When the winners of the American Civil War, Liberal Yankees, discarded
the facts and completely rewrote its narrative in order to conceal the
constitutionality of secession, one of the most crucial features of the
Confederacy was lost to history: the record of the national spirit of
the Southern people shortly before, during, and after the conflict. This
sentiment, which described the emotional impetus behind Dixie's war
efforts, was vigorously chronicled by Southern poets, who penned a
massive corpus of poignant Confederate verse that, tragically, seemed to
vanish after the turn of the Twentieth Century. We have been much poorer
for its disappearance.
In his one-of-a-kind 600 page work Victorian Confederate Poetry: The
Southern Cause in Verse, 1861-1901, award-winning Southern historian
and internationally acclaimed Civil War scholar Colonel Lochlainn
Seabrook brings these suppressed and forgotten Southern compositions
back to life. The nearly 400 poems he has carefully selected embody a
wide spectrum of writing, thought, and emotion, covering the universal
themes of war, patriotism, courage, honor, duty, heritage, family,
faith, loss, and death.
Among his poets are numerous Confederate soldiers and officers, hundreds
of Southern civilians, several South-loving foreigners, and even a
handful of respectful Yankees. Both men and women, children and seniors,
are represented. For aficionados of Victorian, Southern, and Confederate
verse, Colonel Seabrook has included the South's most important and
favorite poets, among them: William Gilmore Simms, Sidney Lanier,
Catherine Anne Warfield, Thomas Nelson Page, Olive Tully Thomas, James
Ryder Randall, John Reuben Thompson, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Henry Timrod,
Jane T. H. Cross, Abram Joseph Ryan, Annie Chambers Ketchum, Francis
Orray Ticknor, John Esten Cooke, and, of course, "the poet laureate of
the South," Paul Hamilton Hayne.
The moving heartfelt words of these celebrated bards, as well as many
other lesser known poets, expose and utterly demolish the countless
Yankee myths, Liberal lies, and Northern fictions that were invented to
shame the South, silence critics, and bury the facts surrounding the
world's most misunderstood war. Read this book and discover the Truth
for yourself. Find out why the South seceded, why she fought, why she
was ready to sacrifice everything for the principle of constitutional
conservatism - in the actual words of those who lived through it.
Heavily illustrated with authentic 19th-Century images, along with
detailed notes and a comprehensive bibliography, Victorian Confederate
Poetry is a significant contribution to Southern and Confederate
literature, one that is destined to become an American classic.
Available in paperback and hardcover.
Colonel Seabrook's other works include: Abraham Lincoln Was a Liberal,
Jefferson Davis Was a Conservative; Lincoln's War: The Real Cause, the
Real Winner, the Real Loser; All We Ask is to be Let Alone: The Southern
Secession Fact Book; The Unholy Crusade: Lincoln's Legacy of Destruction
in the American South; The Great Yankee Coverup: What the North Doesn't
Want You to Know About Lincoln's War; Confederacy 101: Amazing Facts You
Never Knew About America's Oldest Political Tradition; Confederate Flag
Facts: What Every American Should Know About Dixie's Southern Cross;
Women in Gray: A Tribute to the Ladies Who Supported the Southern
Confederacy; Everything You Were Taught About American Slavery is Wrong,
Ask a Southerner!; Abraham Lincoln: The Southern View; The Constitution
of the Confederate States of America Explained; The Bittersweet Bond:
Race Relations in the Old South as Described by White and Black
Southerners; Rise Up and Call Them Blessed: Victorian Tributes to the
Confederate Soldier, 1861-1901.