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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: April 4, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 13 total hits in 5 results.
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 3
Byron (search for this): article 3
Prentice (search for this): article 3
Prentice on Morgan.
--We clip the following from the Louisville Journal of the 19th, from which it appears that Prentice has never forgiven John Morgan for the terrible fright he gave him in one of his raids:
In making a partial reply on Tuesday to a letter of our charming little rebel correspondent, "V.," we omitted to notice what she said of Gen. John Morgan and Gen. Buckner.
We don't propose to repair the omission to any great now. "V. " says: "I wonder why you do not admire our glorious Gen. Morgan.
I thought you had more spirit than not to admire such a dashing hero." Alas it has always been the case that the loveliest of women are ever prone to admire and idolize a "dashing hero," especially if he has a strong spice of sin and the him.
A bold robber chief captivates their romantic fancies sooner than a good and quiet Christian citizen, and a gloomy and desperate pirate, like Byron's Comrad, takes a deeper hold upon their hearts and imaginations than any honest
John Morgan (search for this): article 3
Prentice on Morgan.
--We clip the following from the Louisville Journal of the 19th, from which it appears that Prentice has never forgiven John Morgan for the terrible fright he gave him in one of his raids:
In making a partial reply on Tuesday to a letter of our charmin bel correspondent, "V.," we omitted to notice what she said of Gen. John Morgan and Gen. Buckner.
We don't propose to repair the omission to t now. "V. " says: "I wonder why you do not admire our glorious Gen. Morgan.
I thought you had more spirit than not to admire such a dashin st commander of a steam frigate or ship of the line.
If some of John Morgan's men had robbed our correspondent of her best norse, as they ha e hardly think he would be the idol of her dreams, as he now is. If Morgan had offered two hundred thousand dollars for her own or her father' y dash of his until he dashes out his brains.
We can appreciate John Morgan well enough.
We understand exactly what he is, and what he is n
Buckner (search for this): article 3
Prentice on Morgan.
--We clip the following from the Louisville Journal of the 19th, from which it appears that Prentice has never forgiven John Morgan for the terrible fright he gave him in one of his raids:
In making a partial reply on Tuesday to a letter of our charming little rebel correspondent, "V.," we omitted to notice what she said of Gen. John Morgan and Gen. Buckner.
We don't propose to repair the omission to any great now. "V. " says: "I wonder why you do not admire our glorious Gen. Morgan.
I thought you had more spirit than not to admire such a dashing hero." Alas it has always been the case that the loveliest of women are ever prone to admire and idolize a "dashing hero," especially if he has a strong spice of sin and the him.
A bold robber chief captivates their romantic fancies sooner than a good and quiet Christian citizen, and a gloomy and desperate pirate, like Byron's Comrad, takes a deeper hold upon their hearts and imaginations than any honest