3 v longed light Phineas and his comrades | - “And that is where I was captured,” FROM INDIA. h . The Old ‘“Amen Corner’’ Demorvahi atc Belletonte, Pa., March 5, 1915. Ee ————————————— er THE LUCK OF E. HECOX. rei. Phineas Hale, a native of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, and late first sergeant of So the Twentieth Bay State Regiment, ' hav- ing acquired title to, and taken posses- * sion of, his Virginia farm, like a thrifty husbandman gave his first attention to the deplorable condition of the fences and hedges. Of the former little remain- ed save a few scattering rails and hard- - wood gate-posts, a stone here, and there a rotting log imbedded in the turf, all of which just served to indicate the original demarcation of the Along the road the cedar hedges had been burned . into the sod, so that the old house on his - newly acquired demesne d over what was practically a rolling prairie. It was on the first Sunday after taking possession, an unusually warm morning in the month of March, 1866, that Phineas set out to explore more minutely his . new possessions. He was young and energetic, and as he took his way across the old fields he pictured to himself the happy transformation his thrift and in- dustry would bring to pass in the years to come. The objective of his walk was the timber lot which lay at the back of the farm, and, while his critical eyes rested on the gray tree-tops, not yet leaved out, he was speculating on the - proportion of oak and hickory available for fence rails. A week of hard labor on the walls and "roof of the old stone barn served to make the sacred day of rest peculiarly attractive to Phineas. He keenly ap- preciated the privilege of wandering about in the soft indolence of the spring sunshine. Moreover he was well ground- ed in the austere New England theology, so that it was with a God-fearing as well as a complacent frame of mind that he picked his way down a rock slope on the eastern border of the woods, and stop- ped to look about him. The warm sunshine penetrated into this small glen, sheltered from the wind that had fluttered his shirt sleeves on the uplands. The fresh green grass was sprouting in the hollows along the edge of a tiny brook, and the earth, newly re- leased from the winter’s frost, sent up faint odors that suggested the advent of spring plowing. Blue shadows lurked behina every stump and stone and lay in small flecks under the loose gray leaves lifted softly by the eager grass blades; against the shadows salient objects stood revealed with unusual precision and ‘ sharpness. A gleam of light on a peculiar some: thing before him caught Phineas’s eye. At first glance it looked like a slender gray root, protruding in such odd shape that it seemed to beckon him nearer. He stepped indolently at first, until he halted suddenly at what he saw. He was not horrified as a civilian might have been, just surprised and interested, as an old soldier might be by a comrade calling to him out of the ground. The skeleton hand whose bleached joints curved forward, the forefinger ris- ing above the others, was certainly in the act of beckoning. The double bone of the forearm, which upheld the hand, stood stiffly out of the bare, red soil, and a remnant of ragged blue sleeve lay on the surface of the shallow grave. It was by no means a startling discovery to make on the border of a great battle- field. But peace had lasted a year now and this was not what Phineas regarded as Christian burial. A little freeing of the remaant of blue sleeve from its earthly surrounding brought to light a thick brass button which bore on its sur- face the shield and device of the State of New York. : “Poor fellow,” said Phineas; “it looks like he’d been beckoning for a coffin for four years—maybe five, according to which battle he was killed in. It’s likely he don’t lie any too easy. He shall have the coffin that he wants so badly and decent Christian burial this very day.” With this inward expression of sym- pathy, Phineas began to bestir himself. “There is that long packing-box I brought the books down in,” he thought to him self as he hurried back to the house; “it will fit him like a glove. If I knew his name I'd set him up a head-board.” The carpenter who had been helping him on the barn the day before had gone to Manassas. Phineas felt quite equal to the work himself, however, and after hitching one of the horses to the stone- boat he brought out the box and nec- essary tools for digging. As he made his way back to the scene of his dis- covery his mind was occupied with specu- lations about the life and death