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<h2> CHARLES RUSSELL LOWELL </h2>
<p>Wut's wurds to them whose faith an' truth<br/>
On war's red techstone rang true metal,<br/>
Who ventered life an' love an, youth<br/>
For the gret prize o' death in battle?<br/>
<br/>
To him who, deadly hurt, agen<br/>
Flashed on afore the charge's thunder,<br/>
Tippin' with fire the bolt of men<br/>
Thet rived the rebel line asunder?<br/>
—Lowell.<br/></p>
<p>Charles Russell Lowell was born in Boston, January 2, 1835. He was the
eldest son of Charles Russell and Anna Cabot (Jackson) Lowell, and the
nephew of James Russell Lowell. He bore the name, distinguished in many
branches, of a family which was of the best New England stock. Educated in
the Boston public schools, he entered Harvard College in 1850. Although
one of the youngest members of his class, he went rapidly to the front,
and graduated not only the first scholar of his year, but the foremost man
of his class. He was, however, much more than a fine scholar, for even
then he showed unusual intellectual qualities. He read widely and loved
letters. He was a student of philosophy and religion, a thinker, and, best
of all, a man of ideals—"the glory of youth," as he called them in
his valedictory oration. But he was something still better and finer than
a mere idealist; he was a man of action, eager to put his ideals into
practice and bring them to the test of daily life. With his mind full of
plans for raising the condition of workingmen while he made his own
career, he entered the iron mills of the Ames Company, at Chicopee. Here
he remained as a workingman for six months, and then received an important
post in the Trenton Iron Works of New Jersey. There his health broke down.
Consumption threatened him, and all his bright hopes and ambitions were
overcast and checked. He was obliged to leave his business and go to
Europe, where he traveled for two years, fighting the dread disease that
was upon him. In 1858 he returned, and took a position on a Western
railroad. Although the work was new to him, he manifested the same
capacity that he had always shown, and more especially his power over
other men and his ability in organization. In two years his health was
reestablished, and in 1860 he took charge of the Mount Savage Iron Works,
at Cumberland, Maryland. He was there when news came of the attack made by
the mob upon the 6th Massachusetts Regiment, in Baltimore. Two days later
he had made his way to Washington, one of the first comers from the North,
and at once applied for a commission in the regular army. While he was
waiting, he employed himself in looking after the Massachusetts troops,
and also, it is understood, as a scout for the Government, dangerous work
which suited his bold and adventurous nature.</p>
<p>In May he received his commission as captain in the United States cavalry.
Employed at first in recruiting and then in drill, he gave himself up to
the study of tactics and the science of war. The career above all others
to which he was suited had come to him. The field, at last, lay open
before him, where all his great qualities of mind and heart, his high
courage, his power of leadership and of organization, and his intellectual
powers could find full play. He moved rapidly forward, just as he had
already done in college and in business. His regiment, in 1862, was under
Stoneman in the Peninsula, and was engaged in many actions, where Lowell's
cool bravery made him constantly conspicuous. At the close of the campaign
he was brevetted major, for distinguished services at Williamsburg and
Slatersville.</p>
<p>In July, Lowell was detailed for duty as an aid to General McClellan. At
Malvern Hill and South Mountain his gallantry and efficiency were strongly
shown, but it was at Antietam that he distinguished himself most. Sent
with orders to General Sedgwick's division, he found it retreating in
confusion, under a hot fire. He did not stop to think of orders, but rode
rapidly from point to point of the line, rallying company after company by
the mere force and power of his word and look, checking the rout, while
the storm of bullets swept all round him. His horse was shot under him, a
ball passed through his coat, another broke his sword-hilt, but he came
off unscathed, and his service was recognized by his being sent to
