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Fellow-Citizens:
The unmistakable outbreaks of zeal
which occur all around me, show that you are earnest men—and such a man
am I. Let us therefore, at least for a
time, pass by
all secondary and collateral questions, whether of a personal or of a
general
nature, and consider the main subject of the present canvass. The Democratic party—or, to speak more
accurately—the party which wears that attractive name, is in possession
of the
Federal Government. The Republicans
propose to dislodge that party, and dismiss it from its high trust.
The
main subject, then, is,
whether the Democratic party deserves to retain the confidence of the
American
People. In attempting to prove it
unworthy, I think that I am not actuated by prejudices against that
party, or by
prepossessions in favor of its adversary; for I have learned, by some
experience, that virtue and patriotism, vice and selfishness, are found
in all
parties, and that they differ less in their motives than in the
policies they
pursue.
Our
country is a theatre, which
exhibits, in full operation, two radically different political systems;
the one
resting on the basis of servile or slave labor, the other on the basis
of
voluntary labor of freemen.
The
laborers who are enslaved are
all negroes, or persons more or less purely of African derivation. But this is only accidental.
The principle of the system is, that labor in
every society, by whomsoever performed, is necessarily unintellectual,
grovelling and base; and that the laborer, equally for his own good and
for the
welfare of the State, ought to be enslaved.
The white laboring man, whether native or foreigner, is
not enslaved,
only because he cannot, as yet, be reduced to bondage.
You
need not be told now that the
slave system is the older of the two, and that once it was universal.
The
emancipation of our own
ancestors, Caucasians and Europeans as they were, hardly dates beyond a
period
of five hundred years. The great
melioration of human society which modern times exhibit, is mainly due
to the incomplete
substitution of the system of voluntary labor for the old one of
servile labor,
which has already taken place. This
African slave system is one which, in its origin and in its growth, has
been
altogether foreign from the habits of the races which colonized these
States,
and established civilization here. It was
introduced on this new continent as an engine of conquest, and for the
establishment of monarchical power, by the Portuguese and the
Spaniards, and
was rapidly extended by them all over South America, Central America,
Louisiana,
and Mexico. Its legitimate fruits are
seen in the poverty, imbecility, and anarchy, which now pervade all
Portuguese and
Spanish America. The free-labor system is
of German extraction, and it was established in our country by
emigrants from
Sweden, Holland, Germany, Great Britain, and Ireland.
We
justly ascribe to its
influences the strength, wealth, greatness, intelligence, and freedom,
which
the whole American people now enjoy. One
of the chief elements of the value of human life is freedom in the
pursuit of
happiness. The slave system is not only
intolerant, unjust, and inhuman, toward the laborer, whom, only because
he is a
laborer, it loads down with chains and converts into merchandise, but
is
scarcely less severe upon the freeman, to whom, only because he is a
laborer from
necessity, it denies facilities for employment, and whom it expels from
the
community because it cannot enslave and convert him into merchandise
also. It is necessarily improvident and
ruinous,
because, as a general truth, communities prosper and flourish or droop
and
decline in just the degree that they practise or neglect to practise
the
primary duties of justice and humanity. The
free-labor system conforms to the divine law of equality, which is
written in
the hearts and consciences of men, and therefore is always and
everywhere
beneficent.
The
slave system is one of
constant danger, distrust, suspicion, and watchfulness.
It debases those whose toil alone can produce
wealth and resources for defence, to the lowest degree of which human
nature is
capable, to guard against mutiny and insurrection, and thus wastes
energies
which otherwise might be employed in national development and
aggrandizement.
The
free-labor system educates
all alike, and by opening all the fields of industrial employment, and
all the
departments of authority, to the unchecked and equal rivalry of all
classes of
men, at once secures universal contentment, and brings into the highest
possible activity all the physical, moral, and social energies of the
whole
State. In States where the slave-system
prevails,
the masters, directly or indirectly, secure all political power, and
constitute
a ruling aristocracy. In States where
the free-labor system prevails, universal suffrage necessarily obtains,
and the
State inevitably becomes, sooner or later, a republic or democracy.
