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The Victor of Antietam.

01KG8AJM22738NTDE8TVA26N9B

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description
# The Victor of Antietam. ## Overview - What this is (type, form, dates, scope) "The Victor of Antietam." is a poem by an unknown author, presented as a segment extracted from the larger poetry collection [Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War.](arke:01KG8AJ6FNQ0XKWBY52P8DRPC9) The poem is a reflection on the Battle of Antietam and its victor, General George B. McClellan. The text spans from lines 1368 to 1451 of the source file, and was extracted on January 30, 2026. ## Context - Background and provenance from related entities This poem is part of the [Melville Complete Works](arke:01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW) collection. It was extracted from the text file [battle_pieces_and_aspects_of_the_war.txt](arke:01KG89J1G8S4TRWXNCBRKCRKS8), which contains the poetry collection "Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War." The segment is preceded by "The Battle for the Mississipppi." and followed by "Battle of Stone River, Tennessee. A View from Oxford Cloisters." ## Contents - What it contains, key subjects and details The poem praises General McClellan, focusing on his role in the Battle of Antietam in 1862. It highlights his recall to command, his leadership during the battle, and the soldiers' affection for him. The poem also touches on the sacrifices made during the war, the "empty places" of fallen comrades, and the lasting impact of the battle.
description_generated_at
2026-01-30T20:48:24.803Z
description_model
gemini-2.5-flash-lite
description_title
The Victor of Antietam.
end_line
1451
extracted_at
2026-01-30T20:47:35.910Z
extracted_by
structure-extraction-lambda
start_line
1368
text
The Victor of Antietam.[5] (1862.) When tempest winnowed grain from bran; And men were looking for a man, Authority called you to the van, McClellan: Along the line the plaudit ran, As later when Antietam’s cheers began. Through storm-cloud and eclipse must move Each Cause and Man, dear to the stars and Jove; Nor always can the wisest tell Deferred fulfillment from the hopeless knell-- The struggler from the floundering ne’er-do-well. A pall-cloth on the Seven Days fell, Mcclellan-- Unprosperously heroical! Who could Antietam’s wreath foretell? Authority called you; then, in mist And loom of jeopardy--dismissed. But staring peril soon appalled; You, the Discarded, she recalled-- Recalled you, nor endured delay; And forth you rode upon a blasted way, Arrayed Pope’s rout, and routed Lee’s array, McClellan: Your tent was choked with captured flags that day, McClellan. Antietam was a telling fray. Recalled you; and she heard your drum Advancing through the glastly gloom. You manned the wall, you propped the Dome, You stormed the powerful stormer home, McClellan: Antietam’s cannon long shall boom. At Alexandria, left alone, McClellan-- Your veterans sent from you, and thrown To fields and fortunes all unknown-- What thoughts were yours, revealed to none, While faithful still you labored on-- Hearing the far Manassas gun! McClellan, Only Antietam could atone. You fought in the front (an evil day, McClellan)-- The fore-front of the first assay; The Cause went sounding, groped its way; The leadsmen quarrelled in the bay; Quills thwarted swords; divided sway; The rebel flushed in his lusty May: You did your best, as in you lay, McClellan. Antietam’s sun-burst sheds a ray. Your medalled soldiers love you well, McClellan: Name your name, their true hearts swell; With you they shook dread Stonewall’s spell,[6] With you they braved the blended yell Of rebel and maligner fell; With you in shame or fame they dwell, McClellan: Antietam-braves a brave can tell. And when your comrades (now so few, McClellan-- Such ravage in deep files they rue) Meet round the board, and sadly view The empty places; tribute due They render to the dead--and you! Absent and silent o’er the blue; The one-armed lift the wine to _you_, McClellan, And great Antietam’s cheers renew.
title
The Victor of Antietam.

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