Washington with the captured flags of the enemy.</p>
<p>The following winter he was ordered to Boston, to recruit a regiment of
cavalry, of which he was appointed colonel. While the recruiting was going
on, a serious mutiny broke out, but the man who, like Cromwell's soldiers,
"rejoiced greatly" in the day of battle was entirely capable of meeting
this different trial. He shot the ringleader dead, and by the force of his
own strong will quelled the outbreak completely and at once.</p>
<p>In May, he went to Virginia with his regiment, where he was engaged in
resisting and following Mosby, and the following summer he was opposed to
General Early in the neighborhood of Washington. On July 14, when on a
reconnoissance his advance guard was surprised, and he met them retreating
in wild confusion, with the enemy at their heels. Riding into the midst of
the fugitives, Lowell shouted, "Dismount!" The sharp word of command, the
presence of the man himself, and the magic of discipline prevailed. The
men sprang down, drew up in line, received the enemy, with a heavy fire,
and as the assailants wavered, Lowell advanced at once, and saved the day.</p>
<p>In July, he was put in command of the "Provisional Brigade," and joined
the army of the Shenandoah, of which in August General Sheridan took
command. He was so struck with Lowell's work during the next month that in
September he put him in command of the "Reserved Brigade," a very fine
body of cavalry and artillery. In the fierce and continuous fighting that
ensued Lowell was everywhere conspicuous, and in thirteen weeks he had as
many horses shot under him. But he now had scope to show more than the
dashing gallantry which distinguished him always and everywhere. His
genuine military ability, which surely would have led him to the front
rank of soldiers had his life been spared, his knowledge, vigilance, and
nerve all now became apparent. One brilliant action succeeded another, but
the end was drawing near. It came at last on the famous day of Cedar
Creek, when Sheridan rode down from Winchester and saved the battle.
Lowell had advanced early in the morning on the right, and his attack
prevented the disaster on that wing which fell upon the surprised army. He
then moved to cover the retreat, and around to the extreme left, where he
held his position near Middletown against repeated assaults. Early in the
day his last horse was shot under him, and a little later, in a charge at
one o'clock, he was struck in the right breast by a spent ball, which
embedded itself in the muscles of the chest. Voice and strength left him.
"It is only my poor lung," he announced, as they urged him to go to the
rear; "you would not have me leave the field without having shed blood."
As a matter of fact, the "poor" lung had collapsed, and there was an
internal hemorrhage. He lay thus, under a rude shelter, for an hour and a
half, and then came the order to advance along the whole line, the
victorious advance of Sheridan and the rallied army. Lowell was helped to
his saddle. "I feel well now," he whispered, and, giving his orders
through one of his staff, had his brigade ready first. Leading the great
charge, he dashed forward, and, just when the fight was hottest, a sudden
cry went up: "The colonel is hit!" He fell from the saddle, struck in the
neck by a ball which severed the spine, and was borne by his officers to a
house in the village, where, clear in mind and calm in spirit, he died a
few hours afterward.</p>
<p>"I do not think there was a quality," said General Sheridan, "which I
could have added to Lowell. He was the perfection of a man and a soldier."
On October 19, the very day on which he fell, his commission was signed to
be a brigadier-general.</p>
<p>This was a noble life and a noble death, worthy of much thought and
admiration from all men. Yet this is not all. It is well for us to see how
such a man looked upon what he was doing, and what it meant to him. Lowell
was one of the silent heroes so much commended by Carlyle. He never wrote
of himself or his own exploits. As some one well said, he had "the
impersonality of genius." But in a few remarkable passages in his private
letters, we can see how the meaning of life and of that great time
unrolled itself before his inner eyes. In June, 1861, he wrote:</p>
<p>I cannot say I take any great pleasure in the contemplation of the future.
