登陆注册
5437900000057

第57章 THE PLEBISCITE OF 1864(2)

But neither their own lack of hardihood nor the disasters of their Southern friends could dampen their peculiar ardor. Their hero was Vallandigham. That redoubtable person had fixed his headquarters in Canada, whence he directed his partisans in their vain attempt to elect him Governor of Ohio. Their next move was to honor him with the office of Supreme Commander of the Sons of Liberty, and now Vallandigham resolved to win the martyr's crown in very fact. In June, 1864, he prepared for the dramatic effect by carefully advertising his intention and came home. But to his great disappointment Lincoln ignored him, and the dramatic martyrdom which he had planned did not come off.

There still existed the possibility of a great uprising, and to that end arrangements were made with Southern agents in Canada.

Confederate soldiers, picked men, made their way in disguise to Chicago. There the worshipers of Arcturus were to join them in a mighty multitude; the Confederate prisoners at Camp Douglas in Chicago were to be liberated; around that core of veterans, the hosts of the Pleiades were to rally. All this was to coincide with the assembling at Chicago of the Democratic national convention, in which Vallandigham was to appear. The organizers of the conspiracy dreamed that the two events might coalesce;that the convention might be stampeded by their uprising; that a great part, if not the whole, of the convention would endorse the establishment of a Northwestern Confederacy.

Alas for him who builds on the frame of mind that delights in cheap rhetoric while Rome is afire! At the moment of hazard, the Sons of Liberty showed the white feather, were full of specious words, would not act. The Confederate soldiers, indignant at this second betrayal, had to make their escape from the country.

It must not be supposed that this Democratic national convention was made up altogether of Secessionists. The peace party was still, as in the previous year, a strange complex, a mixture of all sorts and conditions. Its cohesion was not so much due to its love of peace as to its dislike of Lincoln and its hatred of his party. Vallandigham was a member of the committee on resolutions. The permanent chairman was Governor Seymour of New York. The Convention was called to order by August Belmont, a foreigner by birth, the American representative of the Rothschilds. He was the head and front of that body of Northern capital which had so long financed the South and which had always opposed the war. In opening the Convention he said: "Four years of misrule by a sectional, fanatical, and corrupt party have brought our country to the verge of ruin." In the platform Lincoln was accused of a list of crimes which it had become the habit of the peace party to charge against him. His administration was described as "four years of failure," and McClellan was nominated for President.

The Republican managers called a convention at Baltimore in June, 1864, with a view to organizing a composite Union Party in which the War Democrats were to participate. Their plan was successful. The second place on the Union ticket was accepted by a War Democrat, Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee. Lincoln was renominated, though not without opposition, and he was so keenly aware that he was not the unanimous choice of the Union Party that he permitted the fact to appear in a public utterance soon afterward. "I do not allow myself," he said, in addressing a delegation of the National Union League, "to suppose that either the Convention or the League have concluded to decide that I am either the greatest or the best man in America, but rather they have concluded it is not best to swap horses while crossing the river, and have further concluded that I am not so poor a horse that they might not make a botch of it in trying to swap."But the Union Party was so far from being a unit that during the summer factional quarrels developed within its ranks. All the elements that were unfriendly to Lincoln took heart from a dispute betweenthe President and Congress with regard to reconstruction in Louisiana, over a large part of which Federal troops had established a civil government on the President's authority. As an incident in the history of reconstruction, this whole matter has its place in another volume.* But it also has a place in the history of the presidential campaign of 1864.

Lincoln's plan of reconstruction was obnoxious to the Radicals in Congress inasmuch as it did not definitely abolish slavery in Louisiana, although it required the new Government to give its adherence to the Emancipation Proclamation. Congress passed a bill taking reconstruction out of the President's hands and definitely requiring the reconstructed States to abolish slavery.

Lincoln took the position that Congress had no power over slavery in the States. When his Proclamation was thrown in his teeth, he replied, "I conceive that I may in an emergency do things on military grounds which cannot be done constitutionally by Congress." Incidentally there was a further disagreement between the President and the Radicals over negro suffrage. Though neither scheme provided for it, Lincoln would extend it, if at all, only to the exceptional negroes, while the Radicals were ready for a sweeping extension. But Lincoln refused to sign their bill and it lapsed. Thereupon Benjamin Wade of Ohio and Henry Winter Davis of Maryland issued a savage denunciation of Lincoln which has been known ever since as the "Wade-Davis Manifesto".

* Walter L. Fleming, "The Sequel of Appomattox". In "The Chronicles of America".

