FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   397   398   399   400   401   402   403   404   405   406  
407   408   409   410   411   412   413   414   415   416   417   418   419   420   421   422   423   424   425   426   427   428   429   430   431   >>   >|  
ding. This man was not only unpunished, but the Government is to-day supporting his children in luxury by the rent it pays for the use of his property --the well-known Winder building, which is occupied by one of the Departments at Washington. I confess that all my attempts to satisfactorily analyze Winder's character and discover a sufficient motive for his monstrous conduct have been futile. Even if we imagine him inspired by a hatred of the people of the North that rose to fiendishness, we can not understand him. It seems impossible for the mind of any man to cherish so deep and insatiable an enmity against his fellow-creatures that it could not be quenched and turned to pity by the sight of even one day's misery at Andersonville or Florence. No one man could possess such a grievous sense of private or national wrongs as to be proof against the daily spectacle of thousands of his own fellow citizens, inhabitants of the same country, associates in the same institutions, educated in the same principles, speaking the same language--thousands of his brethren in race, creed, and all that unite men into great communities, starving, rotting and freezing to death. There is many a man who has a hatred so intense that nothing but the death of the detested one will satisfy it. A still fewer number thirst for a more comprehensive retribution; they would slay perhaps a half-dozen persons; and there may be such gluttons of revenge as would not be satisfied with the sacrifice of less than a score or two, but such would be monsters of whom there have been very few, even in fiction. How must they all bow their diminished heads before a man who fed his animosity fat with tens of thousands of lives. But, what also militates greatly against the presumption that either revenge or an abnormal predisposition to cruelty could have animated Winder, is that the possession of any two such mental traits so strongly marked would presuppose a corresponding activity of other intellectual faculties, which was not true of him, as from all I can learn of him his mind was in no respect extraordinary. It does not seem possible that he had either the brain to conceive, or the firmness of purpose to carry out so gigantic and long-enduring a career of cruelty, because that would imply superhuman qualities in a man who had previously held his own very poorly in the competition with other men. The probability is that neither Winder nor hi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   397   398   399   400   401   402   403   404   405   406  
407   408   409   410   411   412   413   414   415   416   417   418   419   420   421   422   423   424   425   426   427   428   429   430   431   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Winder

 

thousands

 

fellow

 
cruelty
 

hatred

 

revenge

 

persons

 

retribution

 

animosity

 
comprehensive

fiction

 
monsters
 
satisfied
 

gluttons

 
diminished
 

sacrifice

 

presuppose

 

gigantic

 
enduring
 
career

conceive

 
firmness
 

purpose

 

superhuman

 
probability
 

competition

 

qualities

 
previously
 

poorly

 

traits


mental

 

strongly

 

marked

 

thirst

 

possession

 

animated

 

greatly

 

presumption

 

abnormal

 

predisposition


activity

 

respect

 
extraordinary
 

intellectual

 

faculties

 

militates

 

language

 
imagine
 

inspired

 

futile