1231 3 C56 opy 1 MHIXTCO. ■ ITS REVOLUTIONS: 1 ARE THEY EVIDENCES OF RETROGRESSION OR OF PROGRESS? I A • HISTOEICAL AND POLITICAL REVIEW, GEORGE E. CHURCH. REVISED FEOM THE NEW YORK HERALD OF i¥AY 2.5TH, 1866. NEW YORK: BAKER cfe.GODWIISr, PRINTERS, rniNTI\G-HOUSE SQUARE. 1866. J -:-..-i^v_.,,. ¥ 1 MEXICO. ITS REVOLUTIONS: ARE THEY EVIDENCES OF RETROGRESSION OR OF PROGRESS ? HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL REVIEW, GEORGE E. CHU^Oaiii^ EEYISED FROM THE NEW YORK HERALD OF MAY 25TH, 1866. NEW YORK: BAKER mcl in an ini(>xir;af,i(>;i <»)' |>lo<>i throu^'h tiie eoriHlant; and ardnouH ornploy of fro/fj forty to lilly thou.sand I'rerich troop.-: 1,o ke(;|> tli(;rn i'r<>tti overturn if ij.^ th<; peaceable and unoff'endinj.'' eler^'y vyho r(;jf '^'law and ord(;r."' Maximilian -aid to tiio ';ommj;vHionon',, on tho ;;d of OfJo ber, 1863, "My aeeeptanee of tlie ayo- net. It was r(-Mh}Ay calculated by M. MaJaspIne, editor of " L'Opinion JVationale," tliat when General i'hy.h'nn; wan in- structed in A ugust t^-; takf; the vot<^;. seven-^jiglitf/s of tlie popula- tion of Mexico and twenty-nine th)rf;if;t}(« of Ite tAsn'tU/ry w^im U^- yond the lines of VmucL proU-M'ion.^ while, the t/jrntory wfn'cij they occupied wa?* overrun by Bf;venty-two h'x^tile gueri Jfa baf- arate divisions, and make what has whiWy \>(-A'At aoMf-A '' it,n election e^jring tour iri fkvor of i^nrtfj-, }^\i).x.'u(i\\\h.u.''' The, eSi-Ay tion wa« hehT, theduliefet V^rain rn^y imagine how. T\ihcj>un\,ry gave it« popular vot*; for the Au.strian archduke, who'«oon aft/cjf feati.siied with the result, fn^/'MiAfA tf/e throua of pficMuA Mex- ico. Thns the eaase for which the >\fexican p^'Z/p)^; h^J for a half c<5!ntTiry hattUA and bravely won v/aft throv/n ba/;k year^i into the past. The MexicaTj (Unx^rt:^. \>rMntry and if^ future development; th/^y analysed and found the principle:* of the part)' whoM; caus^f;; they had t^phtv^A t//taJly mc/im^M'ihSa with the wantH of Mexi^^^, and in conformity v/ith their ^/>n;>;iV/- ericy of acti/^n throughout the invasion, they nov/ ':«;iy>u>/j^i th<; principles of the very party which h^i U;!':^j >/> yAmy hsitth'ng to hold their conntry int^^. Gen/fa'al h'^yj&Uih('Mmfii/> an o|^^n rnpttwe ^-s-ith the church iijurty. v/hich \iiif\J[>(^,rti.y(A thh <'/,ttutrf into the hands of France. Thair mymsf^,, timr guilty U'*\t*^^ had borne their legitimate fmits : th*; dieargy had ezpf^c^/'A that iprfjgKSa would be turned bar;k upon itgel^ an4 th^s^ ti^? oJdgyj>- 68 tem would be established, whereby the church might usurp all- power, all wealth, and all emolumeuts. The French com- mander, with a keen insight into the troubles which environed the position, was forced, by maintaining the policy of the liberals, who had sequestrated the church property, to refuse its restora- tion to the clergy. Thus the invaders came to an open rupture with the bishops, and virtually acknowledged the justness of the cause for which the constitutionalists were battling. The archbishop of Mexico was removed from the regency to which Marshal Forey had appointed him. After some correspondence between the archbishop and General Bazaine, the prelates of Mexico issued a joint protest, which is in every view a remark- able document. Opening with a reproach to the French for' having betraved their holy Catholic faith, which the Emperor Napoleon III. had promised them should be restored in all its former rights and privileges, they protest at the treatment it has received, and state that it suifers " a compulsion in its most holy rights and in its canonical Kberties entirely equal to that which it suffered when the authorities emanating from the Plan of Ayutla (the liberals) were in power." " Then," said they, " the government frankly manifested its principles ; it ap- peared to the view of this Catholic people in the character of an opposition armed with a power against religion and the church ; and the latter, as a victim immolated by the govern- ment, defended itself heroically, suffering the consequences of a terrible persecution, and perishing nobly for the holy cause of justice. * * * Then the prelates lea^dng our country, carried with them the hope that the first political change which should take place would bring with it a complete moral and religious restoration. To-day, returning after such a change, to be present at the immolation of all our principles^ the consummation of the ruin of the church, we have received a blow such as is only received at the death of all human hope. Then the church had only one enemy — the government that persecuted it. To-day it has two — that same government which still lives in the country, which still has resources of its own ; an army that contends hand to hand for every foot of ground, and that counts upon the aid of its principles and interests in the enemy's camp, and in the capital ; an enemy whose first occupation it is to carry into effect the destructive plans of its opponents, in religious and moral aft'airs. * -x- * Then we received a blow from the hands of an open enemy ; to- day we are attacked by those who call themselves friends of the church and protectors of its liberties. * * * Then we could publish our protests and our pastorals ; to-day the press is bound in such a manner that it is only open to those 69 who favor the intervention." The whole document is a wail of woe at the betrayal of their hopes by those into whose hands they had betrayed their country. Seldom in history can we find a document so replete with the exasperation of disappointment. They acknowledge, too, finally, that the wars waged by the lib- erals are only against the opposition of the church to " liberty and reform." The clergy had thrown