In Gettysburg: The Last Invasion (Alfred A. Knopf, 2013), the historian Allen C. Guelzo quotes the nineteenth-century English Liberal statesman Richard Cobden, who asked, “If the United States go wrong what hope have we of the civilized world in our turn?” Guelzo replies:
“Preventing that wrong
turn was what the preservation of the Union was about. Emancipating American
slaves would remove the cause of that wrong, and make the Union worth
preserving. But neither of them would be possible without the triumph of the
Union armies. And Gettysburg would be the place where the armies of the Union
would receive their greatest test, and the Union its last invasion.”
The question and Guelzo’s
answer are always worth pondering. Are Americans willing to stand with the
Union troops on Cemetery Ridge during Pickett’s Charge? This “greatest test” came
on July 3, 1863, the third day of battle. The northernmost incursion by
Confederate forces, into southeastern Pennsylvania, was repulsed, marking what
came to be called “the high-water mark of the Confederacy.” Total estimated
casualties in a single afternoon: 51,112 killed, wounded, taken prisoner.
Guelzo uses Herman Melville’s “Gettysburg: The Check” (Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War, 1866) as
his extended epigraph and the likely source of his title: “God walled his
power, / And there the last invader charged.” Melville’s rendering of Pickett’s
Charge is a powerful reminder for every American, Southerner or Northerner:
“He charged, and in that
charge condensed
His all of hate and all of fire;
He sought to blast us in
his scorn,
And wither us in his ire.
Before him went the shriek
of shells-
Aerial screamings, taunts
and yells;
Then the three waves in
flashed advance
Surged, but were met, and back they set:
Pride was repelled by
sterner pride,
And Right is a strong-hold yet.”
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