XXV
An Overruling Providence seemed to interpose its hand between Clara Barton and the perils of war and epidemic alike, for a high and splendid purpose. Pawtucket (R. I.)Times.
If Almighty God gives a man a cowardly pair of legs, how can help their running away with him?A. Lincoln.
Cowards die many times before their deathsThe valiant never taste of death but once.Shakespeare.
Cowards die many times before their deathsThe valiant never taste of death but once.Shakespeare.
Cowards die many times before their deathsThe valiant never taste of death but once.Shakespeare.
Cowards die many times before their deaths
The valiant never taste of death but once.
Shakespeare.
For others Clara Barton will be perfectly fearless.
Dr. L. N. Fowler(Phrenologist.)
Dr. L. N. Fowler(Phrenologist.)
Dr. L. N. Fowler(Phrenologist.)
Dr. L. N. Fowler(Phrenologist.)
I have no fear of the battlefield; I have large stores but no way to reach the troops.Clara Barton.
General Shafter used to say that he did not think Clara Barton knew the meaning of the word fear. Sharp words passed between the General and Miss Barton because she would not obey his orders to keep away from the “firing line,” out of the way of the fighting men and of the bullets. On one occasion he even threatened to order her out of Cuba, if she continually disobeyed his orders in this respect.
Sergeant Henry White, of the 21st Massachusetts Regiment, said that he had seen Clara Barton in positionsof danger where an old veteran would hardly dare venture. He had seen her passing among the wounded lying around on the ground, the battle raging in front of them. As she did so, she supplied the boys in turn with coffee, milk, and other food. Just to please the “boys” she accepted the Sergeant’s pistol which she carried several weeks.
Not only was she oblivious to the danger of the bullets on the battlefield but even more reckless as to her personal safety in the camp. She would go around among the army wagons, close to the heels of kicking mules, where any moment there might be a “stampede,” endangering her life. In a “stampede” of mules, she would be as helpless as in a shower of grape and cannister from the guns of the enemy.