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The Daily Dispatch: February 18, 1865., [Electronic resource], Proclamation by the President, appointing a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer, with thanksgiving. (search)
ence and energy were given by the Mediterranean nations, the northern multitudes were miserable savages.--Whilst Greece and Rome displayed wonders of architectural skill, the dwellers in the cold regions, now known as Russia, Germany, Sweden and Denmark, could not build comfortable dwellings to protect them against the rigor of their own climate. The civilization of Russia, such as it is, is not older than the days of Peter the Great, and he had to visit lands where the sun shone to procure thnd energy, made up of stars of the first magnitude, which will shine on till the firmament above is rolled up like a scroll. The traveler who now visits Europe to behold the wonders of science, energy and art, does not go to Russia, Sweden Denmark or Norway. He finds there a very gluttonous and animal people, but not superior knowledge and refinement. The Northern States of this Union have, indeed, a civilization, which consists in the application of mechanical discoveries to the increa
The Daily Dispatch: February 18, 1865., [Electronic resource], Proclamation by the President, appointing a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer, with thanksgiving. (search)
at of France under too astute a surveillance to see anything on which the Tuileries want them to be blind. What intrigues passed in that obscure corner of Europe I do not know. Suffice it, that the iron-clad, supposed to have been delivered to Denmark, sailed two days ago from Copenhagen, with all her armament on board, the affair having been so managed through the French diplomatic and consular agents there as to get her returned to her owner, Mr. Armand, a friend and protege of the Emperor,. Meanwhile the sister ship which is nominally sold to Prussia, profiting by the voyage of the other, will sail without suspicion, ostensibly for Hamburg, but in reality to meet her consort at a lonely little island off the coast, which the "Danish" ship may be expected to reach in about ten days. Then both of them will be met by tenders having on board the coal, powder and men — some one hundred and twenty for each, independently of such of the present neutral crews as may be tempted to en