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[Footnote 1382: State Dept., Eng., Vol. 84, Nos. 557 and 559. Adams to Seward, Dec. 17, 1863. Adams repeated his advice to "keep out of it."]
[Footnote 1383: _Ibid._, Vol. 85, No. 587. Adams to Seward, Jan. 29, 1864. Adams here expressed the opinion that it was partly the aristocratic antipathy to Bright that had _produced_ the ill-will to the United States.]
[Footnote 1384: _Ibid._]
[Footnote 1385: See Ch. XV.]
[Footnote 1386: _The Index_, Jan. 28, 1864, p. 58.]
[Footnote 1387: Goldwin Smith, _A Letter to a Whig Member of the Southern Independence a.s.sociation_, London, 1864, pp. 14, 68, and 71.]
[Footnote 1388: Leader, _Roebuck_, p. 299. To William Ibbitt, April 26, 1864.]
[Footnote 1389: Arnold, _Mixed Essays_, p. 17. N.Y., Macmillan, 1883.]
[Footnote 1390: State Dept., Eng., Vol. 86, No. 709. Adams to Seward, June 9, 1864]
[Footnote 1391: See _ante_, Ch. XVI.]
[Footnote 1392: Dasent, _Delane_, II, pp. 135-6. Delane to Dasent, Dec.
25 and 26, 1864. The _Times_ on December 26 pictured Sherman as having _escaped_ to the sea, but on the 29th acknowledged his achievements.]
[Footnote 1393: _Lord Acton's Letters to Mary Gladstone_, p. 183.]
[Footnote 1394: These were not confined to Great Britain. The American Legation in Berlin received addresses of sympathy from many organizations, especially labour unions. One such, drawn by W.
Liebknecht, A. Vogt, and C. Schilling read in part: "Members of the working-cla.s.s, we need not affirm to you the sincerity of these our sympathies; for with pride we can point to the fact, that, while the aristocracy of the Old World took openly the part of the southern slaveholder, and while the middle cla.s.s was divided in its opinions, the working-men in all countries of Europe have unanimously and firmly stood on the side of the Union." (_U.S. Diplomatic Correspondence, 1865_, Pt.
IV, p. 500.)]
[Footnote 1395: _U.S. Messages and Doc.u.ments, 1865_, Pt. I, p. 417.
Adams to Hunter, July 13, 1865.]
[Footnote 1396: Disraeli was less disturbed by this than were other Tory leaders. He had long before, in his historical novels, advocated an aristocratic leadership of democracy, as against the middle cla.s.s. Derby called the Bill "a leap in the dark," but a.s.sented to it.]
[Footnote 1397: Pierce, _Sumner_, IV, pp. 151-153, summarizes the factors determining British att.i.tude and places first the fear of the privileged cla.s.ses of the example of America, but his treatment really minimizes this element.]
[Footnote 1398: Goldwin Smith, "The Civil War in America: An Address read at the last meeting of the Manchester Union and Emanc.i.p.ation Society." (Jan. 26, 1866.) London, 1866, pp. 71-75.]
[Footnote 1399: Goldwin Smith, _America and England in their present relations_, London, 1869, p. 30.]