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The Knoll (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
ath said: No weapon formed against you shall prosper. Isa. 54.17. But Mr. Garrison's prediction to Father Mathew that violence and Ante, p. 256. lawlessness would stalk the land in 1850 as in 1835, had been fulfilled; and the end was not yet. A pleasurable reminder of the earlier epoch was contained in the subjoined letter, from the author of The martyr age of the United States, which crossed the ocean almost simultaneously with Thompson: Harriet Martineau to W. L. Garrison. The Knoll, Ambleside, October 23d, 1850. Ms. my dear friend: This is just to say that if you should ere long receive £10 by the hands of my friend Ellis Gray Loring, I hope you will accept it for the Liberator, as my very humble offering in your great cause. I don't know for certain that you will get it. That depends on whether I get properly paid by an American publishing firm. I have no reason whatever to doubt their doing their duty by me. It is only that, somehow or other, such payments se
Patrick Henry (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
posed assemblage of traitors. As for one of the heralded orators for this Anniversary, the black Douglass, who, at the Syracuse Convention in January, Ante. p. 281. had invoked immediate disunion, and alleged that Washington, Jefferson, and Patrick Henry were strangers to any just idea of Liberty—This was uttered, says a contemporary, and no hand was raised to fell the speaker to the earth! But, added the Globe, if this Douglass shall re-proclaim his Syracuse treason here, and any man shallhe found it was somebody else's. Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. Now you can speak, said he to Douglass; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202; N. Y. Herald, May 8, 1850. but mind what I say: if you speak disrespectfully [of the South, or Washington, or Patrick Henry] Ill knock you off the stage. Nothing daunted, the ex-fugitive from greater terrors began: The gentleman who has just spoken has undertaken to prove that the blacks are not human beings. He has examined our whole conformation, from top
Alabama (Alabama, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
nor to the Baptists, nor the Methodists; for they, too, are against the slave, and all the sects are combined to prevent that jubilee which it is the will of God should come. . . . Be not startled when I say that a belief in Jesus is no evidence of goodness (hisses); no, friends. Voice—Yes it is. Mr. Garrison—Our friend says yes; my position is no. It is worthless as a test, for the reason I have already assigned in reference to the other tests. His praises are sung in Louisiana, Alabama, and the other Southern States just as well as in Massachusetts. Captain Rynders—Are you aware that the slaves in the South have their prayer-meetings in honor of Christ? Mr. Garrison—Not a slaveholding or a slave-breeding Jesus. (Sensation.) The slaves believe in a Jesus that strikes off chains. In this country, Jesus has become obsolete. A profession in him is no longer a test. Who objects to his course in Judaea? The old Pharisees are extinct, and may safely be denounced. Je
Canada (Canada) (search for this): chapter 10
n colored Lib. 20:[158], 167, 171, 174. communities along the border—the free sharing the fears of the self-emancipated, and liable to the same fate— began a great northward movement, towards New Lib. 20:[158], [163], 166, 176. England, towards Canada. Here and there they were encouraged to remain firm, they armed themselves, they were Lib. 20.159, [163], 166. given arms; but even from Boston the exodus was Lib. 20.166; 21.39. marked. Senator Sumner estimated that, altogether, as many as 6sons—a larger band than that of the escaping Puritans —precipitately fled from homes which they had established, to British soil. In February, 1851, it was reported that One hundred members of the Baptist Colored Church in Buffalo have gone to Canada. A large number of the Methodist Church, in the same place, have also left for a land of freedom. Out of one hundred and fourteen members of the Baptist Colored Church in Rochester, one hundred and twelve, including the pastor, have crossed th
California (California, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
et was at an end. Clay's programme was: To yield to the inevitable in Lib. 20.21. the case of California, and admit her as a free State— yet with the air of conceding something. To organize the Ter John P. Hale with passionate blasphemy, your business, your avocation is gone! . . . There is California— she is admitted into the Union; will they [the Free Soilers] agitate about that? Well, thereof the Confederacy [Texas] in an attitude of sedition; while a fifth only reluctantly admitted California as a free State when she had refused to contaminate herself with slavery. Which one of these 2. of slavery in America, and of its guarantees in the Constitution; his pretext, in regard to California and New Mexico, that their physical conditions debarred African slavery, and he would not take of the Southern filibustering Lib. 19.14, 136; 20.114. against Cuba; his recommendation that California be Lib. 20.116. admitted a free State without conditions—dismayed the Southern extremists, an<
