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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 13: Marriage.—shall the Liberator die?George Thompson.—1834. (search)
redly come to Freedom's Cottage. And yet, with all his imputed rashness, had the editor of the Liberator ever done a rasher thing than to get married and go to housekeeping? Hardly had he returned home from the Philadelphia Convention in December, 1833, before he set off again for the same city, Lib. 3.206. to represent the precarious condition of his paper. The first number of the new volume, meantime, showed a fresh enlargement, in the teeth of a distinct announcement in the same issund, ere long, that infidelity will meet and vanquish them with their own weapons. only a speaking acquaintance with Garrison; and I was never in the Anti-Slavery rooms but once. Fresh from the inspiration of the Philadelphia Convention of December, 1833, Mr. May appears to have made an Memoir of Henry Ware, Jr., p. 365. earnest effort to win over to the cause the leading clergy of his own denomination. The adhesion of Follen, if so brought about, was a sufficient return for his labor; b