登陆注册
5452300000015

第15章 The Reaction Against Richmond(2)

Associated with the Examiner was a vigorous writer having considerable power of the old-fashioned, furious sort, ever ready to foam at the mouth. If he had had more restraint and less credulity, Edward A. Pollard might have become a master of the art of vituperation. Lacking these qualities, he never rose far above mediocrity. But his fury was so determined and his prejudice so invincible that his writings have something of the power of conviction which fanaticism wields. In midsummer, 1862, Pollard published a book entitled The First Year of the War, which was commended by his allies in Charleston as showing no "tendency toward unfairness of statement" and as expressing views "mainly in accordance with popular opinion."

This book, while affecting to be an historical review, was skillfully designed to discredit the Confederate Administration.

Almost every disaster, every fault of its management was traceable more or less directly to Davis. Kentucky had been occupied by the Federal army because of the "dull expectation" in which the Confederate Government had stood aside waiting for things somehow to right themselves. The Southern Congress had been criminally slow in coming to conscription, contenting itself with an army of 400,000 men that existed "on paper." "The most distressing abuses were visible in the ill-regulated hygiene of our camps." According to this book, the Confederate Administration was solely to blame for the loss of Roanoke Island. In calling that disaster "deeply humiliating," as he did in a message to Congress, Davis was trying to shield his favorite Benjamin at the cost of gallant soldiers who had been sacrificed through his incapacity. Davis's promotion of Benjamin to the State Department was an act of "ungracious and reckless defiance of popular sentiment." The President was "not the man to consult the sentiment and wisdom of the people; he desired to signalize the infallibility of his own intellect in every measure of the revolution and to identify, from motives of vanity, his own personal genius with every event and detail of the remarkable period of history in which he had been called upon to act. This imperious conceit seemed to swallow up every other idea in his mind." The generals "fretted under this pragmatism" of one whose "vanity" directed the war "from his cushioned seat in Richmond" by means of the one formula, "the defensive policy."

One of Pollard's chief accusations against the Confederate Government was its failure to enforce the conscription law. His paper, the Examiner, as well as the Mercury, supported Davis in the policy of conscription, but both did their best, first, to rob him of the credit for it and, secondly, to make his conduct of the policy appear inefficient. Pollard claimed for the Examiner the credit of having originated the policy of conscription; the Mercury claimed it for Rhett.

In other words, an aggressive war party led by the Examiner and the Mercury had been formed in those early days when the Confederate Government appeared to be standing wholly on the defensive, and when it had failed to confide to the people the extenuating circumstance that lack of arms compelled it to stand still whether it would or no. And yet, after this Government had changed its policy and had taken up in the summer of 1862 an offensive policy, this party--or faction, or what you will--continued its career of opposition. That the secretive habit of the Confederate Government helped cement the opposition cannot be doubted. It is also likely that this opposition gave a vent to certain jealous spirits who had missed the first place in leadership.

Furthermore, the issue of state sovereignty had been raised. In Georgia a movement had begun which was distinctly different from the Virginia-Carolina movement of opposition, a movement for which Rhett and Pollard had scarcely more than disdainful tolerance, and not always that. This parallel opposition found vent, as did the other, in a political pamphlet. On the subject of conscription Davis and the Governor of Georgia--that same Joseph E. Brown who had seized Fort Pulaski in the previous year--exchanged a rancorous correspondence. Their letters were published in a pamphlet of which Pollard said scornfully that it was hawked about in every city of the South. Brown, taking alarm at the power given the Confederate Government by the Conscription Act, eventually defined his position, and that of a large following, in the extreme words: "No act of the Government of the United States prior to the secession of Georgia struck a blow at constitutional liberty so fell as has been stricken by the conscript acts."

There were other elements of discontent which were taking form as early as the autumn of 1862 but which were not yet clearly defined. But the two obvious sources of internal criticism just described were enough to disquiet the most resolute administration. When the triple offensive broke down, when the ebb-tide began, there was already everything that was needed to precipitate a political crisis. And now the question arises whether the Confederate Administration had itself to blame. Had Davis proved inadequate in his great undertaking?

The one undeniable mistake of the Government previous to the autumn of 1862 was its excessive secrecy. As to the other mistakes attributed to it at the time, there is good reason to call them misfortunes. Today we can see that the financial situation, the cotton situation, the relations with Europe, the problem of equipping the armies, were all to a considerable degree beyond the control of the Confederate Government. If there is anything to be added to its mistaken secrecy as a definite cause of irritation, it must be found in the general tone given to its actions by its chief directors. And here there is something to be said.

