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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 1 1 Browse Search
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ty is the best policy, and that no amount of skilful diplomacy can be advantageously substituted for manly rectitude. Strive as you may to propitiate the slave power, by which this Government is moulded and directed, it will be only to your own degradation, and without attaining the end you desire. Letter to Kossuth, p. 58. The Hungarian refugee had hardly turned his back upon the national capital when the House, by a narrow vote, just failed of resolving that South Carolina (like Jan. 19. 1852; Lib. 22.14. the seaboard slave States generally) was justified in imprisoning the black sailors of a British ship driven into Lib. 22.25, 71, 99, 201. port by stress of weather—treatment worse than that which the Japanese expedition was ostensibly ordered to Griffis's M. C. Perry, pp. 276-279. redress. He passed into Maryland and Pennsylvania, and was received by the Legislatures and Governors Lib. 22.11, 15. while a bill was pending in each State to prevent the Lib. 22.14, 33. ent