ii V BY S. J. BOW. CLEARFIELD, PA.. WEDNESDAY, MUAEY 8, 1862. VOL. a-NO. 19. 11 ! ji is at r z il ji ilx 11 i ll ji Ti it i it ftr . i nira f iiu; A' n n' ;n ni 1 THE MASON AND SLIDELL CASE. Letters of the Engliihier nd Soc- Seward. Below will be found the correspondence bo tween theBritish Minister and Secretary Seward from which it may be inerred that the difficulty between this country and England are amicably settled . EarlBnaieilto Lord Lyons. Fobeion Office, Nov. 30, 1861. J"A Xori Lyons, K. C. B., 4rc, $c, fc. My Zonf Intelligence of a very grave na 'ture has reached Her Majesty's Government : This Intelligence was conveyed officially to the knowledge of the Admiralty by Comman der Williams, agent for mails on board the ' contract steamer Trent. It appears Irom the letter of Commander Williams, dated "Royal Mail Contract Packet Trent, at Sea, November 9," that tho Trent left ilavanna on the 7th instant, with her Ma jesty's malls for England, having on board numerous passengers. Commander Williams states that shortly after noon on the 8th a 'steamer having the appearance of a man-of-war, but not showing colors, was observed a head. On nearing her at 1,15 P. M. she fired around shdt from her pivot gnn across .the bows of the Trent, and showed American col ors. While the Trent was approaching her slowly the American vessel discharged a shell across the bows W tJie Trent, exploding half a cable's length afeead. The Trent then stop ped, aud art officer with a large armed guard ot marines boarded her.' The officer demanded a list of the passengers ; and, compliance with this demand being reused, the" officer said he had orders to arrest Messrs. Mason, Slidell, Macfarlard and Eustis, and that he had sure infoimafion of their being passengers in tho Trent. While some parley was going on upon 'this matter Mr. Slidell stepped forward and ttolfi the American officer that the four persons ute oat named, were then standing before hun The Commander of the Trent and Commander Williams protested against the act of taking ly iorce. out of the Trent these four passen gers, then under tho protection of the British flag. But the San Jacinto was at that time only two hundred yards from the Trent, her ship's company at quarters, her ports open,and torupions out. Resistance was therefore out of the question, and the four gentlemen before named were forcibly taken out of the ship. fi..lujrther demand was made that the Comman 'der-o"tiU3 Trent should proceed on board the .San JacHfra, but he said he wonld not go un 'less forcibly compelled likewise, aud this de mand was not insisted upon. It thus appears that certain individuals have Ibeen forcibly taken from on board a British vessel, tlia.6b.yi of a neutral Power,while such wessew was -pursuing a lawful and innocent voyage an act of violence which was an af front to the British flag and a violation of in ternational law. Her Majesty's Government, bearing in mind the friendly relations whicn have long subsis ted between Great Britain and the United States, arc willing to believe that the United States naval officer who committed the aggres lion was not acting in compliarce with any authority from his Government, or that if he conceived himself to be so authorized, he greatly misunderstood the instructions which he had received. For the Government of the United States must be fully aware that the Uritish Government could not allow such an affront to the national honor to pass without full reparation, and Her Majesty's Government are unwilling to believe that it could be the deliberate intention of the Government of the United States unnecessarily to force into dis cussion,between the two Governments, a ques tion of so grave a character, and with regard to which the whole British nation would be sure to entertain such unanimity of feeling. Her Majesty's Government, therefore, trust that when this matter shall have been brought under the consideration of the Government ot the United States that Government will, of its own accord, offer to the British Govern ment such redress as alone could satisfy the British nation, namely, the liberation of the tour gentlemen and their delivery to your Lordship, in order that they may again be placed under British protection.and a suitable apology for the aggression which has been 'committed. Should these terms not be offered by Mr. Seward you will propose them to him. You are at liberty to read this dispatch to the Secretary of State, and, il he shall desire it tou will give him a copy of it. Iam,&c, Russell. Sir. Seward to Lord Lyons. Department of State, I Washington, Dec. 26, 1861. f The Itisht Honorable Lord Lyons, fc., c., J-c. ; My Lord Earl Russell's despatch of Novem ber the 30th, a copy of which you have left with me at my request, is of the following ef fect, namely : That a letter of Commander Williams.dated Royal Mail Contract Packet boat Trent, at ea, November 0th, states that that vessel lelt Havana on the 7th of November, with