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The Daily Dispatch: may 28, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: November 12, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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The Daily Dispatch: may 28, 1862., [Electronic resource], By the Governor of Virginia — a proclamation. (search)
e next, and court the hazard the once so dreaded. This courage, as it is styled, is little more with most men than custom; and they learn to despise what has often threatened without causing them harm. If wounded, they learn wounds are less painful to bear than they had supposed; and then the doctrine of probabilities teaches them once more they are less liable to be wounded again. So the mental process goes on until the nerves become by degrees the subject of will, and he only fears who has not the will to be brave. A Kentucky Colonel killed. The Louisville Journal (Federal) says: We have painful rumors that Col. Franklin S. Wolford, of the First Kentucky cavalry, is dead, from the effects of the wound received in Monday's encounter with Morgan's marauders at Lebanon, Tenn. Our intelligence is that he died on Tuesday night, but as the Nashville papers of Wednesday and yesterday do not make any mention of the fact we shall hope that the reports are premature.
of its own interests." "But, difficult though reunion may at present seem, is not everything more easy than dissolution!" "I confess I see nothing between Union and chaos; but how is it to be done? One thing I know, if my vision of how it can be settled were as clear as my desire is intense that it should be settled, the war would speedily be at an end." Position of affairs in Kentucky--Sympathizers with the Confederates ordered out of the State--Symptoms of Insubordination by a Kentucky Colonel. A letter from Louisville, on the 30th ultimo, to the New York Times, says General Boyle has received an order "to immediately arrest and send to Vicksburg, and forbid to return to Kentucky, all persons who have actively aided or abetted in the invasion of Kentucky by rebel troops. Loyalists demand that disloyalists, and treacherous neutrals, who profess to "take no part on either side of this unhappy controversy,' be dispatched to where they belong." The letter adds: The army