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America’s Civil War: January 2000 From the EditorArchives | 0 comments | Print This Post | Email This Post At the same time, it made him persona non grata to many readers in his home region. Fellow Southern writer Paul Hamilton Hayne labeled him a “mongrel cur,” and Cable himself characterized his literary reputation as one of a renegade who had “reaped golden harvests by haranguing Northern audiences on the fascinating subject of the Southern sins.” Exhausted by years of public controversy, Cable moved to Northampton, Mass., in 1885 and lived the last 40 years of his life as a voluntary exile from the very land he had once fought so hard to defend. Roy Morris, Jr., Editor, America’s Civil War Subscribe Today
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