Browsing named entities in Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2. You can also browse the collection for Louis Kossuth or search for Louis Kossuth in all documents.

Your search returned 36 results in 2 document sections:

Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Kossuth (1851). (search)
e of freedom at Missolonghi! But what does Kossuth wish for Hungary? My most ardent wish is, thack word, Be a god! So if men only claim for Kossuth that he is ready to do and dare all for Hungam of twelve millions bought the silence of Louis Kossuth for a year. A world in the scale never boa. I send Fayette, therefore, to Austria. Kossuth, sheltered by the Crescent, hears of the comilorious entry into the capital of Hungary, as Kossuth speaks of the entrance of the Americans into on lay the flattering unction to their souls, Kossuth is an experienced man, he understands our insompany they keep. It seems to me right to judge Kossuth so in this instance. Suppose a friend of the slave from my thoughts, as Kossuth does. Kossuth saves Hungary by subserviency to the South; Ipectfully, W. B. Reed, Attorney-General. Kossuth thus comments on this letter:-- Now, sucd men and the indignant protest of the world, Kossuth, with the eyes of all nations fixed upon him[24 more...]
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Daniel O'Connell (1875.) (search)
To show you that he never took a leaf from our American gospel of compromise; that he never filed his tongue to silence on one truth, fancying so to help another; that he never sacrificed any race to save even Ireland,--let me compare him with Kossuth, whose only merits were his eloquence and his patriotism. When Kossuth was in Faneuil Hall, he exclaimed, Here is a flag without a stain, a nation without a crime! We Abolitionists appealed to him, O eloquent son of the Magyar, come to break cKossuth was in Faneuil Hall, he exclaimed, Here is a flag without a stain, a nation without a crime! We Abolitionists appealed to him, O eloquent son of the Magyar, come to break chains! have you no word, no pulse-beat, for four millions of negroes bending under a yoke ten times heavier than that of Hungary? He answered, I would forget anybody, I would praise anything, to help Hungary. O'Connell never said anything like that. When I was in Naples, I asked Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, a Tory, Is O'Connell an honest man? As honest a man as ever breathed, said he, and then told me this story: When, in 1830, O'Connell entered Parliament, the Antislavery cause was so weak