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A Rebel A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital Volume 1 and 2: Civil War Classic Library

PDF A Rebel A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital Volume 1 and 2: Civil War Classic Library by J B Jones in History

Description

The Mahabharata is one of the two major Sanskrit epics of ancient India. It is an epic narrative of the Kurukshetra War and the fates of the Kauravas and the Pandava princes as well as containing philosophical and devotional material; such as a discussion of the four goals of life. Here we have Mahaprasthanika Parva; the seventeenth; narrating the story of the journey of Yudhisthira and his brothers across the country and finally their ascent of the Himalayas where all Pandava except Yudhisthira falls. Vyasa is a revered figure in Hindu traditions. He is a kala-Avatar or part-incarnation of God Vishnu. Vyasa is sometimes conflated by some Vaishnavas with Badarayana; the compiler of the Vedanta Sutras and considered to be one of the seven Chiranjivins. He is also the fourth member of the Rishi Parampara of the Advaita Guru Paramparā of which Adi Shankara is the chief proponent.


#1519254 in Books 2012-11-10Original language:English 9.00 x 1.40 x 6.00l; #File Name: 1480287393620 pages


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Informative and interesting. Gave a deeper insight into Jefferson ...By Barbara CarterInformative and interesting. Gave a deeper insight into Jefferson Davis et al and inflation during the period.0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A Loser's diaryBy democratStick with it. I know it's long; but Jones gives the reader an excellent inside view of the mind of the ordinary southerner. Until the very end his naïve enthusiasm keeps him going. His refusal to accept defeat is almost laughable [or sad]. His resignation is unapologetic.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. An engrossing eyewitness account of the Civil WarBy Admiral AdamaJohn B. Jones (1810-1866) was a proslavery Border State native who moved South when the Civil War began. A native of Baltimore; he spent most of his youth and young adulthood on the frontier in Kentucky and Missouri. He eventually made his way back to Baltimore and began a career as a newspaper editor. In the 1850's he lived in New Jersey; where he edited and published the "Southern Monitor"; a proslavery newspaper which examined the growing crisis between the North and South from a "Southern Viewpoint." When Abraham Lincoln (whom Jones detested) was elected President in 1860 and several Southern states seceded soon thereafter; Jones decided to move South and give whatever support he could to the new Confederate government. He took his wife and children with him; and he soon found a job as a high-level clerk in the Confederate War Department in Richmond; Virginia; the Confederacy's capital. In essence; Jones became a top assistant to the Confederate Secretary of War; which put him in an excellent position to view the conflict from both the "High Command" perspective and the view of an ordinary government worker and city dweller. In April 1861 Jones decided to start a daily diary describing the historic events taking place around him. He faithfully kept the diary until April 1865; when Richmond fell to Northern troops and the Confederacy was destroyed. Jones died from a sudden illness in February 1866; but his diary survived and has become a classic of its kind. It is often used as a "primary source" document by Civil War historians who want a first-hand; eyewitness account of what it was like to live and work in the Confederacy's capital city during the war. Jones is a good writer; and his diary includes almost every aspect of life in Richmond during the war; from the grand to the mundane. Great battles (and the rumors that often accompany them) are mentioned; the elation of early Southern victories to the despair of knowing that "the cause" was lost by the spring of 1865; the petty infighting and personal jealousies that tore the Confederate government apart - all of these are described in detail by Jones. He offers insightful accounts of Confederate President Jefferson Davis; the hated General Winder; who ineptly handled military rule in Richmond for most of the war; the long-winded and ineffective Confederate Congress; Stonewall Jackson's dramatic funeral in May 1863; and the flight of the Confederate government from Richmond and the burning and looting of the city before Northern troops could arrive and restore order. However; Jones also includes "smaller" and more personal details about the growing struggle to simply survive in Richmond as the North's naval blockade cut off necessary supplies of food; medicine; clothing; etc. Rampant inflation; food rationing; overcrowding; starving mobs of women marching through the city demanding food; and a thriving black market are all described by Jones (often in biting and sarcastic detail). To be sure; some things written in this book are offensive (or should be) to modern eyes. Jones is a contradiction - in his diary he emerges as a devoted father and husband who worries about his family's safety and fortunes. Yet he is also an unabashed racist who loathes Jews (and often blames them for everything from food shortages to financial issues; with no evidence to support him); and he supports slavery as the "best method" of dealing with blacks. He claims that slaves are generally well-treated and even boasts that the slaves would prefer their condition to being freed and "left on their own; with no support" by Northern abolitionists. Yet at the end of the diary; as Richmond lies in ruins and the war is lost; Jones seems less bitter than simply exhausted and glad that his family has survived. "A Rebel War Clerk's Diary" is still one of the best first-hand accounts of what it was like to live and work in the Confederacy's national capital by a government "insider"; and it should be read by every Civil War buff. Recommended!

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