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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 24, 1863., [Electronic resource].
Found 414 total hits in 204 results.
D. H. Hill (search for this): article 1
Kirby Smith (search for this): article 1
Chase (search for this): article 1
The Aspect of affairs.
While Seward and Bates are coolly proposing to grant us peace on condition of unlimited submission, and the loss of our slave property, valued at the commencement of the war at only four thousand millions of dollars, and while Lincoln and Chase are proposing to make the forfeiture yet more severe, the courage of this Confederacy was never higher, its means of resistance more ample, or its determination never to affiliate with the rotten despotism on the other side of the Potomac more fixed and irrevocable.
The people of the Confederacy did not enter into this war without having first maturely considered all the consequences, and thoroughly weighed all the chances of success.
When they drew the sword, it was with a perfect knowledge that they were about to engage in a long, bloody, and tedious war. They knew perfectly well the strength of their enemy, and the extent of his resources.
They never calculated upon uninterrupted success.
They knew that in al
Bragg (search for this): article 1
Shakespeare (search for this): article 1
Seward (search for this): article 1
The Aspect of affairs.
While Seward and Bates are coolly proposing to grant us peace on condition of unlimited submission, and the loss of our slave property, valued at the commencement of the war at only four thousand millions of dollars, and ed their supposed approaching annihilation with pleasure.
It is this people that Lincoln thinks he has subdued, and that Seward insults with proposals to submit because they have lost a single fortress, with its garrison, and failed to destroy their e no signs of its continued existence?--Are there any evidences of weakness — any symptoms of a collapse?
It Lincoln and Seward have been able to discover any, they have keener eyesight than any man in this Confederacy.
From the evidence on the e claims of the rival potentates.
In the same manner the bayonets of the Confederates will dis cse of the pretensions of Seward and his comrades dust recovered from a mortal terror, induced by- Lee's invasion of Pennsylvania, the think they have won
Lincoln (search for this): article 1
Beauregard (search for this): article 1
Price (search for this): article 1
Taylor (search for this): article 1