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A bate the edge of traitors, gracious Lord, That would reduce these I jloody days again, And make poor Enghmd weep in streams of blood IL et them not live to taste this lands increase. That would with treason wound this fair lands peace! Now civil wounds are stopp d, peace lives again; That she may long live here, God say A men !K ing Richard III. ORGANIZATION. Very soon after the outbreak of tlie war for the Union, immediately, in fact, upon the commencement of actual operations in the field, it became painfully apparent that, however inferior the rank and file of the Confederate armies were in point of education and general intelligence to the men who composed the armies of the Union, however imperfect and rude their equipment and material, man for man they were the superiors of their northern antagonists in the use of arms. Recruited mainly from the rural districts (for the South had but few large cities from which to draw its fighting strength), their armies were composed mainly of men who had been trained to the skillful use of the rifle in that most perfect school, the field and forest, in the pursuit of the game so abundant in those sparsely settled districts.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don’t occur in the book.)

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