courteous and pleasant, but very reserved. He
interfered with no one, obeyed orders promptly and
without remark, and was always present for duty.
Scrupulously neat in dress, always as clean-shaved
as an old-fashioned gentleman of the world, with manners
and conversation that showed him to have belonged
to a refined and polished circle, he was evidently
out of place as a private soldier in a company of reckless
and none-too-refined young Illinois troopers, but
he never availed himself of any of the numerous opportunities
offered to change his associations. His elegant
penmanship would have secured him an easy berth and
better society at headquarters, but he declined to
accept a detail. He became an exciting mystery
to a knot of us imaginative young cubs, who sorted
up out of the reminiscential rag-bag of high colors
and strong contrasts with which the sensational literature
that we most affected had plentifully stored our minds,
a half-dozen intensely emotional careers for him.
We spent much time in mentally trying these on, and
discussing which fitted him best. We were always
expecting a denouement that would come like a lightning
flash and reveal his whole mysterious past, showing
him to have been the disinherited scion of some noble
house, a man of high station, who was expiating some
fearful crime; an accomplished villain eluding his
pursuers—in short, a Somebody who would
be a fitting hero for Miss Braddon’s or Wilkie
Collins’s literary purposes. We never
got but two clues of his past, and they were faint
ones. One day, he left lying near me a small
copy of “Paradise Lost,” that he always
carried with him. Turning over its leaves I found
all of Milton’s bitter invectives against women
heavily underscored. Another time, while on
guard with him, he spent much of his time in writing
some Latin verses in very elegant chirography upon
the white painted boards of a fence along which his
beat ran. We pressed in all the available knowledge
of Latin about camp, and found that the tenor of the
verses was very uncomplimentary to that charming sex
which does us the honor of being our mothers and sweethearts.
These evidences we accepted as sufficient demonstration
that there was a woman at the bottom of the mystery,
and made us more impatient for further developments.
These were never to come. Bradford pined away
an Belle Isle, and grew weaker, but no less reserved,
each day. At length, one bitter cold night ended
it all. He was found in the morning stone dead,
with his iron-gray hair frozen fast to the ground,
upon which he lay. Our mystery had to remain
unsolved. There was nothing about his person
to give any hint as to his past.
CHAPTER XIV.
Hoping for exchange—an exposition of the doctrine of chances —off for Andersonville—uncertainty as to our destination—arrival at Andersonville.