of this unfortunate compatriot who had been mutely holding up his shriveled hand through so many years, for want of a better tombstone. Phineas hitched his horse on the oppo- site side of the branch and carried the pine box over on hisskoulder. The light sandy soil yielded easily to the spade, whose grating sound in the quiet glen on this still Sabbath morning struck omin- ously on his ears. Old ‘soldier that he was, he stopped in his work now and then to look about him and listen to the reassuring notes of the early robins in the woods. When patches of the mil- dewed blouse began to show under the red soil, he worked more carefully, hav- ing recourse to his fingers to remove the earth. Presently he uncovered a bit of tarnished metal that had rusted away fyom the cap front. This proved to be a pair of brass cross-guns, and holding them in his hand he straightened himself and swept the field with military eyes. “The battery must have been on that knoll,” he said half aloud, “and the cais- sons over here in the hollow.” He had himself been engaged at the second bat- tle of Bull Run; the preliminary skirmish at Groveton had overrun the very ground on which he stood, and had continued until dark. His ideas of the tipography of the ground were a little vague, but he felt pretty sure that his regiment, which had been on the skirmish line, must have been somewhere in the low land on the opposite side of the knoll. It was not quite four years since the happenings of that summer's night,. and one peculiar effect in the darkness, which no soldier could ever forget, came vividly to his mind: All had been quiet for some min- utes along the front of his regiment, and the men were lying on their guns, listen- ing with satisfaction to the scattering shots, receding and fitful. Above them the stars were glittering in the moonless sky and behind them a dark mass of woods rose back against the overarching canopy of countless worlds. "Suddenly the stillness was broken by the roar of a field-gun, and in the pro- ad seen the Union cannoniers braken back in the act of firing—each number in his place, and behind and above them are arms of the gunner thrown up at the command to fire. He remembered them fixed for an instant like fiery statues, and i then, as the halo which encircled them paled, he saw the gray silhouettes of the men spring on the wheels in the act of rolling the gun forward from its’ recoil. startling was this momentary vision that he had scarcely heeded the howl of the shell which sped high over his head. The same scene was quickly re- peated by another gun a little to the left of the first, and then alternately, until four shots had been fired. The regular- | ity of the firing was such that Phineas, keenly on the alert after the first dis- charge, could almost distinguish the lineaments of the men. He remember- ed the writhing landyard flying through the air like a fiery snake, the black sponge-staff held aloft by number one, and then whirling vaguely as the man who held it sprang in to reload against the fading mass of number three, with his thumb-stall pressed on the vent. “Well, I declare,” exclaimed Phineas, looking down at the poor skeleton half unearthed, "I shouldn’t be sursrised if I'd seen you before.” And then he fell to work vigorously, thinking at the same time of that phantom section on the hill. When the dirt had been sufficiently removed and loosened about the sides, Phineas lifted the poor burden out on warm ground. It was plain that the man had been a cannonier. Phineas bent over and looked carefully for some indication of a bullet-hole. The coat had given away in so many places that he could determine nothing externally, but as he passed his hand over the left breast he heard a sound like the crinkle of paper. When he had loosened the two or three buttons which still held to the rotten fabric, he thrust his hand into an inner pocket and drew out a letter, yellow and mouldy, and, strangely enough, through the center of this letter was the hole traversed by the bullet. Then his quick eye caught sight of a black object dangling between the ex- posed ribs of the skeleton. He dropped the letter on the ground in his eagerness to secure this other property, which swung at the end of a leather thong. Phineas’s eyes fairly bulged as he caught another view of the work of the bullet, which had cut its clean way through the rim of this cheap silver watch, which must have been in the same pocket and behind the letter. It was corroded and eaten with rust, but the hands were im- movably fixed on the enameled face. “Five minutes of nine!” exclaimed