Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II..

Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II..

DEVOTED TO

Literature and national policy.

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Vol.  I.—­February, 1862.—­No.  II.

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Our war and our want.

Can this great republic of our forefathers exist with slavery in it?

Whether we like or dislike the question, it must be answered.  As the war stands, we have gone too far to retreat.  It clamors for a brave and manly solution.  Let us see if we can, laying aside all prejudices, all dislikes whatever, discover an honest course, simply with a view to preserve the Union and insure its future prosperity.  Let us avoid all foregone conclusions, all extraneous issues, adhering strictly to the one great need of the hour—­how to conquer the foe, reestablish the Union, and do this in a manner most consonant with our future national prosperity.

It is manifest enough that in a continent destined at no distant day to contain its hundred millions, the question whether these shall form one great nation or a collection of smaller states is one of fearful importance.  He who belongs to a great nation is thereby great of himself.  He has the right to be proud, and will work out his life more proudly and vigorously and freely than the dweller in a corner-country.  Do those men ever reflect, who talk so glibly of this government as too large, and as one which must inevitably be sundered, to what a degradation they calmly look forward!  No; Union,—­come what may,—­now and ever.  Greatness is to every brave man a necessity.  Out on the craven and base-hearted who aspire to being less than the co-rulers of a continent.  See how vile and mean are those men who in the South have lost all national pride in a small-minded provincial attachment to a State, who love their local county better still, and concentrate their real political interests in the feudal government of a plantation.  Shall we be as such,—­we, the men who hold the destinies of a hemisphere within our grasp?  Never,—­God help us,—­never!

On the basis of free labor we are pressing onward over the mighty West.  Two great questions now require grappling with.  The one is, whether slavery shall henceforth be tolerated; the other, whether we shall strengthen this great government of the Union so as to preserve it in future from the criminal intrigues of would-be seceding, ambitious men of no principle.  Now is the time to decide.

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Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.