登陆注册
14723800000039

第39章 LINCOLN: WAR STATESMAN(2)

There he was joined by McClellan exactly a year later; and there the peace-at-current-prices party continued to nurse and cry their grievances till the war was over. McClellan's dismissal was a matter of dire necessity because victory was impossible under his command. But he was a dangerous reinforcement to the Adullamites; for many of the loyal public had been fooled by his proclamations, the press had written him up to the skies as the Young Napoleon, and the great mass of the rank and file still believed in him. He took the kindly interest in camp comforts that goes to the soldier's heart; and he really did know how to organize. Add his power of passing off tinsel promises for golden deeds, and it can be well understood how great was the danger of dismissing him before his defects had become so apparent to the mass of people as to have turned opinion decisively against him.

We shall presently meet him in his relation to Lincoln during the Virginian campaign, and later on in his relation to Lee. Here we may leave him with the reminder that he was the Democratic candidate for President in '64, that he was still a mortal danger to the Union, even though he had rejected the actual wording of his party's peace plank.

The turn of the tide at the fighting front came in '63; but not at the home front, where public opinion of the most vocal kind was stirred to its dregs by the enforcement of the draft. The dime song books of the Copperhead parts of New York expressed in rude rhymes very much the same sort of apprehension that was voiced by the official opposition in the Presidential campaign of '64.

Abram Lincoln, what yer 'bout?

Stop this war, for it's played out.

Another rhyme, called "The Beauties of Conscription," was a more decorous expression of such public opinion.

And this, the "People's Sovereignty,"

Before a despot humbled!

Well have they cashed old Lincoln's drafts, Hurrah for the Conscription!

Is not this war--this MURDER--for The negro, nolens volens?

So, carrying out their ideas to the same sort of logical conclusion, the New York mob of '63 not only burnt every recruiting office they found undefended but burnt the negro orphan asylum and killed all the negroes they could lay their hands on.

Public opinion did veer round a little with the rising tide of victory in the winter of '63 and '64. But, incredible as it may seem to those who think the home front must always reflect the fighting front, the nadir of public opinion in the North was reached in the summer of '64, when every expert knew that the resources of the South were nearing exhaustion and that the forces of the North could certainly wear out Lee's dwindling army even if they could not beat it. The trumpet gave no uncertain sound from Lincoln's lips. "In this purpose to save the country and its liberties no class of people seem so nearly unanimous as the soldiers in the field and the sailors afloat. Do they not have the hardest of it? Who should quail while they do not?" But the mere excellence of a vast fighting front means a certain loss of the nobler qualities in the home front, from which so many of the staunchest are withdrawn. And then warweariness breeds doubts, doubts breed fears, and fears breed the spirit of surrender.

There seemed to be more Copperheads in the conglomerate opposition than Unionists ready to withstand them. The sinister figure of Vallandigham loomed large in Ohio, where he openly denounced the war in such disloyal terms that the military authorities arrested him. An opposition committee, backed by the snakes in the grass of the secret societies, at once wrote to Lincoln demanding release. Lincoln thereupon offered release if the committee would sign a declaration that, since rebellion existed, and since the armed forces of the United States were the constitutional means of suppressing rebellion, each member of the committee would support the war till rebellion was put down. The committee refused to sign. More people then began to see the self-contradictions of the opposition, and most of those "plain people" to whom Lincoln consciously appealed were touched to the heart by his pathetic question: "Must I shoot the simpleminded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert?"But there was still defection on the Union side, and among many "plain people" too; for Horace Greeley, the best-known Union editor, lost his nerve and ran away. And Greeley was not the only Union journalist who helped, sometimes unwittingly, to pervert public opinion. The "writing up" of McClellan for what he was not, though rather hysterical, was at least well meant. But the reporters who "wrote down" General Cox, because he would not make them members of his staff in West Virginia, disgraced their profession. The lies about Sherman's "insanity" and Grant's "intoxication" were shamelessly excused on the plea that they made "good stories." Sherman's insanity, as we have seen already, existed only in the disordered imagination of blabbing old Simon Cameron. Grant, at the time these stories were published, was strictly temperate.

