MR. DOUGLAS'S SPEECH.
LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN: I
appear before you to-day in pursuance of a previous notice,
and have made arrangements with Mr. Lincoln to divide time,
and discuss with him the leading political topics that now
agitate the country.
Prior to
1854 this country was divided into two great political
parties known as Whig and Democratic. These
parties differed from each other on certain questions which
were then deemed to be important to the best interests of
the Republic. Whig and
Democrats differed about a bank, the tariff, distribution,
the specie circular and the sub-treasury. On
those issues we went before the country and discussed the
principles, objects and measures of the two great parties. Each of the parties could proclaim
its principles in Louisiana
as well as in Massachusetts,
in Kentucky as well as in
Illinois.
Since that period, a great
revolution has taken place in the formation of parties, by
which they now seem to be divided by a geographical line, a
large party in the North being arrayed under the Abolition
or Republican banner, in hostility to the Southern States,
Southern people, and Southern institutions. It
becomes
important for us to inquire how this transformation of
parties has occurred, made from those of national principles
to geographical factions. You
remember that in 1850—this country was agitated from its
center to its circumference about this slavery question—it
became necessary for the leaders of the great Whig party and
the leaders of the great Democratic party to postpone, for
the time being, their particular disputes, and unite first
to save the Union before they should quarrel as to the mode
in which it was to be governed. During
the Congress of 1849—50, Henry Clay was the leader of the
Union men, supported by Cass and Webster, and the leaders of
the Democracy and the leaders of the Whigs, in opposition to
Northern Abolitionists or Southern Disunionists.
That great contest of 1850 resulted in the
establishment of the Compromise Measures of that year, which
measures rested on the great principle that the people of
each State and each Territory of this Union ought to be
permitted to regulate their own domestic institutions in
their own way, subject to no other limitation than that
which the Federal Constitution imposes.
I
now wish to ask you whether that principle was right or
wrong which guarantied to every State and every community
the right to form and regulate their domestic institutions
to suit themselves. These
measures were adopted, as I have previously said, by the
joint action of the Union Whigs and Union Democrats in
opposition to Northern Abolitionists and Southern
Disunionists. In 1858, when the
Whig party assembled at Baltimore,
in National Convention for the last time, they adopted the
principle of the Compromise Measures of 1850 as their rule
of party action in the future. One
month thereafter the Democrats assembled at the same place
to nominate a candidate for the Presidency, and declared the
same great principle as the rule of action by which the
Democracy would be governed. The
Presidential election of 1852 was fought on that basis. It is true that the Whigs claimed
special merit for the adoption of those measures, because
they asserted that their great Clay originated them, their
god-like Webster defended them and their Fillmore signed the
bill making them the law of the land; but on the other hand,
the Democrats claimed special credit for the Democracy, upon
the ground that we gave twice as many votes in both Houses
of Congress for the passage of these measures as the Whig
party.
Thus you
see that in the Presidential election of 1852, the Whigs
were pledged by their platform and their candidate to the
principle of the Compromise Measures of 1850, and the
Democracy were likewise pledged by our principles, our
platform, and our candidate to the same line of policy, to
preserve peace and quiet between the different sections of
this Union. Since that period
the Whig party has been transformed into a sectional party,
under the name of the Republican party, whilst the
Democratic party continues the same national party it was at
that day. All sectional men,
all men of Abolition sentiments and principles, no matter
whether they were old Abolitionists or had been Whigs or
Democrats, rally under the sectional Republican banner, and
consequently all national men, all Union-loving men, whether
Whigs, Democrats, or by whatever name they have been known,
ought to rally under the stars and stripes in defense of the
Constitution as our fathers made it, and of the Union as it
has existed under the Constitution.
How
has this departure from the faith of the Democracy and the
faith of the Whig party been accomplished? In
1854, certain restless, ambitious, and disappointed
politicians throughout the land took advantage of the
temporary excitement created by the Nebraska bill to try and
dissolve the old Whig party and the old Democratic party, to
abolitionize their members, and lead them, bound hand and
foot, captives into the Abolition camp.
In the State of New York a Convention was held by
some of these men and a platform adopted, every plank of
which was as black as night, each one relating to the negro,
and not one referring to the interests of the white man. That example was followed
throughout the Northern States, the effect being made to
combine all the free
States in hostile array against
the slave States. The men who
thus thought that they could build up a great sectional
party, and through its organization control the political
destinies of this country, based all their hopes on the
single fact that the North was the stronger division of the
nation, and hence, if the North could be combined against
the South, a sure victory awaited their efforts.
I am doing no more than justice to the truth of
history when I say that in this State Abraham Lincoln, on
behalf of the Whigs, and Lyman Trumbull, on behalf of the
Democrats, were the leaders who undertook to perform this
grand scheme of abolitionizing the two parties to which they
belonged. They had a private
arrangement as to what should be the political destiny of
each of the contracting parties before they went into the
operation. The arrangement was
that Mr. Lincoln was to take the old line Whigs with him,
claiming that he was still as good a Whig as ever, over to
the Abolitionists, and Mr. Trumbull was to run for Congress
in the Belleville District, and, claiming to be a good
Democrat, coax the old Democrats into the Abolition camp,
and when, by the joint efforts of the abolitionized Whigs,
the abolitionized Democrats, and the old line Abolition and
Freesoil party of this State, they should secure a majority
in the Legislature. Lincoln
was then to be made United States Senator in Shields’s
place, Trumbull remaining in
Congress until I should be accommodating enough to die or
resign, and give him a chance to follow Lincoln.
That was a very nice little bargain so far as
Lincoln and Trumbull were concerned, if it had been carried
out in good faith, and friend Lincoln had attained to
Senatorial dignity according to the contract.
They went into the contest in every part of the
State, calling upon all disappointed politicians to join in
the crusade against the Democracy, and appealed to the
prevailing sentiments and prejudices in all the northern
counties of the State. In three
Congressional Districts in the north end of the State they
adopted, as the platform of this new party thus formed by
Lincoln and Trumbull in the connection with the
Abolitionists, all of those principles which aimed at a
warfare on the part of the North against the South.
They declared in that platform that the Wilmot
Proviso was to be applied to all the Territories of the United States,
North as well as South of 36 deg. 30
min., and not only to all the territory we then had, but all
that we might hereafter acquire; that hereafter no more
slave States should be admitted into this Union, even if the
people of such State desired slavery; that the Fugitive
Slave law should be absolutely and unconditionally repealed;
that slavery should be abolished in the District of
Columbia; that the slave-trade should be abolished between
the different States, and, in fact, every article in their
creed related to this slavery question, and pointed to a
Northern geographical party in hostility to the Southern
States of this Union. Such were
their principles in Northern Illinois. A little further South they became
bleached and grew paler just in proportion as public
sentiment moderated and changed in this direction.
They were Republicans or Abolitionists in the
North, anti-Nebraska men down about Springfield, and in
this neighborhood they contented themselves with talking
about the inexpediency of the repeal of the Missouri
Compromise. In the extreme
northern counties they brought out men to canvass the State
whose complexion suited their political creed, and hence
Fred Douglass, the negro, was to be found there, following
Gen. Cass, and attempting to speak on behalf of Lincoln,
Trumbull
and Abolitionism, against that illustrious Senator.
Why, they brought Fred Douglass to Freeport, when I was
addressing a meeting there, in a carriage driven by the
white owner, the negro sitting inside with the white lady
and her daughter. When I got
through canvassing the northern counties that year, and
progressed as far south as Springfield,
I was met and opposed in discussion by Lincoln, Lovejoy,
Trumbull, and Sidney Breese, who were on one side.
Father Giddings, the high-priest of Abolitionism,
had just been there, and Chase came about the time I left. [“Why didn’t you shoot him?”] I did take a running shot at them,
but as I was single-handed against the white, black and
mixed drove, I had to use a shot-gun and fire into the crowd
instead of taking them off singly with a rifle.
Trumbull had for his
lieutenants, in aiding him to abolitionize the Democracy,
such men as John Wentworth, of Chicago, Gov. Reynolds, of Belleville, Sidney Breese, of
Carlisle, and John Dougherty, of Union,
each of whom modified his opinions to suit the locality he
was in. Dougherty, for
instance, would not go much further than to talk about the
inexpediency of the Nebraska
bill, whilst his allies at Chicago,
advocated negro citizenship and negro equality, putting the
white man and the negro on the same basis under the law. Now these men, four years ago,
were engaged in a conspiracy to breakdown the Democracy;
to-day they are again acting together for the same purpose!
They do not hoist the same flag;
they do not own the same principles, or profess the same
faith; but conceal their union for the sake of policy. In the northern counties, you find
that all the Conventions are called in the name of the Black
Republican party; at Springfield,
they dare not call a Republican Convention, but invite all
the enemies of the Democracy to unite, and when they get
down into Egypt,
Trumbull
issues notices calling upon the “free Democracy”
to assemble and hear him speak. I
have one of the handbills calling a Trumbull
meeting at Waterloo
the other day, which I received there, which is in the
following language:
A
meeting of the Free Democracy will take place in Waterloo,
on Monday, Sept. 13th inst.,
whereat Hon. Lyman Trumbull, Hon. John Baker and others,
will address the people upon the different political topics
of the day. Members of all
parties are cordially invited to be present, and hear and
determine for themselves.
THE MONROE
FREE DEMOCRACY.
What
is
that name of “Free Democrats” put forth for unless to
deceive the people, and make them believe that Trumbull and
his followers are not the same party as that which raises
the black flag of Abolitionism in the northern part of this
State, and makes war upon the Democratic party throughout
the State. When I put that
question to them at Waterloo
on Saturday last, one of them rose and stated that they had
changed their name for political effect in order to get
votes. There was a candid
admission. Their object in
changing their party organization and principles in
different localities was avowed to be an attempt to cheat
and deceive some portion of the people until after the
election. Why cannot a
political party that is conscious of the rectitude of its
purposes and the soundness of its principles declare them
every where alike? I would
disdain to hold any political principles that I could not
avow in the same terms in Kentucky
that I declared in Illinois,
in Charleston as well as in
Chicago, in New
Orleans as well as in New York.
So long as we live under a Constitution common to
all the States, our political faith ought to be as broad, as
liberal, and just as that Constitution itself, and should be
proclaimed alike in every portion of the Union.
But it is apparent that our opponents find it
necessary, for partisan effect, to change their colors in
different counties in order to catch the popular breeze, and
hope with these discordant materials combined together to
secure a majority in the Legislature for the purpose of
putting down the Democratic party. This
combination did succeed in 1854 so far as to elect a
majority of their confederates to the Legislature, and the
first important act which they performed was to elect a
Senator in the place of the eminent and gallant Senator
Shields. His term expired in
the United States Senate at that time, and he had to be
crushed by the Abolition coalition for the simple reason
that he would not join in their conspiracy to wage war
against one-half of the Union. That
was the only objection to General Shields.
He had served the people of the State with ability
in the Legislature, he had served you with fidelity and
ability as Auditor, he had performed his duties to the
satisfaction of the whole country at the head of the Land
Department at Washington, he had covered the State and the
Union with immortal glory on the bloody fields of Mexico in
defense of the honor of our flag, and yet he had to be
stricken down by this unholy combination.
