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[–] PugJesus@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

"O I'm a good old rebel,

Now that's just what I am.

For this "fair land of freedom"

I do not care a damn.

I'm glad I fought against it,

I only wish we'd won,

And I don't want no pardon

For anything I done.

I hates the Constitution,

This great republic too,

I hates the Freedmans' Buro,

In uniforms of blue.

I hates the nasty eagle,

With all his braggs and fuss,

The lyin' thievin' Yankees,

I hates 'em wuss and wuss.

I hates the Yankees nation

And everything they do,

I hates the Declaration,

Of Independence, too.

I hates the glorious Union-

'Tis dripping with our blood-

I hates their striped banner,

I fought it all I could

I rode with Robert E. Lee,

For three year near about,

Got wounded in four places

And starved at Point Lookout

I caught the rheumatism

A' campin' in the snow,

But I killed a chance o' Yankees

I'd like to kill some mo'.

Three hundred thousand Yankees

Is stiff in Southern dust,

We got three hundred thousand

Before they conquered us.

They died of Southern fever

And Southern steel and shot,

I wish they was three million

Instead of what we got.

I can't take up my musket

And fight 'em now no more,

But I ain't going to love 'em,

Now that is sarten sure,

And I don't want no pardon

For what I was and am.

I won't be reconstructed,

And I don't care a damn."

The idea of a Southern nation was very real, as was the conception of the North as an entirely separate cultural entity. Sherman, writing to some of his Southern friends just before the war, references the idea of Southerners as one people and Northerners as another, even in attempting to dissuade them from secession. You can find plenty of letters that express this sentiment in one form or another throughout the war, though Northern politicians rarely gave voice to it. For obvious reasons. Even today the sentiment in the South lingers in some of the more... backwards areas.