The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quite So, by Thomas Bailey Aldrich

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Title: Quite So

Author: Thomas Bailey Aldrich

Release Date: November 6, 2007 [EBook #23359]
Last Updated: March 3, 2018


Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUITE SO ***




Produced by David Widger





 










QUITE SO  

By Thomas Bailey Aldrich  

Boston And New York Houghton Mifflin Company  

Copyright, 1873, 1885, and 1901  










Contents  

I.

II.

III.















I.  


Of course that was not his name. Even in the State of Maine, where it is  still a custom to maim a child for life by christening him Arioch or  Shadrach or Ephraim, nobody would dream of calling a boy Quite So. It  was merely a nickname which we gave him in camp; but it stuck to him with  such bur-like tenacity, and is so inseparable from my memory of him, that  I do not think I could write definitely of John Bladburn if I were to call  him anything but Quite So.  

It was one night shortly after the first battle of Bull Run. The Army of  the Potomac, shattered, stunned, and forlorn, was back in its old quarters  behind the earthworks. The melancholy line of ambulances bearing our  wounded to Washington was not done creeping over Long Bridge; the blue  smocks and the gray still lay in windrows on the field of Manassas; and  the gloom that weighed down our hearts was like the fog that stretched  along the bosom of the Potomac, and enfolded the valley of the Shenandoah.  A drizzling rain had set in at twilight, and, growing bolder with the  darkness, was beating a dismal tattoo on the tentthe tent of Mess  6, Company A, th Regiment, N. Y. Volunteers. Our mess, consisting  originally of eight men, was reduced to four. Little Billy, as one of the  boys grimly remarked, had concluded to remain at Manassas; Corporal Steele  we had to leave at Fairfax Court-House, shot through the hip; Hunter and  Suydam we had said good-by to that afternoon. Tell Johnny Reb, says  Hunter, lifting up the leather side-piece of the ambulance, that I 'll be  back again as soon as I get a new leg. But Suydam said nothing; he only  unclosed his eyes languidly and smiled farewell to us.  

The four of us who were left alive and unhurt that shameful July day sat  gloomily smoking our brier-wood pipes, thinking our thoughts, and  listening to the rain pattering against the canvas. That, and the  occasional whine of a hungry cur, foraging on the outskirts of the camp  for a stray bone, alone broke the silence, save when a vicious drop of  rain detached itself meditatively from the ridge-pole of the tent, and  fell upon the wick of our tallow candle, making it cuss, as Ned Strong  described it. The candle was in the midst of one of its most profane fits  when Blakely, knocking the ashes from his pipe and addressing no one in  particular, but giving breath, unconsciously as it were, to the result of  his cogitations, observed that it was considerable of a fizzle.  

The 'on to Richmond' business?  

Yes.  

I wonder what they 'll do about it over yonder, said Curtis, pointing  over his right shoulder. By over yonder he meant the North in general  and Massachusetts especially. Curtis was a Boston boy, and his sense of  locality was so strong that, during all his wanderings in Virginia, I do  not believe there was a moment, day or night, when he could not have made  a bee-line for Faneuil Hall.  

Do about it? cried Strong. They 'll make about two hundred thousand  blue flannel trousers and send them along, each pair with a man in itall  the short men in the long trousers, and all the tall men in the short  ones, he added, ruefully contemplating his own leg-gear, which scarcely  reached to his ankles.  

That's so, said Blakely. Just now, when I was tackling the commissary  for an extra candle, I saw a crowd of new fellows drawing blankets.  

I say there, drop that! cried Strong. All right, sir, didn't know it  was you, he added hastily, seeing it was Lieutenant Haines who had thrown  back the flap of the tent, and let in a gust of wind and rain that  threatened the most serious bronchial consequences to our discontented  tallow dip.  

You 're to bunk in here, said the lieutenant, speaking to some one  outside. The some one stepped in, and Haines vanished in the darkness.  

