登陆注册
14814800000019

第19章

Night at last, and the stir and tumult of a great fight over. Even the excitement that had swept this portion of the battlefield--only a small section of a vaster area of struggle--into which a brigade had marched, held its own, been beaten back, recovered its ground, and pursuing, had passed out of it forever, leaving only its dead behind, and knowing nothing more of that struggle than its own impact and momentum--even this wild excitement had long since evaporated with the stinging smoke of gunpowder, the acrid smell of burning rags from the clothing of a dead soldier fired by a bursting shell, or the heated reek of sweat and leather. A cool breath that seemed to bring back once more the odor of the upturned earthworks along the now dumb line of battle began to move from the suggestive darkness beyond.

But into that awful penetralia of death and silence there was no invasion--there had been no retreat. A few of the wounded had been brought out, under fire, but the others had been left with the dead for the morning light and succor. For it was known that in that horrible obscurity, riderless horses, frantic with the smell of blood, galloped wildly here and there, or, maddened by wounds, plunged furiously at the intruder; that the wounded soldier, still armed, could not always distinguish friend from foe or from the ghouls of camp followers who stripped the dead in the darkness and struggled with the dying. A shot or two heard somewhere in that obscurity counted as nothing with the long fusillade that had swept it in the daytime; the passing of a single life, more or less, amounted to little in the long roll-call of the day's slaughter.

But with the first beams of the morning sun--and the slowly moving "relief detail" from the camp--came a weird half-resurrection of that ghastly field. Then it was that the long rays of sunlight, streaming away a mile beyond the battle line, pointed out the first harvest of the dead where the reserves had been posted. There they lay in heaps and piles, killed by solid shot or bursting shells that had leaped the battle line to plunge into the waiting ranks beyond. As the sun lifted higher its beams fell within the range of musketry fire, where the dead lay thicker,--even as they had fallen when killed outright,--with arms extended and feet at all angles to the field. As it touched these dead upturned faces, strangely enough it brought out no expression of pain or anguish--but rather as if death had arrested them only in surprise and awe.

It revealed on the lips of those who had been mortally wounded and had turned upon their side the relief which death had brought their suffering, sometimes shown in a faint smile. Mounting higher, it glanced upon the actual battle line, curiously curving for the shelter of walls, fences, and breastworks, and here the dead lay, even as when they lay and fired, their faces prone in the grass but their muskets still resting across the breastworks. Exposed to grape and canister from the battery on the ridge, death had come to them mercifully also--through the head and throat. And now the whole field lay bare in the sunlight, broken with grotesque shadows cast from sitting, crouching, half-recumbent but always rigid figures, which might have been effigies on their own monuments.

One half-kneeling soldier, with head bowed between his stiffened hands, might have stood for a carven figure of Grief at the feet of his dead comrade. A captain, shot through the brain in the act of mounting a wall, lay sideways half across it, his lips parted with a word of command; his sword still pointing over the barrier the way that they should go.

But it was not until the sun had mounted higher that it struck the central horror of the field and seemed to linger there in dazzling persistence, now and then returning to it in startling flashes that it might be seen of men and those who brought succor. A tiny brook had run obliquely near the battle line. It was here that, the night before the battle, friend and foe had filled their canteens side by side with soldierly recklessness--or perhaps a higher instinct--purposely ignoring each other's presence; it was here that the wounded had afterwards crept, crawled, and dragged themselves, here they had pushed, wrangled, striven, and fought for a draught of that precious fluid which assuaged the thirst of their wounds--or happily put them out of their misery forever; here overborne, crushed, suffocated by numbers, pouring their own blood into the flood, and tumbling after it with their helpless bodies, they dammed the stream, until recoiling, red and angry, it had burst its banks and overflowed the cotton-field in a broad pool that now sparkled in the sunlight. But below this human dam--a mile away--where the brook still crept sluggishly, the ambulance horses sniffed and started from it.

The detail moved on slowly, doing their work expeditiously, and apparently callously, but really only with that mechanical movement that saves emotion. Only once they were moved to an outbreak of indignation,--the discovery of the body of an officer whose pockets were turned inside out, but whose hand was still tightly grasped on his buttoned waistcoat, as if resisting the outrage that had been done while still in life. As the men disengaged the stiffened hand something slipped from the waistcoat to the ground. The corporal picked it up and handed it to his officer. It was a sealed packet.

The officer received it with the carelessness which long experience of these pathetic missives from the dying to their living relations had induced, and dropped it in the pocket of his tunic, with the half-dozen others that he had picked up that morning, and moved on with the detail. A little further on they halted, in the attitude of attention, as a mounted officer appeared, riding slowly down the line.

