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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 4, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
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The emancipation proclamation Abroad.
The London Times and other European journals denounce in advance the emancipation policy which it was believed Abraham Lincoln would proclaim.
This great card for enlisting the sympathies of Europe in behalf of the Washington despotism has already failed.
Europeans are not to be humbugged by any such shallow and selfish simulation of humanity.
Even the Abolitionists of the Exeter Hall stamp cannot fail to detect its palpable hypocrisy.
For why was and enlightened men, and, from the experience of India and of San Francisco, the English and French must recoil with horror from a renewal of such scenes on the American continent.
Their common sense will at once detect the impracticability of Lincoln's scheme, and their humanity will array them against it, even if it were possible to carry it out. They are well aware, moreover, that universal emancipation, if it could be effected, would be a death blow to their own interests.
The prospect o
Wise.
Conservative, and benignant Adis President Lincoln--the War to be closed in 90 days.
The New York Herold, of the 30th, has a characteristic article, which may be so into sarcasm that we are almost in to think that there is a substraticious programme of our abolition destructive we turn to the wise, conservative, and benignant aims and purposes of President Lincoln. the object of his late proclamation is not to destroy, but to save the South; not to abolish Southern favor by theevolted rates to preserve their domestic institutions by a return to the ark of the Union.
We feel entirely that President Lincoln, from a vigorous prosecution of the war, anticipates within the ten ninety days such decisive work with the carriesfensive operations against the enemy East and West.
It is so clearly the policy, and as we believe, the purpose of President Lincoln, that we cannot doubt his decision.-- We rely upon him to bring this war substantially to on end before the 1st of