January 4, 1862, I was shown some things
in regard to our nation. My attention was called to the Southern
rebellion. The South had prepared themselves for a fierce conflict,
while the North were asleep as to their true feelings. Before
President Lincoln's administration commenced, great advantage
was taken by the South. The former administration planned and
managed for the South to rob the North of their implements of
war. They had two objects for so doing: 1. They were contemplating
a determined rebellion, and must prepare for it; 2. When they
should rebel, the North would be wholly unprepared. They would
thus gain time, and by their violent threats and ruthless course
they thought they could so intimidate the North that they would
be obliged to yield to them and let them have everything their
own way.
The North did not understand the bitter,
dreadful hatred of the South toward them, and were unprepared
for their deep-laid plots. The North had boasted of their strength
and ridiculed the idea of the South leaving the Union. They considered
it like the threats of a willful, stubborn child, and thought
that the South would soon come to their senses, and, becoming
sick of leaving the Union, would with humble apologies return to their allegiance. The North have
had no just idea of the strength of the accursed system of slavery.
It is this, and this alone, which lies at the foundation of the
war. The South have been more and more exacting. They consider
it perfectly right to engage in human traffic, to deal in slaves
and the souls of men. They are annoyed and become perfectly exasperated
if they cannot claim all the territory they desire. They would
tear down the boundaries and bring their slaves to any spot they
please, and curse the soil with slave labor. The language of
the South has been imperious, and the North have not taken suitable
measures to silence it.
The rebellion was handled so carefully,
so slowly, that many who at first started with horror at the
thought of rebellion were influenced by rebels to look upon it
as right and just, and thousands joined the Southern Confederacy
who would not had prompt and thorough measures been carried out
by our Government at an early period of the rebellion, even as
ill-prepared as it then was for war. The North have been preparing
for war ever since, but the rebellion has been steadily increasing,
and there is now no better prospect of its being subdued than
there was months ago. Thousands have lost their lives, and many
have returned to their homes, maimed and crippled for life, their
health gone, their earthly prospects forever blighted; and yet
how little has been gained! Thousands have been induced to enlist
with the understanding that this war was to exterminate slavery;
but now that they are fixed, they find that they have been deceived,
that the object of this war is not to abolish slavery, but to
preserve it as it is.
Those who have ventured to leave their
homes and sacrifice their lives to exterminate slavery are dissatisfied.
They see no good results from the war, only the preservation
of the Union, and for this thousands of lives must be sacrificed
and homes made desolate. Great numbers have wasted away
and expired in hospitals; others have been
taken prisoners by the rebels, a fate more to be dreaded than
death. In view of all this, they inquire: If we succeed in quelling
this rebellion, what has been gained? They can only answer discouragingly:
Nothing. That which caused the rebellion is not removed. The
system of slavery, which has ruined our nation, is left to live
and stir up another rebellion. The feelings of thousands of our
soldiers are bitter. They suffer the greatest privations; these
they would willingly endure, but they find they have been deceived,
and they are dispirited. Our leading men are perplexed, their
hearts are failing them for fear. They fear to proclaim freedom
to the slaves of the rebels, for by so doing they will exasperate
that portion of the South who have not joined the rebellion but
are strong slavery men. And again they have feared the influence
of those strong antislavery men who were in command, holding
responsible stations. They have feared the effects of a bold,
decided tone, for it fanned to a flame the strong desire of thousands
to wipe out the cause of this terrible rebellion, by letting
the oppressed go free and breaking every yoke.
Many of those who are placed high in command
to fill responsible stations have but little conscience or nobility
of soul; they can exercise their power, even to the destruction
of those under them, and it is winked at. These commanders could
abuse the power given them and cause those subject to them to
occupy dangerous positions where they would be exposed to terrible
encounters with the rebels without the least hope of conquering
them. In this way they could dispose of daring, thoroughgoing
men, as David disposed of Uriah. 2 Samuel 11:14, 15.
Valuable men have thus been sacrificed
to get rid of their strong antislavery influence. Some of the
very men whom the North most need in this critical time, whose
services would be of the highest value, are not. They have been
wantonly sacrificed. The prospects before our nation are
discouraging, for there are those filling
responsible stations who are rebels at heart. There are commanding
officers who are in sympathy with the rebels. While they are
desirous of having the Union preserved, they despise those who
are antislavery. Some of the armies also are composed largely
of such material; they are so opposed to one another that no
real union exists among many regiments.
As this war was shown to me, it looked
like the most singular and uncertain that has ever occurred.
A great share of the volunteers enlisted fully believing that
the result of the war would be to abolish slavery. Others enlisted
intending to be very careful to keep slavery just as it is, but
to put down the rebellion and preserve the Union. And then to
make the matter still more perplexing and uncertain, some of
the officers in command are strong proslavery men whose sympathies
are all with the South, yet who are opposed to a separate government.
