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

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

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February,
1862, No. II., by Various This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere
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Title: Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. Devoted To
Literature And National Policy
Author: Various
Release Date: October 5, 2004 [EBook #13634]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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CONTINENTAL MONTHLY, VOL. I. ***

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THE
CONTINENTAL MONTHLY:
DEVOTED TO
LITERATURE AND NATIONAL POLICY.
* * * * *

VOL. I.--FEBRUARY, 1862.--NO. II.
* * * * *
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, reëstablish 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.
We must not be blind to a great opportunity which may be lost, of

forever quelling a foul nuisance which would, if neglected _now_, live
forever. Do we not see, feel, and understand what sort of white men are
developed by slavery, and do we intend to keep up such a race among
us? Do we want all this work to do over again every ten or five years or
all the time? For a quarter of a century, slavery and nothing else has
kept us in a growing fever, and now that it has reached a crisis the
question is whether we shall calm down the patient with cool
rose-water. In the crisis comes a physician who knows the constitution
of his patient, and proposes searching remedies and a thorough
cure,--and, lo! the old nurse cries out that he is interfering and acting
unwisely, though he is quite as willing to adopt her cooling present
solace as she.
If we had walked over the war-course last spring without opposition,--if
we had conquered the South, would we have put an end to this trouble?
Does any one believe that we would? This is not now a question of the
right to hold slaves, or the wrong of so doing. All of that old abolition
jargon went out and died with the present aspect of the war. So far as
nine-tenths of the North ever cared, or do now care, slaves might have
hoed away down in Dixie, until supplanted, as they have been in the
North, by the irrepressible advance of manufactures and small farms, or
by
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