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Stark
Pilot
posted 11-14- 06:50 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Stark     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
He Lost a War and Won Immortality
by Louis Redmond

Even among the free, it is not always easy to live together. There came a time, less than a hundred years ago, when the people of this country disagreed so bitterly among themselves that some of them felt they could not go on living with the rest.

A test of arms was made to decide whether Americans should remain one nation or become two. The armies of those who believed in two nations were led by a man named Robert E. Lee.

What about Lee? What kind of man was he who nearly split the history of the United States down the middle and made two separate books of it?

They say you had to see him to believe that a man so fine could exist. He was handsome. He was clever. He was brave. He was gentle. He was generous and charming, noble and modst, admired and beloved. He had never failed at anything in his upright soldier's life. He was a born winner, this Robert E. Lee. Except for once. In the greatest contest of his life, in the war beween the South and the North, Robert E. Lee lost.

Now there were men who came with smouldering eyes to Lee and said: "Let's not accept this result as final. Let's keep our anger alive. Let's be grim and unconvinced, and wear our bitterness like a medal. You can be our leader in this."

But Lee shook his head at those men. "Abandon your animosities," he said, "and make your sons Americans."

And what did he do himself when his war was lost? He took a job as president of a tiny college, with forty students and four profes- sors, at a salary of $1500 a year. He had commanded thousands of young men in battle. Now he wanted to prepare a few hun- dred of them for the duties of peace. So the countrymen of Robert E. Lee saw how a born winner loses, and it seemed to them that in defeat he won his most lasting victory.

There is an art of losing, and Robert E. Lee is its finest teacher. In a democracy, where opposing viewpoints regularly meet for a test of ballots, it is good for all of us to know how to lose occasionally, how to yield peacefully, for the sake of freedom. Lee is our master in this. The man who fought against the Union showed us what unity means.

_________________________________________

The above was in reference to Robert. E. Lee, somehow it just struck me as appropriate with our current situation in reagrds to President. Somehow I cannot help but feel that if either candidate had the moral fiber that Lee showed at the end of the Civil War we would not be where we are right now.

-Stark

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Smokey
Pilot
posted 11-14- 07:30 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Smokey   Click Here to Email Smokey     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
It should be noted that Lee didn't really
believe in his own cause. He was a Union
officer before the war and resigned and went
with the south due to loyalty. He never
really believed that the south could win
the war.

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nealg
Pilot
posted 11-15- 01:36 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for nealg   Click Here to Email nealg     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
That is true, Smokey. But when asked by the CS government to take over command, he did so, and made his goal thus: to take the fight to the North and make it so costly that the citizens of the Northern States would force Lincoln into negotiating a settlement with Davis. This would have made the South seem the victor without actually having won; he was well aware that if the war continued, the South must lose, unless the 'promised' outside support came through. It didn't...yet, at Gettysburg, he nearly triumphed in spite of his beliefs. That was the victory he needed, and the results have been hashed and rehashed, there was so much heroism on both sides - he made a rash decision, became too dependent upon Stuart and felt the loss of Jackson too much...and accepted the fact that he, and he alone, was responsible for the defeat.

Well...glad this thread came up. Obviously, I am a admirer of General Lee, and the story Stark relates is so apropos of the current situation and so illustrative of what has made this country as great as it has been. We have been fortunate to have been led by great people, and supported by great people, and let's just hope that this whole fiasco is just another road rut and we will come out of it stronger and better - eventually.

------------------
nealg=FC=

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