Russia
yet maintains slavery, and
is a despotism. Most of the other
European states have abolished slavery, and adopted the system of free
labor. It was the antagonistic political
tendencies
of the two systems which the first Napoleon was contemplating when he
predicted
that Europe would ultimately be either all Cossack or all Republican. Never did human sagacity utter a more
pregnant truth. The two systems are at
once perceived to be incongruous. But
they are more than incongruous—they are incompatible.
They never have permanently existed together
in one country, and they never can. It
would be easy to demonstrate this impossibility, from the
irreconcilable
contrast between their great principles and characteristics. But the experience of mankind has
conclusively established it. Slavery, as
I have already intimated, existed in every state in Europe. Free labor has supplanted it everywhere
except in Russia and Turkey. State
necessities developed in modern times, are now obliging even those two
nations
to encourage and employ free labor; and already, despotic as they are,
we find
them engaged in abolishing slavery. In the
United States, slavery came into collision with free labor at the close
of the
last century, and fell before it in New England, New York, New Jersey,
and
Pennsylvania, but triumphed over it effectually, and excluded it for a
period yet
undetermined, from Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia.
Indeed, so incompatible are the two systems,
that every new State which is organized within our ever-extending
domain makes
its first political act a choice of the one and an exclusion of the
other, even
at the cost of civil war, if necessary. The
slave States, without law, at the last national election, successfully
forbade,
within their own limits, even the casting of votes for a candidate for
President of the United States supposed to be favorable to the
establishment of
the free-labor system in new States.
Hitherto,
the two systems have
existed in different States, but side by side within the American Union. This has happened because the Union is a
confederation of States. But in another
aspect the United States constitute only one nation.
Increase of population, which is filling the
States out to their very borders, together with a new and extended
network of
railroads and other avenues, and an internal commerce which daily
becomes more
intimate, is rapidly bringing the States into a higher and more perfect
social
unity or consolidation. Thus, these
antagonistic systems are continually coming into closer contact, and
collision
results.
Shall
I tell you what this
collision means? They who think that it
is accidental, unnecessary, the work of interested or fanatical
agitators, and
therefore ephemeral, mistake the case altogether. It
is an irrepressible conflict between
opposing and enduring forces, and it means that the United States must
and will,
sooner or later, become either entirely a slaveholding nation, or
entirely a
free-labor nation. Either the cotton and
rice fields of South Carolina and the sugar plantations of Louisiana
will
ultimately be tilled by free labor, and Charleston and New Orleans
become marts
for legitimate merchandise alone, or else the rye-fields and
wheat-fields of
Massachusetts and New York must again be surrendered by their farmers
to slave
culture and to the production of slaves, and Boston and New York become
once
more markets for trade in the bodies and souls of men.
It is the failure to apprehend this great
truth that induces so many unsuccessful attempts at final compromise
between
the slave and free States, and it is the existence of this great fact
that
renders all such pretended compromises, when made, vain and ephemeral. Startling as this saying may appear to you,
fellow-citizens, it is by no means an original or even a modern one. Our forefathers knew it to be true, and
unanimously acted upon it when they framed the Constitution of the
United
States. They regarded the existence of
the servile system in so many of the States with sorrow and shame,
which they
openly confessed, and they looked upon the collision between them,
which was
then just revealing itself, and which we are now accustomed to deplore,
with
favor and hope. They knew that either
the one or the other system must exclusively prevail.
Unlike
too many of those who in
modern time invoke their authority, they had a choice between the two. They preferred the system of free labor, and
they determined to organize the Government, and so to direct its
activity, that
that system should surely and certainly prevail. For
this purpose, and no other, they based
the whole structure of Government broadly on the principle that all men
are created
equal, and therefore free—little dreaming that, within the short period
of one
hundred years, their descendants would bear to be told by any orator,
however
popular, that the utterance of that principle was merely a rhetorical
rhapsody;
or by any judge, however venerated, that it was attended by mental
reservations,
which rendered it hypocritical and false.
