United States.” This alone you offered
to us and the civilized world as an all-sufficient
reason for disregarding the laws of God and man.
You say that “General Johnston himself very
wisely and properly removed the families all the way
from Dalton down.” It is due to that gallant
soldier and gentleman to say that no act of his distinguished
career gives the least color to your unfounded aspersions
upon his conduct. He depopulated no villages,
nor towns, nor cities, either friendly or hostile.
He offered and extended friendly aid to his unfortunate
fellow-citizens who desired to flee from your fraternal
embraces. You are equally unfortunate in your
attempt to find a justification for this act of cruelty,
either in the defense of Jonesboro, by General Hardee,
or of Atlanta, by myself. General Hardee defended
his position in front of Jonesboro at the expense
of injury to the houses; an ordinary, proper, and
justifiable act of war. I defended Atlanta at
the same risk and cost. If there was any fault
in either case, it was your own, in not giving notice,
especially in the case of Atlanta, of your purpose
to shell the town, which is usual in war among civilized
nations. No inhabitant was expelled from his
home and fireside by the orders of General Hardee
or myself, and therefore your recent order can find
no support from the conduct of either of us.
I feel no other emotion other than pain in reading
that portion of your letter which attempts to justify
your shelling Atlanta without notice under pretense
that I defended Atlanta upon a line so close to town
that every cannon-shot and many musket-balls from
your line of investment, that overshot their mark,
went into the habitations of women and children.
I made no complaint of your firing into Atlanta in
any way you thought proper. I make none now,
but there are a hundred thousand witnesses that you
fired into the habitations of women and children for
weeks, firing far above and miles beyond my line of
defense. I have too good an opinion, founded
both upon observation and experience, of the skill
of your artillerists, to credit the insinuation that
they for several weeks unintentionally fired too high
for my modest field-works, and slaughtered women and
children by accident and want of skill.
The residue of your letter is rather discussion.
It opens a wide field for the discussion of questions
which I do not feel are committed to me. I am
only a general of one of the armies of the Confederate
States, charged with military operations in the field,
under the direction of my superior officers, and I
am not called upon to discuss with you the causes
of the present war, or the political questions which
led to or resulted from it. These grave and
important questions have been committed to far abler
hands than mine, and I shall only refer to them so
far as to repel any unjust conclusion which might
be drawn from my silence. You charge my country
with “daring and badgering you to battle.”