As a war correspondent, Wilbur Fisk was an amateur, yet his letters to the Montpelier Green Mountain Freeman comprise one of the finest collections of Civil War letters in existence. Literary gems, historian Herman Hattaway calls them. It would be believable that some expert novelist had created them. pBut Fisk was no novelist. He was a rural school teacher from Vermont, primarily self-educated, who
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As a war correspondent, Wilbur Fisk was an amateur, yet his letters to the Montpelier Green Mountain Freeman comprise one of the finest collections of Civil War letters in existence. Literary gems, historian Herman Hattaway calls them. It would be believable that some expert novelist had created them. pBut Fisk was no novelist. He was a rural school teacher from Vermont, primarily self-educated, who enlisted in the Union Army simply because he believed he would regret it later if he didn't. pUnlike professional war correspondents, Private Fisk had no access to rank or headquarters. Instead, he wrote of life as a private--as one of the foot soldiers who slept in the mud and obeyed orders no matter how incomprehensible. As for the plans our superiors are laying out for us to execute, he wrote, we know as little as a horse knows of his driver. pBetween December 11, 1861 and July 26, 1865, Fisk wrote nearly 100 letters from the battlefield to the Green Mountain Freeman, all of them signed Anti-Rebel. At the beginning of the war he was exuberant and eager for contact with the enemy. In his first letter he boasted, This regiment would relish a fight now extremely well. pTwo years later, after the battle of Gettysburg, Fisk was disillusioned and war weary. The rebel dead and ours lay thickly together, their thirst for blood forever quenched. Their bodies were swollen, black, and hideously unnatural. Their eyes glared from their sockets, their tongues protruded from their mouths, and in almost every case, clots of blood and mangled flesh showed how they had died, and rendered a sight ghastly beyond description. I thought I had become hardened to almost anything, but I cannot say I ever wish to see another sight like that I saw on the battlefield of Gettysburg. pFisk wrote as eloquently on the moral and political issues behind the war as he did on the everyday hardships of life in the Army of the Potomac. He saw the war as a question of right and wrong--of fre
543543
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