By the Ordinance of 1787, they dedicated all of the
national domain not
yet polluted by Slavery to free labor immediately, thenceforth and
forever;
while by the new Constitution and laws they invited foreign free labor
from all
lands under the sun, and interdicted the importation of African slave
labor, at
all times, in all places, and under all circumstances whatsoever. It is true that they necessarily and wisely
modified this policy of Freedom, by leaving it to the several States,
affected
as they were by differing circumstances, to abolish Slavery in their
own way
and at their own pleasure, instead of confiding that duty to Congress,
and that
they secured to the Slave States, while yet retaining the system of
Slavery, a
three-fifths representation of slaves in the Federal Government, until
they
should find themselves able to relinquish it with safety.
But the very nature of these modifications
fortifies my position that the fathers knew that the two systems could not endure within the Union, and
expected that within a short period Slavery would disappear forever. Moreover, in order that these modifications
might not altogether defeat their grand design of a Republic
maintaining universal
equality, they provided that two-thirds of the States might amend the
Constitution.
It
remains to say on this point
only one word, to guard against misapprehension. If
these States are to again become
universally slave-holding, I do not pretend to say with what violations
of the
Constitution that end shall be accomplished.
On the other hand, while I do confidently believe and hope
that my
country will yet become a land of universal Freedom, I do not expect
that it
will be made so otherwise than through the action of the several States
cooperating with the Federal Government, and all acting in strict
conformity
with their respective Constitutions.
The
strife and contentions
concerning Slavery, which gently-disposed persons so habitually
deprecate, are
nothing more than the ripening of the conflict which the fathers
themselves not
only thus regarded with favor, but which they may be said to have
instituted.
It
is not to be denied, however,
that thus far the course of that contest has not been according to
their humane
anticipations and wishes. In the field
of federal politics, Slavery, deriving unlooked-for advantages from
commercial
changes, and energies unforeseen from the facilities of combination
between members
of the slaveholding class and between that class and other property
classes,
early rallied, and has at length made a stand, not merely to retain its
original defensive position, but to extend its sway throughout the
whole Union. It is certain that the
slaveholding class of
American citizens indulge this high ambition, and that they derive
encouragement for it from the rapid and effective political successes
which
they have already obtained. The plan of
operation is this: By continued appliances of patronage and threats of
disunion, they will keep a majority favorable to these designs in the
Senate,
where each State has an equal representation.
Through that majority they will defeat, as they best can,
the admission
of free States and secure the admission of slave States.
Under the protection of the Judiciary, they
will, on the principle of the Dred Scott case, carry Slavery into all
the
Territories of the United States now existing and hereafter to be
organized. By the action of the President
and the
Senate, using the treaty-making power, they will annex foreign
slaveholding
States. In a favorable conjuncture they
will induce Congress to repeal the act of 1808, which prohibits the
foreign
slave-trade, and so they will import from Africa, at the cost of only
$20 a head,
slaves enough to fill up the interior of the continent.
Thus relatively increasing the number of
slave States, they will allow no amendment to the Constitution
prejudicial to their
interest; and so, having permanently established their power, they
expect the Federal
Judiciary to nullify all State laws which shall interfere with internal
or
foreign commerce in slaves. When the
free States shall be sufficiently demoralized to tolerate these
designs, they
reasonably conclude that Slavery will be accepted by those States
themselves. I shall not stop to show how
speedy or how
complete would be the ruin which the accomplishment of these
slaveholding schemes
would bring upon the country. For one, I
should not remain in the country to test the sad experiment. Having spent my manhood, though not my whole
life, in a free State, no aristocracy of any kind, much less an
aristocracy of
slaveholders, shall ever make the laws of the land in which I shall be
content
to live. Having seen the society around me
universally engaged in agriculture, manufactures and trade, which were
innocent
and beneficent, I shall never be a denizen of a State where men and
women are
reared as cattle, and bought and sold as merchandise.
