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The Daily Dispatch: October 8, 1864., [Electronic resource], Yankee prisoners Entering our service. (search)
Yankee prisoners Entering our service. The Augusta Constitutionalist says that some of the Yankee prisoners, whose term of service has expired, and who are detained in captivity because Lincoln, having no further use for them, will not exchange them for our own men, have entered our service and are now doing duty on James island.
The Daily Dispatch: October 8, 1864., [Electronic resource], Yankee prisoners Entering our service. (search)
d. There is too much reason to believe that such propositions were seriously debated between Messrs. Clay and Greeley. As we are ill prepared to make head against a million of men on the American lakes; and as even the Emperor Napoleon will recoil from the thought of having to defend his newly crowned brother against such a horde, the ventilation of his nefarious plot can have but one result in England and France. It makes us desire the utter ruin of the North. We rejoice to hear that Mr. Lincoln is becoming every day more unpopular; that a committee of Congress has denounced him; that governors of States and mayors of cities openly controvert his authority; that powerful secret societies are agitating against him; that discord is growing up between the States, New England being at variance with New York, New York with Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, with Illinois.--We trust that the principle of secession, having taken root, will bear seed and multiply. With a dozen jealous principa
e Yankees. Grant cannot get here this time. The "cradle and the grave"stand between him and Richmond, and they will not let him pass. We have no idea that Grant would have made this expedition had it not been necessary to do something for Lincoln at the approaching election. This expedition is an electioneering movement. Its object is to elect Lincoln, not to take Richmond. To be sure, if Richmond could be taken by surprise while he is electioneering for his master, it would be so mucLincoln, not to take Richmond. To be sure, if Richmond could be taken by surprise while he is electioneering for his master, it would be so much clear gain. The lies of the Yankee telegraph and press have been larger even than is usual with them since Grant came to the north side. The populace must be fed with tales of great battles and wonderful victories, and Grant feeds them. For instance, we all know that Fort Harrison was garrisoned by a few hundred men, who abandoned it almost without a struggle. The Yankee newspapers report a desperate conflict, such as the world has not witnessed since the storming of Badajoz. The Confede
ination.--I recently read a letter from him more intensified with malignity than ever escaped the lips of man.--He said he meant to destroy the present people and populate our country with a better people — the Yankee! You can make with him, or Lincoln, only one peace — that is submission. Go to General Lee's army and you will find its spirit truly animating. Every brigade in it thinks it can whip Grant. Why, then, indulge in despondency? It can do no good. Georgians! do not despoe destroyed. I said twelve months ago that if the enemy ever got to Atlanta he would be destroyed. It is true, I would have preferred his being defeated before he got there. But now we can and will crush the enemy, and that very soon. If Lincoln is defeated, and McClellan elected, in the coming election, we may have peace. But there is no peace party in the North if we are willing to be subjugated. All will subjugate us if they can.--Peace can only come by the defeat of the enemy. Mc