[16]
the rowing men set off for a three-hours' pull down Boston harbor.
Others collected in groups and discussed the future of their country with the natural precocity of youthful minds.
“Here,” said a Boston cousin of the two young Lowells, to a pink-faced, sandy-haired ball-player, “you are opposed to capital punishment; do you think Jeff. Davis ought to be hung?”
“Just at present,” replied the latter, “I am more in favor of suspending Jeff. Davis than of suspending the law,” --an opinion that was greeted with laughter and applause.
The general sentiment of the crowd was in favor of permitting General Lee to retire in peace to private life; but in regard to the president of the Southern Confederacy the feeling was more vindictive.
We can now consider it fortunate that no such retaliatory measures were taken by the government.
Much better that Jefferson Davis, and his confederates in the secession movement, should have lived to witness every day the consequences of that gigantic blunder.
The fact that they adopted a name for their newly organized nation which did not differ essentially from the one which they had discarded; that their form of government, with its constitution and laws, differed so slightly from those of the United States, is sufficient to indicate that their separation was not to be permanent,
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