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Where other causes do not control, rivers unite; bat mountains, deserts, and great bodies of water—ocean disco du/dee—separate a people. Vast forests origin ally, and the Lakes now, also divide us—not very widely or wholly—from the Canadas, though we speak the same language, and are similar in manners, laws and institutions. Our chief navigable rivers run from North to South. Most of our bays and arms of the sea take the same direction. So do our ranges of mountains. Natural mines all tend to Union, except as be tween the Pacific coast and the country east of the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic. It is mani fest destiny." Union is empire. Hence, hithet , to we have continually extended our territory, and the Union with it, South and West The Louisiana purchase, Florida., and Texas all attest it. We passed desert and forest, and scaled even the Rocky Mountains, to extend the Union to the Pacific. 'Sir, there is no natural boundary between the North and the South, and no line of latitude, upon which to separate and if ever a line or longitude shall be established, it will be east of the Mississippi valley. The Alleghenies are no l6nger a barrier. Highways ascend' them everylihere, and the railroad now climbs their summits and spans their chasms, or penetrates their rockiest sides. The electric telegraph fol lows, and, stretching its connecting wires along the clouds, there mingles its vocal lightnings with the fires of heaven. But if disunionists in the East will force a sep aration of any of these States, and a boundary purely conventional, is at last to be marked out, it must and will be either from Lake Erie upon the shortest line to the Ohio river, or from Man hattan to the Canadas. And, now, sir, is there any difference of race here, so radical as to forbid reunion? Ido not. refer to the negro race, styled now, in unctions official phrase by the President, "Americana of African descent." Certainly, there are two white races in the United States, both from the same common stock, and yet so distinct—one of them so peculiar—that they develop different forms of civilization, and might belong, almost, to different types of mankind. But the boundary of these two recce is not at all marked by the line which divides the slaveholding from the non—alaveholding States. If race is to be the geographical limit of disunion, then Mason and Bizon's can never be the line. Next, sir; do not the causes which, in the beginning, impelled to Union still exist in their utmost force and extent? What were they? First, the common descent—and therefore consanguinity—of the great mass of the people from the Angto.Saxon stock. Had the Canadas been settled originally by the English, they would doubtless have followed the fortunes of the thirteen colonies. Nex,t, a common language, one of the strongest of the ligaments which binde a people. Had we been contiguous to Great Britain, either the causes which led to a separa tion would have never existed, or else been speedily removed; or, afterwards, we would long since have been reunited as equals and with all the rights of Englishmen. And along with these were similar, at least not essentially dissimilar, manners, habits, laws, religion, and institutions of all kinds, except one. The common defense was another powerful incentive, and is named in the Constitution as one among the objects of the "more perfect Union" of 1787. Stronger yet than all these, perhaps, but made up of all of them, was a common interest. Variety of climate and soil, and therefore of production, implying also extent of country, is not an element of separation, but, added to contiguity, becomes a part of the ligament of interest, and is one of its toughest strands. Variety of rroduction is the parent of the earliest commerce and trade ; and these, in their lull development, are, as be tween foreign nations, heritages for peace; and between States and people united, they are the 'firmest bonds of Union. But, after all, the strongest of the many original inpelling causes to the Union, was the securing of domestic tran quillity. The statesmen of 1181 well knew that between thirteen independent but contiguous States without a natural boundary, and with nothing to separate them except the machinery of similar governments, there must be a perpet ual, in fact an irrepressible conflict" of juris diction and interest, which, there being no other common arbiter, could only be terminated by the conflict of the sword. And the statesmen of 1862 ought io know that two or more confederate governments, made up of similar States, having no natural boundary either, and separated only by different governments, cannot endure long together in peace, noises one or more of them be either too pusillanimous for rivalry, or too insignificant to provoke it, or too weak to resist aggression. Tbeee, air, along with the establishment of justice, and the securing of the gener . al welfare, and of the blessings of liberty to themselves and their posterity, made up the causes and motives isMoh impelled our fathers to the Union at first. And now, sir, what one of them is wanting ? What one diminished? On the contrary, many of them are stronger to day than in the begin— ning. Migration and intermarriage have strength ened the ties of consanguinity_ Commerce, trade, and production have immensely multiplied. Cotton, almost unknown here in 1787, is now the chief product and export of the country. It has set in motion three-fourths of the spindles of New England, and given employment, directly or remotely, to full half the shipping, trade, and commerce of the United States. More than that : cotton has kept the peace between England and America for thirty years; and had the people of the North been as wise and practical as the statesmen of Great. Britain, it would have main tained Union and peace here. But we are being taught in our first century and at our own cost, the lessons which England learned through the long and bloody experience of eight hundred years. We shall be wiser next time. Let not cotton be king, but peace-maker, and inherit the blessing. A common interest, then, still remains to us. And union far the common defame, at the and of this war, taxed, indebted, impoverished, ex hausted, as both sections must be, and with foreign fleets and armies around us, will be fifty fold more essential than ever before. And final ly, air, without union, our domestic tranquillity must forever remain unsettled, If it cannot be maintained within the Union, how then outside of it, without an exodus or colonization of the people of one section or the other to a distant country ? Sir, I repeat that two governments so interliuked and bound together every way by physical and social ligaments, cannot exist in peaks without a common arbiter. Will treaties bind us? What better treaty than the ConsU tution ? What more solemn, more durable? Shall we settle our disputes, then, by arbitration and compromise ? Sir, let us,arbitrate and com promise now, inside of the Union. Certainly ii