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ing, and reached here (Columbus) that night. The evacuation was completed Thursday night, and the Yankees arrived Friday morning, just twenty-four hours after I left. Let no man blame me for "retreating." I was "under orders. " Besides, after Beauregard left, I could not be expected to hold Corinth against Halleck's army by myself. This evacuation was equal to a victory. It destroys or renders valueless all the Yankees have done for months. It draws them from their gunboats. In fact, all otranded. Report says Halleck had received a large number of fresh troops, and had sent off most of his sick. One-third of his army is reported sick. If he remains in Corinth, all of them will die, for the atmosphere and the water are full of disease. If he advances, Beauregard's army will whip him. He got but few stores and arms, and took a few stragglers prisoners. His attempts to attack our rear were repulsed, and we are improved, while he is worsted, by "the evacuation of Corinth." L.
a warrior rests upon that narrow foundation, and he has been trying ever since to bolster it up by expedients to which no man of genuine merit and honor would ever resort. The plan of McClellan's operations is the conception of that hoary sinner, Gen. Scott, and McClellan is simply a part of the machinery which the old reprobate, who is only nominally retired, continues to work for the destruction of his native State.--Let any one compare the official communications of Gens. Johnston and Beauregard with those of McClellan, and the difference between the true soldier and the blustering pretender will at once he manifest. The Confederate Generals let their deeds speak for them; or, when they have occasion to write, their communications are laconic, comprehensive, and modest. McClellan, on the contrary, is always writing sensation dispatches. He has mistaken his vocation. It is clear that nature intended him for a correspondent of the New York Herald.--After the most smashing defeat