A collision with the seceded
States seems now to be inevitable. The news
up to the time of writing makes no mention of an actual conflict, but it was
looked for at any moment, both at Charleston and Washington. The South Carolinians were mustering in force
at their defences, and the determination had not merely been expressed, but
carried out in one case, not to allow any supplies to be sent to Fort Sumter. The attempt to supply it will doubtless be
resisted, even at the hazard of war, and the Administration has no recourse
left, without surrendering Major Anderson to the traitors, but to supply him. The case is the same with Fort Pickens. At one point or the other, therefore, a
collision can hardly be avoided. Possibly it has occurred by this time. A collision is civil war, and the war is the
act of the seceding States. The
Administration from the beginning has avowed its purpose to do nothing but hold
the Government property, neither acknowledging nor attempting to destroy the
assumed independence of the rebel States, till authorized by the Nation so to
do. This is the policy avowed in the inaugural of Mr. Lincoln, and it has been
acted on steadily. This is the policy of
prudence and peace, and the policy of good order, and of the supremacy of law. Mr. Lincoln could neither declare or do less
without assuming the right to allow a State to secede at will, and that right
clearly belongs only to the people who formed the Union. But the peace policy is to end in war. Why? Not
because it assails anybody. Not because
it coerces anybody. But because the
seceding States are determined to have war; because they believe a war will
drive to their support the border slave States, and unite them all in a great
Southern Confederacy. A policy of peace
is to them a policy of destruction. It
encourages the growth of a reactionary feeling. It takes out of the way all the pride and
resentment which could keep the people from feeling the weight of taxation, and
the distress of their isolated condition. It forces them to reason, and to look at the
consequences of their conduct. A war buries all these considerations in the
fury and glory of battle, and the parade and pomp of arms. War will come because the Montgomery
Government deems it the best way of bringing in the border States, and of
keeping down trouble at home. Hence the
refusal to allow the National Government to maintain its position till the
difficulty can be tried in the court of last resort, the Nation, and adjusted
peaceably. The truth is, and it has been
evident to all eyes for weeks, that the seceded States in claiming that we
should do nothing to change the existing state of affairs, but should leave
everything in statu quo till a full consideration had been given the whole
case, have been guilty of a systematic deception. They have demanded that the National
Government should stand still while they have used the opportunity not to
remain as they were, but to prepare for war with all their power. While they have insisted that we should do
nothing to disturb the status quo, they have borrowed money, levied forces,
prepared munitions, drilled troops, built batteries, and in every way possible
got ready for war. They have demanded that we should do nothing, because that
would be disturbing the existing state of things, while they have gone on and
done whatever they pleased. And now that
the administration desires to keep up the Government forts and forces to the
condition in which they were at the beginning, in other words, to really
maintain the status quo, they fly to arms and begin a war. The Philadelphia Press hits the truth
exactly in saying that the seceded States have held the Border States between
themselves and us to force us to be still, while they have been cutting out the
intestines and mutilating the limbs of the Government. The moment we object to such surgery, they
raise in arms and begin a war. This is
the whole case. If the war comes let it
fall on the heads of those who made it, whose selfish ambition and headlong
folly would be content with nothing else.
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