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Archibald H. Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison the Abolitionist, Chapter 10: between the acts. (search)
anthropist, who cared as little for it as did Garrison. He had never in his twenty-eight years expeer into ventures of that character, than were Garrison and Knapp. Garrison was unfortunate in this on until the partners were quite confounded. Garrison naively confesses this fault of the firm to heech. They were for peace at any cost, while Garrison was for truth at any cost. These proslavery they looked with increasing disapprobation. Garrison's harsh language greatly shocked this class-e there was another, composed of friends, whom Garrison's denunciatory style offended. To Charles For came presently notes of discord, aroused by Garrison's hard language. Sundry of the Unitarian clere was still another cause of offence given by Garrison to his countrymen. It was not his hard languefuse him a fair hearing in consequence. But Garrison was confident that while Thompson's advent wo to his friend's personal safety in the East, Garrison was extremely optimistic, had not apparently [13 more...]
Archibald H. Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison the Abolitionist, Chapter 11: Mischief let loose. (search)
arch-agitator. On the day after the meeting, Garrison and his young wife accordingly retreated to h high, for the accommodation of two persons. Garrison and Thompson were the two persons for whom thsday, 12 o'clock. That Wednesday forenoon Garrison spent at the anti-slavery office, little dreas had ceased, the old fury of the mob against Garrison returned. Out with him! Lynch him! rose inr. All of these considerations the mayor and Garrison's friends urged upon him. The good man fell i a few moments had broken into the room where Garrison was in hiding. They found Mr. Reid, and demaob in the Lane, advising them that it was not Garrison, but Garrison's and Thompson's friend, who kne news now reached the ears of the mayor that Garrison was in the hands of the mob. Thereupon the feid to the Faneuil Hall giants who had hold of Garrison, Take him into my office, which was altogetheore perilous and desperate device to preserve Garrison's life could not well have been hit upon. Ho[33 more...]
Archibald H. Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison the Abolitionist, Chapter 12: flotsam and jetsam. (search)
e sheriff at the time, fought bravely to save Garrison from falling into the hands of the mob. The gs and unwearied exertions. George W. Benson, Garrison's brother-in-law, led off bravely in this resby him in Boston, two days after the riot, to Garrison, at Brooklyn, well illustrates. He had come sfactory solution of the riddle propounded by Garrison: Shall the Liberator die? The fresh access og property to such disturbers of the peace as Garrison and the Liberator. The owner of his home on Bsuch alarm for the safety of his property, if Garrison continued to occupy it, that he requested thewell. The inextinguishable pluck and zeal of Garrison and his Boston coadjutors never showed to betactor of two nations, had left these shores. Garrison's grief was as poignant as his humiliation wareat as he was. It was a blessed refuge to Garrison, the Benson homestead of Brooklyn, termed Frialtogether different fit did it but know that Garrison was watching it from the window of the very r[6 more...]
Archibald H. Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison the Abolitionist, Chapter 13: the barometer continues to fall. (search)
public hearing of the committee, which was granted. On March 4th Garrison and many of the anti-slavery leaders appeared before the committeentislavery movement and of the object and motives of its founders; Garrison to follow with an exhibition of the pacific character of the agitainterrupted the speakers with the greatest insolence of behavior. Garrison, for a wonder, was allowed to finish his remarks without interrupt advancement of the anti-slavery movement in New England. Missing Garrison, the anger of the chairman fell upon Goodell and Prof. Follen, likat had he written, that thousands of people who did not agree with Garrison would not have done and have written under like circumstances? He was not a disciple of Garrison, he did not accept the doctrine of immediate emancipation, and yet a proslavery mob had murdered him. Yes, whondous dread of approaching perils to its liberties. Ah! had not Garrison spoken much plain truth at the public hearing of the Massachusetts
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
Hall meetings will be of no use if Thompson, Garrison, and their vile associates in this city are tce. On parting from his brother-in-law, Mr. Garrison proceeded to the Anti-Slavery Office, and iostly white, but some negroes and mulattoes ( Garrison mob, p. 17). The names of some of these can bmoderate course of action on my part ( Helen Eliza Garrison: a Memorial, p. 25). sitting with cheeres C. Burleigh. Besides Mr. Burleigh and Mr. Garrison, the only gentlemen present were Mr. Henry ilence, and was distinctly heard Even by Mr. Garrison in the adjoining office, the thinness of th was not there—the ladies were not there—but Garrison is there! was the cry. Garrison! Garrison! We must have Garrison! Out with him! Lynch him! These and numberless other exclamations arose froMayor Lyman's account of his interview with Mr. Garrison for this purpose will be found on p. 19 of sband will be untrue to his principles ( Helen E. Garrison: in Memoriam, p. 25). In the morning I [18 more...]<
