Tales of Soldiers and Civilians

Tales of Soldiers and Civilians,
19 stories by Ambrose Bierce, published in 1891 and retitled In the Midst of Life (1892, revised 1898).

These grim, vivid stories, reminiscent of Poe's tales of horror, are marked by an ingenious use of the surprise ending and a realistic study of tense emotional states. Among the tales of soldiers, dealing with Civil War scenes, are A Horseman in the Sky, telling of a soldier in the Union army, who, stationed as a picket near his Southern mountain home, encounters his father, a Confederate cavalry officer, and is forced to shoot, plunging him over a steep cliff to his death; An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge, which is concerned with the illusory thoughts of a Southern planter who is being hanged by Union soldiers, depicting his mind in the interval between the tightening of the rope and the breaking of his neck, during which he imagines that he has escaped; and Chickamauga, a lurid...

[The entire page is 235 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: