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d States. Think not that there are not some reasons for this policy.--The United States are powerful at sea, and can attack Canada. The Confederate States are shut out from the world, and cannot reach Great Britain. As might have been expected, the same man who is a truculent bully to a helpless State is the most abject of cowards to such States as can help themselves. We say nothing of the United States. The whole world has seen the papers published by the Yankee Congress, in which Seward figures as the dictator, and Russell as the cringing and subservient tool. Look at the continent of Europe. Russell pretends to intercede for the Poles, and he is told at once by Alexander to shut his month and attend to his own business. Russia wants none of his interference. He induces the Danes — whom England has cruelly injured on more than one occasion — to raise their crest against Austria and Prussia. When he remonstrates and "represents," these two Powers treat her with the most