nil iNiisl Hii/nv l/ii’iil/ii’i(iitiiirn’ 1 ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ^”^-^ -m M 1 ^ ‘ ^ • ‘ X , ‘ ^ / ^ ‘ ^ / ‘ ^ Ij i>ii wish Id liiimv llii’ JHolili’ (tj llic •rnI [Ir^ ^^B • ! IT^llr^lf i l (>ii iiiiisl Inioxv Ihciylilruilux:rnkJvyLiLlld 11 CrXf^rUfnrn•jis A Traitor?, non-[non,m(‘) 1 ^ * VJvJllCL.LlvJllrn)crt Tal(,r Bledsoe, n pages • # ^ W ^ # ^ ” 1 0 0 ^ ^ 1 ^ / ^ / ^rnuetion h- Dr. Clvde .. Wilson f C f—” I I yA I W W ^ t i f””^rnSu 1 Car lina X Vl^l ICtlkJOCil ll^Vxrn/s Davis A Traitor?, non-l’uUon, 1866rnby Albert Taylor Hled.soe. 2~’Z pagesrnIntroduction by Dr. (;iyde .. Wilsonrnbnixersitv’ of South (Carolinarnia’M llir Suilo, I nrnki’d to liiiii: ‘Take c;irnili()licr> thai ‘JinfiiK’d ihc ,S(irn Jrn’- ”^ViatrnI ions ID the Wiirof IH6I?rnof Ihf C()nfL’dt’rac. was lir’srn’i6 by IniK’s ^Coniprnted twice; b Ik’rmitrnir!>inia. in 1915 iiiidtT a (liflVi’unl lille. I he W(irrnBetWiVii I he Sillies: or iiis Secession cirnCoiistitiitional Rigl)t I’rerioiis lo the Vntroflfi6l>rn”So tills edition, whicii oiigiit to be at the hand ofrneven loal Southerner, makes the book aailable forrnthe first time In eight; years. Bledsoe’s passion, brilliance,rnand eloquence for a ‘lost cause” remind usrnthat Soiilheriiei’s hae aluas belieied in ilie sanctityrnof the word. For them the Constitution was an agreementrnthat meant what it meiuit. that belonged tornthose wlio ratified it. For Northerners it was merelvrnwhatever ends were determined by the predoininantrnpowers, and a playihing for legal and politicalrnsophists. It was this and not slaer that was the irrepressiblernconflict of the sections.”rn—Dr. Clyde X Wilson.rni I’ntversit}’of South Carolinarn. V; ij ‘*Sll»ir^* “^»- ^ . ^rnM*”rn’-”m^jr • * > »rnS*-1*Rrn• (md KttnS^i^rn_>«:rnrnrn