personal responsibility for policy, [484];

interview with Douglas on enlisting colored soldiers, [484]-[486];

McClellan's removal, [487];

relations with Burnside, [487];

with Hooker, [487]-[490];

candor and friendliness with officers, [489]-[490];

visits army of the Potomac, [490]-[492];

his view of Charleston attack, [490];

effect of Chancellorsville on L. [492]-[493];

reads Stedman's poem to cabinet, [494]-[495];