This was the appearance of the British Member of Parliament, Lindsay, in the role of self-constituted Southern emissary to Napoleon. Lindsay, as one of the principal ship-owners in England, had long been an earnest advocate of more free commercial intercourse between nations, supporting in general the principles of Cobden and Bright, and being a warm personal friend of the latter, though disagreeing with him on the American Civil War. He had been in some sense a minor expert consulted by both French and British Governments in the preparation of the commercial treaty of 1860, so that when on April 9 he presented himself to Cowley asking that an audience with the Emperor be procured for him to talk over some needed alterations in the Navigation Laws, the request seemed reasonable, and the interview was arranged for April 11. On the twelfth Lindsay reported to Cowley that the burden of Napoleon’s conversation, much to his surprise, was on American affairs[611].
The Emperor, said Lindsay, expressed the conviction that re-union between North and South was an impossibility, and declared that he was ready to recognize the South “if Great Britain would set him the example.” More than once he had expressed these ideas to England, but “they had not been attended to” and he should not try again. He continued:
“... that France ought not to interfere in the internal affairs of the United States, but that the United States ought equally to abstain from all interference in the internal concerns of France; and that His Majesty considered that the hindrance placed by the Northern States upon the exportation of cotton from the South was not justifiable, and was tantamount to interference with the legal commerce of France.”
He also “denied the efficiency of the blockade so established. He had made observations in this sense to Her Majesty’s Government, but they had not been replied to.” Then “His Majesty asked what were the opinions of Her Majesty’s Govt.; adding that if Her Majesty’s Govt. agreed with him as to the inefficiency of the blockade, he was ready to send ships of war to co-operate with others of Her Majesty to keep the Southern ports open.” Finally Napoleon requested Lindsay to see Cowley and find out what he thought of these ideas.
Cowley told Lindsay he did not know of any “offer” whatever having been made by France to England, that his (Cowley’s) opinion was “that it might be true that the North and the South would never re-unite, but that it was not yet proved; that the efficiency of the blockade was a legal and international question, and that upon the whole it had been considered by Her Majesty’s Govt. as efficient, though doubtless many ships had been enabled to run it”; and “that at all events there could not be a more inopportune moment for mooting the question both of the recognition of the South and of the efficiency of the blockade. The time was gone by when such measures could, if ever, have been taken—for every mail brought news of expeditions from the North acting with success upon the South; and every day added to the efficiency of the blockade”; and “that I did not think therefore that Her Majesty’s Govt. would consent to send a squadron to act as the Emperor had indicated, but that I could only give a personal opinion, which might be corrected if I was in error by Mr. Lindsay himself seeing Lord Russell.”