Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 8, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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are incapable of imitating his atrocities. Because he is a brute, he has no right to conclude that everybody else is so. Fourthly and lastly, Lincoln tells us that the relations of his Government with foreign powers are satisfactory — not so happy as they might be, but still pretty fair. He says nothing of the proposal submitted by the French Emperor, which indicates that the relations in question are anything else than satisfactory; but he lets it leak out that in June last, before McClellan was driven, like a hunted wolf from den to den on the Chickahominy, there was a prospect of inducing the nations of Europe to recall the recognition of the Confederates as belligerents. That notable exploit of the "young Napoleon," however, put a new face upon affairs, and the recognition was not recalled. A large part of the message is devoted to the compensation emancipation scheme, as set forth in his inaugural. This is to finish the war at once, and, as he seems to think, withou
d France--distress in the manufacturing districts of England — the removal of McClellan — France supposed to Intend Interference in American affairs on her own accoumer Bavaria, before reported ashore, got off and proceeded to Hamburg. Gen. McClellan's removal caused a depression in American securities. The London Times says it is the first effect of the recent elections on President Lincoln. McClellan is sacrificed to the political jealousies of the party in power, being known to be e Executive. The editor questions the success of the movement, as it makes Gen. McClellan a conservative martyr. The Army and Navy Gazette regards the removal of Gen. McClellan as a defiance of the Government Democrats. No movement, it says, has been more favorable for bold Confederate movements. It questions Burnside's ab condemned, and will probably be abandoned. The Morning Herald regards Gen. McClellan's removal as a terrible mistake of President Lincoln, both in a military an