On Monday,
October 16, Senator DOUGLAS, by appointment, addressed a large audience at
Peoria. When he closed he was greeted with six hearty cheers; and the band in
attendance played a stirring air. The crowd then began to call for LINCOLN,
who, as Judge Douglas had announced was, by agreement, to answer him. Mr.
Lincoln then took the stand, and said---
``I do not arise
to speak now, if I can stipulate with the audience to meet me here at half past
6 or at 7 o'clock. It is now several minutes past five, and Judge Douglas has
spoken over three hours. If you hear me at all, I wish you to hear me thro'. It
will take me as long as it has taken him. That will carry us beyond eight
o'clock at night. Now every one of you who can remain that long, can just as
well get his supper, meet me at seven, and remain one hour or two later. The
Judge has already informed you that he is to have an hour to reply to me. I
doubt not but you have been a little surprised to learn that I have consented
to give one of his high reputation and known ability, this advantage of me.
Indeed, my consenting to it, though reluctant, was not wholly unselfish; for I
suspected if it were understood, that the Judge was entirely done, you
democrats would leave, and not hear me; but by giving him the close, I felt
confident you would stay for the fun of hearing him skin me.''
The audience
signified their assent to the arrangement, and adjourned to 7 o'clock P.M., at
which time they re-assembled, and Mr. LINCOLN spoke substantially as follows:
The repeal of the
Missouri Compromise, and the propriety of its restoration, constitute the
subject of what I am about to say.
As I desire to
present my own connected view of this subject, my remarks will not be,
specifically, an answer to Judge Douglas; yet, as I proceed, the main points he
has presented will arise, and will receive such respectful attention as I may
be able to give them.
I wish further to
say, that I do not propose to question the patriotism, or to assail the motives
of any man, or class of men; but rather to strictly confine myself to the naked
merits of the question.
I also wish to be
no less than National in all the positions I may take; and whenever I take
ground which others have thought, or may think, narrow, sectional and dangerous
to the Union, I hope to give a reason, which will appear sufficient, at least
to some, why I think differently.
And, as this
subject is no other, than part and parcel of the larger general question of
domestic-slavery, I wish to MAKE and to KEEP the distinction between the
EXISTING institution, and the EXTENSION of it, so broad, and so clear, that no
honest man can misunderstand me, and no dishonest one, successfully
misrepresent me.
In order to
[get?] a clear understanding of what the Missouri Compromise is, a short
history of the preceding kindred subjects will perhaps be proper. When we
established our independence, we did not own, or claim, the country to which
this compromise applies. Indeed, strictly speaking, the confederacy then owned
no country at all; the States respectively owned the country within their
limits; and some of them owned territory beyond their strict State limits.
Virginia thus owned the North-Western territory---the country out of which the
principal part of Ohio, all Indiana, all
Illinois, all
Michigan and all Wisconsin, have since been formed. She also owned (perhaps
within her then limits) what has since been formed into the State of Kentucky.
North Carolina thus owned what is now the State of Tennessee; and South
Carolina and Georgia, in separate parts, owned what are now Mississippi and
Alabama. Connecticut, I think, owned the little remaining part of Ohio---being
the same where they now send Giddings to Congress, and beat all creation at
making cheese. These territories, together with the States themselves,
constituted all the country over which the confederacy then claimed any sort of
jurisdiction. We were then living under the Articles of Confederation, which
were superceded by the Constitution several years afterwards. The question of
ceding these territories to the general government was set on foot. Mr.
Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, and otherwise a chief
actor in the revolution; then a delegate in Congress; afterwards twice
President; who was, is, and perhaps will continue to be, the most distinguished
politician of our history; a Virginian by birth and continued residence, and
withal, a slave-holder; conceived the idea of taking that occasion, to prevent
slavery ever going into the north-western territory. He prevailed on the
Virginia Legislature to adopt his views, and to cede the territory, making the
prohibition of slavery therein, a condition of the deed. [2] Congress accepted the cession, with
the condition; and in the first Ordinance (which the acts of Congress were then
called) for the government of the territory, provided that slavery should never
be permitted therein. This is the famed ordinance of '87 so often spoken of.
Thenceforward, for sixty-one years, and until in 1848, the last scrap of this
territory came into the Union as the State of Wisconsin, all parties acted in
quiet obedience to this ordinance. It is now what Jefferson foresaw and
intended---the happy home of teeming millions of free, white, prosperous
people, and no slave amongst them.
Thus, with the
author of the declaration of Independence, the policy of prohibiting slavery in
new territory originated. Thus, away back of the constitution, in the pure
fresh, free breath of the revolution, the State of Virginia, and the National
congress put that policy in practice. Thus through sixty odd of the best years
of the republic did that policy steadily work to its great and beneficent end.
