America To-day, Observations and Reflections
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e public funeral at Arlington Cemetery of several hundred soldiers, brought home from the battlefields of Cuba. The burial ground on the heights of Arlington
ades at El Caney and San Juan. The significance of the event was widely felt and commented upon. "Henceforth," said one paper, "the graves at Arlingt
ogether si
in blue
he tender pe
s that on
and with h
uined brot
d together
try-one
s of the No
he South
d 'Rebel,' s
one star
id our com
ral bells
ar language. But, as here expressed, it is clearly the sentiment of the North: how far is it shared and acknowled
cross the Potomac to the old Lee mansion at Arlington, while all the flags of Washingt
o' the Wido
' Creation
the same with the s
it down wit
-it's blue wit
might say) was like the smile of the hardened freebooter at the amiable sentimentalism of a comrade who was "yet but young in deed." But why should Mr. Kipling's rugged lines h
n Asia, tom
hire names
le spills
he Sever
. New
hinc-the l
er grave i
e diem
, sed fro
indled no less significantly than the rancour of the grey coat against the blu