Clear and cool.
It is reported that
Grant is reinforcing Sherman, and that the latter has fallen back upon
Goldsborough. This is not yet confirmed by any official statement. A single
retrograde movement by Sherman, or even a delay in advancing, would snatch some
of his laurels away, and enable Lee to obtain supplies. Yet it may be so. He
may have been careering the last month on the unexpended momentum of his recent
successes, and really operating on a scale something more than commensurate
with the forces of his command. Should this be the case, the moral effect on
our people and the army will be prodigious, and a series of triumphs on our
side may be the consequence.
The Northern papers
chronicle the rise in flour here—to $1500 per barrel—a few days ago, and this
affords proof of the fact that every occurrence of military importance in
Richmond is immediately made known in Washington. How can success be possible?
But our authorities are confirmed in their madness.
SOURCE: John
Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate
States Capital, Volume 2, p. 458-9
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