And for what cause? Merely
because he would not join a combination of one-half of the
States to make war upon the other half, after having poured
out his heart’s blood for all the States in the Union. Trumbull
was put in his place by Abolitionism. How
did
Trumbull
get there? Before the
Abolitionists would consent to go into an election for
United States Senator they required all the members of this
new combination to show their hands upon this question of
Abolitionism. Lovejoy, one of
their high-priests, brought in resolutions defining the
Abolition creed, and required them to commit themselves on
it by their votes—yea or nay. In
that creed, as laid down by Lovejoy, they declared first,
that the Wilmot Proviso must be put on all the Territories
of the United
States, North as well
as South of 36 deg. 30min., and
that no more territory should ever be acquired unless
slavery was at first prohibited therein; second, that no
more States should ever be received into the Union unless
slavery was first prohibited, by Constitutional provision,
in such States; third, that the Fugitive Slave law must be
immediately repealed, or, failing in that, then such
amendments were to be made to it as would render it useless
and inefficient for the objects for which it was passed,
etc. The next day after these
resolutions were offered they were voted upon, part of them
carried, and the others defeated, the same men who voted for
them, with only two exceptions, voting soon after for
Abraham Lincoln as their candidate for the United States
Senate. He came within one or
two votes of being elected, but he could not quite get the
number required, for the simple reason that his friend
Trumbull, who was a party to the bargain by which Lincoln
was to take Shields’s place, controlled a few abolitionized
Democrats in the Legislature, and would not allow them all
to vote for him, thus wronging Lincoln by permitting him on
each ballot to be almost elected, but not quite, until he
forced them to drop Lincoln and elect him (Trumbull), in
order to unite the party. Thus
you find, that although the Legislature was carried that
year by the bargain between Trumbull, Lincoln, and the
Abolitionists, and the union of these discordant elements in
one harmonious party; yet Trumbull
violated his pledge, and played a Yankee trick on Lincoln
when they came to divide the spoils. Perhaps
you
would like a little evidence on this point if you would, I
will call Col. James H. Matheny, of Springfield, to the
stand, Mr. Lincoln’s especial confidential friend for the
last twenty years, and see what he will say upon the
subject, of this bargain. Matheny
is now the Black Republican or Abolition candidate for
Congress in the Springfield District against the gallant
Col. Harris, and is making speeches all over that part of
the State against me and in favor of Lincoln,
in concert with Trumbull. He ought to be a good witness, and
I will read an extract from a speech which he made in 1856,
when he was mad because his friend Lincoln had been cheated. It is one of numerous speeches of
the same tenor that were made about that time, exposing this
bargain between Lincoln, Trumbull
and the Abolitionists. Matheny
then said:
“The
Whigs, Abolitionists, Know Nothings and renegade Democrats
made a solemn compact for the purpose of carrying this State
against the Democracy, on this plan: 1st.
That they would all combine and elect Mr. Trumbull
to Congress, and thereby carry his district for the
Legislature, in order to throw all the strength that could
be obtained into that body against the Democrats.
2d. That when the
Legislature should meet, the officers of that body, such as
speaker, clerks, door-keepers, etc., would be given to the
Abolitionists; and 3d. That the
Whigs were to have the United States Senator.
That, accordingly, in good faith, Trumbull was elected to
Congress, and his district carried for the Legislature, and,
when it convened, the Abolitionists got all the officers of
that body, and thus far the “bond” was fairly executed. The Whigs, on their part, demanded
the election of Abraham Lincoln to the United States Senate,
that the bond might be fulfilled, the other parties to the
contract having already secured to themselves all that was
called for. But, in the most
perfidious manner, they refused to elect Mr. Lincoln; and
the mean, low-lived, sneaking Trumbull succeeded, by
pledging all that was required by any party, in thrusting
Lincoln aside and foisting himself, an excrescence from the
rotten bowels of the Democracy, into the United States
Senate; and thus it has ever been, that an honest man makes
a bad bargain when he conspires or contracts with rogues.”
Matheny
thought
that his friend Lincoln made a bad bargain when he conspired
and contracted with such rogues as Trumbull and his
Abolition associates in that campaign.
Lincoln was shoved off
the track, and he and his friends all at once began to mope;
became sour and mad, and disposed to tell, but dare not; and
thus they stood for a long time, until the Abolitionists
coaxed and flattered him back by their assurances that he
should certainly be a Senator in Douglas’s
place. In that way the
Abolitionists have been enabled to hold Lincoln to the alliance
up to this time, and now they have brought him into a fight
against me, and he is to see if he is again to be cheated by
them. Lincoln
this time, though, required more of them than a promise, and
holds their bond, if not security, that Lovejoy shall not
cheat him as Trumbull
did.
When
the Republican Convention assembled at Springfield, in June
last, for the purpose of nominating State officers only, the
Abolitionists could not get Lincoln and his friends into it
until they would pledge themselves that Lincoln should be
their candidate for the Senate; and you will find, in proof
of this, that that Convention passed a resolution
unanimously declaring that Abraham Lincoln was the “first,
last and only choice” of the Republicans for United States
Senator. He was not willing to
have it understood that he was merely their first choice, or
their last choice, but their only choice.
The Black Republican party had nobody else.
Browning was nowhere; Gov. Bissell was of no
account; Archie Williams was not to be taken into
consideration; John Wentworth was not worth mentioning; John
M. Palmer was degraded; and their party presented the
extraordinary spectacle of having but one—the first, the
last, and only choice for the Senate. Suppose
that
Lincoln
should die, what a horrible condition the Republican party
would be in! They would have
nobody left. They have no other
choice, and it was necessary for them to put themselves
before the world in this ludicrous, ridiculous attitude of
having no other choice in order to quiet Lincoln’s
suspicions, and assure him that he was not to be cheated by
Lovejoy, and the trickery by which Trumbull outgeneraled
him. Well, gentlemen, I think
they will have a nice time of it before they get through. I do not intend to give them any
chance to cheat Lincoln
at all this time. I intend to
relieve him of all anxiety upon that subject, and spare them
the mortification of more exposures of contracts violated,
and the pledged honor of rogues forfeited.
But
I wish to invite your attention to the chief points at issue
between Mr. Lincoln and myself in this discussion.
Mr. Lincoln knowing that he was to be the candidate
of his party on account of the arrangement of which I have
already spoken, knowing that be was to receive the
nomination of the Convention for the United States Senate,
had his speech, accepting that nomination, all written and
committed to memory, ready to be delivered the moment the
nomination was announced. Accordingly,
when
it was made, he was in readiness, and delivered his speech,
a portion of which I will read, in order that I may state
his political principles fairly, by repeating them in his
own language:
“We
are now far into the fifth year since a policy was
instituted for the avowed object, and with the confident
promise of putting an end to slavery agitation; under the
operation of that policy, that agitation has not only not
ceased, but has constantly augmented. I
believe it will not cease until a crisis shall have been
reached and passed. ‘A house
divided against itself cannot stand.’ I
believe this Government cannot endure permanently half slave
and half free. I do not expect
the Union to be dissolved. I do not expect the house to fall,
but I do expect it will cease to be divided.
It will become all one thing or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery
will arrest the spread of it, and place it where the public
mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of
ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward
until it shall become alike lawful in all the States, North
as well as South.”
There
you have Mr. Lincoln’s first and main proposition, upon
which he bases his claims, stated in his own language. He tells you that this Republic
cannot endure permanently divided into slave and free States,
as our fathers made it. He says
that they must all become free or all become slave, that
they must all be one thing or all be the other, or this
Government cannot last. Why can
it not last, if we will execute the Government in the same
spirit and upon the same principles upon which it is
founded? Lincoln, by his
proposition, says to the South, “If you desire to maintain
your institutions as they are now, you must not be satisfied
with minding your own business, but you must invade Illinois
and all the other Northern States, establish slavery in
them, and make it universal;” and in the same language he
says to the North, “You must not be content with regulating
your own affairs, and minding your own business, but if you
desire to maintain your freedom, you must invade the
Southern States, abolish slavery there and every where, in
order to have the States all one thing or all the other.” I say that this is the inevitable
and irresistible result of Mr. Lincoln’s argument, inviting
a warfare between the North and the South, to be carried on
with ruthless vengeance, until the one section or the other
shall be driven to the wall, and become the victim of the
rapacity of the other. What
good would follow such a system of warfare? Suppose
the North should succeed in conquering the South, how much
would she be the gainer? or
suppose the South should conquer the North, could the Union be preserved in that way? Is this sectional warfare to be
waged between Northern States and Southern States until they
all shall become uniform in their local and domestic
institutions merely because Mr. Lincoln says that a house
divided against itself cannot stand, and pretends that this
scriptural quotation, this language of our Lord and Master,
is applicable to the American Union and the American
Constitution? Washington and
his compeers, in the Convention that framed the
Constitution, made this Government divided into free and
slave States. It was composed
then of thirteen sovereign and independent States, each
having sovereign authority over its local and domestic
institutions, and all bound together by the Federal
Constitution. Mr. Lincoln
likens that bond of the Federal Constitution, joining free
and slave States together, to a house divided against
itself, and says that it is contrary to the law of God and
cannot stand. When did he
learn, and by what authority does he proclaim, that this
Government is contrary to the law of God and cannot stand? It has stood thus divided into
free and slave States from its organization up to this day. During that period we have
increased from four millions to thirty millions of people;
we have extended our territory from the Mississippi to the
Pacific ocean; we have acquired the Floridas and Texas, and
other territory sufficient to double our geographical
extent; we have increased in population, in wealth, and in
power beyond any example on earth; we have risen from a weak
and feeble power to become the terror and admiration of the
civilized world; and all this has been done under a
Constitution which Mr. Lincoln, in substance, says is in
violation of the law of God, and under a Union divided into
free and slave States, which Mr. Lincoln thinks, because of
such division, can not stand. Surely,
Mr. Lincoln is a wiser man than those who framed the
Government. Washington did not
believe, nor did his compatriots, that the local laws and
domestic institutions that were well adapted to the Green
Mountains of Vermont were suited to the rice plantations of
South Carolina; they did not believe at that day that in a
Republic so broad and expanded as this, containing such a
variety of climate, soil, and interest, that uniformity in
the local laws and domestic institutions was either
desirable or possible. They
believed then as our experience has proved to us now, that
each locality, having different interests, a different
climate and different surroundings, required different local
laws, local policy and local institutions, adapted to the
wants of that locality. Thus
our Government was formed on the principle of diversity in
the local institutions and laws, and not on that of
uniformity.
As
my time flies, I can only glance at these points and not
present them as fully as I would wish, because I desire to
bring all the points in controversy between the two parties
before you in order to have Mr. Lincoln’s reply.
He makes war on the decision of the Supreme Court,
in the case known as the Dred Scott case.
I wish to say to you, fellow-citizens, that I have
no war to make on that decision, or any other ever rendered
by the Supreme Court. I am
content to take that decision as it stands delivered by the
highest judicial tribunal on earth, a tribunal established
by the Constitution of the United States for that purpose,
and hence that decision becomes the law of the land, binding
on you, on me, and on every other good citizen, whether we
like it or not. Hence I do not
choose to go into an argument to prove, before this
audience, whether or not Chief Justice Taney understood the
law better than Abraham Lincoln.
