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The Daily Dispatch: September 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], The English press on American Affairs — a Blast against Seward's emigration circular. (search)
ll as martial law and the apprehension of the draft. No matter that at the moment, the Glasgow Herald tells us, Mr. Mason, the Confederate Commissioner, is the guest of Mr. Stewart at Mardostown, and will next visit Mr. Ellice, at Glenquoich, Mr. Adams, the Federal Minister, will, we fear, be obliged to "stump" the Provinces. In no other way, at the moment, can he aid his Government so well; and as the President himself has been on the stump recently, bashfulness will not be admitted as ore police magistrates in the case of those who obtain goods fraudulently. The Captain of the Tuscarora, however, does not head trifles, and stands all the better with his countrymen for his disrespect to English fleeting. No doubt so will Mr. Adams and the consular agents and ministers of the Federal Government in other countries, if they now uphold the Union cause against all odds, and proclaim to the world that this is the time for the distressed to emigrate. Nowhere else, let them say
importance.--"The backbone of the rebellion is broken!""--As everything is the enemy of the hare — the hawks and vultures in the air, not less than the beasts and serpents of the earth — so everything that occurs in nature, or by the agency of man, has a tendency to break this unfortunate backbone. If the Emperor of Russia speak with tolerable courtesy to Cassius M. Clay, if the Emperor Napoleon bow to the Yankee ambassador at a levee, if Lord John Russell recognize the existence of Charles Francis Adams at a drawing room, if the Queen of Spain dismiss her Ministers and reconstruct her Cabinet, if Pope Plus the Ninth hold a conference with the Austrian Envoy, or Garibaldi be shot in the leg by the soldiers of Victor Emmanuel, we are instantly told that "the backbone of the rebellion is broken." No matter what may happen, this unlucky backbone cannot escape its fate. It is bound to be broken every morning, in the columns of the Herald, let the events of the preceding day have been w