Here Marianne shivered and drew up a shawl, and Jennie gaped; my wife folded up the garment in which she had set the last stitch, and the clock struck twelve.
Bob gave a low whistle. “Who knew it was so late?”
“We have talked the fire fairly out,” said Jennie.
* * * * *
REENLISTED.
Oh, did you see him in the street, dressed
up in army-blue,
When drums and trumpets into town their
storm of music threw,—
A louder tune than all the winds could
muster in the air,
The Rebel winds, that tried so hard our
flag in strips to tear?
You didn’t mind him? Oh, you
looked beyond him, then, perhaps,
To see the mounted officers rigged out
with trooper-caps,
And shiny clothes, and sashes red, and
epaulets and all;—
It wasn’t for such things as these
he heard his country call.
She asked for men; and up he spoke, my
handsome, hearty Sam,—
“I’ll die for the dear old
Union, if she’ll take me as I am.”
And if a better man than he there’s
mother that can show,
From Maine to Minnesota, then let the
nation know.
You would not pick him from the rest by
eagles or by stars,
By straps upon his coat-sleeve, or gold
or silver bars,
Nor a corporal’s strip of worsted,
but there’s something in his face,
And something in his even step, a-marching
in his place,
That couldn’t be improved by all
the badges in the land:
A patriot, and a good, strong man; are
generals much more grand?
We rest our pride on that big heart wrapped
up in army-blue,
The girl he loves, Mehitabel, and I, who
love him too.
He’s never shirked a battle yet,
though frightful risks he’s run,
Since treason flooded Baltimore, the spring
of ’sixty-one;
Through blood and storm he’s held
out firm, nor fretted once, my Sam,
At swamps of Chickahominy, or fields of
Antietam:
Though many a time, he’s told us,
when he saw them lying dead,
The boys that came from Newburyport, and
Lynn, and Marblehead,
Stretched out upon the trampled turf,
and wept on by the sky,
It seemed to him the Commonwealth had
drained her life-blood dry.
“But then,” he said, “the
more’s the need the country has of me:
To live and fight the war all through,
what glory it would be!
The Rebel balls don’t hit me, and,
mother, if they should,
You’ll know I’ve fallen in
my place, where I have always stood.”
He’s taken out his furlough, and
short enough it seemed:
I often tell Mehitabel he’ll think
he only dreamed
Of walking with her nights so bright you
couldn’t see a star,
And hearing the swift tide come in across
the harbor-bar.
The stars that shine above the stripes,
they light him southward now;
The tide of war has swept him back; he’s
made a solemn vow
To build himself no home-nest till his
country’s work is done:
God bless the vow, and speed the work,
my patriot, my son!