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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 3. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 35 total hits in 15 results.
Grange (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 255
88.
the Devil's visit to old Abe.
by Rev. E. P. Birch, of la Grange, Ga.
Written on the occasion of Lincoln's proclamation for prayer and fasting after the battle of Manassas.
Revised and improved by the author. Old Abe was sitting in his chair of state, With one foot on the mantel, and one on the grate, Now smoking his pipe, and then scratching his pate; For he had heard some disastrous news of late, As fearful as death, and as cruel as fate. In an old earthen jug, on a table near by, Was a gallon of “Buckeye,” or “choice old rye,” To cheer up his hopes, which were ready to die, Under whose potent charms old Abe would be able To lay all his griefs, like a bill, “on the table ;” Or, shut up his woe, like a horse, in a stable. He sat in his chair, With a woe-begone air, Gazing at nothing with a meaningless stare, And looked like a wild beast just “skeered” in his lair. His cheek-bones were high, and his visage was rough, Like a middling of bacon, all wrinkled and tou
Illinois (Illinois, United States) (search for this): chapter 255
Washington (United States) (search for this): chapter 255
Arlington Heights (Utah, United States) (search for this): chapter 255
Tunstall (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 255
Cameron (search for this): chapter 255
E. P. Birch (search for this): chapter 255
88.
the Devil's visit to old Abe.
by Rev. E. P. Birch, of la Grange, Ga.
Written on the occasion of Lincoln's proclamation for prayer and fasting after the battle of Manassas.
Revised and improved by the author. Old Abe was sitting in his chair of state, With one foot on the mantel, and one on the grate, Now smoking his pipe, and then scratching his pate; For he had heard some disastrous news of late, As fearful as death, and as cruel as fate. In an old earthen jug, on a table near by, Was a gallon of “Buckeye,” or “choice old rye,” To cheer up his hopes, which were ready to die, Under whose potent charms old Abe would be able To lay all his griefs, like a bill, “on the table ;” Or, shut up his woe, like a horse, in a stable. He sat in his chair, With a woe-begone air, Gazing at nothing with a meaningless stare, And looked like a wild beast just “skeered” in his lair. His cheek-bones were high, and his visage was rough, Like a middling of bacon, all wrinkled and toug
Seward (search for this): chapter 255
Abe Lincoln (search for this): chapter 255
Bennett (search for this): chapter 255