their bone before the lions of Europe, and now they were doomed to see it despoiled of its meat as strip after strip it was wrenched off. They had invi- ted the invader to oppose the constitutional reforms of the lib- erals, only to see them, when firmly in power, espouse those re- forms. It was a case of the most glaring inconsistency on all sides. France had proclaimed that she espoused the cause of the " reactionists ;" she no sooner reached the capital than she overturned the cause she had espoused, and espoused the cause she had overturned, while at the same moment, with 50,000 troops, she battled against the brave defenders of these very principles which she now inscribed upon the code of Mexico. It was a bold proof that it was might not right which dictated the invasion, and that the ruler of France and his advisers were ' either in a most lamentable state of ignorance in reference to the history and political condition of the country, or else they •warred for an idea, and chose to waste some of the best blood of France upon a soil which could }deld them no return for the prodigal outlay, either in honor, justice, glory or wealth, but wliich might fix an indelible stain upon that glorious escutcheon which is almost as much the pride of the United States as of France. On the 18th October, 1864, the Eoman Pontiff addressed a letter to Maximilian, urging him to agree with the Mexican clergy ; but Maximilian, in" his instructions to his Minister of Justice, December 2Tth, 1864, totally disregards it, proposing on the contrary to declare religious tolerance, and confirm the reform laws "^of Juarez. This was followed on the 26th February, 1865, by a decree confirming these instructions ; the protests of the clergy being useless. These measures had the effect upon the Mexican mind to bind them more firmly to the constitution of 1857, and to support the liberals upholding it, who were thus by their very invaders adjudged to be fighting for the right. But Maximilian is enthroned, and we find it is necessary for France to retain 50,000 troops to sustain him where the suffi-ages of the people have placed him. It has now become a matter of pride to the French ruler to at least, if he cannot consolidate the monarchy which his "moral pacification" ■scheme has erected, to continue the farce with the hope that 70 some lucky turn of fortune may enable him to reap the honors of a drawn game, where the liberals play as well with their knights and pawns as JN^apoleon with his king and bishops. i^apoleon III. made a great mistake in the character of the people whose territory he invaded. He should have taken a lesson from J^apoleon I., whose genius was not sufficient to m- pose upon Spain a government with King Joseph at its head. The invasion of Spain by the great JSTapoleon at the opening of this centmy, was wonderfully similar in all its phases to the invasion of Mexico by his nephew in 1862 ; the same appoint- ment of notables, and the same farce of imposing a foreign prince upon the people. The period of occupation of the coun- tries will doubtless correspond very nearly. Said Talleyrand to the great Emperor, " Your Majesty will never hear the last shot fired in a war with a people who have fought eight hundred years with the Moors." Mexico, from the hearts of the liberals^ echoes the same sentiment in reference to its own soil. The French monarch has forgotten that when France invaded the Peninsula Spain had but eleven million inhabitants, that she was in immediate contact with France, which might easily sup- ply her invading forces wath means to prosecute the war, or to rapidly reinforce any threatened point, and that, notwithstand- ing she poured some of her largest veteran armies into Spain, she could not conquer her. If France thus failed to conquer a kingdom_ lying at her very door, how could she hope to subdue a republic six thousand miles distant, with a territory nearly . four and one-half times as large, and which contains eight mil- lions of people, imited in a common cause against her, and possessing a country eminently adapted to the partisan style of warfare which so harassed and cut up the troops of France in the Peninsula? In topographical features which might en- able partisan bands to maintain a destructive warfare, Mexico is eminently like Spain. Her mountain ridges, her waterless deserts, her fastnesses, her numerous large towns and cen- ters of population — which cannot all be held at once by an in- vading force — render her capable of a brilliant defence — and capable, too, to work out her own salvation against any num- ber of troops which Napoleon may be able to bring against her in the present political condition of Europe. « We believe that all that France ever planned in reference to the future development of Mexico will be realized, but not through the influence of any invading Power ; for, to liold and direct the energies, of Mexico in a monarchical channel, you must change the political condition of the United States, and also its form of government. It would take a standing army of one hundred thousand foreign troops in Mexico to crush out"the 71 leaven of dissensions which would constantly impregnate the people from contact with us ; and, as we are ceaselessly advanc- ing westward with our civilization, and building up powerful States in our march, the effort to establish upon our frontiers a monarchy, under the shadow of any European flag, must, by the very abrasion of progressive ideas, fall in its own tracks, which denote a backward instead of an advancing pace in the order of the world's march westward. We believe that there is a great law regulating the progress of the human race, and that, like the spheres which