Mr.
Lincoln objects to that decision, first and mainly because
it deprives the negro of the rights of citizenship.
I am as much opposed to his reason for that
objection as I am to the objection itself.
I hold that a negro is not and never ought to be a
citizen of the United
States.
I hold that this Government was made on the white
basis, by white men, for the benefit of white men and their
posterity forever, and should be administered by white men
and none others. I do not
believe that the Almighty made the negro capable of
self-government. I am aware
that all the Abolition lecturers that you find traveling
about through the country, are in the habit of reading the
Declaration of Independence to prove that all men were
created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness. Mr.
Lincoln is very much in the habit of following in the track
of Lovejoy in this particular, by reading that part of the
Declaration of Independence to prove that the negro was
endowed by the Almighty with the inalienable right of
equality with white men. Now, I
say to you, my fellow-citizens, that in my opinion, the
signers of the Declaration had no reference to the negro
whatever, when they declared all men to be created equal. They desired to express by that
phrase white men, men of European birth and European
descent, and had no reference either to the negro, the
savage Indians, the Fejee, the Malay, or any other inferior
and degraded race, when they spoke of the equality of men. One great evidence that such was
their understanding, is to be found in the fact that at that
time every one of the thirteen colonies was a slaveholding
colony, every signer of the Declaration represented a
slaveholding constituency, and we know that no one of them
emancipated his slaves, much less offered citizenship to
them when they signed the Declaration; and yet, if they
intended to declare that the negro was the equal of the
white man, and entitled by divine right to an equality with
him, they were bound, as honest men, that day and hour to
have put their negroes on an equality with themselves. Instead of doing so, with uplifted
eyes to heaven they implored the divine blessing upon them,
during the seven years’ bloody war they had to fight to
maintain that Declaration, never dreaming that they were
violating divine law by still holding the negroes in bondage
and depriving them of equality.
My
friends, I am in favor of preserving this Government as our
fathers made it. It does not
follow by any means that because a negro is not your equal
or mine, that hence he must necessarily be a slave.
On the contrary, it does follow that we ought to
extend to the negro every right, every privilege, every
immunity which he is capable of enjoying, consistent with
the good of society. When you
ask me what these rights are, what their nature and extent
is, I tell you that that is a question which each State of
this Union must decide for
itself. Illinois has already
decided the question. We have
decided that the negro must not be a slave within our
limits, but we have also decided that the negro shall not be
a citizen within our limits; that he shall not vote, hold
office, or exercise any political rights.
I maintain that Illinois, as a sovereign State, has
a right thus to fix her policy with reference to the
relation between the white man and the negro; but while we
had that right to decide the question for ourselves, we must
recognize the same right in Kentucky and in every other
State to make the same decision, or a different one.
Having decided our own policy with reference to the
black race, we must leave Kentucky
and Missouri
and every other State perfectly free to make just such a
decision as they see proper on that question.
Kentucky
has decided that question for herself.
She has said that within her limits a negro shall not
exercise any political rights, and she has also said that a
portion of the negroes under the laws of that State shall be
slaves. She had as much right
to adopt that as her policy as we had to adopt the contrary
for our policy. New York has decided
that in that State a negro may vote if he has $250 worth of
property, and if he owns that much he may vote upon an
equality with the white man. I,
for one, am utterly opposed to negro suffrage any where and
under any circumstances: yet, inasmuch as the Supreme Court
have decided in the celebrated Dred Scott case that a
State has a right to confer the privilege of voting upon
free negroes, I am not going to make war upon New York
because she has adopted a policy repugnant to my feelings. But New York must mind her
own business, and keep her negro suffrage to herself, and
not attempt to force it upon us.
In
the State of Maine
they have decided that a negro may vote and hold office on
an equality with a white man. I
had occasion to say to the Senators from Maine, in a
discussion last session, that if they thought that the white
people within the limits of their State were no better than
negroes, I would not quarrel with them for it, but they must
not say that my white constituents of Illinois were no
better than negroes, or we would be sure to quarrel.
The
Dred Scott decision covers the whole question, and declares
that each State has the right to settle this question of
suffrage for itself, and all questions as to the relations
between the white man and the negro. Judge
Taney expressly lays down the doctrine.
I receive it as law, and I say that while those
States are adopting regulations on that subject disgusting
and abhorrent, according to my views, I will not make war on
them if they will mind their own business and let us alone.
I
now come back to the question, why cannot this Union
exist forever divided into free and slave States, as our
fathers made it? It can thus
exist if each State will carry out the principles upon which
our institutions were founded, to wit: the right of each
State to do as it pleases, without meddling with its
neighbors. Just act upon that
great principle, and this Union will not only live forever,
but it will extend and expand until it covers the whole
continent, and makes this confederacy one grand, ocean-bound
Republic. We must bear in mind
that we are yet a young nation, growing with a rapidity
unequaled in the history of the world, that our national
increase is great, and that the emigration from the old
world is increasing, requiring us to expand and acquire new
territory from time to time, in order to give our people
land to live upon. If we live
upon the principle of State rights and State sovereignty,
each State regulating its own affairs and minding its own
business, we can go on and extend indefinitely, just as fast
and as far as we need the territory. The
time may come, indeed has now come, when our interests would
be advanced by the acquisition of the Island of Cuba.
When we get Cuba we must take it as we
find it, leaving the people to decide the question of
slavery for themselves, without interference on the part of
the Federal Government, or of any State of this Union. So,
when it becomes necessary to acquire any portion of Mexico
or Canada, or of this continent or the adjoining islands, we
must take them as we find them, leaving the people free to
do as they please—to have slavery or not, as they choose. I never have inquired and never
will inquire whether a new State, applying for admission,
has slavery or not for one of her institutions.
If the Constitution that is presented be the act
and deed of the people, and embodies their will, and they
have the requisite population, I will admit them with
slavery or without it, just as that people shall determine. My objection to the Lecompton
Constitution did not consist in the fact that it made Kansas
a slave State. I would have
been as much opposed to its admission under such a
Constitution as a free
State as I was opposed to its
admission under it as a slave State. I
hold that that was a question which that people had a right
to decide for themselves, and that no power on earth ought
to have interfered with that decision.
In my opinion, the Lecompton Constitution was not the
act and deed of the people of Kansas, and did not embody
their will, and the recent election in that Territory, at
which it was voted down by nearly ten to one, shows
conclusively that I was right in saying, when the
Constitution was presented, that it was not the act and deed
of the people, and did not embody their will.
If we wish to preserve
our institutions in their purity, and transmit them
unimpaired to our latest posterity, we must preserve with
religious good faith that great principle of self-government
which guaranties to each and every State, old and new, the
right to make just such Constitutions as they desire, and
come into the Union with their own Constitution, and not one
palmed upon them. Whenever you sanction the doctrine
that Congress may crowd a Constitution down the throats of
an unwilling people, against their consent, you will subvert
the great fundamental principle upon which all our free
institutions rest. In the future I have no fear that
the attempt will ever be made. President Buchanan
declared in his annual message, that hereafter the rule
adopted in the Minnesota case, requiring a Constitution
to be submitted to the people, should be followed in all
future cases, and if he stands by that recommendation there
will be no division in the Democratic party on that
principle in the future. Hence, the great mission of
the Democracy is to unite the fraternal feeling of the whole
country, restore peace and quiet, by teaching each State to
mind its own business, and regulate its own domestic
affairs, and all to unite in carrying out the Constitution
as our fathers made it, and thus to preserve the Union and
render it perpetual in all time to come. Why should we
not act as our fathers who made the Government? There
was no sectional strife in Washington’s army. They were all
brethren of a common confederacy; they fought under a common
flag that they might bestow upon their posterity a common
destiny, and to this end they poured out their blood in
common streams, and shared, in some instances, a common
grave.
MR. LINCOLN'S
REPLY.
LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN:
There is very much in the principles that Judge Douglas has
here enunciated that I most cordially approve, and over
which I shall have no controversy with him.
In so far as he has insisted that all the States
have the right to do exactly as they please about all their
domestic relations, including that of slavery, I agree
entirely with him. He places me
wrong in spite of all I can tell him, though I repeat it
again and again, insisting that I have no difference with
him upon this subject. I have
made a great many speeches, some of which have been printed,
and it will be utterly impossible for him to find any thing
that I have ever put in print contrary to what I now say
upon this subject. I hold
myself under constitutional obligations to allow the people
in all the States, without interference, direct or indirect,
to do exactly as they please, and I deny that I have any
inclination to interfere with them, even if there were no
such constitutional obligation. I
can only say again that I am placed improperly—altogether
improperly, in spite of all I can say—when it is insisted
that I entertain any other view or purposes in regard to
that matter.
While
I am upon this subject, I will make some answers briefly to
certain propositions that Judge Douglas has put.
He says, “Why can’t this Union
endure permanently, half slave and half free?” I
have said that I supposed it could not, and I will try,
before this new audience, to give briefly some of the
reasons for entertaining that opinion.
Another form of his question is, “Why can’t we let it
stand as our fathers placed it?” That
is the exact difficulty between us. I
say, that Judge Douglas and his friends have changed them
from the position in which our fathers originally placed it. I say, in the way our fathers
originally left the slavery question, the institution was in
the course of ultimate extinction, and the public mind
rested in the helief that it was in the
course of ultimate extinction. I
say when this Government was first established, it was the
policy of its founders to prohibit the spread of slavery
into the new Territories of the United States,
where it had not existed. But
Judge Douglas and his friends have broken up that policy,
and placed it upon a new basis by which it is to become
national and perpetual. All I
have asked or desired any where is that it should be placed
back again upon the basis that the fathers of our Government
originally placed it upon. I
have no doubt that it would become extinct,
for all time to come, if we but readopted the policy of the
fathers by restricting it to the limits it has already
covered—restricting it from the new Territories.
I do not
wish to dwell at great length on this branch of the subject
at this time, but allow me to repeat one thing that I have
stated before. Brooks, the man
who assaulted Senator Sumner on the floor of the Senate, and
who was complimented with dinners, and silver pitchers, and
gold-headed canes, and a good many other things for that
feat, in one of his speeches declared that when this
Government was originally established, nobody expected that
the institution of slavery would last until this day.
That was but the opinion of one man, but it was
such an opinion as we can never get from Judge Douglas or
anybody in favor of slavery in the North at all.
You can sometimes get it from a Southern man. He said at the same time that the
framers of our Government did not have the knowledge that
experience has taught us—that experience and the invention
of the cotton-gin have taught us that the perpetuation of
slavery is a necessity. He
insisted, therefore, upon its being changed from the basis
upon which the fathers of the Government left it to the
basis of its perpetuation and nationalization.
I
insist that this is the difference between Judge Douglas and
myself—that Judge Douglas is helping that change along. I insist upon this Government
being placed where our fathers originally placed it.
