Re: Taking it Like a Man: by Paul Calloway
A description by a participant
from the diary of John King of the 92nd Ill, published as "Three years with the 92nd Illinois
written Sept 20, 1863 dated from Chickamauga
"when a ball strikes a man full force he is numbed in the parts struck, and the instant pain is not so great as that would be from a light stroke of a carriage whip. The pain comes on gradually. Sometimes a man recieving a flesh wound in an arm or leg in times of great excitement does not know it until he sees blood coming down the coat sleeve or feels it working between his toes in his boots."
A description by a participant
from the diary of John King of the 92nd Ill, published as "Three years with the 92nd Illinois
written Sept 20, 1863 dated from Chickamauga
"when a ball strikes a man full force he is numbed in the parts struck, and the instant pain is not so great as that would be from a light stroke of a carriage whip. The pain comes on gradually. Sometimes a man recieving a flesh wound in an arm or leg in times of great excitement does not know it until he sees blood coming down the coat sleeve or feels it working between his toes in his boots."
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