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“February 9—We established a regular camp here. This last march has been a very hard one, and only a distance of thirty miles. But it took us from Wednesday to Sunday, through snow, rain, and mud ankle-deep and without rations. Kinston is a perfect ruin, as the Yankees have destroyed everything they could barely touch, but it must at one time have been a very pretty town—but now nothing scarcely but chimneys are left to show how the Yankees are trying to reconstruct the Union.”

—Louis Leon, The Battle of Gettysburg, Diary of a Tar Heel Confederate Soldier

What does Leon’s account suggest about life as a Confederate soldier?

Respuesta :

Leon's account suggests that camp life could be as dangerous as fighting.

Explanation:  

Louis Leon discussed here life of soldiers during American Civil War, how threatening it was either in camp or on the battlefield. Yankees destroyed southern communities residential and replaced them by their facilities by reconstructing. Leon suggested how casualties of confederate soldiers happened even in camps which were residential for fighters although it's obvious on the battlefield. Soldiers were needed to be extraordinary mentally and physically strong to handle the torture without even their bread and butter.

Answer:

Camp life could be just as dangerous as fighting.

Explanation:

Camp life could be similarly as risky as battling. His story gives a review of a trooper's vagrant routine over a four-year traverse, amid which time the essential requirement for rest, nourishment, and attire moved toward becoming as imperative as the fights he battled and survived. He notes in his prelude that his stories of "outdoors, walking, battling, and enduring" will resound with previous officers, and without a doubt, a lot of his journal basically inventories these events, which mirror the harried life he drove at the time.