Hardage's English Class
"English is not for Sissies"

pat_hardage@allenisd.org
mrhardage@yahoo.com

cell 214/789-0359
South Mountain towered on our right,
  Far off the river lay,
And over on the wooded height
  We held their line at bay.

At last the mutt'ring guns were stilled,
  The day died slow and wan.
At last their pipes the gunners filled,
  The Sergeant's yarns began.

When,--as the wind a moment blew
  Aside the fragrant flood
Our brierwoods raised,--within our view
  A little maiden stood.

A tiny tot of six or seven;
  From fireside fresh she seemed.
(Of such a little one in heaven
  One soldier often dreamed.)

And as we started, her little hand
  Went to her curly head
In grave salute; "And who are you?"
  At length the Sergeant said.

"And where's your home?" he growled again.
  She lisped out, "Who is me?
Why, don't you know? I'm little Jane,
  the pride of Battery B.

"My home? Why, that was burned away,
  And pa and ma are dead,
And so I ride the guns all day
  Along with Sergeant Ned.

"And I've a drum that's not a toy,
  A cap with feathers too,
And I march beside the drummer-boy
  On Sundays at review.

"But now our bacca's all give out,
  The men can't have their smoke,
And so they're cross--why, even Ned
  Won't play with me and joke.

"And the big Colonel said to-day--
  I hate to hear him swear--
He'd give a leg for a good pipe
  Like the Yanks have over there.

"And so I thought, when beat the drum,
  And the big guns were still,
I'd creep beneath the tent and come
  Out here across the hill.

"And beg, good Mister Yankee men,
  You'd give me some Lone Jack.
Please do--when we get some again
  I'll surely bring it back.

"Indeed I will, for Ned, says he,
  If I do what I say
I'll be a general yet, maybe,
  And ride a prancing bay."

We brimmed her tiny apron o'er;
  You should have heard her laugh
As each man from his scanty store
  Shook out a generous half.

To kiss that little mouth stooped down
  A score of grimy men,
Until the Sergeant's husky voice
  Said "'Tention, squad!"--and then

We gave her escort, till good-night
  The pretty waif we bid,
And watched her toddle out of sight--
  Or else 'twas tears that hid

Her tiny form--nor turned about
  A man, nor spoke a word,
Till after while a far, hoarse shout
  Upon the wind we heard.

We sent it back, then cast sad eye
  Upon the scene around.
A baby's hand had touched the tie
  That brothers once had bound.

That's all--save when the dawn awoke
  Again the work of hell,
And through the sullen clouds of smoke
  The screaming missles fell,

Our Gen'ral often rubbed his glass,
  And marvelled much to see
Not a single shell that whole day fell
  In the camp of Battery B.

THE PRIDE OF BATTERY B
    by Frank H. Gassaway
OK, Group,

Here is the list of extra credit questions; you know I'm coming up with them.

1.  Where and when was the Battle of South Mountain?
2.  Who is Frank H. Gassaway?  (Obviously beyond the fact he wrote the poem?)
3.  What do you figure Lone Jack is.
4.  How do the different ranks mention relate?  List them in order - with the
missing ranks put into the list as spacers.
5.  Which units participated in that fight?
6.  Were Texas units among them?  If so, which ones.
7.  Which units were raised in North Texas?  What happened to them?
Any comment about that?
8.  What sort of rhyme scheme does the poet use?
9.  How often does he use color?  Metaphor?  Simile?
10.  How does the poem make you feel?
11.  What is the most powerful image here for you?  Why?

Vocabulary:

yarn      battery   marvel
'bacca   waif        brim (verb)
bay'twas       o'er
scanty   sullen
store     missile

Three Confederate Prisoners at Gettysburg
"The Battle of South Mountain"
From lithograph by Endicott. Courtesy, Library of Congress.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/md002.htm
http://www.civil-war.net/cw_images/files/images/070.jpg
Links
Antietam
http://www.nps.gov/anti/
http://www.nps.gov/anti/home.htm
http://aotw.org/

South Mountain
http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/western/southmountain.html
http://www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/southmtbattle.html
http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/md002.htm

Frank Gassaway
http://oldpoetry.com/authors/Frank%20H%20Gassaway

Civil War Poetry
http://www.civilwarpoetry.org/union/soldierlife/index.html
http://members.tripod.com/~ProlificPains/cpoetry.htm


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