The Great Conspiracy, Volume 4 by John Alexander Logan
page 19 of 106 (17%)
page 19 of 106 (17%)
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an American regiment in the Mexican War.]
CHAPTER XV. FREEDOM'S EARLY DAWN. On the day following Baker's great reply to Breckinridge, another notable speech was made, in the House of Representatives--notable, especially, in that it foreshadowed Emancipation, and, coming so soon after Bull Run, seemed to accentuate a new departure in political thought as an outgrowth of that Military reverse. It was upon the Confiscation Act, and it was Thaddeus Stevens who made it. Said he: "If we are justified in taking property from the Enemy in War, when you have rescued an oppressed People from the oppression of that Enemy, by what principle of the Law of Nations, by what principle of philanthropy, can you return them to the bondage from which you have delivered them, and again rivet the chains you have once broken? It is a disgrace to the Party which advocates it. It is against the principle of the Law of Nations. It is against every principle of philanthropy. I for one, shall never shrink from saying when these Slaves are once conquered by us, 'Go and be Free.' God forbid that I should ever agree that they should be returned again to their masters! I do not say that this War is made for that purpose. Ask those who made the War, what is its object. Do not ask us. * * * Our object is to subdue the Rebels. "But," continued he, "it is said that if we hold out this thing, they |
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