The Great Conspiracy, Volume 5 by John Alexander Logan
page 55 of 118 (46%)
page 55 of 118 (46%)
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programme of the Conspirators was to agitate the Slavery question in all
ways possible, so as to increase, extend and solidify the influence and strength of the Slave power; strain the bonds uniting them with the Free States; and weaken the Free States by dividing them upon the question. At the same time the Free-Trade question was to be pressed forward to a triumphal issue, so that the South might be enriched and strengthened, and the North impoverished and weakened, by the result. That was their programme, in the rough, and it was relentlessly adhered to. Free-Trade and Slavery by turns, if not together, from that time onward, were ever at the front, agitating our People both North and South, and not only consolidating the Southern States on those lines, as the Conspirators designed, but also serving ultimately to consolidate, to some extent--in a manner quite unlooked for by the Conspirators --Northern sentiment, on the opposite lines of Protection and Freedom. The Compromise Tariff Act of 1833--which Clay was weak enough to concede, and even stout old Jackson to permit to become law without his signature--gave to the Conspirators great joy for years afterward, as they witnessed the distress and disaster brought by it to Northern homes and incomes--not distress and disaster alone, but absolute and apparently irreparable ruin. The reaction occasioned by this widespread ruin having brought the Whigs into power, led to the enactment of the Protective-Tariff of 1842 and --to the chagrin of the Conspirators--industrial prosperity and plenty to the Free North again ensued. Even as Cain hated his brother Abel because his sacrifices were acceptable in the sight of God, while his own were not, so the Southern |
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