During the second-battle of...
Illustration
During the second-battle of Bull Run, in August 1862, a Richmond reporter walked over the battlefield, stepping around the bodies which were scattered by the hundreds across the field. He later wrote:
"I was so shaken by the sight of so much death and desolation I could scarcely stand. I trembled as I viewed the utter destruction of man by man, and smelling the stench of powder and decay, I felt as if I were walking through the corridors of hell. I was sickened to the depths of my heart and I began to think of war as a great leprosy which man had brought upon himself. And then I noticed two bodies lying amidst an abundance of bright, yellow wildflowers. The soldiers were both just youngsters, lying as peaceful as in sleep, their hands touching, one in grey and the other in blue. I do not know their story, but for some reason I was reminded that as Elisha cured Naaman of leprosy and as Jesus cleansed those lepers who came to him, so God may someday, somehow, cleanse man of his inclination to bring destruction upon himself."
--Byrd
"I was so shaken by the sight of so much death and desolation I could scarcely stand. I trembled as I viewed the utter destruction of man by man, and smelling the stench of powder and decay, I felt as if I were walking through the corridors of hell. I was sickened to the depths of my heart and I began to think of war as a great leprosy which man had brought upon himself. And then I noticed two bodies lying amidst an abundance of bright, yellow wildflowers. The soldiers were both just youngsters, lying as peaceful as in sleep, their hands touching, one in grey and the other in blue. I do not know their story, but for some reason I was reminded that as Elisha cured Naaman of leprosy and as Jesus cleansed those lepers who came to him, so God may someday, somehow, cleanse man of his inclination to bring destruction upon himself."
--Byrd
