Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

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hen will this horrid war cease? It it was not for the lives it would cost, I would wish the rebels would get to Washington, if it was only for one day, and drive Lincoln and his hordes from their majestic positions. I think it would do them good; but there is no such good luck, Washington is too well fortified. They are sure to rt. If the Government does not do its duty a soldier ought not to do his either. I expect a scolding from you for talking so, but I can't help it. I'll ran down Lincoln and his friends in Congress before anybody, and if I should be arrested to-morrow. I do not think the whole ship and crew of them are worth one cent. I wonder wtisfactory, and I send it to you at once. I am, sir, your obd't serv't, Wm. L. Dayton, His Excellency Wm H. Seward, Secretary of State, &c., Beauties of Lincoln's message. The Albany (N. Y.) Atlas has a good article on the "beauties" of its President's message: The Administration journals have pretended that the
The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], Another Richmond letter in the London times. (search)
nth the war which established the independence of the South was fought on her willing soil; how Lee, and Jackson, and Stua and a hundred others, were among her chosen sons, and how, upon every battle-field, rivers of the best blood of Virginia were freely shed rather than abandon the title to independence which finds its expression in her fierce motto of "Sic Semper Tyrannis." In one respect there need be little anxiety entertained in Europe about the pompous proclamation in which President Lincoln announces that after the 1st of January next all slaves in the States then in rebellion will be et free. From the very first dawn of this war that proclamation has been practically enforced. There remains no power to enforce it in January, 1863, which was not invoked and employed in January, 1862. It is remarked, after the experience of eighteen months of warfare, that the smooth-bore rifle is generally preferred by the Southern soldiers to the Enfield or Springfield. The Confe