Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 11, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Canada (Canada) or search for Canada (Canada) in all documents.

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and that no glory is to be derived from fratricidal strife. The powerful influence of the Herald occasionally makes itself felt in the same direction, and every thinking member of society will approve of its recommendation yesterday, that "there should be an armistice between our loyal and revolted States, for one, two, or three years, in reference to our domestic troubles. " It advocates the use of the armies that have been raised North and South for the purpose of possessing ourselves of Canada, Mexico, and the West India Islands, and adds: "This is our programme for turning the war of mutual destruction between the North and the South into one of mutual assistance, expansion and power, and to the removal of every vestige of European domination from this continent." And against "How much it is to be regretted that such sacrifices are in prospect to preserve the integrity of a Union already glorious, instead of their being made to extend its dominion." Without endorsing this longing
Arrival of Bart Tucker. --Beverly Tucker, Esq., late Consul of the United States at the port of Liverpool, arrived in Richmond on Monday with dispatches for President Davis. We learn that he made the journey from Halifax to Richmond by the way of Canada, Michigan and Illinois, and in order to guard still further against detention by the Myrmidons of Lincoln, traveled under an assumed name. He speaks encouragingly, we understand, of an early recognition of the Southern Confederacy by the Government of Great Britain.
never suffered from Great Britain, reached their climax at last in the open, infamous and successful attempt to elect a sectional President, on purely sectional grounds; to make the South a province and the North its master. But when the war came — the war which, among a free and independent people, was the inevitable result of such usurpation — where were those who had kindled its flames and forged its thunders? Where is Joshua R. Giddings? Enjoying a snug and secure Consul-Generalship in Canada. Where is John P. Hale, of Vermont; Sumner, of Massachusetts; Trumbull, of Illinois; Wade, of Ohio; King, of New York? Where is the bellicose Michigan Senator, who wrote the famous letters in behalf of "blood-letting? " Where are Burlingame, Clay and Carl Shurz? Enjoying the luxury of a foreign mission, while their miserable tools at home are paying the bloody price of their exaltation. Even more base and ignoble is the position of the infamous man to whom, more than any other, the presen
hes delivered by Mr. Clay and his accomplices--Mr. Seward's insolent dispatch to Mr. Dayton-- Mr. Greeley's threats and Mr. Seward's speeches in favor of annexing Canada, have done yeoman's service to the Confederate States. The Moniteur, (which is, as you know, the organ of the French Government,) says: "The most importantinsane violence (une violence folle) from the pen of newspaper editors, but also in private letter." ... And after mentioning the expedition of military forces to Canada, the Moniteur goes on to say: "The North, separated from the South and from the immense territories belonging to it, may be inclined to seek compensation and to re-establish the balance by absorbing Canada in the United States. This is one of the Northern schemes, and English statesmen cannot forget that its avowed advocate is a personage who is none other than Monsieur Seward." "So you see that as Monsieur" Seward's speeches against the South did more than anything else to bring about di