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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 27, 1862., [Electronic resource].

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Conductor W. R. Taylor (search for this): article 1
and, taught me to follow my flag, and defend every portion of my country." Mrs. Bragg insisted "that the Federal were intruders and invaders of the South." The Colonel replied in courteous language that he could not understand his position in that light, and incidentally remarked that, as an old friend of Gen. Bragg, he would have been pleased to see him. At this allusion the lady's dark and sparkling even flashed and she said, "If you would see Gen. Bragg you should meet him in the West, and not here on his plantation." The Colonel, with a little replied that "our Western troops had been trying to meet Gen. Bragg, but that their efforts had not been altogether successful." Here upon the lady demanded protection, and getting into a carriage rode beyond the immediate lines of our troops — sad, no doubt, to feel that her husband, and the trusted friend of Gen. Taylor, and the hero of one of the best fought battles on our continent, was now ing out of Kentucky a defeated rebel.
Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 1
rs fight sympathies for the dead and his pray the wounded, and says he is the more for the disaster, as he moved on this Warrenton rather against the opinion of Secretary of War and Halleck. He be moved earlier than was expected, and Stanton, and Halleck told him to be He gives, as his losses, 1,152 killed, wounded, of which, he says, a large are very slightly so, and his prisoners are He says the army is in good condition, and the Government for its support and confi of Maryland, is dead. The Chronicle says Bragg has been reinforced by on Monday, Vallandigham offered looking to peace, which lies over. The following, from the Herald, will give some the present tone of the Northern press: winter campaign East and West--What is the prospect? The disaster to the national army Fredericksburg has dissipated the confident previously entertained throughout the "short, sharp, and decisive" against the rebellion, East and West, has brought
Richmond (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
le time for rest and for the needful of its heavy damages. Whether General therefore, is to go into winter quarters to resume offensive operations on Rappahannock, or from some other base of operations, we cannot tell. It will su the present that he has received a that he must turn the rebel his front of abandon that line of march they are deliberating now in Washington upon next to do. The absence of any formi movement to General Burnside by of Suffolk and Petersburg or the James river has enabled the rebel Gen. Lee to con forces in front of Fredericksburg, and to delay another advance on our side perhaps for to come. view of the "situation"--Unmerciful of the "imbeciles" at Washington. We copy in full the New York World's editorial last, to which brief allusion has been in the telegraphic column: help us! There seems to be no help in The cause is perishing. Hope after hope has till now the only prospect is the very of despair. But how ca
Suffolk, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
he fearful slaughter, but little time for rest and for the needful of its heavy damages. Whether General therefore, is to go into winter quarters to resume offensive operations on Rappahannock, or from some other base of operations, we cannot tell. It will su the present that he has received a that he must turn the rebel his front of abandon that line of march they are deliberating now in Washington upon next to do. The absence of any formi movement to General Burnside by of Suffolk and Petersburg or the James river has enabled the rebel Gen. Lee to con forces in front of Fredericksburg, and to delay another advance on our side perhaps for to come. view of the "situation"--Unmerciful of the "imbeciles" at Washington. We copy in full the New York World's editorial last, to which brief allusion has been in the telegraphic column: help us! There seems to be no help in The cause is perishing. Hope after hope has till now the only prospect is the v
Warrenton (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
e the battle would more decisive than if he had crossed at first named. He says became very near and that after waiting two days for us to and fight him, he recrossed, without loss or material, and adds "to the brave officers who accomplished the feat of re in the face of the enemy, I owe every For the failure in the attack I am re He compliments his soldiers fight sympathies for the dead and his pray the wounded, and says he is the more for the disaster, as he moved on this Warrenton rather against the opinion of Secretary of War and Halleck. He be moved earlier than was expected, and Stanton, and Halleck told him to be He gives, as his losses, 1,152 killed, wounded, of which, he says, a large are very slightly so, and his prisoners are He says the army is in good condition, and the Government for its support and confi of Maryland, is dead. The Chronicle says Bragg has been reinforced by on Monday, Vallandigham offered looking to peace, whi