And thus, in those five states, and five millions of free, enterprising people,
we have before us the rich fruits of this policy
But now new
light breaks upon us. Now congress declares this ought never to have been; and
the like of it, must never be again. The sacred right of self government is
grossly violated by it! We even find some men, who drew their first breath, and
every other breath of their lives, under this very restriction, now live in
dread of absolute suffocation, if they should be restricted in the ``sacred
right'' of taking slaves to Nebraska. That perfect liberty they sigh
for---the liberty of making slaves of other people---Jefferson never thought
of; their own father never thought of; they never thought of themselves, a year
ago. How fortunate for them, they did not sooner become sensible of their great
misery! Oh, how difficult it is to treat with respect, such assaults upon all
we have ever really held sacred.
But to return to
history. In 1803 we purchased what was then called Louisiana, of France. It
included the now states of Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, and Iowa; also the
territory of Minnesota, and the present bone of contention, Kansas and
Nebraska. Slavery already existed among the French at New Orleans; and, to some
extent, at St. Louis. In 1812 Louisiana came into the Union as a slave state,
without controversy. In 1818 or '19, Missouri showed signs of a wish to come in
with slavery. This was resisted by northern members of Congress; and thus began
the first great slavery agitation in the nation. This controversy lasted
several months, and became very angry and exciting; the House of
Representatives voting steadily for the prohibition of slavery in Missouri, and
the Senate voting as steadily against it. Threats of breaking up the Union were
freely made; and the ablest public men of the day became seriously alarmed. At
length a compromise was made, in which, like all compromises, both sides
yielded something. It was a law passed on the 6th day of March, 1820, providing
that Missouri might come into the Union with slavery, but that in all
the remaining part of the territory purchased of France, which lies north of 36
degrees and 30 minutes north latitude, slavery should never be permitted. This
provision of law, is the Missouri Compromise. In excluding slavery North
of the line, the same language is employed as in the Ordinance of '87. It
directly applied to Iowa, Minnesota, and to the present bone of contention,
Kansas and Nebraska. Whether there should or should not, be slavery south of
that line, nothing was said in the law; but Arkansas constituted the principal
remaining part, south of the line; and it has since been admitted as a slave
state without serious controversy. More recently, Iowa, north of the line, came
in as a free state without controversy. Still later, Minnesota, north of the
line, had a territorial organization without controversy. Texas principally south
of the line, and West of Arkansas; though originally within the purchase from
France, had, in 1819, been traded off to Spain, in our treaty for the
acquisition of Florida. It had thus become a part of Mexico. Mexico
revolutionized and became independent of Spain. American citizens began
settling rapidly, with their slaves in the southern part of Texas. Soon they
revolutionized against Mexico, and established an independent government of
their own, adopting a constitution, with slavery, strongly resembling the
constitutions of our slave states. By still another rapid move, Texas, claiming
a boundary much further West, than when we parted with her in 1819, was brought
back to the United States, and admitted into the Union as a slave state. There
then was little or no settlement in the northern part of Texas, a considerable
portion of which lay north of the Missouri line; and in the resolutions
admitting her into the Union, the Missouri restriction was expressly extended
westward across her territory. This was in 1845, only nine years ago.
Thus originated
the Missouri Compromise; and thus has it been respected down to 1845. And even
four years later, in 1849, our distinguished Senator, in a public address, held
the following language in relation to it:
``The Missouri
Compromise had been in practical operation for about a quarter of a century,
and had received the sanction and approbation of men of all parties in every
section of the Union. It had allayed all sectional jealousies and irritations
growing out of this vexed question, and harmonized and tranquilized the whole
country. It had given to Henry Clay, as its prominent champion, the proud
sobriquet of the ``Great Pacificator'' and by that title and for that
service, his political friends had repeatedly appealed to the people to rally
under his standard, as a presidential candidate, as the man who had exhibited
the patriotism and the power to suppress, an unholy and treasonable agitation,
and preserve the Union. He was not aware that any man or any party from any
section of the Union, had ever urged as an objection to Mr. Clay, that he was
the great champion of the Missouri Compromise. On the contrary, the effort was
made by the opponents of Mr. Clay, to prove that he was not entitled to the
exclusive merit of that great patriotic measure, and that the honor was equally
due to others as well as to him, for securing its adoption---that it had its
origin in the hearts of all patriotic men, who desired to preserve and
perpetuate the blessings of our glorious Union---an origin akin that of the
constitution of the United States, conceived in the same spirit of fraternal
affection, and calculated to remove forever, the only danger, which seemed to
threaten, at some distant day, to sever the social bond of union. All the
evidences of public opinion at that day, seemed to indicate that this
Compromise had been canonized in the hearts of the American people, as a sacred
thing which no ruthless hand would ever be reckless enough to disturb.''