I
remember Judge Douglas once said that he saw the evidences
on the statute books of Congress, of a policy in the origin
of Government to divide slavery and freedom by a
geographical line—that he saw an indisposition to maintain
that policy, and therefore he set about studying up a way to
settle the institution on the right basis—the basis which he
thought it ought to have been placed upon at first; and in
that speech he confesses that he seeks to place it, not upon
the basis that the fathers placed it upon, but upon one
gotten up on “original principles.” When
he asks me why we cannot get along with it in the attitude
where our fathers placed it, he had better clear up the
evidences that he has himself changed it from that basis;
that he has himself been chiefly instrumental in changing
the policy of the fathers. Any
one who will read his speech of the 22d of last March, will
see that he there makes an open confession, showing that he
set about fixing the institution upon an altogether
different set of principles. I
think I have fully answered him when he asks me why we
cannot let it alone upon the basis where our fathers left
it, by showing that he has himself changed the whole policy
of the Government in that regard.
Now,
fellow-citizens,
in regard to this matter about a contract that was made
between Judge Trumbull and myself, and all that long portion
of Judge Douglas’s speech on this subject—I wish simply to
say what I have said to him before, that he cannot know
whether it is true or not, and I do know
that there is not a word of truth in it.
And I have told him so before.
I don’t want any harsh language indulged in, but I do
not know how to deal with this persistent insisting on a
story that I know to be utterly without truth.
It used to be a fashion amongst men that when a
charge was made, some sort of proof was brought forward to
establish it, and if no proof was found to exist, the charge
was dropped. I don’t know how
to meet this kind of an argument. I
don’t want to have a fight with Judge Douglas, and I have no
way of making an argument up into the consistency of a
corn-cob and stopping his mouth with it.
All I can do is, good-humoredly to say that, from
the beginning to the end of all that story about a bargain
between Judge Trumbull and myself, there is not
a word of truth in it. I
can only ask him to show some sort of evidence of the truth
of his story. He brings forward
here and reads from what he contends is a speech by James H.
Matheny, charging such a bargain between Trumbull and
myself. My own opinion is that
Matheny did do some such immoral thing as to tell a story
that he knew nothing about. I
believe he did. I contradicted
it instantly, and it has been contradicted by Judge
Trumbull, while nobody has produced any proof, because there
is none. Now, whether the
speech which the Judge brings forward here is really the one
Matheny made I do not know, and I hope the Judge will pardon
me for doubting the genuineness of this document, since his
production of those Springfield
resolutions at Ottawa. I do not wish to dwell at any
great length upon this matter. I
can say nothing when a long story like this is told, except
it is not true, and demand that he who insists upon it shall
produce some proof. That is all
any man can do, and I leave it in that way, for I know of no
other way of dealing with it.
The
Judge has gone over a long account of the old Whig and
Democratic parties, and it connects itself with this charge
against Trumbull and myself. He
says that they agreed upon a compromise in regard to the
slavery question in 1850; that in a National Democratic
Convention resolutions were passed to abide by that
compromise as a finality upon the slavery question.
He also says that the Whig party in National
Convention agreed to abide by and regard as a finality the
Compromise of 1850. I
understand the Judge to be altogether right about that; I
understand that part of the history of the country as stated
by him to be correct. I
recollect that I, as a member of that party, acquiesced in
that compromise. I recollect in
the Presidential election which followed, when we had
General Scott up for the Presidency, Judge Douglas was
around berating us Whigs as Abolitionists, precisely as he
does to-day—not a bit of difference. I
have often heard him. We could
do nothing when the old Whig party was alive that was not
Abolitionism, but it has got an extremely good name since it
has passed away.
When
that Compromise was made it did not repeal the old Missouri
Compromise. It left a region of
United States
territory half as large as the present territory of the United States,
north of the line of 36 degrees 30 minutes, in which slavery
was prohibited by act of Congress. This
compromise did not repeal that one. It
did not affect or propose to repeal it.
But at last it became Judge Douglas’s duty, as he
thought (and I find no fault with him), as Chairman of the
Committee on Territories, to bring in a bill for the
organization of a Territorial Government—first of one, then
of two Territories north of that line.
When he did so it ended in his inserting a provision
substantially repealing the Missouri Compromise.
That was because the Compromise of 1850 had
not repealed it. And now
I ask why he could not have let that compromise alone? We were quiet from the agitation
of the slavery question. We
were making no fuss about it. All
had
acquiesced in the Compromise measures of 1850.
We never had been seriously disturbed by any
abolition agitation before that period.
When he came to form governments for the Territories
north of the line of 36 degrees 30 minutes, why could he not
have let that matter stand as it was standing?
Was it necessary to the organization of a
Territory? Not at all.
Iowa lay north of
the line and had been organized as a Territory and come into
the Union as a State
without disturbing that Compromise. There
was no sort of necessity for destroying it to organize these
Territories. But, gentlemen, it
would take up all my time to meet all the little quibbling
arguments of Judge Douglas to show that the Missouri
Compromise was repealed by the Compromise of 1850.
My own opinion is, that a careful investigation of
all the arguments to sustain the position that that
Compromise was virtually repealed by the Compromise of 1850,
would show that they are the merest fallacies.
I have the Report that Judge Douglas first brought
into Congress at the time of the introduction of the Nebraska
bill, which in its original form did not
repeal the Missouri Compromise, and he there expressly
stated that he had forborne to do so because it
had not been done by the Compromise of 1850.
I close this part of the discussion on my part by
asking him the question again, “Why,
when we had peace under the Missouri Compromise, could you
not have let it alone?”
In
complaining
of what I said in my speech at Springfield, in which
he says I accepted my nomination for the Senatorship (where,
by the way, he is at fault, for if he will examine it, he
will find no acceptance in it), he again quotes that portion
in which I said that “a house divided against itself cannot
stand.” Let me say a word in regard to that matter.
He
tries to persuade us that there must be a variety in the
different institutions of the States of the Union;
that that variety necessarily proceeds from the variety of
soil, climate, of the face of the country, and the
difference in the natural feature of the States.
I agree to all that. Have
these very matters ever produced any difficulty amongst us? Not at all. Have
we ever had any quarrel over the fact that they have laws in
Louisiana
designed to regulate the commerce that springs from the
production of sugar? Or because
we have a different class relative to the production of
flour in this State? Have they
produced any differences? Not
at all. They are the very
cements of this Union. They don’t make the house a house
divided against itself. They
are the props that hold up the house and sustain the Union.
But
has it been so with this element of slavery? Have
we not always had quarrels and difficulties over it?
And when will we cease to have quarrels over it? Like causes produce like effects. It is worth while to observe that
we have generally had comparative peace upon the slavery
question, and that there has been [just] cause for alarm
until it was excited by the effort to spread it into new
territory. Whenever it has been
limited to its present bounds, and there has been no effort
to spread it, there has been peace. All
the trouble and convulsion has proceeded from efforts to
spread it over more territory. It
was thus at the date of the Missouri Compromise.
It was so again with the annexation of Texas;
so with the territory acquired by the Mexican war, and it is
so now. Whenever there has been
an effort to spread it there has been agitation and
resistance. Now, I appeal to
this audience (very few of whom are my political friends),
as national men, whether we have reason to expect that the
agitation in regard to this subject will cease while the
causes that tend to reproduce agitation are actively at
work? Will not the same cause
that produced agitation in 1820, when the Missouri
Compromise was formed—that which produced the agitation upon
the annexation of Texas,
and at other times—work out the same results always?
Do you think that the nature of man will be
changed—that the same causes that produced agitation at one
time will not have the same effect at another?
This
has been the result so far as my observation of the slavery
question and my reading in history extends.
What right have we then to hope that the trouble
will cease—that the agitation will come to an end—until it
shall either be placed back where it originally stood, and
where the fathers originally placed it, or, on the other
hand, until it shall entirely master all opposition?
This is the view I entertain, and this is the
reason why I entertained it, as Judge Douglas has read from
my Springfield
speech.
Now,
my friends, there is one other thing that I feel myself
under some sort of obligation to mention.
Judge Douglas has here to-day—in a very rambling
way, I was about saying—spoken of the platforms for which he
seeks to hold me responsible. He
says, “Why can’t you come out and make an open avowal of
principles in all places alike?” and he reads from an
advertisement that he says was used to notify the people of
a speech to be made by Judge Trumbull at Waterloo.
In commenting on it he desires to know whether we
cannot speak frankly and manfully as he and his friends do!
How, I ask, do his friends speak
out their own sentiments? A
Convention of his party in this State met on the 21st of
April, at Springfield,
and passed a set of resolutions which they proclaim to the
country as their platform. This
does constitute their platform, and it is because Judge
Douglas claims it is his platform—that these are his
principles and purposes—that he has a right to declare he
speaks his sentiments “frankly and manfully.” On
the
9th of June, Col. John
Dougherty, Gov. Reynolds and others, calling themselves
National Democrats, met in Springfield
and adopted a set of resolutions which are as easily
understood, as plain and as definite in stating to the
country and to the world what they believed in and would
stand upon, as Judge Douglas’s platform.
Now, what is the reason, that Judge Douglas is not
willing that Col. Dougherty and Gov. Reynolds should stand
upon their own written and printed platform as well as he
upon his? Why must he look
farther than their platform when he claims himself to stand
by his platform? Again, in
reference to our platform: On the 16th of June the
Republicans had their Convention and published their
platform, which is as clear and distinct as Judge Douglas’s. In it they spoke their principles
as plainly and as definitely to the world.
What is the reason that Judge Douglas is not
willing I should stand upon that platform?
Why must he go around hunting for some one who is
supporting me, or has supported me at some time in his life,
and who has said something at some time contrary to that
platform? Does the Judge regard
that rule as a good one? If it
turn out that the rule is a good one for me—that I am
responsible for any and every opinion that any man has
expressed who is my friend—then it is a good rule for him. I ask, is it not as good a rule
for him as it is for me? In my
opinion, it is not a good rule for either of us.
Do you think differently, Judge?
Mr.
Douglas—“I
do not.”
Mr.
Lincoln—Judge
Douglas
says he does not think differently. I
am glad of it. Then can he tell
me why he is looking up resolutions of five or six years
ago, and insisting that they were my platform,
notwithstanding my protest that they are not, and never were
my platform, and my pointing out the platform of the State
Convention which he delights to say nominated me for the
Senate? I cannot see what he
means by parading these resolutions, if it is not to hold me
responsible for them in some way. If
he says to me here, that he does not hold the rule to be
good, one way or the other, I do not comprehend how he could
answer me more fully if he answered me at greater length. I will therefore put in as my
answer to the resolutions that he has hunted up against me,
what I, as a lawyer, would call a good plea to a bad
declaration. I understand that
it is a maxim of law, that a poor plea maybe a good plea to
a bad declaration. I think that
the opinions the Judge brings from those who support me, yet
differ from me, is a bad declaration against me; but if I
can bring the same things against him, I am putting in a
good plea to that kind of declaration, and now I propose to
try it.
At
Freeport Judge Douglas occupied a large part of his time in
producing resolutions and documents of various sorts, as I
understood, to make me somehow responsible for them; and I
propose now doing a little of the same sort of thing for
him. In 1850 a very clever
gentleman by the name of Thompson Campbell, a personal
friend of Judge Douglas and myself, a political friend of
Judge Douglas and opponent of mine, was a candidate for
Congress in the Galena District. He
was interrogated as to his views on this same slavery
question. I have here before me
the interrogatories and Campbell’s
answers to them. I will read
them:
INTERROGATORIES.
