Page 4
THE COMBAT.
Without a ripple stretched the plain; For months we had not seen a hill; The endless, hot savannah still Fatigued the eye with waving cane.
A jungly forest lay before, (The ambush of the wary foe); In front, a stagnant sluice with low, Reed-bordered, spongy, inky shore;
Along the right a mildewed swamp Where alligators slept or crawled, And pallid cypress-titans sprawled, And mosses drooped their funeral pomp;
While leftward crept a dull lagoon, As black as Charon's woful tide, With plains beyond it blistering wide Beneath the white-hot gleam of noon.
Gray, fitful spits of musketry Announced our skirmishers at work; We saw their darkling figures lurk In thickets, firing from the knee.
Our cannon searched the distant wood With humming, shrieking, cracking shell, When suddenly the mouth of hell Reclaimed its polyphemic food.