whirl round it, it has its orbit of revolution. May not its constant march westward gather to its folds an ever increasing civiliza- tion, as its resistless activity develops and calls forth a steady growth of brain force 'i Does not this advance of the human element, forcing before it the great wave of intellectual im- provement, indicate that in future ages, when in its course it has swept across the Pacific and impinged upon the eastern Asiatic border, that the worn-out nationalities there found must move westward towards Europe — westward, westward, until, in the ceaseless revolution, they meet our American nationalities — then as dead as Asia is to-day — and, with a civilization and im- provement which will have gained immensely in its revolution of the world, force us in our turn before its irresistible onward march? The effects of such invasions as that of France in Mexico may impede, but scarcely exert a perceptible influence npon, the com."se of the race. In the French expedition the French Emperor has played one of those far-reaching games so characteristic of him. A man who could reach the throne of France as he did must be blessed with a wonderfully good fortune, backed by a brain that has a deep insight into the fortuitous phases of any problem which may interest him ; but in this Mexican problem he made a very excusable mistake, which altered its conditions entirely ; this was, the predetermined result which, in common with Europe, he aflSxed to our civil war. It was, from the very out- break of the rebellion, accepted as a foregone conclusion that the United States were divided never more to be united. Rea- soning from all precedent, they had every right to draw this conclusion. It was supposed that the South, following the ten- dency of the institutions which existed there in 1860, would naturally gather the dominant classes into a powerful aristo- cratic faction, which, in consonance with their education and natural tendencies, would form a limited monarchical govern- ment. It could not have been entirely outside of the vista of Napoleon III. that in snch an event the South might have found it to her advantage to link herself to Maximilian, and form with Mexico a great empire, of which the latter country would have 72 been a dependency. France conld then have more than enjoyed the reality of one of her dreams in reference to her Mexican conquest — not only the obtaining of cotton for herself, but al- most its entire monopoly. It was also a very wise plan during our great contest to be within easy reach at the bursting of the Western stars. There were mighty and valuable fragments to be gathered up in such an event. They could not see the result through the convex achromatic lenses of liberty, in the nine- teenth century ; but chose rather to look at the movement through the concave goggles which monarchical Europe puts on whenever she looks at anything republican in the Old or New World. It is worthy of consideration that, in April, 1861, the fii'st gun thundered against Fort Sumter ; in June the French le- gation pushed the liberal Mexican government to the wall ; in October the allied treaty of intervention was signed ; and, in the December following, Yera Cruz was occupied by a part of the allied force. We are officially informed that the French troops will all be removed from the Mexican soil by N^ovember, 1867 ; "the first being intended to depart in November, 1866." There is an immensity between intention- and action. We do believe that the French troops will be withdrawn, providing there are no further troubles in the United States before the time fixed ; for the French people are thoroughly disgusted with this Mexi- can expedition, which draws so heavily both upon their pockets and their honor. There are, however, elements in the problem which place the Emperor JSTapoleon in a most embarrassing position — the honor of France and the prestige of his constant successes, which, if here broken, will cut loose the ties which have bouLnd his name with so much firmness to that country. The French people have long been dazzled with the bright sun of the house of Bonaparte ; once let them clear their eyes of this blindness, and there is little doubt what direction the er- ratic and highly organized brain of France would take. Heaven was in a prodigal mood when it shaped French intellect ; and if in 1789 it surged in one wild wave beyond the level which liberty should occupy, it did no more than other nations have done before it ; the reflux naturally brought back monarchy, but the tide vibrates still in its course to a proper equilibrium. The withdrawal of the French troops does not necessarily involve the withdrawal of the French population in Mexico. The French troops, if natm-alized there, may become Mexican troops under the banner of Maximilian. The time also of many of the French regiments may expire before November, 1867, and it is not a matter of compulsion that they should return home. Any foreigner may in Mexico to-day, or next year, en- 7-6 list under tlie Mexican flag of Maximilian ; and although he might have an army of thirty to forty thousand Frenchmen in his service, there might not be a single one of its soldiers borne upon the military roll of France. We believe, therefore, that whatever troops are withdrawn will be very few, and only those who cannot be persuaded to remain in the service of Maximilian. This is something to which we could not take exception, for France could justly say she no longer held a direct interest in the expedition, however large a quantity of funds she might furnish to support the bogus monarchy against the stalwart blows of the heroic liberals. France labors under another difficulty : there is no reason- able course which she can pursue to obtain indemnity for the immense outlays which she has made in this expedition. She has, as it were, with an invading army, proclaimed Maximilian Emperor of Mexico ; but he, never having been in possession of a square foot of ground which French troops have not for the moment occupied, has been unable to exercise his so-called function unless guarded by the bayonets which not only pro- tect, but think and dictate his policy, making him the most perfect android of this century. "What right has he to acknowl- edge a debt of 270,000,000 francs on the part of Mexico to France, or yet to negotiate a Mexican loan, as has been done on the French Bourse ? Being a mere puppet in the hands of the military power, he is, as it were, an officer of the invading force, who, within a mobilized encampment, with guns shotted and troops ready to spring to arms at the sound of the " long roll," signs a treaty and binds the country he invades to a course of action which the real government cannot, for a moment, sanc- tion. Deny the existence of the liberal government all they may, the fact that fifty thousand French troops, with all their splendid discipline, war material, and equipment, cannot, or do not, to-day, hold one-third of the country against the half- starved and poorly supplied patriots opposed to them, is the most tangible and powerful recognition that can be granted that there is a force superior to their own, which, if the French Foreign Minister does not recognize, the Treasury of France does, and that, too, every day, with immense and constantly increasing additions to the debit side of the account, while the credit side is as blank as the soul which gave the expedition birth. The truth is, France sends an expedition to Mexico, sets up her android upon what she classifies as a throne, writes out her bill of indemnity, orders it to be signed, and lo ! Mexico owes France at least $200,000,000. If France evacuates Mexico and Maximilian follows, with whom can Napoleon treat ? The allies acknowledged the exist- ence of the liberal scovernment bv the treaty of La Soled ad, 74- . when they first entered the country; and, as we have said, fifty thousand troops have recognized it ever since; but if, by a treaty on any subject, they again recognize that government they have so constantly ignored, it will be a virtual acknowl- edgment that they have never, in truth, been able to foist upon the country their bogus monarchy, and therefore its acts must fall with it, including the debts which have been contracted in the attempt to maintain it upon such unpromising soil. In truth the constitutional government has ever been since the French invasion the real government, and never has there been at any moment one-third of the country under the shadow of foreign bayonets. The Emperor l^apoleon is unfortunately bound, to a certain degree, to protect the prince of Austria, 'who was induced to place himself in so doubtful a position ; the honor of France is here also at stake. In a discussion in the French Chambers, in January, 1864, M. Thiers boldly stated, that " when a prince is taken from one of the greatest reigning families of Europe, when that family is asked for a prince to be delivered up to the haz- ards of those civil wars so frequent in Mexico, to pretend that there is no obligation contracted towards him and his, is to ad- vance a theory not very honorable to France." France, then, is assailed by a double dishonor. If she withdraws from Mexico and _abandons Maximilian to his fate, she acknowledges her Mexican expedition a complete failure, and sinks much glory, much treasure, and much prestige on this side of the Atlantic, while, on the other side, it is equivalent to almost open war with Austria. French treasure and Austrian troops natm-ally become the next expedient. When that policy fails, will not a European war be necessary to give employment to the French mind and gloss over the Mexican failure ? It is far from im- probable that the reaction of the French Mexican scheme may cause Europe some trouble, and may lead to complications not to be measured by words, but by swords. In our present condition in the United States, the result of four years of civil strife and terrible carnage, we are naturaUy left in a position where the elements are still simmering under the latent heat which produced the great rebellion. Aside from our abstract views of foreign interference in the governments of our Western World, we have a home interest to look to, which is not among the least important. All unsettled as we are, and seeking, as yet, to mingle the States into a more homogeneous nationality, the presence of a foreign monarchical element upon our southwestern frontier is a constant source, if not of alarm, at least of suspicion, which calls our earnest attention to its re- moval at the earliest moment. We do not want a war with France ; we are too closely bound in the ties which were woven 75 in onr War of Independence to wisti to live in other than the most amicable relations with her ; but it is the feeling of the whole nation that this French-Mexican scheme is a constant threat against om* people, which, if long continued, can bat ripen into bitter fruit and destroy a friendship which we highly prize so long as we can enjoy it with honor. We feel that the time set for the withdrawal of the French forces is too distant, and that it is fixed more with reference to the hope that some lucky tmm of events in the United States may leave the Mexican ex- pedition undistm'bed, than it is with a view to an abandonment of the Mexican scheme of empire. We hazard little in predict- ing that the Mexican