Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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Lincoln speaks again. By reference to the extracts on our first page on the crisis, it will be seen that the Tribune, Lincoln's oracle, speaks by authority for him that he will make no consessions whatever. Seward, in his polished and artful generalities, had already indicated as much.
Judge Smalley's charge. --It is stated, in connection with Judge Smalley's charge to the Grand Jury of New York, that Henry Ward Beecher, Horace Greeley and Senator Seward, have each been served with a summons to appear before the Grand Inquest, to answer such interrogations as may be put to them, there, concerning certain grave matters with which they are supposed to have complicity.
cy he was elected to preside over is not in existence. The Gulf States are making the "Views" of General Scott dissolving views. They are relieving South Carolina from the attitude of forming a "gap" in the territory of the Union, by establishing a continuous line of secession from South Carolina to Texas, and terminating the line of the Federal Government at the Northern border of the Palmetto State. In that event, even General Scott does not propose, nor even think of "Coercion." He utterly repudiates it. Warrior as he is, and inclined to the imperative mood as military chieftains generally are, he yet sees the utter madness of any attempt to control the seceding States. It is for such demagogues as John Sherman, and Hale, and Wade, and that arch-traitor, Seward, to present the argument of the "ultima ratio" to "enforce the laws and uphold the Union."--What men, indeed, are these to pick up the sword which the greatest General of the age puts a way as bootless and ruthless!