1st. Will you, if elected, vote for and
cordially support a bill prohibiting slavery in the
Territories of the United States?
2d.
Will you vote for and support a
bill abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia?
3d. Will you oppose the admission of
any slave States which may be formed out of Texas or the
Territories?
4th. Will you vote for and advocate the
repeal of the Fugitive Slave law passed at the recent
session of Congress?
5th. Will you advocate and vote for the
election of a Speaker of the House of Representatives who
shall be willing to organize the committee of that House so
as to give the free States their just influence in the
business of legislation?
6th. What are your views, not only as
to the constitutional right of Congress to prohibit the
slave-trade between the States, but also as to the
expediency of exercising that right immediately?
CAMPBELL’S
REPLY.
To
the first and second interrogatories, I answer unequivocally
in the affirmative.
To
the third interrogatory I reply, that I am opposed to the
admission of any more slave States into the Union,
that may be formed out of Texan or any other Territory.
To
the fourth and fifth interrogatories I unhesitatingly answer
in the affirmative.
To
the sixth interrogatory I reply, that so long as the slave
States continue to treat slaves as articles of commerce, the
Constitution confers power on Congress to pass laws
regulating that peculiar COMMERCE, and that the protection
of Human Rights imperatively demands the interposition of
every constitutional means to prevent this most inhuman and
iniquitous traffic.
T.
CAMPBELL.
I
want to say here that Thompson Campbell was elected to
Congress on that platform, as the Democratic candidate in
the Galena District, against Martin P. Sweet.
Judge
Douglas—“Give me the date of the letter.”
Mr.
Lincoln—The time Campbell
ran was in 1850. I have not the
exact date here. It was some
time in 1850 that these interrogatories were put and the
answer given. Campbell was elected to
Congress, and served out his term. I
think a second election came up before he served out his
term and he was not re-elected. Whether
defeated or not nominated, I do not know.
[Mr. Campbell was nominated for re-election by the
Democratic party, by acclamation.] At
the
end of his term his very good friend, Judge Douglas, got him
a high office from President Pierce, and sent him off to California. Is not that the fact? Just
at
the end of his term in Congress it appears that our mutual
friend Judge Douglas got our mutual friend Campbell a good
office, and sent him to California
upon it. And not only so, but
on the 27th of last month, when Judge Douglas and myself
spoke at Freeport in joint discussion, there was his same
friend Campbell, come all the way from California, to help
the Judge beat me; and there was poor Martin P. Sweet
standing on the platform, trying to help poor me to be
elected. That is true of one of
Judge Douglas’s friends.
So
again, in that same race of 1850, there was a Congressional
Convention assembled at Joliet,
and it nominated K. S. Molony for Congress, and unanimously
adopted the following resolution:
Resolved, That we are uncompromisingly
opposed to the extension of slavery; and while we would not
make such opposition a ground of interference with the
interests of the States where it exists, yet we moderately
but firmly insist that it is the duty of Congress to oppose
its extension into Territory now free, by all means
compatible with the obligations of the Constitution, and
with good faith to our sister States; that these principles
were recognized by the Ordinance of 1787, which received the
sanction of Thomas Jefferson, who is acknowledged by all to
be the great oracle and expounder of our faith.
Subsequently
the
same
interrogatories were propounded to Dr. Molony which had been
addressed to Campbell, as above, with the exception of the
6th, respecting the inter-State slave-trade, to which Dr.
Molony, the Democratic nominee for Congress, replied as
follows:
I
received the written interrogatories this day, and as you
will see by the La Salle Democrat and
Ottawa Free Trader, I took at Peru on the
5th and at Ottawa on the 7th, the affirmative side of
interrogatories 1st and 2d, and in relation to the admission
of any more slave States from free Territory, my position
taken at these meetings, as correctly reported in said
papers, was emphatically and distinctly
opposed to it. In relation to
the admission of any more slave States from Texas, whether I shall
go against it or not will depend upon the opinion that I may
hereafter form of the true meaning and nature of the
resolutions of annexation. If,
by said resolutions, the honor and good faith of the nation
is pledged to admit more slave States from Texas
when she (Texas)
may apply for the admission of such State, then I should, if
in Congress, vote for their admission.
But if not so pledged and bound by sacred contract,
then a bill for the admission of more slave States from Texas
would never receive my vote.
To
your
fourth interrogatory I answer most decidedly
in the affirmative, and for reasons set forth in my reported
remarks at Ottawa
last Monday.
To
your
fifth interrogatory I also reply in the affirmative most
cordially, and that I will use my utmost exertions to
secure the nomination and election of a man who will
accomplish the objects of said interrogatories.
I most cordially approve of the resolutions adopted
at the union meeting held at Princeton
on the 27th September ult.
Yours, etc.,
K. S. MOLONY.
All
I have to say in regard to Dr. Molony is, that he was the
regularly nominated Democratic candidate for Congress in his
district—was elected at that time, at the end of his term
was appointed to a land-office at Danville.
(I never heard any thing of Judge Douglas’s
instrumentality in this.) He
held this office a considerable time, and when we were at Freeport
the other day, there were handbills scattered about
notifying the public that after our debate was over, R. S. Molony
would make a Democratic speech in favor of Judge Douglas. That is all I know of my own
personal knowledge. It is added
here to this resolution, and truly I believe, that—
“Among
those who participated in the Joliet Convention, and who
supported its nominee, with his platform as laid down in the
resolution of the Convention and in his reply as above
given, we call at random the following names, all of which
are recognized at this day as leading Democrats:
“Cook County—E.
B. Williams, Charles
McDonell, Arno Voss, Thomas Hoyne, Isaac Cook.”
I
reckon we ought to except Cook.
“F. C. Sherman.”
“Will—Joel
A. Matteson, S.
W. Bowen.”
“Kane—B.
F. Hall, G. W. Renwick, A. M.
Herrington, Elijah Wilcox.”
“McHenry—W.
M.
Jackson, Enos W. Smith, Neil Donnelly.”
“La Salle—John Hise, William
Reddick.”
William
Reddick! another one of Judge
Douglas’s friends that stood on the stand with him at Ottawa,
at the time the Judge says my knees trembled so that I had
to be carried away. The names
are all here:
“DuPage—Nathan
Allen.”
“DeKalb—Z.
B.
Mayo.”
Here
is another set of resolutions which I think are apposite to
the matter in hand.
On
the 28th of February of the same year, a Democratic District
Convention was held at Naperville,
to nominate a candidate for Circuit Judge.
Among the delegates were Bowcn and Kelly, of Will;
Captain Naper, H. H. Cody, Nathan Allen, of DuPage; W. M.
Jackson, J. M. Strode, P. W. Piatt and Enos W. Smith, of
McHenry; J. Horsman and others, of Winnebago.
Col. Strode presided over the Convention.
The following resolutions were unanimously
adopted—the first on motion of P. W. Piatt, the second on
motion of William M. Jackson:
Resolved, That this Convention is in favor of
the Wilmot Proviso, both in Principle and Practice, and that we know of no good reason
why any person should oppose the largest
latitude in Free Soil, Free
Territory
and Free Speech.
Resolved,
That in the opinion of the Convention, the time has arrived
when all men should be free, whites as well
as others.
Judge
Douglas—“What is the date of those resolutions?”
Mr.
Lincoln—I
understand it was in 1850, but I do not know
it. I do not state a thing and
say I know it, when I do not. But
I have the highest belief that this is so.
I know of no way to arrive at the conclusion that
there is an error in it. I mean
to put a case no stronger than the truth will allow.
But what I was going to comment upon is an extract
from a newspaper in DeKalb county, and it strikes me as
being rather singular, I confess, under the circumstances. There is a Judge Mayo in that
county, who is a candidate for the Legislature, for the
purpose, if he secures his election, of helping to re-elect
Judge Douglas. He is the editor
of a newspaper [DeKalb County Sentinel],
and in that paper I find the extract I am going to read. It is part of an editorial article
in which he was electioneering as fiercely as he could for
Judge Douglas and against me. It
was a curious thing, I think, to be in such a paper.
I will agree to that, and the Judge may make the
most of it:
“Our
education
has been such, that we have ever been rather in
favor of the equality of the blacks; that is, that they
should enjoy all the privileges of the whites where they
reside. We are aware that
this is not a very popular doctrine. We
have had many a confab with some who are now strong
‘Republicans,’ we taking the broad ground of equality and
they the opposite ground.
“We
were brought up in a State where blacks were voters, and we
do not know of any inconvenience resulting from it, though
perhaps it would not work as well where the blacks are more
numerous. We have no doubt of
the right, of the whites to guard against such an evil, if
it is one. Our opinion is that
it would be best for all concerned to have the colored
population in a State by themselves [in this I agree with
him]; but if within the jurisdiction of the United States, we say by all means they should have the right to
have their Senators and Representatives in Congress, and
to vote for President. With
us ‘worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow.’ We have
seen many a ‘nigger’ that we thought more of than some white
men.”
That is
one of Judge Douglas’s friends. Now
I do not want to leave myself in an attitude where I can be
misrepresented, so I will say I do not think the Judge is
responsible for this article; but he is quite as responsible
for it as I would be if one of my friends had said it. I think that is fair enough.
I
have here also a set of resolutions parsed by a Democratic
State Convention in Judge Douglas’s own good old State of
Vermont, that I think ought to be good for him too:
Resolved,
That liberty is a right inherent and inalienable in man and
that herein all men are equal.
Resolved, That we claim no authority in the
Federal Government to abolish slavery in the several Slates,
but we do claim for it Constitutional power perpetually to
prohibit the introduction of slavery into territory now
free, and abolish it wherever, under the jurisdiction of
Congress, it exists.
Resolved, That no more slave States should be
admitted into the Federal Union.
Resolved, That the Government ought to return
to its ancient policy, not to extend, nationalize or
encourage, but to limit, localize and discourage slavery.
At
Freeport I answered several
interrogatories that had been propounded to me by Judge
Douglas at the Ottawa
meeting. The Judge has yet not
seen fit to find any fault with the position that I took in
regard to those seven interrogatories, which were certainly
broad enough, in all conscience, to cover the entire ground. In my answers, which have been
printed, and all have had the opportunity of seeing, I take
the ground that those who elect me must expect that I will
do nothing which will not be in accordance with those
answers. I have some right to
assert that Judge Douglas has no fault to find with them. But he chooses to still try to
thrust me upon different ground without paying any attention
to my answers, the obtaining of which from me cost him so
much trouble and concern. At
the same time, I propounded four interrogatories to him,
claiming it as a right that he should answer as many
interrogatories for me as I did for him, and I would reserve
myself for a future installment when I got them ready. The Judge in answering me upon
that occasion, put in what I suppose he intends as answers
to all four of my interrogatories. The
first one of these interrogatories I have before me, and it
is in these words:
“Question
1. If the people of Kansas shall, by means entirely
unobjectionable in all other respects, adopt a State
Constitution, and ask admission into the Union
under it, before they have the requisite
number of inhabitants according to the English bill—some
ninety-three thousand—will you vote to admit them?”
