书城外语美国历史(英文版)
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第90章 CONFLICT AND INDEPENDENCE(65)

The Confederacy also sold bonds,the first issue bringing into the treasury nearly all the specie available in the Southern banks.This specie by unhappy management was early sent abroad to pay for supplies,sapping the foundations of a sound currency system.Large amounts of bonds were sold overseas,commanding at first better terms than those of the North in the markets of London,Paris,and Amsterdam,many an English lord and statesman buying with enthusiasm and confidence to lament within a few years the proofs of his folly.The difficulties of bringing through the blockade any supplies purchased by foreign bond issues,however,nullified the effect of foreign credit and forced the Confederacy back upon the device of paper money.In all approximately one billion dollars streamed from the printing presses,to fall in value at an alarming rate,reaching in January,1863,the astounding figure of fifty dollars in paper money for one in gold.Every known device was used to prevent its depreciation,without result.To the issues of the Confederate Congress were added untold millions poured out by the states and by private banks.

Human and Material Resources.-When we measure strength for strength in those signs of power-men,money,and supplies-it is difficult to see how the South was able to embark on secession and war with such confidence in the out-come.In the Confederacy at the final reckoning there were eleven states in all,to be pitted against twenty-two;a population of nine millions,nearly one-half servile,to be pitted against twenty-two millions;a land without great industries to produce war supplies and without vast capital to furnish war finances,joined in battle with a nation already industrial and fortified by property worth eleven billion dollars.Even after the Confederate Congress authorized conion in 1862,Southern man power,measured in numbers,was wholly inadequate to uphold the independence which had been declared.How,therefore,could the Confederacy hope to sustain itself against such a combination of men,money,and materials as the North could marshal?

Southern Expectations.-The answer to this question is to be found in the ideas that prevailed among Southern leaders.First of all,they hoped,in vain,to carry the Confederacy up to the Ohio River;and,with the aid of Missouri,to gain possession of the Mississippi Valley,the granary of the nation.In the second place,they reckoned upon a large and continuous trade with Great Brit-ain-the exchange of cotton for war materials.They likewise expected to receive recognition and open aid from European powers that looked with satisfaction upon the breakup of the great American republic.In the third place,they be-lieved that their control over several staples so essential to Northern industry would enable them to bring on an industrial crisis in the manufacturing states."I firmly believe,"wrote Senator Hammond,of South Carolina,in 1860,"that the slave-holding South is now the controlling power of the world;that no other power would face us in hostility.Cotton,rice,tobacco,and naval stores com-mand the world;and we have the sense to know it and are sufficiently Teutonic to carry it out successfully.The North without us would be a motherless calf,bleating about,and die of mange and starvation."

There were other grounds for confidence.Having seized all of the federal military and naval supplies in the South,and having left the national government weak in armed power during their possession of the presidency,Southern leaders looked to a swift war,if it came at all,to put the finishing stroke to independence."The greasy mechanics of the North,"it was repeatedly said,"will not fight."As to disparity in numbers they drew historic parallels."Our fathers,a mere handful,overcame the enormous power of Great Britain,"a saying of ex-President Tyler,ran current to reassure the doubtful.Finally,and this point cannot be too strongly emphasized,the South expected to see a weakened and divided North.It knew that the abolitionists and the Southern sympathizers were ready to let the Confederate states go in peace;that Lincoln represented only a little more than one-third the voters of the country;and that the vote for Douglas,Bell,and Breckinridge meant a decided opposition to the Republicans and their policies.

Efforts at Compromise.-Republican leaders,on reviewing the same facts,were themselves uncertain as to the outcome of a civil war and made many ef-forts to avoid a crisis.Thurlow Weed,an Albany journalist and politician who had done much to carry New York for Lincoln,proposed a plan for extending the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific.Jefferson Davis,warning his fol-lowers that a war if it came would be terrible,was prepared to accept the offer;but Lincoln,remembering his campaign pledges,stood firm as a rock against it.His followers in Congress took the same position with regard to a similar settle-ment suggested by Senator Crittenden of Kentucky.

Though unwilling to surrender his solemn promises respecting slavery in the territories,Lincoln was prepared to give to Southern leaders a strong guaranteethat his administration would not interfere directly or indirectly with slavery in the states.Anxious to reassure the South on this point,the Republicans in Congress proposed to write into the Constitution a declaration that no amendment should ever be made authorizing the abolition of or interference with slavery in any state.The resolution,duly passed,was sent forth on March 4,1861,with the approval of Lincoln;it was actually ratified by three states before the storm of war destroyed it.By the irony of fate the thirteenth amendment was to abolish,not guarantee,slavery.