rt, this committee has secured if not the leading editors,
certainly important and warm friends, representing the Manchester
Guardian, the _Leeds Mercury_, the _Plymouth Western News, Newcastle
Leader_, the _London Daily Graphic_, the _Westminster Gazette_, the
_London Echo_, a host of minor papers all over the kingdom, and
practically the entire religious press of the kingdom.
The greatest victory for the antilynchers comes this morning in the
publication in the _London Times_ of William Lloyd Garrison's letter.
This letter will have immense effect here. It may have been printed in
full in the United States, but nevertheless I will quote a paragraph
which will strengthen the antilynchers greatly in their crusade here:
A year ago the South derided and resented Northern protests; today it
listens, explains and apologizes for its uncovered cruelties. Surely a
great triumph for a little woman to accomplish! It is the power of truth
simply and unreservedly spoken, for her language was inadequate to
describe the horrors exposed.
If the Southern states are wise, and I say this with the earnestness of a
friend and one who has built a home in the mountain regions of the South
and thrown his lot in with them, they will not only listen, but stop
lawlessness of all kinds. If they do, and thus secure the confidence of
Englishmen, we may in the next decade realize some of the hopes for the
new South we have so fondly cherished.
8
MISS WILLARD'S ATTITUDE
No class of American citizens stands in greater need of the humane and
thoughtful consideration of all sections of our country than do the
colored people, nor does any class exceed us in the measure of grateful
regard for acts of kindly interest in our behalf. It is, therefore, to us,
a matter of keen regret that a Christian organization, so large and
influential as the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, should refuse to
give its sympathy and support to our oppressed people who ask no further
favor than the promotion of public sentiment which shall guarantee to
every person accused of crime the safeguard of a fair and impartial trial,
and protection from butchery by brutal mobs. Accustomed as we are to the
indifference and apathy of Christian people, we would bear this instance
of ill fortune in silence, had not Miss Willard gone out of her way to
antagonize the cause so dear to our hearts by including in her Annual
Address to the W.
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