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friend's resolution, at the same time urged that a committee be formed. As to disunion, he remarked, it must and will come. Calhoun wants it at one end of the Union— Garrison wants it at the other. It is written in the counsels of God. Meantime, let all classes and orders and interests unite in using the present hour to prevent the consummation of this annexation of Texas. Lib. 15.177. A State Anti-Texas Committee resulted from a mass Lib. 15.178. meeting held in Faneuil Hall on November 4, with Charles Francis Adams in the chair; the stirring resolutions being offered by John G. Palfrey, the Massachusetts Secretary of State. At the head of this committee stood Mr. Adams, and Mr. Garrison was among his colleagues, consenting to become a member of the Committee as an experiment, Lib. 16.19. and to help more clearly to demonstrate the futility of any and every attempt to assail slavery in its incidents and details. The Slave Power must be attacked and vanquished openly, as
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 6: third mission to England.—1846. (search)
rrison could rightly claim its demise as one of the results of Lib. 16.198. his English mission. The public sentiment aroused by the Exeter Hall meeting, and by similar demonstrations all over the United Kingdom up to his sailing for home on November 4, admittedly constrained the British branch, when organizing at Manchester on that very date, to Lib. 16.198. exclude slaveholders from membership—albeit leaving their personal Christianity an open question. Ashurst expressly declared of thifully to deserve them. A breakfast by invitation with George Combe, perhaps on Oct. 22, in company with Thompson, Douglass, and Buffum, was another pleasurable incident of this visit to Edinburgh ( Life of Douglass, ed. 1882, p. 245). On November 4, Mr. Garrison sailed from Liverpool on the Acadia. A large party of friends—representatives Lib. 16.201. of the three kingdoms—who had gathered the night before expressly to bid him farewell at the house of Richard Rathbone, waved him their lo<
ante, 2: 377, 390]. I had the treat of meeting Mazzini—a truly great man as he appears in his present position, and I cannot but entertain the hope that he would stand the test of a visit to America, though Kossuth has proved so fearfully recreant to principle (Ms. and Lib. 22: [123]). See the pointing of this contrast after Kossuth's return to England in Lib. 24: 113, 125, 126. a packet describing with faithfulness and correctness the true state of the slave question in the States. On November 4, James Haughton sent through Charles Gilpin a letter to Lib. 22.3. Kossuth admonishing him not to go to America, and to give to the world his reasons for staying away. On November 17, Richard Webb, forwarding his mite for Lib. 21:[203]. the Hungarian fund to the Mayor of Southampton, desired him to lay before Kossuth considerations why, in visiting America, he should not forfeit the esteem of European admirers by ignoring the existence of slavery. The Edinburgh Ladies' Emancipation Soc