Her Majesty's mails for England, having on board numerous passengers. Shortly after noon, on the 8th of November, the United States was steamer San Jaciuto.Captaia Wilkes,not show ing colors, was observed ahead. That steam er, on being neared by the Trent, at one o' clock filteen minutes In the afternoon, fired a round shot from a pivot gun across her bows, and showed American colors. While the Trent was approaching slowly towards the San i acinto she discharged a shell acrous the Trent's which exploded at hair a cable's length wore her. The Trent then stopped, and an officer with a large armed guard of marines Warded her. The officer said he had orders to arrest Messrs. Mason, Slidell, Macfarland ana Eustis, and had sure information that they passengers in the Trent. - While some Pvley was going on upon this matter Mr. Sli 8tePped forward and said to the American fficer that the four persons he had named ere standing before him. The Commander the Treut and Commander Williams protest "gainst the act, of taking those four pas angers out of the Trent, they then being un "'Mbe protection of the British flag. But '"8 San Jacinto was at this time only two hun dred yards distant,' her ship's oompany at quarters, her ports opeo and tompions oat, nd so resistance was out of the question. Joe four persons before named were then rcibly taken ont of the ship. A further de mand was made that the Commander of the : orent should proceed on board the San Jacin- but no said he would not go unless forcibly "mpslltd likewise, and this demand, was not -listed, upon,. Upon this, statement Earl Russell remarks that it thus appears that certain individuals have been forcibly taken on board a British vessel, the ship of a neutral power, while that vessel was pursuing a lawful and innocent voyage, an act of violence which was an affront to the British flag and a violation of interna tional law. Earl Russell next' says that Her Majesty's Government, bearing in mind the friendly re lations which have long existed between Great Uritam and the United States, are willing to believe that the naval officer who committed this aggression was not acting in compliance with any authority from his Government, or that, if he conceived himself to be so author zed, hegreatly misunderstood the instructions which he had received. Earl Russell argues that the United States must be fully aware that the British Govern ment could not allow such an affront to the national honor to pass without full reparation, and they are willing to believe that it could not be the deliberate intention of the Govern ment of the United States unnecessarily to force into discussion between the two Govern ments a question of so grave a character, and with regard to which the whole British nation would be sure to entertain such unanimity of feeling. Earl Russell, resting upon tho statement and the argument which I have thus recited, closes with saying that Her Majesty's Govern ment trusts that when this matter shall have been brought under the consideration of the United States it will, of its own accord, oiler to the British Government such redress as alone could satisfy the British nation, namely, the liberation of the four prisoners taken from the Trent, and their delivery to your Lordship, in order that they may again be placed under British protection, and a suitable apology, for the aggression which has been committed. Earl Russell finally instructs you to propose those terms tome, if I should not first offer them on the part of the Government. This despatch has been submitted to the President. The British Government has rightly con jectured, what it is now my duty to state, that C-ipt. Wilkes, in conceiving and executing the proceeding in question, acted upon his own suggestions of duty, without any direction or instruction.or even foreknowledge of it on the part of this Government. No directions had been given to him or any other naval officer, to arrest the four persons named, or any of them, on the Trent, or on any other British vessel, or on any other neutral vessel, at the place where it occurred or elsewhere. The British Government will justly infer from these facts that the United States not only had no purpose, but even no thought of forc ing into discussion the question which has a risen.or any which could affect in any way the sensibilities of the British nation. It is true that a round shot was fired by the San Jacinto from her pivot gun when the Trent was distantly approaching. But, as the facts have been reported to this Government, the shot was nevertheless intentionally fired in a direction so obviously divergent from the course of the Trent as to be quite as harmless as a blank shot, while it should be regarded as s signal. So also we learn that the Trent was not ap proaching the San Jacinto slowly when the shell was fired across her bows, but, on the contrary, the Trent was, or seemed to be moving under a full head of steam, as if with a purpose to pass