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A FLAG, ON A HILL

As Civil War battles went, it was a small and insignificant affair.
But in terms of story – and especially, in terms of lessons – it’s one
of my favorites.

The war had not yet fully turned in October of 1864. And even though
Stonewall Jackson had been dead for well over a year – killed by
mistake by his own men at the Battle of Chancellorsville -- the
Shenandoah Valley still belonged if not to Jackson then to Jackson’s
ghost, for it was there that he and his “foot cavalry” had won their
eternal place in Valhalla. Jackson’s tactical brilliance and the
endless series of Union routs still hung like clouds of gunpowder in
the valleys and hollows of the Shenandoah.

And so it came a no surprise to either the Union or the Confederate
soldiers on the banks of Cedar Creek to see, once again, a blue rout –
men throwing down rifles and knapsacks and running for their lives,
dodging perhaps the few hissing musket balls fired at their backs but
completely unable to escape the jeering and the insults and that high,
horrible Rebel yell, as that pack of feral wolves descended on their
camps, drank their coffee, ate their rations and sat going through
their personal effects, admiring photos and reading letters from their
sweethearts. Not a loss, but a rout. Another rout. The latest in an
ongoing series of routs without end, or so it must have seemed.

The Union general was a young man, new to his command, and who in
point of fact had been back in Washington during the defeat. But as he
rode toward the sound of the guns that morning, curiosity turned to
apprehension, and apprehension to something worse, as he crossed Mill
Creek and came upon a low hill, to see before him “the appalling
spectacle of a panic-stricken Army.”

Phillip Sheridan was his name, described by Shelby Foote as a man with
the face of a Mongol Warlord and a hair so short and dense it made his
head look like a bullet with a coat of black paint.

Sheridan’s first instinct was to form a straggler line and prepare for
the final Rebel assault. But the Rebels were too busy celebrating. And
after he caught his breath, Little Phil noticed something surprising:
not a broken and routed army, fleeing for their lives, but small
groups of men boiling fresh coffee, speaking to one another calmly and
cheering him as he rode by.

One of his aides described him at that moment: “As he galloped on, his
features grew gradually set, as those carved in stone, and the same
dull red glint I had seen in his piercing eyes when, on other
occasions, the battle was going against us, was there now.”

You bet it was.

The closer Sheridan came to the battle, the more cheerful and animated
his defeated men became. Encountering a small group of them, Little
Phil would stand in the saddle, and give a jaunty salute – as if to
congratulate them on a great victory, rather than another humiliating
defeat.

The result was electric, if not universal. Amid the cheering, one
infantry colonel – whose descendents perhaps would go on to become
campaign advisors – stood in Sheridan’s path and begged him not to go
on.

“The army’s whipped!” he cried.

“You are, but the army isn’t,” growled Sheridan, who then put the
spurs to a horse who’s back was taller than he was and rode to the
scene of the disaster, shouting, “About face, boys! We are going back
to our camps! We are going to lick them out of their boots!”

His men were not beaten. They just needed leadership.

“We are going to get a twist on those fellows, men!” he shouted,
pounding down the pike. “We are going to lick them out of their
boots!”

And that’s what he did, too. He and his routed army went back to that
field and licked those Rebels right out of their boots.

“Run!” he shouted, standing in the stirrups. “Go after them! We’ve got
the God-damnedest twist on them you ever saw!”





Battles don’t always go that way. But sometimes they do. It depends on
whether the individual soldier still has any fight in him.

It has been a source of delight for me these past few days to see
nothing but evidence of this, all across our defeated lines. Nowhere
have I heard a shred of defeatism or despair. On the contrary. In
point of fact, the magnanimity and graciousness I have seen in defeat
in so many places on the right tells me that this is a eager and
seasoned army, one able to look defeat in the face and own up to the
errors in tactics and strategy that got us there. And nowhere do I see
a call to abandon our core principles and sue for terms, but rather
that our loss was caused precisely by our abandonment of the issues we
which hold dear and which have served us so well on battlefields
past.

So consider this, my fellows in arms:

On Tuesday, the Left – armed with the most attractive, eloquent,
young, hip and charismatic candidate I have seen with my adult eyes, a
candidate shielded by a media so overtly that it can never be such a
shield again, who appeared after eight years of a historically
unpopular President, in the midst of two undefended wars and at the
time of the worst financial crisis since the Depression and whose
praises were sung by every movie, television and musical icon without
pause or challenge for 20 months… who ran against the oldest nominee
in the country’s history, against a campaign rent with internal
disarray and determined not to attack in the one area where attack
could have succeeded and who was out-spent no less than seven-to-one
in a cycle where not a single debate question was unfavorable to his
opponent – that historic victory, that perfect storm of opportunity…

Yielded a result of 53%

Folks, we are going to lick these people out of their boots.

There is much to do. That a man with such overt Marxist ideas and such
a history of association with virulent anti-Americans can be elected
President should make it crystal clear to each of us just how far we
have let fall the moral tone of this Republic. The great lesson from
Ronald Reagan was simply that we can and must gently educate as well
as campaign, and explain our ideas with smiles on our faces and real
joy in our hearts, for unlike the far-left radical who gained the
Presidency on Tuesday, we start with 150 million of the most free and
intelligent and hard-working people in the history of the Earth at our
backs, with a philosophy that -- unlike theirs, which has resulted in
100 million dead in unmarked graves -- has liberated and enriched more
people and created more joy than any nation or combination of nations
in our history.

How can we lose this greater fight, my friends? How can we lose,
unless we give up?

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