INDEX
��Cooke, John Esten, on Stuart at Chancellorsville, 45; pen pictures of Stuart, 50, 56; his account of Beauregard's social relations, 96; his comment on Beauregard's smile, loi; describes Beauregard's relations with officers, ill.
Cooke, General Philip St. George, 219.
Cooper, General Samuel, his rank in the Confederate army, 10.
Cox, General J. D., an admirer of Johnston, 4, 25, 26.
Crittenden, John J,, Toombs's friend- ship for, 198.
Dalgetty, Captain Dugald, 97.
D'Artagnan, 96, 113.
Davis, Jefferson, his hopes of John- ston's success, 3; growing un- friendliness between them, 7, 8, 10; placed Johnston fourth in Confederate army, 10; had his own ideas of military policy, 11; writes sharply to Johnston, 11, 12; characterizes letter of Johnston as insubordinate, 14; more diplo- matic than Johnston, 17; his later utterances more savage than Johnston's, 19; his patriotism, 20; contrasted with Lincoln, 22, 147; on Stuart, 45; snubs Longstreet, 80; unpleasant relations with Beauregard, 102, 103; writes sharply to Beauregard, 119; shows confidence in Benjamin, 130; a patriotic idealist in pur- pose, 135; objects to advice, 135; "spat" with Benjamin, 143; com- plimentary to Benjamin, 150; op- posed by Stephens, 154; com- ments on, by Stephens, 163, 171; criticism of, 207, 211.
Davis, Mrs. Jeflferson, writes Life of her husband, 81; writes of Benja- min, 135, 136, 142, 144, 145; her portrait of Robert Toombs, 185, 186, 196.
��Deerhound, the, English yacht that rescued Semmes, 229, 240.
de Sevigne, Madame, her com- ment on the historical novels of her day, 52.
Dodd, W. E., calls Benjamin "hated Jew," 125.
Drewry's Bluff, General Whiting at, no; Beauregard's plans not car- ried out at, 118.
Dumas, Alexandre, 96.
Early, General J. A., explains criti- cism of Longstreet, 84.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, on self- confidence, 68.
Enobarbus, profound doctrine of, in regard to women, 56.
Ewell, General Richard S., 14, 105, 256.
Fair Oaks, 3; Johnston struck down by a shell at, 6, 23.
Fernando de Noronha, 237.
Floyd, General John B., 112.
Fort Loudon, Longstreet and Mc- Laws at, 78, 79.
Fort Warren, A. H. Stephens im- prisoned in, 163, 165.
Fremantle, A. J. L., 6; quoted, 13, 14, 26; his description of Stuart's movements, 42; on Longstreet, 65, 67, 71.
Gamett, Judge Theodore S, writes of Stuart's discipline, 41.
Gettysburg, battle of, Longstreet 's connection with, 66, 67, 73, 74, 78, 83, 256, 257; the climax of an in- evitable struggle, 249; Lee and Meade in command at, 254; posi- tion of opposing forces, 255; the first day, 255, 256; the second day, 256, 257; Pickett's great charge, 257-259; consequences of, 259, 260.
Gilmore, J. R., describes Benjamin, 148.
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