The evening before the terrible Battle of Fredericksburg, Clara Barton, the Angel of the
Antietam Battlefield, took a moment to pen her cousin a letter. In her few brief words, she sadly predicts the
outcome of the following day.
Head Quarters 2nd Div.
9th Army Corps-Army of the Potomac
Camp near Falmouth, Va.
December 12th, 1862 - 2 o'clock A.M.
My dear Cousin Vira:
Five minutes time with you; and God only knows what those five minutes might be worth to the many-doomed thousands sleeping around
me. It is the night before a battle. The enemy, Fredericksburg, and its mighty entrenchments lie before us, the river between
- at tomorrow's dawn our troops will assay to cross, and the guns of the enemy will sweep those frail bridges at every breath.
The moon is shining through the soft haze with a brightness almost prophetic. For the last half hour I have stood alone in the
awful stillness of its glimmering light gazing upon the strange sad scene around me striving to say, "Thy will Oh God be done."
The camp fires blaze with unwanted brightness, the sentry's tread is still but quick - the acres of little shelter tents are
dark and still as death, no wonder for us as I gazed sorrowfully upon them. I thought I could almost hear the slow flap of the
grim messenger's wings, as one by one he sought and selected his victims for the morning. Sleep weary one, sleep and rest for
tomorrow toil. Oh! Sleep and visit in dreams once more the loved ones nestling at home. They may yet live to dream of you, cold
lifeless and bloody, but this dream soldier is thy last, paint it brightly, dream it well. Oh northern mothers wives and sisters,
all unconscious of the hour, would to Heaven that I could bear for you the concentrated woe which is so soon to follow, would that
Christ would teach my soul a prayer that would plead to the Father for grace sufficient for you, God pity and strengthen you every
one.
Mine are not the only waking hours, the light yet burns brightly in our kind hearted General's tent where he pens what may be a
last farewell to his wife and children and thinks sadly of his fated men.
Already the roll of the moving artillery is sounded in my ears. The battle draws near and I must catch one hour's sleep for
tomorrow's labor.
Good night near cousin and Heaven grant you strength for your more peaceful and less terrible, but not less weary days than mine.
Yours in love,
Clara
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