the San Jacinto. We are inlormed also that the boarding offi cer(Lieutenant Fairfax)did not board ttie Trent with a large armed guard, but he left his ma rines in his boat when he entered the Treut. lie states his instructions from Capt. Wilkes to search for the tour persons named, in a re spectful and courteous though decided manner, and he asked the Captain of the Trent to show his passenger list, which was refused. The Lieutenant, as we aru informed, did not em ploy absolute force in transferring the passen gers, but he used just so much as was neces sary to satisfy the parties concerned that re fusal or resistance would be unavailing. So, also, we are informed that the Captain of tho Trent was not at anv time or in any way required to go on board the San Jacinto. These modifications ot the case as present by Commander Williams are based upon our official reports. I have now to remind your Lordship of some facts which doubtlessly were omitted by Earl Russell, with the very proper and becom ing motive of allowing them to be brought in to the case, on the part of the United States, in the way most satisfactory to this Govern ment. These facts are that at the time the transaction eccured an insurrection was exist ing in the United States which this Govern ment was engaged in suppressing by the em ployment of land and naval forces ; that in re gard to this domestic strife the United States considered Ureal iiritain as a irienaiy rower, while she had assumed for herself the attitude of a neutral : and that Spain was considered in the same light, and bad assumed the same attitude as Great Britain. It had been settled by correspondence that the United States and Great Britain mutually recognized as applicable to this local strife these two articles of the declarations by the Congress of Paris in 1856, namely that the neutral or friendly nag should cover enemy's goods not contraband of war, and that neutral goods not contraband of war are not liable to capture under an enemy's Mag. These excep tions of contraband from favor where a nega tive acceptance by the parties of the rule hitherto every where recognized as a part of the law of cations,that whatever is contraband is lia ble to capture and confiscation in all cases. James M.Mason and E. J. McFarland are citizens of the United States, and residents of Virginia. John Slidell and George Eustis are citizens of the United States and residents of Louisiana. It was well known at Havana when these parties embarked in the Trent that James M. Mason was proceeding to bug land in the affected character of a Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of St. James, un der a pretended commission from Jefferson Davis, who had assumed to be President of the insurrectionary party in the United btates, and E. J. Mcfarland was going with him in a like unreal character of Secretary of Legation to the pretended mission.. John Slidell, in similar circumstances, was going to Paris as a pretended Minister to the Emperor of the French, and George Eustis was the chosen Secretary of Legation for that simulated mis sion. The fact that these persons had assum ed such characters has been since avowed by the 6ame Jefferson Davis in a pretended, mes sage to an nnlawful and insurrectionary Con gress. It was we think, rightly presumed mat inese Ministers bore credentials and in structions, and such papers are in the lav Known as despatches. We are informed by our consul at Paris that these despatches, having escaped the search of the Trent, were actually conveyed and delivered to em isaries ot tbe insurrection in England. Al though it is not essential, yet it is proper to siaie, as l do also upon information and belief, mat tne owner and agent, and all the officers oi tne i rent, Including the Commander Wit liams, had knowledge of the assumed ch trac- teis and purposes of the persons before named, wnen tney embarked on that vessel. iTour lordship will now preceive that tbe cases before us, instead of presenting a merely nagrant act of violence on the part of Capt n ilkes, as might well be inferred from the incomplete statement of it that went up to the British Government, was undertaken as i simple, legal, customary and beligerent pro ceeding by Capt. Wilkes to arrest and capture a neutral vessel engaged In carrying contra band of war for the use and benefit of tbe in surgents. . - - The question before us is whether this proceeding was authorized by and conducted according to the law ot nations. It involves tbe following inquiries: 1st. Were tbe persons named and .their supposed despatches contraband of war ? 