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The Daily Dispatch: April 29, 1864., [Electronic resource], Reported advance of the enemy on the Peninsula. (search)
ll further prosecuted" he prefers "that it shall be done under the auspices of those who now conduct its management" The inference is that, between McClellan and Lincoln, Mr. Long will go with Mr. Henderson for Lincoln. We predicted upwards of a year ago that the peace men and the Abolitionists would ultimately act together in faLincoln. We predicted upwards of a year ago that the peace men and the Abolitionists would ultimately act together in favor of the acknowledgment of the Southern Confederacy, and the prediction seems likely very soon to be realized. In that event, Lincoln will be recognized as the disunion candidate, which he will be whether he is so recognized or not; and McClellan, the only recognized, as in any event the only real Union candidate, will collect uLincoln will be recognized as the disunion candidate, which he will be whether he is so recognized or not; and McClellan, the only recognized, as in any event the only real Union candidate, will collect under his glorious banner not only the legions of patriots who meet in convention at Chicago, but the genuine patriots of the Republican party. For that matter, there are in the breasts of thousands and thousands of Republicans a smouldering admiration for McClellan, and a living faith in him that, no matter what may be the final c
by an excited, pike-eyes, seething crowd such as vibrates in the of the Parisian Bourse. At night theatres, gambling houses, "Varieties," and worse dens of infamy, veiled under no pretence at disguise, vie with the attractions of the "inspired Maid of Philadelphia," Miss Anna Dickinson Mr. Seward's optimism is accepted without thought or comment; no sound of war save the occasional boom of cannon being tried at the Navy Yard (a sound soothing to Yankee vanity) ever flutters the senses; Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Chase openly, and Mr. Seward secretly, are speculating much more as to their chances for the next Presidency than as to the strength of Gen. Lee or the designs of President Davis. Proceed next to New York, and the recollections of Richmond, blurred by intercourse with Washington, fade into the hazy distance, and can be recalled only by a vigorous effort of the understanding. But as he journeys northwards from Washington the passenger cannot but dreamily contrast the memory o