continental commerce of this country
should depend on one railroad. I want new territories opened. I
want to see American steamships running to all the great ports of
the world. I want to see our flag flying on all the seas and in
all the harbors. We have the best country, and, in my judgment,
the best people in the world, and we ought to be the most prosperous
nation on the earth.
_Question_. Then you only consider the Greenback movement a
temporary thing?
_Answer_. Yes; I do not believe that there is anything permanent
in anything that is not sound, that has not a perfectly sound
foundation, and I mean sound, sound in every sense of that word.
It must be wise and honest. We have plenty of money; the trouble
is to get it. If the Greenbackers will pass a law furnishing all
of us with collaterals, there certainly would be no trouble about
getting the money. Nothing can demonstrate more fully the
plentifulness of money than the fact that millions of four per
cent. bonds have been taken in the United States. The trouble is,
business is scarce.
_Question_. But do you not think the Greenback movement will help
the Democracy to success in 1880?
_Answer_. I think the Greenback movement will injure the Republican
party much more than the Democratic party. Whether that injury
will reach as far as 1880 depends simply upon one thing. If
resumption--in spite of all the resolutions to the contrary--
inaugurates an era of prosperity, as I believe and hope it will,
then it seems to me that the Republican party will be as strong in
the North as in its palmiest days. Of course I regard most of the
old issues as settled, and I make this statement simply because I
regard the financial issue as the only living one.
Of course, I have no idea who will be the Democratic candidate,
but I suppose the South will be solid for the Democratic nominee,
unless the financial question divides that section of the country.
_Question_. With a solid South do you not think the Democratic
nominee will stand a good chance?
_Answer_. Certainly, he will stand the best chance if the Democracy
is right on the financial question; if it will cling to its old
idea of hard money, he will. If the Democrats will recognize that
the issues of the war are settled, then I think that party has the
best chance.
_Question_. But if it clings to soft money?
_Answer_. Then I think it will be beaten, if by soft money it
means the payment
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