When Strong had succeeded in restoring the candle to consciousness, the  light fell upon a tall, shy-looking man of about thirty-five, with long,  hay-colored beard and mustache, upon which the rain-drops stood in  clusters, like the night-dew on patches of cobweb in a meadow. It was an  honest face, with unworldly sort of blue eyes, that looked out from under  the broad visor of the infantry cap. With a deferential glance towards us,  the new-comer unstrapped his knapsack, spread his blanket over it, and sat  down unobtrusively.  

Rather damp night out, remarked Blakely, whose strong hand was supposed  to be conversation.  

Quite so, replied the stranger, not curtly, but pleasantly, and with an  air as if he had said all there was to be said about it.  

Come from the North recently? inquired Blakely, after a pause.  

Yes.  

From any place in particular?  

Maine.  

People considerably stirred up down there? continued Blakely, determined  not to give up.  

Quite so.  

Blakely threw a puzzled look over the tent, and seeing Ned Strong on the  broad grin, frowned severely. Strong instantly assumed an abstracted air,  and began humming softly,  
     “I wish I was in Dixie.”
 

The State of Maine, observed Blakely, with a certain defiance of manner  not at all necessary in discussing a geographical question, is a pleasant  State.  

In summer, suggested the stranger.  

In summer, I mean, returned Blakely with animation, thinking he had  broken the ice. Cold as blazes in winter, thoughIsn't it?  

The new recruit merely nodded.  

Blakely eyed the man homicidally for a moment, and then, smiling one of  those smiles of simulated gayety which the novelists inform us are more  tragic than tears, turned upon him with withering irony.  

Trust you left the old folks pretty comfortable?  

Dead.  

The old folks dead!  

Quite so.  

Blakely made a sudden dive for his blanket, tucked it around him with  painful precision, and was heard no more.  

Just then the bugle sounded lights out,bugle answering bugle in  far-off camps. When our not elaborate night-toilets were complete, Strong  threw somebody else's old boot at the candle with infallible aim, and  darkness took possession of the tent. Ned, who lay on my left, presently  reached over to me, and whispered, I say, our friend 'quite so' is a  garrulous old boy! He'll talk himself to death some of these odd times, if  he is n't careful. How he did run on!  

The next morning, when I opened my eyes, the new member of Mess 6 was  sitting on his knapsack, combing his blonde beard with a horn comb. He  nodded pleasantly to me, and to each of the boys as they woke up, one by  one. Blakely did not appear disposed to renew the animated conversation of  the previous night; but while he was gone to make a requisition for what  was in pure sarcasm called coffee, Curtis ventured to ask the man his  name.  

Bladburn, John, was the reply.  

That's rather an unwieldy name for every-day use, put in Strong. If it  would n't hurt your feelings, I 'd like to call you Quite Sofor  short. Don't say no, if you don't like it. Is it agreeable?  

Bladburn gave a little laugh, all to himself, seemingly, and was about to  say, Quite so, when he caught at the words, blushed like a girl, and  nodded a sunny assent to Strong. From that day until the end, the  sobriquet clung to him.  

The disaster at Bull Bun was followed, as the reader knows, by a long  period of masterly inactivity, so far as the Army of the Potomac was  concerned. McDowell, a good soldier, but unlucky, retired to Arlington  Heights, and McClellan, who had distinguished himself in Western Virginia,  took command of the forces in front of Washington, and bent his energies  to reorganizing the demoralized troops. It was a dreary time to the people  of the North, who looked fatuously from week to week for the fall of  Richmond; and it was a dreary time to the denizens of that vast city of  tents and forts which stretched in a semicircle before the beleaguered  Capitolso tedious and soul-wearing a time that the hardships of  forced marches and the horrors of battle became desirable things to them.  

Roll-call morning and evening, guard-duty, dress-parades, an occasional  reconnoissance, dominoes, wrestling-matches, and such rude games as could  be carried on in camp made up the sum of our lives. The arrival of the  mail with letters and papers from home was the event of the day. We  noticed that Bladburn neither wrote nor received any letters. When the  rest of the boys were scribbling away for dear life, with drum-heads and  knapsacks and cracker-boxes for writing-desks, he would sit serenely  smoking his pipe, but looking out on us through rings of smoke with a face  expressive of the tenderest interest.  

