Mr. Seward to Mr. Adams,.
Sir: Your despatch of the 23d of April, No. 1357, is received. It presents vividly the state of solicitude for the preservation of European peace which now exists in England, and with equal clearness the state of anxiety which has been [Page 87] produced by the inconstancy of the House of Commons in regard to domestic political questions. The condition of the mind of Europe, as well as that of Great Britain, has changed with such a rapidity as to excite surprise on this side of the Atlantic. Comparing it with circumstances which preceded our late civil war, one is almost obliged to expect immediately even a more general revolutionary movement in Europe than that which so lately and so fearfully disturbed the United States.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
Charles Francis Adams, Esq., &c., &c., &c.