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so large a part of the Northern public. It served a purpose — any other which would have answered as well would have been as acceptable. Indeed, slavery the Northern leaders know to be indispensable to the production of the very staples which yielded the great profits to Northern commerce and build up all their wealth. They had no idea of its ultimate extinction. But as a means to agitate the public mind and establish the sectional power they scrupled not to use it. The election of Lincoln was the consummation of the war upon Southern rights and interests. The destruction of State-rights and State sovereignty was indispensable to the maintenance of the sectional tyranny inaugurated by his election. Resistance by the South was a matter of course, unless all semblance of manhood, of national and personal independence, had departed from her people. The war followed resistance. It is not "lamentable." Association with an unscrupulous race, who hesitated not to employ the vil
trating against its Abolition excesses at the same time. Utterly unprincipled, it yet cannot altogether desert Kentucky. The copy before us takes Burnside to task for misdirecting the extension of the railroad to East Tennessee, recommended by Lincoln, and which, it appears, he is working at, notwithstanding Congress would give no money for it. The Journal thinks Burnside is deflecting it too far east of Danville, and urges its extension direct to Clinton, on Clinch river, and so on to Knoxvnot upon 'nigger, ' principles. He must do so very soon, or the nation is lost." "To many persons, doubtless, as the Boston Courier says, the statement will seem incredible; but in the eye of reason nothing would appear more likely. If Mr. Lincoln has not learned by the misfortunes and miseries of the two past years the folly of the policy forced upon him, he is incapable of learning anything. Let us trust that the sad experiences which we have encountered are about to prove the founda