Look here, Quite So, Strong would say, the mail-bag closes in half an  hour. Ain't you going to write?  

I believe not to-day, Bladburn would reply, as if he had written  yesterday, or would write to-morrow: but he never wrote.  

He had become a great favorite with us, and with all the officers of the  regiment. He talked less than any man I ever knew, but there was nothing  sinister or sullen in his reticence. It was sunshine,warmth and  brightness, but no voice. Unassuming and modest to the verge of shyness,  he impressed every one as a man of singular pluck and nerve.  

Do you know, said Curtis to me one day, that that fellow Quite So is  clear grit, and when we come to close quarters with our Palmetto brethren  over yonder, he'll do something devilish?  

What makes you think so?  

Well, nothing quite explainable; the exasperating coolness of the man, as  much as anything. This morning the boys were teasing Muffin Fan [a small  mulatto girl who used to bring muffins into camp three times a week,at  the peril of her life!] and Jemmy Blunt of Company Kyou know himwas  rather rough on the girl, when Quite So, who had been reading under a  tree, shut one finger in his book, walked over to where the boys were  skylarking, and with the smile of a juvenile angel on his face lifted  Jemmy out of that and set him down gently in front of his own tent. There  Blunt sat speechless, staring at Quite So, who was back again under the  tree, pegging away at his little Latin grammar.  

That Latin grammar! He always had it about him, reading it or turning over  its dog's-eared pages at odd intervals and in out-of-the-way places. Half  a dozen times a day he would draw it out from the bosom of his blouse,  which had taken the shape of the book just over the left breast, look at  it as if to assure himself it was all right, and then put the thing back.  At night the volume lay beneath his pillow. The first thing in the  morning, before he was well awake, his hand would go groping instinctively  under his knapsack in search of it.  

A devastating curiosity seized upon us boys concerning that Latin grammar,  for we had discovered the nature of the book. Strong wanted to steal it  one night, but concluded not to. In the first place, reflected Strong,  I haven't the heart to do it, and in the next place I have n't the moral  courage. Quite So would placidly break every bone in my body. And I  believe Strong was not far out of the way.  

Sometimes I was vexed with myself for allowing this tall, simple-hearted  country fellow to puzzle me so much. And yet, was he a simple-hearted  country fellow? City bred he certainly was not; but his manner, in spite  of his awkwardness, had an indescribable air of refinement. Now and then,  too, he dropped a word or a phrase that showed his familiarity with  unexpected lines of reading. The other day, said Curtis, with the  slightest elevation of eyebrow, he had the cheek to correct my Latin for  me. In short, Quite So was a daily problem to the members of Mess 6.  Whenever he was absent, and Blakely and Curtis and Strong and I got  together in the tent, we discussed him, evolving various theories to  explain why he never wrote to anybody and why nobody ever wrote to him.  Had the man committed some terrible crime, and fled to the army to hide  his guilt? Blakely suggested that he must have murdered the old folks.  What did he mean by eternally conning that tattered Latin grammar? And was  his name Bladburn, anyhow? Even his imperturbable amiability became  suspicious. And then his frightful reticence! If he was the victim of any  deep grief or crushing calamity, why did n't he seem unhappy? What  business had he to be cheerful?  

It's my opinion, said Strong, that he 's a rival Wandering Jew; the  original Jacobs, you know, was a dark fellow.  

Blakely inferred from something Bladburn had said, or something he had not  saidwhich was more likelythat he had been a schoolmaster at  some period of his life.  

Schoolmaster be hanged! was Strong's comment. Can you fancy a  schoolmaster going about conjugating baby verbs out of a dratted little  spelling-book? No, Quite So has evidently been aaBlest if I  can imagine what he 's been!  