Phineas, his mind going back to that sul- phury summer night four years before. “That must have been the" time, and a finer mark for a sharp-shooter I never saw. [I've certainly seen you before, Mr. ——. Ah, where's that letter?” The stained envelope bore on its left- hand corner an unfurled flag with the words below, “shoot him dead on the spot.” The colors from the flag had run and the bullet had pierced the center, but it was written in a fair round hand, and with a little study Phineas made out “Hecox” for the surname, and of the Christian name he could only be certain that the initial was E. The letter was further addressed to “Battery L., First New York Artillery Camp of First Corps, near Culpepper, Virginia.” Tenderly lifting “E. Hecox of Battery L,” he laid him reverently in the pack- ing-case, composed with some difficulty the skeleton hand which had been beck- oning to the outer world so long, and carried the light coffin across the branch and placed it on the stone-boat. He de- cided to bury E. Hecox, temporarily, at the foot of a certain plum-tree in the old en. It would be hard to imagine a more quiet and decorous funeral procession than this progress across the fields in the stillness of the Sabbath noonday. Phineas walked gravely at the horse's bridle, and the stone-boat with its unconscious bur- den glided noiselessly over the turf. “Maybe those four shells balanced his account with interest,” reflected Phineas, “and maybe they didn’t—all the same, it was hard luck for E. Hecox.” It was late in the afternoon before the self-appointed sexton found to examine the letter. The postmark was oblit f- ated, but fortunately the name of the town where the soldier had lived was plainly written in the upper right-hana corner on the first page of the letter itself, “Allen’s Hill, May 15, 1862.” As far as Phineas could make out, the letter related only to domestic affairs. It was neatly written, well expressed in terms of patriotism and devotion, and neither the cruel bullet nor the mildew had en- croached on what were probably the last written words of conjugal love E. Hecox had ever read. “I pray hourly for your preservation, for the success of the Union cause, and for your restoration, dear Eben, to the arms of your loving wife— Letty.” : “She has given him up years ago,” mused Phineas; “information as to his Wheteabonts will be a relief instead of a shock.” When he had written his letter he discarded “Letty” and addressed it to Mrs. E. Hecox. Week after week passed. It was Sun- day again. It had come to look quite | th homelike about the house and garden, the air was already perfumed with the luxurious blossoming of the spring. Under the plum-tree a plain head-board with the name of the deceased soldier had been erected over the grave. The old colored mammy who was at the head of Phineas’s domestic establishment was moving about the yard gathering dande- lion roots for greens, while Phineas him- self was enjoying his morming pipe on the gallery. No reply had come to his letter. Aunt Phillis’s old ears first caught the sound of wheels, and, straightening her- self, she shaded her eyes and looked down the road. Then she planted her hands firmly on her broad hips. “Ef 1 got any sense left, Marse Hale,” she said, “dat’s Tom Little’s wagon from 'Nasses Junction an’ he ain’ cyary- in’ none o’ de ladies aboot yer.” The carriage stopped at the veranda steps, and five minutes later the pretty widow Hecox was comfortably seated in the gallery glancing over the exterior of the bullet-perforated letter. The half- minute so spent im: Phineas with a new sense of the hard luck of the man in the garden or any other man who had lived so short a time with such a wife. Ted ot 2 ondof the Sumit of thoughts si y that ra ullet- hole, and when she raised her glistening eyes to Phineas’s face he rose and silent- ly offered his arm. In silence they walk- ed across the yard and through the gar- den until they stood before the grave marked “E. Hecox.” A few pink blos- Ir mde Essen. eet sens et i Sete een ernest. You ask me why I look so sad, a saying not a word: Why, Becky, thoughts of long ago my memory have stirred. I'm thinking of the meetin’ house where preached old Father Horner; But mostly I've been thinking ’bout that dear old “amen corner.” Them days long since have fled and gone, dear friends have passed away; And that old meetin’ house is going to decay. I looked around among the folks, if any I may see; But all are gone it seeme to me, but Becky, you and me. I see the dear old corner yet; ‘twas close beside the altar; Them good old souls whose seats w