When that evil day shall come, and all
further effort at resistance shall be impossible, then, if there shall
be no
better hope for redemption than I can now foresee, I shall say with
Franklin,
while looking abroad over the whole earth for a new and more congenial
home, “Where
liberty dwells, there is my country.”
You
will tell me that these fears
are extravagant and chimerical. I
answer, they are so; but they are so only because the designs of the
slaveholders must and can be defeated. But
it is only the possibility of defeat that renders them so.
They cannot be defeated by inactivity.
There is no escape from them, compatible with
non-resistance. How, then, and in what
way, shall the necessary resistance be made?
There is only one way. The
Democratic
party must be permanently dislodged from the Government.
The reason is, that the Democratic party is
inextricably committed to the designs of the slaveholders, which I have
described. Let me be well understood. I do not charge that the Democratic candidates
for public office now before the people are pledged to, much less that
the Democratic
masses who support them really adopt, those atrocious and dangerous
designs. Candidates may, and generally do,
mean to act
justly, wisely, and patriotically, when they shall be elected; but they
become
the ministers and servants, not the dictators, of the power which
elects them. The policy which a party
shall pursue at a
future period is only gradually developed, depending on the occurrence
of
events never fully foreknown. The motives
of men, whether acting as electors or in any other capacity, are
generally pure. Nevertheless, it is not
more true that “Hell is
paved with good intentions,” than it is that earth is covered with
wrecks
resulting from innocent and amiable motives.
The
very constitution of the
Democratic party commits it to execute all the designs of the
slaveholders,
whatever they may be. It is not a party
of the whole Union, of all the free States and of all the slave States;
nor yet
is it a party of the free States in the North and in the Northwest; but
it is a
sectional and local party, having practically its seat within the slave
States,
and counting its constituency chiefly and almost exclusively there. Of all its representatives in Congress and in
the Electoral Colleges, two-thirds uniformly come from these States. Its great element of strength lies in the
vote of the slaveholders, augmented by the representation of
three-fifths of
the slaves. Deprive the Democratic party
of this strength, and it would be a helpless and hopeless minority,
incapable
of continued organization. The
Democratic party, being thus local and sectional, acquires new strength
from
the admission of every new slave State, and loses relatively by the
admission of
every new free State into the Union.
A
party is in one sense a
joint-stock association, in which those who contribute most direct the
action
and management of the concern. The
slaveholders contributing in an overwhelming proportion to the capital
strength
of the Democratic party, they necessarily dictate and prescribe its
policy. The inevitable caucus system
enables them to
do so with a show of fairness and justice.
If it were possible to conceive for a moment that the
Democratic party
should disobey the behests of the slaveholders, we should then see a
withdrawal
of the slaveholders, which would leave the party to perish. The portion of the party which is found in
the free States is a mere appendage, convenient to modify its sectional
character, without impairing its sectional constitution, and is less
effective
in regulating its movement than the nebulous tail of the comet is in
determining the appointed though apparently eccentric course of the
fiery
sphere from which it emanates.
To
expect the Democratic party to
resist Slavery and favor Freedom, is as unreasonable as to look for
Protestant
missionaries to the Catholic Propaganda of Rome. The
history of the Democratic party commits
it to the policy of Slavery. It has been
the Democratic party, and no other agency, which has carried that
policy up to
its present alarming culmination. Without
stopping to ascertain, critically, the origin of the present Democratic
party,
we may concede its claim to date from the era of good feeling which
occurred
under the Administration of President Monroe.
At that time, in this State, and about that time in many
others of the
free States, the Democratic party deliberately disfranchised the free
colored
or African citizen, and it has pertinaciously continued this
disfranchisement ever
since. This was an effective aid to
Slavery; for while the slaveholder votes for his slaves against
Freedom, the
freed slave in the free States is prohibited from voting against
Slavery.
In
1824, the Democracy resisted
the election of John Quincy Adams—himself before that time an
acceptable
Democrat—and in 1828, it expelled him from the Presidency and put a
slaveholder
in his place, although the office had been filled by slaveholders
thirty-two
out of forty years.
