Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for March 14th or search for March 14th in all documents.

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o the world. Clarksville has fallen-Roanoke Has yielded to the mighty stroke; And Richmond, Treason's central grounds, Is suffering from her sister's wounds. Her pulse is sluggish, stagnant, slow, And when the coming potent blow Is struck, she'll stagger, reel and fall, And Davis with it, treason, all. Then where's that fancied paradise, Those fields luxuriant, cotton, rice; Those verdant lawns; elysian plains; Embowered shrines; pierian strains; That constitution, moulded in time, To suit the South and Southern clime; Those petticoated belles and maids, Who scoff to shame the Yankee trades; And all that fancy-gilded scheme, The South-Carolinian's golden dream? Where, where, bold soldier, tell us where, When spring is breathing summer's air. Where have the mighty thousands bled? Where was the hero's blood not shed? Where is that flag you bore away, The symbol of a bloody day? Tell us, brave soldier, does it wave Still o'er the land, the free, the brave? --Baltimore American, March 14.
A Rebel soldier named Joseph Infield died on the steamer Fanny Bullitt at Fort Donelson from a wound received in the battle. He requested that his mother should be informed of his fate, but was too low to give particulars. Her name is now Harriet Harris, and she is supposed to reside in Southern Kentucky. His dying words were: Tell my mother I have made my peace with God and die happy; that I have but one regret, that of raising an arm against my country. His last moments were soothed by womanly tenderness and sympathy. Louisville Journal, March 14.
Rebel Hounds.--The following paragraph is taken from an old number of the Louisville-Nashville-Bowling-Green Courier: We, the undersigned, will pay five dollars per pair for fifty pairs of well-bred hounds, and fifty dollars for one pair of thorough-bred blood-hounds that will take the track of a man. The purposes for which those dogs are wanted is to chase the infernal, cowardly, Lincoln bushwhackers of East-Tennessee and Kentucky (who have taken the advantage of the bush to kill and cripple many good soldiers) to their dens and capture them. The said hounds must be delivered at Capt. Hanmer's livery-stable by the tenth of December next, where a mustering officer will be present to muster and inspect them. F. N. Mcnairy, H. H. Harris. Camp Crinfort, Campbell Co., Tenn. --N. Y. Evening Post, March 14.
The poisoning of forty of the Union soldiers in Arkansas by the rebel troops, the poisoning of Sheriff Craig by a rebel soldier after the battle of Fort Donelson, whilst the Sheriff was engaged in relieving the wounded, and the finding of a lot of poisoned bullets at Nashville, left behind by the rebels in their flight from that city, are fearful indications of the fiendish spirit of portions of our enemies. If this war shall continue, we know not how soon the rebels, transformed by fury and despair from human beings into devils, may resort to poisoning as an established mode of warfare. But we earnestly trust never to see so dreadful a condition of things. Louisville Journal, March 14.