It is warm and sultry. There are not so many sick and
wounded coming in as there were a few days ago. Quite a number, at their own
request, are being sent out to the front. When the convalescents are able for
duty, they can't stand it to remain here; the first thought is to get back into
the lines. Taking care of the sick is no light work, if one does his duty. The
worst is that there is so much sad, heart-rending work to do, ministering to
the dying, taking down their farewells to be sent to their homes; then after
death, we have to roll the bodies in their blankets and carry them to the “deadhouse,”
where other hands take charge and bury them without coffin or ceremony.
Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B.,
Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 212
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