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into little villages, where the fishermen dried their nets. Notwithstanding, however, we are not disposed to place any confidence in anything the Herald or its correspondents may say, we deem it certain that England and France will never allow the Union to be reconstructed.--In that event England cannot fail to foresee the downfall of her maritime supremacy, and France the extinction of all hope of ever obtaining a permanent foothold in Mexico. As long as we fought on equal terms England was anxious to see the strife continue; but she is not anxious to see us overwhelmed, as she will be induced by the enormous lies of the Yankee newspapers to believe we are about to be. Napoleon has long been desirous to recognize the Confederacy, and now that he has planted the tricolor in Mexico, he will no longer be withheld by England. These considerations and nothing that the Herald and its correspondents say, induce us to believe that we shall shortly be recognized, at least by France.
epublic will follow the example of the old Roman Republic, which always embarked upon a foreign war after a civil convulsion, so as to induce a unity of national spirit. With these indications before them, and with the unofficial dispatches of our Ministers and Consuls abroad. Mr. Seward and the President are convinced that this is the most critical time, so far as regards our relations with foreign powers, that we have had since the commencement of the war. We cannot afford to permit England to destroy our commerce, nor allow France to name her designs on New Orleans. This state of affairs has made the President and Secretary of State anxious to settle up our present quarrel. They believe that proper measured taken now would restore the Union and put an end to the present unhappy war. From what I hear, I am inclined to believe that are now foot looking to this end. The programme is that the Territories, as decided in the recent Congress, shall remain free forever — thus pre