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    Chapter 78

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    RETURN TO FLORENCE AND A SHORT SOJOURN THERE--OFF TOWARDS WILMINGTON
    AGAIN--CRUISING A REBEL OFFICER'S LUNCH--SIGNS OF APPROACHING OUR LINES
    --TERROR OF OUR RASCALLY GUARDS--ENTRANCE INTO GOD'S COUNTRY AT LAST.

    But Kilpatrick, like Sherman, came not. Perhaps he knew that all the
    prisoners had been removed from the Stockade; perhaps he had other
    business of more importance on hand; probably his movement was only a
    feint. At all events it was definitely known the next day that he had
    withdrawn so far as to render it wholly unlikely that he intended
    attacking Florence, so we were brought back and returned to our old
    quarters. For a week or more we loitered about the now nearly-abandoned
    prison; skulked and crawled around the dismal mud-tents like the ghostly
    denizens of some Potter's Field, who, for some reason had been allowed to
    return to earth, and for awhile creep painfully around the little
    hillocks beneath which they had been entombed.

    A few score, whose vital powers were strained to the last degree of
    tension, gave up the ghost, and sank to dreamless rest. It mattered now
    little to these when Sherman came, or when Kilpatrick's guidons should
    flutter through the forest of sighing pines, heralds of life, happiness,
    and home--

    After life's fitful fever they slept well
    Treason had done its worst. Nor steel nor poison:
    Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing
    Could touch them farther.

    One day another order came for us to be loaded on the cars, and over to
    the railroad we went again in the same fashion as before. The
    comparatively few of us who were still able to walk at all well, loaded
    ourselves down with the bundles and blankets of our less fortunate
    companions, who hobbled and limped--many even crawling on their hands and
    knees--over the hard, frozen ground, by our sides.

    Those not able to crawl even, were taken in wagons, for the orders were
    imperative not to leave a living prisoner behind.

    At the railroad we found two trains awaiting us. On the front of each
    engine were two rude white flags, made by fastening the halves of meal
    sacks to short sticks. The sight of these gave us some hope, but our
    belief that Rebels were constitutional liars and deceivers was so firm

    and fixed, that we persuaded ourselves that the flags meant nothing more
    than some wilful delusion for us.

    Again we started off in the direction of Wilmington, and traversed the
    same country described in the previous chapter. Again Andrews and I
    found ourselves in the next box car to the passenger coach containing the
    Rebel officers. Again we cut a hole through the end, with our saw, and
    again found a darky servant sitting on the rear platform. Andrews went
    out and sat down alongside of him, and found
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