In
1836, Martin Van Buren—the
first nonslaveholding citizen of a free State to whose election the
Democratic
party ever consented—signalized his inauguration into the Presidency by
a
gratuitous announcement, that. under no
circumstances would he ever approve a bill for the abolition of Slavery
in the
District of Columbia. From 1838 to 1844,
the subject of abolishing Slavery in the District of Columbia and in
the
national dock-yards and arsenals was brought before Congress by
repeated
popular appeals. The Democratic party
thereupon promptly denied the right of petition, and effectually
suppressed the
freedom of speech in Congress, so far as the institution of Slavery was
concerned.
From
1840 to 1843, good and wise
men counselled that Texas should remain outside of the Union until she
should
consent to relinquish her self-instituted Slavery; but the Democratic
party
precipitated her admission into the Union, not only without that
condition, but
even with a covenant that the State might be divided and reorganized so
as to constitute
four slave States instead of one.
In
1846, when the United States
became involved in a war with Mexico, and it was apparent that the
struggle
would end in the dismemberment of that republic, which was a
non-slaveholding
power, the Democratic party rejected a declaration that Slavery should
not be
established within the territory to be acquired. When,
in 1850, governments were to be
instituted in the Territories of California and New Mexico, the fruits
of that
war, the Democratic party refused to admit New Mexico as a free State,
and only
consented to admit California as a free State on the condition, as it
has since
explained the transaction, of leaving all of New Mexico and Utah open
to Slavery,
to which was also added the concession of perpetual Slavery in the
District of Columbia,
and the passage of an unconstitutional, cruel, and humiliating law, for
the
recapture of fugitive slaves, with a further stipulation that the
subject of
Slavery should never again be agitated in either chamber of Congress. When, in 1854, the slaveholders were
contentedly reposing on these great advantages, then so recently won,
the
Democratic party unnecessarily, officiously, and with superserviceable
liberality, awakened them from their slumber, to offer and force on
their
acceptance the abrogation of the law which declared that neither
Slavery nor
involuntary servitude should ever exist within that part of the ancient
territory of Louisiana which lay outside of the State of Missouri, and
north of
the parallel of 36° 30' of north latitude—a law which, with the
exception of one
other, was the only statute of Freedom then remaining in the Federal
code.
In
1856, when the people of
Kansas had organized a new State within the region thus abandoned to
Slavery,
and applied to be admitted as a free State into the Union, the
Democratic party
contemptuously rejected their petition, and drove them, with menaces
and
intimidations, from the Halls of Congress, and armed the President with
military power to enforce their submission to a slave code, established
over
them by fraud and usurpation. At every
subsequent stage of the long contest which has since raged in Kansas,
the
Democratic party has lent its sympathies, its aid, and all the powers
of the
Government which it controlled, to enforce Slavery upon that unwilling
and
injured people. And now, even at this
day, while it mocks us with the assurance that Kansas is free, the
Democratic
party keeps the State excluded from her just and proper place in the
Union,
under the hope that she may be dragooned into the acceptance of Slavery.
The
Democratic party, finally,
has procured from a Supreme Judiciary, fixed in its interest, a decree
that
Slavery exists by force of the Constitution in every Territory of the
United
States, paramount to all legislative authority, either within the
Territory, or
residing in Congress.
Such
is the Democratic party. It has no policy,
State or Federal, for
finance, or trade, or manufacture, or commerce, or education, or
internal
improvements, or for the protection or even the security of civil or
religious liberty. It is positive and
uncompromising in the
interest of Slavery—negative, compromising, and vacillating, in regard
to
everything else. It boasts its love of
equality, and wastes its strength, and even its life, in fortifying the
only
aristocracy known in the land. It
professes fraternity, and, so often as Slavery requires, allies itself
with
proscription. It magnifies itself for
conquests in foreign lands, but it sends the national eagle forth
always with
chains, and not the olive branch, in his fangs.
This
dark record shows you,
fellow-citizens, what I was unwilling to announce at an earlier stage
of this
argument, that of the whole nefarious schedule of slaveholding designs
which I
have submitted to you, the Democratic party has left only one yet to be
consummated—the abrogation of the law which forbids the African slave
trade.
