on the eve of election, and becomes a chronic disease
in the two houses of Congress, has so accustomed us
to dissociate words and things, and to look upon strong
language as an evidence of weak purpose, that we attach
no meaning whatever to declamation. Our Southern
brethren have been especially given to these orgies
of loquacity, and have so often solemnly assured us
of their own courage, and of the warlike propensities,
power, wealth, and general superiority of that part
of the universe which is so happy as to be represented
by them, that, whatever other useful impression they
have made, they insure our never forgetting the proverb
about the woman who talks of her virtue. South
Carolina, in particular, if she has hitherto failed
in the application of her enterprise to manufacturing
purposes of a more practical kind, has always been
able to match every yard of printed cotton from the
North with a yard of printed fustian, the product
of her own domestic industry. We have thought
no harm of this, so long as no Act of Congress required
the reading of the “Congressional Globe.”
We submitted to the general dispensation of long-windedness
and short-meaningness as to any other providential
visitation, endeavoring only to hold fast our faith
in the divine government of the world in the midst
of so much that was past understanding. But we
lost sight of the metaphysical truth, that, though
men may fail to convince others by a never so incessant
repetition of sonorous nonsense, they nevertheless
gradually persuade themselves, and impregnate their
own minds and characters with a belief in fallacies
that have been uncontradicted only because not worth
contradiction. Thus our Southern politicians,
by dint of continued reiteration, have persuaded themselves
to accept their own flimsy assumptions for valid statistics,
and at last actually believe themselves to be the
enlightened gentlemen, and the people of the Free
States the peddlers and sneaks they have so long been
in the habit of fancying. They have argued themselves
into a kind of vague faith that the wealth and power
of the Republic are south of Mason and Dixon’s
line; and the Northern people have been slow in arriving
at the conclusion that treasonable talk would lead
to treasonable action, because they could not conceive
that anybody should be so foolish as to think of rearing
an independent frame of government on so visionary
a basis. Moreover, the so often recurring necessity,
incident to our system, of obtaining a favorable verdict
from the people, has fostered in our public men the
talents and habits of jury-lawyers at the expense
of statesmanlike qualities; and the people have been
so long wonted to look upon the utterances of popular
leaders as intended for immediate effect and having
no reference to principles, that there is scarcely
a prominent man in the country so independent in position
and so clear of any suspicion of personal or party
motives, that they can put entire faith in what he
says, and accept him either as the leader or the exponent
of their thoughts and wishes. They have hardly
been able to judge with certainty from the debates
in Congress whether secession were a real danger,
or only one of those political feints of which they
have had such frequent experience.