. As seen from the ranks; a boy in the Civil War . CHAPTER XI OVER THE CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS The Imp in the Attic—Leaving the Winter Camp—Hardening to the Work—Last Camp in MiddleTennessee—Chmbing the Mountain Range—Ri-valry of Regiments—Nick-a-jack Cave and itsBlood-Curdling Traditions. FLORENCE PERCY, in an exquisite littlepoem, represents Memory as a drollfellow dwelling in the upper story and havingcharge of all the facts and figures that areplaced in his keeping. She calls this keeperof the psychological storehouse of past events The Imp in the Attic^ Some of the valu-ables placed in his c


. As seen from the ranks; a boy in the Civil War . CHAPTER XI OVER THE CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS The Imp in the Attic—Leaving the Winter Camp—Hardening to the Work—Last Camp in MiddleTennessee—Chmbing the Mountain Range—Ri-valry of Regiments—Nick-a-jack Cave and itsBlood-Curdling Traditions. FLORENCE PERCY, in an exquisite littlepoem, represents Memory as a drollfellow dwelling in the upper story and havingcharge of all the facts and figures that areplaced in his keeping. She calls this keeperof the psychological storehouse of past events The Imp in the Attic^ Some of the valu-ables placed in his charge are lost, and someare only found after long searching; and it isto be noted also that the controlling Imp ofeach attic has idiosyncrasies quite his own. Now that these events of the war have re-ceded into the far ^past and can only be OVER THE CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS III viewed from the beginning of another cen-tury, it will not surprise the reader that myImp has tired of presenting the record inpanoramic continuity, but sometimes


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1902