In this permission also, the condition of holding Tennessee firmly against Hood is prominent.
The next day General Grant again telegraphed as follows:
General Sherman, on page 154, says he received no answer to his Kingston dispatch ‘at the time.’ The reason is obvious. It was dated 11:30 P. M. of the 11th, and the next day Sherman left for Rome. His telegraphic communications with Kingston and with Washington, however, remained perfect, and it is not likely that a dispatch from the Lieutenant-General, directing the march of an army through to the sea-coast, would be long delayed. If he had never received it in the field, however, he need not now have made the above mistake of three weeks in so important a date, since General Grant's reply of October 11th was printed in full in his final report of the operations of the armies.
On page 157 Sherman says: ‘So it is clear that at that date [October 17] neither General Grant nor General Thomas heartily favored my proposed plan of campaign.’ And yet the day before this he had telegraphed Halleck:
‘I got the dispatch in cipher about providing me a place to come out on salt water, but the cipher is imperfect, and I can not make out whether ’