Did all the lets and bars appear To every just or larger end,
Whence should come the trust and cheer? Youth must its ignorant impulse lend —Age finds place in the rear. All wars are boyish, and are fought by boys,
The champions and enthusiasts of the state: Turbid adors and vain joys Not barrenly abate —Stimulants to the power mature, Preparatives of fate. Who here forecasteth the event?
What heart but spurns at
And warnings of the wise,
Contemned foreclosures of surprise?
The banners play, the bugles call,
The air is blue and prodigal. No berrying party, pleasure-wooed,
No picnic party in the May,
Ever went less loth than they Into that leafy neighborhood.
In Bacchic glee they file toward Fate,
Moloch's uninitiate;
Expectancy, and glad
Of battle's unknown mysteries,
All they feel is this: 'tis glory,
A rapture sharp, though transitory,
Yet lasting in belaureled story.
So they gayly go to fight,
Chanting left and laughing right.
But some who this blithe mood present, As on in lightsome files they fare,
Shall die experienced ere three days are spent — Perish, enlightened by the vollied glare;
Or shame survive, and, like to adamant, The throe of Second Manassas share.
The raw, untested Union troops that met the Confederate Army on the plains of Manassas July 21, 1861, were not prepared for the drubbing administered to them by their Southern counterparts.
So high was their confidence as they entered Virginia that many stopped along the way to pick berries and treated the march as a picnic outing.
Those who survived to fight again at Manassas the following summer counted First Manassas as the moment that began their conversion from green recruits to seasoned veterans.