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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 14: the Boston mob (first stage).—1835. (search)
eigner Thompson, patting the greasy little fellows on their cheeks, and giving them most lovely kisses. They are the exclusive philanthropists —the only lovers of the human race—the only legitimate defenders of the religion of Christ ( Letters and Times of the Tylers, 1.576). Nowhere was this question more seriously pondered than in Boston, where the Atlas at once called for a Lib. 5.130. meeting in the same Faneuil Hall that had been denied the abolitionists, and urged that Webster, Otis, Adams, Story, Sprague, Austin, Choate, and Everett should vindicate the fair fame of our city. One thus invited to declare his sentiments against men accused of preparing a civil and servile war in the name of philanthropy, John Quincy Adams, wrote as follows in his diary: August 11, 1835. The theory of the rights of man has taken Memoirs, 9.251. deep root in the soil of civil society. . . . Anti-slavery associations are formed in this country and in England, and they are already