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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 1: re-formation and Reanimation.—1841. (search)
ublication, in the Liberator; but the simple facts of the final transfer were stated by the financial Lib. 12.3. committee on renewing their trust for the twelfth volume. Amid all the vexatious cares of this year 1841, Mr. Garrison's health and spirits were at their height. With his verse the Liberator volume had opened, and with his verse it closed; the last half being freely sprinkled with sonnets, lyrics, and other forms from the editor's active muse. To the new volume of the Liberty Bell he contributed The Song of the Abolitionist, which, to the tune of Auld Lang Syne, was sung at countless gatherings in Lib. 12.205, etc. hall and grove for twenty years. A verse or two shall close the present chapter: I am an Abolitionist! Lib. 11.212; Writings of W. L. G., p. 134. I glory in the name; Though now by Slavery's minions hissed, And covered o'er with shame: It is a spell of light and power— The watchword of the free:— Who spurns it in the trial-hour, A craven soul is he! I a
reats blows, and let slip the dogs of war! Beautiful consistency! O, this is pitiable! On the same page of the Liberator with this censure, Mr. Garrison printed twenty stanzas, addressed to Kossuth, which were his contribution to the Liberty Bell for 1852. They bore date December 10, 1851, the author's 46th birthday, and had this foot-note appended: Since these lines Lib. 21:[203]. were written, Kossuth has made a dishonorable election. He is a trimmer. The spirit of the poem may be junce slavery, or they must renounce liberty. They cannot renounce liberty. They must renounce slavery, or renounce the Gospel. They will never renounce the Gospel ( Letter to Louis Kossuth, p. 38; Lib. 21: 126). and Lafayette; In the Liberty Bell for 1846, p. 64, Thomas Clarkson, describing to Mrs. Chapman his intimacy with Lafayette, reported him to have said, frequently, I would never have drawn my sword in the cause of America if I could have conceived that thereby I was founding a lan
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 13: the Bible Convention.—1853. (search)
permanent leave of his native England, having purchased a farm in Ohio and removed thither with his Lib. 23.11. family. On his preliminary visit to this country he had received from Mr. Garrison in Boston attentions like those Ms. Albany, Apr. 19, 1851. he had bestowed in England. Once settled, he identified himself with the abolitionists, writing copiously for the J. Barker to W. L. G.; ante, p. 174. Liberator, and finding there admission (which Edmund Quincy denied to it in the Liberty Bell) for an article Lib. 22.80; Ms. Jan. 13, 1853, E. Quincy to R. D. Webb. showing that; since the Bible sanctioned slavery, the book must be demolished as a condition precedent to emancipation. In November, 1852, he had been prime mover in a Bible Convention held at Salem, Ohio, Nov. 27-29. concerning which he reported to Mr. Garrison that the Lib. 22.174, 183; Ms. Dec. 21, 1852, Barker to W. L. G. meetings had been crowded, with just enough opposition. At Hartford, likewise, there was a
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 15: the Personal Liberty Law.—1855. (search)
in 1813. Tourgueneff rightly held that emancipation in Russia would come about not from below but from above—that is, from the Czar; and happily he lived to see the great consummation. to Mrs. M. W. Chapman. Paris, September 29, 1855. Liberty Bell for 1856, p. 100; Lib. 26.60. Madame: Seeing you on the point of departing for America, I cannot forbear entreating you to be the bearer of my tribute of respect and admiration to one of your compatriots. Need I add that I have in view our hol you left us; that nothing which has occurred, affecting either the integrity or success of our glorious cause, has escaped your observation; that you have not only improved, but created, opportunities to aid us, on British and Lib. 28.4; Liberty Bell for 1858, p. 243. on French soil, by speech, testimony, personal influence, the press, the preparation of circulars and tracts, a generous pecuniary cooperation, multitudinous letters, and well-directed blows, struck at the right time and with irr