FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   >>  
relinquished that which I could not hold. I will not pause to discuss that point further than to say that if I had chosen to adopt the policy with the present monarch of the church, which his friends and mouthpieces say I did adopt with the king who is dead, it might have been possible to retain this place of honor with dishonor. Every apostle is a part of this terrible power, which can make and unmake at its mysterious will and pleasure. Early in 1902 warning had been publicly uttered in the State against the continued manifestation of church power in politics. The period of unsettled conditions during which I was elected had ended and we had opportunity to see the manner in which the church monarch was resuming his forbidden sway; and we had occasion to know the indignant feelings entertained by the people of the United States when they contemplated the flagrant breaking of the pledge given to the country to secure the admission of Utah. I myself, after conference with distinguished men at Washington, journeyed to Utah and presented a solemn protest and warning to the leaders of the church against the dangerous exercise of their political power. I did it to repay a debt which I owed to Utah, and not for any selfish reason. I knew that from the day I uttered that warning the leaders of the Mormon Church would hate and pursue me for the purpose of wreaking their vengeance. But as the consequences of their misconduct, their pledge breaking would fall upon all of the people of the State, upon the innocent more severely than upon the guilty, I felt that I must assert my love and gratitude to the State, even though my warning should lead to my own destruction by these autocrats. If there had been one desire in my heart to effect a conjunction with this church monarchy, if I had been willing to retain office as its gift, I would not have taken this step, for I knew its consequences. I began in that hour my effort to restore to the people of Utah the safety and the political freedom which are their right, and I shall continue it while I live until the fight is won. The disdain with which that message was received was final proof of the contempt in which that church monarchy holds the Senate and the people of the United States, and of the disregard in which the church monarchy holds the pledges which it made in order to obtain the power of statehood. They do not need to utter explicit instructions in order to assert their
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   >>  



Top keywords:

church

 

people

 

warning

 

monarchy

 

breaking

 
consequences
 

political

 

leaders

 

assert

 

United


States
 

pledge

 

uttered

 

retain

 

monarch

 

severely

 

guilty

 
gratitude
 

obtain

 

purpose


wreaking

 

pursue

 

instructions

 

explicit

 

vengeance

 

pledges

 
innocent
 
misconduct
 

statehood

 
freedom

safety

 

restore

 

contempt

 
Church
 

received

 

disdain

 

message

 

continue

 
effort
 

desire


destruction

 

autocrats

 

effect

 

conjunction

 

office

 

disregard

 
Senate
 
unmake
 

mysterious

 

pleasure