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MEASURES OF ADJUSTMENT 166 CHAPTER X YOUNG AMERICA 191 CHAPTER XI THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT 220 CHAPTER XII BLACK REPUBLICANISM 260 CHAPTER XIII THE TESTING OF POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY 281 BOOK III. THE IMPENDING CRISIS CHAPTER XIV THE PERSONAL EQUATION 309 CHAPTER XV THE REVOLT OF DOUGLAS 324 CHAPTER XVI THE JOINT DEBATES WITH LINCOLN 348 CHAPTER XVII THE AFTERMATH 393 CHAPTER XVIII THE CAMPAIGN OF 1860 412 CHAPTER XIX THE MERGING OF THE PARTISAN IN THE PATRIOT 442 CHAPTER XX THE SUMMONS 475 BOOK I THE CALL OF THE WEST CHAPTER I FROM THE GREEN MOUNTAINS TO THE PRAIRIES The dramatic moments in the colonizing of coastal New England have passed into song, story, and sober chronicle; but the farther migration of the English people, from tide-water to interior, has been too prosaic a theme for poets and too diverse a movement for historians. Yet when all the factors in our national history shall be given their full value, none will seem more potent than the great racial drift from the New England frontier into the heart of the continent. The New Englanders who formed a broad belt from Vermont and New York across the Northwest to Kansas, were a social and political force of incalculable power, in the era which ended with the Civil War. The New Englander of the Middle West, however, ceased to be altogether a Yankee. The lake and prairie plains bred a spirit which contrasted strongly with the smug provincialism of rock-ribbed and sterile New England. The exultation born of wide, unbroken, horizon lines and broad, teeming, prairie landscapes, found expression in the often-quoted saying, "Vermont is the most glorious spot on the face of this globe for a man to be born in, _provided_ he emigrates when he is very young." The career of Stephen Arnold Douglas is intelligible only as it is viewed against the background of a New England boyhood, a young manhood passed on the prairies of Illinois, and a wedded life pervaded by the gentle culture of Southern womanhood. In America, observed De Tocqueville two generations ago, democ
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