登陆注册
15709400000142

第142章

I do not think that we in England have quite sufficiently taken all this into consideration. We have been in the habit of exclaiming very loudly against the war, execrating its cruelty and anathematizing its results, as though the cruelty were all superfluous and the results unnecessary. But I do not remember to have seen any statement as to what the Northern States should have done--what they should have done, that is, as regards the South, or when they should have done it. It seems to me that we have decided as regards them that civil war is a very bad thing, and that therefore civil war should be avoided. But bad things cannot always be avoided. It is this feeling on our part that has produced so much irritation in them against us--reproducing, of course, irritation on our part against them. They cannot understand that we should not wish them to be successful in putting down a rebellion; nor can we understand why they should be outrageous against us for standing aloof, and keeping our hands, if it be only possible, out of the fire.

When Slidell and Mason were arrested, my opinions were not changed, but my feelings were altered. I seemed to acknowledge to myself that the treatment to which England had been subjected, and the manner in which that treatment was discussed, made it necessary that I should regard the question as it existed between England and the States, rather than in its reference to the North and South. Ihad always felt that as regarded the action of our government we had been sans reproche; that in arranging our conduct we had thought neither of money nor political influence, but simply of the justice of the case--promising to abstain from all interference and keeping that promise faithfully. It had been quite clear to me that the men of the North, and the women also, had failed to appreciate this, looking, as men in a quarrel always do look, for special favor on their side. Everything that England did was wrong. If a private merchant, at his own risk, took a cargo of rifles to some Southern port, that act to Northern eyes was an act of English interference--of favor shown to the South by England as a nation; but twenty shiploads of rifles sent from England to the North merely signified a brisk trade and a desire for profit. The "James Adger," a Northern man-of-war, was refitted at Southampton as a matter of course. There was no blame to England for that.

But the Nashville, belonging to the Confederates, should not have been allowed into English waters. It was useless to speak of neutrality. No Northerner would understand that a rebel could have any mutual right. The South had no claim in his eyes as a belligerent, though the North claimed all those rights which he could only enjoy by the fact of there being a recognized war between him and his enemy the South. The North was learning to hate England, and day by day the feeling grew upon me that, much as I wished to espouse the cause of the North, I should have to espouse the cause of my own country. Then Slidell and Mason were arrested, and I began to calculate how long I might remain in the country. "There is no danger. We are quite right," the lawyers said. "There are Vattel, and Puffendorff, and Stowell, and Phillimore, and Wheaton," said the ladies. "Ambassadors are contraband all the world over--more so than gunpowder; and if taken in a neutral bottom," etc. I wonder why ships are always called bottoms when spoken of with legal technicality? But neither the lawyers nor the ladies convinced me. I know that there are matters which will be read not in accordance with any written law, but in accordance with the bias of the reader's mind. Such laws are made to be strained any way. I knew how it would be. All the legal acumen of New England declared the seizure of Slidell and Mason to be right. The legal acumen of Old England has declared it to be wrong; and I have no doubt that the ladies of Old England can prove it to be wrong out of Yattel, Puffendorff, Stowell, Phillimore, and Wheaton.

"But there's Grotius," I said, to an elderly female at New York, who had quoted to me some half dozen writers on international law, thinking thereby that I should trump her last card. "I've looked into Grotius too," said she, "and as far as I can see," etc. etc.

etc. So I had to fall back again on the convictions to which instinct and common sense had brought me. I never doubted for a moment that those convictions would be supported by English lawyers.

I left Boston with a sad feeling at my heart that a quarrel was imminent between England and the States, and that any such quarrel must be destructive to the cause of the North. I had never believed that the States of New England and the Gulf States would again become parts of one nation, but I had thought that the terms of separation would be dictated by the North, and not by the South.

I had felt assured that South Carolina and the Gulf States, across from the Atlantic to Texas, would succeed in forming themselves into a separate confederation; but I had still hoped that Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri might be saved to the grander empire of the North, and that thus a great blow to slavery might be the consequence of this civil war. But such ascendency could only fall to the North by reason of their command of the sea. The Northern ports were all open, and the Southern ports were all closed. But if this should be reversed. If by England's action the Southern ports should be opened, and the Northern ports closed, the North could have no fair expectation of success. The ascendency in that case would all be with the South. Up to that moment--the Christmas of 1861--Maryland was kept in subjection by the guns which General Dix had planted over the City of Baltimore.