As
I read the Judge’s answer in the newspaper, and as I
remember it as pronounced at the time, he does not give any
answer which is equivalent to yes or no—I will or I wont. He answers at very considerable
length, rather quarreling with me for asking the question,
and insisting that Judge Trumbull had done something that I
ought to say something about; and finally getting out such
statements as induce me to infer that he means to be
understood he will, in that supposed case, vote for the
admission of Kansas. I only bring this forward now for
the purpose of saying that if he chooses to put a different
construction upon his answer he may do it.
But if he does not, I shall from this time forward
assume that he will vote for the admission of Kansas in disregard of
the English bill. He has the
right to remove any misunderstanding I may have.
I only mention it now that I may hereafter assume
this to be the true construction of his answer, if he does
not now choose to correct me.
The
second interrogatory that I propounded to him, was this:
“Question
2. Can the people of a United States Territory,
in any lawful way, against the wish of any citizen of the United States,
exclude slavery from its limits prior to the formation of a
State Constitution?”
To
this Judge Douglas answered that they can lawfully exclude
slavery from the Territory prior to the formation of a
Constitution. He goes on to
tell us how it can be done. As
I understand him, he holds that it can be done by the
Territorial Legislature refusing to make any enactments for
the protection of slavery in the Territory, and especially
by adopting unfriendly legislation to it.
For the sake of clearness I state it again; that
they can exclude slavery from the Territory, 1st, by
withholding what he assumes to be an indispensable
assistance to it in the way of legislation; and, 2d, by
unfriendly legislation. If I
rightly understand him, I wish to ask your attention for a
while to his position.
In
the first place, the Supreme Court of the United States has
decided that any Congressional prohibition of slavery in the
Territories is unconstitutional—that they have reached this
proposition as a conclusion from their former proposition,
that the Constitution of the United States expressly
recognizes property in slaves, and from that other
Constitutional provision, that no person shall be deprived
of property without due process of law.
Hence they reach the conclusion that as the
Constitution of the United States expressly recognizes
property in slaves, and prohibits any person from being
deprived of property without due process of law, to pass an
act of Congress by which a man who owned a slave on one side
of a line would be deprived of him if he took him on the
other side, is depriving him of that property without due
process of law. That I
understand to be the decision of the Supreme Court.
I understand also that Judge Douglas adheres most
firmly to that decision; and the difficulty is, how is it
possible for any power to exclude slavery from the Territory
unless in violation of that decision? That
is the difficulty.
In
the Senate of the United States, in 1850, Judge Trumbull, in
a speech, substantially, if not directly, put the same
interrogatory to Judge Douglas, as to whether the people of
a Territory had the lawful power to exclude slavery prior to
the formation of a Constitution? Judge
Douglas then answered at considerable length, and his answer
will be found in the Congressional Globe,
under date of June 9th, 1856.
The Judge said that whether the people could
exclude slavery prior to the formation of a Constitution or
not was a question to be decided by the Supreme
Court. He put that
proposition, as will be seen by the Congressional
Globe, in a variety of forms, all running to the same
thing in substance—that it was a question for the Supreme
Court. I maintain that when he
says, after the Supreme Court have decided the question,
that the people may yet exclude slavery by any means
whatever, he does virtually say, that it is not
a question for the Supreme Court. He
shifts his ground. I appeal to
you whether he did not say it was a question for the Supreme
Court? Has not the Supreme
Court decided that question? When
he now says the people may exclude
slavery, does he not make it a question for the people? Does he not virtually shift his
ground and say that it is not a question
for the court, but for the people? This
is a very simple proposition—a very plain and naked one. It seems to me that there is no
difficulty in deciding it. In a
variety of ways he said that it was a question for the
Supreme Court. He did not stop
then to tell us that whatever the Supreme Court decides, the
people can by withholding necessary “police regulations”
keep slavery out. He did not
make any such answer. I submit
to you now, whether the new state of the case has not
induced the Judge to sheer away from his original ground. Would not this be the impression
of every fair-minded man?
I
hold that the proposition that slavery cannot enter a new
country without police regulations is historically false. It is not true at all. I
hold that the history of this country shows that the
institution of slavery was originally planted upon this
continent without these “police
regulations” which the Judge now thinks necessary for the
actual establishment of it. Not
only so, but is there not another fact—how came this Dred
Scott decision to be made? It
was made upon the case of a negro being taken and actually
held in slavery in Minnesota
Territory,
claiming his freedom because the act of Congress prohibited
his being so held there. Will
the Judge pretend that Dred Scott was not held there
without police regulations? There
is at least one matter of record as to his having been held
in slavery in the Territory, not only without police
regulations, but in the teeth of Congressional legislation
supposed to be valid at the time. This
shows
that there is vigor enough in slavery to plant itself in a
new country even against unfriendly legislation.
It takes not only law but the enforcement
of law to keep it out. That is
the history of this country upon the subject.
I
wish to ask one other question. It
being understood that the Constitution of the United States
guaranties property in slaves in the Territories, if there
is any infringement of the right of that property, would not
the United States Courts, organized for the government of
the Territory, apply such remedy as might be necessary in
that case? It is a maxim held
by the courts, that there is no wrong without its remedy;
and the courts have a remedy for whatever is acknowledged
and treated as a wrong.
Again:
I will ask you, my friends, if you were elected members of
the Legislature, what would be the first thing you would
have to do before entering upon your duties?
Swear to support the Constitution of
the United
States.
Suppose you believe, as Judge Douglas does, that
the Constitution of the United States guaranties to your
neighbor the right to hold slaves in that Territory—that
they are his property—how can you clear your oaths unless
you give him such legislation as is necessary to enable him
to enjoy that property? What do
you understand by supporting the Constitution of a State, or
of the United
States? Is
it not to give such Constitutional helps to the rights
established by that Constitution as may be practically
needed? Can you, if you swear
to support the Constitution, and believe that the
Constitution establishes a right, clear your oath, without
giving it support? Do you
support the Constitution if, knowing or believing there is a
right established under it which needs specific legislation,
you withhold that legislation? Do
you not violate and disregard your oath?
I can conceive of nothing plainer in the world. There can be nothing in the words
“support the Constitution,” if you may run counter to it by
refusing support to any right established under the
Constitution. And what I say
here will hold with still more force against the Judge’s
doctrine of “unfriendly legislation.” How
could
you, having sworn to support the Constitution and believing
it guarantied the right to hold slaves in the Territories,
assist in legislation intended to defeat that
right? That would be
violating your own view of the Constitution.
Not only so, but if you were to do so, how long
would it take the courts to hold your votes unconstitutional
and void? Not a moment.
Lastly I
would ask—is not Congress, itself, under obligation to give
legislative support to any right that is established under
the United States Constitution? I
repeat the question—is not Congress, itself, bound to give
legislative support to any right that is established in the
United States Constitution? A
member of Congress swears to support the Constitution of the
United
States, and if he sees
a right established by that Constitution which needs
specific legislative protection, can he clear his oath
without giving that protection? Let
me ask you why many of us who are opposed to slavery upon
principle, give our acquiescence to a Fugitive Slave law? Why do we hold ourselves under
obligations to pass such a law, and abide by it when it is
passed? Because the
Constitution makes provision that the owners of slaves shall
have the right to reclaim them. It
gives the right to reclaim slaves, and that right is, as
Judge Douglas says, a barren right, unless there is
legislation that will enforce it.
The
mere declaration, “No person held to service or labor in one
State under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall
in consequence of any law or regulation therein be
discharged from such service or labor, but shall be
delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or
labor may be due,” is powerless without specific legislation
to enforce it. Now, on what
ground would a member of Congress who is opposed to slavery
in the abstract, vote for a Fugitive law, as I would deem it
my duty to do? Because there is
a Constitutional right which needs legislation to enforce
it. And although it is
distasteful to me, I have sworn to support the Constitution,
and having so sworn, I cannot conceive that I do support it
if I withhold from that right any necessary legislation to
make it practical. And if that
is true in regard to a Fugitive Slave law, is the right to
have fugitive slaves reclaimed any better fixed in the
Constitution than the right to hold slaves in the
Territories? For this decision
is a just exposition of the Constitution, as Judge Douglas
thinks. Is the one right any
better than the other? Is there
any man who, while a member of Congress, would give support
to the one any more than the other? If
I wished to refuse to give legislative support to slave
property in the Territories, if a member of Congress, I
could not do it, holding the view that the Constitution
establishes that right. If I
did it at all, it would be because I deny that this decision
properly construes the Constitution. But
if I acknowledge, with Judge Douglas, that this decision
properly construes the Constitution, I cannot conceive that
I would be less than a perjured man if I should refuse in
Congress to give such protection to that property as in its
nature it needed.
At
the end of what I have said here I propose to give the Judge
my fifth interrogatory, which he may take and answer at his
leisure. My fifth interrogatory
is this:
If
the slaveholding citizens of a United States Territory should
need and demand Congressional legislation for the protection
of their slave property in such Territory, would you, as a
member of Congress, vote for or against such legislation?
Judge
Douglas—“Will you repeat that? I
want to answer that question.”
Mr.
Lincoln—If
the slaveholding citizens of a United States Territory should
need and demand Congressional legislation for the protection
of their slave property in such Territory, would you, as a
member of Congress, vote for or against such legislation?
I
am aware that in some of the speeches Judge Douglas has
made, he has spoken as if he did not know or think that the
Supreme Court had decided that a Territorial Legislature
cannot exclude slavery. Precisely
what the Judge would say upon the subject—whether he would
say definitely that he does not understand they have so
decided, or whether he would say he does understand that the
court have so decided, I do not know; but I know that in his
speech at Springfield he spoke of it as a thing they had not
decided yet; and in his answer to me at Freeport, he spoke
of it so far again, as I can comprehend it, as a thing that
had not yet been decided. Now I
hold that if the Judge does entertain that view, I think
that he is not mistaken in so far as it can be said that the
court has not decided any thing save the mere question of
jurisdiction. I know the legal
arguments that can be made—that after a court has decided
that it cannot take jurisdiction in a case, it then has
decided all that is before it, and that is the end of it. A plausible argument can be made
in favor of that proposition, but I know that Judge Douglas
has said in one of his speeches that the court went forward,
like honest men as they were, and decided
all the points in the case. If
any points are really extra-judicially decided because not
necessarily before them, then this one as to the power of
the Territorial Legislature to exclude slavery is one of
them, as also the one that the Missouri Compromise was null
and void. They are both
extra-judicial, or neither is, according as the court held
that they had no jurisdiction in the case between the
parties, because of want of capacity of one party to
maintain a suit in that court. I
want, if I have sufficient time, to show that the court did
pass its opinion, but that is the only thing
actually done in the case. If
they did not decide, they showed what they were ready to
decide whenever the matter was before them.
What is that opinion? After
having argued that Congress had no power to pass a law
excluding slavery from a United States Territory, they then
used language to this effect: That
inasmuch
as Congress itself could not exercise such a power, it
followed as a matter of course that it could not authorize a
Territorial Government to exercise it, for the Territorial
Legislature can do no more than Congress could do.
