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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 8: to England and the Continent.—1867. (search)
ing.) Any one of the above speeches would have made the occasion noteworthy and significant, but it remained for John Stuart Mill, who followed Earl Russell, to point, with philosophic thoughtfulness, the moral of Mr. Garrison's experience. Mr. Mill said: The speakers who have preceded me have, with an eloquence W. L. G. Breakfast, pp. 33-35. far beyond anything which I can command, laid before our honored guest the homage of admiration and gratitude which we all feel is due to his h Garrison amused his auditors with the story of Buxton's mistaking Ante, 1.351. him for a black man, and then, passing to the World's Convention of 1840, and his reasons for declining to enter it, he improved the opportunity to pay a tribute to Mr. Mill for the masterly ability with which he had recently advocated, in Parliament, the rights of woman—rights which pertain to all the human race, the exclusive possession of which cannot be safely entrusted to those who are for class interests, and