Now,
I know very well that the
Democratic party has, at every stage of these proceedings, disavowed
the motive
and the policy of fortifying and extending Slavery, and has excused
them on
entirely different and more plausible grounds.
But the inconsistency and frivolity of these pleas prove
still more
conclusively the guilt I charge upon that party. It
must, indeed, try to excuse such guilt
before mankind, and even to the consciences of its own adherents. There is an instinctive abhorrence of
Slavery, and an inborn and inhering love of Freedom in the human heart,
which
render palliation of such gross misconduct indispensable.
It disfranchised the free African on the ground
of a fear that, if left to enjoy the right of suffrage, he might seduce
the
free white citizen into amalgamation with his wronged and despised race. The Democratic party condemned and deposed
John Quincy Adams, because he expended $12,000,000 a year, while it
justifies
his favored successor in spending $70,000,000, $80,000,000, and even
$100,000,000,
a year. It denies emancipation in the
District of Columbia, even with compensation to masters and the consent
of the people,
on the ground of an implied constitutional inhibition, although the
Constitution expressly confers upon Congress sovereign legislative
power in
that District, and although the Democratic party is tenacious of the
principle of
strict construction. It violated the
express
provisions of the Constitution in suppressing petition and debate on
the
subject of Slavery, through fear of disturbance of the public harmony,
although
it claims that the electors have a right to instruct their
representatives, and
even demand their resignation in cases of contumacy.
It extended Slavery over Texas, and connived
at the attempt to spread it across the Mexican territories, even to the
shores
of the Pacific Ocean, under a plea of enlarging the area of Freedom. It abrogated the Mexican slave law and the
Missouri Compromise prohibition of Slavery in Kansas, not to open the
new
Territories to Slavery, but to try therein the new and fascinating
theories of
Non-intervention and Popular Sovereignty; and, finally, it overthrew
both these
new and elegant systems by the English Lecompton bill and the Dred
Scott
decision, on the ground that the free States ought not to enter the
Union
without a population equal to the representative basis of one member of
Congress, although slave States might come in without inspection as to
their
numbers.
Will
any member of the Democratic
party now here claim that the authorities chosen by the suffrages of
the party
transcended their partisan platforms, and so misrepresented the party
in the
various transactions I have recited? Then
I ask him to name one Democratic statesman or legislator, from Van
Buren to
Walker, who either timidly or cautiously like them, or boldly and
defiantly
like Douglas, ever refused to execute a behest of the slaveholders, and
was not
therefor, and for no other cause, immediately denounced, and deposed
from his
trust, and repudiated by the Democratic party for that contumacy.
I
think, fellow-citizens, that I
have shown you that it is high time for the friends of Freedom to rush
to the
rescue of the Constitution, and that their very first duty is to
dismiss the
Democratic party from the administration of the Government.
Why
shall it not be done? All agree that it
ought to be done. What, then, shall
prevent its being done? Nothing but
timidity or division of the
opponents of the Democratic party.
Some
of these opponents start one
objection, and some another. Let us
notice these objections briefly. One
class say that they cannot trust the Republican party; that it has not
avowed
its hostility to Slavery boldly enough, or its affection for Freedom
earnestly enough.
I
ask, in reply, is there any
other party, which can be more safely trusted?
Every one knows that it is the Republican party, or none,
that shall
displace the Democratic party. But I
answer, further, that the character and fidelity of any party are
determined, necessarily,
not by its pledges, programmes, and platforms, but by the public
exigencies,
and the temper of the people when they call it into activity. Subserviency to Slavery is a law written not
only on the forehead of the Democratic party, but also in its very
soul—so
resistance to Slavery, and devotion to Freedom, the popular elements
now actively
working for the Republican party among the people, must and will be the
resources for its ever-renewing strength and constant invigoration.
