| Jefferson Davis - 1881 - 930 pages
...chance to know whereof he bore witness, even if there had been any foundation of truth for his fiction. For an enemy so relentless in the war for our subjugation,...malignity toward the people of the South ; his successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people, perhaps... | |
| Jefferson Davis - 1881 - 908 pages
...chance to know whereof he bore witness, even if there had been any foundation of truth for his fiction. For an enemy so relentless in the war for our subjugation,...malignity toward the people of the South ; his successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people, perhaps... | |
| 1881 - 318 pages
...cheered, as was natural, at the news of the fall of one they considered as their most powerful foe. . . . For an enemy so relentless in the war for our subjugation,...malignity toward the people of the South. His successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people, perhaps... | |
| Jefferson Davis - 1881 - 902 pages
...chance to know whereof he bore witness, even if there had been any foundation of truth for his fiction. For an enemy so relentless in the war for our subjugation,...malignity toward the people of the South ; his successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people, perhaps... | |
| David Homer Bates - 1907 - 452 pages
...so relentless in the war for our subjugation, we could not be expected to mourn, yet, in view of the political consequences, it could not be regarded otherwise than as a great misfortune to the South. . . . To CHAPTER XXVIII See Page 395 THE following communication from Major AEH Johnson is of historic... | |
| Francis Whiting Halsey - 1912 - 228 pages
...chance to know whereof he bore witness, even if there had been any foundation of truth for his fiction. For an enemy so relentless in the war for our subjugation,...malignity toward the people of the South; his successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people, perhaps... | |
| Jefferson Davis - 2003 - 770 pages
...Fall, 2:683; Sherman, Memoirs, 2:349). 6Davis' recollection of his reaction to Lincoln's assassination: "it could not be regarded otherwise than as a great...malignity toward the people of the South; his successor was without power in the North, and the embodiment of malignity toward the Southern people." Stephen... | |
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