登陆注册
15709400000087

第87章

I will put it to any reader of history whether, since government commenced, it has not been regarded as the first duty of government to prevent a separation of the territories governed; and whether, also, it has not been regarded as a point of honor with all nationalities to preserve uninjured each its own greatness and its own power? I trust that I may not be thought to argue that all governments, or even all nationalities, should succeed in such endeavors. Few kings have fallen, in my day, in whose fate I have not rejoiced--none, I take it, except that poor citizen King of the French. And I can rejoice that England lost her American colonies, and shall rejoice when Spain has been deprived of Cuba. But I hold that citizen King of the French in small esteem, seeing that he made no fight; and I know that England was bound to struggle when the Boston people threw her tea into the water. Spain keeps a tighter hand on Cuba than we thought she would some ten years since, and therefore she stands higher in the world's respect.

It may be well that the South should be divided from the North. Iam inclined to think that it would be well--at any rate for the North; but the South must have been aware that such division could only be effected in two ways: either by agreement, in which case the proposition must have been brought forward by the South and discussed by the North, or by violence. They chose the latter way, as being the readier and the surer, as most seceding nations have done. O'Connell, when struggling for the secession of Ireland, chose the other, and nothing came of it. The South chose violence, and prepared for it secretly and with great adroitness. If that be not rebellion, there never has been rebellion since history began;and if civil war was ever justified in one portion of a nation by turbulence in another, it has now been justified in the Northern States of America.

What was the North to do; this foolish North, which has been so liberally told by us that she has taken up arms for nothing, that she is fighting for nothing, and will ruin herself for nothing?

When was she to take the first step toward peace? Surely every Englishman will remember that when the earliest tidings of the coming quarrel reached us on the election of Mr. Lincoln, we all declared that any division was impossible; it was a mere madness to speak of it. The States, which were so great in their unity, would never consent to break up all their prestige and all their power by a separation! Would it have been well for the North then to say, "If the South wish it we will certainly separate?" After that, when Mr. Lincoln assumed the power to which he had been elected, and declared with sufficient manliness, and sufficient dignity also, that he would make no war upon the South, but would collect the customs and carry on the government, did we turn round and advise him that he was wrong? No. The idea in England then was that his message was, if anything, too mild. "If he means to be President of the whole Union," England said, "he must come out with something stronger than that." Then came Mr. Seward's speech, which was, in truth, weak enough. Mr. Seward had ran Mr. Lincoln very hard for the President's chair on the Republican interest, and was, most unfortunately, as I think, made Secretary of State by Mr.

Lincoln, or by his party. The Secretary of State holds the highest office in the United States government under the President. He cannot be compared to our Prime Minister, seeing that the President himself exercises political power, and is responsible for its exercise. Mr. Seward's speech simply amounted to a declaration that separation was a thing of which the Union would neither hear, speak, nor, if possible, think. Things looked very like it; but no, they could never come to that! The world was too good, and especially the American world. Mr. Seward had no specific against secession; but let every free man strike his breast, look up to heaven, determine to be good, and all would go right. A great deal had been expected from Mr. Seward, and when this speech came out, we in England were a little disappointed, and nobody presumed even then that the North would let the South go.

It will be argued by those who have gone into the details of American politics that an acceptance of the Crittenden compromise at this point would have saved the war. What is or was the Crittenden compromise I will endeavor to explain hereafter; but the terms and meaning of that compromise can have no bearing on the subject. The Republican party who were in power disapproved of that compromise, and could not model their course upon it. The Republican party may have been right or may have been wrong; but surely it will not be argued that any political party elected to power by a majority should follow the policy of a minority, lest that minority should rebel. I can conceive of no government more lowly placed than one which deserts the policy of the majority which supports it, fearing either the tongues or arms of a minority.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 电影世界旅游记

    电影世界旅游记

    极限运动爱好者林辉在一次意外中拥有了可以穿梭在电影世界的能力,从此他找到了比极限运动更加刺激的游戏。
  • 拳道神宗

    拳道神宗

    这是一个使用真气的世界,这个世界所处的星球名为“真神星”。在这个世界里拥有真气的都被称为“修士”。身为少家主的李易,本为剑修天才,却意外出事成为一代废物,险被逐出家族,濒死之时奇遇一代宗师出手相救,从此踏上拳道征途......
  • 一条狗的人生

    一条狗的人生

    屠刀麾下,鲜血淋淋,被千年驯化的忠诚,却又被人类无情的背叛。一个特殊的契机,让一条从屠夫手中逃脱的狗,变身成了人类,并且拥有了人类整天幻想的超能力,对于这个全新的身份,他将如何前进。是血洗人间。还是隐士求安。
  • 冥王的独宠娇妻

    冥王的独宠娇妻

    五年的相守,七年的等待,再见之日,她以为便是他许她幸福之时,然而,他却化身黑色帝国的冥王,伸出无情的双手将她推入万劫不复的深崖,夜夜欺辱。他为了复仇,将她逼到了绝境,也将自己逼到了尽头。失去了孩子,失去了家人,为了他,她失去了所有!然而,等到真相大白时,她以为就此逃出了深渊,谁知却是另一个万劫不复。时光无情,交错的爱恨情仇又将如何收尾?
  • 少城轶事

    少城轶事

    本书介绍了成都的历史文化遗存和底蕴:街道、桥梁、河流、公馆、饭店、寺院、商铺、吊脚楼。甚至是一段老城墙。
  • 好好活着:珍爱一生的心灵法则

    好好活着:珍爱一生的心灵法则

    本书内容包括:好好活着是一种态度、好好活着是一种心情、好好活着是一种状态、好好活着是一种选择、好好活着是一种生活方式等。
  • 提着灯笼的路人

    提着灯笼的路人

    这路途遥远,荒原寂静,我们都是提着灯笼的路人,偶然聚首,从而离故,并持续着彼此不知从何而来,又该由和来往的孤单漫长路程······在抱歉的说一声,应为我是学生党,只有周六周日可能更新,大家不要建议啊
  • 失落的颜色之幽雪

    失落的颜色之幽雪

    无色应劫九轮回,夜幽入世一仙道。长路缥缈坎坷多,短生瞬息哀怨少。冷心自有真情在,暖欲从没伪思存。黑夜沉默意孤行,白雪单纯心两愿。九幽后裔宿命途,倾城转生思心径。悲冬凄曲雪泣珠,恨春恸诗幽伤泪。凡尘登顶天地崛,魔界踏行众仙震。直路向狱始成神,曲径通幽终化帝。
  • 中华人民共和国企业所得税法

    中华人民共和国企业所得税法

    为加强法制宣传,迅速普及法律知识,服务于我国民主法制建设,多年来,中国民主法制出版社根据全国人大常委会每年定期审议通过、修订的法律,全品种、大规模的出版了全国人民代表大会常务委员会公报版的系列法律单行本。该套法律单行本经过最高立法机关即全国人民代表大会常务委员会的权威审定,法条内容准确无误,文本格式规范合理,多年来受到了社会各界广泛关注与好评。
  • 银发三千:异瞳五小姐

    银发三千:异瞳五小姐

    她,21世纪的王牌杀手,没人不知道她凤听雨。她,凤府嫡出的五小姐,却是笙箫大陆有名的废物,爹不宠,娘不爱。当她来到她的身体,一切都发生改变,拥有上古六大神兽,丹药一抓就是一大把。他,魔界魔主,对别人冷酷、无情,但对她却有着无数的柔情。他,愿意倾尽所有,凡是阻止他与她相爱者,只有死。