Fifty Hours Left Wounded on the Field.
— Here is a case of a soldier I found among the
crowded cots in the Patent Office. He likes to have some one to talk to, and we will listen to him.
He got badly hit in his leg and side at Fredericksburgh that eventful Saturday, 13th of December.
He lay the succeeding two days and nights helpless on the field, between the city and those grim
terraces of batteries; his company and regiment had been compell'd to leave him to his fate. To
make matters worse, it happen'd he lay with his head slightly down hill, and could not help
himself. At the end of some fifty hours he was brought off, with other wounded, under a flag of
truce........I ask him how the rebels treated him as he lay during those two days and nights within
reach of them — whether they came to him — whether they abused him? He answers that several of
the rebels, soldiers and others, came to him, at one time and another.
A couple of them, who were together, spoke roughly and sarcastically, but nothing worse. One
middle-aged man, however, who seem'd to be moving around the field, among the dead and
wounded, for benevolent purposes, came to him in a way he will never forget; treated our soldier
kindly, bound up his wounds, cheer'd him, gave him a couple of biscuits, and a drink of whiskey
and water; ask'd him if he could eat some beef. This good Secesh, however, did not change our
soldier's position, for it might have caused the blood to burst from the wounds, clotted and
stagnated. Our soldier is from Pennsylvania; has had a pretty severe time; the wounds proved to
be bad ones. But he retains a good heart, and is at present on the gain......... (It is not uncommon
for the men to remain on the field this way, one, two, or even four or five days.)