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thern movement. The last movement on the chess board by the Northern Government is a recognition by law of the despotism previously existing in that country. Lincoln had waged war — he had let loose his horde of robbers and murderers upon the South, and blockaded the ports of the South--he had suspended wherever he pleased theulous partizans saw the necessity of shelling it with all powers necessary for the maintenance of its tyrannical rule. They not only did this, but they protected Lincoln from all responsibility to constitution and law, by legalizing all his past violations of law and popular rights. Thus fortified against popular complaint and opents. Section alism destroyed the old Union; but the Republican party, which employed sectionalism with this result, cannot itself destroy sectionalism. Nor can Lincoln with his ignorant and impertinent constitutional dogmas, ignore States rights even at the North--He cannot blot out the boundaries of the States, nor abolish thei
Later from Europe. The Hibernian, with Liverpool dates to the 19th and Londonderry dates to the 20th, arrived at Portland, Me., on the 4th inst. Lord Stratherden has given notice in the House of Lords that he would move for copies of dispatches from Mr. Mason to the English Government relative to the claims of the Confederates to be acknowledged by Great Britain. Meetings, lectures, &c., in favor of Lincoln's emancipation policy daily occur in various parts of England. At St. James's Hall a resolution condemning the Lord Mayor for inviting Mason to the Mansion House was unanimously carried. The Times complains that the grand old antislavery cause has degenerated into a mere cats paw to Seward. The Bank of Mobile has remitted to London about £10,000 in specie to meet the demand until July, 1864, of the interest on the bonds of Alabama. The Shipping Gazette points out that the accounts of the Charleston affair are far too meagre to justify any Governm
ven the moral and physical weight which the Union exerted on behalf of Republicanism abroad would not have been permanently impaired if the besotted Government of Lincoln had consented to a peaceful dissolution. The two sections would then have parted friends, and perhaps formed an offensive and defensive alliance, both advancing as united and efficacious on the side of constitutional liberty as if they had remained under one Union. It is not the dissolution of Union, but the war waged by Lincoln, which has almost irreparably damaged the prestige of free institutions abroad, and seriously impaired the resources of both countries. But even the war, if the would we have discovered for a long time, the military capacity of the American States but for this war. Every one remembers how, as late as the Administration of Lincoln's predecessor, British gunboats chased, stopped, and boarded American merchantmen off our own coast, with perfect impunity. It was in vain that the public press
Good news from Kentucky. A gentleman who came out of the heart of Kentucky, a few days ago, brings the information that Lincoln's emancipation proclamation has wrought a very great change in public sentiment, and that many who were heretofore decided Union men are now strong for the South. It will be remembered that some months ago gentlemen, for the privilege of taking the Yankee oath of allegiance, were charged, according to their ability to pay, from $50 up $5,000, and where they could not pay the money property to the amount levied was taken. A few weeks ago, in fright at the present state of public feeling. General Boyle issued an order that all who had taken pay should refund the money or property. The Lincoln Marshal in Bourbon county, who had taken the property of a gentleman, was called upon by the owner for its restoration. The Marshal being unable to refund, the gentleman at once had him arrested and imprisoned, and last accounts he was still in limbo. This
mercenaries to plunder your property and lay waste your homes. But his marauding hosts have been so often beaten and baffled that they are now discourage and demoralized. Should you be able to check them everywhere for the next sixty days, the three hundred thousand whose time expires in May will not re-enlist, and the war will end before July. Should the scoundrels, however, gain a single substantial success at any one point, the war will be prolonged during the entire Administration of Lincoln. It becomes a solemn duty, then, to labor and fight during the next two months as we have never done before. We must make the war unpopular with the mercenary vandals of the North by harassing and annoying them. We must cut down to six feet by two, the dimensions of the farms which these plunderers propose to appropriate. You will have to endure more hardships, and to fight more desperate battles than you would have done were your ranks property filled. Our cities, towns, and villages
sion were so great that Banks sent down a regiment to disperse the crowd. Over one thousand contraband letters and other articles were captured. On information of a negro that rebels were planting torpedoes between Port Hudson and Bason Rouge, the gunboat Essex went up the river and captured four, containing each 200 pounds of powder. Reports from Baton Rouge represent that there are numerous indications of an immediate movement, and that great activity prevails in the army. Lincoln communicated to the Senate a message with a memorial from distressed operatives of Blackburn England, expressing gratitude for material aid, and hoping an interchange of feeling will be productive of a further manifestation of sympathy, with a prayer that the civil war may "come to a speedy termination in favor of freedom, regardless of race or color." The message suggests that more effective relief could be rendered by aiding the sufferers to emigrate to America, and urges the adoption of