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قراءة كتاب Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy

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‏اللغة: English
Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863
Devoted to Literature and National Policy

Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Transcriber's note

A Table of Contents has been created for the HTML version. Printer errors have been changed, and they are indicated with a mouse-hover and listed at the end of this book. All other inconsistencies are as in the original.


THE

CONTINENTAL MONTHLY:

DEVOTED TO

LITERATURE AND NATIONAL POLICY.


Vol. IV.—SEPTEMBER, 1863.—No. III.


SOUTHERN HATE OF NEW ENGLAND
WAITING FOR NEWS!
EARLY HISTORY OF THE PRINTING AND NEWSPAPER PRESS IN BOSTON AND NEW
RECONNOISSANCE NEAR FORT MORGAN
THE CRUEL CARPENTER
DIARY OF FRANCES KRASINSKA
THE ISLE OF SPRINGS
THE GRAVE
REASON, RHYME, AND RHYTHM
REMEMBRANCE
THE GREAT RIOT
THE DESERTED HOUSE
SPRING MOUNTAIN
ENDURANCE
JAPANESE FOREIGN RELATIONS
WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
JEFFERSON DAVIS AND REPUDIATION
EDITOR'S TABLE
AMOR PATRIÆ VINCIT
THE GOOD GODDESS OF POVERTY
CONTENTS.—No. XXII


SOUTHERN HATE OF NEW ENGLAND.

In these days of strange and startling events, of rapid and fundamental changes, of curious and unexpected developments; these days, tremulous with the vibrations of the political atmosphere, and quaking with the fierce earthquake of national war; these days, that are filling up a web of history with more fearful rapidity, more complete, important, and decisive results than any previous epoch in the world's annals,—a history which, if ever truly and worthily penned, will demand a deeper search into moral causes and effects, a closer scrutiny of the philosophy of mind, and a more careful balancing of political judgments, than any drama ever before played on the great world's stage,—in such days as these, I say, it is curious and profitable to subject each new moral phase that presents itself to a rigid analysis, and trace every effect, moral, political, governmental, or popular, to the cause or causes that may, after a fair showing, appear to have produced it. A fair and dispassionate application of true and just principles is as essential to a right political judgment as to a correct moral decision, and he who allows himself to be led by passion, selfishness, prejudice, or a blind adoration of party, instead of the calm convictions of educated reason and conscience, thereby dishonors himself, and abdicates the right he possesses of acting for the best interests of himself and all. Especially is this true under a democratic form of government—where every citizen is a legislator, virtually,—where opinion leads to political action, and is consequently responsible for the course that action may take, and where each one helps to swell the numbers of those great parties that in their plannings and counterplannings make or mar the general good fortune. If this is true of individual citizens, how much more is it true of those mighty engines of the press and of party, that sweep such grand circles of influence, and install, in grandeur or in gloom, such important national conditions. That these are fruitful of evil as well as of good, every great national struggle, every crisis in the affairs of nations and of humanity, bears witness. Every national contest has seen the rise and the fall of an anti-war party, and felt the influence of a press wielded in the interest of that party. These have not, necessarily, always been in the wrong. The contrary has been often true, though their fall, and the opprobrium cast upon them have been none the less sure. It is only when these have arisen during the progress of a war involving great moral and humanitarian principles in its successful prosecution, that the whole force of such an opposing influence is felt, the whole evil apparent. No cause however just, no war however holy, no trust however high and honorable, but has met the violence of this evil opposition, and the danger of

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