<h3>MR. LINCOLN'S OPINION OF GENERAL McCLELLAN.</h3>
<p>In the first stage of the war, when the President was
commander-in-chief of the forces by virtue of his office, he played
the part of the elevated boy in "The King of the Castle." Every one
of his colleagues, who ought to have been his loyal supporters, until
some firm stand was attained under the batteries of Richmond, civil
and military, warred against him, underhandedly and haply openly. All
aimed, in Cabinet and on the staff, to be ruler. The understrappers
of aged General Scott upheld all that concurred with warfare, set
and obsolete, of the European strategists, overthrown by the great
Napoleon. The principal practiser of these tactics, the <i>summum
bonum</i>, or "good thing," of the "West Pointers" was General
McClellan, "the Little Mac" of his worshipers and "the Little
Napoleon" of the dazzled crowd. He was, like Cassio, "a great
arithmetician, who had never set a squadron in the field or the
division of a battle knew," etc. Seeming utterly to ignore that
the enemy was composed of men trained by their life and "genteel"
occupations to shoot true, to ride like Comanches or Revolutionary
Harry Lee's Light-horse, used to lying outdoors under skies genial
to them, and subsisting on game and corn-cake as Marion on sweet
potatoes, he expected to foil such guerrillas as "Jeb" Stuart, Mosby,
and Quantrell by earthworks, which they probably would have leaped
their horse over if they wanted to reach their spoil in that way. It
was in allusion to this adherence to Vauban that the President, who
eyed the aspiring Hotspur as Henry V. his heir, the sixth Henry,
trying on his crown, observed shrewdly, when the general kept silence:</p>
<p>"He is entrenching."
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