<h3>FOR FLAYING A MAN ALIVE.</h3>
<p>A representative of Ohio, Alexander Long, proposed in the House a
recognition of the Southern Confederacy. It must be borne in mind
that, before the firing on the supply-steamer at Charleston, which
was despatched surreptitiously not "to offend the sympathizers'
susceptibilities," many good citizens, dwelling on the silence of the
Constitution as to secession, said openly that they did not see why
the States chafing under the partnership all the original thirteen
made, should not withdraw peacefully. Long was not solitary in his
unseemly proposition, which, however, could never have been otherwise
than untimely after the first shot.</p>
<p>General Garfield met the issue with indignation. He called the act
"treason!" and denounced the author as a second Benedict Arnold. He
entreated loyal representatives:</p>
<p>"Do not believe that another such growth on the soil of Ohio deformed
the face of nature and darkened the light of God's day!"</p>
<p>When this speech met the President's eye, he hastened to thank General
Garfield for having "flayed Long alive."
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