[800] Russell Papers. To Russell.
[801] Ibid., To Russell, Oct. 24, 1862.
[802] Palmerston MS. Russell to Palmerston, Oct. 24, 1862.
[803] Palmerston MS. Marked: "Printed Oct. 24, 1862."
[804] Morley, Gladstone, II, 84. Morley was the first to make clear that no final decision was reached on October 23, a date hitherto accepted as the end of the Cabinet crisis. Rhodes, IV, 337-348, gives a résumé of talk and correspondence on mediation, etc., and places October 23 as the date when "the policy of non-intervention was informally agreed upon" (p. 343), Russell's "change of opinion" being also "complete" (p. 342). Curiously the dictum of Rhodes and others depends in some degree on a mistake in copying a date. Slidell had an important interview with Napoleon on October 28 bearing on an armistice, but this was copied as October 22 in Bigelow's France and the Confederate Navy, p. 126, and so came to be written into narratives of mediation proposals. Richardson, II, 345, gives the correct date. Rhodes' supposition that Seward's instructions of August 2 became known to Russell and were the determining factor in altering his intentions is evidently erroneous.
[805] Maxwell, Clarendon, II, 265.
[806] Ibid., p. 266.
[807] Russell Papers. Palmerston to Russell, Oct. 24, 1862. Palmerston was here writing of Italian and American affairs.
[808] Palmerston MS. Oct. 25, 1862.
[809] Russell Papers. To Russell.