[Frank on a Gun-Boat by Harry Castlemon]@TWC D-Link bookFrank on a Gun-Boat CHAPTER XVI 10/20
When I was seventeen years of age, I was sent North to complete my education, at Yale College, and was just about commencing my senior year, when I received this letter from my father." Here George paused, and drew from his pocket a bundle of papers, carefully tied up, and, producing a letter, from which the writing was almost obliterated, he handed it to Frank, who read aloud as follows: CATAHOOLA PARISH, _February_ 12, 1861. MY DEAR GEORGE: Your letter of the 2d ult.
was duly received. Although your ideas of the civil war, to which you seem to look forward with such anxiety, are rather crude, you are, in the main, correct in your conjectures as to our intentions.
Secession is a fixed fact.
You know it has often been discussed by our leading men, and the election of Mr.Lincoln has only served to precipitate our action.
Had he been defeated, it might have been put off four years longer; but it would be certain to come then. For years the heaven-sanctioned institution of slavery has been subjected to all the attacks that the fiendish imaginations of the Yankee abolitionists could suggest, and we are determined to bear with them no longer.
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