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and a considerable portion of Mexico, under which the power of the Democracy would remain undisturbed. But when they found nearly the whole power of the government enlisted in behalf of the contemplated rebellion, when they found the heads of so many of the departments, embracing the Secretaries of the Treasury, War, Navy, and Interior, viz., Messrs. Howell Cobb, John B. Floyd, Isaac M. Toucey, and Jacob Thompson, all lending an active co-operation to their treasonable purposes, and the President himself, either from imbecility, cowardice, or want of patriotism, if not decidedly encouraging the movement, at least indisposed to take any steps to check its progress, then “vaulting ambition o'erleaped itself," and, with treason doubly damned, they struck for nothing less than the absolute control of the entire country, and consequent seizure of the Capitol at Washington, which has already been explained in the preceding pages of this outline of traitors; but the day of retribution will assuredly arrive, and the poisoned chalice will be returned to their own lips.

"Is there not some chosen curse,

Oh!

Some hidden thunder in the stores of Heaven,
Red with uncommon wrath, to blast the man

Who owes his greatness to his country's ruin ?"

During the canvass the public mind was filled with the most frightful apprehensions, from the studied misrepresentations of the press and public speakers. Yet the Union spirit of this state remained firm and unshaken, and Virginia was carried by a plurality vote for the man who stood upon the platform of "the Union, the Constitution, and the Enforcement of the Laws."

THE ELECTION OF LINCOLN.

Lincoln was elected by a plurality vote only, falling very far short of a majority. South Carolina went into ecstasics over the event; the city of Charleston was illuminated, boufires blazed in every direction; the pretext was offered, the time for open rebellion had at last arrived; a convention was called, and an ordinance of secession was passed. The property of the United States of every description was seized, consisting of arsenals, arms, ammunition, revenue cutters, mints, custom-houses, post-offices, with all their contents; in short, whatever of government property they could reach was appropriated. After a severe struggle, and a great deal of chicanery and false play, the Gulf or Cotton States followed suit to South Carolina, while it is extremely doubtful whether there was not a clear majority in every state, possibly with the exception of South Carolina, against disunion, if a full, fair, and free vote could have been taken; but every where the more desperate, the reckless, the idle, the thoughtless, the depraved, and the youthful portions of the community, who had every thing to gain and nothing to lose by commotion, as they imagined, were easily enlisted in such a cause, while by coarse denunciation and threats of violence the sounder and more respectable portions of society were deterred from an honest expression of opinion.

During tho administration of Mr. Buchanan, who had at length been stirred up by General Scott to a sense of duty to the country, and long before Lincoln was inaugurated, the steamer "Star of the West," sailing under the United, States flag, with re-enforcements for Fort Sumter, was fired upon as she attempted to enter into the harbor of Charleston, and was forced to put back, she being an unarmed commercial steamer, selected specially that no suspicion

might attach to the object of her entrance, and that no of fense might be given to this rebellious state, which was a great and inexcusable error: re-enforcements should have been sent openly, and with a force that would have landed there in spite of all opposition.

Shortly after South Carolina had assumed her position of hostility to the government, Governor Letcher issued his proclamation calling the Legislature together in extraordinary session, which was composed of a body of men that had been elected nearly two years before, and did not, therefore, come fresh from the people, and consisted of a large majority of Breckinridge men, or of the disunion party. They made hot haste, without consulting the people, and without the slightest authority to call a convention, for the invariable habit heretofore in Virginia had been first to submit to the people whether they would have a convention or not, which was determined by the vote for or against it. But no such course was pursued here; all precedent was set aside, and the convention called. The people acquiesced in what they seemed to think they had no power to control; but still the state held fast to her moorings, and elected something more than two thirds professed Union men. But even then, distrustful either of their wisdom or virtue, they voted by an overwhelming majority that nothing they might do should have a binding operation until it was submitted to them for ratification or rejection.

THE SO-CALLED" PEACE CONGRESS.

While this Convention was in session, various pretended efforts were made to gull the people with the belief that they sought for compromise and peace, but could not obtain it. I say pretended efforts, because, I repeat, the Democracy never intended to accept any compromise that did

not secure to them the power of the government. This is a broad and bold assertion, and ought to be established by proof. Well, here it is:

1st. A Peace Congress had been proposed to be held in Washington, to come, if possible, to some terms of understanding; fivo gentlemen were appointed as delegates from this state, to wit, Messrs. William C. Rives, James A. Scddon, George W. Summers, John Tyler, and John W. Brockenbrough. The Congress met; certain terms of arrangement were agreed upon, which were satisfactory to a majority of those delegates or commissioners, to wit, Mr. Rives, Mr. Summers, and Judge Brockenbrough, one a Whig, one a Democrat, and the third supposed to stand in about as close proximity. to the one party as to the other; but they did not prove satisfactory to Messrs. Tyler and Seddon, of the secession party, nor did they prove acceptable to any one secessionist in the Convention, as far as I have ever learned; and it surely may be supposed that any proposition that could have been acceptable to all others than the secessionists would have been far better than a resort to civil war, even if they had not gotten all they had asked for.

But as very few of the Southern people have had the opportunity of knowing what terms were offered by this Peace Congress, I incorporate them here, as indispensable to a correct understanding of this question.

"ARTICLE 13, Section 1. In all the present territory of the United States north of the parallel of 36° 30′ of north latitude, involuntary servitude, except on punishment of crime, is prohibited. In all the present territory south of that line, the status of persons held to involuntary service or labor as it now exists shall not be changed; nor shall any law be passed by Congress or the Territorial Legisla

ture to hinder or prevent the taking of such persons from any of the states of this Union to said territory, nor to impair the rights arising from said relation, but the same shall be subject to judicial cognizance in the Federal courts according to the course of the common law. Whenever any territory north or south of said line, within such boundary as Congress may subscribe, shall contain a population equal to that required for a member of Congress, it shall, if its form of government be republican, be admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the original states, with or without involuntary servitude, as the Constitution of such state may provide.

"Sec. 2. No territory shall be acquired by the United States, except by discovery and for naval and commercial stations, dépôts, and transit routes, without the concurrence of a majority of all the senators from states which allow involuntary servitude, and a majority of all the senators from states which prohibit that relation; nor shall territory be acquired by treaty unless the votes of a majority of the senators from each class of states herein before mentioned be cast as a part of the two thirds majority necessary to the ratification of such treaty.

"Sec. 3. Neither the Constitution, nor any amendment thereof, shall be construed to give Congress power to regulate, abolish, or control within any state the relation established or recognized by the laws thereof touching persons held to labor or involuntary service therein, nor to interfere with or abolish involuntary service in the District of Columbia without the consent of Maryland and without the consent of the owners, or making the owners who do not consent just compensation; nor the power to interfere with or prohibit representatives and others from bringing with them to the District of Columbia, retaining and taking

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