Page:Southern Historical Society Papers volume 17.djvu/157

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LifCy Services and Character of Jefferson Davis, 149 .

as a political question of territorial integrity. They accorded bel- ligerent rights to the Confederacy, exchanged prisoners, and gave paroles of war, and revolutionized all theories and constitutional mandates to carry their main point — the preservation of the Union. General Grant says of their legislation in his Memoirs : ** Much of it was no doubt unconstitutional, but it was hoped that the laws enacted would subserve their purpose before their constitutionality could be submitted to the judiciary and a decision obtained.'* Of the war he says : *' The Constitution was ifot framed with a view to any such re- bellion as that of i86i~*65. While it did not authorize rebellion, it made no provision against it. Yet,'* he adds, " the right to resist or suppress rebellion is as inherent as the right of an individual to pre- serve his life when it is in jeopardy. The Constitution was, there- fore, in abeyance for the time being, so far as it in any way affected the progress and termination of the war.**

This is revolution.

Indicted for treason, Jefferson Davis faced his accusers with the uplifted brow and dauntless heart of innocence, and eagerly asked a trial. If magnanimity had let him pass it would have been appre- ciated ; but they who punished him without a hearing, before they set him free, now proceeded to amend the Constitution to disfranchise him and his associates, finding, like . Grant, nothing in it as it stood against such movement as he led.

It may be that but for the assassination of President Lincoln— most infamous and unhappy deed — which

'* Uproared the universal peace And poured the milk of Concord into hell,"

the country would have been spared the shame of President Davis's cruel incarceration and the maiming of the Constitution.

For I can scarcely believe that he who three times overruled eman- cipation ; who appealed to " indispensable necessity ** as justification for ** laying strong hands on the colored element ** ; who candidly avowed Northern ** complicity "• in the wrongs of his time ; who said, " I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me'*; who had preached revolution in 1848, and revolutionized all things to save the Union in 1862 — I can scarcely believe it possible that one of his broad mind and generous heart would have persecuted an honorable foe. It has been a wonder to me that those who justly applaud his virtues have not copied his ex-