同类推荐
  • 须颂篇

    须颂篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 混元八景真经

    混元八景真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编官常典王寮部

    明伦汇编官常典王寮部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大乘本生心地观经

    大乘本生心地观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Stepping Heavenward

    Stepping Heavenward

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 帝国兴衰史:楚汉风云

    帝国兴衰史:楚汉风云

    汉民族的童年,一个帝国的往事,传说中的皇帝,那些过去。死去的爱情和虞姬的眼泪,战争与最后的角斗,像每部传奇,英雄们都最终老去。便风云散尽于虚无,帝国兴衰于成败……
  • 顿悟

    顿悟

    人有时候很奇怪,我们急于成长,又哀叹失去的童年;以健康换取金钱,不久后又用金钱恢复健康;活着时认为死离自己很远,临死前又仿佛从未活够;明明对未来焦虑不已,却又无视眼下的幸福。人生在世,谁能不苦?唯有顿悟人生之苦,才能化苦为甜,活一世洒脱幸福。人生虽苦,但苦有苦的味道,悟开了,苦也是甜;生活虽平淡,但淡也有淡的风采,平淡也是幸福。带着精神的枷锁,注定走不出心灵的囚室,背着过于沉重的包袱,注定游不过命运的大江大河。既然如此,为何还要苦苦执着,为何不肯坐下顿悟,立地欢喜?
  • 活用庄子:安时处顺

    活用庄子:安时处顺

    本书是介绍庄子智慧的文化读本,作者基于国际视野,站在世界平台上,对庄子智慧进行阐释和解读。作者论述了庄子智慧在启发心灵方面的价值,指明了当今社会,人们如何运用庄子智慧去顺应自然、认识自我、透视人性,在自主自足中圆满人生。作者还讲述了许多西方人士吸纳庄子之言、善加应用并获益良多的实例,中国读者读来会自发产生对中华传统文化的由衷自豪感和深切共鸣。本书的出版有益于弘扬中国优秀的传统文化,为存在知识断层的中国人重拾经典提供便利。
  • 萝莉皇后很腹黑

    萝莉皇后很腹黑

    前有强势皇帝,后有温柔王爷。哼!先让你们爱上姐,姐再狠狠的复灭门仇!咦,为什么姐将剑刺入面前这位男人的身体时,心跳的那么疼,眼泪不停的滑落?莫非是这个机缘之下得到的“枭雄”眼角膜出问题了?本书腹黑无下限,看书请自备急救用品。
  • 吞天魂帝

    吞天魂帝

    “天地不仁,以万物为刍狗!”“诸神无道,视苍生如蝼蚁!”三千年前,一代妖孽叶开被圣庭围杀,身死道消,就连挚爱之人也为救他而死……三千年后,一个少年流着血泪从青铜棺椁中爬出!这一世,叶开誓要逆乱这苍天,杀上那圣庭,以心中怒火,手中长剑,焚天戮神!
  • Cast Upon the Breakers

    Cast Upon the Breakers

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宠物(中国好小说)

    宠物(中国好小说)

    本文主要写的是一个年轻的小伙子帮别人寻找宠物,不经意卷入一桩婚外情感恋之中。后来在客户的威胁下,最终退出了这个圈子。这段感情纠结复杂,结果最后大家都回到了各自的起点。本文嘲讽了在金钱的利诱下,有些人的价值观被扭曲了。
  • 一品妖妃千千岁

    一品妖妃千千岁

    某女挑了一个夫君心情很不错夜晚探问,“王爷,如果有人得罪了你,专门挖坑让你跳,你会原谅她么?”,倾城王爷斜睨着一脸小心翼翼的女子,斩钉截铁的说,“原谅她是佛祖的事情,本王负责送她去见佛祖。”。某女脖子一缩,泪流满面。“但如果那个人是你的话……”。“怎样?”。倾城王爷皮笑肉不笑:“我会挖更多更深的坑让你跳。”。“……”。于我来说,还有什么坑,能比陷入你编织的情网更大更深?我早就跳进去了,义无反顾,死而无怨。你有没有因为一个人而爱上一座城,留念一处风景?包括她为你挖的坑?O(∩_∩)O这是一场欲罢不能的逗比追逐游戏,一旦开始,休想喊停。
  • 屠夫小姐逆袭记

    屠夫小姐逆袭记

    【此书又名】:《屠夫》“人生有八苦,生,老,病,死,爱别离,怨憎,求不得,五阴炽盛;可苦无所苦,厄无所厄,有谁能来度吾苦厄·····厄非厄,求不得“[给几个词参考一下:武侠/言情/东方玄幻/有cp/有点虐/文风不属于温婉类别〕
  • 道路交通事故责任与处理

    道路交通事故责任与处理

    本书为《中华人民共和国重要法律知识宣讲》丛书之一。本书以《中华人民共和国道路交通安全法》《中华人民共和国侵权法》《中华人民共和国民法通则》为蓝本,结合相关司法解释进行了宣讲。