question has scarcely yet reached its secondary phase. Notwithstanding cyax warning to Austria not to embark troops to replace those of France in Mexico, reliable news reaches us that the fii'st shipment of such troops has ah-eady taken place. There is, moreover, no law which prevents Ger- mans from emi^'ating where they please ; and there is no law which prevents France and Austi-ia fr-om supplying Maximilian with all the material of war he inay demand. The truth is that the liberals, unless they receive assistance, must depend upon theii' own good swords for some time yet. It is but justice, however, that they should receive assistance, and that, too, from om* Government. We have long enough nm^sed the selfish policy of non-intervention in the affairs of the Spanish- American Republics ; long enough seen them browbeaten and plundered by monarchical Em^ope, which has taken advantage of our self- ishness in forcing all the struggling republics to the south of us from enjoying any ray of light from us excepting that which has given them their revolutionary impetus. Sisters in a com- mon cause, we have acted most unkindly towards them, and the results we every day witness in such acts as the invasion of Mexico, and the bullying of the whole Pacific coast by Spain, which, the news just reaches us, has added the appendix to the long list of horrors which, through her hands, have cm-sed Spanish- America, by the disgraceful bombardment of Yal- paraiso. Surely we lack generosity, sui-ely we are without common humanity even, if we permit these constant and glar- ing outrages upon a people who are struggling to raise their heads above the inherited curses of Europe. Even in a selfish point of view the benefits which we might reap in throwing a protecting influence over Spanish- America would more than repay all warfare which we might have to wage on their ac- count : for. once be it known that we stood as the champion of justice between them and the Em-opean nations, there would be no causes given for any active interference. The nation that lives entirely for itself can make but a poor mark in the history 76 of the world, and tlie jingle of its money bags will scarcelj throw its echoes so far into the future as would the broad policy of protection to human progress. France recognizes the government of Maximilian as the legitimate ruling power of Mexico ; we recognize that of the liberals, under Juarez. France is not making war against Mexico, but is furnishing troops to what she calls the legitimate government, for a stipulated price according to a written con- tract. ]^ow, if France has the right to furnish the government which she recognizes with mercenary troops and money to carry on the war — and this right is recognized in Europe by other governments — why have we not a similar legitimate right to furnish war materiel and cash to the government which we recognize ? The liberals are not in want of men. They could to-day raise an army of three hundred thousand had they the naeans for supplying it with munitions of war. They want money, and we as a people would only be doing them and their cause simple justice were we to furnish it to them in whatever quantities may be required. We do not advocate this course that we may gain any foothold in the JSTorthern provinces of Mexico, for we have quite territory enough to suit the mass of the American people ; although there be many who have made large investments in Sonora with the hope that the schemes of President Buchanan, in 1859, might redound to the advantage of those who were in the secret. These men are now willing to argue for any government which promises stability, without reference to its principles. We believe, however, that their only hope of stability in the N^orthern provinces, unless they are annexed to the IJnited States, is in the liberal government, for they will assuredly be the battle ground of the contending parties until Maximilian is driven from the country. The present condition of Mexico is scarcely changed from what it was at the first occupation of the French troops and the crowning of Maximilian. The Emperor can scarcely travel five miles in any direction without a large escort, as a protec- tion against the guerrilla bands, which keep the foreign troops constantly employed, even in the most pacified districts. Of the war in the Northern provinces, we hear the most conflicting accounts ; but judging even from those most in favor of the Imperialists, they are waging an exhaustive warfare against the large and constantly increasing forces of the liberals, who ap- pear to be rapidly gaining ground. The Pall Mall Gazette of March 9, 1865, says :— " It looks as if we might hope for peace and civilization when there are no more Mexicans." Mexico had her dawn of civilization and peace at the very moment that France invaded her soil in 1862, and the true hope for lier is when there are no more foreign 77 bayonets upon her soil to thrust her back into the darkness from which she had just emerged. From calculations made from official dispatches, published in the Mexican imperial journals, it appears that there took place, during the year 1866, three hundred and twenty -two encounters of arms, or about on an average, a battle or a skirmish for every day in the year. Is Mexico under control of Maximilian or the liberalists? The war which has been waged by the French troops is in no manner superior in character to that civil warfare which was in Europe so much condemned before the landing of a foreign force. The mercenaries of Maximilian have, if we may believe all accounts, been as rigorously cruel in their treatment of the Mexicans opposed to them as ever England was in the treatment of