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" It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they appeared about this time. If the enemy or their general had shown any enterprise, there is no saying what might have happened. General Lee and his officers were evidently fully impressed... "
Southern History of the War: The Third Year of the War - Page 25
by Edward Alfred Pollard - 1865 - 391 pages
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 94

Scotland - 1863 - 828 pages
...strongest admiration, and I never saw any man fail him except the man in the ditch. It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they...much less noise, fuss, or confusion of orders than at an ordinary fieldday : the men, as they were rallied in the wood, were brought up in detachments and...
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Three Months in the Southern States: April-June, 1863

Sir Arthur James Lyon Fremantle - History - 1863 - 366 pages
...strongest admiration, and I never saw any man fail him except the man in the ditch. It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they...much less noise, fuss, or confusion of orders than at an ordinary field-day : the men, as they were rallied in the wood, were brought up in detachments,...
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Littell's Living Age, Volume 79

Literature - 1863 - 652 pages
...fail him except the man in the ditch. It is difficult tu exaggerate the critical state of affairs аз they appeared about this time. If the enemy or their...is no saying what might have happened. General Lee find his officers were evidently fully impressed with a sense of the situation ; yet there was much...
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The Rebellion Record: A Diary of American Events, with Documents ..., Volume 7

Frank Moore - United States - 1865 - 834 pages
...Longstreet had been finally repulsed by our left, on Friday afternoon, July third, he says: "It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs, as they appeared about this time. If tlie enemy or his general had shown any enterprise, there is I no saying what might have happened....
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Southern Generals: Who They Are, and what They Have Done

William Parker Snow - Confederate States of America - 1865 - 924 pages
...strongest admiration, and I never saw any man fail him, except the man in the ditch." It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they appeared about this time. General Lee and his officers were fully impressed with a sense of the situation ; yet there was much...
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Campaigns of the Army of the Potomac: A Critical History of Operations in ...

William Swinton - History - 1866 - 702 pages
...the British service. Referring to the sitnation after Pickctt's repulse, he says: "It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they...evidently fully impressed with a sense of the situation." But the sequel seems to belie this ; for he immediately remarks : " Yet there was much less noise,...
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The Lost Cause: A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates ...

Edward Alfred Pollard - Confederate States of America - 1866 - 758 pages
...recovery. An English colonel, who rode by the side of the great Confederate commander, remarks : " Gen. Lee and his officers were evidently fully impressed...fuss, or confusion of orders, than at any ordinary field-day ; the men, as they were rallied in the wood, were brought up in detachments, and lay down...
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Southern Generals: Their Lives and Campaigns

William Parker Snow - Confederate States of America - 1866 - 576 pages
...strongest admiration, and I never saw any man fail him, except the man in the ditch." It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs as they appeared about this time. General Lee and his officers were fully impressed with a sense of the situation ; yet there was much...
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The Grayjackets: and how They Lived, Fought and Died, for Dixie: With ...

Confederate - Confederate States of America - 1867 - 596 pages
...fail him except the man in the ditch. It is difficult to exaggerate the critical state of affairs tid they appeared about this time. If the enemy or their...less noise, fuss, or confusion of orders, than at an ordinary field-day. The men, as they were rallied in the wood, were brought up in detachments, and...
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The Lost Cause: A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates ...

Edward Alfred Pollard - Confederate States of America - 1867 - 776 pages
...recovery. An English colonel, who rode by the side of the great Confederate commander, remarks : " Gen. Lee and his officers were evidently fully impressed...fuss, or confusion of orders, than at any ordinary field-day ; the men, as they were rallied in the wood, were brought up in detachments, and lay down...
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