I do not read
this extract to involve Judge Douglas in an inconsistency. If he afterwards
thought he had been wrong, it was right for him to change. I bring this forward
merely to show the high estimate placed on the Missouri Compromise by all
parties up to so late as the year 1849.
But, going back a
little, in point of time, our war with Mexico broke out in 1846. When Congress
was about adjourning that session, President Polk asked them to place two
millions of dollars under his control, to be used by him in the recess, if
found practicable and expedient, in negociating a treaty of peace with Mexico,
and acquiring some part of her territory. A bill was duly got up, for the
purpose, and was progressing swimmingly, in the House of Representatives, when
a member by the name of David Wilmot, a democrat from Pennsylvania, moved as an
amendment ``Provided that in any territory thus acquired, there shall never be
slavery.''
This is the
origin of the far-famed ``Wilmot Proviso.'' It created a great flutter; but it
stuck like wax, was voted into the bill, and the bill passed with it through
the House. The Senate, however, adjourned without final action on it and so
both appropriation and proviso were lost, for the time. The war continued, and
at the next session, the president renewed his request for the appropriation,
enlarging the amount, I think, to three million. Again came the proviso; and
defeated the measure. Congress adjourned again, and the war went on. In Dec.,
1847, the new congress assembled. I was in the lower House that term. The ``Wilmot
Proviso'' or the principle of it, was constantly coming up in some shape or
other, and I think I may venture to say I voted for it at least forty times;
during the short term I was there. The Senate, however, held it in check, and
it never became law. In the spring of 1848 a treaty of peace was made with
Mexico; by which we obtained that portion of her country which now constitutes
the territories of New Mexico and Utah, and the now state of California. By
this treaty the Wilmot Proviso was defeated, as so far as it was intended to
be, a condition of the acquisition of territory. Its friends however, were
still determined to find some way to restrain slavery from getting into the new country. This new
acquisition lay directly West of our old purchase from France, and extended
west to the Pacific ocean---and was so situated that if the Missouri line
should be extended straight West, the new country would be divided by such
extended line, leaving some North and some South of it. On Judge Douglas' motion
a bill, or provision of a bill, passed the Senate to so extend the Missouri
line. The Proviso men in the House, including myself, voted it down, because by
implication, it gave up the Southern part to slavery, while we were bent on
having it all free.
In the fall of
1848 the gold mines were discovered in California. This attracted people to it
with unprecedented rapidity, so that on, or soon after, the meeting of the new
congress in Dec., 1849, she already had a population of nearly a hundred
thousand, had called a convention, formed a state constitution, excluding
slavery, and was knocking for admission into the Union. The Proviso men, of
course were for letting her in, but the Senate, always true to the other side
would not consent to her admission. And there California stood, kept out
of the Union, because she would not let slavery into her borders. Under
all the circumstances perhaps this was not wrong. There were other points of
dispute, connected with the general question of slavery, which equally needed
adjustment. The South clamored for a more efficient fugitive slave law. The
North clamored for the abolition of a peculiar species of slave trade in the
District of Columbia, in connection with which, in view from the windows of the
capitol, a sort of negro-livery stable, where droves of negroes were collected,
temporarily kept, and finally taken to Southern markets, precisely like droves
of horses, had been openly maintained for fifty years. Utah and New Mexico
needed territorial governments; and whether slavery should or should not be
prohibited within them, was another question. The indefinite Western boundary
of Texas was to be settled. She was received a slave state; and consequently
the farther West the slavery men could push her boundary, the more slave
country they secured. And the farther East the slavery opponents could thrust
the boundary back, the less slave ground was secured. Thus this was just as
clearly a slavery question as any of the others.
These points all
needed adjustment; and they were all held up, perhaps wisely to make them help
to adjust one another. The Union, now, as in 1820, was thought to be in danger;
and devotion to the Union rightfully inclined men to yield somewhat, in points
where nothing else could have so inclined them. A compromise was finally
effected. The south got their new fugitive-slave law; and the North got
California, (the far best part of our acquisition from Mexico,) as a free
State. The south got a provision that New Mexico and Utah, when admitted as
States, may come in with or without slavery as they may then
choose; and the north got the slave-trade abolished in the District of
Columbia. The north got the western boundary of Texas, thence further back
eastward than the south desired; but, in turn, they gave Texas ten millions of
dollars, with which to pay her old debts. This is the Compromise of 1850.
Preceding the
Presidential election of 1852, each of the great political parties, democrats
and whigs, met in convention, and adopted resolutions endorsing the compromise
of '50; as a ``finality,'' a final settlement, so far as these parties could
make it so, of all slavery agitation. Previous to this, in 1851, the Illinois
Legislature had indorsed it.
