XI

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XI

The Seventh Marches

Far away,

One foggy morning in the midst of May,

Fort Lincoln had beheld the marshalling

Of Terry’s forces; heard the bugle sing,

The blaring of the band, the brave hurrah

Of Custer’s men recalling Washita

And confident of yet another soon.

How gallantly in column of platoon

(So many doomed and given to the ghost)

Before the weeping women of the post

They sat their dancing horses on parade!

What made the silence suddenly afraid

When, with a brazen crash, the band went whist

And, dimmer in the clinging river mist,

The line swung westward? Did the Ree squaws know,

Through some wise terror of the ancient foe,

To what unearthly land their warriors led

The squadrons? Better suited to the dead

Than to the quick, their chanting of farewell

Grew eerie in the shadow, rose and fell⁠—

The long-drawn yammer of a lonely dog.

But when at length the sun broke through the fog,

What reassurance in the wide blue air,

The solid hills, and Custer riding there

With all the famous Seventh at his heel!

And back of those the glint of flowing steel

Above the dusty infantry; the sun’s

Young glimmer on the trundled Gatling guns;

And then the mounted Rees; and after that

The loaded pack mules straggling up the flat

And wagons crowding wagons for a mile!

What premonition of the afterwhile

Could darken eyes that saw such glory pass

When, lilting in a muffled blare of brass

Off yonder near the sundering prairie rim,

“The Girl I Left Behind Me” floated dim

As from the unrecoverable years?

And was it nothing but a freak of tears,

The vision that the grieving women saw?

For suddenly a shimmering veil of awe

Caught up the van. One could have counted ten

While Custer and the half of Custer’s men

Were riding up a shining steep of sky

As though to join the dead that do not die

But haunt some storied heaven of the bold.

And then it seemed a smoke of battle rolled

Across the picture, leaving empty air

Above the line that slowly shortened there

And dropped below the prairie and was gone.

Now day by day the column straggled on

While moody May was dribbling out in rain

To make a wagon-wallow of the plain

Between the Muddy and the upper Heart.

Where lifeless hills, as by demonic art,

Were hewn to forms of wonderment and fear,

Excited echoes flocked about to hear,

And any sound brought riotous applause,

So long among the scarps and tangled draws

Had clung that silence and the spell of it.

Some fiend-deserted city of the Pit

The region seemed, with crumbling domes and spires;

For still it smoked with reminiscent fires,

And in the midst, as ’twere the stream of woe,

A dark flood ran.

June blustered in with snow,

And all the seasons happened in a week.

Beyond the Beaver and O’Fallon creek

They toiled. Amid the wilderness of breaks

The drainage of the lower Powder makes,

They found a way and brought the wagons through;

Nor had they sight or sign of any Sioux

In all that land. Here Reno headed south

With packs and half the troopers for the mouth

Of Mispah, thence to scout the country west

About the Tongue; while Terry and the rest

Pushed onward to the Yellowstone to bide

With Gibbon’s men the news of Reno’s ride.

Mid June drew on. Slow days of waiting bred

Unhappy rumors. Everybody said

What no one, closely questioned, seemed to know.

Enormous numerations of the foe,

By tentative narration made exact

And tagged with all the circumstance of fact,

Discredited the neat official tale.

’Twas well when dawn came burning down the vale

And river fogs were lifting like a smoke

And bugles, singing reveille, awoke

A thousand-throated clamor in the herd.

But when the hush was like a warning word

And taps had yielded darkness to the owl,

A horse’s whinny or a kiote’s howl

Made true the wildest rumors of the noon.

So passed the fateful seventeenth of June

When none might guess how much the gossip lacked

To match the unimaginative fact

Of what the upper Rosebud saw that day:

How Crook, with Reno forty miles away,

Had met the hordes of Crazy Horse and Gall,

And all the draws belched cavalries, and all

The ridges bellowed and the river fen

Went dizzy with the press of mounted men⁠—

A slant cyclonic tangle; how the dark

Came not a whit too early, and the lark

Beheld the Gray Fox slinking back amazed

To Goose Creek; what a dust the victors raised

When through the Cherish Hills by many a pass

They crowded down upon the Greasy Grass

To swell the hostile thousands waiting there.