will be quite as easy. And, now, sir, to all these original causes and motives which impelled to union at first, must be added certain artificial ligaments, which eighty years of association under a common Govern ment have moat fully' developed. Chief among these are canals, steam navigation, railroads, express companies, the post office, the newspaper press, and that terrible agent of good and evil mixed—" spirit of health, and yet goblin damn ed"—if free, the gentlest minister of truth and liberty when enslaved, the supplest instrument of falsehood and tyranny—the magnetic tele graph. Allihese have multiplied the speed or the quantity of trade, travel, communication, migration, and intercourse of all kinds between the different States and sections ; and thus, so long as a healthy condition of the body politic continued, they became powerful cementing agencies of union. The numerous voluntary associations, artistic, literary, charitable, social, and scientific, until corrupted and made fanatical; the various ecclesiastical organizations, until they divided; and the pbtiticsl forties, so long as they remained all national and not sectional, were also among the strong ties which bound us together. And yet all of these, perverted and abused for some years in the hands of bad or fanatical men, became still more powerful in strumentalities in the fatal work of disunion; just as the veins and arteries of the human body, designed to convey the vitalizing fluid through every part of it, will carry also, and with in creased rapidity, it may be, the subtle poison which takes life away, Nor is this all. It was through their agency that the imprisoned Winds of civil war were all let loose at first with such sudden and appalling fury ; and, kept in motion by political power, they have ministered to that fury ever since. Bat, potent alike for good and evil, they may yet, under the control of the pen pie, and tti the hands of wise, good and patriotic men, be made the most effective agencies, under Providence, in the reunion of these States. Other ties also less material in their nature, but hardly less persuasive in their influence, have grown up under the Union. Long associ ation, a common history, national reputation, treaties and diplomatic intercourse abroad, ad mission of new States, a common jurisprudence, great men whose names and fame are the patri mony of the whole country, patriotic music and songs, common battle-fields, and glory won under the same flag. These make up the poetry of Union ; and yet, as in the marriage relation, and the family with similar influences, they are stronger than hooks of steel. He was a wise statesman, though he may never have held an office, who said, Let me write the songs of a people, and I care not who makes their laws." Why is the Marseillaise prohibited in France ? Sir, Hail Columbia and the Star Spangled Ban ner—Pennsylvania gave us one, and Maryland the other—have done more for the Union than all the legislation. and all the debates in this Capitol for forty yours ; and they will do more yet again than all your armies, though you call out another million of men into the field. Sir, I would add." Yankee Doodle ;" but first let me be assured that Yankee Doodle loves the Union more than be bates the slaveholder.* And now, 'sir, I propose to briefly consider the causes which led to disunion and the - present civil war; and to inquire whether they are eter— nal and ineradicable in their nature, and at the same time powerful enough to overcome all the causes and considerations which impel to re union. . . Haring two years ago discussed fully and elab orately the more abstruse and remote causes Whence spring civil oommotions in all Governments and those also which are peculiar to our com plex and Federal system, such as the consolidat ing tendencies of the General Government, be cause of executive power and patronage, and of the tariff, and taxation and disbursement gener ally, all unjust and burdensome to the West equally with the South, I pass.them by now. What, then, I ask, is the immediate, direct cause oP dieueloe and this civil tear Y. Slavery, it . .. is answered. Sir, that is the philosophy of the rustic in the ploy—" that a great cause of the night, is lack of the sun." Certainly slavery was in one sense—very obscure indeed—the cause of the war. Had there been no slavery here, this, partioular war about slavery would never have been waged. In a like sense, the Holy Sepulchre was the cause of the war of the Crusades ; and had Troy or Carthage never ex isted, there never would have been Trojan or Carthagenian war, and wo such personages as Hector and Hannibal i and no Iliad or Armed would ever have been written. But far better say that the negro is the cause of the war; for had there been no negro here, there would be no war just now. What then ? Exterminate him? Who demands it? Colonize him? How? Where? When ? At whose cost? Sir, let, us have an end of this folly. But slavery is the cause of the war. Why? Because the South obstinately and wickedly re fused to restrict or abolish it at the demand of the philosophers or fanatics and demagogues of the North and West. Then, sir, it was abolition, the purpose to abolish or interfere with and hem in slavery, which caused disunion and war. Slavery is only the suitjeci, but abolition the Male, of this civil war. It was the persistent and determined agitation in the free States of the question of abolishing slavery in the South, be cause of the alleged " irrepressible conflict" be tween the forms of labor in the two sections, or in the false and mischievous cant of the day, betweeh freedom and slavery, that forced a col lision of arms at last. Sir, that conflict was not confined to the Territories. It was expressly proclaimed by its apostles, as between the States also, against the institution of domestic slavery everywhere. But, assuming the plat forms of the Republican party as the standard, and stating the case most strongly in favor of that party, it was the refusal of the South to consent that slavery should be exebided from the Territories that led to the continued agita Gen, North and South, of that question, and finally to disunion and civil war. Sir, I will not be answered now by the old clamor about " the aggressions of the slave power." That miserable spectre, that unreal mockery, has been exorcised and expelled by debt and taxation and blood. If that power did govern this country for the sixty years preceding this terrible revolution, then the sooner this Administration and Government re turn to the principles and policy of Southern atatermanship, the better for the country 1 and that, sir, is already, or Boon will be, the judg ment of the people. But I deny that it was the "slave power" that governed fur so many years, land so wisely and well. It was the Democratic party, and Its principles and policy, moulded and controlled, indeed, largely by Southern states men. Neither will I be stopped by that other * In trail., the song wan written la derision, by a Brit— ish oilicer, and not by an American. SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, cry of mingled fanaticism and hypocrisy, about the sin and barbarism of African slavery. Sir, I see more of barbarism and sin, a 'thousand times, in the continuance of this war, the disso— lution of the Union, the breaking up of this Government, and the enslavement of the white race by debt and taxes and arbitrary power. The day of fanatics and sophists and enthusiasts, tbadk God, is gone at last ; and though the age of chivalry may not, the age of practical states manship is about to return. Sir, I accept the language and intent of the Indiana resolution to the full—.. that in considering terms of settle— ment we will look only to the welfare, peace, and safety of the white race, without reference to the effect that settlement may have upon the condition of the African." And when we have done this, my word for it, the safety, peace, and welfare of the African will have been best seem , ed. Sir, there is fifty-fold less of anti-slavery sentiment to day in the West than there was two years ago ; and if thisivar be continued,' there will be still less a year hence. The people there begin, at last, to comprehend that domeatie slavery in the South, is a question, not of morals, or religion, or humanity, but a form of labor, perfectly compatible with the 'dignity of free white labor in the same community, and with national vigor, power, and prosperity, and espe cially with military strength. They have learn. ed, or begin to learn, that the evils of the system affect the master alone, or the community and State in which it exists ; and that we of the free Slates partake of all the material benefits of the institution, unmixed with any part of its mien chiefs. They believe also in the subordination of the negro race to the, white where they both exist together. and that the condition-of subor dination, as established in the South, is far bet ter every way for the negro than the hard servitude of poverty, degradation, and crime to which he is subjected in the free States. All this, sir, may be "pro-slaveryism," if there be such a word. Perhaps it is; but the people of the West begin now to think it wisdom and good sense. We *ill not establish slavery in our own midst; neither will we abolish or interfere with it outside of our own limits. Sir, an anti•slaavery paper in New York, (the Tribune,) the most influential, and, therefore, most dangerous of all of that class—it would exhibit more of dignity, and command more of Influence, it it were always to tlisoass publie questions and public men with a decent respect —laying aside now the epithets of "secession ist" and " traitor," has returned to its ancient political nomenclature, and calls certain mem bers of this House "pro-slump." Well, sir, in the old sense of the term as applied to the Demo cratic party, I will not object. I said years ago, audit is a fitting time now to repeat it: " If to love my country ; to cherish the Union.; to revore the Constitution ; If to abhor the madness and hate the treason which would lilt up a eacrtiesinne hand agezietit either if to read that in the poet, to behold It in the Tires. ent. to foresee it in the future of this land, which in of more value to us and to the world for ages to come than all the multiplied millions who have inhabited Africa from the creation to thin day!—if this is ro be pro-slavery, then, to every nerve, fibre, vein, bone, tendon, joint, and ligament, from the topmost hair of the head to the last extremity of the foot, I am all over and.altogether a.pro-slavery man.' And now, sir, I come to the great controlling question within which the whole issue of union or disunion is bound up: Is there "an irrepres sible conflict" between-the slaveholding and non alaveholding States? Must " the cotton and rice fields of South Carolina, and the sugar planta tions of Louisiana," in the language of Mr, Seward, "be ultimately tilled by free labor, and Charleston and New Orleans become marts for legitimate merchandise alone, or else the rye fields and wheat fields of Massachusetts and New York again be surrendered by their farmer. to slave eulture and the production of slaves, and Boston and New York become once more markets for trade in the bodies and souls of men ?" If so, then there is an end of all union and forever. You cannot abolish sla . very by the sword ; still less by proclamations, Slough the President were to " proclaim" every month, Of what possible avail was his proclamation of September ? Did the South submit? Was she even alarmed.? And yet has now fulmined another "bull against the comet."—brutum fultnen—arid, threatening servile insurrection with all its horrors, has yet coolly appealed to the judgment of mankind, anti invoked the blessing or the God of pease and love! But declaring it a military necessity, an essential measure of war to subdue the rebels, yet,. with admirable wisdom, he expressly ex• empta from its operatin nthe only States and parte of States in the South where he has the military power to execute it. Neither, air, can you abolish slavery by argu ment. As well attempt to abolish marriage or the relation of paternity. The South is resolved to maintain - it at every hazard and by every sacrifice ; and if this Union cannot endure part 'ove and pert free," then it is already and final. ly dissolved. Talk not to me of " West -Vir ginia." Tell me not of Missouri, trampled under the feet of your soldiery. As well talk to me of Ireland. Sir, the destiny of those States must abide the issue of the war. But Kentucky you may find tougher. And Maryland— "E'en in her ashes live their wonted Aran" Nor will Delaware be found wanting in the day of trial. But I deny the doctrine. It is full of disunion and civil war. It is disunion itself. Whoever first taught it ought to be dealt with as not only hostile to the Union, but an enemy of the human race. Sir, the fundamental idea of theConstitu lion is the perfect and eternal compatibility of a union of States "part slave and part free ;" else the Constitution never would have been framed, nor the Union founded; and seventy years of successful experiment have approved the wisdom of the plan. In my deliberate judgment, a con federacy made up of slaveholding and non-slave holding States is, in the nature of things, the strongest of all popular governments_ African slavery has been, and is, eminently conservative. It makes the absolute political equality of the white race everywhere practicable. It dispenses with the English order of nobility, and leaves every white man,_North and South, owning slaves or owning none, the equal of every other white man. It has reconciled universal suffrage throughout the free States with the stability of government. I speak not. now of its material benefits to the North and West, which are many and more obvious. But the South, too, has profited many Ways by a union with the non slaveholding States. Enterprise. industry, self reliance, perseverance, and the other hardy vir tues of a people living in a higher latitude and without hereditary servants, she has learned or received