Scalding heat during
forenoon; heavy showers follow. Water is running through camp like a flood.
Prisoners reported missing, rations suspended; Rebels are making a stir on the
outside.
Finished
"Paradise Lost"; called on Harriman. He supplied us with Pollock's
"ourse of Time." We had read this, but it is now more acceptable. In
our view it is a work of more natural thought and imbibes less of the
unnatural. Milton has soulstirring passages, alive with truth, significant
expression and beautiful simplicity. Then he goes deeply into themes beyond
most conceptions; we don't wish to not, unless this is "Paradise
Lost." Confederacy when he said:
follow him, or
cannot, have Did he mean the Southern
"Devils with devils damned firm concord
hold."
Did he mean the North when he wrote:
"Men only disagree of creatures
rational,
Though under hope of heavenly grace"
how they should save the Union?
The following lines express a truth in human experience:
"God proclaiming peace,
Yet men live in hatred, enmity and strife
Among themselves, and levy cruel wars
Wasting the earth, each other to destroy,
As if man had not hellish foes enough
besides,
That day and night for his destruction
wait."
Milton seems to have
designed to impress the thought that man had hellish foes distinct from his
race, awaiting his destruction, which originated through rebellious war in
heaven. I think the causes of our troubles lie in our lack of knowledge and
misconception of our social relations, wicked ambition, foolish pride, and that
these lines better fit an earthly than a heavenly realm.
The usual monotony
except an unusual amount of firing by sentry. Prisoners arrive daily from both
our great armies. Men crowd near them to get news and hardtack; occasionally
old friends meet. About half the camp draw raw meal; we are of that half this
week; have the trouble of cooking it without salt or seasoning or wood, half
the time. We stir it in water, bake it on plates held over a splinter fire with
a stiff stick, or boil it into mush or dumplings, baking or boiling as long as
fuel lasts.
SOURCE: John Worrell
Northrop, Chronicles from the Diary of a War Prisoner in Andersonville
and Other Military Prisons of the South in 1864, p. 70-1
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