同类推荐
  • 山海慧菩萨经

    山海慧菩萨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 摄大乘论本

    摄大乘论本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上洞神三元妙本福寿真经

    太上洞神三元妙本福寿真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 盂兰盆经疏

    盂兰盆经疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 匋雅

    匋雅

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 虚归何处

    虚归何处

    杳士平在窥虚了道之时终是借着界元之力窥见了过去的一切因果,更感受到了那些曾经高高在上,如今却被天道之门阻隔在外的存在们内心深处的真实想法。“天道不公啊!”“他杳士平不过是个山野草民,资质又是极差的四个半,要出身没出身,要资质没资质,要资源没资源,一路修行更没遇到过什么逆天的机缘,他凭什么就能修成正果!”“我们又凭什么不能?”杳士平轻轻一叹忽略了这些无妄之念,目光坚定的穿过时间和空间的阻隔投射到那无尽的虚无之中,那里才是自己该追逐的方向吧,可这些虚无又将归于何方?
  • 衍道应天

    衍道应天

    虚无混沌中,青莲造化成!平凡的地球小子,穿越异界有哪些不一样的精彩!
  • 白色眷恋

    白色眷恋

    因为不满皇马6比2的比分,中国青年律师沈星怒砸啤酒瓶,结果电光火石间,他穿越成了佛罗伦蒂诺的儿子,且看来自09年的小伙子如何玩转03年的欧洲足坛
  • 进化神光

    进化神光

    异能出世,群雄并起……内家高手,连刀成芒……诡谲灵异,光怪陆离……异族来客,恶意觊觎……或许,这个世上曾有许多人,经历意外的穿越,而去到了另外的世界,或许,这个世上也有许多人,经历意外的穿越,而莫名的来到了地球。或许,他,就在你身边。或许,他很平凡。或许,他高高在上。然而,这样的人,确实存在。(封面不要吐槽了,,,书名换了封面懒得重做...)
  • 丑女变身:撞上恶魔遇上爱

    丑女变身:撞上恶魔遇上爱

    她,是一个丑到人神共愤的大丑女。她的出现几乎轰动了整个樱世高中,她被称为“樱世最丑女”,是樱世数一数二的重量级人物(这里指体重),然而,她却有着不为人知的多重身份……他,是樱世的“校草第二”,家世好、脾气好,是众位女生们心目中的白马王子。几次偶然的相遇,他解救了被众人冷嘲热讽的她。感动之余,她在心中暗暗发誓一定要追到校草级的他,并为此进行了华丽的大变身。他们之间将会擦出怎样的火花?让我们共同期待,丑小鸭如何蜕变成美丽的白天鹅。
  • 娇妃乐一个:腹黑邪王妃常萌

    娇妃乐一个:腹黑邪王妃常萌

    他是君王,却是百年不遇的腹黑闷骚男,不,他是明骚,光明正大的那种;她,费尽心机研究时空,没想到把自己送进去了!把他的王宫翻了个底朝天,他无奈叹息,保她终身生活,没想到自己会爱上一个不属于这个时代的人。被他百般调戏,“你是朕的妻子,这个天下任你横着走!”,“你负责貌美如花,朕负责护你周全。”,“=_=再犯花痴床上伺候!”……沫兮儿翻白眼。
  • 猛将陶勇(尹家民黄埔·红墙系列)

    猛将陶勇(尹家民黄埔·红墙系列)

    陶勇(1913—1967),中国人民解放军中将。早年参加革命,从普通战士,迅速成长为一个智勇双全的战将。曾任红军团长、新四军团长、苏皖支队司令、解放军华野四纵队司令,新中国成立后,任中国人民海军副司令、东海舰队司令,是中国人民海军的创建者和领导人之一。1967年,莫名而死,成为至今尚未知晓谜底的“文革奇案”。
  • Boss来袭:洛洛丫头别想逃!

    Boss来袭:洛洛丫头别想逃!

    本作品由米小璃著洛洛、冷翼、欧阳娅、宇文轩、崔珊、余执...每个人都有自己该去的方向,无论这条路上多么艰辛,最后的最后,该来的还是会来。当冷翼的前女友归来,当欧阳娅的身世揭开,当余执挚爱的女人回来,他们又该怎样选择?不是每一个人都会有幸福的结局,黎玉溪为自己的心机付出了沉重的代价,倾情因为陷害了欧阳娅而永不得翻身、、、这一切都是无法预料的...当命运大门打开,因为他,她离开了。洛洛的身世到底是什么?为什么最后冷翼要和洛切国的未来继承人联姻?这是一场什么样的恋爱?让我们走进男主女主的世界,去慢慢探索吧。这是一场我逃你追的故事,轻松不虐心。
  • 桃园秘史

    桃园秘史

    ~~心之所向,想象力之所及,将是吾人足迹之所至~~世界很残酷,也很美好,请:武装,而非伪装自己;真实,而非现实地活着。这本破书,给你勇气!
  • 饥荒之生岛

    饥荒之生岛

    这段时间做了饥荒这款游戏的主播,被这款魔性的游戏吸引上了。便有了写一部关于这游戏的小说的想法,以表示对这游戏的喜爱。一座荒岛,四十年,两代人,阴差阳错的来到这里。前世与今生在这岛上相遇,为了找寻相同的答案,跨越时空的阻碍,携手前进。但恶劣的环境,怪异的生物,复杂的人性,给这段旅途蒙上了一层神秘的面纱。