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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 31, 1862., [Electronic resource].

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Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 4
ep humiliation and cover ourselves with "sack cloth and ashes," for our transgressions have been many and grievous. Parson Brownlow again in the field. This traitor to his country is stumping the North and venting his spite against the South before large audiences, who loudly applaud his vulgar expressions. A short time since he announced that he would address a public meeting in the McKendree Methodist Church, in Cincinnati, from the text: "Go into all the South, and preach Jeff. Davis to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized be damned; and he that believeth not shall ed." spoke according to appointment, and the Northern papers tell us that his blasphemous and talk was loudly applauded. Among other things, he said, that if all "the slaves were emancipated, it would be a righteous retribution on the South." He claimed that the present difficulty was "not the work of Abolitionists, but of God-forsaken Southerners. He poured forth much venom agai
icy embarrassed at every step by these ghouls and harpies, who armed at power through "free speech," "free wool," and "free Kansas." that they might carry out their damnable purposes of dissolving the Union and gorging their rapacious and hungry maws with the spoils and plunder of the Government. And now they have succeeded, and what is the result? Precisely what any sane man would have predicted from the beginning. The John Brown raid — the logical result of the teachings of such men as Garrison and Giddings, who were proven to have been its instigators and co-workers — has culminated in revolution and civil war on Southern soil, and the blood of the thousands of Northern men that has drenched the sudden ground of many a battle-field, and the bones that lie bleaching in the sun, cry aloud for vengeance and retribution on the heads of the guilty authors and abettors of this "gigantic rebellion." Let us take all these truths home to ourselves.--Let us take the beam out of our o
ion Society, held at Buffalo, N. Y., to carry out these nefarious and revolutionary purposes, and to set at defiance the authority of the Federal Government in a Territory she was bound to protect and to sustain in all her legal and constitutional rights. But these are not a tithe of the wrongs perpetrated by New England, and her allies in other States, against the Constitution of the country, and revolutionary and factious in their character and tendency. The administrations of both Mr. Pierce and Mr. Buchana were assailed from their beginning to their end, with a bitterness and unrelenting hostility worthy only of men and a party totally lost to every particle of principle and of honor.--Their motives were impeached, their integrity questioned, and their policy embarrassed at every step by these ghouls and harpies, who armed at power through "free speech," "free wool," and "free Kansas." that they might carry out their damnable purposes of dissolving the Union and gorging their
wedge of disunion. I mean to show these traitors to the scorn and abhorrence of their countrymen." Remarks like these, from such a source of course do not injure any person or any society. The above extract, however, shows how vitiated the taste of the North has become. For when "large and crowded audiences" are delighted with, and applaud such stuff, the public mind has become debased — very low indeed.--Augusta Chronicle and Sentinel. New England Begins to howl. On the 18th instant, Wendell Phillips made a speech in Boston, on the war. In that harangue he said: * * *. Let Mr. Lincoln perpetuate this war, and hand it down to his successors in anything like his present guise, and in the canvass that begins eighteen months hence you will see a candidate on the other side of the mountain, one plank in whose platform will be that the West desert the East and join her natural ally who holds the mouth of the Mississippi. If the Democratic politicians of Albany have
ll our preachers obedience to the laws and constituted authorities of the land. A transgression of this injunction makes the offender liable to expulsion from the Church. * * * "These rebel preachers are perjured — foully, wickedly perjured Early, when he was ordained a bishop, took an oath to promote peace and harmony, law and order. I heard him swear the lie myself in Columbus, Ga. Parson Sawris, who knows him well, in some private transactions, says that Early is a miserably corrupt oEarly is a miserably corrupt old creature. Let us believe these rebels always when they testify against one another" "When the villainy of these wretches shall be exposed, the revelation will shock the country. These Southern Methodist preachers began the work of disunion years ago. John C. Calhoun, the arch-originator of treason, sent for Bishop Capers, and had a long private conference with him at the time the spilt occurred in our Church. This was the en tering wedge of disunion. I mean to show these traitors t