I fancy you feel much as I do about the profitableness of a soldier's
life, and would not think of trying it, were it not for a muddled and
twisted idea that somehow or other this fight was going to be one in which
decent men ought to engage for the sake of humanity,—I use the word
in its ordinary sense. It seems to me that within a year the slavery
question will again take a prominent place, and that many cases will arise
in which we may get fearfully in the wrong if we put our cause wholly in
the hands of fighting men and foreign legions.</p>
<p>In June, 1863, he wrote:</p>
<p>I wonder whether my theories about self-culture, etc., would ever have
been modified so much, whether I should ever have seen what a necessary
failure they lead to, had it not been for this war. Now I feel every day,
more and more, that a man has no right to himself at all; that, indeed, he
can do nothing useful unless he recognizes this clearly. Here again, on
July 3, is a sentence which it is well to take to heart, and for all men
to remember when their ears are deafened with the cry that war, no matter
what the cause, is the worst thing possible, because it interferes with
comfort, trade, and money-making: "Wars are bad," Lowell writes, "but
there are many things far worse. Anything immediately comfortable in our
affairs I don't see; but comfortable times are not the ones t hat make a
nation great." On July 24, he says:</p>
<p>Many nations fail, that one may become great; ours will fail, unless we
gird up our loins and do humble and honest days' work, without trying to
do the thing by the job, or to get a great nation made by a patent
process. It is not safe to say that we shall not have victories till we
are ready for them. We shall have victories, and whether or no we are
ready for them depends upon ourselves; if we are not ready, we shall fail,—voila
tout. If you ask, what if we do fail? I have nothing to say; I shouldn't
cry over a nation or two, more or less, gone under.</p>
<p>Finally, on September 10, a little more than a month before his death, he
wrote to a disabled officer:</p>
<p>I hope that you are going to live like a plain republican, mindful of the
beauty and of the duty of simplicity. Nothing fancy now, sir, if you
please; it's disreputable to spend money when the government is so hard
up, and when there are so many poor officers. I hope that you have
outgrown all foolish ambitions, and are now content to become a "useful
citizen." Don't grow rich; if you once begin, you will find it much more
difficult to be a useful citizen. Don't seek office, but don't
"disremember" that the "useful citizen" always holds his time, his
trouble, his money, and his life ready at the hint of his country. The
useful citizen is a mighty, unpretending hero; but we are not going to
have any country very long, unless such heroism is developed. There, what
a stale sermon I'm preaching. But, being a soldier, it does seem to me
that I should like nothing so well as being a useful citizen. Well, trying
to be one, I mean. I shall stay in the service, of course, till the war is
over, or till I'm disabled; but then I look forward to a pleasanter
career.</p>
<p>I believe I have lost all my ambitions. I don't think I would turn my hand
to be a distinguished chemist or a famous mathematician. All I now care
about is to be a useful citizen, with money enough to buy bread and
firewood, and to teach my children to ride on horseback, and look
strangers in the face, especially Southern strangers.</p>
<p>There are profound and lofty lessons of patriotism and conduct in these
passages, and a very noble philosophy of life and duty both as a man and
as a citizen of a great republic. They throw a flood of light on the great
underlying forces which enabled the American people to save themselves in
that time of storm and stress. They are the utterances of a very young
man, not thirty years old when he died in battle, but much beyond thirty
in head and heart, tried and taught as he had been in a great war. What
precisely such young men thought they were fighting for is put strikingly
by Lowell's younger brother James, who was killed at Glendale, July 4,
1862. In 1861, James Lowell wrote to his classmates, who had given him a
sword:</p>
<p>Those who died for the cause, not of the Constitution and the laws,—a
superficial cause, the rebels have now the same,—but of civilization
and law, and the self-restrained freedom which is their result. As the
Greeks at Marathon and Salamis, Charles Martel and the Franks at Tours,
and the Germans at the Danube, saved Europe from Asiatic barbarism, so we,
at places to be famous in future times, shall have saved America from a
similar tide of barbarism; and we may hope to be purified and strengthened
ourselves by the struggle.</p>
<p>This is a remarkable passage and a deep thought. Coming from a young
fellow of twenty-four, it is amazing. But the fiery trial of the times
taught fiercely and fast, and James Lowell, just out of college, could see
