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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 15, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): article 1
ln in a basket as the head of John the Baptist was presented of old to a tyrant not much more cruel, and far more respectable from his abilities, the rejoicing could hardly have been greater. Like the Chinese, to whom they have been more than once compared, the Yankees are but little more than full grown children in every thing but avarice and ferocity. We are confident that more extravagant demonstrations were made on the late occasion of Gen. Lee's retreat, in the smallest town in Pennsylvania or New York, than have been made throughout the Southern Confederacy in honor of all the victories we have ever gained. And yet no nation, of which there is any account in history, ever ran such a career of glory, all the difficulties under which it has been run being taken into consideration. The cause of the difference is obvious. Success to the Yankees is a thing so unusual that they hail it as they hail the arrival of a Prince or a Japanese embassy — as an event wholly unexpected —
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 1
ill venture to say, never yet presented itself to a contemptuous world.--Yet no sooner do they obtain a short respite from the fear of imminent danger than they give in to all the wild extravagance with which semi-barbarous nations are wont to express their gratitude for deliverance from what they perceive to be a peril of the most portentous magnitude. Had the last spark of life been crushed out of the prostrate Confederacy — had Meade presented the heads of Jeff. Davis and his Cabinet to Lincoln in a basket as the head of John the Baptist was presented of old to a tyrant not much more cruel, and far more respectable from his abilities, the rejoicing could hardly have been greater. Like the Chinese, to whom they have been more than once compared, the Yankees are but little more than full grown children in every thing but avarice and ferocity. We are confident that more extravagant demonstrations were made on the late occasion of Gen. Lee's retreat, in the smallest town in Penn
heads of Jeff. Davis and his Cabinet to Lincoln in a basket as the head of John the Baptist was presented of old to a tyrant not much more cruel, and far more respectable from his abilities, the rejoicing could hardly have been greater. Like the Chinese, to whom they have been more than once compared, the Yankees are but little more than full grown children in every thing but avarice and ferocity. We are confident that more extravagant demonstrations were made on the late occasion of Gen. Lee's retreat, in the smallest town in Pennsylvania or New York, than have been made throughout the Southern Confederacy in honor of all the victories we have ever gained. And yet no nation, of which there is any account in history, ever ran such a career of glory, all the difficulties under which it has been run being taken into consideration. The cause of the difference is obvious. Success to the Yankees is a thing so unusual that they hail it as they hail the arrival of a Prince or a Japa
Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 1
presented by Yankeedom, we will venture to say, never yet presented itself to a contemptuous world.--Yet no sooner do they obtain a short respite from the fear of imminent danger than they give in to all the wild extravagance with which semi-barbarous nations are wont to express their gratitude for deliverance from what they perceive to be a peril of the most portentous magnitude. Had the last spark of life been crushed out of the prostrate Confederacy — had Meade presented the heads of Jeff. Davis and his Cabinet to Lincoln in a basket as the head of John the Baptist was presented of old to a tyrant not much more cruel, and far more respectable from his abilities, the rejoicing could hardly have been greater. Like the Chinese, to whom they have been more than once compared, the Yankees are but little more than full grown children in every thing but avarice and ferocity. We are confident that more extravagant demonstrations were made on the late occasion of Gen. Lee's retreat,
spectacle so despicable as that presented by Yankeedom, we will venture to say, never yet presented itself to a contemptuous world.--Yet no sooner do they obtain a short respite from the fear of imminent danger than they give in to all the wild extravagance with which semi-barbarous nations are wont to express their gratitude for deliverance from what they perceive to be a peril of the most portentous magnitude. Had the last spark of life been crushed out of the prostrate Confederacy — had Meade presented the heads of Jeff. Davis and his Cabinet to Lincoln in a basket as the head of John the Baptist was presented of old to a tyrant not much more cruel, and far more respectable from his abilities, the rejoicing could hardly have been greater. Like the Chinese, to whom they have been more than once compared, the Yankees are but little more than full grown children in every thing but avarice and ferocity. We are confident that more extravagant demonstrations were made on the late