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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 9: Journalist at large.—1868-1876. (search)
s driven to take up the message and draw from that as much as I could. I was in earnest, and determined if possible to arrest this sacrifice. The only answer was a flood of personalities. Nothing has been baser than the Advertiser. Its allegation was Boston Daily Advertiser. absolutely false. At the West I am generally sustained. In Boston—you know. There is a menace to displace me from the Committee on Foreign Relations, of which I have been chairman ten years. This is a sop to Cerberus. It is founded on my difference with the Administration on this question, and the character of my speech. You will receive the speech soon, and I commend it to your perusal. Consider, if you please, that documentary evidence known to me could not be used. Gerrit Smith writes as you do. What will W. P. say? Wendell Phillips. Ever sincerely yours, Charles Sumner. Mr. Garrison had to take issue with his friend in the following year, when the Democracy made a final rally under H