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Chapter 7 A MUD-MARCH AND A SHAM BATTLE.

Word Count: 3458    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

y the dull monotony of a soldier's everyday life. There was, of course, plenty of work in the way of picket duty and endless drilli

fe, and, knowing that great things were before us, with all the ardor of young men for strange experiences and new adventures, we gradually became more and more anxious for the campaign to open. Alas! we knew not what it

by this time we had repaired our chimney, which had been destroyed by the fire, and had several times already prepared our fritters without burning our house down over our heads in the operation. Having finished our meal, we were lying lazily bac

t, sergeant

boy," said the sergeant. "Orde

s spread like fire in a clearing, and the boys came tumbling out of

answered the sergeant, with a shru

. No knapsacks; only a shelter or a gum-blanket, and thr

be dispensed with in winter, or had been thrown away in summer. We drummer-boys, tightening our drums and tuning them up with a tap-tap-tap of the drumstick, took station on the parade-ground up on the hill, awaiting the adjutant's signal to beat the assembly. At the first tap of our drums the whole regiment, in full view below us, poured out of quarters, like ant

"route-step." They march usually four abreast, indeed, but make no effort to keep step; for marching in that way, though good enough for a mile or two on parade, would soon become intolerable if kept up for any great distance. In "route-step" each man picks his way, selecting his steps at his pleasure, and carrying or shifting his arms at his convenience. Even then, marching is no easy matter, especially when it is raining,

e good farms and comfortable looking houses, where we should have liked to stop and buy bread and butter, or get "hoecake" and milk; but there was

e) a provoking incumbrance. Drummer-boys carried no arms except a straight thin sword fastened to a broad leathern belt about the waist. Of this we had been in the outstart quite proud, and had kept it polished with great care. However, this "toad-sticker," as we were pleased to call it, on this mud-march caused each of us drummer-boys a world of trouble, and well illustrated the saying that "pride goeth before a fall." For as we groped about in the darkness and slid and plunged about in the mud, this miserable sword was forever getting tangled up with th

horty had been employed by one of our captains as cook, or, as seemed more likely on the present occasion, as a sort of sumpter-mule. For the captain, having an eye to comfort on the march, had loaded the poor darky with a pack of blankets, tents, pans, kettles, and general camp equipage, so large and bulky, that it is no exaggeration to say that Shorty's pack was quite as large as himself. All along it had been a wonder to us how he had managed to pull through so far

e then lighted, in order to find it. Then we forded a creek, and then on and on we went, till at length we were al

nd, and these were dry enough when split open with a hatchet or an axe. In a few moments the fence around the cornfield was carried off rail by rail, an

ny tin cup, and when you get your coffee cook

to make the coffee with? It's so dark, that nobody

s presented, as, coming out of the surrounding darkness, I faced the brilliant fires with groups of busy men about them. There they sat, squatting about the fires, each man with his quart tin cup suspended on one end of his iron ramrod or on some convenient stick, and each eager and impatient to be the first to bring his cup to the boiling-point. Thrusting my cup in amongst the dozen others already smoking amid the crackling flames, I soon had the pl

ven o'clock, and away we went again slap-dash in the thick darkness and bottomless mud. At three o'clock in the morning, during a brief halt, I fell asleep while sitting on my drum, and tumbled over into

. However, daylight having now come to our assistance, we marched on in merrier mood in the direction of Port Royal, a place or

once into battle. And so, indeed, it seemed, as the long column halted in a cornfield a short distance from the river, and the pontoon trains came up, and the pioneers were sent f

ood together beside a corn shock and watched the men putting down t

river, there might happen to be a lot of Johnnies watching us, and all ready to sweep down on us

em do it once! Look there! There come the boys

the skirt of the woods in our rear, I beheld a battery of artillery

of his fingers, "till you hear those old bull-dogs beg

t where we were standing, and co

gs covered over with black gum-blankets and mounted on the front-wheels of wagons, and-as

y, with a look of mingled s

no means the case. So there was not going to be any battle after all, then? Such indeed, as we learned a little later in the day, was the true state of things. Nevertheless the pioneers went on with their work of putting down the pontoon-boats for a bridge, and our gallant quartermaster, on his bobtail gray, with drawn sword, and shouting out his commands like a veritable major-general, swept b

of darkness, and bivouacked in the woods to our rear, where we were ordered to make as many and as large fires as we could, so as to attract the enemy's attention, and make him believe that the whole Army of the Potomac was concentrat

ermaster'

ermaster, having to do only with army supplies, was a non-combatant, that is to say, he did no fighting, and in most cases "stayed by the stuff" among his army wagons, which were usually far enough to the rea

f Warrenton. (You remember Warrenton? Fine country down there.) And I found the people very kind an

ere in the war

well admit it) I was on the other side

Major, did you e

; 'lots of 'em,-l

ian. 'And if I might be so bold as to

a quartermaster, thinking that in that position I wouldn't have to kill anybody with a gun, anyhow. But war is a dreadful thing, a dreadful thing, sir. And I found that even a quartermaster had to take a hand at killing people; and the way I took for it was this: I always managed to have a good swift horse, and as soon as things would begin to look a little like fighting, and the big guns would begin to

march for home. We marched all day over the hills, and as the sun was setting, came at last to a certain hilltop whence we could loo

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Contents

The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 1 OFF TO THE WAR.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 2 FIRST DAYS IN CAMP.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 3 ON TO WASHINGTON.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 4 OUR FIRST WINTER QUARTERS.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 5 A GRAND REVIEW.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 6 ON PICKET ALONG THE RAPPAHANNOCK.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 7 A MUD-MARCH AND A SHAM BATTLE.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 8 HOW WE GOT A SHELLING.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 9 IN THE WOODS AT CHANCELLORSVILLE.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 10 THE FIRST DAY AT GETTYSBURG.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 11 AFTER THE BATTLE.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 12 THROUGH MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 13 PAINS AND PENALTIES.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 14 A TALE OF A SQUIRREL AND THREE
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 15 THE PRIDE OF THE REGIMENT.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 16 AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 17 OUR FIRST DAY IN THE WILDERNESS.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 18 A BIVOUAC FOR THE NIGHT.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 19 WENT DOWN TO JERICHO AND FELL AMONG
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 20 IN THE FRONT AT PETERSBURG.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 21 FUN AND FROLIC.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 22 CHIEFLY CULINARY.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 23 HATCHER'S RUN.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 24 KILLED, WOUNDED, OR MISSING
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 25 A WINTER RAID TO NORTH CAROLINA.
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The Log of the Empire State
Chapter 26 JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME.
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