The President is unwell again; to what extent I have not
learned. But the Vice-President is ready, no doubt, to take his place in the
event of a fatal result; and some would rejoice at it. Such is the mutability of
political affairs!
The Attorney-General Watts, being referred to, sends in a written
opinion that foreigners sojourning here, under the protection of the
Confederate States, are liable to military duty, in defense of their homes,
against any government but the one to which they claim to owe allegiance. This
I sent in to the Secretary of War, and I hope he will act on it; but the
Assistant Secretary and Mr. Benjamin were busy to-day — perhaps combating the
Attorney-General's opinion. Will Mr. Seddon have the nerve to act? It is a trying
time, and every man is needed for defense.
The enemy were drawn up in line of battle this morning below
the fortifications. The Department Guard (my son Custis among them) were
ordered out, and marched away; and so with the second class militia. A battle
is looked for to-morrow; and there has been skirmishing to-day. A dispatch from
Hanover Court House says the enemy is approaching likewise from the north in
large force — and 15 guns. This is his great blunder. He cannot take Richmond,
nor draw back Lee, and the detachment of so many of his men may endanger
Baltimore and Washington, and perhaps Philadelphia.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 1, p. 367
No comments:
Post a Comment