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as follows about the situation of affairs: "That we shall soon have possession of Memphis, which, next to Charleston, has been the not-house of Secession. I do not doubt.--But before it is ours we shall walk across a bloody field. The South is roused. The Pittsburg repulse has been magnified into a victory. There is no doubt of the fact that from every town, village, and plantation in the South men are rushing to arms. They turn out as once our revolutionary forefathers did, when Burgoyne was advancing on Saratoga. Never was there greater activity than at the present time. The South has received not less than fifty thousand foreign arms since the first of March, and there is but little doubt that the Southern armies are fuller to-day than they have been at any time. They have abandoned the seasons, and the West, and are concentrating all their forces at two or three points. Great battles are to be fought in the future. The rebellion is far from being crushed. It is wi
George Wright (search for this): article 2
The "Rebellion." --The Fort Wright correspondent of the Best in Journal, (an ultra Black Republican sheet,) writes as follows about the situation of affairs: "That we shall soon have possession of Memphis, which, next to Charleston, has been the not-house of Secession. I do not doubt.--But before it is ours we shall walk across a bloody field. The South is roused. The Pittsburg repulse has been magnified into a victory. There is no doubt of the fact that from every town, village, and plantation in the South men are rushing to arms. They turn out as once our revolutionary forefathers did, when Burgoyne was advancing on Saratoga. Never was there greater activity than at the present time. The South has received not less than fifty thousand foreign arms since the first of March, and there is but little doubt that the Southern armies are fuller to-day than they have been at any time. They have abandoned the seasons, and the West, and are concentrating all their forces a
January, 3 AD (search for this): article 2
bt.--But before it is ours we shall walk across a bloody field. The South is roused. The Pittsburg repulse has been magnified into a victory. There is no doubt of the fact that from every town, village, and plantation in the South men are rushing to arms. They turn out as once our revolutionary forefathers did, when Burgoyne was advancing on Saratoga. Never was there greater activity than at the present time. The South has received not less than fifty thousand foreign arms since the first of March, and there is but little doubt that the Southern armies are fuller to-day than they have been at any time. They have abandoned the seasons, and the West, and are concentrating all their forces at two or three points. Great battles are to be fought in the future. The rebellion is far from being crushed. It is wisdom to keep the fact ever before us. Whereupon the New York Express remarks: The Secretary of War thinks otherwise, or acts otherwise; for without a reserve cor