Frank and Fearless or The Fortunes of Jasper Kent
FRANK AND FEARLESS OR THE FORTUNES OF JASPER KENT BY HORATIO ALGER, JR. AUTHOR OF "BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES," ETC. THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO. PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO TORONTO Copyright, 1897 by
was final and, as he hoped, an excellent thing for the North, looking to
the purity of race and the opportunity for unhampered advance[57]. If
English writers were in any way influenced by their correspondents in
the United States they may, indeed, have well been in doubt as to the
origin and prospects of the American quarrel. Hawthorne, but recently at
home again after seven years' consulship in England, was writing that
abolition was not a Northern object in the war just begun. Whittier
wrote to _his_ English friends that slavery, and slavery alone, was the
basic issue[58]. But literary Britain was slow to express itself save in
the Reviews. These, representing varying shades of British upper-class
opinion and presenting articles presumably more profound than the
newspaper editorials, frequently offered more recondite origins of the
American crisis. The _Quarterly Review_, organ of extreme Conservatism,
in its first article, dwelt upon the failure of democratic institutions,
a topic not here treated at length since it will be dealt with in a
separate chapter as deserving special study. The _Quarterly_ is also the
first to advance the argument that the protective tariff, advocated by
the North, was a real cause for Southern secession[59]; an idea made
much of later, by the elements unfriendly to the North, but not
hitherto advanced. In these first issues of the Reviews for 1861, there
was frequently put forth the "Southern gentlemen" theory.
"At a distance of three thousand miles, the Southern planters
did, indeed, bear a resemblance to the English country
gentleman which led to a feeling of kinship and sympathy with
him on the part of those in England who represented the old
FRANK AND FEARLESS OR THE FORTUNES OF JASPER KENT BY HORATIO ALGER, JR. AUTHOR OF "BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES," ETC. THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO. PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO TORONTO Copyright, 1897 by