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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 1: re-formation and Reanimation.—1841. (search)
Edmund Quincy, and did not prevail. In fact, what J. H. Noyes called the whole phalanx of Massachusetts Ultraists Ante, p. 11. had a conservative element of which the editor of the Liberator was, paradoxical as it might seem, the head. He was himself a shining example of moderate and calculated utterance, while little disturbed by the want of it in those whose anti-slavery sincerity, courage, zeal, and devotedness he felt to be equal to his own. There is danger, Lib. 12.94. he wrote in June, 1842, in a fine plea for toleration of idiosyncrasies, of abolitionists becoming invidious and censorious toward each other, in consequence of making constitutional peculiarities virtuous or vicious traits, or, in other words, on account of the manner in which the cause is advocated Lib. 12.95. by this person or that. I see by the Post, writes George Bradburn to Francis Boston Post. Jackson, on August 7, 1841, that friend Loring does Ms. not choose to be understood as discussing abolition E