[The Sable Cloud by Nehemiah Adams]@TWC D-Link bookThe Sable Cloud CHAPTER X 31/45
If broken irretrievably, the alternative is to be divided, or for one part of the country to coerce its neighbors and brethren.
This we find to be extremely inconvenient and really impracticable without civil war; and after the war,--whose horrors, in our case, can never be pictured,--we would either find ourselves in the same divided state as before, or if politically united, it will have been effected at a cost which it is fearful to contemplate. "So that we are illustrating the question, whether such a government as ours is really practicable,--whether a people can govern themselves. Already we hear it said, 'We have no government.' The explanation is, We are not disposed to destroy each other's lives to preserve the confederation.
We can have a monarchy, with its 'divine right,' and with its standing army, if we choose; or, if we remain as a republic, we must be liable to just our present exigency.
Our only defence, then, consists in mutual conciliation and agreement. "What a land this is," said I, "with its diversified interests and its unparalleled variety of products,--its agriculture, mechanic arts, science, and literature.
Separation will embarrass every form of intercourse, and make us hostile." "Jews and Samaritans," said Mrs.North.
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