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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 21, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 6 total hits in 2 results.
Butler (search for this): article 2
Jackson (search for this): article 2
Yankee praises of Jackson.
The Enquirer passes an appropriate and pithy comment upon the Yankee praises of Jackson, now that he is dead.
Him "they never could afford to admire until he was dead, and their sorrow is tempered by a sense of reliJackson, now that he is dead.
Him "they never could afford to admire until he was dead, and their sorrow is tempered by a sense of relief" The Enquirer thinks that their creditable mimicry of admiration of him "is second only to that unfeigned homage which, in their inmost souls, they pay to the living grandeur of their own hero, Butler, who embodies, in highest perfection, all tha them, and to prove that in accordance with their own standard of true glory, as displayed in Butler, their great model, Jackson is unworthy of their praises.
It says:
"It may seem harsh, at such a moment, to damage, in the eyes of the Yankeeink it a duty to inform them — they will scarcely believe us; they had formed a smarter opinion of human nature — that Gen. Jackson did not accumulate a fortune in this war. He did not speculate in sugar or molasses; in tobacco or in flour; he robbed