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abraham lincoln and the union-第29部分

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ng dragon。  Who; in the last analysis; provided all these supplies?  Who paid the soldiers? Who supplemented their meager pay and supported their families? The people; of course; and they did so both directly and indirectly。  In taxes and loans they paid to the Government about three thousand millions of dollars。  Their indirect assistance was perhaps as great; though it is impossible today to estimate with any approach to accuracy the amount either in money or service。 Among obvious items are the collections made by the Sanitary Commission for the benefit of the hospital service; amounting to twenty…five million dollars; and about six millions raised by the Christian Commission。  In a hundred other ways both individuals and localities strained their resources to supplement those of the Government。  Immense subscription lists were circulated to raise funds for the families of soldiers。  The city of Philadelphia alone spent in this way in a single year 600;000。  There is also evidence of a vast amount of unrecorded relief of needy families by the neighbors; and in the farming districts; such assistance; particularly in the form of fuel during winter; was very generally given。

What made possible this enormous total of contributions was; in a word; the general willingness of those supporting the war to forego luxuries。  They ceased buying a great multitude of unnecessary things。  But what became of the labor that had previously supplied the demand for luxuries?  A part of it went the way of all other Northern laborinto new trades; into the army; or to the Westand a part continued to manufacture luxuries: for their market; though curtailed; was not destroyed。  There were; indeed; two populations in the North; and they were separated by an emotional chasm。  Had all the North been a unit in feeling; the production of articles of luxury might have ceased。  Because of this emotional division of the North; however; this business survived; for the sacrifice of luxurious expenditure was made by only a part of the population; even though it was the majority。

Furthermore; the whole matter was adjusted voluntarily without systematic government direction; since there was nothing in the financial policy of the Government to correspond to conscription。 Consequently; both in the way of loans and in the way of contributions; as well as in the matter of unpaid service; the entire burden fell upon the war party alone。  In the absence of anything like economic conscription; if such a phrase may be used; those Northerners who did not wish to lend money; or to make financial sacrifice; or to give unpaid service; were free to pursue their own bent。  The election of 1864 showed that they formed a market which amounted to something between six and nine millions。  There is no reason to suppose that these millions in 1864 spent less on luxuries than they did in 1860。  Two or three items are enough。  In 1860; the importation of silk amounted to 32 million dollars; in 1862; in spite of inflated prices; it had shrunk to 7 millions; the consumption of malt liquors shrank from 101 million gallons in 1860 to 62 million gallons in 1863; of coffee; hardly to be classed as a luxury; there were consumed in 1861; 184 million pounds and in 1863; 80 millions。

The clue to the story of capital is to be found in this fact; too often forgotten; that there was an economic…political division cutting deep through every stratum of the Northern people。  Their economic life as well as their political life was controlled on the one hand by a devotion to the cause of the war; and on the other hand by a hatred of that cause or by cynical indifference。 And we cannot insist too positively that the Government failed very largely to take this fact into account。  The American spirit of invention; so conspicuous at that time in mechanics; did not apply itself to the science of government。  Lincoln confessedly was not a financier; his instinct was at home only in problems that could be stated in terms of men。  Witness his acceptance of conscription and his firmness in carrying it through; as a result of which he saved the patriotic party from bearing the whole burden of military service。 But there was no parallel conservation of power in the field of industry。  The financial policy; left in the hands of Chase; may truly be described as barren of ideas。  Incidentally; it may be mentioned that the 〃loyal〃 North was left at the mercy of its domestic enemies and a prey to parasites by Chase's policy of loans instead of taxes and of voluntary support instead of enforced support。

The consequence of this financial policy was an immense opportunity for the 〃disloyally〃 and the parasites to make huge war profits out of the 〃loyals〃 and the Government。  Of course; it must not be supposed that everyone who seized the chance to feather his nest was so careless or so impolitic as to let himself be classed as a 〃disloyal。〃  An incident of the autumn of 1861 shows the temper of those professed 〃loyals〃 who were really parasites。  The background of the incident is supplied by a report of the Quartermaster…General:

〃Governors daily complain that recruiting will stop unless clothing is sent in abundance and immediately to the various recruiting camps and regiments。  With every exertion; this department has not been able to obtain clothing to supply these demands; and they have been so urgent that troops before the enemy have been compelled to do picket duty in the late cold nights without overcoats; or even coats; wearing only thin summer flannel blouses。。。。  Could 150;000 suits of clothing; overcoats; coats; and pantaloons be placed today; in depot; it would scarce supply the calls now before us。  They would certainly leave no surplus。〃

The Government attempted to meet this difficulty in the shortest possible time by purchasing clothing abroad。  But such disregard of home industry; the 〃patriotism〃 of the New England manufacturers could not endure。  Along with the report just quoted; the Quartermaster…General forwarded to the Secretary of War a long argumentative protest from a committee of the Boston Board of Trade against the purchase of army clothing in Europe。  Any American of the present day can guess how the protest was worded and what arguments were used。  Stripped of its insincerity; it signified this: the cotton mills were inoperative for lack of material; their owners saw no chance to save their dividends except by requipment as woolen mills; the existing woolen mills also saw a great chance to force wool upon the market as a substitute for cotton。  In Ohio; California; Pennsylvania; and Illinois; the growers of wool saw the opportunity with equal clearness。  But; one and all; these various groups of parasites saw that their game hinged on one condition: the munitions market must be kept open until they were ready to monopolize government contracts。  If soldiers contracted pneumonia doing picket duty on cold nights; in their summer blouses; that was but an unfortunate incident of war。

Very different in spirit from the protest of the Boston manufacturers is a dispatch from the American minister at Brussels which shows what American public servants; in contrast with American manufacturers; were about。  Abroad the agents of North and South were fighting a commercial duel in which each strove to monopolize the munitions market。  The United States Navy; seeing things from an angle entirely different from that of the Boston Board of Trade; ably seconded the ministers by blockading the Southern ports and by thus preventing the movement of specie and cotton to Europe。  As a consequence; fourmonth notes which had been given by Southern agents with their orders fell due; had to be renewed; and began to be held in disfavor。  Agents of the North; getting wind of these hitches in negotiations; eagerly sought to take over the unpaid Confederate orders。  All these details of the situation help to explain the jubilant tone of this dispatch from Brussels late in November; 1861:

〃I have now in my hands complete control of the principal rebel contracts on the continent; viz。: 206;000 yards of cloth ready for delivery; already commencing to move forward to Havre; gray but can be dyed blue in twenty days; 100;000 yards deliverable from 15th of December to 26th of January; light blue army cloth; same as ours; 100;000 blankets; 40;000 guns to be shipped in ten days; 20;000 saber bayonets to be delivered in six weeks。。。。  The winter clothing for 100;000 men taken out of their hands; when they cannot replace it; would almost compensate for Bull Run。 There is no considerable amount of cloth to be had in Europe; the stocks are very short。〃

The Secretary of War was as devoid of ideas as the Secretary of the Treasury was and even less equipped with resisting power。 Though he could not undo the work already done by the agents of the Government abroad; he gave way as rapidly as possible to the allied parasites whose headquarters; at the moment; were in Boston。  The story grows uglier as we proceed。  Two powerful commercial combinations took charge of the policy of the woolen intereststhe National Woolgrowers' Association and the National Association of Wool Manufacturers; which were soon in control of this im
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