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The Daily Dispatch: November 27, 1862., [Electronic resource], An English opinion of "what Constitutes the South." (search)
An English opinion of "what Constitutes the South." We take from the London Index the following article under the heading of "What Constitutes the South." It shows that in Great Britain the question of boundary lines between the Confederate States and the United States are properly understood: This question, now that the Confederate armies are on the soil of Maryland, is uppermost in the public mind. It is strange that, despite the careful study of American history and statistics to which the war has given rise, the question should still require a reply, and that in endeavoring to reply to it, otherwise well-informed presses should fall into such stupendous errors as have within the last few days appeared in print. In the American vocabulary the words "North" and "South" have always had a definite geographical and political meaning. They were known already to the colonists as designating the settlements lying respectively North and South of "Mason and Dixon's Line,"