from the North. Sir, it is easy, 1 know, to denounce all this, and to revile him who utters it.. Be it so. The English is, of all languages, the most copious in words of bitterness and re proach. ...Pour on: 1 will endure." Then, sir, there is not an " irrepressible con flict" between.slave labor and free labor. There is no conflict at all. Both exist together in per fect harmony in the South. The master and the slave, the white laborer and the black, work together in the same field or the same shop, and without the slightest sense of degradation. They are not equals, either socially or politically. And why, then, cannot Ohio, having only fr4e labor, live in harmony with Kentucky which has both slave and free? Above all, why cannot Massachusetts allow the same right of choice to South Carolina, separated as they are a thousand miles, by other States who would , keep the peace and live in good will? Why this I civil war? Whence disunion? Not from slavery —not because the South chooses to have two kinds of labor instead of one; but from section alism, always and everywhere a disintegrating principle. Sectional jealousy and hate—these, sir, are the only elements of conflict' between these States, said though powerful, they are yet net at all irrepressible. They exist between families, communities, towns, cities, counties, and States, and if not repressed would dissolve all society and government. They exist also between other sections than the North and South. Sectionalism East, many years -ago, saw the SOuth and West united by the ties of geographical position, migration, intermarriage, and interest, and thus strong enough to control the power and policy of the Union. It. found us divided' only by different forms of labor ; and, with consummate but most guilty sagacity, it seized upon the question of slavery as the surest and most powerful instrumentality by irhioh to separate the West from the South, and bind her wholly to the North. Encouraged every way from abroad by those who were jealous of our prosperity and greatness, and who knew the secret of our strength, it proclaimed the " irre preeeihle conflict" between slave labor and free labor. It taught the people of the North to for get both their duty and their interests ; and aided by the artificial ligaments and influ ence which money and enterprise had creat ed between the sea board and the Northwest, it persuaded the people of that section, also, to yield up every tie which binds them to the-great valley of the Mississippi, and to join their polit ical fortunes especially, wholly with the East. It resisted the fugitive slave law, and demanded the exclusion of slavery from all the Territories and from this District, and clamored against the admission of any more slave States into the Union. It organized a sectional anti-slavery party, and thus drew to its aid as well political ambition and interest as fanaticism; and after twenty-five years of incessant and vehement agitation, it obtained possession finally, and upon that issue, of the Federal Government and of every State government North and West. And to-day, we are in the midst of the greatest, most cruel, most destructive civil war ever waged. But two years. sir, of blood and debt and taxation .and incipient commercial ruin are teaching the people of the West, and I trust of the North also the folly and madness of this crusade against African slavery, and the wisdom and necessity of a union of the States, as our fathers made it, "part slave and part free." What, then, sir, with so many causes impelling to reunion, keeps us apart to-day! Hate, pas sion, antagonism, revenge, all heated seven times hotter by war. Sir, these, while they last, are the most powerful of all motives with a people, and with the individual man ; but fortunately they are the least durable. They bold a divided sway in the same bosoms with the nobler quali ties of love, justice, reason, placability ; and, except when at their height, are weaker than the sense of interest, and always, in States at least, give way to it at last. No statesman who yields himself up to them can govern wisely or well ; and no State whose policy is controlled by them can either prosper or endure. But war is both their offspring and their aliment, and while it lasts, all other motives are subordinate. The virtnee ef peace ..cannot flourish, cannot even find development in the midst of fighting; and this civil war keeps in motion the centrifugal forces of the Union, and gives to them increased strength and activity every day. But such, and so many and powerful, in my judgment, are the cementing or centripetal agencies impelling us together that nothing but perpetual war and strife can keeps us always divided. Sir, I do not underestimate the power of the prejudices of section, or, what is much stronger, of race. Prejudice is collier, and, therefore, more durable than the passions of hate and re venge, or the spirit of antagonism, Buts as I have already said, its boundary in the United States is not Mason and Dixon's line. The long standing mutual jealousitsi of New England and the South do not primarily grow out of slavery. They are deeper, and will always he the chief obstacle in the wny of full and absolute reunion, They are founded in difference of manners,' hab its, and social life, and different notions about politics, morals, and religion. Sir, after all, this whole war is.not so much one of sections— least of all between the elavehtdding and non slaetholding Indians—act of rotes, representing not difference in blood but mind and its devel opment, and different types of civilization. It is the old conflict of the Cavalier and the Round head, the Liberalist and the Puritan ; or rather it is a conflict upon new issues of the ideas and elements represented by those names, It is a war of the Yankee and the Southron. Said a Boston writer the other day, eulogizing a New England officer who fell at Fredericksburg: " This is Massachusetts's war; Massachusetts and South Carolina made it." But in the begin ning, the Roundhead outwitted the Cavalier, and by a skillful use of slavery and the negro united all New England first, and afterward the entire North and West, and finally sent out to battle against him Celt and Saxon, German and Knick erbocker, Catholic and Episcopalian, and even a part of his own household and of the descendants of his own stook. ' Said Mr. Jefferson, when New England threatened secession some sixty years ago: "No, let us keep the Yankees to quarrel with." Ah, sir, he forgot that quarrel ing is always a hazardous experiment ; and after some time, the countrymen of Adams proved themselves too sharp at that work for the coun trymen of Jefferson. But every day the contest. now tends again to its natural and original ele ments. In many parts of the Northwest—l might add of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York city—the prejudice against the "Yan kee" has always been almost as bitter as in the South. Suppressed for a little while by the anti-slavery sentiment and the war, it threatens now to break forth in one