Via Bernhard
“Marse Robert is Asleep”
“The
thirtieth anniversary of Lee’s surrender (April 9, 1865) finds the
character of the vanquished General a model to which all may refer with
approval. “His modesty was his highest virtue,” said a learned critic.
Gen. Winfield Scott, commander of the United States armies, under whom
Lee served in Mexico, said, “He was the best soldier I ever saw in the
field.”
When
he surrendered the remnant of his army, which had been invincible so
many years, Gen. Meade, in conversation with him, asked how many men he
had at Petersburg, when his lines were broken, and Lee replied “Forty thousand.” Meade said, “I am amazed, and could not believe it were it
not you who said it.” [Grant’s strength was at least 110,000 men]
When
terms of capitulation were agreed upon, and the officer who had gone to
take an inventory of Lee’s army, reported to Gen. Grant, stating that
there were 8,000 men for duty, 120 cannon, etc., Grant refused to permit
the firing of any salute of victory. In every way he showed his
appreciation of the heroism and long persistence of Gen. Lee.
In
a tribute to his character, Rev. Dr. Henry M. Field, who was reared in
the Berkshire Hills of New England, a born abolitionist, but who
venerates the memory of his “Black Mammy” as do Southerners, visited
Lexington, Va., and concludes a tribute as follows:
“As
I took a last look at the recumbent statue, I observed that its base
bore no epitaph; no words of praise were carved upon the stone. Only
above it on the wall was the name “Robert Edward Lee,” with the two
dates, “Born January 19, 1807, Died October 12, 1870.”
That
is all, but it is enough, for any eulogy would but detract from the
spell of that single name: “One of the few, the immortal names, That
were not born to die.”
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