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cottonwood, and snapping the trailing vines. Some other regiments went
by another route. The ironclads, followed in hot haste by General
Sherman in a navy tug, had gone ahead, and were even then shoving with
their noses great trunks of trees in their eagerness to get behind the
Rebels. The Missouri regiment spread out along the waters, and were soon
waist deep, hewing a path for the heavier transports to come. Presently
the General came back to a plantation half under water, where Black Bayou
joins Deer Creek, to hurry the work in cleaning out that Bayou. The
light transports meanwhile were bringing up more troops from a second
detachment. All through the Friday the navy great guns were heard
booming in the distance, growing quicker and quicker, until the quivering
air shook the hanging things in that vast jungle. Saws stopped, and axes
were poised over shoulders, and many times that day the General lifted
his head anxiously. As he sat down in the evening in a slave cabin
redolent with corn pone and bacon, the sound still hovered among the
trees and rolled along the still waters.
The General slept lightly. It was three o'clock Saturday morning when
the sharp challenge of a sentry broke the silence. A negro, white eyed,
bedraggled, and muddy, stood in the candle light under the charge of a
young lieutenant. The officer saluted, and handed the General a roll of
tobacco.
"I found this man in the swamp, sir. He has a message from the Admiral--"
The General tore open the roll and took from it a piece of tissue paper
which he spread out and held under the candle. He turned to a staff
officer who had jumped from his bed and was hurrying into his coat.
"Porter's surrounded," he said. The order came in a flash. "Kilby Smith
and all men here across creek to relief at once. I'll take canoe through
bayou to Hill's and hurry reenforcements."
The staff officer paused, his hand on the latch of the door.
"But your escort, General. You're not going through that sewer in a
canoe without an escort!"
"I guess they won't look for a needle in that haystack," the General
answered. For a brief second he eyed the lieutenant. "Get back to your
regiment, Brice, if you want to go," he said.
Stephen saluted and went out. All through the painful march that
followed, though soaked in swamp water and bruised by cypress knees, he
thought of Sherman in his canoe, winding unprotected through the black
labyrinth, risking his life that more men might be brought to the rescue
of the gunboats.
The story of that rescue has been told most graphically by Sherman
himself. How he picked up the men at work on the bayou and marched them
on a coal barge; how he hitched the barge to a navy tug; how he met the
little transport with a fresh load of troops, and Captain Elijah Brent's
reply when the General asked if he would follow him. "As long as the
boat holds together, General." And he kept his word. The boughs
hammered at the smoke-pipes until they went by the board, and the
pilothouse fell like a pack of cards on the deck before they
had gone three miles and a half. Then the indomitable Sherman
disembarked, a lighted candle in his hand, and led a stiff march through
thicket and swamp and breast-deep backwater, where the little drummer
boys carried their drums on their heads. At length, when they were come
to some Indian mounds, they found a picket of three, companies of the
force which had reached the flat the day before, and had been sent down
to prevent the enemy from obstructing further the stream below the fleet.
"The Admiral's in a bad way, sir," said the Colonel who rode up to meet
the General. "He's landlocked. Those clumsy ironclads of his can't move
backward or forward, and the Rebs have been peppering him for two days."
Just then a fusillade broke from the thickets, nipping the branches from
the cottonwoods about them.
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