of those great but un fortunate popular uprisings, in the midst of which reason and justice are for the time utterly silenced. I speak advisedly ; and let New Eng land heed; else she, and the whole Eakt, too, in their struggle for power, may learn yet from.the West the same lesson which civil war taught to Rome, that etrulgato intperii arcano, posse principem alibi, quam Rome fieri. The people of the West demand peace, and they begin to more than BM pect that New England is the way. The storm rages ; and they believe that she, not slavery, is the cause. The ship is sore tried; and passengers and crew are now almost ready to propitiate the waves by throwing the ill omened prophet everboard. In plain English— not very classic, but most expressive—they threaten to "set New England out in the cold." And now, sir, I, who have not a drop of New England blood in my veins, but was born in Ohio, and am wholly of southern ancestry—with a slight cross of Pennsylvania Scotch-trish—would speak a word to the men of the' West and the South, in behalf of New England. Sir, some years ago, in the midst of high sectional contro versies, and speaking as a western man, I said some things harsh of the North, which now, in a more catholic spirit as a United States man, and for the sake of reunion, I would recall. My prejudices, indeed, upon, this subject are as strong as any man's; but in this, the day of great national humiliation and calamity, let the voice of prejudies be hushed. Sir, they who would exclude New England in any reconstruction of the Union, assume' that all New Englanders are "Yankees" and Puritans; anti that the Puritan or pragmatical element, or type of civilization, has always held undisputed sway. Well, sir, Yankees, certainly, they are in one sense; and so to Old England we are all Yankees, North and South; and to the South just now, or a little while ago, we of the middle and western States, also, are, or were, Yankees, too. But, there is really a very large, and most. liberal and conservative non-Puritan element in the population of New England, w hich, for many years, struggled for the mastery, and sometimes held it. It divided Maine, New Hampshire, and Connecticut, and once controlled Rhode Island wholly. It held the sway during the Revolution, and at the period when the Constitution was founded, and for some years afterward, Mr., Calhoun said very justly, in 1841, that to the wisdom and enlarged patriotism of Sherman and Ellsworth on the slavery question we were in debted for this admirable Government; and that, along with Paterson, of New Jersey. "their minis ought to be engraver' out brass, and live forever." And Mr. Webster, in 1830, in one of those grand historic word paintings, in which he was so great a master, said of Massachusetts and South Carolina: "Hand in hand they stool around the Administration of Washington, and felt his great arm Mats on them for support." Indeed, air, it was not till some thirty years ago that the narrow, presumptuous, intermeddling, and fanat ical spirit of the old Puritan element began to 863. reappear in a form very much more aggressive I and destructive than at first, and threatened to obtain absolute mastery in church, and school, and State. A little earlier it had struggled hard, lAt the conservatives proved too etrong for it ; and so long as the great statesmen and jurists of the Whig and Democratic parties sur vived, it made but small progress, though• John Quincy Adams gave to it the strength of his great name. But after their death it broke in as a flood, and swept , away the last vestige of ;the ancient, liberal, and tolerating conservatism. Then every form and development of fanaticism sprang up in rank and most luxuriant growth, till abolitionism, the chief fungus of. all, over— spread the whole of New England first, and then the middle States, and finally every State in the Northwest. Certainty, sir, the more liberal or non-Puritan element was mainly, though not altogether, from the old Puritan stook, or largely.crossed with it. But even within the first ten years after the landing of the Pilgrims, a more enlarged and tolerating civilisation was introduced. Roger Williams, not of the Mayflower, though a Puritan himself, and thoroughly imbued with all its pecu liarities of cant and creed and form of worship, seems yet to have had naturally a more liberal spirit; and, fire , perhaps of all men, some three or more years before "the Ark and the Dove" touched the shores of the St. Mary's, in Mary land, taught the sublime doctrine of freedom-of opinion and practice in religion. Threatened first with banishment to England, so as to "re move as far as possible the infection of his prin ciples; "and afterwards actually banished beyond the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, because, in the language of the sentence of the General Court, he broached and divulged divers new and strange doctrines against the authority of magistrates" over the religious opinions of men, thereby disturbing the peace of the colony, be became the founder of Rhode Island, and, in. deed, of a large part of New England society. And, whether from his teaching and example, and in the persons of his descendants and those of his associates, or from other causes and an other stock, there has always been a large infu sion throughout New England of what may be called the Roger Williams element, as distinguish ed from the extreme Puritan or Mayflower and Plymouth Rock type of the New Englander; and its influence, till late yeare, has always been powerful. Sir, I would not deny or disparage the austere virtues .of the old Puritans of Eng land or America. But I do believe that, in the very 14.ature of things ? no community could exist long in peace, and no Government endure long alone, or become great, where that element in its earliest or its more recent form holds supreme control. And it is my solemn conviction that there can be no possible or dura ble reunion of these States until it shall have been again subordinated to other and more liber al and conservative elements, and, above all, until its worst, and most mischievous develop- ment, abolitionism, has been utterly extinguish ed. Sir, the peace of the 'Union and of this con tinent demands it. But, fortunately, those very elements exist abundantly in New England her self ; and to her I look with confidence to secure to them the mastery within her limits. In fact, sir, the true voice of New England has for some years past been but rarely heard here or else where in public affairs. Men now control her politics and are in high places, State and Feder al, who, twenty years ago, could not have been chosen as selectmen in old Massachusetts. But let her remember at last her ancient renown ; let her turn from vain-glorious admiration of the stone monuments of her heroes and patriots of a format. age, to generous emulation of the noble and manly virtues which they were designed to commemorate. Letus hear less from her of the Pil -1 grim Fathers and the Mayflower and of Plymouth Rook, and more of Roger Williams and his com