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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abe Lincoln or search for Abe Lincoln in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], War matters. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch .] (search)
The Lincoln blockade.
There is no doubt that the present blockade has its inconveniences, and, in some respects, serious disadvantages.
We are by means disposed to close our eyes to them, nor to underrate them.
It is no consolation that foreign nations, by permitting this obstruction to a commerce in which so many millions of the Old World are interested, are inflicting an injury and loss upon their own subjects greater than that which we ourselves suffer.
We all know and feel that if the blockade were opened, the war might last fifty years without exhausting the resources or endangering any vital part of the Southern Confederacy.
But, conceding the value of open ports in some most important respects to the Southern cause, there are advantages flowing from the present state of things which are equally undeniable, and which must prove of more value in the end than any one could gain by immediate and unobstructed commerce with Europe.
The South has been reduced to a state
The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], Mysterious disappearance. (search)
Federals on the Eastern shore.
The designs of Lincoln become developed more and more as his victim is more securely bound in his grasp, and the hope of escape becomes less.
By an edict, every boat is to be destroyed capable of being used by refugees to cross the bay?
This is the prelude; then that people, vainly trusting to the proclamation of the notorious Dix for protection and safety, are required to go through the mummery of an election of men to mis- represent them in the Wheeling
Yet the military rule of the despotism, in the face of most solemn promises, decrees that an unlawful election shall be held; and gentlemen are to be turned out of office, and degraded tools of a loathsome tyranny be placed in their stead to do Lincoln's bidding.
The people under military threat, are forced to submit to this high-handed outrage.
It has been supposed among civilized nations that a people in the military possession of the enemy had at least some rights; but it seems to be rese