[48]
Then came to the South a not unanticipated, and to many of her leaders a not unwelcome political Waterloo, in the election of Lincoln.
This gave the argument for secession that was wanted.
The South had then to yield — which she had no idea of doing-or to go into rebellion.
She went out of the Union very much as she would have gone to a frolic.
She had no thought that serious fighting was to follow.
She did not believe, as one of the Southern leaders expressed it, that the Northern people would go to war for the sake of the “niggers.”
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