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would say that the constitutional election of no man is a sufficient cause to break up the Union, but that the State should wait until he at least does some unconstitutional act.

Mr. Toombs-Commit some overt act. Mr. Stephens-No, I did not say that. The word overt is a sort of technical term connected with treason, which has come to us from the mother country, and it means an open act of rebellion. I do not see how Mr. Lincoln can do this unless he should levy war upon us. I do not therefore use the word overt. I do not intend to wait for that. But I use the word unconstitutional act, which our people understand much better, and which expresses just what I mean. But as long as he conforms to the Constitution he should be left to exercise the duties of his office.

In giving this advice I am but sustaining the Constitution of my country, and I do not thereby become a Lincoln aid man either, (applause,) but a Constitutional aid man. But this matter the convention can determine. As to the other matter, I think we have a right to pass retaliatory measures, provided they be in accordance with the Constitution of the United States, and I think they can be made such. But whether it would be wise for this Legislature to do this now is the question. To the convention, in my judgment, this matter ought to be referred. Before we commit reprisals on New England we should exhaust every means of bringing about a peaceful solution of the question.

Thus did Gen. Jackson in the case of the French. He did not recommend reprisals until he had treated with France, and got her to promise to make indemnification, and it was only on her refusal to pay the money which she had promised that he recommended reprisals. It was after negotiation had failed. I do think, therefore, that it would be best, before going to extreme measures with our confederate States, to make presentation of our demands, to appeal to their reason and judgment to give us our rights. Then, if reason should not triumph, it will be time enough to commit reprisals, and we should be justified in the eyes of a civilized world. At least let the States know what your grievances are, and if they refuse, as I said, to give us our rights under the Constitution of our country, I should be willing as a last resort to sever the ties of this Union. (Applause.)

sider it, and I would ask all States south to do the same thing.

I am for exhausting all that patriotism can demand before taking the last step. I would invite, therefore, South Carolina to a conference. Í would ask the same of all the other Southern States, so that if the evil has got beyond our control, which God, in his mercy, grant may not be the case, let us not be divided among ourselves-(cheers,)-but, if possible, secure the united cooperation of all the Southern States; and then, in the face of the civilized world, we may justify our action; and, with the wrong all on the other side, we can appeal to the God of battles to aid us in our cause. (Loud applause.) But let us not do any thing in which any portion of our people may charge us with rash or hasty action. It is certainly a matter of great importance to tear this Government asunder. You were not sent here for that purpose. I would wish the whole South to be united if this is to be done; and I believe if we pursue the policy which I have indicated, this can be effected.

In this way our sister Southern States can be induced to act with us, and I have but little doubt that the States of New York and Pennsylvania and Ohio, and the other Western States, will compel their Legislatures to recede from their hostile attitudes if the others do not. Then with these we would go on without New England if she chose to stay out.

A voice in the assembly-We will kick them

out.

Mr. Stephens-I would not kick them out. But if they chose to stay out they might. I think moreover that these Northern States being principally engaged in manufactures, would find that they had as much interest in the Union under the Constitution as we, and that they would return to their constitutional duty

this would be my hope. If they should not, and if the Middle States and Western States do not join us, we should at least have an undivided South. I am, as you clearly perceive, for maintaining the Union as it is, if possible. I will exhaust every means thus to maintain it with an equality in it. My principles are these:

First, the maintenance of the honor, the rights, the equality, the security, and the glory of my native State in the Union; but if these cannot be maintained in the Union, then I am for their maintenance, at all hazards, out of it. Next to the honor and glory of Georgia, the land of my birth, I hold the honor and glory of our common country. In Savannah I was made to say by the reporters, who very often make me say things which I never did, that I was first for the glory of the whole country, and next for that of Georgia.

My own opinion is, that if this course be pursued, and they are informed of the consequences of refusal, these States will secede; but if they should not, then let the consequences be with them, and let the responsibility of the consequences rest upon them. Another thing I would have that convention to do. Reaffirm I said the exact reverse of this. I am proud the Georgia Platform with an additional plank of her history, of her present standing. I am in it. Let that plank be the fulfilment of the proud even of her motto, which I would have obligation on the part of those States to repeal duly respected at the present time by all her these obnoxious laws as a condition of our re- sons- -Wisdom, Justice, and Moderation. maining in the Union. Give them time to con- I would have her rights and that of the Southern

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States maintained now upon these principles. | does at last come, falls like snow and lights as Her position now is just what it was in 1850, gently as thistle-down. Surely it cannot be a with respect to the Southern States. Her plat-"cross"? If it be, half the old Union is in form then has been adopted by most, if not all, the conspiracy, for all are arming and rushing the other Southern States. Now I would add to war, as if they expected serious work. but one additional plank to that platform, which I have stated, and one which time has shown to be necessary.

