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The Daily Dispatch: April 20, 1863., [Electronic resource], A British opinion of the Confederate President — a contrast. (search)
and a gentleman, a man of moderate views and sober judgment — as as any man could be to the brawling demagogues and rough back woodsmen, who are the hope of the Northern States. Abraham Lincoln would hardly find in England a constituency to send him to Parliament. Seward would rank far below the Brights and O'Connells, would hardly be listened to by the House, and would obtain but a few brief lines from the reporters; and not one of his colleagues would ever be heard of at all, save as Mr. Cox and Mr. Peter Taylor are heard of — to be treated with universal ridicule and contempt. The leaders of the Southern Confederacy are men who would rank high in any country; and Mr. Jefferson Davis, if he had been born a British subject might fairly have aspired to the highest place that a subject can hold. Well might such men as those, and such a nation as that which they worthily represent, revolt from their degrading connection with his vulgar and demoralized Democracy of the North,