Lord Acton (1834-1902) English Catholic politician, historian and writer. |
Bologna
November 4, 1866
November 4, 1866
Sir,
The very kind
letter which Mrs. Lee wrote to my wife last winter encouraged me to hope that
you will forgive my presuming to address you, and that you will not resent as an
intrusion a letter from an earnest and passionate lover of the cause whose glory
and whose strength you were.
I have been
requested to furnish private counsel in American affairs for the guidance of the
editors of a weekly Review which is to begin at the New Year, and which will be
conducted by men who are followers of Mr. Gladstone. You are aware, no doubt,
that Mr. Gladstone was in the minority of Lord Palmerston's cabinet who wished
to accept the French Emperor's proposal to mediate in the American war.
The reason of the confidence shown in my advice is simply the fact that I formerly traveled in America, and that I afterwards followed the progress of the four years' contest as closely and as keenly as it was possible to do with the partial and unreliable information that reached us. In the momentous questions which have arisen since you sheathed the sword, I have endeavoured to conform my judgment to your own as well as I could ascertain it from the report of your evidence, from the few English travelers who enjoyed the privilege of speaking with you, and especially from General Beauregard, who spoke, as I understood, your sentiments as well as his own. My travels in America never led me south of Maryland, and the only friends to whom I can look for instruction, are Northerners, mostly of Webster's school.
In my emergency, urged by the importance of the questions at issue in the United States, and by the peril of misguided public opinion between our two countries, I therefore seek to appeal to southern authorities, and venture at once to proceed to Headquarters.
If, Sir, you will consent to entertain my request, and will inform me of the light in which you would wish the current politics of America to be understood, I can pledge myself that the new Review shall follow the course which you prescribe and that any communication with which you may honor me shall be kept in strictest confidence, and highly treasured by me. Even should you dismiss my request as unwarranted, I trust you will remember it only as an attempt to break through the barrier of false reports and false sympathies which encloses the views of my countrymen.
It cannot have escaped you that much of the good will felt in England towards the South, so far as it was not simply the tribute of astonishment and admiration won by your campaigns, was neither unselfish nor sincere. It sprang partly from an exultant belief in the hope that America would be weakened by the separation, and from terror at the remote prospect of Farragut appearing in the channel and Sherman landing in Ireland.
I am anxious that you should distinguish the feeling which drew me aware toward your cause and your career, and which now guides my pen, from that thankless and unworthy sympathy.
Without presuming to decide the purely legal question, on which it seems evident to me from Madison's and Hamilton's papers that the Fathers of the Constitution were not agreed, I saw in State Rights the only availing check upon the absolutism of the sovereign will, and secession filled me with hope, not as the destruction but as the redemption of Democracy. The institutions of your Republic have not exercised on the old world the salutary and liberating influence which ought to have belonged to them, by reason of those defects and abuses of principle which the Confederate Constitution was expressly and wisely calculated to remedy. I believed that the example of that great Reform would have blessed all the races of mankind by establishing true freedom purged of the native dangers and disorders of Republics. Therefore I deemed that you were fighting the battles of our liberty, our progress, and our civilization; and I mourn for the stake which was lost at Richmond more deeply than I rejoice over that which was saved at Waterloo.
General Beauregard confirmed to me a report which was in the papers, that you are preparing a narrative of your campaigns. I sincerely trust that it is true, and that the loss you were said to have sustained at the evacuation of Richmond has not deprived you of the requisite materials. European writers are trying to construct that terrible history with the information derived from one side only. I have before me an elaborate work by a Prussian officer named Sander. It is hardly possible that future publications can be more honorable to the reputation of your army and your own. His feelings are strongly Federal, his figures, especially in estimating your forces, are derived from Northern journals, and yet his book ends by becoming an enthusiastic panegyric on your military skill. It will impress you favourably towards the writer to know that he dwells with particular detail and pleasure on your operations against Meade when Longstreet was absent, in the autumn of 1863.
But I have heard the best Prussian military critics regret that they had not the exact data necessary for a scientific appreciation of your strategy, and certainly the credit due to the officers who served under you can be distributed and justified by no hand but your own.
