Bright, windy, cold,
and disagreeable.
There was nothing
new at the department this morning. Nothing from below; nothing from South
Carolina. Perhaps communications are cut between this and Charleston. All are
anxious to hear the result of the anticipated battle with Sherman, for somehow
all know that the order to fight him was sent from Richmond more than a week
ago.
People's thoughts
very naturally now dwell upon the proximate future, and the alternatives likely
to be presented in the event of the abandonment of Richmond, and consequently
Virginia, by Lee's army. Most of the male population would probably (if permitted)
elect to remain at their homes, braving the fate that might await them. But the
women are more patriotic, and would brave all in following the fortunes of the
Confederate States Government. Is this because they do not participate in the
hardships and dangers of the field? But many of our men are weary and worn, and
languish for repose. These would probably remain quiescent on parole,
submitting to the rule of the conqueror; but hoping still for foreign
intervention or Confederate victories, and ultimate independence.
Doubtless Lee could
protract the war, and, by concentrating farther South, embarrass the enemy by
compelling him to maintain a longer line of communication by land and by sea,
and at the same time be enabled to fall upon him, as occasion might offer, in
heavier force. No doubt many would fall out of the ranks, if Virginia were
abandoned; but Lee could have an army of 100,000 effective men for years.
Still, these dire
necessities may not come. The slaveowners, speculators, etc., hitherto contriving
to evade the service, may take the alarm at the present aspect of affairs, and
both recruit and subsist the army sufficiently for victory over both Grant and
Sherman; and then Richmond will be held by us, and Virginia and the Cotton
States remain in our possession; and we shall have peace, for exhaustion will
manifest itself in the United States.
We have dangerous
discussions among our leaders, it is true; and there may be convulsions, and
possibly expulsion of the men at the head of civil affairs: but the war will
not be affected. Such things occurred in France at a time when the armies
achieved their greatest triumphs.
One of the greatest
blunders of the war was the abandonment of Norfolk; and the then Secretary of
War (Randolph) is now safely in Europe. That blunder brought the enemy to the
gates of the capital, and relinquished a fertile source of supplies; however,
at this moment Lee is deriving some subsistence from that source by connivance
with the enemy, who get our cotton and tobacco.
Another blunder was
Hood's campaign into Tennessee, allowing Sherman to raid through Georgia.
SOURCE: John
Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate
States Capital, Volume 2, p. 417-9
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