ight, beyond the swamp. I shouted, and one of
the skirmishers came up. I asked him what the matter was.
"We've got a spy, sir," he said excitedly.
"A spy! Here?"
"Yes, Major. He was hid in the thicket yonder, lying flat on his face.
He reckoned that our boys would run right over him and that he'd get
into our lines that way. Tim Foley stumbled on him, and he put up as
good a fight with his fists as any man I ever saw."
Just then a regiment swept past us. That night I told the General, who
sent over to the headquarters of the 17th Corps to inquire. The word
came back that the man's name was Addison, and he claimed to be a Union
sympathizer who owned a plantation near by. He declared that he had been
conscripted by the Rebels, wounded, sent back home, and was now about to
be pressed in again. He had taken this method of escaping to our lines.
It was a common story enough, but General Mower added in his message
that he thought the story fishy. This was because the man's appearance
was very striking, and he seemed the type of Confederate fighter who
would do and dare anything. He had a wound, which had been a bad one,
evidently got from a piece of shell. But they had been able to find
nothing on him. Sherman sent back word to keep the man until he could
see him in person. It was about nine o'clock last night when I reached
the house the General has taken. A prisoner's guard was resting outside,
and the hall was full of officers. They said that the General was
awaiting me, and pointed to the closed door of a room that had been the
dining room. I opened it.
Two candles were burning in pewter sticks on the bare mahogany table.
There was the General sitting beside them, with his legs crossed,
holding some crumpled tissue paper very near his eyes, and reading. He
did not look up when I entered. I was aware of a man standing, tall and
straight, just out of range of the candles' rays. He wore the easy dress
of a Southern planter, with the broad felt hat. The head was flung back
so that there was just a patch of light on the chin, and the lids of the
eyes in the shadow were half closed.
My sensations are worth noting. For the moment I felt precisely as I
had when I was hit by that bullet in Lauman's charge. I was aware of
something very like pain, yet I could not place the cause of it. But
this is what since has made me feel queer: you doubtless remember
staying at Hollingdean, when I was a boy, and hearing the story of
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