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Southern Historical Society Papers.


marched, and fought under his command; to the faultless chieftain to whose exalted character, transcendent abilities, and well-nigh unerring judgment he yielded the utmost devotion of his great soul, Robert E. Lee, who returned that affection and confidence in unstinted measure; to none of these was Stonewall Jackson ever grotesque.

Whatever his peculiarities, and he had some which were marked, they were no more than idiosyncrasies which are sometimes the companions of genius and of great natures, and no more impaired the dignity and true greatness of the man than does the foam upon the limpid waters of the rapidly moving river lessen its usefulness or its loveliness as it flows in matchless beauty to the sea.

We learn from his biographers that from his childhood and on through his boyhood and youth he exhibited those qualities of courage, indomitable strength of will, self-respecting decision of character, truthfulness, frankness, unfaltering faith, and a high sense of honor, which characterized his conduct throughout his adult life, and were afterwards illustrated upon fields of action which his genius has made immortal.

From his very boyhood his life was dominated by a sense of duty to others and duty to himself. From those early years he was animated by a supreme purpose "to make himself the very greatest of which he was capable," and he placed no very circumscribed limits upon those capabilities.

Some notion of his extraordinary self-discipline and of the ideals which then actuated him is afforded by the admirable code of maxims and rules of conduct which, while a cadet at West Point, he compiled for his own guidance.

Of these maxims the following was conspicuous and most characteristic:

    more or less intimately a large number of soldiers and officers who served under General Jackson in 1861, 1862, and 1863; has lived in Lexington most of the time since 1866; and has learned from personal acquaintance and observation and from soldiers and citizens, residing in Lexington and elsewhere, the facts as to the characteristics of this extraordinary man, and as to the estimate in which he was held by his neighbors, friends, comrades in arms, and the soldiers whom he commanded.