... previous history, but by the conduct they pursue and the position they maintainamong the Powers of the earth. Their internal institutions are their own affair; their financial and politicalarrangements ... XICHAPTER XIICHAPTER XIIIPart II, CHAPTER XIVCHAPTER XVCHAPTER XVICHAPTER XVIIPart II, p. 323.CHAPTER XVIIIPart I, p. 319.Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams The ... Lincoln on the subject of Slavery and consider the extreme moderation of the sentiments it expresses, the allowance that is made for the situation, for the feelings, for the prejudices, of the South;...