in the red light around him that not merely the freedom of a race and the
saving of a nation were at stake, but that behind all this was the forward
movement of civilization, brought once again to the arbitrament of the
sword. Slavery was barbarous and barbarizing. It had dragged down the
civilization of the South to a level from which it would take generations
to rise up again. Was this barbarous force now to prevail in the United
States in the nineteenth century? Was it to destroy a great nation, and
fetter human progress in the New World? That was the great question back
of, beyond and above all. Should this force of barbarism sweep conquering
over the land, wrecking an empire in its onward march, or should it be
flung back as Miltiades flung back Asia at Marathon, and Charles Martel
stayed the coming of Islam at Tours? The brilliant career, the shining
courage, best seen always where the dead were lying thickest, the heroic
death of Charles Lowell, are good for us all to know and to remember. Yet
this imperfect story of his life has not been placed here for these things
alone. Many thousand others, officers and soldiers alike, in the great
Civil War gave their lives as freely as he, and brought to the service of
their country the best that was in them. He was a fine example of many
who, like him, offered up all they had for their country. But Lowell was
also something more than this. He was a high type of a class, and a proof
of certain very important things, and this is a point worthy of much
consideration.</p>
<p>The name of John Hampden stands out in the history of the English-speaking
people, admired and unquestioned. He was neither a great statesman, nor a
great soldier; he was not a brilliant orator, nor a famous writer. He fell
bravely in an unimportant skirmish at Chalgrove Field, fighting for
freedom and what he believed to be right. Yet he fills a great place in
the past, both for what he did and what he was, and the reason for this is
of high importance. John Hampden was a gentleman, with all the advantages
that the accidents of birth could give. He was rich, educated, well born,
of high traditions. English civilization of that day could produce nothing
better. The memorable fact is that, when the time came for the test, he
did not fail. He was a type of what was best among the English people, and
when the call sounded, he was ready. He was brave, honest, high-minded,
and he gave all, even his life, to his country. In the hour of need, the
representative of what was best and most fortunate in England was put to
the touch, and proved to be current gold. All men knew what that meant,
and Hampden's memory is one of the glories of the English-speaking people.</p>
<p>Charles Lowell has the same meaning for us when rightly understood. He had
all that birth, breeding, education, and tradition could give. The
resources of our American life and civilization could produce nothing
better. How would he and such men as he stand the great ordeal when it
came? If wealth, education, and breeding were to result in a class who
could only carp and criticize, accumulate money, give way to
self-indulgence, and cherish low foreign ideals, then would it have
appeared that there was a radical unsoundness in our society, refinement
would have been proved to be weakness, and the highest education would
have been shown to be a curse, rather than a blessing. But Charles Lowell,
and hundreds of others like him, in greater or less degree, all over the
land, met the great test and emerged triumphant. The Harvard men may be
taken as fairly representing the colleges and universities of America.
Harvard had, in 1860, 4157 living graduates, and 823 students, presumably
over eighteen years old. Probably 3000 of her students and graduates were
of military age, and not physically disqualified for military service. Of
this number, 1230 entered the Union army or navy. One hundred and
fifty-six died in service, and 67 were killed in action. Many did not go
who might have gone, unquestionably, but the record is a noble one. Nearly
one man of every two Harvard men came forward to serve his country when
war was at our gates, and this proportion holds true, no doubt, of the
other universities of the North. It is well for the country, well for
learning, well for our civilization, that such a record was made at such a
time. Charles Lowell, and those like him, showed, once for all, that the
men to whom fortune had been kindest were capable of the noblest
patriotism, and shrank from no sacrifices. They taught the lesson which
can never be heard too often—that the man to whom the accidents of
birth and fortune have given most is the man who owes most to his country.
If patriotism should exist anywhere, it should be strongest with such men
as these, and their service should be ever ready. How nobly Charles Lowell
in this spirit answered the great question, his life and death, alike
victorious, show to all men.</p>
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