Spent yesterday at the hospital — very few patients. Our
army in the Valley falling back; and the two armies said to be very near each
other, and much skirmishing. Our dear W. B. N. had his horse shot under him a
few days ago. This is fearful. Our country is greatly afflicted, and our dear
ones in great peril; but the Lord reigneth — He, who stilleth the raging of the
seas, can surely save us from our enemies and all that hate us — to Him do we
look for help.
A Baltimore paper of the 11th gives an account of McClellan
having been superseded by Burnside. We are delighted at this, for we believe
McC. to be the better general of the two. It is said that he was complained of
by Halleck for not pushing the army on, and preventing the capture of Harper's
Ferry and the 11,000. McC. knew it could not be done, for he had General
Jackson to oppose him! His removal was an unexpected blow to the North,
producing great excitement. Oh that the parties there would fight among
themselves! The Northern papers are insisting upon another “On to Richmond,” and
hint that McC. was too slow about every thing. The “Young Napoleon” has fallen
from his high estate, and returns to his family at Trenton! The Yankees are
surely an absurd race, to say the least of them. At one moment extolling their
generals as demi-gods, the next hurling them to the dust — none so poor as to
do them reverence. “General McClellan is believed to have passed through
Washington last night,” is the announcement of a late Yankee paper, of the idol
of last week.
SOURCE: Judith W. McGuire, Diary of a Southern
Refugee, During the War, p. 170-1
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