2d. Might Capt. .Wilkes lawfully stop and search the Trent lor these contraband persons and despatches 7 3d. Did he exercise the right in a lawful and proper manner 7 4th. Having found tbe contraband persons on board and In presumed possession of the contraband despatches, had he a right to cap ture the persons 1 ' 5th. Did he exercise that rieht of capture in the manner allowed and recognized by the law of nations 1 If all these inquiries shall be resolved in the affirmative the British Goterutuent will have no claim for reparation. I address myself to the first inquiry, namely, were the lour persons mentioned, and their supposed dispatches, contraband 7 Maritime law so generally deals, as its profes sois say, in rem, that is, with property, and so seldom with persons, that it seems a straining of the term contraband to apply it to them. But persons,as well as property ,may become contra band, since the word means broadly "contrary to proclamation, prohibited, illegal, unlawful." All writers and judges pronounce naval or military persons in the service of the enemy contraband. Vattel says war allows us to cut off from an enemy ail his resources, and to hinder him from sending ministers to solicit assis tance. And Sir William Scott says you may step the ambassador of your enemy on bis pas sage. Dispatches are not less clearly contra band, and the bearers or couriers who under take th carry them fall under the same con demnation. A subtlety might be raised whether pro tended ministers of an usurping power, not recognized as legal by either the belligerent or the neutral, could be held to be contraband. But it would disappear on being subjected to what is the true test in all cases namely, tbe spirit ot the law. Sir William Scott, speak ing of civil magistrates who were arrested and detained as coutraband, says: 'It appears to me on principle to be but reasonable that when it is of sufficient impor tance to the enemy that such persons shall be sent out on the public service at the public expense, it should afford equal ground of for feiture against the vessel that may be let out for a purpose so intimately connected with the hostile operations." I trust that 1 have shown that the fonr per sons who were taken from the Trent by Capt. Wilkes, and their despatches, were contraband of war. The second inquiry is whether Capt. Wilkes had a right by the law of nations to detain and search the Trent 7 The Trent, though she carried mails, was a contractor merchant vessel a common carrinr for hire. Maritime law knowsonly three classes of vessels vessels of war, revenue vessels, and merchant vessels. TheTrent falls within the lat ter class. Whatever disputes have existed con cerning a right of visitation or search in time of peace, none it is supposed, has existed in modern times about the right of a belligerent in time of war to capture contrabands in neutral and even friendly merchant vessels and of the right of visitation and search, in order to determine whether they are neutral, and are document ed as such according to the law. of nations. I assume, in the present case, what, as I read British authorities, is regarded by Great Britain herself as true maratime law : that tbe circumstances that the Treat was proceeding from a neutral port to another neutral port does not modify the right of the belligerent captor. The third question is whether Capt. Wilkes exercised the right of search in a lawful and proper manner ? If any doubt hung over this point, as the case was presented in the statement of it adopt ed by the British Government, 1 think it must have already passed away before tbe modifica tions of that statement which I have already submitted. I proceed to tbe fourth inquiry, namely : Having found tbe suspected contraband of war on board the Trent, bad Capt. Wilkes a right to capture tbe same ? Such a capture is the chief, if not the only recognized object of a visitation and search. The principle of tbe law is that a belligerent exposed to danger may prevent tho contraband person or thing from applying themselves or being applied to the hostile use or purpose de signed. Tbe law is so very liberal in this re spect that when tbe contraband is found on board a neutral vessel, not only is the contra band forfeited, bntthe vessel, which is the ve hicle of its passage or transportation, being tainted, also becomes contraband, and is sub ject to capture and confiscation. Only tbe fifth question remains, namely : Did Capt. Wilkes exercise the right of captur ing tbe contraband in conformity with the law of nations 7 It is just here that tbe difficulties of the case begin. What is the manner which the law of nations prescribes for disposing ef the contra band when you have fonnd and seized it on board of the neutral vessel? The answer would be easily found if tbe question were what yon shall do with the contraband vessel. Yon must take or send her Into a convenient port, and subject her to a judicial prosecution there in adrairaliy, which will try and decide the questions of belligerency, neutrality, contra nana and capture. So, again, you would promptly find the same answer il the question were, What is the manner of proceeding pre scribed by tbe law of nations in regard to the contraband if it be property or things of mate rial or pecuniary value 1 But the question here concerns the mode of procedure