WmT1Ncs oF SAM HousToN, 1860
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now against the Northern sectional party, because its strength betokens success. Defeat and overthrow it, and the defeat and overthrow of Southern sectionalism is easy. I come not here to speak in behalf of a united South against Lincoln. I appeal to the nation. I ask not the defeat of section- alism by sectionalism, but by nationality. These men who .talk of a united South, know well that it begets a united North. Talk of frightening the North into measures by threats of dis- solving the Union! It is child's play and folly. It is all the Black Republican leaders want. American blood, North or South, has not yet become so ignoble as to be chilled by threats. Strife begets strife, threat begets threat, and taunt begets taunt, and these disunionists know it. American blood brooks no such re- straints as these men would put upon it. I would blush with shame for America, if I could believe that one vast portion of my countrymen had sunk so low that childish threats would intim- idate them. Go to the North, and behold the elements of a revolu- tion which its great cities afford. Its thousands of wild and reckless young men, its floating population, ready to enter into any scheme of adventure, are fit material for demagogues to work upon. To such as these, to the great hive of working population, the wily orator comes to speak in overdrawn language of the threats and the words of derision and contempt of Southern men. The angry passions are roused.into fury, and regardless of conse- quences they cling to their sectional leaders. As well might the Abolitionist expect the South to abandon slavery, through fear that the North would go out of the Union and leave it to itself. No, these are not the arguments to use. I would appeal rather to the great soul of the nation than to the passions of a section. I would say to Northern as well as Southern men, "Here is a party inimical to the rights of the whole country, such a party as Washington warned us against. Let us put it down;" and this is the only way it can be put down. The error has been that the South has met sectionalism with sectionalism. We want a Union basis, one broad enough to com- prehend the good and true friends of the Constitution at the North. To hear Southern disunionists talk, you would think that the majority of the Northern people were in this Black Repub- lican party; but it is not so. They are in a minority, and it but needs a patriotic movement like that supported by the conserva- tives of Texas, to unite the divided opposition to that party there and overthrow it. Why in New York, Pennsylvania, and New --
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