FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   >>  
om Massachusetts and who resigned the same year, wrote a minority decision. _Chase and Mace_. Salmon P. Chase was at that time Senator from Ohio. Daniel Mace was a Democrat representative, who was opposed to the Nebraska Bill. _Judge Nelson_. Samuel Nelson, a justice of the Supreme Court. "_A living dog is better than a dead lion_." Ecclesiastes ix. 4. THE FREEPORT DEBATE. The Lincoln-Douglas Joint Debates took place in seven towns in various parts of Illinois between August 21 and October 15, 1858. The proposal for these meetings was made by Lincoln in a note addressed to Douglas. The length of each debate and the division of time between the speakers are stated in the opening sentence of the speech given in the text. The speeches, which were all extempore, as far as the actual form is concerned, were later collected from the newspaper reports, and after some slight revision by the authors were published in 1860 in Columbus, Ohio. This volume, from which the present text is taken, contained in addition a number of speeches delivered by Lincoln and Douglas earlier in 1858 and two speeches made by Lincoln in Ohio in 1859. Lincoln's statement at the close of a letter to the publishers, accompanying the copy for the book, is characteristic and interesting: "I wish the reprint to be precisely as the copies I send, without any comment whatever." This Columbus issue was used as a Republican campaign document and large numbers were sold. The Freeport Debate, the second in the series, was held on the afternoon of August 27. With the exception of the Galesburg Debate, it was the most largely attended of the seven meetings, and in its effect upon the campaign it is now regarded as the most important. _Judge Douglas and myself_. In the informal speeches Lincoln frequently committed errors of speech like this. Even during the presidential period he shows a marked tendency to use the cleft infinitive. But in the carefully written addresses the language is almost always correct. _Fugitive Slave law_. This statute was passed in 1850 for the stricter regulation of the return of escaped slaves to their owners. In his answer to this question Lincoln showed clearly that he was not an Abolitionist, as that term was then understood. _Question 2_. Douglas' reply to this question was as follows: "I answer emphatically, as Mr. Lincoln has heard me answer a hundred times from every stump in Illinois that in
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   >>  



Top keywords:

Lincoln

 

Douglas

 

speeches

 
answer
 

Columbus

 
speech
 

Illinois

 

August

 
meetings
 
Nelson

Debate

 

campaign

 
question
 
numbers
 
frequently
 

Freeport

 

informal

 

document

 

Republican

 
comment

errors

 
committed
 

important

 

Galesburg

 

afternoon

 

exception

 
largely
 
attended
 

regarded

 

effect


series

 

written

 

Abolitionist

 

understood

 

slaves

 

owners

 

showed

 
Question
 

hundred

 

emphatically


escaped
 

return

 
infinitive
 
carefully
 
copies
 

tendency

 

presidential

 
period
 
marked
 

addresses