in regard, not to the vessel that was carrying the contraband, nor yet to contraband inmgs wtiicn worked the forfeiture of the ves sel, but to contraband persons. The books of law are dumb. Yet the ques lion is as important as it is difficult. First, the belligerent coptor has a right to prevent iue contraband otticer, soldier, sailor, minis ter, or courier from proceeding in his unlaw ful voyage and reaching tbe destined scene of his injurious service. But on the other hand, me person captured'may be innocent that be may not be contiaband. He, therefore, has a right to a fair trial of the accusation;against him. The neutral State has taken him under its flag, is bound to protect him if be is not contraband, and is therefore entitled to be satisfied upon that important Question. The faith of that State is pledged to his salety, if innocent, as its justice is pledged to his sur renderithe is really contraband. Here are conflicting claims, involving personal liberty, life, honor, and duty. Here are conflicting national claims, involving welfare, safety, hon or and empire. They require a tribunal and a trial. The captors and the captured are equals ; the neutral and thn belligerent State are equals. ' While the law authorities were found silent it was suggested at an early dav by this Gov ernment that you should take the captured persons into a convenient port and institute judicial proceedings there to try the contro versy. But only courts of admiralty have juris diction in maratime cases, and these courts hare formulas to try only claims to contra band chatties, but no one to try claims con cerning contraband persons. Tbe courts can entertain no proceedings and render no judg ment in favor of or against4the alleged coutra band men. It was replied all this is true ; but yon can reach in those courts a decision which will have the moral weight of a judicial one by a circuitous proceeding.' Convey tbe suspected men, together with the suspected vessel, inte port, and try there the question whether the vessel is contraband. Yon can prove it to be so by proving the suspected men to be contra band, and tbe court must then detetmine the vessel to be contraband. .If the men are not contraband the vessel will escape condemna tion. Still there is no judgmont for or against the captured persons. But it was assumed that there would result from tbe determination of the court concerning the vessel a legal cer tainty concerning the character of the men. This course of proceeding seemed open to many objections. It elevates the incidental inferior private interest into the proper placo of tbe paramount pnblie one, and possibly it may make the fortunes, tbe safety, or tbe ex istence of a nation depend on the accidents of a merely personal and pecuniary litigation. Moreover, when the judgment of the prize court upon the lawfulness of the capture of the vessel is rendered, it really concludes noth ing, and binds neither the belligerent State nor the neutral upon the great question of tbe disposition to be made of tbe captured contra band persons. That question is still to be re ally determined, if at all. by diplomatic ar rangement or by war. One may well express bis surprise when told that the law of nations has furnished no more reasonable, practical, and perfect mode than this of determining questions of such grave import between sovereign powers. The regret we may feel on the occasion is nevertheless modified by the reflection that the difficulty is not altogether anomalous. Similar and equal deficiencies are found in every system of mu nicipal law, especially in the system which ex ists in the greater portions ot Great Britain and the United States. Tbe title to personal property can hardly ever be resolved by a court without resorting to the fiction that the claimant has lost and the possessor has found it, and the title to real estate is disputed by real litigants under the names of imaginary persons. It must be confessed, however, that while all aggrieved nations demand, and all impartial ones concede, the need of some form of judicial process in determining the charac ters of contraband persons, no other form than the illogical and circuitous one thus described exists, uor has any other yet been suggested. Practically, therefore, the choice is between that judicial remedy or no judicial remedy whatever. If there be no judicial remedy, the result is that the question must be determined by the captor himself, on the deck ot tbe prize ves sel. Very grave objections arise against such a course. The captor is armed, the neutral is unarmed. The captor is interested, prejudic ed, and perhaps violent ; the neutral, if truly neutral, is disinterested, subdued, and help less. The tribunal is irresponsible, while its judgment is carried into instant execution. The captured party is compelled to submit, though bound by no legal, moral, or treaty obligation to acquiesce. Reparation is distant and problematical, and depends at last