同类推荐
  • 陶真人内丹赋

    陶真人内丹赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Antichrist

    The Antichrist

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 琴声十六法

    琴声十六法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大丹记

    大丹记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 灵城精义

    灵城精义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 倾世之才:天才七小姐

    倾世之才:天才七小姐

    “为什么,为什么你样样都比我好,我什么都没有,只有那傲人的天赋,你的出现,使这个平衡打破了,我的天赋在你这儿什么都不算。”“那是你自作自受。”“为什么你要这样对我?”“那是你自作自受。”“为什么要将他抢走。‘’“那谁是你自作自受。”“你不会说别的话了么。”“那是你自找的。”“......”
  • 双职业全能剑士

    双职业全能剑士

    说我是死宅!?不!如果说待在家里就算宅的话,我仅仅只算个伪宅~时不时的上上小网,打打小游戏,看看小萝莉~不过这上网有时候也是会出现故障的……“只听夸嚓一声!”“裤裆烂了!?”“NO,NO,NO~““那莫非你蛋裂了!?”“我擦,你不要猥琐的行不行!”“那好吧,除非你穿越了,如果其他的你都别给我说。”老艾新书,求各位看官收藏推荐!
  • 三微夺道

    三微夺道

    一个野心勃勃的文明,一个不知谋略的文明,一个横冲直撞的文明。三个各有缺点的文明,三个一看就是失败者的文明,三个不起眼的文明。当有一个人把它们融合在一起,将是一个前所未有的庞然大物。
  • 异界封魔

    异界封魔

    杨凡在暗战游戏里参加争霸赛,在最终关头勘破虚实之谜,来到一个实体位面,灵魂进入杨家三子杨凡体内,发现自己在游戏里的技能在在这个界面可以用真气来催动,而杨凡在杨家地位并不高,因为杨凡是一个典型的纨绔子弟,空有天赋,却不思进取,在杨凡了解这个世界的同时,原本青梅竹马的恋人慕容雪却离开自己投入了自己的堂哥杨勇的怀抱,杨凡大怒与杨勇对峙,惨败,杨凡决心要好好修炼,于是开始修炼自己在游戏里的技能。
  • 素问要旨论

    素问要旨论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 度鬼餐馆

    度鬼餐馆

    这是一个餐厅和鬼的故事。ps:作者会尽快把名子改了
  • 神武纪

    神武纪

    天才们还在修炼古人的功法的时候,萧寒正在修炼着最牛逼的功法。别人还在为了一本武道秘籍而打的头破血流的时候,萧寒却在甩卖各种牛逼武技。当别人因为丹药不足而导致修为无法提升的时候,萧寒把极品丹药当成糖豆为给自己的宠物。当那些天才以为突破了某一个境界而沾沾自喜的时候,萧寒早就已经把他们的师傅给打的满地吐血。当某个强者意识到自己的命运早已注定不可逆转的时候,萧寒却告诉他,你的命运,将由我来主宰。
  • 刀塔之寻找肉山

    刀塔之寻找肉山

    比龙更加凶狠的动物是什么?他们在寻找什么?灰铁龙真的是肉山吗?究竟又是谁在寻找肉山?失落的圣剑又埋藏在了哪里?谁是队伍中隐藏的间谍?敌法师,不朽尸王他们为什么是宿命中的敌人?出现在蝙蝠骑士面前的那个老头又是谁?半人马战行者“布拉德瓦登”为什么会有杀手之王的称号,是谁与他一起闯过了地狱之门?《刀塔——寻找肉山》以英雄的背景故事为创作源泉,构造了一个恢弘浩大的故事,所有的疑问都在这里得到解答。希望和我一样喜欢dota2并喜欢他们背景故事的朋友们喜欢这本小说。
  • 东城旧事

    东城旧事

    灵柩上开出了一朵花,惊醒了沉睡在多年的人。“风住沉香花已尽。帘卷西风,人比黄花瘦。”醒了的人目光呆滞,喃喃道。空灵中传来:色色空空空空色色,地狱无空不成佛,帘卷西风,道了一人行走白骨无人收。若干年后,当弥蓝忆起往事时,不禁湿了衣衫。城空国破,家尚在。心不在。
  • 书呆子恋上校草鹿晗

    书呆子恋上校草鹿晗

    每个人在青春都有一场难忘又轰轰烈烈的暗恋,爱对了是爱情爱错了是青春。愿意用全部去换取那个人的快乐与平安,当然女主也是为了喜欢的人去改变一切,当书呆子暗恋上校草又会发生怎样的故事呢?男主当然就是我们的鹿哥啦,这是一场校园里纯粹的爱恋希望大家可以喜欢,喜欢就点进去看吧.O(∩_∩)O