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Timeless Classic Books
A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital: The Entire Collection
A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital: The Entire Collection
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April 22nd - Early a few mornings since, I called on Gov. Wise, and informed him that Lincoln had called out 70,000 men. He opened his eyes very widely and said, emphatically, "I don't believe it." The greatest statesmen of the South have no conception of the real purposes of the men now in power in the
United States. They cannot be made to believe that the Government at Washington are going to wage war immediately. But when I placed the President's
proclamation in his hand, he read it with deep
emotion,and uttered a fierce "Hah!"
Nevertheless, when I told him that these 70,000 were designed to be merely the videttes and outposts of an army of 700,000, he was quite incredulous. He had not witnessed the Wide-Awake gatherings the preceding fall, as I had done,and listened to the pledges they made to subjugate the South, free the negroes, and hang Gov. Wise. I next told him they would blockade our ports, and endeavor to cut off our supplies. To this he uttered a most positive negative. He said it would be contrary to the laws of nations, as had been decided often in the Courts of Admiralty, and would be moreover a violation of the Constitution.
United States. They cannot be made to believe that the Government at Washington are going to wage war immediately. But when I placed the President's
proclamation in his hand, he read it with deep
emotion,and uttered a fierce "Hah!"
Nevertheless, when I told him that these 70,000 were designed to be merely the videttes and outposts of an army of 700,000, he was quite incredulous. He had not witnessed the Wide-Awake gatherings the preceding fall, as I had done,and listened to the pledges they made to subjugate the South, free the negroes, and hang Gov. Wise. I next told him they would blockade our ports, and endeavor to cut off our supplies. To this he uttered a most positive negative. He said it would be contrary to the laws of nations, as had been decided often in the Courts of Admiralty, and would be moreover a violation of the Constitution.
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