, Chesterton historia USA 

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Slave or Free!" But as regards Slavery their decision was emphatic and apparently irreversible.
The Southerners were at once angry and full of anxiety. It seemed that they had been trapped, that victories
won largely by Southern valour were to be used to disturb still more the balance already heavily inclining to
the rival section. In South Carolina, full of the tradition of Nullification, men already talked freely of
Secession. The South, as a whole, was not yet prepared for so violent a step, but there was a feeling in the air
that the type of civilization established in the Slave States might soon have to fight for its life.
On the top of all this vague unrest and incipient division came a Presidential election, the most strangely
unreal in the whole history of the United States. The issue about which alone all men, North and South, were
thinking was carefully excluded from the platforms and speeches of either party. Everyone of either side
professed unbounded devotion to the Union, no one dared to permit himself the faintest allusion to the hot and
human passions which were patently tearing it in two. The Whigs, divided on the late war, divided on Slavery,
divided on almost every issue by which the minds of men were troubled, yet resolved to repeat the tactics
which had succeeded in 1840. And the amazing thing is that they did in fact repeat them and with complete
success. They persuaded Zachary Taylor, the victor of Monterey, to come forward as their candidate. Taylor
had shown himself an excellent commander, but what his political opinions might be no-one knew, for it
transpired that he had never in his life even recorded a vote. The Whigs, however, managed to extract from
him the statement that if he had voted at the election of 1844--as, in fact, he had not--it would have been for
Clay rather than for Polk; and this admission they proceeded, rather comically, to trumpet to the world as a
sufficient guarantee from "a consistent and truth-speaking man" of the candidate's lifelong devotion to "Whig"
principles. Nothing further than the above remark and the frank acknowledgment that he was a slave-owner
could be extracted from Taylor in the way of programme or profession of faith. But the Convention adopted
him with acclamation. Naturally such a selection did not please the little group of Anti-War Whigs--a group
which was practically identical with the extreme Anti-Slavery wing of the party--and Lowell, in what is
perhaps the most stinging of all his satires, turned Taylor's platform or absence of platform to ridicule in lines
known to thousands of Englishmen who know nothing of their occasion:--
"Ez fer my princerples, I glory In hevin' nothin' of the sort. I ain't a Whig, I ain't a Tory, I'm jest a--Candidate
in short."
"Monterey," however, proved an even more successful election cry than "Tippercanoe." The Democrats tried
to play the same game by putting forward General Cass, who had also fought with some distinction in the
Mexican War and had the advantage--if it were an advantage--of having really proved himself a stirring
Democratic partisan as well. But Taylor was the popular favourite, and the Whigs by the aid of his name
CHAPTER VII 67
carried the election.
He turned out no bad choice. For the brief period during which he held the Presidential office he showed
considerable firmness and a sound sense of justice, and seems to have been sincerely determined to hold
himself strictly impartial as between the two sections into which the Union was becoming every day more
sharply divided. Those who expected, on the strength of his blunt avowal of slave-owning, that he would
show himself eager to protect and extend Slavery were quite at fault. He declared with the common sense of a
soldier that California must come into the Union, as she wished to come in, as a Free State, and that it would
be absurd as well as monstrous to try and compel her citizens to be slave-owners against their will. But he
does not appear to have had any comprehensive plan of pacification to offer for the quieting of the distracted
Union, and, before he could fully develop his policy, whatever it may have been, he died and bequeathed his
power to Millard Filmore, the Vice-President, a typical "good party man" without originality or initiative.
The sectional debate had by this time become far more heated and dangerous than had been the debates which
the Missouri Compromise had settled thirty years before. The author of the Missouri Compromise still lived,
and, as the peril of the Union became desperate, it came to be said more and more, even by political
opponents, that he and he alone could save the Republic. Henry Clay, since his defeat in 1844, had practically
retired from the active practice of politics. He was an old man. His fine physique had begun to give way, as is
often the case with such men, under the strain of a long life that had been at once laborious and self-indulgent.
But he heard in his half-retirement the voice of the nation calling for him, and he answered. His patriotism had
always been great, great also his vanity. It must have been strangely inspiring to him, at the end of a career
which, for all its successes, was on the whole a failure--for the great stake for which he played was always
snatched from him--to live over again the great triumph of his youth, and once more to bequeath peace, as by
his last testament, to a distracted nation. God allowed him that not ignoble illusion, and mercifully sent him to
his rest before he could know that he had failed.
The death of Taylor helped Clay's plans; for the soldier-President had discovered a strong vein of obstinacy.
He had his own views on the question, and was by no means disposed to allow any Parliamentary leader to
over-ride them. Filmore was quite content to be an instrument in the hands of a stronger man, and, after his
succession, Clay had the advantage of the full support of the Executive in framing the lines of the last of his
great compromises.
In the rough, those lines were as follows: California was to be admitted at once, and on her own terms, as a
Free State, Arizona and New Mexico were to be open to Slavery if they should desire its introduction; their
Territorial Governments, when formed, were to decide the question. This adjustment of territory was to be [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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