Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 20, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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I will tell you why. Some months ago I did make a formal application to England. England sent my dispatch to America. [Hear, hear] That dispatch, getting into Mr. Seward's hands, was shown to my Ambassador at Washington. It came back to me, and I feel that I was ill-treated by such conduct. [Loud cheers from the Opposition.] Iror of the French, proposing a meditation between the contending parties in America, was transmitted by, Earl Russell to Lord Lyons, and by Lord Lyons handed to Mr. Seward, by which means Mr. Seward received information which would otherwise have been with held from him respecting the Emperor's proposal to Her Majesty's GovernmentMr. Seward received information which would otherwise have been with held from him respecting the Emperor's proposal to Her Majesty's Government. Now, I know that no secret was made at the time that such a proposal had been made by the Emperor of the French to Her Majesty's Government. It was announced by the newspapers that dispatch had been taken into consideration by Her Majesty's Government, and answered in terms of courtesy of which I am sure the Emperor of the Fre
ion to recognize the Confederate States, and that the paper, after having been sent to Lord Lyons, was, by that functionary, most dishonorably handed over to Secretary Seward, cannot be doubted. He could have no inducement to make a false statement upon the subject, especially when he knew that it could so easily be detected and transmitted to Lord Lyons, and that Lord Lyons, notwithstanding the high encomium of Mr. Gray, had the weakness or the baseness (just as you like) to betray it to Seward. It is perfectly in character with all his transactions at Washington, where he has been the supple and cringing tool of Seward ever since his arrival. To ingraSeward ever since his arrival. To ingratiate himself with that despicable tool of a despicable faction, he has perpetrated an act which, in private life, would deprive him of the right to be considered and treated as a gentleman. The instincts of the Confederate people have long since placed these parties in the position which this statement of this French Emperor