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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 2: the Irish address.—1842. (search)
y farewell. My heart was full, and I trembled like an aspen leaf shook by the wind. We parted for the last time on earth. 1818-1819. In his trunk he afterwards found a letter from her which he could never read without weeping. What intemperance and cruel suffering had spared of James Garrison's battered hulk drifted at last by a kind Providence into the port of Boston, where a brother's love was ready to be proved superior to all temptations to disownment. W. L. Garrison to Secretary Paulding. For the Secretary's reply, see ante, 2: 330. Boston, December 14, 1839. Ms. Navy Dept. Archives. I have a brother, James H. Garrison, who is now attached as a seaman to the U. S. Ship Columbus at the Navy Yard in Charlestown. He has been in the naval service of his country for the long period of sixteen years. It is rather more than Ante, p. 74. four months since his last enlistment. During nearly all this time he has been on the sick-list, wholly incapacitated to perfor