<h3>A STAGE IN THE CEASELESS MARCH ONWARD TO VICTORY.</h3>
<p>Veterans will remember the peculiar effect, on a forced march, of the
younger or less-enduring comrade falling asleep as to all but his eyes
and the muscles employed, but stepping out and apparently sustained
only by the touching of elbows in the lurching from the ruts in
the obliterated road. On the night of the stunning news of the
last conflict at Chancellorsville, Lincoln could derive no comfort
from later intelligence. Late at night General Halleck, commanding
the capital, and Secretary Stanton left him unconsoled. Then his
secretary, as long as he stayed, heard the man on whom rested the
national hopes--her very future--pace his room without pause save to
turn. It was like the fisher on the banks who must keep awake for
a chance at a grab at the chains of the ship that may burst through
the fog and crush his smack like a coconut-shell. At midnight the
chief may have stopped to write, for there was a pause--but a
breathing-spell. Then the pacing again till the attach� left at 3 A.M.
When he came in the morning, not unanxious himself, he found his chief
eating breakfast alone in the unquitted room. On the table lay a
sheet of written paper: instructions for General Hooker to renew
fighting although it only brought the slap on the other cheek--at
Winchester--and still Lee pressed on into Pennsylvania till Harrisburg
was menaced! But Meade supplanted "Fighting Joe," and Gettysburg wiped
out the shame of the later repulses.</p>
<p>(The private secretary was W. O. Stoddard.)
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