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Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, William Lloyd Garrison (1879). (search)
William Lloyd Garrison (1879). Remarks at the funeral services, Boston, May 28, 1879. It has been well said that wed never intermitted their testimony against slavery. But Garrison was the first man to begin a movement designed to annihilf approval or sympathy. During all his weary struggle, Mr. Garrison felt its weight in the scale against him. In those year is that of John Brown. Brown stood on the platform that Garrison built; and Mrs. Stowe herself charmed an audience that hedred to a voice that you have heard to-day, whose pathway Garrison's bloody feet had made easier for the treading,--when hemiscalculation of the enemy's strength. Whoever mistook, Garrison seldom mistook. Fewer mistakes in that long agitation ofbster and Clay shrunk from him and evaded his assertion. Garrison, alone at that time, met him face to face, proclaiming slot get high enough to reach the level of my contempt. So Garrison, from the serene level of his daily life, from the faith