on tbe justice, magnanimity, or weakness of the State in whose behalf and by whose authority the capture was made. Out of these disputes re prisals and wars necessarily arise, and these are so frequent atd destructive that it may well be doubted whether tbis form of remedy is not a greater social evil than all that conld follow if the belligerent right of search were universally renounced and abolished forever. But carry the case one step farther. What if the State that has made tbe capture unreason ably refuse to bear the oomplaint of the neu tral or to redress it 7 In that oase, the very act of capture would be an act of war of war begun without notice, and possibly entirely without provocation. . I think all unprejudiced minds will agree that, imperfect as the existing judicial remedy may be supposed to be, it would be, as a gen eral practice, better to follow it than to adopt the summary one of leaving the decision with the captor, and relying upon diplomatic de bates to review bis decision. Practically, it Is a question of choice between law, with its imperfections and delays, and war, mith its evils and desolations. Nor is it ever to be for gotten that neutrality, honestly and justly preserved, isfalways tbe harbinger of peace, and therefore, is the common interest of na tions, which is only saying that it is tbe inter est of humanity itself. At tbe same time it is not to be deoiedhat it may sometimes happen that the judicial remedy will become impossible, as by ship wreck of the prize vessel, or other circumstan ces which excuse the captor from sending or taking her into port for confiscation. In such a case the right of the captor to the custody of the captured persons and the right to dis pose of them, if they are really contraband, so ag to defeat their unlawful purposes, cannot reasonably be denied. What rule shall be ap plied in such a case 1 Clearly, the captor ought to be required to show that the failure of the judicial remedy results from circum stances beyond bis control, and without his fault. Otherwise he would be allowed to de rive advantage from a wrongful act of bis own. In tbe present case Capt. Wilkes, after cap turing the contraband persons and making prize of the Trent in what seems to us a per fectly lawful manner, instead of sending her into port, released her from the capture, and permitted her to proceed with her whole cargo on her voyage. He thus effectually prevented the judicifil examination which otherwise might have occurred. If now, the capture of the contraband per sons and the capture, of the contraband vessel are to be regarded, not as two separate or dis tinct transactions under the law of nations, but as one transaction, one capture only, then it follows that the capture in this case was left unfinished or abandoned. Whether tbe United States have a right to retain the chief public benefits of it, namely the custody of the cap tured persons on proving them to be contra band, will depend upon tbe preliminary ques tion whether the leaving of the transaction unfinished was nececsary, or whether it was unnecessary and therefore voluntary. If it was necessary, Great Britain, as we suppose, must waive the defect, and the consequent failure of the judicial remedy. On the other hand, it is not seen how the United States can insist upon her waiver of that judicial remedy, if the defect of the capture resulted from an act of Capt. Wilkes, which would be a fault on their own side. Capt. Wilkes has presented to this Govern ment his reasons for releasing the Trent. 'I forbore to seize her," be says, "ic conse quence of my being so reduced in officers " and crew, and the derangement it wonld " cause innocent persons, there being a large number of passengers who would bave been put to great loss and inconvenience, as well as disappointment, from the interruption it would have caused them in not being able "to join the steamer from St. Thomas to " Europe." I therefore concluded to sacrifice " the interests of my officers and crew in the prize, and suffered her to proceed after the " detention necessary to effect tho transfer of " those Commissioners, considering I bad ob " tained the important end I had in view, and which affected the interests of our country and interrupted the action of that of tbe Confederates." I shall consider first, how these reasons ought to affect the action of this Government; and, secondly, how they ought to be expected to auect tne action of ureal Britain. The reasons are satisfactory to this Govern ment, so far as Captain Wilkes is concerned. It could not desire that tbe San Jacinto, her officers and crew, should be exposed to danger ana loss by weakning their number to detach a prize crew to go on board the Trent. Still less could it disavow the hnmane motive of preventing inconveniences,losscs,and perhaps disasters, to the several hundred innocent passengers found on board tbe prize vessel. Nor could tbis Government perceive any ground for questioning the