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facts stand when we come to examine them? Let us go back to the proceedings of the last Congress.

"What was the true phase of the times? A compromise, you remember-the Crittenden proposition—was introduced. The Southern senators, including Toombs, Benjamin, Iverson, and a host of others, pretended that, if the measure passed, the South would be satisfied; but they desired every thing else but compromise. Senator Clark of fered an amendment which we believed would be acceptable to the South. I had critically kept pace with these pretenders. Their protest was only to disguise their real intentions. When the vote was put on Clark's amendment, mark well, only fifty-five ballots were recorded. The amendment was adopted by two votes, thus defeating the original compromise. Who is responsible for this work of destruction? Six Southern senators standing and refusing to record their votes. If the Crittenden Compromise had been adopted, they would have been deprived of a pretext for their treason. Judah Benjamin, a sneaking thief and perjurer, and an unconscionable traitor, was seated near me while the vote was being taken. I told him it was his duty to come to the relief of the country by voting upon this important proposition. He sneeringly answered that, 'when he wanted my advice he would make the request.' I said, 'You are a senator, and I demand that your vote be recorded.' With six others, he contrived to defeat the measure by slipping out. They wanted no compromise.

"This, then, has caused the present difficulties. These six senators destroyed the compromise, upon which they based revolution. Let us examine ourselves, gentlemen, that wo may arraign the guilty ones at the shrine of public suffering. Did Lincoln or the Republicans dissolve the Union? No! Who, then, are to blame? Men who in themselves were ca

pable of averting the storm, and yet cried there was no help for the South, no escape from separation.

"You know the clamor has been raised that the non-slaveholding states would amend the Constitution so as to legislate upon the subject of slavery. On the 20th of December South Carolina passed an ordinance of secession, took Fort Moultric, and the revolution commenced. Soon after South Carolina went out, seven other states followed. Their argument was that the Free States would interfere with their peculiar institution by legislation. By the withdrawal of these states the North had over three fourths of the votes in Congress, and, consequently, had the power to legislate. Having the power, did they so amend the Constitution? No, they did not. They came forward with an amendment to the effect that 'Congress, in all future time, shall have no power to legislate upon the subject of slavery.' The amendment was passed by a vote of two thirds. Why did you not accept it instead of being governed by a petty tyrant ?"

I could multiply and pile up evidence upon top of evidence to an interminable extent to show that no compromise was desired or would have been accepted; yet the people have been persuaded to believe that every expedient was resorted to to obtain a peaceable settlement of the difculties existing, and that the overbearing power of the North had doggedly refused to listen to their complaints. And when such opportunities as these were presented for reconciliation and peace, which were not only not accepted, but purposely and pertinaciously smothered over, and, as far as could be, kept concealed from the people, what have they to say for the price they have had to pay for the costly cheat that has been put upon them?

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THE VIRGINIA CONVENTION OF 1861.

To come back to the Virginia Convention. They had been in session for some two months without making any perceptible progress toward secession, except by a change of some few known aspirants for office, who conceived that the Democratic craft was the safest to take passage in; and, unfortunately, there were too many of that class of small politicians in the body, nearly every one of whom have since received office, or have been candidates for the Confederate Congress or of the State Legislature, major generals, brigadiers, colonels, majors, captains, commissaries, quarter-masters, or something else that would pay well and give them notoriety; still secession was at a great discount, notwithstanding the Convention was surrounded by a reckless and unprincipled public press, all of which not already in tho service of the secessionists had become subsidized, and notwithstanding every effort at intimidation was resorted to by an infuriated mob, who assembled daily and offered personal insult to those members who still expressed attachment to their country and its institutions.

MR. BOTTS HAS AN INTERVIEW WITH MR. LINCOLN.

About this time Mr. Lincoln sent a messenger to Rich. mond, inviting a distinguished member of the Union party to come immediately to Washington, and if he could not come himself, to send some other prominent Union man, as he wanted to see him on business of the first importance. The gentleman thus addressed, Mr. Summers, did not go, but sent another, Mr. J. B. Baldwin, who had distinguished himself by his zeal in the Union cause during the session of the Convention; but this gentleman was slow in getting to Washington, and did not reach there for something like a

week after the time he was expected; he reached Washington on Friday the 5th of April, and, on calling on Mr. Lincoln, the following conversation in substance took place, as I learned from Mr. Lincoln himself. After expressing some regret that he had not come sooner, Mr. Lincoln said, "My object in desiring the presence of Mr. Summers, or some other influential and leading member of the Union party in your Convention, was to submit a proposition by which I think the peace of the country can be preserved; but I fear you are almost too late. However, I will make it yet.

"This afternoon," said he, "a fleet is to sail from the harbor of New York for Charleston; your Convention has been in session for nearly two months, and you have done nothing but hold and shake the rod over my head. You have just taken a vote, by which it appears you have a majority of two to one against secession. Now, so great is my desire to preserve the peace of the country, and to save the Border States to the Union, that if you gentlemen of the Union party will adjourn without passing an ordinance of secession, I will telegraph at once to New York, arrest the sailing of the fleet, and take the responsibility of EVACUATING FORT SUMTER." The proposition was declined. On the following Sunday night I was with Mr. Lincoln, and the greater part of the time alone, when Mr. Lincoln related the above facts to me. I inquired, "Well, Mr. Lincoln, what reply did Mr. Baldwin make ?" "Oh!" said he, throwing up his hands, "he wouldn't listen to it at all; scarcely treated mo with civility; asked me what I meant by an adjournment; was it an adjournment 'sine die?'". "Of course," said Mr. Lincoln, "I don't want you to adjourn, and, after I have evacuated the fort, meet again to adopt an ordinance of secession." I then said, "Mr. Lincoln, will you authorize me to make that proposition? for I will start to

morrow morning, and have a meeting of the Union men to-morrow night, who, I have no doubt, will gladly accept it." To which he replied, "It is too late now; the fleet sailed on Friday evening." He then said to me, "Botts, I have always been an Old-line Henry-Clay Whig, and if your Southern people will let me alone, I will administer this government as nearly upon the principles that he would have administered it as it is possible for one man to follow in the path of another"—all of which I believed then, and believe now he would have done. He said, moreover, "We have seventy odd men in Fort Sumter, who are short of provisions. I can not and will not let them suffer for food: they have so much beef, so much pork, potatoes, etc., but their bread will not last longer than next Wednesday, and I have sent a special messenger to Governor Pickens to say that I have dispatched a steamer loaded with bread” ”— that was his expression, though I suppose he meant provisions generally" and that if he fired upon that vessel he would fire upon an unarmed vessel, with bread only for the troops; and that if he would supply them, or let Major Anderson procure his marketing in Charleston, I would stop the vessel; but that I had also sent a fleet along with this steamer to protect her if she was fired into. What do I want with war ?" said he. "I am no war man; I want peace more than any man in this country, and will make greater sacrifices to preserve it than any other man in the nation."

This is a part of the history of this war that is not generally known; I think it ought to be made public, and therefore I give it. I have often wondered why Mr. Lincoln had not himself, in his own justification, made it known to the country. I suppose it was because he felt that he had assumed a heavy responsibility in thus proposing to surrender

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