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Gordon, Hanford Lennox, 1836-1920

"The Feast of the Virgins and Other Poems"

1, 1st Minn. Vols., killed in a
skirmish, near Ball's Bluff, October 22, 1861.]

"We've had a brush," the Captain said,
"And Rebel blood we've spilled;
We came off victors with the loss
Of only a _private_ killed."
"Ah," said the orderly--"it was hot,"--
Then he breathed a heavy breath--
"Poor fellow!--he was badly shot,
Then bayoneted to death."
And now was hushed the martial din;
The saucy foe had fled;
They brought the private's body in;
I went to see the dead;
For I could not think our Rebel foes--
So valiant in the van--
So boastful of their chivalry--
Could kill a wounded man.
A musket ball had pierced his thigh--
A frightful, crushing wound--
And then with savage bayonets
They pinned him to the ground.
One deadly thrust drove through the heart,
Another through the head;
Three times they stabbed his pulseless breast
When he lay cold and dead.
His hair was matted with his gore,
His hands were clinched with might,
As if he still his musket bore
So firmly in the fight.
He had grasped the foemen's bayonets
Their murderous thrusts to fend:
They raised the coat-cape from his face,
And lo--it was my friend!
Think what a shudder chilled my heart!
'Twas but the day before
We laughed together merrily,
As we talked of days of yore.


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