH,” FIRST TENNESSEE

  Fondly do we hope—fervently do we pray—that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, “The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.”

  —ABRAHAM LINCOLN

  Second Inaugural, March 4, 1865

  AFTERWORD

  An afterword is a clumsy appendage to a work of fiction, but once again truth must be sorted out from invention.

  Which soldiers are which? Seven are real. Guided by archivist Brian Sullivan, I found their faces in the picture collection of the Harvard University Archives—Charles Redington Mudge, Thomas Rodman Robeson, Henry Ropes, Henry Weld Farrar, Henry Lawrence Eustis, Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. The regimental histories of all seven are listed in Francis Brown’s Roll of Harvard Students Who Served in the Army or Navy of the United States During the War of the Rebellion. Memoirs of the three who died at Gettysburg appear in the two volumes of Harvard Memorial Biographies.

  The fictional characters—soldiers, family members, a surgeon, a nurse, an unhappy farmer and a landlady—turned up among the cartes de visile bought from collector Henry Deeks in his antiquarian bookshop in Maynard, Massachusetts. Roaming among hundreds of faces, I bought a small population of unidentified men, women and children.

  The photographs of Ida Morgan, Augusta Morgan and top-hatted Otis Pike were found in histories of nineteenth-century fashion. Eben Flint’s hospital picture is one of many photographic studies of wounded soldiers in The Civil War, an Illustrated History, by Geoffrey C. Ward, with Ric Burns and Ken Burns. The likeness of chubby charmer Lily LeBeau is really a photograph of dancer Laura Le Claire found in Mr. Lincoln’s Cameraman, a collection of Mathew Brady photographs edited by Roy Meredith.

  The three stereographs are from several sources. The one of dead men on the field at Gettysburg is attributed to Alexander Gardner. A copy of the Patent Office stereograph comes from the Patent Office Historical Collection of Judy, Diane and Jim Davis. (It has been slightly doctored.) A famous photograph of a doctor performing an amputation was shamelessly scissored to look like a stereograph.

  The “Reference Service Slip” is a real one from the National Archives and Records Administration in Washington, supplied by archivist Michael Musick.

  Annette Fern of the Harvard Theatre Collection unearthed several prompt books for The Marble Heart, as well as the Hasty Pudding playbill, to which a few fictional names have been added. In Mary Kelly’s scrapbook all but two of the listed names are of real men, with the actual parts they played in Hasty Pudding and their later regimental histories.

  The melancholy photograph of the armless soldier was found in Bell I. Wiley’s Common Soldier of the Civil War, identified only as a private in the 147th New York. He might have been at Gettysburg, since his regiment was there. But there was another private who did indeed lose both arms in that battle. In the fighting for Culp’s Hill by the Twelfth Corps on the morning of July 3, 1863, a shell from a Union battery exploded prematurely above the 20th Connecticut, its shards mangling both arms of Private George W. Warner. Carried to the rear, Warner did not learn until he was treated at a hospital that he had lost both limbs—not just the right arm, as he had thought when wounded. (Jeffry D Wert, Gettysburg, Day Three.)

  Although Mr. Tossit is fictional, his grievance is like that of farmer William Bliss, whose barn was destroyed on the Gettysburg battlefield, and whose request for financial restitution was at last denied.

  Although several episodes involving actual soldiers Mudge, Robeson, Fox, Ropes, Farrar and Eustis are fictional, the words of Colonel Mudge, “It’s murder, but it’s an order,” have gone down in the history books.

  There are undoubtedly many unconscious historical mistakes in this narrative, but I confess to one of which I am fully aware. By the time I learned that the hospital in the Patent Office had been closed before the battle of Gettysburg, I was too infatuated to give it up.

  The tablets in Harvard’s Memorial Hall are of course real, although I have added two fictional names to one of them. I can’t help lamenting the fact that after so many years there are still no memorials to the many Harvard men who died for the Confederacy.

  Ida’s experiences in the town of Gettysburg borrow graphic detail from a remarkable history of the three-day battle as it appeared to the citizens of the town—Firestorm at Gettysburg, Civilian Voices, by Jim Slade and John Alexander, and from A Vast Sea of Misery, an exhaustive study by Gregory A. Coco of the nearly 160 hospitals that were hastily set up in tents, houses and public buildings to care for the 21,000 men from both armies wh
o were wounded in the battle of Gettysburg.

  Another source book provided three of the case studies composed by my fictional Patent Office surgeon. Actually they are authentic studies reported in 1870 by Surgeon General Joseph K. Barnes. They appear in One Vast Hospital: The Civil War Hospital Sites in Frederick, Maryland, after Antietam, by Terry Reimer. (The complete list of wounded patients fills nearly two hundred pages of small print, fifty names to a page.)

  Many knowledgeable people informed and corrected this rash venture into history. Professor David Donald recommended the most essential reading. Christopher Morss and Paul Travers loaned dozens of books. Isabelle Plaster loaned old family volumes, Malcolm Ferguson found a rare memoir and reference librarian Jeanne Bracken was tireless in finding faraway titles.

  In Gettysburg Jared Peatman twice conducted my son Andy and me around the several battlefields and on both occasions Professor Jean Potuchek offered the key to her house. By E-mail from Washington Michael Musick explained in detail how Homer Kelly would make his way into the military records of the National Archives, and Patent Office historian Kenneth Dobyns (whose name should appear in letters of gold) began by answering a few questions and went on to provide massive amounts of information, answering endless questions. Could the guns of Gettysburg be heard in Philadelphia? Where was the B&O station in Washington? His knowledgeable friend Louis Allahut kindly read the manuscript. A great many more questions were answered by Laurence Golding, a veteran reenactor who gallops across one field of battle after another.

  Here at home Tom Blanding supplied helpful history about Concord during the Civil War, Diane and Herbert Haessler explained nineteenth-century medical practices and astronomer Alan Hirshfeld reported on the state of weather and moonlight in Gettysburg during the first week of July in 1863. Norman Levey kept the electronic connections working, Betty Levin and Ellen Raja knew about farming and Katherine Hall Page loaned an album of haunting nineteenth-century faces.

  Much of this story is concerned with real and fictional Harvard soldiers. But I agree wholeheartedly with Homer Kelly’s disgruntled opinion that the unfulfilled life of an Illinois farmboy was as promising as those of the men whose names are inscribed on the tablets in Harvard’s Memorial Hall.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Photographs courtesy of: Harvard University Archives, Historic Northampton, U.S. Army Military History Institute, Adams County Historical Society, Wisconsin State Historical Society, the Patent Office Historical Collections of Judy, Diane and Jim Davis, the Burns Archive, the National Archives and Records Administration, Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library, the Boston Athenaeum, the Rockaway Borough Library in Rockaway, New Jersey, and the Meserve Collection in the National Portrait Gallery.

  copyright © 2003 by Jane Langton

  This edition published in 2012 by MysteriousPress.com/Open Road Integrated Media

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