Alas, how wide they made for Yellow Hair

That highway leading to the shining Past!

Now came the end of waiting, for at last

The scouring squadrons, jogging from the south,

Had joined their comrades at the Rosebud’s mouth

With doubtful news. That evening by the fires,

According to their dreads or their desires,

The men discussed the story that was told

About a trail, not over three weeks old,

That led across the country from the Tongue,

Struck up the Rosebud forty miles and swung

Again to westward over the divide.

Some said, “We’ll find blue sky the other side,

Then back to Lincoln soon!” But more agreed

’Twould not be so with Custer in the lead.

“He’ll eat his horses when the hardtack’s gone

Till every man’s afoot!” And thereupon

Scarred veterans remembered other days

With Custer⁠—thirsty marches in the blaze

Of Texas suns, with stringy mule to chew;

And times when splinters of the North Pole blew

Across the lofty Colorado plains;

And muddy going in the sullen rains

Of Kansas springs, when verily you felt

Your backbone rub the buckle of your belt

Because there weren’t any mules to spare.

Aye, there were tales to make the rookies stare

Of Custer’s daring and of Custer’s luck.

And some recalled that night before they struck

Black Kettle’s village. Whew! And what a night!

A foot of snow, and not a pipe alight,

And not a fire! You didn’t dare to doze,

But kept your fingers on your horse’s nose

For fear he’d nicker and the chance be lost.

And all night long there, starry in the frost,

You’d see the steaming Colonel striding by.

And when the first light broke along the sky,

Yet not enough to make a saber shine,

You should have seen him gallop down the line

With hair astream! It warmed your blood to see

The way he clapped his hat beneath his knee

And yelled “Come on!” “Go ask him if we came!”

And so they conjured with a magic name;

But, wakeful in the darkness after taps,

How many saddened, conscious of the lapse

Of man-denying time!

The last owl ceased.

A pewee sensed the changing of the east

And fluted shyly, doubtful of the news.

A wolf, returning from an all-night cruise

Among the rabbits, topped a staring rim

And vanished. Now the cooks were stirring dim,

Waist-deep in woodsmoke crawling through the damp.

The shadow lifted from the snoring camp.

The bugle sang. The horses cried ha! ha!

The mule herd raised a woeful fanfara

To swell the music, singing out of tune.

Up came the sun.

The Seventh marched at noon,

Six hundred strong. By fours and troop by troop,

With packs between, they passed the Colonel’s group

By Terry’s tent; the Rickarees and Crows

Astride their shaggy paints and calicoes;

The regimental banner and the grays;

And after them the sorrels and the bays,

The whites, the browns, the piebalds and the blacks.

One flesh they seemed with those upon their backs,

Whose weathered faces, like and fit for bronze,

Some gleam of unforgotten battle-dawns

Made bright and hard. The music of their going,

How good to hear!⁠—though mournful beyond knowing;

The low-toned chanting of the Crows and Rees,

The guidons whipping in a stiff south breeze

Prophetical of thunder-brewing weather,

The chiming spurs and bits and crooning leather,

The shoe calks clinking on the scattered stone,

And, fusing all, the rolling undertone

Of hoofs by hundreds rhythmically blent⁠—

The diapason of an instrument

Strung taut for battle music.

So they passed.

And Custer, waking from a dream at last

With still some glory of it in his eyes,

Shook hands around and said his last goodbyes

And swung a leg across his dancing bay

That champed the snaffle, keen to be away

Where all the others were. Then Gibbon spoke,

Jocosely, but with something in the joke

Of its own pleasantry incredulous:

“Now don’t be greedy, Custer! Wait for us!”

And Custer laughed and gave the bay his head.

“I won’t!” he cried. Perplexed at what he said,

They watched the glad bay smoking up the draw

And heard the lusty welcoming hurrah

That swept along the column. When it died,

The melancholy pack mules prophesied

And ghost-mules answered.