Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for England or search for England in all documents.

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stand the argument of those who think that it is particularly to be desired in the interest of the negro race that the American Union should be reconstructed. But I must confess, for reasons that I need not now explain, that I do not think that England has had any interest in the disruption of that Union; my own private opinion is that it was rather the interest of England that the Union should continue. I know that it is not an opinion generally shared; but at any rate, gentlemen, whatever vh Minister will be forwarded to Count Mercier, the French Minister at Washington, by the same steamer which will bring the English Minister back to this country. We are also given to understand that our Government will soon be informed that England and France have decided upon the recognition of the Southern Confederacy, if the joint offers of mediation and armistice to be proposed to Mr. Seward are not accepted. At any rate this Government will be duty notified of the intentions of Engla
to bring the enemy to a fight and to beat him. That General Rosecrans, who succeeds Gen. Buell, in such a man, no one need be told. His victory at Corinth proved to the popular apprehension what was known in the army before, that he possesses these qualities which conduce to success in the field. The question of recognition at Washington. A Washington telegram asserts that the declaration of Mr. Gladstone that the Confederates are a nation, does not produce the belief there that England is about to recognize them. But even should she recognize them, the writer says: It is not believed that it would, even if France joined England in making it, seriously affect our power to crush the rebellion, if the purpose to do so be the stern resolve of our civil and military leaders. Recognition by England will not itself add a feather's weight to the material and moral aid and comfort which the rebels are to-day receiving from Great Britain. It will only be a rechristening of