Except for them, busy with pick and spade, no living creature in sight
was at work.
Sherman said it!
Chapter 4
"Marsch, Marsch, Marsch, So Geh'n Wir Weiter!"
Have you ever seen three hundred thousand men and one hundred thousand
horses moving in one compact, marvelous unit of organization, discipline
and system? If you have not seen it you cannot imagine what it is like.
If you have seen it you cannot tell what it is like. In one case the
conceptive faculty fails you; in the other the descriptive. I, who have
seen this sight, am not foolish enough to undertake to put it down with
pencil on paper. I think I know something of the limitations of the
written English language. What I do mean to try to do in this chapter is
to record some of my impressions as I watched it.
In beginning this job I find myself casting about for comparisons to set
up against the vision of a full German army of seven army corps on the
march. I think of the tales I have read and the stories I have heard of
other great armies: Alaric's war bands and Attila's; the First Crusade;
Hannibal's cohorts, and Alexander's host, and Caesar's legions; the
Goths and the Vandals; the million of Xerxes--if it was a million--and
Napoleon starting for Moscow.
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