United States Senate Chamber,
Washington, July 10, 1873.
my dear Sir,—Few events have given me more pleasure than the vote on your motion.
I thank you for making the motion, and I thank you also for not yielding to
Mr. Gladstone's request to withdraw it. You were in the very position of
Buxton on his motion against Slavery.
He, too, insisted upon a division; and that vote led to Emancipation.
May you have equal success!
I anticipate much from this vote.
It will draw attention on the Continent, which the facts and figures of your speech will confirm.
I find in your speech grand compensation for the long postponement to which you have been constrained.
It marks an epoch in a great cause.
I know you will not rest.
But this speech alone, with the signal result, will make your Parliamentary life historic.
Surely, Mr. Gladstone acted under some imagined exigency of politics.
He cannot, in his soul, differ from you. Honoring him much, I regret that he has allowed himself to appear on the wrong side.
What fame so great as his, if he would devote the just influence of his lofty position to securing for nations the inappreciable benefits of a Tribunal for the settlement of their differences!
How absurd to call your motion Utopian, if by this word is meant that it is not practical!
There is no question so supremely practical; for it concerns not merely one nation, but every nation: and even its discussion promises to diminish the terrible chances of war. Its triumph would be the greatest reform of history.
And I doubt not that this day is near.
Accept my thanks and congratulations, and believe me, my dear sir,
Sincerely yours,