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 2
cause, when we had arranged terms of peace the Belgium refused them; and instead of enforcing obedience the Powers divided, England and France supporting Belgium, and the other three Powers ending by Holland and their joint award. "Holland defied the five Powers." No such thing; she defied Belgium, and defeated the Belgians over and over but when England and France interfered, though she had Russia, Austria, and Prussia on her side, she withdrew from the contest. We do not expect from Mr. Lincoln the singular good sense and moderation which distinguish the Princes of the House of Orange. But so far as precedents go, those just discussed establish the right of intervention beyond dispute, while they prove nothing either against the possibility of effecting by mediation a pacific settlement, nor against the wisdom of interference in such a case as the present. The Confederates are not Gr or Belgians; they are neither savages nor coward. They have shown their ability and resoluti
py the following highly interesting article from the London Inder: The case for the Defendants. Lord Russell is neither distinguished by administrative capacity nor by diplomatic courtesy. The publication in this country of his dispatch to Lord Cowley, before it could have been read to the French Minister for Foreign Affairs, was an outrageous breach of international courtesy. Some of his lordship's enemies attribute this extraordinary proceeding to an abject desire to conciliate Mr. Adams and his Government; a much more reasonable assumption is, that it was due to his eagerness to allay the anxiety of the Stock Exchange and the Cotton market. But it would have been very easy to attain this object by an informal publication of the purport of the dispatch; and the only conclusion we can come to is that Lord Russell is either ignorant or oblivious of diplomatic at quette. Hanuga seria duount in mala. The consequences of trivial discourtesies are not always trifling; and it i
January 1st, 1861 AD (search for this): article 2
, disposes of all argument on this point. The American Government recognized (or rather offered to recognize) the short-lived Republic of Hungary. This was says Historicus, a breach of international law — an act of hostility against Austria Be it so. But the American Government and American affirm that it was not so; and by their own rations and by their own act they are estopped from all complaint if any European Power shall tomorrow recognize the Government at Richmond Say, if on January 1st, 1861, England had recognized South Carolina, we cannot see how, on its own showing, the Federal Government could have claimed a right to remonstrate. As to the pretended difficulty of knowing what to recognize no one is better aware than this ingenious plunder that it is merely a pretence. We do not recognize Territories, but Governments, we should recognize not "the South" but the Confederate States of America; and we should recognize them not by defining their frontiers, but by accrediti
hose of Greece and Belgium, he affirms, are not precedents in point at all. The great Powers did not recognize the revolted subjects of the Sultan and the King of Holland: they interfered to create Greece and Belgium, which would never have been created without their assistance. Passing to the stronger and closer parallel affordedeace the Belgium refused them; and instead of enforcing obedience the Powers divided, England and France supporting Belgium, and the other three Powers ending by Holland and their joint award. "Holland defied the five Powers." No such thing; she defied Belgium, and defeated the Belgians over and over but when England and France Holland defied the five Powers." No such thing; she defied Belgium, and defeated the Belgians over and over but when England and France interfered, though she had Russia, Austria, and Prussia on her side, she withdrew from the contest. We do not expect from Mr. Lincoln the singular good sense and moderation which distinguish the Princes of the House of Orange. But so far as precedents go, those just discussed establish the right of intervention beyond dispute, wh
Historians (search for this): article 2
olicy, or an explanation of the views of the Americanizing section of the Cabinet. The only documents that do seem to express their opinions and defend their action as they would have it defended are two letters that have appeared in the Times from the p n of a gentleman actually connected with Ministerial families, and formerly reputed to be the author of some of the bitterest and most brilliant essays that won the first place among weekly journals for the paper in which they appeared. Historians as it pleases him to be called, is a special pleader of no mean capacity; and if a case can be made cut for his clients, we may be sure that it is contained in the long and able articles in which he endeavors to demonstrate the wrongfulness of recognition and the impossibility of Intervention. His first argument is directed to dispose of the precedents alleged in favor of recognition. Those of Greece and Belgium, he affirms, are not precedents in point at all. The great Powers did no
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