If all this fails, we shall at least have the satisfaction of knowing that we have done our duty and all that patriotism could require.

Mr. Stephens continued for some time on other matters, which are omitted, and then took his seat amidst great applause.

N. Y. Times, November 22, 1860.

Doc. 148.

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What next? An attempt to recapture Fort Sumter? A contest for Fort Pickens? struggle for the Capital? A diversion in Texas? A renewal of negotiations? No one knows, and, what is worse, no one credits President Lincoln for any plan. We can only compare the two sides, and strike a balance. In the North there is an army and a navy, and money, and a more numerous white population, without, too, the incubus of Slavery. There is also the tradition of the Union, the Capitol, and the successor of Washington. Modern warfare cannot go on without money, and the Northern

THE ENGLISH PRESS ON THE FALL OF States can more easily raise and spend a hun

66

FORT SUMTER.

dred millions of dollars a year than the South-
ern can raise ten millions. All that is outside,
and material, is in favor of the North. It has
the preponderance of every thing that can be
counted, measured, and weighed, that can be
bought and sold; that can be entered in
legers and put on a balance-sheet. It has the
manufactories, the building yards, the dock-
yards,-the whole apparatus of national wealth
and strength. It has the money market, and it
borrows more easily than the South, where,
however, political zeal sustains a fictitious
credit. So, in the North we read of numerous
gatherings of State forces-of many steamers
chartered, stripped of their finery, filled with
soldiers' food and ammunition, and steaming
southward. So much for the North. In the
South, on the contrary, there is little or noth-
ing but that which often becomes the counter-
balance to every thing else. There are the men
of action, who can combine, conspire, keep the
secret, have a plan, and carry it out without
wavering or flinching. The politicians at Wash-
ington have been vacillating between peace and
war, between compromise and resistance. In
the South there has been one steady, uninter-
rupted progress toward secession and war.
the very last, President Lincoln has been be-
hindhand. His ships, sent to relieve Fort Sum-
ter, only arrived in time to be distant specta-
tors of the scene; they came, in fact, but to
contribute to the glory of the captors, and to
bring shame and distrust on themselves and
their cause. If this is to be an omen of the
result, the rich and unready North will be no
match for the fiery forwardness of the South.

NATURE, or something that stands in its stead, is still strong in the Americans. They fight willing, but with unwilling minds." They lift the hand to strike, they wing the instrument of death, but a mysterious power averts the stroke, or blunts the edge, or deadens the blow. Are they in earnest, or are they playing at war, or dreaming that they strike, and still strike not? It sounds more like a dangerous game than a sad reality. Seven batteries breached and bombarded Fort Sumter for forty hours, burnt down its barracks, blew up several magazines, threw shells into it innumerable, and did a vast show of destruction. The fort replied with like spirit. At length it surrendered, the garrison marched out prisoners of war, and it was then found that not a man was killed or an officer wounded on either side. Many a "difficulty" at a bar has cost more bloodshed. Was this a preconcerted feat of conjuring? Were the rival Presidents saluting one another in harmless fireworks to amuse the groundlings? The whole affair is utterly inexplicable. It sounds like the battles when the coat of mail had come to its perfection, and when the only casualty, after a day's hard fighting, was a case of suffocation and a few bruises. Odin's heroes, as they renew their daily warfare, are really wounded, though their wounds are quickly healed. This is sparring with boxing-gloves-not the loaded cæstus of modern warfare. It is a mere spectacle. The population and even the ladies of Charleston poured forth to see the sight. Ten thousand soldiers lined the works, watching the sport But long shots are very different from close and contributing their share. Our own Cock-quarters. A fight of batteries across a river, neys have seen as much, and done as much, at Cremorne, or the Surrey Gardens, not more unscathed, and, let us hope, in not more pacific mood. But, perhaps, this is only the interchange of courtesies which in olden times preceded real war. The result is utterly different from all we are accustomed to hear of the Americans. There, "a word or a blow" has been the rule. In this case, the blow, when it

