But As To That I
Confess Myself To Be Comparatively Careless; It Is Not The Concern
Which I Have Now At Heart.
For myself, I shall feel satisfied if
that manumission shall reach the million of whites by whom Virginia
is populated; or if not that million in its integrity, then that
other million by which its rich soil would soon be tenanted.
There
are now about four million of white men and women inhabiting the
slave States which I have described, and I think it will be
acknowledged that the Northern States will have done something with
their armies if they succeed in rescuing those four millions from
the stain and evil of slavery.
There is a third question which I have asked myself, and to which I
have undertaken to give some answer. When this war be over between
the Northern and Southern States, will there come upon us a
necessity of fighting with the Americans? If there do come such
necessity, arising out of our conduct to the States during the
period of their civil war, it will indeed be hard upon us, as a
nation, seeing the struggle that we as a nation have made to be just
in our dealings toward the States generally, whether they be North
or South. To be just in such a period, and under such
circumstances, is very difficult. In that contest between Sardinia
and Austria it was all but impossible to be just to the Italians
without being unjust to the Emperor of Austria. To have been
strictly just at the moment one should have begun by confessing the
injustice of so much that had gone before! But in this American
contest such justice, though difficult, was easier. Affairs of
trade rather than of treaties chiefly interfered; and these affairs,
by a total disregard of our own pecuniary interests, could be so
managed that justice might be done. This I think was effected. It
may be, of course, that I am prejudiced on the side of my own
nation; but striving to judge of the matter as best I may without
prejudice, I cannot see that we, as a nation, have in aught offended
against the strictest justice in our dealings with America during
this contest. But justice has not sufficed. I do not know that our
bitterest foes in the Northern States have accused us of acting
unjustly. It is not justice which they have looked for at our
hands, and looked for in vain - not justice, but generosity! We have
not, as they say, sympathized with them in their trouble. It seems
to me that such a complaint is unworthy of them as a nation, as a
people, or as individuals. In such a matter generosity is another
name for injustice, as it too often is in all matters. A generous
sympathy with the North would have been an ostensible and crushing
enmity to the South. We could not have sympathized with the North
without condemning the South, and telling to the world that the
South were our enemies.
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