OR's vol. 11,pg.616 THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN, YA. [CHAP. XXIII. Trimble's report
admirably adapted for artillery, and from which an incessant fire could be maintained~ against an advancing force over the heads of its own infantry, which was screened from harm by the abrupt declivity of the hill under which they had been posted; so that our men had the day before been exposed for over two hours to the combined fire of shot, shell, grape, and musketry, to which Yankee ingenuity had added a sort of repeating gun, called a telescopic cannon, discharging 60 balls per minute. Several of these were captured. The natural defenses of the position were strengthened by felling timber on the hill-side and in the marshy ground of the rivulet at its foot, to make tjio progress of an attacking force slow and longer held under fire