Whatever John Bladburn had been, he was a lonely man. Whenever I want a  type of perfect human isolation, I shall think of him, as he was in those  days, moving remote, self-contained, and alone in the midst of two hundred  thousand men.  







II.  


The Indian summer, with its infinite beauty and tenderness, came like a  reproach that year to Virginia. The foliage, touched here and there with  prismatic tints, drooped motionless in the golden haze. The delicate  Virginia creeper was almost minded to put forth its scarlet buds again. No  wonder the lovely phantomthis dusky Southern sister of the pale  Northern Junelingered not long with us, but, filling the once  peaceful glens and valleys with her pathos, stole away rebukefully before  the savage enginery of man.  

The preparations that had been going on for months in arsenals and  foundries at the North were nearly completed. For weeks past the air had  been filled with rumors of an advance; but the rumor of to-day refuted the  rumor of yesterday, and the Grand Army did not move. Heintzelman's corps  was constantly folding its tents, like the Arabs, and as silently stealing  away; but somehow it was always in the same place the next morning. One  day, at last, orders came down for our brigade to move.  

We 're going to Richmond, boys! shouted Strong, thrusting his head in at  the tent; and we all cheered and waved our caps like mad. You see, Big  Bethel and Bull Run and Ball's Bluff (the bloody B's, as we used to call  them) had n't taught us any better sense.  

Rising abruptly from the plateau, to the left of our encampment, was a  tall hill covered with a stunted growth of red-oak, persimmon, and  chestnut. The night before we struck tents I climbed up to the crest to  take a parting look at a spectacle which custom had not been able to rob  of its enchantment. There, at my feet, and extending miles and miles away,  lay the camps of the Grand Army, with its camp-fires reflected luridly  against the sky. Thousands of lights were twinkling in every direction,  some nestling in the valley, some like fire-flies beating their wings and  palpitating among the trees, and others stretching in parallel lines and  curves, like the street-lamps of a city. Somewhere, far off, a band was  playing, at intervals it seemed; and now and then, nearer to, a silvery  strain from a bugle shot sharply up through the night, and seemed to lose  itself like a rocket among the starsthe patient, untroubled stars.  Suddenly a hand was laid upon my arm.  

I 'd like to say a word to you, said Bladburn.  

With a little start of surprise, I made room for him on the fallen tree  where I was seated.  

I may n't get another chance, he said. You and the boys have been very  kind to me, kinder than I deserve; but sometimes I 've fancied that my not  saying anything about myself had given you the idea that all was not right  in my past. I want to say that I came down to Virginia with a clean  record.  

We never really doubted it, Bladburn.  

If I did n't write home, he continued, it was because I had n't any  home, neither kith nor kin. When I said the old folks were dead, I said  it. Am I boring you? If I thought I was  

No, Bladburn. I have often wanted you to talk to me about yourself, not  from idle curiosity, I trust, but because I liked you that rainy night  when you came to camp, and have gone on liking you ever since. This is n't  too much to say, when Heaven only knows how soon I may be past saying it  or you listening to it.  

That's it, said Bladburn, hurriedly, that's why I want to talk with  you. I 've a fancy that I sha' n't come out of our first battle.  

The words gave me a queer start, for I had been trying several days to  throw off a similar presentiment concerning hima foolish  presentiment that grew out of a dream.  

In case anything of that kind turns up, he continued, I 'd like you to  have my Latin grammar hereyou 've seen me reading it. You might  stick it away in a bookcase, for the sake of old times. It goes against me  to think of it falling into rough hands or being kicked about camp and  trampled underfoot.  

He was drumming softly with his fingers on the volume in the bosom of his  blouse.  

