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McClellan (search for this): article 8
him a little money, and expecting it, too. He has one of the best heads among the Cabinet, though one cannot help remarking that he has a detect in his eyes, and oddly enough so has Gen. Butler, and so has Mr. Jefferson Davis.--It is not too much to say that any stranger would be struck by the immense superiority of the heads and expression of Mr. Davis, of General Polk, of Beauregard, of Stonewall Jackson, and Lee, to most of the Federal chiefs of whom few are at all striking in any way. McClellan looks small, and anxious, and unhappy; Blenker stands like a soldier and has the air of being one; and Burnside seems calm, and self-possessed, and capable; Halleck's head is intellectual, but the face is dreamy and the lower jaw feeble stout, florid, sanguine looking fine, is like a German bass-singer in fine condition, and there is no other to speak of, excepting perhaps Meaguer and McDowall, in the list of soldiers worth looking at a second time, after we have passed Banks, the unhappy
of Mr. Davis, of General Polk, of Beauregard, of Stonewall Jackson, and Lee, to most of the Federal chiefs of whom few are at all striking in any way. McClellan looks small, and anxious, and unhappy; Blenker stands like a soldier and has the air of being one; and Burnside seems calm, and self-possessed, and capable; Halleck's head is intellectual, but the face is dreamy and the lower jaw feeble stout, florid, sanguine looking fine, is like a German bass-singer in fine condition, and there is no other to speak of, excepting perhaps Meaguer and McDowall, in the list of soldiers worth looking at a second time, after we have passed Banks, the unhappy recipient of Stonewall Jackson's favors. The few naval men in the book contrast advantageously with many of the soldiers, but some of the best of the latter are not here. "Stonewall" Jackson's likeness is something like that of Ney — a remarkable " but without the beetle-brows, shaggy and over hanging the full eye, attributed to him."
lp remarking that he has a detect in his eyes, and oddly enough so has Gen. Butler, and so has Mr. Jefferson Davis.--It is not too much to say that any stranger would be struck by the immense superiority of the heads and expression of Mr. Davis, of General Polk, of Beauregard, of Stonewall Jackson, and Lee, to most of the Federal chiefs of whom few are at all striking in any way. McClellan looks small, and anxious, and unhappy; Blenker stands like a soldier and has the air of being one; and Burnside seems calm, and self-possessed, and capable; Halleck's head is intellectual, but the face is dreamy and the lower jaw feeble stout, florid, sanguine looking fine, is like a German bass-singer in fine condition, and there is no other to speak of, excepting perhaps Meaguer and McDowall, in the list of soldiers worth looking at a second time, after we have passed Banks, the unhappy recipient of Stonewall Jackson's favors. The few naval men in the book contrast advantageously with many of
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