<h3>"LET THE GRASS GROW WHERE IT MAY!"</h3>
<p>Up to the dread day when the news of the flag of our Union being fired
upon, in Charleston harbor, the country resembled the sea in one of
those calms preceding a storm. When the placidity betrays hidden and
mighty currents, and overhead, in the clear sky, one divines the
coursers of the tempest gathering to race in strife like that beneath.
Up to Lincoln's arrival in Washington, the nest of sedition, the
pro-slavery, peace-at-any-price party slackened in no efforts to
retain the <i>statu quo</i>, or worse, a new State of the Southern
States branching off as suckers strike from the main stem. William E.
Dodge had the courage to face the wrought-up Chief Magistrate, chafed
with his narrow escape from the assassins of the railroad journey from
Baltimore. Said Mr. Dodge:</p>
<p>"It is for you, Mr. President, to say whether the whole nation shall
be plunged into bankruptcy (the slaves were valued as property at
two thousand million dollars!); whether the grass shall grow in the
streets of our commercial cities." (The balance of trade against the
South to the manufacturing and supplying North was stupendous.)</p>
<p>"Then, I say, it shall not," replied Lincoln; "if it depends upon me,
the grass will not grow anywhere, save in the fields and meadows."</p>
<p>Mr. Dodge persisted in his sordid and businesslike errand.</p>
<p>"Then you will not go to war on account of slavery?"</p>
<p>"I do not know what my acts may be in the future, beyond this: The
Constitution will not be preserved and defended until it is enforced
and obeyed in every part of every one of the United States. It must be
so respected, obeyed, enforced, and defended--let the grass grow where
it will!"
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