Amid all the hindrances--and encouragements, for the Union press generally did noble service in the Union cause--of an uncensored press, and all the complexities of public opinion, Lincoln kept his head and heart set firmly on the one supreme objective of the Union. He foresaw from the first that if all the States came through the war United, then all the reforms for which the war was fought would follow; but that if any particular reform was itself made the supreme objective, then it, and with it all the other reforms, would fail, because only part of the Union strength would be involved, whereas the whole was needed.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 穿越时光的旅行

    穿越时光的旅行

    顾念幽和姐姐因为一点鸡毛蒜皮的小事而吵了起来,生气的她一气之下冲出了家门,然而一辆汽车冲她疾驰而来......而这起事件,她不但没死,还穿梭到了未来世界......
  • 家庭养狗一本通(居家生活宝典)

    家庭养狗一本通(居家生活宝典)

    随着生活水平的不断提高,人们越来越重视生活质量,希望在温馨舒适的环境中享受生活的乐趣。鉴于此,我们编撰了《居家生活宝典》丛书。该丛书包括《四季养花一本通》、《家庭养花万事通》、《钓鱼技巧大全》、《家庭养狗一本通》、《家庭养猫一本通》、《生活小窍门》、《针灸按摩一本通》、《糖尿病食疗与养生》、《高血压食疗与养生》和《心脏病食疗与养生》10册,对现代人最关心、最敏感的问题作了全面、详尽、科学、完备的阐述,是每一个现代家庭必不可少的良师益友。《居家生活宝典》的宗旨是做您的生活顾问,让您对家的感觉更好,给您紧张而忙碌的生活增添休闲的色彩。
  • 仙道难途

    仙道难途

    七情六欲乃人之常情,我不修无情之道!我不是修炼狂人,风景多美丽,旅途多精彩,莫辜负了大好时光!扮猪吃老虎?太小家子气!我有元婴期的师尊,有化神期的师祖,天生贵气,就该肆意妄为!都说仙途太寂寥,大道当独行。当你独自一人踏上巅峰之时,岂不太孤独?我说大道当肆意,享乐当及时!朋友几许,恋人独我,只在此时,你我倾情相待。他日,你心若变,我必洒脱!友人?恋人?只盼携手一生,大道不独行!成不了仙,又有何妨?
  • 虚拟游戏之死亡游戏

    虚拟游戏之死亡游戏

    杨天一个看起来就像普通家庭的孩子一样,却成为游戏世界霸主。最后却因小人的剥夺和暗杀,成为一个濒临死亡的植物人。却没想到杨天背后也有一个庞大的家族,为他打造另一个世界以此来救他。然而又陷入了另一个阴谋之中,让杨天不得不为了生存而战。为了自己为了自己要保护的人不得不冲破这个虚拟的世界。一个字:战!战!战!!!
  • 夏日浅情爱未央

    夏日浅情爱未央

    自从苏小小追到校园里的长腿欧巴宋央,两个人一起走过三个岁月。毕业之际,宋央成绩优秀,家里让他出国留学。苏小小等了他三年,等到的他却变了一个人似的,对苏小小忽冷忽热。一次,在KTV遇到宋央,还来不及叫他,就看到他和同学刘莉莉暧昧不清。终于,苏小小下定决心提出分手..
  • 快穿之我的新视界

    快穿之我的新视界

    当从另一个世界重新活起,她不知道自己叫什么,也不知道自己从何而来,又有着什么样的曾经?她像一个小孩子一点一点摸索着世界,并完成系统的任务。她没有什么想要的,只想这样子一直过下去。可以说是治愈系的文吧喜欢的小伙伴可以来看一看哟,么么哒\(//?//)\额(⊙o⊙)…,决定了更新看我心情吧。
  • 傲娇大小姐:王来追

    傲娇大小姐:王来追

    前世是一代神后,却被情而困,伤心过度而亡。神皇为保她能再次复生,耗尽一世修为将她的情魄送至现代。神后回来了!却不曾想,神后出轨了?!!王爷,那什么麻烦的神后我不做了,我给你做王妃吧。
  • 迷离半夏

    迷离半夏

    呆萌可爱的小学弟,霸道帅气的同桌,温柔甜心的体育老师,他们的到来,让她只能浅笑着,深陷在这迷离半夏,到最后,却是一片空白。我爱的他,不要离开我——by米粒。
  • 新编大学体育

    新编大学体育

    全书分为基础理论、教学实践和保健休闲三个部分。主要内容包括体育健康概述、体育锻炼对人体发展的作用、科学健身的方法、田径运动、各种球类运动、健美与健美操运动、武术运动、跆拳道、饮食锻炼与疾病的预防、体育欣赏等等。本教材旨在弘扬体育健身、增强体质的精神,倡导学生养成终身锻炼的良好习惯,力求突破以运动技术为主线、理论与实践相分离的传统教材编写模式,主张体育教育与健康教育相结合,充分体现体育的多功能特征。
  • 虚魔古道

    虚魔古道

    在这个仙侠的世界里,每一处都是阴暗,要么,你踩着别人的尸体而活,要么,别人踩着你的尸体而生,没有邪的错,没有正的对,靠力量活下去,才是真道!所以,我修魔!所以,我炼道!灭鬼宗,屠三道,毁魔界…一切,只是我想活下去!