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532

LESSONS OF THE WAR.

nalist, at Mill Spring; Stonewall Jackson, Lee's right arm, at Chancellorsville; Polk, priest and warrior, at Lost Mountain; Armistead, wavering between two allegiances and fighting alternately for each, and Barksdale and Garnett- all at Gettysburg; Hill at Petersburg; and the dashing Stuart, and Daniel, and Perrin, and Dearing, and Doles, and numberless others. The sudden hush and sense of awe that impresses a child when he steps upon a single grave, may well overcome the strongest man when he looks upon the face of his country scarred with battle-fields like these, and considers what blood of manhood was rudely wasted there. And the slain were mostly young, unmarried men, whose native virtues fill no living veins, and will not shine again on any field.

It is poor business measuring the mouldered ramparts and counting the silent guns, marking the deserted battle-fields and decorating the grassy graves, unless we can learn from it all some nobler lesson than to destroy. Men write of this as of other wars as if the only thing necessary to be impressed upon the rising generation were the virtue of physical courage and contempt of death. It seems to me that is the last thing that we need to teach; for since the days of John Smith in Virginia and the men of the "Mayflower" in Massachusetts, no generation of Americans has shown any lack of it. From Louisburg to Petersburg a hundred and twenty years, the full span of four generations they have stood to their guns and been shot down in greater comparative numbers

LESSONS OF THE WAR.

533

than any other race on earth. In the War of Secession there was not a State, not a county, probably not a town, between the great lakes and the Gulf, that was not represented on fields where all that men could do with powder and steel was done, and valor was exhibited at its highest pitch. It was a common saying in the Army of the Potomac that courage was the cheapest thing there; and it might have been said of all the other armies as well. There is not the slightest necessity for lauding American bravery or impressing it upon American youth. But there is the gravest necessity for teaching them respect for law, and reverence for human life, and regard for the rights of their fellow-men, and all that is significant in the history of our country- lest their feet run to evil and they make haste to shed innocent blood. I would be glad to convince my compatriots that it is not enough to think they are right, but they are bound to know they are right, before they rush into any experiments that are to cost the lives of men and the tears of orphans, in their own land or in any other. I would warn them to beware of provincial conceit. I would have them comprehend that one may fight bravely, and still be a perjured felon; that one may die humbly, and still be a patriot whom his country cannot afford to lose; that as might does not make right, so neither do rags and bare feet necessarily argue a noble cause. I would teach them that it is criminal either to hide the truth or to refuse assent to that which they see must follow logically from ascertained.

534

LESSONS OF THE WAR.

truth. I would show them that a political lie is as despicable as a personal lie, whether uttered in an editorial, or a platform, or a president's message, or a colored cartoon, or a disingenuous ballot; and that political chicanery, when long persisted in, is liable to settle its shameful account in a stoppage of civilization and a spilling of life. These are simple lessons, yet they are not taught in a day, and some whom we call educated go through life without mastering them at all.

It may be useful to learn from one war how to conduct another; but it is infinitely better to learn how to avert another. I am doubly anxious to impress this consideration upon my readers, because history seems to show us that armed conflicts have a tendency to come in pairs, with an interval of a few years, and because I think I see, in certain circumstances now existing within our beloved Republic, the elements of a second civil war. No American citizen should lightly repeat that the result is worth all it cost, unless he has considered how heavy was the cost, and is doing his utmost to perpetuate the result. To strive to forget the great war, for the sake of sentimental politics, is to cast away our dearest experience and invite, in some troubled future, the destruction we so hardly escaped in the past. There can be remembrance without animosity, but there can not be oblivion without peril.

INDEX.

Acton, Thomas C., in the New

York riots, 300
Adams, Charles Francis, U. S.
minister at London, 404
Adams, John Quincy, action on
mutilated census, 13; quoted
on the slavery question, 206
Adams, Nehemiah, on slavery, 12
Alabama secedes, 36

Alabama, the, her career, 400-
403; Sec. Seward's argument
concerning, 407

Albemarle, the, iron-clad ram, de-
stroyed, 442

Aldie, cavalry fight at, 252
Allatoona, defence of, 491
Allen's Farm, action at, 166
American party, the, 21

Anderson, Galusha, service in
Missouri, 77

Anderson, Gen. G. T., wounded,
267

Anderson, Gen. Robert, at Forts
Moultrie and Sumter, 38-40;
commands in Kentucky, 80
Anderson, Gen. R. H., his night
march, 378