patriots, and his toleration. Let her banish now and forever her dreamers and her sophists and her fanatics, and call back again into her State administration and into the national coun cils " her men of might, her grand in soul " some of them still live—and she will yet escape the dangers which now threaten her with isola tion, Then, sir, while las Memorably hostile to Puritan domination in religion or literature or politics, I am not in favor of the proposed exclu sion of New England. I would have the Union as it was ; and first, New England as sbe was. But if New England will have no union with olaveholders ; if she ip not content with "the Union as it was," then upon her own head be the responsibility for secession. And there will be no more coercion now. I, at least, will be exactly consistent. And now, sir, can the central States, New York, New Jersey, and Peunsylvani4, consent to separation? Can New York city ? sir, the trade of the South made her largely what she is. She was the factor and banker of the South—cotton filled her harbor with shipping and her banks with gold. But in an evil hour the foolish, I will not say bad, "men of Gotham" persuaded her merchant princes—against their first lesson in business—that she could retain or force back the southern trade by war. War, indeed, has given her, just now, a new business and trade greater and more profitable than the old. But with disunion that, too, must perish. And let not Wall street, or any other great interest, mer cantile, manufacturing, or commercial, imagine that it shall have power enough or wealth enough to stand in the way of reunion through peace. Let them learn, one and all, that a public man who has the people as his support, is stronger than they, though he may not be worth a mil— lion, nor even one dollar. A little while ago the banks said that they were king, but President Jackson speedily taught them their mistake. Next, railroads assumed to be king ; and cotton once vaunted largely hie kingship. Sir, these are only of the royal family—princes of the blood. There is but one king on earth. Politics is king. But to return : New Jersey, too, is bound closely to the South, and the South to her; and more and longer than any other State, she re. membered both her duty to the Constitution and her interest in the Union. And Pennsylvania, a sort of middle ground, just between the North and the South, and extending, also, to the West, is united by nearer, if not st ronger ties, to every section, than any other one Stale, unless it be Ohio. She was—she is yet—the keystone in the great but now crumbling arch of the Union. She is a border State; and, more than that, she has less within her of the fanatical or disturbing element than any of the States. The people of Pennsylvania are quiet, peaceable, practical, and enterprising, without being aggressive. They have more of the honest old English and German thrift than any other. No people mind more diligently their own business. They have but one idiosyncrasy or specialty—the tariff; and even that is really far more a matter of tradition than of substantial interest. The industry, en terprise, and thrift of Pennsylvania are abun dantly able to take care of themselves against any competition. In any event, the Union is of more value, many times, to her then any local interest. But other ties also bind, these States—Pennsyl vania and New Jersey, especially—to the South, and the South to them. Only an imaginary line I separates the former from Delaware and Mary land. The Delaware river, common to both Pennsylvania and New Jersey, flows into Dela ware bay. The Susquehanna empties its waters, through Pennsylvania and Maryland, into the Chesapeake. And that great watershed itself, extending to Norfolk, and, therefore, almost to the North Caroline line, does belong, and must ever belong, in common to the central and south— ern States, under one Government; or else the line of separation will be the Potomac to its head waters. All of Delaware and Maryland, and the counties of .Accomao and Northampton, in Vir ginia, would, in that event, follow the fortunes of the northern confederacy. In feet, air, dis agreeable as the idea may be to many within their limits on both sides, no man who looks at the map and then reflects upon history and the [VOL. XXIII.-NO. 41.-WHOLE NO. 1983. force of natural causes, and considers the pre sent actual and the future probable position of the hostile armies and navies at the end of this war, ought for a moment to doubt that either the States and counties which I have named must go with the North, or Pennsylvania and New Jersey with the South. Military force on either side cannot control the destiny of the States lying between the mouth of the Chesapeake and the Hudson. And if that bay were itself made the line. Delaware, and the Eastern Shore of Mary land and Virginia, would belong to the North ; while Norfolk, tile only capacious harbor -on the southeastern coast, must be commanded by the guns of some new fortress upon Cape Charles; and Baltimore, the now queenly city, eeated then upon the very boundary of two rival, yes, hos tile, confederacies, would rapidly fall into decay. And now, sir, I will not ask whether the North west can consent to separation from the South. Never. Nature forbids. We are only a part of the great valley of the Mississippi. There is no line of latitude upon which to separate. The getilll WORN net (login Om •914 lice of 30 ° 30 ' on both sides of the river; and there is no natu ral boundary east and west. The nearest to it are the Ohio and Missouri rivers. But that line would leave Cincinnati and St. Louis, as. border cities, like Baltimore, to decay, and, extending fifteen hundr e d miles he leu s dh, would bee'ome the scene of an eternal border warfare without example even in 'the worst of times. Sir, we cannot, ought not, will not, separate front the South. And if you of the East who have found this war against the South and for the negro, gratifying to your hate or profitable to your purse, will continue it till a separation be forced between the slaveholding and your non- slave holding States, then, believe me, and accept 'it, as you did not the other solemn warnings of years past, the day which divides the North from the South, that self—sone day decrees eternal divorce between the West and the East. Sir, our destiny is fixed. There is not one drop of rain which descending from the heavens, and fertilizing our soil, causes it to yield an abundant harvest, but flows into the Mississippi, and there, mingling with the waters of the mighty river, finds its way, at last, to the Gulf of Mexico. And we must and will follow it with travel and trade, not by treaty but by right, freely, peaceably, and without restriction or tribute, under the same Oovornment and flag, to its helm in the bosom of that Gulf. Sir, we will not remain after sepa ration from the South, a province or appanage of the East, to bear her burdens and pay her taxes ; nor hemmed in and isolated as we are, and without a sea-coast, could we long remain a distinct oonfetletliCy. But