![more money for the fools that clone 5 true things down for thr roughness layzie bone more money for the fools that clone 5 true things down for thr roughness layzie bone](https://s3.studylib.net/store/data/008885493_1-2525cda14dd90e0998d9a5bdcffd564f.png)
At this moment the air is full of melody from the tents, of prayer and hymns mingled with the hearty yah, yah, of the playful outsiders. Their religious devotion is more natural than any I ever witnessed.
![more money for the fools that clone 5 true things down for thr roughness layzie bone more money for the fools that clone 5 true things down for thr roughness layzie bone](https://64.media.tumblr.com/6c7070c6feaaa0acca066bb2aebf2121/b35ba964b8553199-84/s640x960/9da86b4d91586c63ea0c9572b1c0c9a5d25f4ee1.png)
I leave all of my things in tent unguarded and at loose ends as I could never think of doing in a white regiment, and if I ever lose anything you shall be informed. Be true to them and they will be devoted to you. A more childlike, jovial, devotional, musical, shrewd, amusing, set of beings never lived. Multiply that delight by ten and you will approximate to what I get among these children of the tropics. You remember my delight in the life of ship surgeon, when I had three hundred and fifty of the lowest Irish to care for. There is a little more of solid reality in this work of camp life than I have found in any previous experience. Surgeon of the First South Carolina Volunteers. Rogers, late captain in the First South Carolina (afterwards 33d U.S.C.T.)Įxtracts From Letters Of Dr. Their only living child, Isabel Rogers, born January 2, 1855, in Worcester, Mass., resides (1903) in Pomfret, Ct., and by her permission these letters have been copied by her cousin, James S. and Anne (Gould) Mitchell, born Decemdied September 24, 1889. He was born in Danby, Rutland County, Vermont, Februdied in Pomfret, Ct., Augmarried May 30, 1843, Hannah, daughter of Jethro F. He was a large-hearted and exceptionally pure minded man whose acquaintance and friendship were highly prized by all who knew him. Afterward, he practiced medicine as a regular physician and belonged to the Mass., Medical Society.Īfter his return from the South he retired from active practice and resided on a beautiful farm in Pomfret, Conn., but, up to the time of his death, he usually had one or more chronic invalids in his household for whom he cared, and many obstinate cases were successfully treated. He conducted a water cure establishment in Worcester, Mass., for many years. Seth Rogers, from whose letters the following extracts are made, was one of the early practitioners of “water-cure” in America.