andersonville-第67章
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O; Tannenbaum! O; Tannenbaum; wie tru sind deine Blatter!
Da gruenst nicht nur zur Sommerseit;
Nein; auch in Winter; when es Schneit; etc。
which Longfellow has finely translated;
O; hemlock tree! O; hemlock tree! how faithful are thy branches!
Green not alone in Summer time;
But in the Winter's float and rime。
O; hemlock tree O; hemlock tree! how faithful are thy branches。 etc。
The Rebel version ran:
MARYLAND。
The despot's heel is on thy shore;
Maryland!
His touch is at thy temple door;
Maryland!
Avenge the patriotic gore
That flecked the streets of Baltimore;
And be the battle queen of yore;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Hark to the wand'ring son's appeal;
Maryland!
My mother State; to thee I kneel;
Maryland!
For life and death; for woe and weal;
Thy peerless chivalry reveal;
And gird thy beauteous limbs with steel;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Thou wilt not cower in the duet;
Maryland!
Thy beaming sword shall never rust
Maryland!
Remember Carroll's sacred trust;
Remember Howard's warlike thrust
And all thy slumberers with the just;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Come! 'tis the red dawn of the day;
Maryland!
Come! with thy panoplied array;
Maryland!
With Ringgold's spirit for the fray;
With Watson's blood at Monterey;
With fearless Lowe and dashing May;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Comet for thy shield is bright and strong;
Maryland!
Come! for thy dalliance does thee wrong;
Maryland!
Come! to thins own heroic throng;
That stalks with Liberty along;
And give a new Key to thy song;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Dear Mother! burst the tyrant's chain;
Maryland!
Virginia should not call in vain;
Maryland!
She meets her sisters on the plain
'Sic semper〃 'tis the proud refrain;
That baffles millions back amain;
Maryland!
Arise; in majesty again;
Maryland! My Maryland!
I see the blush upon thy cheek;
Maryland!
But thou wast ever bravely meek;
Maryland!
But lo! there surges forth a shriek
From hill to hill; from creek to creek
Potomac calls to Chesapeake;
Maryland! My Maryland!
Thou wilt not yield the vandal toll。
Maryland!
Thou wilt not crook to his control;
Maryland!
Better the fire upon thee roll;
Better the blade; the shot; the bowl;
Than crucifixion of the soul;
Maryland! My Maryland!
I hear the distant Thunder hem;
Maryland!
The Old Line's bugle; fife; and drum。
Maryland!
She is not dead; nor deaf; nor dumb
Hnzza! she spurns the Northern scum!
She breathesshe burns! she'll come! she'll come!
Maryland! My Maryland!
〃Stonewall Jackson Crossing into Maryland;〃 was another travesty; of
about the same literary merit; or rather demerit; as 〃The Bonnie Blue
Flag。〃 Its air was that of the well…known and popular negro minstrel
song;〃 Billy Patterson。〃 For all that; it sounded very martial and
stirring when played by a brass band。
We heard these songs with tiresome iteration; daily and nightly; during
our stay in the Southern Confederacy。 Some one of the guards seemed to
be perpetually beguiling the weariness of his watch by singing in all
keys; in every sort of a voice; and with the wildest latitude as to air
and time。 They became so terribly irritating to us; that to this day the
remembrance of those soul…lacerating lyrics abides with me as one of the
chief of the minor torments of our situation。 They were; in fact; nearly
as bad as the lice。
We revenged ourselves as best we could by constructing fearfully wicked;
obscene and insulting parodies on these; and by singing them with
irritating effusiveness in the hearing of the guards who were inflicting
these nuisances upon us。
Of the same nature was the garrison music。 One fife; played by an
asthmatic old fellow whose breathings were nearly as audible as his
notes; and one rheumatic drummer; constituted the entire band for the
post。 The fifer actually knew but one tune 〃The Bonnie Blue Flag〃
and did not know that well。 But it was all that he had; and he played it
with wearisome monotony for every camp callfive or six times a day;
and seven days in the week。 He called us up in the morning with it for a
reveille; he sounded the 〃roll call〃 and 〃drill call;〃 breakfast; dinner
and supper with it; and finally sent us to bed; with the same dreary wail
that had rung in our ears all day。 I never hated any piece of music as I
came to hate that threnody of treason。 It would have been such a relief
if the; old asthmatic who played it could have been induced to learn
another tune to play on Sundays; and give us one day of rest。 He did
not; but desecrated the Lord's Day by playing as vilely as on the rest of
the week。 The Rebels were fully conscious of their musical deficiencies;
and made repeated but unsuccessful attempts to induce the musicians among
the prisoners to come outside and form a band。
CHAPTER XLV
AUGUSTNEEDLES STUCK IN PUMPKIN SEEDSSOME PHENOMENA OF STARVATION
RIOTING IN REMEMBERED LUXURIES。
〃Illinoy;〃said tall; gaunt Jack North; of the One Hundred and Fourteenth
Illinois; to me; one day; as we sat contemplating our naked; and sadly
attenuated underpinning; 〃what do our legs and feet most look most like?〃
〃Give it up; Jack;〃 said I。
〃Whydarning needles stuck in pumpkin seeds; of course。〃 I never heard
a better comparison for our wasted limbs。
The effects of the great bodily emaciation were sometimes very startling。
Boys of a fleshy habit would change so in a few weeks as to lose all
resemblance to their former selves; and comrades who came into prison
later would utterly fail to recognize them。 Most fat men; as most large
men; died in a little while after entering; though there were exceptions。
One of these was a boy of my own company; named George Hillicks。 George
had shot up within a few years to over six feet in hight; and then; as
such boys occasionally do; had; after enlisting with us; taken on such a
development of flesh that we nicknamed him the 〃Giant;〃 and he became a
pretty good load for even the strongest horse。 George held his flesh
through Belle Isle; and the earlier weeks in Andersonville; but June;
July; and August 〃fetched him;〃 as the boys said。 He seemed to melt away
like an icicle on a Spring day; and he grew so thin that his hight seemed
preternatural。 We called him 〃Flagstaff;〃 and cracked all sorts of jokes
about putting an insulator on his head; and setting him up for a
telegraph pole; braiding his legs and using him for a whip lash; letting
his hair grow a little longer; and trading him off to the Rebels for a
sponge and staff for the artillery; etc。 We all expected him to die;
and looked continually for the development of the fatal scurvy symptoms;
which were to seal his doom。 But he worried through; and came out at
last in good shape; a happy result due as much as to anything else to his
having in Chester Hayward; of Prairie City; Ill。;one of the most
devoted chums I ever knew。 Chester nursed and looked out for George with
wife…like fidelity; and had his reward in bringing him safe through our
lines。 There were thousands of instances of this generous devotion to
each other by chums in Andersonville; and I know of nothing that reflects
any more credit upon our boy soldiers。
There was little chance for any one to accumulate flesh on the rations we
were receiving。 I say it in all soberness that I do not believe that a
healthy hen could have grown fat upon them。 I am sure that any good…
sized 〃shanghai〃 eats more every day than the meager half loaf that we
had to maintain life upon。 Scanty as this was; and hungry as all were;
very many could not eat it。 Their stomachs revolted against the trash;
it became so nauseous to them that they could not force it down; even
when famishing; and they died of starvation with the chunks of the so…
called bread under their head。 I found myself rapidly approaching this
condition。 I had been blessed with a good digestion and a talent for
sleeping under the most discouraging circumstances。