wherever we go, married to the South or the east, we bring with us three-fourths of the territories of that valley to the Rocky mountains, and it may be to the Pacific—the grandest and most magnificent dowry which bride ever had to bestow. Then, sir, New England, freed at last from the doMination of her sophisters and dreamers and bigots, and restored to the control once more of her former liberal, tolerant, and conservative civilization, will not stand in the way of the re union of these States upon terms of fair and .honorable adjustment. And in this great work the central free and border slave States, too, will unite heart and hand. To the West, it is a neces sity, and she demands it. And let not the States now called confederate insist upon • separation and independence. Whit did they demand at first? Security against abolitionism within the Union. Protection from the irrepressible con flict " and the domination of the absolute numeri cal majority. A change of public opinion..and consequently of political parties in the North and West, so that their local institutions and domestic peace should no longer be endangered. And, now, sir, after two years of persistent and most gigantic effort on the part of this Admin istration to compel them to submit, but. with utter and signal failure, the people of the free States are now or are fast becoming satisfied that the Union is the utter suppression of abolitionism or anti-slay.ery as a political element, and the complete subordination of the spirit of fanaticism and intermeddling which give it birth. In any event, they are ready now, if I have not greatly misread the signs of the times, to return to the old constitutional and actual basis of fifty years ago—three- Mho rule of reprelentiktion, @poody return of fugitives from labor, equal rights in the Territories, no more slavery agitation any where, and transit and temporary sojourn with slaves, without molestation, in the free States. Without all these there could be neither peace nor permanence to a restored union of States ,4 part slave and part free." With it, the South, in addition to all the other great and multiplied benefits of union, would be far more secure in her slave property, her domestic institutions, than under a separate government. Sir, let no man North or West, tell me that this would per petuate African slavery. I know it. But se does the Constitution. I repeat, sir, it is the price of the Union. Whoeier bates negro Slavery more than he loves the Union, must demand separation at last. I think that you can never abolish slavery by fighting. Certainly you never can till you have first destroyed the South, and then, in the language, first of Mr. Douglas and afterwards of Mr. Seward, converted this Gov vernment into an imperial despotism. And, sir, I whenever I On forced to a choice between the loss to my own country and race. of personal and political liberty with all its blessings, and the involuntary domestic servitude of the negro, I shall not hesitate one moment to choose the latter alternative. The sole question to-day is between the Union with slavery, or finaldisunion, and, I think, anarchy and despotism. lam for the Union. It was good enough for my fathers. It is good enough for us and our children after us. And, sir, let no man in the South tell me that she has been invaded, and that all the horrors implied in those most terrible of words, civil war, have been visited upon her. I know that, too. But we, also, of the North and West, in every State and by thousands, who have dared so much as to question the principle and policy, or doubt the honesty, of this Administration and its party, have suffered everything that the worst despotism could inflict, except only loss of life itself upon the scaffold. Some even, have died for the cause by the hand of the assassin. And can we forget? Never, never. Time will but burn the memory of these wrongs deeper into our hearts. But shall we break up the Union? Shall we destroy the Government because usurp ing tyrants have held possession and perverted it to the most cruel of oppressions ? Was it ever so done in any other country? In Athens? Rome? England? Anywhere? No, sir; let us expel the usurper, and restore the Constitution and laws, the rights of the States, and the liber ties of the people ; and then, in the country of our fathers, under the Union of our fathers, and the old flag—the symbol once again of the free and the brave—let us fulfill the grand mission which Providence has appointed for us among the nations of the earth. And now, sir, if it be the will of all sections to unite, then upon what terms? Sir, between the South awl most of the States of the North, and all of the West, there is but one subject in controversy—slavery. It is the only question, said Mr. Calhoun twenty-five years ago, of suf ficient magnitude and potency to divide this Union ; and divide it it will, he added, or drench the country in blood if not arrested. It has done both. But settle it on the original basis of the Constitution, and give to each section the power to protect itself within the Union, and now, after the terrible lessons of the past two years, the Union will be stronger than before, and, indeed, endure for ages. Woe to the man, North and South, who, to the third or the fourth generation, should teach men disunion. And now the way to reunion ; what so easy ? Behold to-day two separate governments in one country, and without a natural dividing line; with two Presidents and Cabinets, and a double Congress; and yet each under a constitution so exactly similar, the one to the other, that a stran ger could scarce discern the difference. Was ever folly and madness like thin? Sir, it is not in the nature of things that it should so continue long. But why speak of ways or terms of reunion now ? The will is yet wanting in both sections. Union is consent. and good will and fraternal affeeti -rt. War is force, hate, revenge. Is the country tired at last of war ? Has the experi ment been tried long enough? Ras sufficient blood been shed, treasure expended, and misery inflicted in both the North and the South? What then? Stop fighting. Make an armistice—no formal treaty. Withdraw your army from the seceded States. Reduce both armies to a fair and sufficient peace establishment. Declare ab solute free trade between the North and South. Buy and sell. Agree upon a zollverein. Recall your fleets. Break up your blockade. Reduce your navy. Restore travel. Open up railroads. Re-establish the telegraph. Reunite your ex press companies. No more lioniters and km/- clads, but set your friendly steamers and steam ships again in motion. Visit the North and West. Visit the South. Exchange newspapers. Migrate. Intermarry. Let slavery alone. Hold elections at the appointed times. Let ns choose a new President in sixty.four. And when the gospel of peace shall have descended again from heaven into their hearts, and the'gospel of abo lition and of hate been expelled, let your clergy and the churches meet again in Christian inter course, North and South. Let the secret orders