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providing the supplies, the Legislature will perhaps proceed to transcend the limits of its authority by passing an act of indemnity in favor of the Executive. Mr Lincoln may have been morally right in all measures which he has adopted, but he has found it necessary to violate at every turn a Constitution which was never calculats advocates of the war once more in a minority. "The President's Message is the oddest document which was ever issued by the Government of a great nation. Mr. Lincoln's admirers boast that the Chief Magistrate of the Union once navigated a timber float; and it is satisfactory to observe that an august bargeman from the Mississippi is, in style and rhetoric, precisely on a level with an uncrowned bargeman on the Thames. "The little 'disguise,' says Mr. Lincoln, that the supposed right is to be exercised only for a just cause, themselves to be the sole judges of its justice, is too thin to merit any notice. Thus sugar-coated they have been drugging the
July 20th (search for this): article 8
Young Oxford on the war. The Saturday Review, the representative of Young Oxford, and by far the cleverest, as it is one of the most influential of the English journals, in its number of July 20th, contains an article on the "Civil War in America," from which we make the following extracts: "Having performed the constitutional duty of providing the supplies, the Legislature will perhaps proceed to transcend the limits of its authority by passing an act of indemnity in favor of the Executive. Mr Lincoln may have been morally right in all measures which he has adopted, but he has found it necessary to violate at every turn a Constitution which was never calculated for the contingencies of civil war. He has enforced martial law in Baltimore without ever proclaiming it, and he has held intercourse with the revolutionary or bogus Virginia Government which has been originated by the Wheeling Convention. In his first proclamation after the captured of Fort Sumter, the President