[W. T. Sherman P. H. Sheridan Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals by U. S. Grant]@TWC D-Link bookW. T. Sherman P. H. Sheridan Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals CHAPTER XVII 17/24
Before the car I was in had started, a dapper little fellow--he would be called a dude at this day -- stepped in.
He was in a great state of excitement and used adjectives freely to express his contempt for the Union and for those who had just perpetrated such an outrage upon the rights of a free people.
There was only one other passenger in the car besides myself when this young man entered.
He evidently expected to find nothing but sympathy when he got away from the "mud sills" engaged in compelling a "free people" to pull down a flag they adored.
He turned to me saying: "Things have come to a -- -- pretty pass when a free people can't choose their own flag. Where I came from if a man dares to say a word in favor of the Union we hang him to a limb of the first tree we come to." I replied that "after all we were not so intolerant in St.Louis as we might be; I had not seen a single rebel hung yet, nor heard of one; there were plenty of them who ought to be, however." The young man subsided.
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