It Is Not Long Since The "Habeas
Corpus" Was Suspended In Parts Of Ireland, And Absurd Arrests Were
Made Almost Daily When That Suspension First Took Effect.
It was
grievous that there should be necessity for such a step; and it is
very grievous now that such necessity should be felt in the
Northern States.
But I do not think that it becomes Englishmen to
bear hardly upon Americans generally for what has been done in that
matter. Mr. Seward, in an official letter to the British Minister
at Washington - which letter, through official dishonesty, found its
way to the press - claimed for the President the right of suspending
the "habeas corpus" in the States whenever it might seem good to
him to do so. If this be in accordance with the law of the land,
which I think must be doubted, the law of the land is not favorable
to freedom. For myself, I conceive that Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Seward
have been wrong in their law, and that no such right is given to
the President by the Constitution of the United States. This I
will attempt to prove in some subsequent chapter. But I think it
must be felt by all who have given any thought to the Constitution
of the States, that let what may be the letter of the law, the
Presidents of the United States have had no such power. It is
because the States have been no longer united, that Mr. Lincoln has
had the power, whether it be given to him by the law or no.
And then as to the debt; it seems to me very singular that we in
England should suppose that a great commercial people would be
ruined by a national debt. As regards ourselves, I have always
looked on our national debt as the ballast in our ship. We have a
great deal of ballast, but then the ship is very big. The States
also are taking in ballast at a rather rapid rate; and we too took
it in quickly when we were about it. But I cannot understand why
their ship should not carry, without shipwreck, that which our ship
has carried without damage, and, as I believe, with positive
advantage to its sailing. The ballast, if carried honestly, will
not, I think, bring the vessel to grief. The fear is lest the
ballast should be thrown overboard.
So much I have said wishing to plead the cause of the Northern
States before the bar of English opinion, and thinking that there
is ground for a plea in their favor. But yet I cannot say that
their bitterness against Englishmen has been justified, or that
their tone toward England has been dignified. Their complaint is
that they have received no sympathy from England; but it seems to
me that a great nation should not require an expression of sympathy
during its struggle. Sympathy is for the weak rather than for the
strong. When I hear two powerful men contending together in
argument, I do not sympathize with him who has the best of it; but
I watch the precision of his logic and acknowledge the effects of
his rhetoric.
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