Stephen Vincent Benet

Here you will find the Long Poem Army Of Northern Virginia of poet Stephen Vincent Benet

Army Of Northern Virginia

Army of Northern Virginia, army of legend,
Who were your captains that you could trust them so surely? 
Who were your battle-flags?
Call the shapes from the mist, 
Call the dead men out of the mist and watch them ride. 
Tall the first rider, tall with a laughing mouth, 
His long black beard is combed like a beauty's hair, 
His slouch hat plumed with a curled black ostrich-feather,
He wears gold spurs and sits his horse with the seat 
Of a horseman born.
It is Stuart of Laurel Hill, 
'Beauty' Stuart, the genius of cavalry,
Reckless, merry, religious, theatrical, 
Lover of gesture, lover of panache, 
With all the actor's grace and the quick, light charm 
That makes the women adore him-a wild cavalier
Who worships as sober a God as Stonewall Jackson,
A Rupert who seldom drinks, very often prays,
Loves his children, singing, fighting spurs, and his wife. 
Sweeney his banjo-player follows him.
And after them troop the young Virginia counties,
Horses and men, Botetort, Halifax, 
Dinwiddie, Prince Edward, Cumberland, Nottoway,
Mecklenburg, Berkeley, Augusta, the Marylanders,
The horsemen never matched till Sheridan came.
Now the phantom guns creak by. They are Pelham's guns. 
That quiet boy with the veteran mouth is Pelham.
He is twenty-two. He is to fight sixty battles 
And never lose a gun.
The cannon roll past,
The endless lines of the infantry begin.
A. P. Hill leads the van. He is small and spare,
His short, clipped beard is red as his battleshirt,
Jackson and Lee are to call him in their death-hours.
Dutch Longstreet follows, slow, pugnacious and stubborn,
Hard to beat and just as hard to convince,
Fine corps commander, good bulldog for holding on,
But dangerous when he tries to think for himself,
He thinks for himself too much at Gettysburg,
But before and after he grips with tenacious jaws.
There is D. H. Hill-there is Early and Fitzhugh Lee-
Yellow-haired Hood with his wounds and his empty sleeve,
Leading his Texans, a Viking shape of a man, 
With the thrust and lack of craft of a berserk sword,
All lion, none of the fox.
When he supersedes 
Joe Johnston, he is lost, and his army with him,
But he could lead forlorn hopes with the ghost of Ney. 
His bigboned Texans follow him into the mist. 
Who follows them?
These are the Virginia faces, 
The Virginia speech. It is Jackson's footcavalry,
The Army of the Valley, 
It is the Stonewall Brigade, it is the streams 
Of the Shenandoah, marching.
Ewell goes by,
The little woodpecker, bald and quaint of speech
With his wooden leg stuck stiffly out from his saddle,
He is muttering, 'Sir, I'm a nervous Major-General,
And whenever an aide rides up from General Jackson
I fully expect an order to storm the North Pole.'
He chuckles and passes, full of crotchets and courage,
Living on frumenty for imagined dyspepsia, 
And ready to storm the North Pole at a Jackson phrase.
Then the staff-then little Sorrel-and the plain 
Presbyterian figure in the flat cap, 
Throwing his left hand out in the awkward gesture
That caught the bullet out of the air at Bull Run,
Awkward, rugged and dour, the belated Ironside 
With the curious, brilliant streak of the cavalier
That made him quote Mercutio in staff instructions,
Love lancet windows, the color of passion-flowers,
Mexican sun and all fierce, tautlooking fine creatures;
Stonewall Jackson, wrapped in his beard and his silence,
Cromwell-eyed and ready with Cromwell's short
Bleak remedy for doubters and fools and enemies,
Hard on his followers, harder on his foes, 
An iron sabre vowed to an iron Lord, 
And yet the only man of those men who pass 
With a strange, secretive grain of harsh poetry 
Hidden so deep in the stony sides of his heart 
That it shines by flashes only and then is gone.
It glitters in his last words.
He is deeply ambitious,
The skilled man, utterly sure of his own skill 
And taking no nonsense about it from the unskilled,
But God is the giver of victory and defeat, 
And Lee, on earth, vicegerent under the Lord. 
Sometimes he differs about the mortal plans 
But once the order is given, it is obeyed. 
We know what he thought about God. One would like to know 
What he thought of the two together, if he so mingled them. 
He said two things about Lee it is well to recall.
When he first beheld the man that he served so well,
'I have never seen such a fine-looking human creature.'
Then, afterwards, at the height of his own fame,
The skilled man talking of skill, and something more.
'General Lee is a phenomenon, 
He is the only man I would follow blindfold.'
Think of those two remarks and the man who made them
When you picture Lee as the rigid image in marble.
No man ever knew his own skill better than Jackson
Or was more r