Chapter 4

RICHMOND ON THE JAMES.

BY G. T. BURGESS.

FROM THE SOUTH TO THE NORTH.

BY C. L. S.

A BALLAD OF THE WAR.

BY GEORGE HERBERT SASS, OF S. C.

LAND OF THE SOUTH.

BY A. F. LEONARD.

Air—“Friend of my Soul.”

THERE’S LIFE IN THE OLD LAND YET!

BY JAS. R. RANDALL.

THE MEN.

BY MAURICE BELL.

THE CONFEDERATE FLAG.

BY J. R. BARRICK.

“STONEWALL JACKSON’S WAY.”

GONE TO THE BATTLE-FIELD.

BY JOHN ANTROBUR.

RE-ENLISTMENT.

BY MRS. MARGARITA J. CANEDO.

SOUTHLAND.

THE PRIZE SONG.[13]

BEYOND THE POTOMAC.

BY PAUL H. HAYNE.[14]

TRUE TO THE GRAY.

BY PEARL RIVERS.

TELL THE BOYS THE WAR IS ENDED.

BY EMILY J. MOORE.

While in the first ward of the Quintard Hospital, Rome, Georgia, a young soldier, from the Eighth Arkansas Regiment, who had been wounded at Murfreesboro’, called me to his bedside. As I approached I saw that he was dying, and when I bent over him he was just able to whisper, “Tell the boys the war is ended.”

BURN THE COTTON.

BY ESTELLE.

THE PRINTERS OF VIRGINIA TO “OLD ABE.”

BY HARRY C. TREAKLE.

THE MARSEILLES HYMN.

Translated and adapted as an ode,

BY B. F. PORTER, OF ALABAMA.

MONODY ON THE DEATH OF GENERAL STONEWALL JACKSON.

BY THE EXILE.

THE CONFEDERATE FLAG.

BY MRS. C. D. ELDER.

THE SOUTH.

BY CHARLIE WILDWOOD.

THE GIRLS OF THE MONUMENTAL CITY.

WRITTEN BY A CONFEDERATE PRISONER.

WAR SONG OF THE PARTISAN RANGERS.

BY BENJAMIN F. PORTER.

Air—McGregor’s Gathering.


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