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Adams, Ephraim Douglass

"Great Britain and the American Civil War"

.." The British metropolitan press, in nearly
every issue of which for at least two years after December, 1860, there
appeared news items and editorial comment on the American crisis, was at
first nearly unanimous in condemning the South[35]. The _Times_, with
accustomed vigour, led the field. On November 21, 1860, it stated:
"When we read the speech of Mr. Lincoln on the subject of
Slavery and consider the extreme moderation of the sentiments
it expresses, the allowance that is made for the situation,
for the feelings, for the prejudices, of the South; when we
see how entirely he narrows his opposition to the single
point of the admission of Slavery into the Territories, we
cannot help being forcibly struck by the absurdity of
breaking up a vast and glorious confederacy like that of the
United States from the dread and anger inspired by the
election of such a man to the office of Chief Magistrate....
We rejoice, on higher and surer grounds, that it [the
election] has ended in the return of Mr. Lincoln. We are glad
to think that the march of Slavery, and the domineering tone
which its advocates were beginning to assume over Freedom,
has been at length arrested and silenced. We rejoice that a
vast community of our own race has at length given an
authoritative expression to sentiments which are entertained
by everyone in this country.


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