and voluntary associations everywhere reunite as brethren once more. In short, give to all the natural and all the artificial causes which impel us together, their fullest sway. Let time do his office—drying tears, dispelling sorrows, mellow ing passion, and making herb and grass and tree to grow again upon the hundred battle-fields of this terrible war. But this is recognition." It is not formal recognition, to which I will not consent. Recog nition now, and attempted permanent treaties about boundary, travel, and trade, and partition of Territories, would end in a war fiercer and more disadtrous than before. Recognition is ab solute disunion ; and not between the slave and the free States, but with Delaware and Maryland as part of the North, and Kentucky and Missouri part of the West. But wherever the actual line, ovary evil and misohief of disunion is implied is it. And for similar reasons, sir, I would not at Ibis time press hastily a convention of the States. The men who now would hold seats in such a convention, would, upon both sides, if both agreed to attend, come together full of the hate and bit. terness inseparable from civil war. No, sir; let passion have time to cool, and reason to resume its sway. It cost thirty years of desperate and most wicked patience and industry to destroy or impair the magnificent temple of this Union. Let us be content if, within three years, we shall be able to restore it. But certainly what I propose is informal, prac tical recognition. And that is. precisely what exists to-day, and has existed, more or less de fined, from the first. Flags of truce, exchange of prisoners, and all your other observances of the laws, forms and courtesies of war are acts of recognition. Sir, does any man doubt today that there is a Confederate government at Rich mond, and that it is a "belligerent ?" Even the Secretary of State has discovered it at last, though he has written ponderous folios of polish ed rhetoric to prove that it is not. Will contin ual war, 'then, without extended and substantial success, make the confederate States any the less a government in fact? " But it confesses disunion." Yes, just as the surgeon, who sete'your fractured limb in splints, in order that it may be healed, admits that it is broken. But the Government will have failed to "crush out the rebellion." Sir, it has failed. You went to war to prove that we had a Govern ment. With what result? To the people of the loyal States it has, in your hands, been the Gov. ernment of King Stork, but to the Confederate States, of King Log. "But the rebellion will have triumphed." Better trinfhph to-day than ten years hence. But I deny it. The rebellion will at last be crushed out in the only way in which it ever was possible. "But no one will be hung at the end of war." Neither will there be, though the war should last half a century, except by the mob' or-the band of arbitrary pow er. But really, sir, if there is to be no hanging, 'let this Administration, and all who have done its bidding everywhere, rejoice and be exceeding glad. And now, sir, allow me a word upon a subject of very great interest at this moment, and most important it may be in its influence upon the future—roasinu MEDIATION. I speak not of armed and hostile intervention, which I would resist as long as but one man was left to strike a blow at the invader. But friendly mediation— the kindly offer of an impartial Power to stand as a daysman between the contending parties in this most bloody and exhausting strife—ought to be met in a Spirit as cordial and ready as that in which it is proffered. It would be churlish to refuse. Certainly, it is not consistent with the former dignity of this Government to ask for mediation; neither, sir, would it befit its ancient magnanimity to reject it. As proposed by the Emperor of France, I would accept it at once. Now is the auspicious moment. It is the speedi est, easiest, most graceful mode of suspending hostilities. Let us hear no more of the media tion of cannon and the sword. The day for all that has gone by. Let ns be statesmen at last. Sir, I give thanks that some, at least, among the Republican party seem ready now to lift them selves up to the height of this great argument, and to deal with it in the spirit of the patriots and great men of other countries and ages, and of the better days of the United States. And now, sir, whatever may have been the motives of England, Prance, and the other great Powers of Europe, in withholding recognition so long from the Confederate States, the South and the North are both indebted to them for an im mense public service. The South has proved her ability to maintain herself by her own strength and resources, without foreign aid, moral or ma terial. And the North and West—the whole country, indeed—these great Powers have served incalcuably, by holding back a solemn proclama tion to the world that the Union of. these States was finally and formally dissolved. They have left to us every motive and every chance for re union ; and if that has been the purpose of Eng land especially—our rival so long; interested more than any other in disunion and the conse quent weakening of our great naval and com mercial power, and suffering, too,, as she has suf fered, so long and severely because of this war —I do not hesitate to say that she has performed an act of unselfish heroism without example in history. Was such indeed her purpose ? Let her answer before the impartial tribunal of pos terity. In any event, after the great reaction in public sentiment in the North and West, to be followed after some time by a like reaction in the South, foreign recognition now of the Confedef ate States could avail little to delay or prevent final reunion ; if, as I firmly believe, reunion be not only possible but inevitable. Sir, I have not spoken of foreign arbitration. That is quite another - question. I think it im practicable, and fear it as dangerous. The very Powers—or any other Power—which have hesi tated to aid disunion directly or by force, might, as authorized arbiters, most readily pronounce fel it at last. Very grand, indeed, would be the tribunal before which the great question of the Union of these States and the final destiny of this continent for ages, should be heard, and his toric through till time, the ambassadors who should argue it. And if both belligerents con sent, let the subjects in controversy be referred to Switzerland, or Russia, or any other impartial and incorruptible Power or State in Europe. But at last, sir, the people of these several, States here, at home, must bathe final arbiter of this great quarrel in America; and the people and States of the Northwest, the mediator who shall stand, like the prophet, betwixt the living and the dead, that the plague of disunion may be stayed. Sir, this war, horrible as it is, has taught us all some of the most important and salutary les sons which ever a people learned. First, it has annihilated, in twentyaleatha, all the false and pernicious theories and teachings of abolitionism for thirty years, and which a mast