fact that these rea sons, though apparently congruous, did operate in the mind of Captain V ilkes and determine him to release the Trent. Human actions generally proceed upon mingled, and some times conflicting motives. He measured the sacrifices which this decision would cost. It manifestly, however, did not occur to him that beyond tbe sacrifice of the private inter ests (as he calls them) of his officers and crew. there might also possibly be a sacrifice even of the chief and public object of his capture namely, the right of h:s Government to the custody and disposition of the captured per sons. This government cannot censure him for this oversight. It confesses that the whole subject came unforseen upon the Government, as doubtless it did upon him. Its present convictions on the point in question are the result of deliberate examination and deduc tion now made, and not of any impressions previously formed. 2 evertheless.the question now is,not wheth er Capt. Wilkes is justified to his government in what he did, but what is the present view of the government as to the effect of what he has done. Assuming now, for argument's sake only, that the release of the Trent, if voluntary, involved a waiver of the claim of the government to bold the captured persons, the United States could in that case have no hesitation in saying that the act which has thus already been approved by the government must be allowed to draw its legal consequence after it. It is of the very nature of a gift or a charity that the giver cannot, after the exer cise of his benevolence is past,i ecall or modify its benefits. We are thus brought directly to the question whether we are entitled to regard the release of the Trent as involuntary, or whether wo are obliged to consider that it was voluntary. Clearly the release would have been involun tary bad it been made solely upon the first ground assigned for it by Capt. Wilkes.name- ly, a want of a sufficient force to send the prize vessel into port for adjudication. It is not tbe duty of a captor to hazard bis own vessel in order ta secure a Judicial examina tion to the captured party. No large prise crew, however, is legally necessary, for it is the duty of the captured party to acquiesce and go willingly before the tribunal to whose jurisdiction it appeals. It tbe captured party indicate purposes to employ means of rests-1 tance wbioh the captor oannoi with probable safety to himself overcome, be may properly eave the vessel to go forward : and neither she nor tbe State she represents can ever after wards justly object that the capture deprived her of the judioial remedy to which she was entitled. But the seoond reason assigned by Captain Wilkes for releasing the Trent differs from the first. At best, therefore, it must be held that Capt. Wilkes, as he explains himself, acted from combined sentiments of prudence and generosity, and so that the release of the prize vessel was not strictly fteoesaary ox in voluntary. .-. , , . r . Secondly. -How ought we to expect these explanations by Capt. Wilkes of bis reasons for leaving the capture incomplete to effect the action ot the British Government 7 Tbe observation upon this point which first occurs is, that Capt. Wilkes explanations were not made to the authorities of the cap tured vessel. If made known to them they might have approved and taken tho release, upon the condition of waiving a judicial d vestigation of the whole transaction, or they might have reiused to accept the release upon that condition. But tbe case is not one with them, but with the British Government. If we claim that Great Britain ought not to insist that a judicial trial has been lost because we voluntarily re leased. the offending vessel out ot considera tion for her innocent passengers, I do not see how she is to be bound to acquiesce in the de cision which was thus made by us without necessity on our part, and withoat the knowl edge of conditions or consent on her own; Tbe question betweeu Great Britain and our selves thus stated would be a question not of right and of law, bnt or favor to be cenceded ' by her to ns in return for favors shown by us to her, of the value of which favors on boti sides we ourselves shall be the judge. Of course the United States, could have no" thought of raising such a question in any case. I trust that I have shown to the satisfaction of the British Government, by a very simple and natural statement of the facts, and analysis ' of the law applicable to them, that this Govern ment has neither meditated, nor practiced, nor approved any deliberate wronc in the transi tion to which they have called its attention ; -and, on the contrary, that what has happened has been simply an inadvertency, consisting in ' a departure, by the naval officer, free from any ' wrongful motive, from a rule uncertainly estab- ' lisbed, and probably by tbe several parties con--cerned either imperfectly understood or en tirely unknown. For this error the British ' Government has a right to expect the same ' reparation that we as an independent State, should expect from Gruat Britain or from any other friendly nation in a similar case. 1 bave not been unaware that, in examining ' this question, 1 have fallen into an argument ' for what seems to be tbe British side of 'it a-' gainst my own country. But I am relieved ! from all embarrassments on that subject. I' had hardly fallen into that line of argu ment, when I discovered that 1 was really de fending and maintaining, not an exclusively' British interest, but an old honored and cher ished American cause, not upon British' an-' thorities, but upon principles that constitute a ' large portion ol the distinctive policy by which the United States have developed the resour ces of a continent, and thus becoming a con siderable maritime power.have won the respect ' and confidence of many nations. Those prin ciples were laid down for us in 1801, by James Madison, when Secretary of State in the ad ministration of Thomas Jefferson, in instruc tions, given to James Monroe, our Minister to England. Although the case before him con cerned a description of persons different from tbose whet are incidently the subjects of the present discussion, the ground assumed then was the same 1 now occupy, and the arguments by which he sustained himself upon it have been an inspiration to me in preparing this reply. "Whenever," be says, "property found in a neutral vessel is supposed to be liable on any greund to capture or condemnation, the rule in all cases is, that tbe question shall not be deci ded by the captor, but be carried before a legal tribunal, where a regular trial may be had, and whete the captor himself is liable to damages for an abuse of power. Can it be reasonable then, or just, that a belligerent commander who is thus restricted,and thus responsible fn'a case of mere property of trivial amount, should be permitted,without recurring to any tribunal whatever,to examine tbe crew of a neutral ves sel, to decide the important question of their respective allegiances, and to carry that decis ion into execution by forcing every individual he may choose into a service abhorcnt to bis feelings, cutting him off from bis mostlender connections, exposing his mind and bis person to tbe most humiliating discipline,' and his life itself to the greatest danger Reason, justice, and humanity unite in protesting a gainst so extravagant a proceeding." If I decide this case in favor of luy own Gov ernment, I must disavow its most cherished principle, and reverse and forever abandon its essential policy. The country cannot afford tbe sacrifice. If I maintain those principles and adhere to that policy, I must surrender the case itself. It will be seen, therefore, that this Government could not deny the jus tice of the claim preSsented to tis In this re spect upon its merits.- We are asked to do to tbe British nation just what we have always insisted all nations ought to do to us. ' The claim of the British Government is not made in a discourteous manner. This Govern ment, since is first organization, has never used more guarded language in a similar case. In coming to my conclusion I have not for gotton that, if tbe safety of tbis Union requir ed the detention ot the enptured persons, it would be the right and duty of this Govern ment to detain tbem. Bat the effectual check and wanting proportions of the existing insur rection, as well as tbe comparative unimport ance of the captured persons themselves, when dispassionately weighed, happily forbid me from resorting to that defence. Nor am I unaware that American "citizens are not in any case to be unnecessarily- sur rendered for any purpose into tbe keeping of a foreign State. Only the captnred persons however, or others who are interested in them, could justly raise a question on that ground. Nor have I been tempted at a!! by sugges tions that cases might be found in history where Great Britain refused to yield to other nations, and even to ourselves, claims like that which is now before us. Tbose cases occur red when Great Britain, as well as tbe United States was then tbe home of generations which, with all their peculiar interests and passions, have passed away. She conld in no way so efieotually disavow any such injury as we think she does by assuming now as her own tbe gronnd upon which we then stood. It wonld tell little for our own claims to tbe character of a just and magnanimous people if we should so far consent to be guided by the law of re taliation as to lift up, buried injuries from their graves to oppose agaiost what national consis tency and tbe national conscience compel us to regard as a claim intrinsically right. Putting behind me all suggestions of this kind, X preier to express my satisfaction that by tbe adjustment ot ' the present case upon prlnciplesjconfessodly American, and yet as I trust, mutually satisfactory to both of the ns- COSCLCDEO ON fOCRTa TAW- ; t i s f s-; ; f! II