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us looking man than the Commander-in-Chief of the Confederate armies--General Lee. Take a human form, say five feet eight inches in height, its constituents well knit together, full in its proportions, and yet without superfluity. Add to it a well-shaped, squarely-built head, with a front whose every line is marked with energy and genius, a pair of keen, dark eyes — brown in the parlor, but black in the field — that seem to embrace everything at a glance; a handsomely-shaped nose, such as Napoleon liked to see on his Generals; a mouth indicative of an iron will, and a countenance whose natural expression is one of gentleness and benevolence; cover the head, mouth, and lower part of the face with a heavy growth of short gray hair; invest the whole figure with grace, and an unassuming consciousness of strength, purpose, and position; let it speak to you in a voice whose tones of politeness never vary, whether uttered to the highest or the lowest in rank, and you have as full and comple
S. D. Lee (search for this): article 7
Gen. Lee. --A correspondent of the Charleston Courier, writing from the army, says of Gen. Lee: You cannot imagine a plainer or more unostentatious looking man than the Commander-in-Chief of the Confederate armies--General Lee. Take a human form, say five feet eight inches in height, its constituents well knit togetherGen. Lee: You cannot imagine a plainer or more unostentatious looking man than the Commander-in-Chief of the Confederate armies--General Lee. Take a human form, say five feet eight inches in height, its constituents well knit together, full in its proportions, and yet without superfluity. Add to it a well-shaped, squarely-built head, with a front whose every line is marked with energy and genius, a pair of keen, dark eyes — brown in the parlor, but black in the field — that seem to embrace everything at a glance; a handsomely-shaped nose, such as Napoleon likGeneral Lee. Take a human form, say five feet eight inches in height, its constituents well knit together, full in its proportions, and yet without superfluity. Add to it a well-shaped, squarely-built head, with a front whose every line is marked with energy and genius, a pair of keen, dark eyes — brown in the parlor, but black in the field — that seem to embrace everything at a glance; a handsomely-shaped nose, such as Napoleon liked to see on his Generals; a mouth indicative of an iron will, and a countenance whose natural expression is one of gentleness and benevolence; cover the head, mouth, and lower part of the face with a heavy growth of short gray hair; invest the whole figure with grace, and an unassuming consciousness of strength, purpose, and posi