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watched with telescopes, and quietly witnessed by a large population, affords little clue for the result of a battle, hand to hand, step by step, with revolvers, knives, and what not, round the very building of the Capitol. That appears to be the thing next apprehended, and President Lincoln has summoned to his aid all the miscellaneous local corps of the several Northern States that may choose to hear him. Strange

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shell were fired by both parties, not one single man was killed on either side, and it is doubtful whether any one has been wounded. This bloodless conclusion of the first encounter, taken in connection with the circumstances which preceded and followed it, seems to indicate that there is no very bitter or rancorous feeling on either side, and favors the hope that a good deal of the pent-up irritation of the Southerners has found vent in the first and comparatively harmless passage of arms. From the corre

that the spot once held so sacred and so carefully insulated from local or partial associations, should become the object of the first civil war! That is, indeed, what we have come to. Many of us remember, not without a tingle of shame for our own country, the wanton attack of the British army on the Capitol, and the foolish injuries done there, destined to be more than avenged. This was but a souvenir of the old War of Independence. No British officer would have dared to insult the shrine of American union and liberty, had it not been felt that, be-spondence between General Beauregard and Masides the question then at issue, there was an account still to settle for the former war. Since the year 1812, there has been a generation of mutual respect-of even affection. That is all gone by. Other combatants gather round Washington. The War Minister of the Southern Confederacy publicly promises that the Secession flag shall float over the Capitol by the 1st of May. Any day it is expected that Virginia, whether by choice or necessity, will join the Secession, and then the sacred district of Columbia, which was to have been the common ground of the world's great brotherhood, will be the debateable border of a divided allegiance and a bloody quarrel. Meanwhile time brings round anniversaries, which are celebrated as of yore, but with the feeling that they are now a solemn mockery. What are the Declaration of Independence, the Battle of Lexington, the Birthday of Clay, and the other red-letter days in the American Calendar, now that the glorious fabric is itself in the dust, and the mountain made with hands shattered to pieces? It was but the other day, that all eyes were fixed on the Capital of the Old World as the single object of interest, and the expected scene of the great events that were to mark the latter years of this century. Rome occupied the attention of all men. A hundred questions were asked, but all were of Rome. Will Rome be still a Capital? Will it be the head of a Confederation, or the throne of a King, or the seat of a foreign Viceroy, or the See of a Universal Bishop, or the Senate of a National Republic? Before these questions could be answered, and while they are still asked, the Capital of the New World comes to the foreground, and is the object of much the same inquiries. The two cities of Rome and Washington are not so differently situated at this moment, nor are their prospects so different as might be. For the present, indeed, we shall all think more of Washington than of Rome.

-London Times, April 27.

We have at last the intelligence that hostilities have broken out between the Federal Government and the Southern States. Fort Sumter has fallen, after what is described as a gallant resistance on the part of Major Anderson and his force, of forty hours' duration. But, singular enough-and fortunate as it is singular -during this protracted cannonade, in the course of which some 1,700 rounds of shot and

jor Anderson immediately before the forts opened fire, it was quite obvious that bloodshed was not intended, and that the commander of Fort Sumter, in resisting the demand to evacuate, stood simply on a point of honor, and, in returning the fire of the Secessionists, only desired to justify himself to his Government, and remove the impression which his passive conduct appears to have created at Washington. We say all this is to be gathered from the correspondence in question, and derives confirmation from the fact that, immediately after Major Anderson hauled down his flag, he proceeded to Charleston, where he became the guest of General Beauregard. It is further observable that, although there were ships of war under the orders of the Federal Government, in the offing, no attempt was made to relieve Fort Sumter, nor when the commander commenced to reply to the Secessionists' fire. The excitement both at Charleston and at Washington is described as intense; but it would seem the feeling has not reached the occupants of the White House, who, and more especially the President, are said to be calm and composed. Neither has the news from the South, notwithstanding its gravity, produced any thing like a panic at New York. The stocks generally receded, it is true, but the Government Securities are reported to have been firmly held-a fact in itself of sufficient significance, as indicating confidence in the proceedings of the Administration. The suspension of business in Wall street was the natural consequence of the report of the actual outbreak of hostilities, but the absence of any thing approaching to a panic could not fail to be regarded as a proof that the mercantile community, at least, do not regard civil war with all its horrors, as inevitable, or that the general interruption of trade is the necessary consequence of the existing state of things. Nevertheless, notwithstanding the reluctance of the Federal Government to resort to hostilities, it is obvious that they are prepared to take a determined stand against the Secessionists, wherever the rights or property of the Union are attacked. It rests, therefore, with the Southern Convention to say whether they are disposed to listen to terms, or whether they are prepared to persevere in the course they have adopted, regardless of the consequences. -London Shipping Gazette, April 25.

