The President revised one of my articles for the press
to-day, suggesting some slight modifications, which, perhaps, improved it. It was
not a political article; but designed exclusively to advance the cause by
inciting the people of Virginia and elsewhere to volunteer for the war. Such
volunteers are accepted, and ordered into active service at once; whereas six
and twelve months' men, unless they furnish their own arms, are not accepted.
It is certain the United States intend to raise a grand
army, to serve for three years or the war. Short enlistments constituted the
bane of Washington's army; and this fact is reiterated a thousand times in his
extant letters.
There are a great many applications for clerkships in the
departments by teachers who have not followed their pupils to the
army. Army and naval officers, coming over at this late day, are commissioned
in our service. In regard to this matter, the President is supposed to know
best.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 1, p. 55
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