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The Daily Dispatch: December 8, 1862., [Electronic resource], English opinion on the mediation question. (search)
ngton." The Times expresses the opinion that the Northern elections, if adverse to the Republicans, will be merely the prelude to some sharper and more deadly struggle. The Morning Herald is very pointed in its comments. It says: "such is the language with which be [Lord Russell] mocks the hopes and insults the misery of half a million of starving English labor are" "Everything is to be sacrificed to the vain hope of retaining the parliamentary support of Messrs Bright and Cobden, and the still more absurd delusion that, by abject patience and dastardly submission, we may avert the vindictive wrath and pacify the causeless hatred of the mongrel rabble which controls the Government of the Northern States Of all political crimes, since history began, this, which has just been committed by the English Government, is one of the most foolish and the most unpardonable. For cold-blooded cruelty and pusillanimous betrayal of duty, Lord Russell and his colleagues are hardly
The Daily Dispatch: December 8, 1862., [Electronic resource], The Times special in Richmond--first letter. (search)
tt and his votaries, who still believe in imprisoned loyalty as existing in the South, might as well search in the British Islands for a man who desired them to be annexed to France. So united, so homogeneous a community as the States of the Southern Confederacy finds no parallel in our annals. No war that England has waged for a hundred years has met with such cordial, unanimous, undivided support. The war against the French Republic had its Charles Fox; the war against Russia its Richard Cobden. There is no such character in the Southern States. The victory of the Federal in this exasperated struggle means, not the defeat of the Southern armies, not the possession of Richmond, Charleston, Savannah, Mobile, and New Orleans, which would no more lead to a conclusion of the war than the seizure of the Isle of Man. A Federal victory means nothing on earth but the extermination and annihilation of every man, woman, and child in the Southern Confederacy. There is no passion, no fr