: G.A. Henty
: With Lee in Virginia: A Story of the American Civil War
: Charles River Editors
: 9781537805405
: 1
: CHF 1,10
:
: Historische Romane und Erzählungen
: English
: 512
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
G.A. Henty was a prolific English author best known for his historical adventure novels.  Henty's books covered key segments of history throughout all regions of the world and he is still widely popular today.  Some of Henty's greatest books include The Dragon and The Raven, The Cat of Bubastes, and In the Reign of Terror.  This edition of With Lee in Virginia: A Story of the American Civil War includes a table of contents.

CHAPTER II. BUYING A SLAVE.


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MRS. WINGFIELD DID TALK THE matter over with the overseer, and things went on in consequence more smoothly. Vincent, however, adhered to his wish, and it was arranged that as soon as he could get a nomination he should go to West Point, which is to the American army what Sandhurst and Woolwich are to England. Before that could be done, however, a great political agitation sprang up. The slave States were greatly excited over the prospect of a Republican president being chosen, for the Republicans were to a great extent identified with the abolition movement; and public feeling, which had for some time run high, became intensified as the time approached for the election of a new president, and threats that if the Democrats were beaten and a Republican elected the slave States would secede from the Union, were freely indulged in.

In Virginia, which was one of the most northern of the slave States, opinion was somewhat divided, there being a strong minority against any extreme measures being taken. Among Vincent’s friends, however, who were for the most part the sons of planters, the Democratic feeling was very strongly in the ascendant, and their sympathies were wholly with the Southern States. That these had a right to secede was assumed by them as being unquestionable.

But in point of fact there was a great deal to be said on both sides. The States which first entered the Union in 1776 considered themselves to be separate and sovereign States, each possessing power and authority to manage its own affairs, and forming only a federation in order to construct a central power, and so to operate with more effect against the mother country. Two years later the constitution of the United States was framed, each State giving up a certain portion of its authority, reserving its own self-government and whatever rights were not specifically resigned.

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