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bring back their own wounded who had fallen near it; and coming

across Vincent; and finding that he still breathed; and was

apparently without a wound; they carried him back with them

across the river as a prisoner。



Vincent had indeed escaped without a wound; having been only

stunned by the passage of the shot that had carried away his cap;

and missed him but by the fraction of an inch。  He had begun to

recover consciousness just as his captors caine up; and the action

of carrying him completely restored him。  That he had fallen into

the hands of the Northerners he was well aware; but he was unable

to imagine how this; had happened。  He remembered that the

Confederates had been; up to the moment when he fell; completely

successful; and he could only imagine that in a subsequent attack

the Federals had turned the tables upon them。



How he himself had fallen; or what had happened to him; he had

no idea。  Beyond a strange feeling of numbness in the head he was

conscious of no injury; and he could only imagine that his horse

had been shot under him; and that he must have fallen upon his

head。  The thought that his favorite horse was killed afflicted him

almost as much as his own capture。  As soon as his captors

perceived that their prisoner's consciousness had returned they at

once reported that an officer of Stuart's cavalry had been taken;

and at daybreak next morning General McClellan on rising was

acquainted with the fact; and Vincent was conducted to his tent。



〃You are unwounded; sir?〃 the general said in some surprise。



〃I am; general;〃 Vincent replied。  〃I do not know how it happened;

but I believe that my horse must have been shot under me; and that

I must have been thrown and stunned; however; I remember

nothing from the moment when I heard the word halt; just as we

reached the side of the stream; to that when I found myself being

carried here。〃



〃You belong to the cavalry?〃



Yes; sir。〃



Was Lee's force all engaged yesterday?〃



〃I do not know;〃 Vincent said。  〃I only came up with Jackson's

division from Harper's Ferry the evening before。〃



〃I need not have questioned you;〃 McClellan said。  〃I know that

Lee's whole army; 100;000 strong; opposed me yesterday。〃



Vincent was silent。  He was glad to see that the Federal general; as

usual; enormously overrated the strength of the force opposed to

him。



〃I hear that the whole of the garrison of Harper's Ferry were

released on parole not to serve again during the war。  If you are

ready to give me your promise to the same effect I will allow you

to return to your friends; if not; you must remain a prisoner until

you are regularly exchanged。〃



〃I must do so; then; general;〃 Vincent said quietly。  〃I could not

return home and remain inactive while every man in the South is

fighting for the defense of his country; so I will take my chance of

being exchanged。〃



〃I am sorry you choose that alternative;〃 McClellan said。  〃I hate to

see brave men imprisoned if only for a day; and braver men than

those across yonder stream are not to be found。  My officers and

men are astonished。 They seem so thin and worn as to be scarce

able to lift a musket; their clothes are fit only for a scarecrow; they

are indeed pitiful objects to look at; but the way in which they

fight is wonderful。  I could not have believed had I not seen it; that

men could have charged as they did again and again across ground

swept by a tremendous artillery and musketry fire; it was

wonderful!  I can tell you; young sir; that even though you beat us

we are proud of you as our countrymen; and I believe that if your

General Jackson were to ride through our camp he would be

cheered as lustily and heartily by our men as he is by his own。〃



Some fifty or sixty other prisoners had been taken; they had been

captured in the hand…to…hand struggle that had taken place on some

parts of the field; having got separated from their corps and mixed

up with the enemy; and carried off the field with them as they

retired。  These for the most part accepted the offered parole; but

some fifteen; like Vincent; preferred a Northern prison to

promising to abstain from fighting in defense of their country; and

in the middle of the day they were placed together in a tent under a

guard at the rear of the camp。



The next morning came the news that Lee had fallen back。  There

was exultation among the Federals; not unmingled with a strong

sense of relief; for the heavy losses inflicted in the previous

fighting had taken all the ardor of attack out of McClellan's army;

and they were glad indeed that they were not to be called upon to

make another attempt to drive the Confederates from their

position。  Vincent was no less pleased at the news。  He knew how

thin were the ranks of the Confederate fighting men; and how

greatly they were worn and exhausted by fatigue and want of food;

and that; although they had the day before repulsed the attacks of

the masses of well…fed Northerners; such tremendous exertions

could not often be repeated; and a defeat; with the river in their

rear; approachable only by one rough and narrow road; would have

meant a total destruction of the army。



The next morning Vincent and his companions were put into the

train and sent to Alexandria。  They had no reason to complain of

their treatment upon the way。  They were well fed; and after their

starvation diet for the last six weeks their rations seemed to them

actually luxurious。 The Federal troops in Alexandria; who were for

the most part young recruits who had just arrived from the north

and west; looked with astonishment upon these thin and ragged

men; several of whom were barefooted。  Was it possible that such

scarecrows as these could in every battle have driven back the

well…fed and cared…for Northern soldiers!



〃Are they all like this?〃 one burly young soldier from a western

state asked their guard。



That's them; sir;〃 the sergeant in charge of the party replied。  〃Not

much to look at; are they?  But; by gosh; you should see them

fight!  You wouldn't think of their looks then。〃



〃If that's soldiering;〃 the young farmer said solemnly; 〃the sooner I

am back home again the better。  But it don't seem to me altogether

strange as they should fight so hard; because I should say they

must look upon it as a comfort to be killed rather than to live like

that。〃



A shout of laughter from the prisoners showed the young rustic

that the objects of his pity did not consider life to be altogether

intolerable even under such circumstances; and he moved away

meditating on the discomforts of war; and upon the remarks that

would be made were he to return home in so sorrowful a plight as

that of these Confederate prisoners。



〃I bargained to fight;〃 be said; 〃and though I don't expect I shall

'ike it; I sha'n't draw back when the time comes; but as to being

starved till you are nigh a skeleton; and going about barefooted and

in such rags as a tramp wouldn't look at; it ain't reasonable。〃  And

yet; had he known it; among those fifteen prisoners more than half

were possessors of wide estates; and had been brought up from

their childhood in the midst of luxuries such as the young farmer

never dreamed of。



Among many of the soldiers sympathy took a more active form;

and men pressed forward and gave packets of tobacco; cigars; and

other little presents to them; while two or three pressed rolls of

dollar notes into their hands; with words of rough kindness。



〃There ain't no ill feeling in us; Rebs。  You have done your work

like men and no doubt you thinks your cause is right; just as we

does; but it's all over now; and maybe our turn will come next to

see the inside of one of your prisons down south。  So we are just

soldiers together; and can feel for each other。〃



Discipline in small matters was never strictly enforced in the

American armies; and the sergeant in charge offered no opposition

to the soldiers mingling with the prisoners as they walked along。



Two days later they were sent by railway to the great prison at

Elmira; a town in the southwest of the State of New York。  When

they reached the jail the prisoners were separated; Vincent; who

was the only officer; being assigned quarters with some twenty

others of the same rank。  The prisoners crowded round him as he

entered; eager to hear the last news from the front; for they heard

from their guards only news of constant victories won by the

Northerners; for every defeat was transformed by the Northern

papers into a brilliant victory; and it was only when the shattered

remains of the various armies returned to Alexandria to be

re…formed that the truth gradually leaked out。 Thus Antietam had

been claimed as a great Northern victory; for although McClellan's

troops had in the battle been hurled back shattered and broken

across the river; two days afterward Lee 

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