Andersonville prison, 343-346;
the keeper executed, 525
Andrew, Gov. John A,, 521
Anthony, Col. Daniel R., refuses

to return slaves, 211
Antietam campaign, the, 185, et
seq.; battle of the, 194, et seq.
Anti-slavery work, 6, et seq.
Appomattox Court House, sur-
render at, 518

Arbitration, international, 412
Archer, Gen., at Gettysburg, 256
Arkansas, secession of, 46
Arkansas, the, iron-clad ram, de-
stroyed, 272

Arkansas Post, capture of, 277
Arlington Heights, occupied, 55
Armistead, Gen. Lewis A., killed,
266

Asboth, Gen. A. S., at Pea Ridge,
108

Atlanta campaign, the, 418-437;

battles around the city, 433,
434; fall of, 437; inhabitants
sent away, 488; shops and
depots destroyed, 493

Atlanta, the, iron-clad, captured,
311, 312

Augur, Gen. C. C., in defence of
Washington, 453

Averell, Gen. William W., at
Winchester, 454; at the Ope-
quan, 462

Averysboro, battle of, 509

Bailey,

Lieut-Col. Joseph, his

Red River dam, 417

Bailey, Capt. Theodorus, at New
Orleans, 120, 123

Baker, Col. Edward D., men-
tioned, 530

Baldwin, Judge, quoted, 334
Baltimore, riot in, 53
Banking system, national, 485
Banks, Gen. N. P., 173; attacks
Jackson at Cedar Mountain,
176; receives the surrender of
Port Hudson, 288; his Shreve-
port expedition, 415-418
Barksdale, Gen. Wm., killed, 269
Barlow, Arabella G., hospital
services, 361

Barlow, C. J., quoted, 339
Barlow, Gen. Francis C., 361; at
Spottsylvania, 380; at the To-
topotomoy, 393; at Cold Har-
bor, 395

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Barnes, Gen. James, wounded,
267

Barron, Samuel, at Hatteras, 93
Barry, Major Wm. F., at Bull
Run, 66

Barton, Clara, hospital services,
361

Bartow, Col., killed, 68
Bastiles, talk of, 292
Baxter, Gen. Henry, at Gettys-

burg, 258; wounded, 375
Beauregard, Gen.G. T., bombards
Fort Sumter, 39, 40; in com-
mand at Manassas Junction, 59;
at Shiloh, 135, et seq.; suc-
ceeded by Bragg, 230; calls for
execution of prisoners and pro-
clamation of the black flag,
239; in command at Charles-
ton, 308, et seq.; in defence of
Petersburg, 443, et seq.

Beaver Dam Creek, action at, 163
Bee, Gen. Bernard E., at Bull
Run, 64; killed, 65
Beecher, Henry Ward, addresses
in England, 88

Bell, John, nominated for Presi-

dent, 35

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Blenker, Gen. Louis, 152
Blockade, the, 90
Blockade-runners, 308
Bloodhounds, used for tracking
prisoners, 346; killed by Sher-
man's men, 497

Blount's Farm, action at, 320
Bonds, issue of, 483 et seq.
Booneville, Mo., action at, 76
Booth, Major L. F., killed, 340
Botanist, imprisonment of a, 13
Bowling Green, Ky., occupied by
national forces, 102

Bradford, Major W. F., murdered,
341

Bradley, Amy, hospital services,
361

Bragg, Gen. Braxton, at Shiloh,
135; takes command in the
west, 230; at Stone River, 235;
in Chickamauga campaign, 323
-329; defeated by Grant, 331-
333; superseded, 333

Brandy Station, cavalry engage-
ment at, 250

Breckinridge, Gen. John C., nomi-

nated for President, 35; enters
the Confederate service, 80; at
Stone River, 237; attacks Baton
Rouge, 271

Breckinridge, Robert J., opposes
secession, 79

Bright, John, friendly to the
United States, 88

Bristoe Station, action at, 179
Brooke, Gen. John R., wounded,
267, 396

Brough, John, elected Governor
of Ohio, 306

Brown, B. Gratz, service in Mis-
souri, 77

Brown, John, his raid, 15
Brown, Gov. Joseph E., at odds
with Jefferson Davis, 489
Brownlow, William G., on slavery,
12; opposes secession, 83
Buchanan, Capt. Franklin, com-
mands the Merrimac,
wounded at Mobile, 441
Buchanan, James, vetoes
Homestead bill, 18; elected
President, 24; his paradox, 38;
comes out for the Union, 51

128;

the

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