ellion." Let us take all these truths home to ourselves.--Let us take the beam out of our own eye before we discover and find fault with the mote in that of our neighbor's. Before God, and in the light of history, we of the North will not be held blameless for the curse of the civil war what is upon us with all its countless evils. We should bow ourselves in deep humiliation and cover ourselves with "sack cloth and ashes," for our transgressions have been many and grievous. Parson Brownlow again in the field. This traitor to his country is stumping the North and venting his spite against the South before large audiences, who loudly applaud his vulgar expressions. A short time since he announced that he would address a public meeting in the McKendree Methodist Church, in Cincinnati, from the text: "Go into all the South, and preach Jeff. Davis to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized be damned; and he that believeth not shall ed." spoke according
he New York Sunday Mercury has a very good article, from which we extract the following: It is fashionable to say that the south, in arming for resistance to Lincoln's election, initiated the revolution. So she did in one sense, and we do not pretend to hold her guiltless. But is the North entirely blameless of any participainel. New England Begins to howl. On the 18th instant, Wendell Phillips made a speech in Boston, on the war. In that harangue he said: * * *. Let Mr. Lincoln perpetuate this war, and hand it down to his successors in anything like his present guise, and in the canvass that begins eighteen months hence you will see a emaining hope is in inciting the slaves to revolt. Your panacea for all the terrible evils of this so called rebellion, is a servile insurrection. And you tell Mr. Lincoln, poor old man, that if he does not help you to set the negroes of the South to cutting the throats of the women and children in that section, you will not only
Wendell Phillips (search for this): article 4
has become. For when "large and crowded audiences" are delighted with, and applaud such stuff, the public mind has become debased — very low indeed.--Augusta Chronicle and Sentinel. New England Begins to howl. On the 18th instant, Wendell Phillips made a speech in Boston, on the war. In that harangue he said: * * *. Let Mr. Lincoln perpetuate this war, and hand it down to his successors in anything like his present guise, and in the canvass that begins eighteen months hence you er of an alliance among twenty States leaving New England out in the cold, than there is of an alliance among twenty States leaving the Cotton States out of the Union Commenting upon this extract the New York Mercury says: Just so, Mr. Phillips. You and your friends are beginning to see in what an awkward dilemma you have placed New England. You made the war for the negro. You were willing to let the Union slide," in order to free the slaves of the South, under the cover of "milit
John C. Calhoun (search for this): article 4
dained a bishop, took an oath to promote peace and harmony, law and order. I heard him swear the lie myself in Columbus, Ga. Parson Sawris, who knows him well, in some private transactions, says that Early is a miserably corrupt old creature. Let us believe these rebels always when they testify against one another" "When the villainy of these wretches shall be exposed, the revelation will shock the country. These Southern Methodist preachers began the work of disunion years ago. John C. Calhoun, the arch-originator of treason, sent for Bishop Capers, and had a long private conference with him at the time the spilt occurred in our Church. This was the en tering wedge of disunion. I mean to show these traitors to the scorn and abhorrence of their countrymen." Remarks like these, from such a source of course do not injure any person or any society. The above extract, however, shows how vitiated the taste of the North has become. For when "large and crowded audiences" a
ed at every step by these ghouls and harpies, who armed at power through "free speech," "free wool," and "free Kansas." that they might carry out their damnable purposes of dissolving the Union and gorging their rapacious and hungry maws with the spoils and plunder of the Government. And now they have succeeded, and what is the result? Precisely what any sane man would have predicted from the beginning. The John Brown raid — the logical result of the teachings of such men as Garrison and Giddings, who were proven to have been its instigators and co-workers — has culminated in revolution and civil war on Southern soil, and the blood of the thousands of Northern men that has drenched the sudden ground of many a battle-field, and the bones that lie bleaching in the sun, cry aloud for vengeance and retribution on the heads of the guilty authors and abettors of this "gigantic rebellion." Let us take all these truths home to ourselves.--Let us take the beam out of our own eye before
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