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Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: January 2, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 16 (search)
associate,--no, their lackey. I affirm, he does not represent Boston. [Cheers.] Look at its Lincoln vote! I appeal from Philip drunk to Philip sober, from Ann Street, cozened by old fogies, to Ann Street under guidance of her native instincts. [Loud applause.] Mr. Appleton represents neither the merchants of Boston nor its grog-shops, though his friends boast of having carried him by their aid. They are both too good for him. But the Bell-Everett party cannot say, with Francis I. at Pavia, when he addressed the first lady by position in the State, Madam, we have lost all but honor, since the soreness of expected defeat led them to insult an invited guest, a lady, and that lady, like the mother of Francis, the first by position in the State. [Loud applause.] Of the first Governor of Massachusetts (unless we count Endicott, and then call Winthrop our second Governor), the last historian writes: The qualities that denote the gentleman were eminently his. Cordial and ready to ev
The Daily Dispatch: January 2, 1862., [Electronic resource], Extract of a letter from a Southern lady. (search)
ming these delicate and have done duties without the slightest recognition of them, so far as we are informed, by those in authority. He has seen others promoted and commissioned, while he has pursued the "even tenor of his way," extending his reconnaissances almost into the very camp of the enemy, undisturbed by any feeling of jealousy or envy at the good fortune of his more favored compeers. And though he has largely shared the misfortunes of his ill-fated county, having, like Francis at Pavia, lost "everything, save honor," without any he is none the sse than when, led by the us spirit, he chased the bu or the Indian over the wilds of the Rock? m before search for gold had explored its pa or the "Pathfinder" had been heard of; and, seemingly indifferent to that most delightful incense, the breath of popular applause, he is content, provided only he can do his part and he is doing it manfully) towards ridding the Peninsula of the foul incubus that has crushed out its prosp