登陆注册
19308800000056

第56章 LEE AND JACKSON: 1862-3(13)

This second stinging raid roused the loyal North to fury; and by November a new invasion of Virginia was in full swing on the old ground, with McClellan at Warrenton, Lee at Culpeper, and Jackson in the Valley.

But McClellan's own last chance had gone. Late at night on the seventh he was sitting alone in his tent, writing to his wife, when Burnside asked if he could come in with General C.P.

Buckingham, the confidential staff officer to the War Department.

After some forced conversation Buckingham handed McClellan a paper ordering his supersession by Burnside. McClellan simply said: "Well, Burnside, I turn the command over to you." The eighth and ninth were spent in handing over; and on the tenth McClellan made his official farewell. Next day he was entraining at Warrenton Junction when the men, among whom he was immensely popular, broke ranks and swarmed round his car, cursing the Government and swearing they would follow no one but their "Old Commander." McClellan, with all his faults in the field, was a good organizer, an extremely able engineer, a very brave soldier, a very sympathetic comrade in arms, and a regular father to his men, whose personal interests were always his first care. The moment was critical. McClellan, had he chosen, might have imitated the Roman generals who led the revolts of Praetorian Guards. But he stepped out on the front platform of the car, held up his hand, and, amid tense silence, asked the men to "stand by General Burnside as you have stood by me." The car they had uncoupled to prevent his departure was run up and coupled again;and then, amid cheers of mournful farewell, they let him go.

General Ambrose E. Burnside was expected to smash Lee, take Richmond, and end the war at once. He was a good subordinate, but quite unfit for supreme command, which he accepted only under protest. Moreover, he was not supported as he should have been by the War Department, nor even by the Headquarter Staff. While changing his position from Warrenton to Fredericksburg he was hampered by avoidable delays. So when he reached Falmouth he found Lee had forestalled him on the opposing heights of Fredericksburg itself.

The disastrous thirteenth of December was dull, calm, and misty.

But presently the sun shone down with unwonted warmth; the mists rolled up like curtains; and there stood 200,000 men, arrayed in order of battle: 80,000 Confederates awaiting the onslaught of 120,000 Federals.

On came the solid masses of the Federals, eighty thousand strong, with forty in support, amid the thunder of five hundred attacking and defending guns. The sunlight played upon the rising tide of Federal bayonets as on sea currents when they turn inshore. The colors waved proudly as ever; and to the outward eye the attack seemed almost strong enough to drive the stern and silent gray Confederates clear off the crest. But the indispensable morale was wanting. For this was the end of a long campaign, full of drawn battles and terrible defeats. Burnside was an unpopular substitute for McClellan; he was not in any way a great commander; and he was acting under pressure against his own best judgment. His army knew or felt all this; and he knew they knew or felt it. The Federals, for all their glorious courage, felt, when the two fronts met at Fredericksburg, that they were no more than sacrificial pawns in the grim game of war. After much useless slaughter they reeled back beaten. But they could and did retire in safety, skillfully "staffed" by their leaders and close to their unconquerable sea.

Lee could make no counterstroke. The Confederate Government had not dared to let him occupy the far better position on the line of the North Anna, from which a vigorous counterstroke might have almost annihilated a beaten attacker, who would have been exposed on both flanks, beyond the sure protection of the sea. Thus fear of an outcry against "abandoning" the country between Fredericksburg and the North Anna caused the Southern politicians to lose their chance at home. But without a decisive victory they could not hope for foreign intervention. So losing their chance at home made them lose it abroad as well.

Burnside was dazed by his defeat and the appalling loss of life in vain. But after five weeks of most discouraging inaction he tried to surprise Lee by crossing the Rappahannock several miles higher up. On the twentieth and twenty-first of that miserable January the Federal army ploughed its dreary way through sloughs of gluey mud under torrents of chilling rain. Then, when the pace had slackened to a funereal crawl, and the absurdly little chance of surprising Lee had vanished altogether, this despairing "Mud March" came to its wretched end. Four days later Burnside was superseded by one of his own subordinates, General Joseph Hooker, known to all ranks as "Fighting Joe Hooker."Fredericksburg, the spell of relaxing winter quarters beside the fatal Rappahannock, and then the fatal "Mud March," combined to lower Federal morale. Yet the mass of the men, being composed of fine human material, quickly recovered under "Fighting Joe Hooker," who knew what discipline meant. Numbers and discipline tell. But disciplined numbers were not the only or even the greatest menace to the South. For here, as farther west, the Confederate Government was beginning to be foolish just as the Federal Government showed signs of growing wise. Lincoln and Stanton were giving Joe Hooker a fairly free hand just when Davis and Seddon (his makeshift minister of war) were using Confederate forces as puppets to be pulled about by Cabinet strings from Richmond. Here again (as later on at Chattanooga) Longstreet was sent away on a useless errand just when he was needed most by Lee. Good soldier though he was in many ways he was no such man as Stonewall Jackson; and, in this one year, he failed his seniors thrice.