Thus it expressed its opinion emphatically against
the power of a Territorial Legislature to exclude slavery,
leaving us in just as little doubt on that point as upon any
other point they really decided.
Now,
my fellow-citizens, I will detain you only a little while
longer. My time is nearly out. I find a report of a speech made
by Judge Douglas at Joliet,
since we last met at Freeport—published,
I
believe, in the Missouri Republican—on the
9th of this month, in which Judge Douglas says
“You
know at Ottawa,
I read this platform, and asked him if he concurred in each
and all of the principles set forth in it.
He would not answer these questions.
At last I said frankly, I wish you to answer them,
because when I get them up here where the color of your
principles are a little darker than in Egypt, I intend to
trot you down to Jonesboro. The
very notice that I was going to take him down to Egypt
made him tremble in the knees so that he had to be carried
from the platform. He laid up
seven days, and in the meantime held a consultation with his
political physicians; they had Lovejoy and Farnsworth and
all the leaders of the Abolition party, they consulted it
all over, and at last Lincoln came to the conclusion that he
would answer, so he came up to Freeport last Friday.”
Now
that statement altogether furnishes a subject for
philosophical contemplation. I
have been treating it in that way, and I have really come to
the conclusion that I can explain it in no other way than by
believing the Judge is crazy. If
he was in his right mind, I cannot conceive how he would
have risked disgusting the four or five thousand of his own
friends who stood there, and knew, as to my having been
carried from the platform, that there was not a word of
truth in it.
Judge
Douglas—“Didn’t
they carry you off?”
Mr.
Lincoln—There;
that question illustrates the character of this man Douglas,
exactly. He smiles now and
says, “Didn’t they carry you off?” But he said then, “he
had to be carried off;” and he said it to convince the
country that he had so completely broken me down by his
speech that I had to be carried away. Now
he seeks to dodge it, and asks, “Didn’t they carry you off?”
Yes, they did.
But, Judge Douglas, why didn’t you tell
the truth? I would like
to know why you didn’t tell the truth about it.
And then again, “He laid up seven days.” He
puts this in print for the people of the country to read as
a serious document. I think if
he had been in his sober senses he would not have risked
that barefacedness in the presence of thousands of his own
friends, who knew that I made speeches within six of the
seven days at Henry, Marshall county; Augusta, Hancock
county, and Macomb, McDonough county, including all the
necessary travel to meet him again at Freeport at the end of
the six days. Now, I say, there
is no charitable way to look at that statement, except to
conclude that he is actually crazy. There
is another thing in that statement that alarmed me very
greatly as he states it, that he was going to “trot me down
to Egypt.”
Thereby he would have you to
infer that I would not come to Egypt unless he forced
me—that I could not be got here, unless he, giant like, had
hauled me down here. That
statement he makes, too, in the teeth of the knowledge that
I had made the stipulation to come down here, and
that he himself had been very reluctant
to enter into the stipulation. More
than all this, Judge Douglas, when he made that statement,
must have been crazy, and wholly out of his sober senses, or
else he would have known that when he got me down here—that
promise—that windy promise—of his powers to annihilate me,
wouldn’t amount to anything. Now,
how little do I look like being carried away trembling? Let the Judge go on, and after he
is done with his half hour, I want you all, if I can’t go
home myself, to let me stay and rot here; and if anything
happens to the Judge, if I cannot carry him to the hotel and
put him to bed, let me stay here and rot.
I say, then, there is something extraordinary in
this statement. I ask you if
you know any other living man who would make such a
statement? I will ask my friend
Casey, over there, if he would do such a thing? Would
he send that out and have his men take it as the truth? Did the Judge talk of trotting me
down to Egypt
to scare me to death? Why, I
know this people better than he does. I
was raised just a little east of here.
I am a part of this people. But
the Judge was raised further north, and perhaps he has some
horrid idea of what this people might be induced to do. But really I have talked about
this matter perhaps longer than I ought, for it is no great
thing, and yet the smallest are often the most difficult
things to deal with. The Judge
has set about seriously trying to make the impression that
when we meet at different places I am literally in his
clutches—that I am a poor, helpless, decrepit mouse, and
that I can do nothing at all. This
is one of the ways he has taken to create that impression. I don’t know any other way to meet
it, except this. I don’t want
to quarrel with him—to call him a liar—but when I come
square up to him I don’t know what else to call him, if I
must tell the truth out. I want
to be at peace, and reserve all my fighting powers for
necessary occasions. My time,
now, is very nearly out, and I give up the trifle that is
left to the Judge, to let him set my knees trembling again,
if he can.
MR. DOUGLAS'S
REPLY.
My
friends, while I am very grateful to you for the enthusiasm
which you show for me, I will say in all candor, that your
quietness will be much more agreeable than your applause,
inasmuch as you deprive me of some part of my time when ever
you cheer.
I
will commence where Mr. Lincoln left off, and make a remark
upon this serious complaint of his about my speech at Joliet. I did
say there in a playful manner that when I put these
questions to Mr. Lincoln at Ottawa he failed to answer, and
that he trembled and had to be carried off the stand, and
required seven days to get up his reply.
That he did not walk off from that stand he will
not deny. That when the crowd
went away from the stand with me, a few persons carried him
home on their shoulders and laid him down, he will admit. I wish to say to you that whenever
I degrade my friends and myself by allowing them to carry me
on their backs along through the public streets, when I am
able to walk, I am willing to be deemed crazy.
I did not say whether I beat him or he beat me in
the argument. It is true I put
these questions to him, and I put them not as mere idle
questions, but showed that I based them upon the creed of
the Black Republican party as declared by their Conventions
in that portion of the State which he depends upon to elect
him, and desired to know whether he indorsed that creed. He would not answer.
When I reminded him that I intended bringing him
into Egypt
and renewing my questions if he refused to answer, he then
consulted and did get up his answers one week after—answers
which I may refer to in a few minutes and show you how
equivocal they are. My object
was to make him avow whether or not he stood by the platform
of his party; the resolutions I then read, and upon which I
based my questions, had been adopted by his party in the
Galena Congressional District, and the Chicago and
Bloomington Congressional Districts, composing a large
majority of the counties in this State that give Republican
or Abolition majorities. Mr.
Lincoln cannot and will not deny that the doctrines laid
down in these resolutions were in substance put forth in
Lovejoy’s resolutions, which were voted for by a majority of
his party, some of them, if not all, receiving the support
of everyman of his party. Hence,
I laid a foundation for my questions to him before I asked
him whether that was or was not the platform of his party. He says that he answered my
questions. One of them was
whether he would vote to admit any more slave States into
the Union.
The creed of the Republican party as set forth in
the resolutions of their various Conventions was, that they
would under no circumstances vote to admit another slave
State. It was put forth in the
Lovejoy resolutions in the Legislature; it was put forth and
passed in a majority of all the counties of this State which
give Abolition or Republican majorities, or elect members to
the Legislature of that school of polities.
I had a right to know whether he would vote for or
against the admission of another slave State in the event
the people wanted it. He first
answered that he was not pledged on the subject, and then
said, “In regard to the other question, of whether I am
pledged to the admission of any more slave States into the
Union, I state to you very frankly that I would be
exceedingly sorry ever to be put in the position of having
to pass on that question. I
should be exceedingly glad to know that there would never be
another slave State admitted into the Union; but I must add
that if slavery shall be kept out of the Territories during
the territorial existence of any one given Territory, and
then the people, having a fair chance and clean field when
they come to adopt a Constitution, do such an extraordinary
thing as adopt a slave Constitution, uninfluenced by the
actual presence of the institution among them, I see no
alternative, if we own the country, but to admit them into
the Union.”
Now
analyze that answer. In the
first place he says he would be exceedingly sorry to be put
in a position where he would have to vote on the question of
the admission of a slave State. Why
is he a candidate for the Senate if he would be sorry to be
put in that position? I trust
the people of Illinois
will not put him in a position which he would be so sorry to
occupy. The next position he
takes is that he would be glad to know that there would
never be another slave State, yet, in certain contingencies,
he might have to vote for one. What
is that contingency? “If
Congress keeps slavery out by law while it is a Territory,
and then the people should have a fair chance and should
adopt slavery, uninfluenced by the presence of the
institution,” he supposed he would have to admit the State. Suppose Congress should not keep
slavery out during their territorial existence, then how
would he vote when the people applied for admission into the
Union with a slave
Constitution? That he does not
answer, and that is the condition of every Territory we have
now got. Slavery is not kept
out of Kansas
by act of Congress, and when I put the question to Mr.
Lincoln, whether he will vote for the admission with or
without slavery, as her people may desire, he will not
answer, and you have not got an answer from him.
In Nebraska
slavery is not prohibited by act of Congress, but the people
are allowed, under the Nebraska
bill, to do as they please on the subject; and when I ask
him whether he will vote to admit Nebraska with a slave
Constitution if her people desire it, he will not answer. So with New
Mexico, Washington
Territory,
Arizonia, and the four new States to be admitted from Texas. You cannot get an answer from him
to these questions. His answer
only applies to a given case, to a condition—things which he
knows does not exist in any one Territory in the Union. He
tries to give you to understand that he would allow the
people to do as they please, and yet he dodges the question
as to every Territory in the Union. I now ask why cannot Mr. Lincoln
answer to each of these Territories? He
has
not done it, and he will not do it. The
Abolitionists
up North understand that this answer is made with a view of
not committing himself on any one Territory now in
existence. It is so understood
there, and you cannot expect an answer from him on a case
that applies to any one Territory, or applies to the new
States which by compact we are pledged to admit out of Texas,
when they have the requisite population and desire
admission. I submit to you
whether he has made a frank answer, so that you can tell how
he would vote in any one of these cases.
“He would be sorry to be put in the position.” Why would he be sorry to be put in
this position if his duty required him to give the vote? If the people of a Territory ought
to be permitted to come into the Union
as a State, with slavery or without it, as they pleased, why
not give the vote admitting them cheerfully?
If in his opinion they ought not to come in with
slavery, even if they wanted to, why not say that he would
cheerfully vote against their admission?
His intimation is that conscience would not let him
vote “No,” and he would be sorry to do that which his
conscience would compel him to do as an honest man.
In
regard to the contract or bargain between Trumbull, the
Abolitionists and him, which he denies, I wish to say that
the charge can be proved by notorious historical facts. Trumbull, Lovejoy, Giddings, Fred
Douglass, Hale, and Banks, were traveling the State at that
time making speeches on the same side and in the same cause
with him. He contents himself
with the simple denial that no such thing occurred.
Does he deny that he, and Trumbull, and Breese,
and Giddings, and Chase, and Fred Douglass, and Lovejoy, and
all those Abolitionists and deserters from the Democratic
party, did make speeches all over this State in the same
common cause? Does he deny that
Jim Matheny was then, and is now, his confidential friend,
and does he deny that Matheny made the charge of the bargain
and fraud in his own language, as I have read it from his
printed speech. Matheny spoke
of his own personal knowledge of that bargain existing
between Lincoln, Trumbull,
and the Abolitionists. He still
remains Lincoln’s
confidential friend, and is now a candidate for Congress,
and is canvassing the Springfield District for Lincoln.
