FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1296   1297   1298   1299   1300   1301   1302   1303   1304   1305   1306   1307   1308   1309   1310   1311   1312   1313   1314   1315   1316   1317   1318   1319   1320  
1321   1322   1323   1324   1325   1326   1327   1328   1329   1330   1331   1332   1333   1334   1335   1336   1337   1338   1339   1340   1341   1342   1343   1344   1345   >>   >|  
riefly my opinion, I do not forget that after all the choice and responsibility rest with General Grant alone. There I am content to leave them. I am very far from urging any sectional claim. Let the country but have peace after its long discord, let its good faith and financial credit be sustained, and all classes of its citizens everywhere protected in person and estate, and it matters very little to me whether Massachusetts is represented at the Executive Council board, or not. Personally, Charles Sumner would gain nothing by a transfer from the Senate Chamber to the State Department. He does not need a place in the American cabinet any more than John Bright does in the British. The highest ambition might well be satisfied with his present position, from which, looking back upon an honorable record, he might be justified in using Milton's language of lofty confidence in the reply to Salmasius: "I am not one who has disgraced beauty of sentiment by deformity of conduct, or the maxims of a freeman by the actions of a slave, but, by the grace of God, I have kept my life unsullied." THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1872. The following letter was written on receiving a request from a committee of colored voters for advice as to their action at the presidential election of 1872. AMESBURY, 9th mo. 3d, 1872. DEAR FRIENDS,--I have just received your letter of the 29th ult. asking my opinion of your present duty as colored voters in the choice between General Grant and Horace Greeley for the presidency. You state that you have been confused by the contradictory advice given you by such friends of your people as Charles Sumner on one hand, and William L. Garrison and Wendell Phillips on the other; and you ask me, as one whom you are pleased to think "free from all bias," to add my counsel to theirs. I thank you for the very kind expression of your confidence and your generous reference to my endeavors to serve the cause of freedom; but I must own that I would fain have been spared the necessity of adding to the already too long list of political epistles. I have felt it my duty in times past to take an active part--often very distasteful to me--in political matters, having for my first object the deliverance of my country from the crime and curse of slavery. That great question being now settled forever, I have been more than willing to leave to younger and stronge
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1296   1297   1298   1299   1300   1301   1302   1303   1304   1305   1306   1307   1308   1309   1310   1311   1312   1313   1314   1315   1316   1317   1318   1319   1320  
1321   1322   1323   1324   1325   1326   1327   1328   1329   1330   1331   1332   1333   1334   1335   1336   1337   1338   1339   1340   1341   1342   1343   1344   1345   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
choice
 

advice

 
matters
 

opinion

 

political

 

confidence

 

voters

 
Sumner
 

Charles

 
letter

country

 
present
 

colored

 

General

 

contradictory

 

Wendell

 

Phillips

 

Garrison

 

friends

 

people


William

 

Greeley

 

FRIENDS

 
AMESBURY
 

action

 

presidential

 

election

 

received

 

Horace

 
presidency

confused

 

distasteful

 

object

 

deliverance

 

active

 

forever

 

settled

 

younger

 

stronge

 

slavery


question

 

epistles

 
expression
 
generous
 

counsel

 

pleased

 

reference

 

endeavors

 

necessity

 
spared