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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 3: the Clerical appeal.—1837. (search)
attack was not made upon himself alone, but upon William Goodell, Elizur Wright, and the host of abolitionists who had given him the right hand of fellowship, as Woodbury, on his part, had hitherto done. As for swallowing Garrison, everybody had done so who had abandoned the Colonization Society and signed the National Anti-Slave Liberator, that our State Society is to hold a quarterly meeting at Worcester on the 27th inst. I sincerely hope you will be able to attend it; for, doubtless, Woodbury, Fitch, Towne, and their party, will endeavor to rally all their forces, and try to force through the meeting some condemnatory resolutions. I think I shall notifferently from what you now do, and approve the course we are determined on taking here. 4. You speak of sedition, and of chastising Messrs. Fitch, Towne and Woodbury. I do not like such language. They come up to the average abolitionism of the day. By denouncing them, then, you denounce probably a majority of the members of