同类推荐
  • 大沩五峰学禅师语录

    大沩五峰学禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 依楞严究竟事忏

    依楞严究竟事忏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • LookingGlass

    LookingGlass

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 五家宗旨纂要

    五家宗旨纂要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 笔法记

    笔法记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 星之解忧店

    星之解忧店

    当你彷徨,绝望,后悔,痛苦的时候,是祈求神明的救赎还是自我解脱?如果能在一家店铺里面接受一单他人的委托就能获得一次摆脱你困境的机会,你能否抓住机会帮助他人,拯救自己?望辰偶然进入这家店铺,正处于妹妹失踪的痛苦之中,为了找到妹妹的下落,接受了店主的委托,一觉醒来竟然变成了兽耳少女……双鲤的沙雕大脑一天突然成精,屡屡给他制造麻烦。我要起床,大脑:不,你不想。我要逃跑,大脑:不,你不想。我……大脑:不,你不想。在不断与之对抗的过程中遇到望辰,被店铺奇妙的魅力吸引自愿留下来与之成为搭档,带着沙雕大脑一同开始了全新生活。
  • 人界玩家

    人界玩家

    天地初开之时分为六界:人界、灵界、妖界、鬼界、魔界、神界。无数光年过去,人界慢慢远离六界,渐渐与五界脱离,灵气溃散。六界大势合久必分,分久必合!当人界被选中之人再次出现在五界之时,他们被五界统称为——“人界掌控者”!
  • 帝尊霸道之逆天妃要冲天

    帝尊霸道之逆天妃要冲天

    简介:大千世界,群英荟萃,看鬼面废材小姐如何演绎小强人生,从弱者攀上至尊巅峰,一体双魂,黑白双绝,且看男主究竟是谁?送药草送功法,送武器,附送美男一枚。做贼,为夫陪你。打怪为夫陪你。虐渣渣为夫陪你。直到天荒地老……
  • 有匪(赵丽颖、王一博主演《有翡》原著)

    有匪(赵丽颖、王一博主演《有翡》原著)

    赵丽颖、王一博主演电视剧《有翡》原著小说。晋江超200亿积分、大神级作家Priest古言小说扛鼎之作,豆瓣年度读书榜单推荐作品。每个人心中都有一个江湖,每个江湖中,都有一段动人心魄的爱情。Priest以犀利的笔锋,写出了她心中那个波澜诡谲的江湖,又用柔软的笔触,描绘出了周翡与谢允之间那段跨越了生与死的爱情传奇。
  • 倾殇之倾城之泪

    倾殇之倾城之泪

    真灵世界乃是一个天地都充满着真力的世界。这里矗立着三大天域,四大帝国。伴随着九龙当空而生的杨倾正在书写着他的传奇!
  • 王者荣耀之无双之巅

    王者荣耀之无双之巅

    【2018王者荣耀文学大赛·征文参赛作品】他在经历陨落后终于走出。那个曾经无敌的荣耀之王,如今再次意外归来。他,将重新站上世界的巅峰!
  • 创造

    创造

    闺密们都说理惠是个奇迹,不光说理惠是个奇迹,说理惠的外婆也是个奇迹。九十岁的人了,耳不聋眼不花,一餐还能吃进去半个肘子,你说是不是奇迹?而且外婆还不糊涂,不光眼面前的事情,更远的,很远的,十几年、几十年前的,甚至民国的事情她也一样说得出来。但是外婆有个毛病,说起以前的事情,她是只说事,不说人,故事说得脉络清晰,精彩绝伦,里面永远缺少一个人物。一当外婆唠叨起来,理惠总是半听不听,打不起精神听完她的故事。外婆也不气,仍然唠叨她的,就像念一部永远念不完的经书,不管有没有听众,她是一念到底。
  • 三国之逍遥人生

    三国之逍遥人生

    袁熙,历史系的大学生,酷爱三国游戏,意外穿越成了三国时期的袁熙。战争年代,好好活着就是一种幸福,此时正值官渡大战前夕,踌躇满志的袁绍以为可以借机消灭曹操,成为北方霸主,继而统一天下。了解历史的袁熙知道,官渡之战袁绍惨败,不仅袁绍因此病逝,自己最终也会成为辽东公孙康的刀下亡魂。为了自保,袁熙从幽州起兵,开始争夺天下
  • 都市之邪龙逆世

    都市之邪龙逆世

    身怀龙族魂,体流龙神血,修得逆天之力,机缘巧合住进一幢只有三个美女的别墅,故事从这里开始------
  • 武圣是怎样炼成的

    武圣是怎样炼成的

    一个大学生穿越到东汉末年,附身成谁不好,偏偏成了武圣关二爷。我一介大学生,让我温酒斩华雄,万军刺颜良,我做不到啊。很多穿越者想改变历史,但穿越到有些人身上,你会发现连沿着历史的轨迹行走都是如此艰难。内心只是一介凡人的关羽,在这乱世中,见识过了宦官的阴险,奸臣的狠毒,但也看到了一批为了汉室复兴舍生忘死的士人。他跟着皇甫嵩一起在战场上平叛,亲眼见证了董卓乱政后的暴行,不知不觉间,他褪去了稚嫩,成为了一名名副其实的“汉人”,并决定为了大汉的国运而平定天下。回过神来,这个世界的关羽,已经走上了一条只属于自己的武圣之路。“无论皇帝昏庸还是有为,官场清廉还是浑浊,这个朝廷中,一定有一些人,他们为了国家的强盛而锐意进取,为了百姓的安康而不顾个人得失,为了天下人的安定而鞠躬尽瘁。如果说什么是大汉的话,那不是天子,也不是朝廷,而是这些人心中的理想,那也正是自高帝建国以来,这个国家传承下来的大汉精神。”(本文除人设部分借鉴演义以外,故事发展以正史为主,但本文通篇不会有XXX是演义吹出来的正史不行之类的言论,我也不希望各位带着这种看法来看本书,和谐讨论,谢谢)