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- 4034
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- 2026-01-30T20:47:58.829Z
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- 3927
- text
- Their pipes they light, they loiter there;
Then up, and urging still the Guide,
On, and after Mosby ride.
This Guide in frowzy coat of brown,
And beard of ancient growth and mould,
Bestrode a bony steed and strong,
As suited well with bulk he bore--
A wheezy man with depth of hold
Who jouncing went. A staff he swung--
A wight whom Mosby’s wasp had stung.
Burnt out and homeless--hunted long!
That wheeze he caught in autumn-wood
Crouching (a fat man) for his life,
And spied his lean son ’mong the crew
That probed the covert. Ah! black blood
Was his ’gainst even child and wife--
Fast friends to Mosby. Such the strife.
A lad, unhorsed by sliding girths,
Strains hard to readjust his seat
Ere the main body show the gap
’Twixt them and the read-guard; scrub-oaks near
He sidelong eyes, while hands move fleet;
Then mounts and spurs. One drop his cap--
“Let Mosby fine!” nor heeds mishap.
A gable time-stained peeps through trees:
“You mind the fight in the haunted house?
That’s it; we clenched them in the room--
An ambuscade of ghosts, we thought,
But proved sly rebels on a house!
Luke lies in the yard.” The chimneys loom:
Some muse on Mosby--some on doom.
Less nimbly now through brakes they wind,
And ford wild creeks where men have drowned;
They skirt the pool, a void the fen,
And so till night, when down they lie,
They steeds still saddled, in wooded ground:
Rein in hand they slumber then,
Dreaming of Mosby’s cedarn den.
But Colonel and Major friendly sat
Where boughs deformed low made a seat.
The Young Man talked (all sworded and spurred)
Of the partisan’s blade he longed to win,
And frays in which he meant to beat.
The grizzled Major smoked, and heard:
“But what’s that--Mosby?” “No, a bird.”
A contrast here like sire and son,
Hope and Experience sage did meet;
The Youth was brave, the Senior too;
But through the Seven Days one had served,
And gasped with the rear-guard in retreat:
So he smoked and smoked, and the wreath he blew--
“Any _sure_ news of Mosby’s crew?”
He smoked and smoked, eying the while
A huge tree hydra-like in growth--
Moon-tinged--with crook’d boughs rent or lopped--
Itself a haggard forest. “Come”
The Colonel cried, “to talk you’re loath;
D’ye hear? I say he must be stopped,
This Mosby--caged, and hair close cropped.”
“Of course; but what’s that dangling there”
“Where?” “From the tree--that gallows-bough;
A bit of frayed bark, is it not”
“Ay--or a rope; did _we_ hang last?--
Don’t like my neckerchief any how”
He loosened it: “O ay, we’ll stop
This Mosby--but that vile jerk and drop!”[23]
By peep of light they feed and ride,
Gaining a grove’s green edge at morn,
And mark the Aldie hills upread
And five gigantic horsemen carved
Clear-cut against the sky withdrawn;
Are more behind? an open snare?
Or Mosby’s men but watchmen there?
The ravaged land was miles behind,
And Loudon spread her landscape rare;
Orchards in pleasant lowlands stood,
Cows were feeding, a cock loud crew,
But not a friend at need was there;
The valley-folk were only good
To Mosby and his wandering brood.
What best to do? what mean yon men?
Colonel and Guide their minds compare;
Be sure some looked their Leader through;
Dismsounted, on his sword he leaned
As one who feigns an easy air;
And yet perplexed he was they knew--
Perplexed by Mosby’s mountain-crew.
The Major hemmed as he would speak,
But checked himself, and left the ring
Of cavalrymen about their Chief--
Young courtiers mute who paid their court
By looking with confidence on their king;
They knew him brave, foresaw no grief--
But Mosby--the time to think is brief.
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