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news, issue in civil war. The rumor that the | immediate recognition of the Southern ConfederSouthern Confederation intends to anticipate an ation. We can imagine no course more disgraceattack by moving upon Washington, is scarcely ful to England, or less likely to command the likely to be true, for President Davis is too sa- assent of the popular body appealed to. Not gacious a man to take a step which would so that we desire to see a civil war in America, enrage the North as to induce it to enter heart even though the North should be completely and soul into an internecine contest with the triumphant. We have often said that, unless South. If he were wise, indeed, he would not there were a Union party in the Southern States have ventured any active collision at all, such considerable enough to make some head even as has taken place at Charleston. It would without external assistance, the defeat of the have been better to trust exclusively to block-newly-confederated States by the North could ade for the reduction of the Federal garrisons in the revolted States. The moral shock of any collision is most dangerous, as the accounts of the frantic excitement in Washington, on the arrival of the news of the collision at Fort Sumter and the surrender of Major Anderson, sufficiently prove. It is true that American rage even at its highest pitch usually manages to stop short where policy would direct, and that we in England are exceedingly liable to be deceived by its effervescent symptoms. Still there is now the gravest reason to apprehend a serious civil war; indeed all the Free States seem already to have intimated to the President, through the telegraph, their readiness to support a war policy; and, if it is prevented at all, it will only be by the unwillingness of the northern statesmen to risk the adhesion of the border States by an actual invasion. But if the Southern States should, as is rumored, be so foolish as to take the initiative by invading Washington, they would play directly into the hands of the extreme party in the North. All compunction would immediately be at an end, and in all probability the border States would themselves be induced by such a step to fight with the North. The situation is very similar to the attitude of Austria and Sardinia. The neutrals will inevitably throw their influence into the scale of the party attacked. Mr. Lincoln, as far as his own popularity and political position are concerned, can wish for nothing better than to be relieved by his antagonist of the responsibility of a decision. His difficulty has hitherto been, that the great power and wealth of the North have been passive and reluctant to foment a fratricidal strife. But let once the slave States take the guilt upon themselves, as in some degree they have already done, and Mr. Lincoln would find his hands strengthened and his cause enthusiastically supported by a power such as does not exist in the Southern States at all. We do not believe, then, in the reported invasion of Washington. A course so blind and insane is utterly inconsistent with the general ability shown by the Southern Government. But we do fear that the strife and defeat at Charleston will render it very difficult for Mr. Lincoln, in the attitude in which he now stands, to evade some attempt at reprisal, and that thus a regular war may soon break out.

Under these grave circumstances it is that Mr. Gregory proposes to ask the House of Commons on Tuesday next to affirm the expediency of an

scarcely lead to any good result. It would be
mere military conquest; and a power like the
American Union cannot hope to hold together
its territory by military force. And seeing that
there is, unhappily, but little trace of a power-
ful Unionist minority among the seceded States,
we cannot wish to see a fratricidal strife which
would multiply indefinitely the mutual hatreds
of North and South without solving the ulti-
mate difficulty. But this is not the question
for us to consider. It has been England's uni-
versal rule to acknowledge a de facto revolu-
tionary government whenever it has established
its practical independence by incontrovertible
proofs-then and not sooner. Whatever be the
wisdom or folly of the war, which there is but
too much reason to believe is now declared be-
tween the Federal Government at Washington
and the revolted States-it is not yet begun, or
is only just beginning-there can be no ques-
tion whatever of the constitutional right of
President Lincoln to treat the hostile confeder-
ation as a treasonable rebellion, which, so far
as it trenches on Federal property and laws, he
may resist by force. This is his present attitude.
He hopes, however little we may hope, to sup-
press the rebellion. He thinks, however little
we may think, that he shall be able to enforce
the laws enacted at Washington, and to redeem
the United States property from the hands of
the seceders. This may be sanguine; nay, it
may even be a mere hallucination. With that
we have nothing to do. We profess always to
abstain from judging the rights of a quarrel
between a people and its rulers, and to guide
our conduct by the plain results of political fact.
We are now on the eve of seeing what these
results will be. Either war or compromise
seems now inevitable. If it be compromise,
we shall know how to act. If it be war, we are
bound to await the results of that war.
A pre-
mature recognition of the Southern Confederation
would be a departure from the recognized course
of England, and could not but therefore express
a political bias in favor of the seceders.