I did n't intend to speak of this to a living soul, he went on,  motioning me not to answer him; but something took hold of me to-night  and made me follow you up here, Perhaps if I told you all, you would be  the more willing to look after the little book in case it goes ill with  me. When the war broke out I was teaching school down in Maine, in the  same village where my father was schoolmaster before me. The old man when  he died left me quite alone. I lived pretty much by myself, having no  interests outside of the district school, which seemed in a manner my  personal property. Eight years ago last spring a new pupil was brought to  the school, a slight slip of a girl, with a sad kind of face and quiet  ways. Perhaps it was because she was n't very strong, and perhaps because  she was n't used over well by those who had charge of her, or perhaps it  was because my life was lonely, that my heart warmed to the child. It all  seems like a dream now, since that April morning when little Mary stood in  front of my desk with her pretty eyes looking down bashfully and her soft  hair falling over her face. One day I look up, and six years have gone byas  they go by in dreamsand among the scholars is a tall girl of  sixteen, with serious, womanly eyes which I cannot trust myself to look  upon. The old life has come to an end. The child has become a woman and  can teach the master now. So help me Heaven, I did n't know that I loved  her until that day!  

Long after the children had gone home I sat in the school-room with my  face resting on my hands. There was her desk, the afternoon shadows  falling across it. It never looked empty and cheerless before. I went and  stood by the low chair, as I had stood hundreds of times. On the desk was  a pile of books, ready to be taken away, and among the rest a small Latin  grammar which we had studied together. What little despairs and triumphs  and happy hours were associated with it! I took it up curiously, as if it  were some gentle dead thing, and turned over the pages, and could hardly  see them. Turning the pages, idly so, I came to a leaf on which something  was written with ink, in the familiar girlish hand. It was only the words  'Dear John,' through which she had drawn two hasty pencil linesI  wish she had n't drawn those lines! added Bladburn, under his breath.  

He was silent for a minute or two, looking off towards the camps, where  the lights were fading out one by one.  

I had no right to go and love Mary. I was twice her age, an awkward,  unsocial man, that would have blighted her youth. I was as wrong as wrong  can be. But I never meant to tell her. I locked the grammar in my desk and  the secret in my heart for a year. I could n't bear to meet her in the  village, and kept away from every place where she was likely to be. Then  she came to me, and sat down at my feet penitently, just as she used to do  when she was a child, and asked what she had done to anger me; and then,  Heaven forgive me! I told her all, and asked her if she could say with her  lips the words she had written, and she nestled in my arms all a-trembling  like a bird, and said them over and over again.  

When Mary's family heard of our engagement, there was trouble. They  looked higher for Mary than a middle-aged schoolmaster. No blame to them.  They forbade me the house, her uncles; but we met in the village and at  the neighbors' houses, and I was happy, knowing she loved me. Matters were  in this state when the war came on. I had a strong call to look after the  old flag, and I hung my head that day when the company raised in our  village marched by the school-house to the railroad station; but I  couldn't tear myself away. About this time the minister's son, who had  been away to college, came to the village. He met Mary here and there, and  they became great friends. He was a likely fellow, near her own age, and  it was natural they should like one another. Sometimes I winced at seeing  him made free of the home from which I was shut out; then I would open the  grammar at the leaf where 'Dear John' was written up in the corner, and my  trouble was gone. Mary was sorrowful and pale these days, and I think her  people were worrying her.  

It was one evening two or three days before we got the news of Bull Run.  I had gone down to the burying-ground to trim the spruce hedge set round  the old man's lot, and was just stepping into the enclosure, when I heard  voices from the opposite side. One was Mary's, and the other I knew to be  young Marston's, the minister's son. I did n't mean to listen, but what  Mary was saying struck me dumb. We must never meet again, she was  saying in a wild way. We must say good-by here, for ever,good-by,  good-by! And I could hear her sobbing. Then, presently, she said,  hurriedly, No, no; my hand, not my lips! Then it seemed he kissed  her hands, and the two parted, one going towards the parsonage, and the  other out by the gate near where I stood.  

I don't know how long I stood there, but the night-dews had wet me to the  bone when I stole out of the graveyard and across the road to the  school-house. I unlocked the door, and took the Latin grammar from the  desk and hid it in my bosom. There was not a sound or a light anywhere as  I walked out of the village. And now, said Bladburn, rising suddenly from  the tree-trunk, if the little book ever falls in your way, won't you see  that it comes to no harm, for my sake, and for the sake of the little  woman who was true to me and did n't love me? Wherever she is to-night,  God bless her!  

