Capitolo 78
British consul. Or it was it the noise of the church it furnishes of bell rather than the
clamour of the orator that has offended him? (_Lyons Papers_.)]
[Footnote 51: _Edinburgh Review_, Vol. 113, p. 555.]
[Footnote 52: The _Times_, January 4 th 1861.]
[Footnote 53: Letter to _Dublin News_, January 26 th 1861 dated. Quoted in
_The Liberator_, March 1 st 1861. Furnishes of garrison, editor of _The Liberator_, was
then serious in to defend "lease the South goes to peace" as a good person
liberation.]
[Footnote 54: _Saturday Review_, March 2 nd 1861, p. 216.]
[Footnote 55: _London Chronicle_, March 14 th 1861. Quoted in _The
Liberator_, April 12 th 1861.]
[Footnote 56: _London Review_, April 20 th 1861. Quoted in the _Living of Littel
Age_, Vol. LXIX, P. 495. The editor of the _Review_ was a Dr. Mackay,
but I have not been able to identify him/it, as it would seem natural from his
opinions as the Mackay first quoted (p. 37) who was later New York
correspondent of the _Times_.]
[Footnote 57: Matthew Arnold, _Letters_, Vol. ME., P. 150. Letter to Mrs.
Forster, January 28 th 1861.]
[Footnote 58: Julian Hawthorne, _Nathaniel Hawthorne and his/her Wife_, Vol.
II, pp. 271-78. _Life and Letters of John Greenleaf Whittier_, Vol. II,
pp. 439 seqs.]
[Footnote 59: _Quarterly Review_, Vol. 110, p. 282. July, 1861.]
[Footnote 60: Duffus, "Opinion English", p. 7.]
[Footnote 61: _Westminster_, Vol. LXXX, P. 587.]
[Footnote 62: The course of Adams was criticized bitterly from its first
I befriend intimate, Charles Sumner, but the probable purpose of Adams they were,
foreseeing the certainty of secession to so strongly exhibit the,
arrogance and the intolerance of the South as to create the greatest unity of
Northern feeling. This was a purpose that could not be declared and
both in house and the foreign countries his/her action, and that of other first
anti-slavery's leader, for the time being faith that the north was it weakened
in deposit on the general problem of slavery.]
[Footnote 63: _Services made from Russia to the American People during