the Sepoy troops during the East India rebellion. The barbarous order of Maximilian, in October, 1865, to mer- cilessly shoot down all liberals found under arms shows not only how hard the imperial forces have been pressed, but also the sanguinary character of the struggle which they are forced to maintain to preserve even a show of European-reflected roy- alty upon the soil w^hich had been so dishonorably usm-ped. The liberals are, however, fast effecting the recovery of the country. This is shown by the fact that the battles are con- stantly increasing in number, and that where there was one battle in the opening of 1865, there are now two. No quarter has been the rule of warfare, and the result has been a terrible loss of life on both sides. The desperate resolve of the Mexi- cans to free their soil from the invader makes the task of the latter to pacify the country alinost a hopeless one, while the "moral support" which the Emperor Napoleon furnishes to the government he has so generously permitted the Mexican people to unanimously choose, is fast losing ground before the stm-dy blow^s of a people who prefer the enshrinement of a different kind of morality upon their political altars. From reliable information the imperial treasury of Max- imilian is almost as hard pushed for funds as was that of the liberals when the invaders first landed. It appears that they have already been obliged to resort to that plan to which their predecessors in power have been forced before them — the sell- ing of the orders of the Minister of Finance on the Custom Houses at a discount — to obtain means to meet the demands on the Treasury. There is but one hope. Maximilian again turns his eyes towards Napoleon, and Napoleon towards the French people. Will the latter, already depleted in purse by this heavy drain in support of an idea, again respond, and aid the Mexican Imperialists in the formation of a foreign legion with which to continue their policy of Mexican pacification ? 78 SUPPLEMENT. Successes of the Liberals — Maximilian grossly Deceived — FiNAJSrCIAL CONDITION OF THE CoUNTRY ChXIROH PaBTY WITH Santa Anna again in the Field — Effects of the Invasion — Dispute about the Presidency — Grant of Extraordinary Powers to Juarez — Mexico fights the Republican Battle for the whole Continent — Con- cluding Remarks. The late mformation from Mexico informs us that the so- called empire is tottering to its fall ; and yet, we believe that efforts will be made to maintain it in the face of every obstacle ; • the liberals are, however, overrunning the whole country, and the strong strategic positions of the various States are rapidly falling into their hands. Were the Emperor Napoleon famed for his honor, we might anticipate some new move in favor of the unfortunate prince Maximilian, to whom he has presented a " sacred white elephant ;" but we are too well instructed in his history to believe that the man who could approve of per- fidy in the first act at La Soledad, can blush at the desertion of the archduke in the present condition of the tragic-comedy called the Empire. As we have before remarked, European complica- tions may be necessary to gloss over the failure ; and there is more of Mexico to-day in the present hostile attitude of the great powers of Europe, than is seen upon the surface. The archduke Maximilian was grossly deceived by all par- ties, as to the condition of Mexico, before he crossed the Atlan- tic. The misrepresentations of the interested European powers were only made patent to him when he found that the part of Mexico which he governed was only ruled under the gleam of foreign bayonets : and yet it appears that, in the treaty which he made wi h Napoleon III., for. the retention of a whole corps cf armee^ he was somewhat doubtful of the truth of the picture of Mexico which the clergy photographed upon the the monarchical retina of Europe. Perhaps he even dis- trusted the truthfulness of Santa Anna's words, who, on the 22d December, 1883, wrote to him — " I may also assure your Imperial Highness that the voice raised in Mexico to proclaim your respected name is not the voice of a party. An immense majority of the nation desire to restore the empire of the Mon- tezumas with your Imperial Highness at its head, believing it to be the only remedy for existing ills, and the ultimate anchor of its hopes." 79 ■ The financial condition of the so-called empire is to-day worse than that of any party which ever occupied the capital during any revolutionary overturning in the country. The so- called empire has attempted to load Mexico with a mountain of debt, many times exceeding that which the nation owed in 1861 ; while the immense increase of expenditures for this bastard government compares very unfavorably with the more democratic outlays for the support of republican institutions. Up to January 1st, 1866, official data, published at Wash- ington, shows : First. That France has charged to Mexico for expenses of invasion to July 1st, 1864. . $50,000,000 Second. That loans have been negotiated for Maximilian in France, amounting to . . . 150,000,000 Third. That the claims of France, admitted by the constitutional government before the intervention, were only 2,859,917 Fourth. That the French claims recognized by Maximilian already amount to 192,962,962 We have also the following COMPAKISONS. Foreign debt, as attempted to be recognized by Maximilian $271,735,605 Foreign debt, as recognized by the constitutional government 81,632,560 Attempted increase by Maximilian $190,103,045 Annual interest required to be paid by Maxi- milian $12,966,204 Annual interest under the government of the Eepublic 2,760,022 Attempted increase by Maximilian $10,206,182 Annual expenditures under Maximilian. ..... $49,929,326 Annual expenditm-es, fixed by the national Congress, under the Republic. 