[1350] Gladstone Papers, Dec. 27, 1861.

[1351] State Dept., Eng., Vol. 78, No. 95. Adams to Seward, Dec. 27, 1861. As printed in U.S. Messages and Documents, 1862-63, Pt. I, p. 14. Adams' emphasis on the word "not" is unindicated, by the failure to use italics.

[1352] Ibid., No. 110. Enclosure. Adams to Seward, Jan. 31, 1862.

[1353] Feb. 22, 1862.

[1354] State Dept., Eng., Vol. 80, No. 206. Adams to Seward, Aug. 8, 1862. Of this period in 1862, Rhodes (IV, 78) writes that "the most significant and touching feature of the situation was that the cotton operative population was frankly on the side of the North." Lutz, Die Beziehungen zwischen Deutschland und den Vereinigten Staaten während des Sezessionskrieges, pp. 49-53, makes an interesting analysis of the German press, showing it also determined in its attitude by factional political idealisms in Germany.

[1355] Palmerston MS., Aug. 24, 1862.

[1356] Aug. 30, 1862.

[1357] October, 1862. "The Confederate Struggle and Recognition."

[1358] Nov. 4, 1862.

[1359] The Index, Nov. 20, 1862, p. 63. (Communication.)