FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   744   745   746   747   748   749   750   751   752   753   754   755   756   757   758   759   >>  
to the "ballot-box." Nor was it until the Elections of the last Autumn, that abolition action at "the ballot-box" had become so extensive, as to apprise the Nation, that it is a principle with abolitionists to "remember" in one place as well as in another--at the polls as well as in the closet--"them that are in bonds." The fact that, at the last State Election, there were three or four hundred abolition votes given in the County in which I reside, is no more real because of its wide spread interest, than the comparatively unheard of fact, that about one hundred such votes were given the year before. By the way, when I hear complaints of abolition action at the "ballot-box," I can hardly refrain from believing, that they are made ironically. When I hear complaints, that the abolitionists of this State rallied, as such, at the last State Election, I cannot easily avoid suspecting, that the purpose of such complaints is the malicious one of reviving in our breasts the truly stinging and shame-filling recollection, that some five-sixths of the voters in our ranks, either openly apostatized from our principles, or took it into their heads, that the better way to vote for the slave and the anti-slavery cause was to vote for their respective political parties. You would be less afraid of the abolitionists, if I should tell you that more than ten thousand of them in this State voted at the last State Election, for candidates for law makers, who were openly in favor of the law of this State, which creates slavery, and of other laws, which countenance and uphold it. And you would owe me for one of your heartiest laughs, were I to tell you, that there are abolitionists--professed abolitionists--yes, actual members of the Anti-Slavery Society--who, carrying out this delusion of helping the slave by helping their "party," say, that they would vote even for a slaveholder, if their party should nominate him. Let me remark, however, that I am happy to be able to inform you, that this delusion--at least in my own State--is fast passing away; and that thousands of the abolitionists who, in voting last Autumn for Gov. Marey or Gov. Seward, took the first step in the way, that leads to voting for the slaveholder himself, are now not only refusing to take another step in that inconsistent and wicked way, but are repenting deeply of that, which they have already taken in it. Much as you dislike, not to say _dread_, abolition action at "the
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   744   745   746   747   748   749   750   751   752   753   754   755   756   757   758   759   >>  



Top keywords:

abolitionists

 

abolition

 
Election
 

ballot

 

action

 

complaints

 

openly

 
voting
 

helping

 

delusion


slaveholder

 

slavery

 

Autumn

 

hundred

 
Slavery
 

actual

 

makers

 

thousand

 

members

 

heartiest


countenance

 

uphold

 
candidates
 
creates
 
Society
 

laughs

 
professed
 

refusing

 
inconsistent
 
wicked

dislike
 

repenting

 
deeply
 
Seward
 

remark

 

nominate

 
passing
 
thousands
 

inform

 
carrying

spread

 

County

 

reside

 

interest

 

comparatively

 

unheard

 
extensive
 

apprise

 
Elections
 

Nation