[The Red Acorn by John McElroy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Red Acorn CHAPTER IX 3/22
But no matter how many or how few it takes, that's none of our affair.
We've got eleven hundred good men in ranks, and we're going to do all that eleven hundred good men can do.
God Almighty and Abe Lincoln have got to take care of the rest." It will be seen that the Colonel was a very practical soldier. "First think we know, the Colonel will be trying to make us 'leven hundred clean out 'leven thousand Rebs," growled Abe Bolton. "Suppose the Colonel should imagine himself another Leonidas, and us his Spartan band, and want us to die around him, and start another Thermopylae down her in the mountains, some place," suggested Kent Edwards, "you would cheerfully pass in your checks along with the rest, so as to make the thing an entire success, wouldn't you ?" "The day I'm sent below, I'll take a pile of Rebs along to keep me company," answered Abe, surlily. Glen, standing in the rear of his company in his place as file-closer, listened to these words, and saw in the dim distance and on the darkling heights the throngs of fierce enemies and avalanches of impeding dangers as are likely to oppress the imagination of a young soldier at such unfavorable moments.
The conflict and carnage seemed so imminent that he half expected it to begin that very night, and he stiffened his sinews for the shock. Lieutenant Alspaugh also heard, studied over the unwelcome possibilities shrouded in the gathering gloom of the distance, and regretted that he had not, before crossing the Ohio, called the Surgeon's attention to some premonitory symptoms of rheumatism, which he felt he might desire to develop into an acute attack in the event of danger assuming an unpleasant proximity. But as no Rebels appeared on the sweeping semi-circle of hills that shut in Convington on the south, he concluded to hold his disability in abeyance, by a strong effort of the will, until the regiment had penetrated farther into the enemy's country. For days the regiment marched steadily on through the wonderfully lovely Blue Grass Region, toward the interior of the State, without coming into the neighborhood of any organized body of the Rebels. Glen's first tremors upon crossing the Ohio subsided so as to permit him to thoroughly enjoy the beauties of the scenery, and the pleasures of out-door life in a region so attractive at that season of the year. The turnpike, hard and smooth as a city pavement, wound over and around romantic hills--hills crowned with cedar and evergreen laurel, and scarred with cliffs and caverns.
It passed through forests, aromatic with ripening nuts and changing leaves, and glorious in the colors of early Autumn.
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