Knoxville, Tenn. We are again under
marching orders. It is rumored we go to Rosecrans' support tomorrow morning.
Our boys are quite as enthusiastic as when they first left home, and for the
same reason. They are ready to go anywhere—do anything to hasten the end. They
have borne with wonderful fortitude the excessive fatigue of marching through a
mountainous country. Burnside does not like to spare them—will not unless
absolutely necessary. He owes something to the Ninth Army Corps. Those stars
upon his epaulets that shine so brightly, and which he wears so jauntily, were
won for him by the Ninth Army Corps. General Burnside is truly a noble man. We
respect him for his honesty and frankness in acknowledging his mistakes as well
as for his great administrative ability.
Our orders to march
have just been countermanded. General Burnside told Colonel Luce he had
received a despatch from Rosecrans that we are not needed at present. That
seems to confirm the rumor of his success. We are having delightful weather,
clear and cool.
SOURCE: David Lane, A Soldier's Diary: The Story of
a Volunteer, 1862-1865, p. 97
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