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    Chapter 77

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    FRUITLESS WAITING FOR SHERMAN--WE LEAVE FLORENCE--INTELLIGENCE OF THE
    FALL OF WILMINGTON COMMUNICATED TO US BY A SLAVE--THE TURPENTINE REGION
    OF NORTH CAROLINA--WE COME UPON A REBEL LINE OF BATTLE--YANKEES AT BOTH
    ENDS OF THE ROAD.

    Things had gone on in the way described in the previous chapter until
    past the middle of February. For more than a week every waking hour was
    spent in anxious expectancy of Sherman--listening for the far-off rattle
    of his guns--straining our ears to catch the sullen boom of his
    artillery--scanning the distant woods to see the Rebels falling back in
    hopeless confusion before the pursuit of his dashing advance. Though we
    became as impatient as those ancient sentinels who for ten long years
    stood upon the Grecian hills to catch the first glimpse of the flames of
    burning Troy, Sherman came not. We afterwards learned that two
    expeditions were sent down towards us from Cheraw, but they met with
    unexpected resistance, and were turned back.

    It was now plain to us that the Confederacy was tottering to its fall,
    and we were only troubled by occasional misgivings that we might in some
    way be caught and crushed under the toppling ruins. It did not seem
    possible that with the cruel tenacity with which the Rebels had clung to
    us they would be willing to let us go free at last, but would be tempted
    in the rage of their final defeat to commit some unparalleled atrocity
    upon us.

    One day all of us who were able to walk were made to fall in and march
    over to the railroad, where we were loaded into boxcars. The sick
    --except those who were manifestly dying--were loaded into wagons and
    hauled over. The dying were left to their fate, without any companions
    or nurses.

    The train started off in a northeasterly direction, and as we went
    through Florence the skies were crimson with great fires, burning in all
    directions. We were told these were cotton and military stores being
    destroyed in anticipation of a visit from, a part of Sherman's forces.

    When morning came we were still running in the same direction that we
    started. In the confusion of loading us upon the cars the previous
    evening, I had been allowed to approach too near a Rebel officer's stock

    of rations, and the result was his being the loser and myself the gainer
    of a canteen filled with fairly good molasses. Andrews and I had some
    corn bread, and we, breakfasted sumptuously upon it and the molasses,
    which was certainly none-the-less sweet from having been stolen.

    Our meal over, we began reconnoitering, as much for employment as
    anything else. We were in the front end of a box car. With a saw made
    on the back of a case-knife we cut a hole through the boards big enough
    to permit us to pass out, and perhaps escape.
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