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federacy." The London Times says all Europe, enemies as well as friends of the Confederacy, will yield it admiration. It has "gained a reputation for genius and valor which the most famous nations may envy. " It opposes recognition, however, until the South has both won and kept its frontiers by its own exertions." The London Herald (Derby's organ) urges interference, if mediation is refused. The Liverpool Courier urges France and England now to interfere. It thinks they can no longer refuse the application for recognition. The London Globe thinks. "revolutionary symptoms are but too apparent in the Federal States." The news from the Continent is unimportant.--Garibaldi is worse. The Opinion Nationdle, of Paris, Prince Napoleon's organ, condemns the idea of an emancipation proclamation for the negroes in anticipation, and in very severe terms, while the Dublin Free man's Journal (a Union paper) points out the inutility of such a measure for the negroes themselves.
The Daily Dispatch: October 2, 1862., [Electronic resource], An English Analysis of American Photographs. (search)
, clear outline of Mr. Seward's features, next to it. Why did not Mr. Brady give the full face of Mr. Seward, so that one could see his eye? In other respects the likeness, though it does not convey that air of "cunning and conceit" which Priace Napoleon's attache attributed in his to the Secretary of State, is characteristic and true. Pass over Mr. Batel, and we come to Mr. Chase, who is standing with one hand outside his coat, over his breeches pocket, and the other on a plaster of Paris pedestal, looking as though he were waiting for some one to lend him a little money, and expecting it, too. He has one of the best heads among the Cabinet, though one cannot help remarking that he has a detect in his eyes, and oddly enough so has Gen. Butler, and so has Mr. Jefferson Davis.--It is not too much to say that any stranger would be struck by the immense superiority of the heads and expression of Mr. Davis, of General Polk, of Beauregard, of Stonewall Jackson, and Lee, to most of