The College Colonel.

He rides at their head;

A crutch by his saddle just slants in view,

One slung arm is in splints, you see,

Yet he guides his strong steed—how coldly too.

He brings his regiment home—

Not as they filed two years before,

But a remnant half-tattered, and battered, and worn,

Like castaway sailors, who—stunned

By the surf’s loud roar,

Their mates dragged back and seen no more—

Again and again breast the surge,

And at last crawl, spent, to shore.

A still rigidity and pale—

An Indian aloofness lones his brow;

He has lived a thousand years

Compressed in battle’s pains and prayers,

Marches and watches slow.

There are welcoming shouts, and flags;

Old men off hat to the Boy,

Wreaths from gay balconies fall at his feet,

But to him—there comes alloy.

It is not that a leg is lost,

It is not that an arm is maimed.

It is not that the fever has racked—

Self he has long disclaimed.

But all through the Seven Day’s Fight,

And deep in the wilderness grim,

And in the field-hospital tent,

And Petersburg crater, and dim

Lean brooding in Libby, there came—

Ah heaven!—what truth to him.

The Eagle of the Blue.[[12]]

[12] Among the Northwestern regiments there would seem to have been more than one which carried a living eagle as an added ensign. The bird commemorated here was, according the the account, borne aloft on a perch beside the standard; went through successive battles and campaigns; was more than once under the surgeon’s hands; and at the close of the contest found honorable repose in the capital of Wisconsin, from which state he had gone to the wars.

Aloft he guards the starry folds

Who is the brother of the star;

The bird whose joy is in the wind

Exultleth in the war.

No painted plume—a sober hue,

His beauty is his power;

That eager calm of gaze intent

Foresees the Sibyl’s hour.

Austere, he crowns the swaying perch,

Flapped by the angry flag;

The hurricane from the battery sings,

But his claw has known the crag.

Amid the scream of shells, his scream

Runs shrilling; and the glare

Of eyes that brave the blinding sun

The vollied flame can bear.

The pride of quenchless strength is his—

Strength which, though chained, avails;

The very rebel looks and thrills—

The anchored Emblem hails.

Though scarred in many a furious fray,

No deadly hurt he knew;

Well may we think his years are charmed—

The Eagle of the Blue.

A Dirge for McPherson,[[13]]

Killed in front of Atlanta.

(July, 1864.)

[13] The late Major General McPherson, commanding the Army of the Tennessee, a major of Ohio and a West Pointer, was one of the foremost spirits of the war. Young, though a veteran; hardy, intrepid, sensitive in honor, full of engaging qualities, with manly beauty; possessed of genius, a favorite with the army, and with Grant and Sherman. Both Generals have generously acknowledged their professional obligiations to the able engineer and admirable soldier, their subordinate and junior.

In an informal account written by the Achilles to this Sarpedon, he says: “On that day we avenged his death. Near twenty-two hundred of the enemy’s dead remained on the ground when night closed upon the scene of action.”

It is significant of the scale on which the war was waged, that the engagement thus written of goes solely (so far as can be learned) under the vague designation of one of the battles before Atlanta.

Arms reversed and banners craped—

Muffled drums;

Snowy horses sable-draped—

McPherson comes.

But, tell us, shall we know him more,

Lost-Mountain and lone Kenesaw?

Brave the sword upon the pall—

A gleam in gloom;

So a bright name lighteth all

McPherson’s doom.

Bear him through the chapel-door—

Let priest in stole

Pace before the warrior

Who led. Bell—toll!

Lay him down within the nave,

The Lesson read—

Man is noble, man is brave,

But man’s—a weed.

Take him up again and wend

Graveward, nor weep:

There’s a trumpet that shall rend

This Soldier’s sleep.

Pass the ropes the coffin round,

And let descend;

Prayer and volley—let it sound

McPherson’s end.

True fame is his, for life is o’er—

Sarpedon of the mighty war.