In C.[abinet] C[ouncil]—present, Welles, Usher, Blair, Bates, and part of
the time, Fessenden. absent Seward and Stanton—
The Prest. gave a minute account of the (pretended) attempt to negotiate
for peace, thro' George [N.] Sanders, Clem. C. Clay and Holcolm[be] by the
agency of that meddlesome blockhead, Jewitt [Jewett] and Horace Greel[e]y. He
read us all the letters.
I am surprised to find the Prest. green enough to be entrapped into such
a correspondence; but being in, his letters seem to me cautious and prudent.
Jewitt [Jewett] a crack-brained simpleton (who aspires to be a knave,
while he really belongs to a lower order of entities) opens the affair, by a
letter and telegram to Greel[e]y; and Greel[e]y carries on the play, by writing
to the President, to draw him out, and, if possible, commit him, to his hurt —
while the pretended Confederate Commissioners play dumby, — wa[i]ting to avail
themselves of some probable blunder, on this side.
I noticed that the gentlemen present were, at first, very chary, in speaking
of Greel[e]y, evidently afraid of him and his paper, the Tribune; and so, I
said “I cant [sic] yet see the color of the cat, but there is certainly a cat
in that mealtub.” The contrivers of the plot counted largely on the Presidents
[sic] gullibility, else they never would have started it by the agency of such
a mad fellow as Jewitt [Jewett] — perhaps they used him prudently, thinking
that if bluffed off, at the start, they might pass it off as a joke.
I consider it a very serious affair — a double trick. — On the part of the
Rebel Commissioners (now at Niagara, on the Canada side) the hope might have
been entertained that a show of negotiation for peace might produce a truce,
relax the war, and give them a breathing spell, at this critical moment of
their fate. And as for Greel[e]y, I think he was cunningly seeking to make a
pretext for bolting the Baltimore nomination.
The President, I fear, is afraid of the Tribune, and thinks he cant [sic]
afford to have it for an enemy. And Usher tries to deepen that impression. But
Blair says there is no danger of that; that Greel[e]y is restrained by Hall,1
who controls the paper, and Greel[e]y too, owning 6/10 of the stock, and is a
fast friend of the President — (of that? [I question.])
<[Note.] Oct [ ]. It appears that Greel[e]y is now ruled in, as Blair
said. He is now a sound (?) Lincoln man — Elector at large, for the State of N.
Y! Having, vainly, exhausted his strength against Mr. Lincoln's candidacy, he
now, adopts the candidate (manifestly forced upon him, by popular
demonstration) and plays the next best game, i. e. tries to convert him to his
own use, by making him as great a Radical as himself. >
_______________
1 Henry Hall, son of a leading New York jurist, was connected with the
Tribune for twenty-six years during eighteen of which he was business manager.
SOURCE: Edward Bates, Diary of
Edward Bates, p. 388-9
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