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
stion— upon what can they agitate? . . . Then, will they agitate about the [abolition of the] slave-trade in the District of Columbia? That is accomplished. There remained the abolition disunionists, the Garrisonians, of whom Senator Toombs of Georgia had said: In my Robert Toombs. judgment, their line of policy is the fairest, most just, Lib. 20.49. most honest and defensible of all the enemies of our institutions—and such will be the judgment of impartial history—they might, indeed, agitaer was encouraging the commercial interests of Lib. 20.177. the great metropolis of the country [to] speak with united hearts and voices for slavery and Union. Boston itself was in a fever of excitement caused by the presence of Lib. 20.174. Georgia agents bent on recapturing William and Ellen Ante, p. 247. Craft, who had to be hurried off to England. Mr.Lib. 21.14, 15, 141, 153; 22.2. Thompson might have rubbed his eyes and asked himself if he had really been absent for fifteen years. Wh<
Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
to them, nor to the Baptists, nor the Methodists; for they, too, are against the slave, and all the sects are combined to prevent that jubilee which it is the will of God should come. . . . Be not startled when I say that a belief in Jesus is no evidence of goodness (hisses); no, friends. Voice—Yes it is. Mr. Garrison—Our friend says yes; my position is no. It is worthless as a test, for the reason I have already assigned in reference to the other tests. His praises are sung in Louisiana, Alabama, and the other Southern States just as well as in Massachusetts. Captain Rynders—Are you aware that the slaves in the South have their prayer-meetings in honor of Christ? Mr. Garrison—Not a slaveholding or a slave-breeding Jesus. (Sensation.) The slaves believe in a Jesus that strikes off chains. In this country, Jesus has become obsolete. A profession in him is no longer a test. Who objects to his course in Judaea? The old Pharisees are extinct, and may safely be deno
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
ition? How did he resent the expulsion of Massachusetts from the Federal Ante, p. 130. courts in tion in unreal, ghostly abstractions. His Massachusetts Lib. 20.70. fellow-citizens, reluctant torm a disagreeable duty. Lib. 20.70. Would Massachusetts, he asked sardonically, conquer her own Preceived a crushing Lib. 20.182. defeat in Massachusetts. But more immediately response was made ie other Southern States just as well as in Massachusetts. Captain Rynders—Are you aware that theust denounce it. So did the Quaker poet of Massachusetts: John G. Whittier to W. L. Garrison.ew up for them an address to the clergy of Massachusetts. Lib. 20.162, 177. The short-sighted of higher-law sermons, mostly preached in Massachusetts, in Lib. 21: 46. For instance, the chancesncing fugitive slaves foreigners to us [in Massachusetts], with no right to be here, and to be repeonly to say, I bid you God-speed, women of Massachusetts and New England, in this good work! Whene[3 more...]
New Hampshire (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
eeting was finally turned out of doors by the police, but the reception was adjourned to Worcester, and Lib. 20.190, 193, 197. was supplemented by a second, at which the Mayor of that Henry Chapin. city presided in his unofficial capacity. In other Massachusetts cities, too, Mr. Thompson, who preserved the Lib. 20.191, 195, 198, 203, 207. vigor of his appearance and all his old eloquence, was heard with pleasure and without molestation. He received and accepted invitations even from New Hampshire. Parker Pillsbury, however, wrote from Concord, N. H., to Mr. Garrison: I take the liberty of calling your attention to the late Union Ms. Nov. 28, 1850. meeting in Manchester in this State, as reported in the N. H. Patriot. You will, I think, be greatly edified by some of the speeches, particularly with Ichabod Bartlett's, a Portsmouth Whig and the most able lawyer in the State, and also with Chas. G. Atherton's, of gag-rule memory, and Senator Norris's, Ante, 2: 247-249. who a
New York (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 10
ope not. Public opinion should be regulated. These abolitionists should not be allowed to misrepresent New York. He besought his regulators to go on Tuesday morning to the Tabernacle, and there look at the black and white brethren and sisters, fraternizing, slobbering over each other, speaking, praying, singing, blaspheming, and cursing the Constitution of our glorious Union, and then say whether these things shall go forth to the South and the world as the feeling of the great city of New York. Every citizen has a right, legally, and more than morally, to have his say at the amalgamation meeting on Tuesday. The Union expects every man to do his duty; and duty to the Union, in the present crisis, points out to us that we should allow no more fuel to be placed upon the fire of abolitionism in our midst, when we can prevent it by sound reasoning and calm remonstrances. May 7, 1850. On May 2, the Herald returned to the subject, drawing somewhat nearer to the leader of the
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