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A Bewildered, Confounded, and Miserably Perplexed Man

Submitted by Ken Watts on Tue, 07/17/2007 - 11:21

At it's beginning, Genl. Scott was, by this same President, driven into disfavor, if not disgrace, for intimating that peace could not be conquered in less than three or four months. But now, at the end of about twenty months, during which time our arms have given us the most splendid successes—every department, and every part, land and water, officers and privates, regulars and volunteers, doing all that men could do, and hundreds of things which it had ever before been thought men could not do,—after all this, this same President gives us a long message, without showing us, that, as to the end, he himself, has, even an imaginary conception. As I have before said, he knows not where he is. He is a bewildered, confounded, and miserably perplexed man.

Abraham Lincoln


—from a speech in which Lincoln justifies his vote for a resolution "declaring that the war with Mexico was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the President".