|
![]() |
|
|
That's a great sentence, appearing on the opening page of James M. McPherson's new book Hallowed Ground. It says so much: American language, not English language. And the point of the sentence is deeply true. If a picture conveys a thousand words, then "Gettysburg" conveys a thousand pictures of two armies stumbling into each other at a site neither one chose; of Joshua Chamberlain holding the left flank on Little Round Top; of the golden-haired George Custer yelling, "Come on, you Wolverines!"; of Pickett's fateful charge; of Blue and Grey clashing in the most momentous battle in our national history.
This Tuesday marks the 140th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, which raged for three days in 1863. Unless you like crowds, the battlefield is probably a place to avoid on July 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of any year. But it's also a place that every American should visit at least once. It helps to prepare for Gettysburg. Some 1,400 monuments and markers dot the landscape today. It's a big place and a big story to take in impossible to do in just a few hours. Reading McPherson's Hallowed Ground beforehand is a superb way to get ready. McPherson narrates the book as if he's leading readers on a tour of the battlefield. This, in fact, is his charge Hallowed Ground being one in a series of walking-tour books called Crown Journeys. (Another in the series is Washington Schlepped Here, by Christopher Buckley, son of WFB.) Indeed, Hallowed Ground has lines like this one, on page 52: "We will gather between the monument to the 154th New York and the mural on the side of a warehouse portraying the action at this site." McPherson is an ideal author for this tour. He is not only our finest Civil War historian (his Battle Cry of Freedom belongs in the library of every Civil War buff), but he also has led many groups of family, friends, and students around the battlefield. Last week, I bumped into an editor who worked on this book except that "worked" isn't really the right word for it. He marveled at how little editing McPherson needed. Perhaps McPherson didn't "write" this book so much as transcribe it. He's been giving this talk for years. As with every battle, plenty of debates swirl around Gettysburg. McPherson isn't afraid to wade into a few here. He's sympathetic to Confederate General James Longstreet (who is sometimes condemned for taking his time to carry out orders) and Union General George Meade (who is occasionally blamed for not making more of his victory). McPherson is also gently critical of Robert E. Lee (for ordering Pickett's disastrous charge against the advice of Longstreet) and Abraham Lincoln (for believing Meade was certain to smash Lee's army with a counterattack on a never-fought fourth day). Yet Hallowed Ground is not really an analysis of what happened. It's a tour of today's battlefield, told in a way that allows the story of the fight to unfold as McPherson rambles around with his readers. The book is full of the colorful anecdotes and odd facts that mark the difference between a fascinating tour and a dull one. Here's a sampling of what McPherson offers on 141 breezy pages:
I won't conclude with any wise words; I'll simply share another anecdote, which also happens to be the author's last (before an epilogue). McPherson observes that rain started to fall after the battle: "Heavy rain fell after several Civil War battles. A widespread theory at the time held that the thunder of artillery somehow caused clouds to let loose their own thunder and moisture. I am unable to say whether this theory holds water." Okay, okay, here are some wise words: If want a great book about Gettysburg, read Hallowed Ground. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||