As we descended to camp with our arms resting on each other's shoulder,  the watch-fires were burning low in the valleys and along the hillsides,  and as far as the eye could reach the silent tents lay bleaching in the  moonlight.  







III.  


We imagined that the throwing forward of our brigade was the initial  movement of a general advance of the army; but that, as the reader will  remember, did not take place until the following March. The Confederates  had fallen back to Centreville without firing a shot, and the national  troops were in possession of Lewinsville, Vienna, and Fairfax Court-House.  Our new position was nearly identical with that which we had occupied on  the night previous to the battle of Bull Runon the old turnpike  road to Manassas, where the enemy was supposed to be in great force. With  a field-glass we could see the Rebel pickets moving in a belt of woodland  on our right, and morning and evening we heard the spiteful roll of their  snare-drums.  

Those pickets soon became a nuisance to us. Hardly a night passed but they  fired upon our outposts, so far with no harmful result; but after a while  it grew to be a serious matter. The Rebels would crawl out on all-fours  from the wood into a field covered with underbrush, and lie there in the  dark for hours, waiting for a shot. Then our men took to the rifle-pitspits  ten or twelve feet long by four or five deep, with the loose earth banked  up a few inches high on the exposed sides. All the pits bore names, more  or less felicitous, by which they were known to their transient tenants.  One was called The Pepper-Box, another Uncle Sam's Well, another The  Reb-Trap, and another, I am constrained to say, was named after a  not-to-be-mentioned tropical locality. Though this rude sort of  nomenclature predominated, there was no lack of softer titles, such as  Fortress Matilda and Castle Mary, and one had, though unintentionally,  a literary flavor to it, Blair's Grave, which was not popularly  considered as reflecting unpleasantly on Nat Blair, who had assisted in  making the excavation.  

Some of the regiment had discovered a field of late corn in the  neighborhood, and used to boil a few ears every day, while it lasted, for  the boys detailed on the night-picket. The corn-cobs were always  scrupulously preserved and mounted on the parapets of the pits. Whenever a  Rebel shot carried away one of these barbette guns, there was  swearing in that particular trench. Strong, who was very sensitive to this  kind of disaster, was complaining bitterly one morning, because he had  lost three pieces the night before.  

There's Quite So, now, said Strong, when a Minie-ball comes ping!  and knocks one of his guns to flinders, he merely smiles, and does n't at  all see the degradation of the thing.  

Poor Bladburn! As I watched him day by day going about his duties, in his  shy, cheery way, with a smile for every one and not an extra word for  anybody, it was hard to believe he was the same man who, that night before  we broke camp by the Potomac, had poured out to me the story of his love  and sorrow in words that burned in my memory.  

While Strong was speaking, Blakely lifted aside the flap of the tent and  looked in on us.  

Boys, Quite So was hurt last night, he said, with a white tremor to his  lip.  

What!  

Shot on picket.  

Why, he was in the pit next to mine, cried Strong.  

Badly hurt?  

Badly hurt.  

I knew he was; I need not have asked the question. He never meant to go  back to New England!  

Bladburn was lying on the stretcher in the hospital-tent The surgeon had  knelt down by him, and was carefully cutting away the bosom of his blouse.  The Latin grammar, stained and torn, slipped, and fell to the floor.  Bladburn gave me a quick glance. I picked up the book, and as I placed it  in his hand, the icy fingers closed softly over mine. He was sinking fast.  In a few minutes the surgeon finished his examination. When he rose to his  feet there were tears on the weather-beaten cheeks. He was a rough  outside, but a tender heart.  

My poor lad, he blurted out, it's no use. If you 've anything to say,  say it now, for you 've nearly done with this world.  

Then Bladburn lifted his eyes slowly to the surgeon, and the old smile  flitted over his face as he murmured,  

Quite so.  













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