Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 5, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for England or search for England in all documents.

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be no explosion, but that public opinion will be eventually cleared and purified by the process. * * * * The secret of the disappointment of the Northerners and of their strange display of temper is to be found, we think, in that constant disregard of international courtesy which has distinguished successive governments for many years. Elated by the rapid growth of their wealth and population; by their successful attempts on the territory of their neighbors, and by the knowledge that England depended on them constantly for cotton and periodically for food, the American people have acquired a habit of petulance, and almost of insolence, in their dealings with foreign powers, which now affects their judgment — usually clear and sound — in questions of constitutional right. It is the old failing of despots, whether on a throne or in private life, that they look on those who disagree with them as questioning their veracity or insulting their character. So with the Americans. It
e battle-field of democratic civil war." In the same article there appears the following: "The energy the free States have displayed; the great number of men they have raised, and the good material of which their army is composed, are beyond all praise. It is easy to see that a great deal of their irritability towards England arises from a feeling that justice has not been done to their patriotic spirit by public opinion here. Looking, as every American does, to the opinion of England, they have been mortified at finding that an effort which they feel to be worthy of admiration, has been received by us with coolness, forgetful, as they are, that we are bound to refrain from enthusiasm for their military ardor, when the object of it is to crush those with whom we are as much in relation as with themselves. "In the meantime the Confederate States, it is evident, are not sleeping. Everything betokens that the conflict which is to decide the fate of Virginia will be fi