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rces of men and means which were poured forth with unstinted hand for years of the war had been husbanded with the care and handled with the skill which the occasion demanded; and if, instead of mutual bickering and distrust, we had cultivated a spirit of mutual toleration, and thrown the mantle over all that was weak and shameful instead of exposing it to the gaze of the world, we might be in a situation to-day that would render as ridiculous the enemy's vaunts of our approaching ruin as they uniformly proved to be in time past.--These reflections will prove a consolation if ever the dismal hour of our subjugation arrives. They are not, however, too late now. If we draw the proper moral from the past, if we stand shoulder to shoulder as in the first year of the war, and put forth our energies in a united and enlightened course of action, the Spring campaign of 1865, with the blessing of Heaven, will have the same results as the Spring campaign of every year since the war commenced.