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ston in his Georgia campaign. Why could he not see that a cam- paign i>t" almost identical conditions had been forced on him ? If he was compelled to fall liark from tin- Wilderness to Petersburg, it was because Grant had limitless resources at a moment's command, while every man who fell out of his own ranks was iM,nr forever and none to be found in his place. If the retreat from the Wilderness to Petersburg was a military necessity, what were the changed condi- tions to arrest at Petersburg the policy of retreat and pursuit of the same two armies ? Did not General Lee see that the defence ol Petersburg for a few months must terminate in the destruction of his army ? Did he not suggest to the government a true military avoid- ance of such a catastrophe by pursuing with the Army of Northern Virginia the same general strategy that General Johnston adopted with the Army of the Tennessee ? I put the plain question to Vice- President Stephens, while he was defending Petersburg in view ot Johnston's retreat before Sherman, namely: "Who of our generals is the greatest in your eyes?" The reply came promptly: "I am decidedly of the opinion that General Joseph Johnston has the clear- est understanding of any of the military policy necessary to final success. In this I prefer him." I have always regretted that opin- ion of Mr. Stephens, because I have never been content to believe that the defence of Petersburg was the generalship of Lee as a feature of his strategy.

When we come to institute parallels between the generals of our armies one in Virginia and the other in the more Southern States we encounter the resistance of President Davis or his government to all. That feature of our history is, for sentimental reasons, thus far suppressed. General Lee's greatness is apparent in the fact that, whatever his grievance, he never permitted the civil government to become openly at war with him. The two Johnstons, Beauregard, Hardee, Forrest, etc., and nearly all the civil leaders Stephens, Toombs, Yancey, Wigfall, Rhett, etc. were far from terms of peace with the President or with the War Department.

JOHN WITHERSPOON Du BOSE. Wetumpka, Ala.