“There was a Confederate scout, Stringfellow by name, who on the 4th
of May, 1864, the eve of the opening of that [Wilderness] campaign,
reported himself to [General] Lee, when the following colloquy took
place:
“Well, Captain Stringfellow, where do you come from?”
“From Washington, General.”
“What number of men has General Grant, and what is he doing?”
“He has about 140,000 men in front of you and is about to move on you.”
Without a moment’s hesitation Lee said: “I have 54,000 men up, and as soon as he crosses the river I will strike him.”
Grant
crossed the Rapidan on the following day, and as soon as he was
entangled in the Wilderness Lee struck him a staggering blow. In the
four weeks’ campaign ending with Grant’s bloody repulse at Cold Harbor
on June 2
. . . Lee had put as many of Grant’s men out of action as he himself
had under his command during the entire campaign – viz., 64,000.”
(Robert E. Lee, H. Gerald Smythe, Confederate Veteran Magazine, January 1921, pp. 6-7)