On This Side Of The Line
There Was An Occasional Glimpse Of The Enemy.
But for a great part
of the time the men shot at the places from where the enemy's fire
seemed to come, aiming low and answering in steady volleys.
The fire
discipline was excellent. The prophets of evil of the Tampa Bay
Hotel had foretold that the cowboys would shoot as they chose, and,
in the field, would act independently of their officers. As it
turned out, the cowboys were the very men who waited most patiently
for the officers to give the word of command. At all times the
movement was without rest, breathless and fierce, like a cane-rush,
or a street fight. After the first three minutes every man had
stripped as though for a wrestling match, throwing off all his
impedimenta but his cartridge-belt and canteen. Even then the sun
handicapped their strength cruelly. The enemy was hidden in the
shade of the jungle, while they, for every thicket they gained, had
to fight in the open, crawling through grass which was as hot as a
steam bath, and with their flesh and clothing torn by thorns and the
sword-like blade of the Spanish "bayonet." The glare of the sun was
full in their eyes and as fierce as a lime-light.
When G Troop passed on across the trail to the left I stopped at the
place where the column had first halted - it had been converted into a
dressing station and the wounded of G Troop were left there in the
care of the hospital stewards. A tall, gaunt young man with a cross
on his arm was just coming back up the trail. His head was bent, and
by some surgeon's trick he was carrying a wounded man much heavier
than himself across his shoulders. As I stepped out of the trail he
raised his head, and smiled and nodded, and left me wondering where I
had seen him before, smiling in the same cheery, confident way and
moving in that same position. I knew it could not have been under
the same conditions, and yet he was certainly associated with another
time of excitement and rush and heat. Then I remembered him. As now
he had been covered with blood and dirt and perspiration, but then he
wore a canvas jacket and the man he carried on his shoulders was
trying to hold him back from a white-washed line. And I recognized
the young doctor, with the blood bathing his breeches, as "Bob"
Church, of Princeton. That was only one of four badly wounded men he
carried that day on his shoulders over a half-mile of trail that
stretched from the firing-line back to the dressing station and under
an unceasing fire. {3} As the senior surgeon was absent he had chief
responsibility that day for all the wounded, and that so few of them
died is greatly due to this young man who went down into the firing-
line and pulled them from it, and bore them out of danger.
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