Doc. 149.

- London Economist.

A PRAYER FOR THE TIMES. Ar the opening of the Tennessee Legislature, on the 25th ult., Rev. James Bardwell offered up the following prayer:

Almighty and most merciful God, our heavenly Father, we adore Thee as the king eternal,

immortal and invisible, the only living and true God, the creator and governor of all worldsruling in the armies of Heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth. Thy favor is life and thy frown is death with reverence and profound humility would we present ourselves before Thee, to confess our sins and implore Thy mercy, through Jesus Christ our Redeemer. In his name do we present our petitions, and for his sake we humbly invoke Thy favor. We have sinned against Thee, O Lord, as individuals, and we have sinned against Thee, as a people.

We have been unthankful for our blessings; we have abused mercies; we have misimproved our privileges; we have too often disregarded Thy authority and rejected Thy counsel. In the pride and vanity of our hearts we have forgotten Thee, the God of our fathers, and arrogated to ourselves the glory which is due to Thee alone. Lord, we confess our sins, we acknowledge our transgressions, and we humbly implore Thy pardoning mercy. Be merciful unto us, O God, be merciful unto us. For the sake of Thy dear Son, our Redeemer, in the midst of divine wrath, make known and remember mercy. Doubtless Thou art our God, though Abraham be ignorant of us, and Israel acknowledge us not. Thou hast been the God of our fathers, their refuge in every trouble. And we now look to Thee as our God and Redeemer. In this the time of our calamity and trouble, we invoke Thy guidance and protection.

Bless, we beseech Thee, the Governor of this Commonwealth, encircle him with Thy mercy, and grant unto him that wisdom and strength that may be necessary to direct and sustain him in the discharge of all the responsible duties now devolving upon him. And bless, we humbly pray Thee, the Legislature of this State, now convened under circumstances of peculiar solemnity and responsibility. Preside over and direct, in wisdom and great mercy, both houses of this general assembly. Give unto our senators wisdom—a spirit of knowledge and sound understanding. Place Thy fear before their eyes, and write Thy laws upon their hearts. May they all realize the solemn responsibilities devolving upon them at this critical juncture.

Deliver them from strife and division in sentiment and action, unite them in fear and in firm maintenance of the cause of justice and truth. Deliver us as a people from dissension and conflict at home; save us from passion, from violence, and from wickedness of all kinds. But grant unto us wisdom, prudence, firmness, and efficiency in all our deliberations and actions. O Lord, our help is in Thee, and we humbly invoke Thy protection. Wilt Thou not defend the right, and bring to nought the wickedness of the wicked?-Restrain, we beseech Thee, the wrath of man. Put Thy hook in the nose of him who deviseth mischief against us, and turn him back by the way he came. Circumvent and frustrate all his wicked devices; and may it yet please Thee to save us from the horrors

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THE FIRST REGIMENT VERMONT VOLUNTEERS.

THE following is a full list of the officers of this regiment:

FIELD AND STAFF OFFICERS.

Colonel, J. Wolcott Phelps; Lieutenant-Col., P. T. Washburn; Major, H. N. Worthen; Adjutant, Hiram Stephens; Quartermaster, E. A. Morse; Surgeon, E. K. Sanborn; Assistant Surgeon, Willard Childe; Sergeant Major, C. G. Chandler; Drum Major, Thos. R. Clark; Fife Major, Martin J. McManus; Chaplain, Rev. Levi H. Stone.

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Boynton, Captain; C. A. Webb, First LieutenCo. E, Northfield, First Regiment—Wm. H. tenant; and 64 privates.

Co. C, Swanton, Fourth Regiment-L. D. Clark, Captain; A. B. Jewett, First Lieutenant; and 71 privates.

W. Pelton, Captain; Andrew J. Dike, First Co. A, Woodstock, Second Regiment-Wm. Lieutenant; and 64 privates.

Co. E, Cavendish, Second Regiment-O. S. S. Dutton, Ensign; and 65 privates. Tuttle, Captain; A. Clark, First Lieutenant;

Co. B, St. Albans, Fourth Regiment-Geo. G. Hunt, Captain; Hiram F. Perkins, First Lieutenant; F. E. Bell, Ensign; and 67 privates.

Co. A, Burlington, Fourth Regiment-D. Brainard Peck, Captain; O. G. Mower, First Lieutenant; G. J. Hagar, Ensign; and 67 pri

vates.

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