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ttributed to McClellan that, as soon as he had succeeded in reconstructing the Union, his great desire was to see both sections unite in a war against England, expresses the sentiment of the great mass of the Northern nation. It is in vain that England has marked out for herself a course of rigid neutrality. Her very first step, in acknowledging the South a belligerent power, gave mortal offence to the Federal Government, which regards the South as a rebel, and expects the whole world to do tis war which time and circumstance have no opiate to make us forget. Even were it possible to conquer us, our hate of the murderous villains would only be the more profound, implacable, and eternal. We can not what may be the responsibility of England for the present state of things in America. It may be that through British policy the Union has been overthrown; but we can scarcely make England responsible for the spirit and temper in which the war has been conducted. On the contrary, the f