these fleeting phenomenal discor

, and partly to the more prominent actors in the war. The contrast between the 
American colonies of Great Britain throwing off their allegiance to the Old 
Country because they saw fit to do so for their own interests, and the 
government of the Federation of these same ex-colonies insisting that some of 
them, which in their turn see fit to break loose from the Federal pact, shall 
not do so, under the alternative of war and the pains of treason,--this 
contrast is assuredly a glaring one; many people considered that it amounted to 
a positive anomaly,--not a few to a barefaced act of tyrannic apostasy. The 
personal feeling of the English people, their national _amour propre_, 
conspired to lead towards this harshest construction of the facts: it was so 
tempting to convict our old adversaries out of their own mouths, and make them, 
by the logic of events, read out either their recantation of the Colonial 
Revolution, or their self-condemnation for the Anti-Secession War. I have 
already explained to what extent these views appear to me to be tenable, and 
where their weak point lies: that both the insurrection of the colonies against 
England, and that of the South against the Federation,--both the repressive 
measures of England against the colonies, and of the Federation against the 
South,--were in themselves founded on an indefeasible right, and abstractly 
defensible; and that the "casting vote," (so to speak,) in both cases, depends, 
not upon any wordy denial of the right, but upon a thorough estimate of all the 
attendant conditions, and prominently of the "mights of man." So far for one 
phase of the personal question. The other phase pertained to the character and 
the deeds of some leading actors in the war-drama. To most English 
apprehensions, _the_ hero of the war, from an early stage of it up to his 
tragic death, was Stonewall Jackson, whose place was afterwards taken, in 
popular esteem, though not in coequal enthusiasm, by General Lee, both of them 
Southerners; while the _bete noire_ of the story was General Butler, the 
Northerner. It would be futile to expound

<<blazingly.jpg>>

_______________________________________________
dev mailing list
dev@openvswitch.org
http://openvswitch.org/mailman/listinfo/dev

Reply via email to