11,087,440 Aimual increase under Maximilian $38,841,886 Annual salary of Maximilian, so called Em- peror of Mexico $1,500,000 Annual salary of the President of the Eepublic. 30,000 ■ 80 It will be liere noticed that the interest alone^ which is re- quired to be paid by Maximilian, exceeds by almost two Tnillion^ of dollars the total anmial expenditures sanctioned hy the con- stitutional Congress^ hefore the invasion. The result of these considerations shows with severity against the attempted foisting of a monarchical government upon the country. To make this indebtedness good, there is a combination of a powerful moneyed interest to uphold the em- pire, upon which they put almost their total dependence for future payment of claims. This moneyed interest is very nearly equal in amount, although not equal in power, to that which the church held, while for so many years it contested the rights of cash against high political principles. In support of the empire there is also a considerable party of Mexicans who em- barked their fortunes in it ; others who have received titles and distinctions under it ; others who have grown rich from its con- tracts ; others who have entered the country from foreign lands and accepted from it peculiar and valuable privileges ; all com- bined forming a powerful party, not entirely to be ignored, even after the p^romised withdrawal of the French troops. But we believe that the postponement of this withdrawal to so late a date, is to give all these interests time to consolidate, with the hope also, that, in eighteen months, the additional interests that may be brought to work in harmony with the others, may en- able the imperial government to make head against all oppo- nents. In view of this, we question the wisdom of our govern- ment in allowing the longer continuance of this bastard usurp- ation of the rights of a people, and the enduring of this stand- ing insult to the whole Western continent. The church party are also in the field with new- political com- binations, with the hope that, by some extraordinary turn of fortune, they may regain some of their lost power, and re-estab- lish a reactionary government in place of that to which they betrayed their country, and which in turn betrayed them. Again, as of old, their exponent is Santa Anna ; and this retro- gressive champion issues a frommciamiento^ crying " Down with the empire ! " — which Tie helped establish — and " Long live the republic 1 " — which he helped overthroio. The clergy, with the hope of driving from the soil the power which has broken faith with them, are now making one grand rally to free themselves from its weight ; therefore they cry Union of all parties and all political creeds, but they want Union and the Leadership ; this, ^we believe, * See New York Herald, June 14, 1866. 81 would be ruin to the liberal cause, and we see in it, therefore, the reasons for the distrust with which all the liberals look at the attempted foisting of Santa Anna upon the republican plat- form. The clergy, finding that they cannot establish a church party, and that intervention and monarchy fail to dro^^^l the the republic in their waves, very naturally seek for a footing under the repu?jlican standard, and demand a position which it would be fatal for the liberals to grant them. Gro'^^n^ out of French invasion and the consequent dis- tracted condition of the country, there are other combinations in the field derogatory to the true interests of Mexican civiliza- tion and progress. Among these has been the inability of the Mexican people to hold a constitutional election for President before the expiration of the late presidential term. The result has been that, by virtae of the constitution. General Ortega, as " President of the Supreme Court of Justice," considered him- self entitled, on the 1st December, 1865, to the presidential chaii'. On that date, however, he was absent from the country, and, therefore, could not assume the duties of the office. He had claimed that he was entitled to the seat in 1864; but the decision of the cabinet was against him, and to this he appar- ently acquiesced like a true patriot. It is easy to sit quietly in one's study and render a decision of what is the right in time of peace ; but in time of great public peril, when, by civil commotion, by foreign invasion, and by a struggle that saps the life-blood of a nation, the whole conditions of the problem become changed, a point at least should be yielded to that stera military law which is the growth of the moment, and which, unwritten, is still to be considered when the destinies of a people perhaps hang upon the firmness of the hand that presses the helm. A true patriot never leaves his post at that moment, no matter what personal considera- tions may influence him.. It is not within our province to decide the question of Ortega's right to the presidency, but we believe that a strict rendering of military law would cause his arrest for desertion and trial by court martial were he to return to Mexico ; for, nearly twelve months previous to the time at which the cabinet of Juarez decided that the presidential term should be extended, General Ortega applied for, and received from his government, a " leave of transit " from Chihuahua through the Lnited States to another part of Mexico, for the purpose of organizing some military expedition against the enemy. Ever since this leave was granted Ortega has been in the United States. Instead of standing beside the other heroes of Mexico who have 6 82 so bravely fought in the cause of freedom, he has