If you will do me the honor to write to me, letters will reach me addressed Sir J. Acton, Hotel [Serry?], Rome. Meantime I remain, with sentiments stronger than respect, Sir,
~ Your faithful
servantJohn Dalberg
Acton
Gen. Robert E. Lee |
Lexington,
Vir.,
15 Dec. 1866
15 Dec. 1866
Sir,
Although your
letter of the 4th ulto. has been before me some days unanswered, I hope you will
not attribute it to a want of interest in the subject, but to my inability to
keep pace with my correspondence. As a citizen of the South I feel deeply
indebted to you for the sympathy you have evinced in its cause, and am conscious
that I owe your kind consideration of myself to my connection with it. The
influence of current opinion in Europe upon the current politics of America must
always be salutary; and the importance of the questions now at issue the United
States, involving not only constitutional freedom and constitutional government
in this country, but the progress of universal liberty and civilization, invests
your proposition with peculiar value, and will add to the obligation which every
true American must owe you for your efforts to guide that opinion aright. Amid
the conflicting statements and sentiments in both countries, it will be no easy
task to discover the truth, or to relieve it from the mass of prejudice and
passion, with which it has been covered by party spirit. I am conscious the
compliment conveyed in your request for my opinion as to the light in which
American politics should be viewed, and had I the ability, I have not the time
to enter upon a discussion, which was commenced by the founders of the
constitution and has been continued to the present day. I can only say that
while I have considered the preservation of the constitutional power of the
General Government to be the foundation of our peace and safety at home and
abroad, I yet believe that the maintenance of the rights and authority reserved
to the states and to the people, not only essential to the adjustment and
balance of the general system, but the safeguard to the continuance of a free
government. I consider it as the chief source of stability to our political
system, whereas the consolidation of the states into one vast republic, sure to
be aggressive abroad and despotic at home, will be the certain precursor of that
ruin which has overwhelmed all those that have preceded it. I need not refer one
so well acquainted as you are with American history, to the State papers of
Washington and Jefferson, the representatives of the federal and democratic
parties, denouncing consolidation and centralization of power, as tending to the
subversion of State Governments, and to despotism. The New England states, whose
citizens are the fiercest opponents of the Southern states, did not always avow
the opinions they now advocate. Upon the purchase of Louisiana by Mr. Jefferson,
they virtually asserted the right of secession through their prominent men; and
in the convention which assembled at Hartford in 1814, they threatened the
disruption of the Union unless the war should be discontinued. The assertion of
this right has been repeatedly made by their politicians when their party was
weak, and Massachusetts, the leading state in hostility to the South, declares
in the preamble to her constitution, that the people of that commonwealth "have
the sole and exclusive right of governing themselves as a free sovereign and
independent state, and do, and forever hereafter shall, exercise and enjoy every
power, jurisdiction, and right which is not, or may hereafter be by them
expressly delegated to the United States of America in congress assembled." Such
has been in substance the language of other State governments, and such the
doctrine advocated by the leading men of the country for the last seventy years.
Judge Chase, the present Chief Justice of the U.S., as late as 1850, is reported
to have stated in the Senate, of which he was a member, that he "knew of no
remedy in case of the refusal of a state to perform its stipulations," thereby
acknowledging the sovereignty and independence of state action. But I will not
weary you with this unprofitable discussion. Unprofitable because the judgment
of reason has been displaced by the arbitrament of war, waged for the purpose as
avowed of maintaining the union of the states. If, therefore, the result of the
war is to be considered as having decided that the union of the states is
inviolable and perpetual under the constitution, it naturally follows that it is
as incompetent for the general government to impair its integrity by the
exclusion of a state, as for the states to do so by secession; and that the
existence and rights of a state by the constitution are as indestructible as the
union itself. The legitimate consequence then must be the perfect equality of
rights of all the states; the exclusive right of each to regulate its internal
affairs under rules established by the Constitution, and the right of each state
to prescribe for itself the qualifications of suffrage. The South has contended
only for the supremacy of the constitution, and the just administration of the
laws made in pursuance to it. Virginia to the last made great efforts to save
the union, and urged harmony and compromise. Senator Douglass, in his remarks
upon the compromise bill recommended by the committee of thirteen in 1861,
stated that every member from the South, including Messrs. Toombs and Davis,
expressed their willingness to accept the proposition of Senator Crittenden from
Kentucky, as a final settlement of the controversy, if sustained by the
republican party, and that the only difficulty in the way of an amicable
adjustment was with the republican party. Who then is responsible for the war?
Although the South would have preferred any honorable compromise to the
fratricidal war which has taken place, she now accepts in good faith its
constitutional results, and receives without reserve the amendment which has
already been made to the constitution for the extinction of slavery. That is an
event that has been long sought, though in a different way, and by none has it
been more earnestly desired than by citizens of Virginia. In other respects I
trust that the constitution may undergo no change, but that it may be handed
down to succeeding generations in the form we received it from our forefathers.
The desire I feel that the Southern states should possess the good opinion of
one whom I esteem as highly as yourself, has caused me to extend my remarks
farther than I intended, and I fear it has led me to exhaust your patience. If
what I have said should serve to give any information as regards American
politics, and enable you to enlighten public opinion as to the true interests of
this distracted country, I hope you will pardon its prolixity.
In regard to
your inquiry as to my being engaged in preparing a narrative of the campaigns in
Virginia, I regret to state that I progress slowly in the collection of the
necessary documents for its completion. I particularly feel the loss of the
official returns showing the small numbers with which the battles were fought. I
have not seen the work by the Prussian officer you mention and therefore cannot
speak of his accuracy in this respect.– With sentiments of great respect, I
remain your obt. servant,
~ R.E.
Lee
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