Mrs. Sarah Benson, 2.208, 213; Sarah Benson, 2.229, 238; G. Bradburn, 2.354; J. T. Buckingham, 1.179; W. E. Channing, 1.24, 464; M. W. Chapman, 2.360, 362; J. A. Collins, :418, 427; E. Dole, 1.192, 260, 284, 306; Fanny Lloyd Garrison, 1.49; Helen E. Garrison, 1.429, 433, 448, 473, 2.46, 47, 49, 50, 67, 68, 95, 98, 105, 106, 107, 117, 209, 211, 227, 294, 355, 357, 358, 359, 362, 381, 385, 395; J. H. Garrison, 2.362, 413; W. Goodell, 1.345, 2.91; M. Gunn, 2.398; Jacob Horton, 1.124; O. Johnson, 1 P. Crandall, 1.315, 316, 322; J. Cropper, 1.444; L. Crowl, 2.315; C. Cushing, 2.330; E. M. Davis, 2.211; S. Fessenden, 1.302; C. Fitch, 2.335; J. Forten, 1.223, 255; Elizabeth Garrison, 1.40; Fanny Lloyd Garrison, 1.33, 37, 38, 44, 48, 51; Helen E. Garrison, 1.427, 433; S. M. Gates, 2.380; W. Goodell, 2.37, 91; R. B. Haydon, 2.389, 390; W. E. Hickson, 2.394; Inquirers after Truth, 1.330, 331; J. C. Jackson, 2.317; S. S. Jocelyn, 1.259, 260, 300, 339; 0. Johnson, 2.348, 385, 398; Abby Kelley,
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Letter to George Thompson (1839). (search)
day of freedom would be like Egypt's, when God came forth from his place, his right hand clothed in thunder, and the jubilee of Israel was echoed by Egypt's wailing for her first-born. It is not the thoughtful, the sober-minded, the conscientious, for whom we fear. With them truth will finally prevail. It is not that we want eloquence or Christian zeal enough to sustain the conflict with such, and with your aid to come off conquerors. We know, as your Whately says of Galileo, that if Garrison could have been answered, he had never been mobbed; that May's Christian firmness, Smith's world-wide philanthropy, Chapman's daring energy, and Weld's soul of fire can never be quelled, and will finally kindle a public feeling before which opposition must melt away. But how hard to reach the callous heart of selfishness, the blinded conscience, over which a corrupt Church has thrown its shield lest any ray of truth pierce its dark chambers. How shall we address that large class of men wi
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Kossuth (1851). (search)
ith the Lacedaemonians, Be to Hungary her Washington! The time was when even he claimed more, when he could proclaim that the cause of liberty was one the world over. That whoever struck a blow for justice and humanity anywhere, helped the oppressed the wide world through; while he who gave comfort to tyrants was the foe of all peoples. We felt that that lightning which melted the chain of the Hungarian serf, flashed a glad light into every hovel of the Carolinas; and that the blow which Garrison was striking on the gates of the American Bastile, lent strength to hosts that battled on the banks of the Danube. So thought Kossuth once; but is it possible that his conviction was no manly faith, but only a fairy spell which legends tell us a running stream always dissolves, and that the waves of the Atlantic have washed it out, and flung him upon our shores a mere Hungarian exile,--instead of one of those great spirits with which God at rare intervals blesses the ages, with hearts so l
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Review of Dr. Crosby's Calm view of Temperance (1881). (search)
g the Bible in the way of the Temperance movement. But we older ones and Abolitionists are used to such attempts. Forty-five years ago the Princeton Review, representing the Presbyterian Church, denounced the Antislavery movementat a time when Garrison stood surrounded by divines and church-members without number — as infidel and contrary to revealed religion. Its argument was the exact counterpart of Dr. Crosby's against our Temperance enterprise. In vain we showed that the word slave in thdid Weld's Bible argument --which was never answered — prove the same to be true of the Old Testament. Still, we were denounced as --twisting and wresting and straining the Scriptures, and undermining the Bible. This Crosby Bible was flung in Garrison's face for thirty years. But since his great hand wrote Righteousness on the flag, and sent it down to the Gulf, and since we boast that no slave treads our soil,--since then nine hundred and ninety-nine church-members out of every thousand will
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2, Letter from Naples (1841). (search)
Letter from Naples (1841). Naples, April 12, 1841. Dear Garrison,--I have borne very constantly in mind my promise, in London, to write you, but have found nothing in my way which I thought would be of interest; and these late lines come not as a letter, but only as an excuse. For I know nothing now of interest, except, perhaps, the loss of my Liberators, which the custom-house of his Holiness--under the general rule, I believe, forbidding all which has not passed the censorship — took from me as I went up to Rome, and which now lie at Civita Vecchia, waiting for me if I ever return that way. 'T is a melancholy tour, this through Europe; and I do not understand how any one can return from it without being, in Coleridge's phrase, a sadder and a wiser man. Every reflecting mind at home must be struck with the many social evils which prevail around; but the most careless eye cannot avoid seeing the painful contrasts which sadden one here at every step,--wealth beyond that of fa