It seems impossible to have the war conducted successfully, for
many in our own ranks are continually working to favor the South,
and our armies have been repulsed and unmercifully slaughtered
on account of the management of these proslavery men. Some of
our leading men in Congress also are constantly working to favor
the South. In this state of things, proclamations are issued
for national fasts, for prayer that God will bring this war to
a speedy and favorable termination. I was then directed to Isaiah
58:5-7: "Is it such a fast that I have chosen? a day for
a man to afflict his soul? is it to bow down his head as a bulrush,
and to spread sackcloth and ashes under him? wilt thou call this
a fast, and an acceptable day to the Lord? Is not this the fast
that I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo
the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that
ye break every yoke? Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry,
and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house?
when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou hide not thyself from thine own flesh?"
I saw that these national fasts were an
insult to Jehovah. He accepts of no such fasts. The recording
angel writes in regard to them: "Ye fast for strife and
debate, and to smite with the fist of wickedness." I was
shown how our leading men have treated the poor slaves who have
come to them for protection. Angels have recorded it. Instead
of breaking their yoke and letting the oppressed go free, these
men have made the yoke more galling for them than when in the
service of their tyrannical masters. Love of liberty leads the
poor slaves to leave their masters and risk their lives to obtain
liberty. They would never venture to leave their masters and
expose themselves to the difficulties and horrors attending their
recapture if they had not as strong a love for liberty as any
of us. The escaped slaves have endured untold hardships and dangers
to obtain their freedom, and as their last hope, with the love
of liberty burning in their breasts, they apply to our Government
for protection; but their confidence has been treated with the
utmost contempt. Many of them have been cruelly treated because
they committed so great a crime as to dare to make an effort
to obtain their freedom. Great men, professing to have human
hearts, have seen the slaves almost naked and starving, and have
abused them, and sent them back to their cruel masters and hopeless
bondage, to suffer inhuman cruelty for daring to seek their liberty.
Some of this wretched class they thrust into unwholesome dungeons,
to live or die, they cared not which. They have deprived them
of the liberty and free air which heaven has never denied them,
and then left them to suffer for food and clothing. In view of
all this, a national fast is proclaimed! Oh, what an insult to
Jehovah! The Lord saith by the mouth of Isaiah: "Yet they
seek Me daily, and delight to know My ways, as a nation that
did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of their God."
The escaped slaves have been told by their
masters that the Northern men wanted to get possession of them
that they might cruelly misuse them; that the abolitionists would
treat them worse than they had been treated while in slavery.
All manner of horrible stories have been repeated in their ears
to make them detest the North, and yet they have had a confused
idea that some hearts in the North felt for their grievances
and would yet make an effort to help them. This has been the
only star which has shed its glimmering light upon their distressed
and gloomy bondage. The manner in which the poor slaves have
been treated has led them to believe that their masters have
told them the truth in these things. And yet a national fast
is proclaimed! Saith the Lord: "Is not this the fast that
I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the
heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye
break every yoke?" When our nation observes the fast which
God has chosen, then will He accept their prayers as far as the
war is concerned; but now they enter not into His ear. He turns
from them, they are disgusting to Him. It is so managed that
those who would undo the heavy burdens and break every yoke are
placed under censure, or removed from responsible stations, or
their lives are planned away by those who "fast for strife
and debate, and to smite with the fist of wickedness."
I was shown that if the object of this
war had been to exterminate slavery, then, if desired, England
would have helped the North. But England fully understands the
existing feelings in the Government, and that the war is not
to do away slavery, but merely to preserve the Union; and it
is not for her interest to have it preserved. Our Government
has been very proud and independent. The people of this nation
have exalted themselves to heaven, and have looked down upon
monarchical governments, and triumphed in their boasted liberty,
while the institution of slavery, that was a thousand times worse
than the tyranny exercised by monarchial
governments, was suffered to exist and was cherished. In this
land of light a system is cherished which allows one portion
of the human family to enslave another portion, degrading millions
of human beings to the level of the brute creation. The equal
of this sin is not to be found in heathen lands.
Said the angel: "Hear, O heavens,
the cry of the oppressed, and reward the oppressors double according
to their deeds." This nation will yet be humbled into the
dust. England is studying whether it is best to take advantage
of the present weak condition of our nation, and venture to make
war upon her. She is weighing the matter, and trying to sound
other nations. She fears, if she should commence war abroad,
that she would be weak at home, and that other nations would
take advantage of her weakness. Other nations are making quiet
yet active preparations for war, and are hoping that England
will make war with our nation, for then they would improve the
opportunity to be revenged on her for the advantage she has taken
of them in the past and the injustice done them. A portion of
the queen's subjects are waiting a favorable opportunity to break
their yoke; but if England thinks it will pay, she will not hesitate
a moment to improve her opportunities to exercise her power and
humble our nation. When England does declare war, all nations
will have an interest of their own to serve, and there will be
general war, general confusion. England is acquainted with the
diversity of feeling among those who are seeking to quell the
rebellion. She well knows the perplexed condition of our Government;
she has looked with astonishment at the prosecution of this war--the
slow, inefficient moves, the inactivity of our armies, and the
ruinous expenses of our nation. The weakness of our Government
is fully open before other nations, and they now conclude that
it is because it was not a monarchial government, and they admire
their own government, and look down, some with pity, others
with contempt, upon our nation, which they
have regarded as the most powerful upon the globe. Had our nation
remained united it would have had strength, but divided it must
fall.