同类推荐
  • 洞真太上八素真经修习功业妙诀

    洞真太上八素真经修习功业妙诀

    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。
  • 岁除日奉推事使牒追

    岁除日奉推事使牒追

    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。
  • 翠渠摘稿

    翠渠摘稿

    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。
  • 易象图说外篇

    易象图说外篇

    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。
  • 幼仪杂箴

    幼仪杂箴

    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。
热门推荐
  • 也许这就是爱情

    也许这就是爱情

    你只听过柏拉图的名字和故事,但是他和他的精神恋人到底经历了什么?来这里一探究竟吧!
  • 校花的贴身保镖

    校花的贴身保镖

    活跃在社会最底层的向东流,因为生活困难而帮人代练游戏,却不料一枚可用来偷听别人内心想法的神奇戒指,居然从游戏中跑出了现实。回到家,向东流还没来得及消化心灵戒指所带来的震撼,接着又莫名其妙地接到一个保护美女校花的重任。本来不想从,但是父命难违,而且对方也对他家里帮助甚大。于是,向东流保护美女校花的同时,也开始和美女校花同班同桌又同居,从此生活变得多姿多彩,各色美女更是接踵而至。
  • 养鬼少女:史上最强女宗主

    养鬼少女:史上最强女宗主

    一个被诅咒的血脉,一个倒霉的少女,一场凄惨的车祸,让一切重新开始;一个友爱的宗门,宠爱自己的父母,溺爱自己的哥哥,因为一场命运的玩笑,全部烟消云散。从此以后,一个身负阴阳的少女,一只名为九尾的白狐,一个算尽天下的书生,结伴踏上了斩妖除魔的道路。在这充满荆棘的路上,他们结识了一个浪荡天下的道士,一个贪吃酒肉的和尚,一个怜悯世人的药师,一个抱琴问天下的女子,一个冷酷无情的剑客,他们之间又会发生什么有趣的事情呢?欲知详情一切尽在《养鬼少女:史上最强女宗主》
  • 星际逆仙

    星际逆仙

    灾难降临,阴霾笼罩着整个世界,姜晨在秘密试验中被证明死亡,却在血雨中复活……
  • 一等庶女,嫁值千金

    一等庶女,嫁值千金

    她是袁府小小的庶女,亦是世人嘴里惊才绝艳的女中诸葛。同一张面容,同一副皮囊,重生后,却是桃花四处开,她想避也避不开。这一只、二只、三只……后面的那些笑得像八百年没近过女色的皇子、公子们,请你们立正向后转,本姑娘哪里啃得下这么多?
  • 余生有你便安好

    余生有你便安好

    曾经的海誓山盟,已烟消云散!二零一五年七月十五日,我会永远记住这一天!仇恨充斥着我的内心,我不惜回到他的身边!只为把曾经的痛苦,如数奉还!直到他的出现……才使我灰暗的生活出现了一丝色彩!乍见之欢,不如久处不厌。或许冥冥中早已注定!余生有你,便是安好!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 刘备的一生

    刘备的一生

    刘备的一生都充满了传奇,他的精神教给了我们许多道理。
  • 《水浒》是本管理书

    《水浒》是本管理书

    说《水浒》是本管理书,一点也不夸张,因为它暗含了团队管理的三大难题。宋江,文也不能文,武也不能武,无形象、无学历、无背景,他却能领导梁山好汉扯旗造反,轰轰烈烈地开展“山寨事业”……为什么?梁山公司,一个县处级单位,居然有36个正处、72个副处。这100多个高管(高度难管),品流复杂,野性难驯,动辙来个亲密接触,搞点流血事件。可是在宋江的安排下,梁山公司秩序井然,人人爱岗敬业,充分发扬团结协作的精神……为什么?梁山公司的领导更替,充满了十足的火药味儿……为什么?答案就在《水浒》中,就看你能不能发现。幸运的是,赵玉平已经帮我们找到了答案,我们不用熟读《水浒》,就能从根本上解决这三大难题。
  • 舞动的岁月

    舞动的岁月

    年轻的岁月,是充满激情的岁月,就像一部戏,你怎样导演自己的激情年代…………
  • 荆棘赛场

    荆棘赛场

    《战域》,一款风靡全球的游戏,巨额的利益足以引起别国的觊觎!他,一个小丑,又怎么在电子竞技的职业联赛中浮浮沉沉?!一帮为了胜利,为了梦想的年轻,在不断追逐胜利的同时,有将拥有那些精彩的故事?她,一个集团的继承人,竟然跑来战队只为逃避被安排的命运?他,一个职业联赛开始时的巨星,当初,为何突然失踪?现在,又为何重新出山?他好强、他自尊、她泼辣、她睿智,他们就是这样一帮年轻人,每个人都有自己的故事,唯一共同的,就是他们都有梦想,并为之努力奋斗!所以,《战域》职业联赛的世界之战,电子竞技界的世界杯,等着,李想和他的战队来了!!