Others
cannot support the
Republican party, because it has not sufficiently exposed its platform,
and
determined what it will do and what it will not do, when triumphant. It may prove too progressive for some, and too
conservative for others. As if any party
ever foresaw so clearly the course of future events as to plan a
universal
scheme for future action, adapted to all possible emergencies. Who would ever have joined even the Whig party
of the Revolution, if it had been obliged to answer, in 1775, whether
it would
declare for Independence in 1776, and for this noble Federal
Constitution of
ours in 1787, and not a year earlier or later?
The
people of the United States
will be as wise next year, and the year afterward, and even ten years
hence, as
we are now. They will oblige the
Republican party to act as the public welfare and the interests of
justice and
humanity shall require, through all the stages of its career, whether
of trial
or triumph.
Others
will not venture an effort, because they fear that
the Union would not endure the change. Will
such objectors tell me how long a Constitution can bear a strain
directly along
the fibres of which it is composed? This
is a Constitution of Freedom. It is being
converted into a Constitution of Slavery.
It is a republican Constitution. It
is being made an aristocratic one. Others
wish to wait until some collateral questions concerning temperance, or
the
exercise of the elective franchise are properly settled.
Let me ask all such persons, whether time
enough has not been wasted on these points already, without gaining any
other
than this single advantage, namely, the discovery that only one thing
can be
effectually done at one time, and that the one thing which must and
will be done
at any one time is just that thing which is most urgent, and will no
longer
admit of postponement or delay. Finally,
we are told by faint-hearted men that they despond; the Democratic
party, they
say, is unconquerable, and the dominion of Slavery is consequently
inevitable. I reply to them, that the
complete and
universal dominion of Slavery would be intolerable enough when it
should have
come after the last possible effort to escape should have been made. There would, in that case, be left to us the
consoling reflection of fidelity to duty.
But
I reply, further, that I
know—few, I think, know better than I—the resources and energies of the
Democratic party, which is identical with the Slave Power.
I do ample prestige to its traditional
popularity. I know, further—few, I
think, know better than I—the difficulties and disadvantages of
organizing a
new political force like the Republican party, and the obstacles it
must
encounter in laboring without prestige and without patronage. But, notwithstanding all this, I know that
the Democratic party must go down, and that the Republican party must
rise into
its place. The Democratic party derived
its strength, originally, from its adoption of the principles of equal
and
exact justice to all men. So long as it
practised this principle faithfully, it was invulnerable.
It became vulnerable when it renounced the
principle, and since that time it has maintained itself, not by virtue
of its
own strength, or even of its traditional merits, but because there as
yet had
appeared in the political field no other party that had the conscience
and the
courage to take up and avow, and practise the life-inspiring principle
which
the Democratic party had surrendered. At
last, the Republican party has appeared.
It avows now, as the Republican party of 1800 did, in one
word, its
faith and its works, “Equal and exact justice to all men.” Even when it
first entered
the field, only half organized, it struck a blow which only just failed
to
secure complete and triumphant victory. In
this, its second campaign, it has already won advantages which render
that
triumph now both easy and certain.
The
secret of its assured success
lies in that very characteristic which, in the mouth of scoffers,
constitutes
its great and lasting imbecility and reproach.
It lies in the fact that it is a party of one idea; but
that idea is a
noble one—an idea that fills and expands all generous souls; the idea
of
equality—the equality of all men before human tribunals and human laws,
as they
all are equal before the Divine tribunal and Divine laws.
I know, and
you know, that a
revolution has begun. I know, and all
the world knows, that revolutions never go backward.
Twenty Senators and a hundred Representatives
proclaim boldly in Congress to-day sentiments and opinions and
principles of
Freedom which hardly so many men, even in this free State, dared to
utter in
their own homes twenty years ago. While
the Government of the United States, under the conduct of the
Democratic party,
has been all that time surrendering one plain and castle after another
to
Slavery, the people of the United States have been no less steadily and
perseveringly gathering together the forces with which to recover back
again
all the fields and all the castles which have been lost, and to
confound and
overthrow, by one decisive blow, the betrayers of the Constitution and
Freedom forever.
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