I assert that I can prove the charge to be true in
detail if I can ever get it where I can summon and compel
the attendance of witnesses. I
have the statement of another man to the same effect as that
made by Matheny, which I am not permitted to use yet, but
Jim Matheny is a good witness on that point, and the history
of the country is conclusive upon it. That
Lincoln up to that time had been a Whig, and then undertook
to Abolitionize the Whigs and bring them into the Abolition
camp, is beyond denial; that Trumbull up to that time had
been a Democrat, and deserted, and undertook to Abolitionize
the Democracy, and take them into the Abolition camp, is
beyond denial; that they are both now active, leading,
distinguished members of this Abolition Republican party, in
full communion, is a fact that cannot be questioned or
denied.
But
Lincoln
is not willing to be responsible for the creed of his party. He complains because I hold him
responsible, and in order to avoid the issue, he attempts to
show that individuals in the Democratic party, many years
ago, expressed Abolition sentiments. It
is true that Tom Campbell, when a candidate for Congress in
1850, published the letter which Lincoln read.
When I asked Lincoln
for the date of that letter he could not give it.
The date of the letter has been suppressed by other
speakers who have used it, though I take it for granted that
Lincoln
did not know the date. If he
will take the trouble to examine, he will find that the
letter was published only two days before the election, and
was never seen until after it, except in one county.
Tom Campbell would have been beat to death by the
Democratic party if that letter had been made public in his
district. As to Molony, it is
true he uttered sentiments of the kind referred to by Mr.
Lincoln, and the best Democrats would not vote for him for
that reason. I returned from Washington
after the passage of the Compromise Measures in 1850, and
when I found Molony running under John Wentworth’s tutelage,
and on his platform, I denounce! him, and declared that he
was no Democrat. In my speech
at Chicago,
just before the election that year, I went before the
infuriated people of that city and vindicated the Compromise
Measures of 1850. Remember the
city council had passed resolutions nullifying acts of
Congress and instructing the police to withhold their
assistance from the execution of the laws, and as I was the
only man in the city of Chicago who was responsible for the
passage of the Compromise Measures, I went before the crowd,
justified each and every one of those measures, and let it
be said to the eternal honor of the people of Chicago, that
when they were convinced by my exposition of those measures
that they were right and they had done wrong in opposing
them, they repealed their nullifying resolutions and
declared that they would acquiesce in and support the laws
of the land. These facts are
well known, and Mr. Lincoln can only get up individual
instances, dating back to 1849-50, which are contradicted by
the whole tenor of the Democratic creed.
But
Mr. Lincoln does not want to be held responsible for the
Black Republican doctrine of no more slave States.
Farnsworth is the candidate of his party to-day in
the Chicago District, and he made a speech in the last
Congress in which he called upon God to palsy his right arm
if he ever voted for the admission of another slave State,
whether the people wanted it or not. Lovejoy
is making speeches all over the State for Lincoln now, and taking
ground against any more slave States. Washburne,
the Black Republican candidate for Congress in the Galena
District, is making speeches in favor of this same Abolition
platform declaring no more slave States.
Why are men running for Congress in the northern
districts, and taking that Abolition platform for their
guide, when Mr. Lincoln does not want to be held to it down
here in Egypt
and in the center of the State, and objects to it so as to
get votes here. Let me tell Mr.
Lincoln that his party in the northern part of the State
hold to that Abolition platform, and that if they do not in
the South and in the center they present the extraordinary
spectacle of a “house divided against itself,” and hence
“cannot stand.” I now bring
down upon him the vengeance of his own scriptural quotation,
and give it a more appropriate application than he did, when
I say to him that his party, Abolition in one end of the
State and opposed to it in the other, is a house divided
against itself, and cannot stand, and ought not to stand,
for it attempts to cheat the American people out of their
votes by disguising its sentiments.
Mr.
Lincoln attempts to cover up and get over his Abolitionism
by telling you that he was raised a little east of you,
beyond the Wabash in Indiana,
and he thinks that makes a mighty sound and good man of him
on all these questions. I do
not know that the place where a man is born or raised has
much to do with his political principles.
The worst Abolitionist I have ever known in
Illinois have been men who have sold their slaves in Alabama
and Kentucky, and have come here and turned Abolitionists
whilst spending the money got for the negroes they sold, and
I do not know that an Abolitionist from Indiana or Kentucky
ought to have any more credit because he was born and raised
among slaveholders. I do not
know that a native of Kentucky
is more excusable because raised among slaves, his father
and mother having owned slaves, he comes to Illinois, turns
Abolitionist, and slanders the graves of his father and
mother, and breathes curses upon the institutions under
which he was born, and his father and mother bred.
True, I was not born out west here.
I was born away down in Yankee land, I was born in
a valley in Vermont,
with the high mountains around me. I
love the old green mountains and valleys of Vermont, where I was
born, and where I played in my childhood.
I went up to visit them some seven or eight years
ago, for the first time for twenty odd years.
When I got there they treated me very kindly. They invited me to the
commencement of their college, placed me on the seats with
their distinguished guests, and conferred upon me the degree
of LL. D. in Latin (doctor of
laws), the same as they did old Hickory, at Cambridge, many
years ago, and I give you my word and honor I understood
just as much of the Latin as he did. When
they got through conferring the honorary degree, they called
upon me for a speech, and I got up with my heart lull and
swelling with gratitude for their kindness, and I said to
them, “My friends, 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.”
I
emigrated when I was very young. I
came out here when I was a boy, and I found my mind
liberalized, and my opinions enlarged when I got on these
broad prairies, with only the Heavens to bound my vision,
instead of having them circumscribed by the little narrow
ridges that surrounded the valley where I was born.
But, I discard all flings of the land where a man
was born. I wish to be judged
by my principles, by those great public measures and
Constitutional principles upon which the peace, the
happiness and the perpetuity of this Republic now rest.
Mr.
Lincoln has framed another question, propounded it to me,
and desired my answer. As I
have said before, I did not put a question to him that I did
not first lay a foundation for by showing that it was a part
of the platform of the party whose votes he is now seeking,
adopted in a majority of the counties where he now hopes to
get a majority, and supported by the candidates of his party
now running in those counties. But
I will answer his question. It
is as follows: “If the slaveholding citizens of a United States
Territory
should need and demand Congressional legislation for the
protection of their slave property in such Territory, would
you, as a member of Congress, vote for or against such
legislation?” I answer him that
it is a fundamental article in the Democratic creed that
there should be non-interference and non-intervention by
Congress with slavery in the States or Territories.
Mr. Lincoln could have found an answer to his
question in the Cincinnati
platform, if he had desired it. The
Democratic
party have always stood by that great principle of
noninterference and non-intervention by Congress with
slavery in the States and Territories alike, and I stand on
that platform now.
Now
I desire to call your attention to the fact that Lincoln
did not define his own position in his own question.
How does he stand on that question?
He put the question to me at Freeport
whether or not I would vote to admit Kansas
into the Union before she
had 93,420 inhabitants. I
answered him at once that it having been decided that Kansas had now population enough for
a slave State, she had population enough for a free State.
I
answered the question unequivocally, and then I asked him
whether he would vote for or against the admission of Kansas
before she had 93,420 inhabitants, and he would not answer
me. To-day he has called
attention to the fact that, in his opinion, my answer on
that question was not quite plain enough, and yet he has not
answered it himself. He now
puts a question in relation to Congressional interference in
the Territories to me. I answer
him direct, and yet he has not answered the question
himself. I ask you whether a
man has any right, in common decency, to put questions in
these public discussions, to his opponent, which he will not
answer himself, when they are pressed home to him.
I have asked him three times, whether he would vote
to admit Kansas whenever the people applied with a
Constitution of their own making and their own adoption,
under circumstances that were fair, just and
unexceptionable, but I cannot get an answer from him.
Nor will he answer the question which he put to me,
and which I have just answered in relation to Congressional
interference in the Territories, by making a slave code
there.
It
is true that he goes on to answer the question by arguing
that under the decision of the Supreme Court it is the duty
of a man to vote for a slave code in the Territories.
He says that it is his duty, under the decision
that the court has made, and if he believes in that decision
he would be a perjured man if he did not give the vote. I want to know whether he is not
bound to a decision which is contrary to his opinions just
as much as to one in accordance with his opinions.
If the decision of the Supreme Court, the tribunal
created by the Constitution to decide the question, is final
and binding, is he not bound by it just as strongly as if he
was for it instead of against it originally?
Is every man in this land allowed to resist
decisions he does not like, and only support those that meet
his approval? What are
important courts worth unless their decisions are binding on
all good citizens? It is the
fundamental principles of the judiciary that its decisions
are final. It is created for
that purpose, so that when you cannot agree among yourselves
on a disputed point you appeal to the judicial tribunal
which steps in and decides for you, and that decision is
then binding on every good citizen. It
is the law of the land just as much with Mr. Lincoln against it as
for it. And yet he says that if
that decision is binding he is a perjured man if he does not
vote for a slave code in the different Territories of this Union. Well,
if you [turning to Mr. Lincoln] are not going to resist the
decision, if you obey it, and do not intend to array mob law
against the constituted authorities, then, according to your
own statement, you will be a perjured man if you do not vote
to establish slavery in these Territories.
My doctrine is, that even taking Mr. Lincoln’s view
that the decision recognizes the right of a man to carry his
slaves into the Territories of the United States,
if he pleases, yet after he gets there he needs affirmative
law to make that right of any value. The
same doctrine not only applies to slave property, but all
other kinds of property. Chief
Justice Taney places it upon the ground that slave property
is on an equal footing with other property.
Suppose one of your merchants should move to Kansas
and open a liquor store; he has a right to take groceries
and liquors there, but the mode of selling them, and the
circumstances under which they shall be sold, and all the
remedies must be prescribed by local legislation, and if
that is unfriendly it will drive him out just as effectually
as if there was a Constitutional provision against the sale
of liquor. So the absence of
local legislation to encourage and support slave property in
a Territory excludes it practically just as effectually as
if there was a positive Constitutional provision against it.
Hence, I assert that under the
Dred Scott decision you cannot maintain slavery a day in a
Territory where there is an unwilling people and unfriendly
legislation. If the people are
opposed to it, our right is a barren, worthless, useless
right, and if they are for it, they will support and
encourage it. We come right
back, therefore, to the practical question, if the people of
a Territory want slavery they will have it, and if they do
not want it you cannot force it on them.
And this is the practical question, the great
principle, upon which our institutions rest.
I am willing to take the decision of the Supreme
Court as it was pronounced by that august tribunal without
stopping to inquire whether I would have decided that way or
not. I have had many a decision
made against me on questions of law which I did not like,
but I was bound by them just as much as if I had had a hand
in making them, and approved them. Did
you ever see a lawyer or a client lose his case that he
approved the decision of the court? They
always think the decision unjust when it is given against
them. In a Government of laws
like ours we must sustain the Constitution as our fathers
made it, and maintain the rights of the States as they are
guarantied under the Constitution, and then we will have
peace and harmony between the different States and sections
of this glorious Union.
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