Who Goes There? by Blackwood Ketcham Benson
page 55 of 648 (08%)
page 55 of 648 (08%)
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was forced upon us. But why reason thus, as though we still had choice?
War already exists; we must make the best of it; we are down to-day, but Bull Run is not the whole of the war; one field is lost, but all is not lost. "Doctor," I asked, "why do you say that yesterday will prove to be the crisis of the war?" "Because," he answered, "yesterday's lesson was well taught and will be well learned; it was a rude lesson, but it will prove a wholesome one. Your government now knows the enormous work it has to do. We shall now see preparation commensurate with the greatness of the work. Three months' volunteers are already a thing of the past. This war might have been avoided; all war might be avoided; but this war has not been avoided; America will be at war for years to come." I was silent. "We shall have a new general, Jones; General McClellan is ordered to report immediately in person to the war department." "Why a new general? McClellan is well enough, I suppose; but what has McDowell done to deserve this?" "He has failed. Failure in war is unpardonable; every general that fails finds it so; McClellan may find it so." "You are not much of a comforter, Doctor." "The North does not need false comforters; she needs to look things |
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