The Army of the Cumberland
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第46章

But if the plan was not at fault, what was? Rosecrans started from Nashville for an offensive campaign, and before his plan of battle had met the test, he was compelled to abandon it, and assume the defensive.Where was the fault and who was to blame? The fault was McCook's defective line, and in part Rosecrans was responsible for it.He ought never to have trusted the formation of a line of battle so important to the safety of his whole army to McCook alone, and he certainly knew this.Rosecrans gave his personal attention to the left, but he should at least have ordered the change his quick eye had detected as necessary in McCook's line, and not trusted to chance and McCook's ability to withstand the attack with his faulty line.No one who saw him at Stone's River the 31st of December will say aught against the personal bravery and courage of McCook under fire.All that he could do to aid in repairing the great disaster of that day he did to the best of his ability.He stayed with Davis's division under fire as long as it held together, and then gave personal directions to Sheridan's troops, in the gallant fight they made against overwhelming odds.

As Rosecrans himself says in his official report of McCook, "a tried, faithful, and loyal soldier, who bravely breasted the battle at Shiloh and Perryville, and as bravely on the bloody field of Stone's River." But there is something more than mere physical bravery required in a general officer in command of as large a body of troops as a corps d'armee.As an instructor at West Point, McCook maintained a high rank.As a brigade and division commander under Buell, there was none his superior in the care and attention he gave his troops on the march, in camp, or on the drill-ground.

His division at Shiloh as it marched to the front on the second day did him full credit, and in his handling of it on that field he did credit to it and to himself.What McCook lacked was the ability to handle large bodies of troops independently of a superior officer to give him commands.This was his experience at Perryville, and it was repeated at Stone's River.With the known results of Perryville, McCook ought never to have been placed in command of the "right wing." Rosecrans at Stone's River, of necessity was on the left, and being there he should have had a general in command of the right with greater military capacity than McCook.Rosecrans's confidence was so slight in his commander of the left that he felt his own presence was needed there in the movement of the troops in that part of the plan of battle.

Rosecrans in his report repeatedly speaks of "the faulty line of McCook's formation on the right." But he knew this on the 30th, and told McCook that it was improperly placed.McCook did not think so.Rosecrans told him that it faced too much to the east and not enough to the south, that it was too weak and long, and was liable to be flanked.Knowing all this and knowing McCook's pride of opinion, for McCook told him he "did not see how he could make a better line," or a "better disposition of my troops," it was the plain duty of Rosecrans to reform the line, to conform to what it should be in his judgment.The order to McCook to build camp fires for a mile beyond his right was another factor that brought about the combination that broke the line on the right.

Rosecrans was correct in his conception of this, in order to mislead Bragg and cause him to strengthen his left at the expense of his right.Had Bragg awaited Rosecrans's attack, this building of fires was correct--if it took troops away from the right to reinforce the left; but this it did not do.Bragg moved McCown and Cleburne's divisions from his right to his left on Tuesday, but after this Bragg brought none of his forces across the river until Wednesday afternoon.The building of the fires caused Bragg to prolong his lines, lengthening them to the extent that before Hardee struck Kirk's and Willich's brigades, he thought our line extended a division front to their right.Finding this not to be the case, he whirled his left with all the force of double numbers on to the right of McCook.The rebels then swinging around found themselves in the rear of Johnson's division before they struck any troops on their front.Of course it is mere guess-work to say just what the outcome might have been of any other formation of the line, but it is safe to say that had the left instead of the centre of Hardee struck the right of McCook, there would have been a better chance for the troops on the extreme right of his line to have shown the spirit that was in them, before they were overpowered by mere superiority of numbers.