apparently de- serted the cause of his country. General Ortega is a brave man, with many good qualities of head and heart ; but his place was by the side of Juarez, battling for the overthrow of the empire, that, in case of the death of the latter, he might take up the standard and continue the contest. Should Juarez die, there is no one to fill the chair, according to the letter of the constitu- tion, unless, by virtue of the powers vested in Trim by the N"ational Congress, he has appointed some one. The decrees of Congress, for this and every purpose, have been more than ample, and show what confidence has been centered in the present incumbent of the presidential chair. On December 11, 1861, Congress granted extraordinary powers to the President, only Imiiting him to the preservation of the national territory and the indej^endence of the country intact, and the support of the constitution. On December 13, 1861, a supplementary article was added, even granting power " to conclude treaties and conventions, and place them in the course of execution." Again, May 3, 1862, and October 2Y, 1862, and still again May 27, 1863, Congress reconfirmed these extraordinary powers to the President, who, on the 8th Nov., 1865, by their virtue, issued a decree extending his term of ofiice, and also that of the " President of the Supreme Com-t of Justice," until " the condi- tion of the war may permit an election to be constitutionally held." . Besides the reasons given in this decree for the extension, there were other and powerful ones, born of the situation and potent in their solution of the contest against the invaders of the soil. It was a case of imperious necessity that Juarez should continue to govern ; for, it was his government that the French proclaimed war against, and not against the Mexican people who had with an overwhelming majority placed him in the presidential chair. The wish of every true Mexican was, therefore, that the man of their choice should remain at the head of their government, in the face of all for- eign opposition ; providing that, in addition to this wish, there were good and sufficient constitutional reasons forhis so doing. In this view then, Juarez represents the will of Mexico in opposition to the will of Prance. It was, moreover, necessary to have a sterling man in the position, that required a persistent, unwavering purpose, with unfaltering nerve, to wage a contest of years against the bastard empire of Maximilian ! Fortunate has it been for Mexico that she found the man whose sterling integrity was proof against all the dazzling allm-ements of the empire ; who could not be bought, nor yet deceived ; whose 83 sole purpose of life appeal's to be to free his countiy from her invaders, and restore the cause of order and civilization which foreign intervention so rudely hurled aside, at the moment it was established, after the terrific battle of half a century. The attempt of France to overthrow the government of the people has, thus far, been unsuccessful, and it should be the effort to-day of every real Mexican patriot to prevent the ma- chinations of the French Emperor from establishing any govern- ment in place of the present liberal one whereby, upon the exodus of Maximilian, he may be able to attach to the Mexican national debt the long and unfortunate bill he has contracted in his foolish attempt to establish an empire in the heart of the Western Kepublican World ! Mexico is to-day fighting the great battle of republicanism against imperialism. The direct insult which France offered to the Mexican people, in the attempt to establish a government not of their choice, is also an indirect insult to every republic on this continent, and most of all to the United States. The conquest of Mexico was to be a foothold for the propagandism of monarchical ideas in the New World. One after the other the republics were to fall until human liberty and republi- canism became a transient bubble of the past, that showed its bright colors in the sunshine, but burst at the first blast ; but the wave of imperialism has broken against a rock ; lashed into foam, it hurls itself in vain against an unaided and poverty- stricken republic which fifty years of civil strife have torn and wounded to the heart. Shame ! shame ! that we, as a people, look on quietly and see Mexico tight the battle of both North and South America. Shame ! to the Great Republic that we bind our sympathies in the shroud of selfishness and see im- perial Europe scourge, without cause, the young republics to the south of us, who, just struggling into the light of civiliza- tion, are baified and thrown back into the past because the Colossus of the North lies dead to their appeals against a com- mon enemy. With the overthrow of Maximilian, there will naturally arise new complications, born of the evils which have dropped from the folds of the French flag. The whole political atmos- phere, driven into cloud and whirlwind by the invasion, will not settle into calm under the first ray of sunshine. Our own civil war, and its present phase, should teach us to have patience with a people whose political fortunes have been stirred to more tragic action by five decades of contest and the solution of a dozen curses in its one great crucible of revolu- tion. Grant them a few years to restore their country ! — first, 84 LIBRRRY OF CONGRESS 015 834 919 to the condition in which the allies found it in 1861, when they cuTsedit with their presence ; then the reorganization of the whole civil and political forces overtprned by the invasion ; and, finally, the restoration of the organic law of the land, the constitution of 1857, with all the civilizing reforms that attended it. THE END.