During this long
period of time Nebraska had remained, substantially an uninhabited country, but
now emigration to, and settlement within it began to take place. It is about
one third as large as the present United States, and its importance so long
overlooked, begins to come into view. The restriction of slavery by the
Missouri Compromise directly applies to it; in fact, was first made, and has
since been maintained, expressly for it. In 1853, a bill to give it a
territorial government passed the House of Representatives, and, in the hands
of Judge Douglas, failed of passing the Senate only for want of time. This bill
contained no repeal of the Missouri Compromise. Indeed, when it was assailed
because it did not contain such repeal, Judge Douglas defended it in its
existing form. On January 4th, 1854, Judge Douglas introduces a new bill to
give Nebraska territorial government. He accompanies this bill with a report,
in which last, he expressly recommends that the Missouri Compromise shall
neither be affirmed nor repealed.
Before long the
bill is so modified as to make two territories instead of one; calling the
Southern one Kansas.
Also, about a
month after the introduction of the bill, on the judge's own motion, it is so
amended as to declare the Missouri Compromise inoperative and void; and,
substantially, that the People who go and settle there may establish slavery,
or exclude it, as they may see fit. In this shape the bill passed both branches
of congress, and became a law.
This is the repeal
of the Missouri Compromise. The foregoing history may not be precisely accurate
in every particular; but I am sure it is sufficiently so, for all the uses I
shall attempt to make of it, and in it, we have before us, the chief material
enabling us to correctly judge whether the repeal of the Missouri Compromise is
right or wrong.
I think, and
shall try to show, that it is wrong; wrong in its direct effect, letting
slavery into Kansas and Nebraska---and wrong in its prospective principle,
allowing it to spread to every other part of the wide world, where men can be
found inclined to take it.
This declared
indifference, but as I must think, covert real zeal for the spread of
slavery, I can not but hate. I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of
slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its
just influence in the world---enables the enemies of free institutions, with plausibility,
to taunt us as hypocrites---causes the real friends of freedom to doubt our
sincerity, and especially because it forces so many really good men amongst
ourselves into an open war with the very fundamental principles of civil
liberty---criticising the Declaration of Independence, and insisting that there
is no right principle of action but self-interest.
Before
proceeding, let me say I think I have no prejudice against the Southern people.
They are just what we would be in their situation. If slavery did not now exist
amongst them, they would not introduce it. If it did now exist amongst us, we
should not instantly give it up. This I believe of the masses north and south.
Doubtless there are individuals, on both sides, who would not hold slaves under
any circumstances; and others who would gladly introduce slavery anew, if it
were out of existence. We know that some southern men do free their slaves, go
north, and become tip-top abolitionists; while some northern ones go south, and
become most cruel slave-masters.
When southern
people tell us they are no more responsible for the origin of slavery, than we;
I acknowledge the fact. When it is said that the institution exists; and that
it is very difficult to get rid of it, in any satisfactory way, I can
understand and appreciate the saying. I surely will not blame them for not
doing what I should not know how to do myself. If all earthly power were given
me, I should not know what to do, as to the existing institution. My first
impulse would be to free all the slaves, and send them to Liberia,---to their
own native land. But a moment's reflection would convince me, that whatever of
high hope, (as I think there is) there may be in this, in the long run, its
sudden execution is impossible. If they were all landed there in a day, they
would all perish in the next ten days; and there are not surplus shipping and
surplus money enough in the world to carry them there in many times ten days.
What then? Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings? Is it quite
certain that this betters their condition? I think I would not hold one in
slavery, at any rate; yet the point is not clear enough for me to denounce
people upon. What next? Free them, and make them politically and socially, our
equals? My own feelings will not admit of this; and if mine would, we well know
that those of the great mass of white people will not. Whether this feeling
accords with justice and sound judgment, is not the sole question, if indeed,
it is any part of it. A universal feeling, whether well or ill-founded, can not
be safely disregarded. We can not, then, make them equals. It does seem to me
that systems of gradual emancipation might be adopted; but for their tardiness
in this, I will not undertake to judge our brethren of the south.
When they remind
us of their constitutional rights, I acknowledge them, not grudgingly, but
fully, and fairly; and I would give them any legislation for the reclaiming of
their fugitives, which should not, in its stringency, be more likely to carry a
free man into slavery, than our ordinary criminal laws are to hang an innocent
one.
But all this; to
my judgment, furnishes no more excuse for permitting slavery to go into our own
free territory, than it would for reviving the African slave trade by law. The
law which forbids the bringing of slaves from Africa; and that which has
so long forbid the taking them to Nebraska, can hardly be distinguished
on any moral principle; and the repeal of the former could find quite as
plausible excuses as that of the latter.
The arguments by
which the repeal of the Missouri Compromise is sought to be justified, are
these:
First, that the
Nebraska country needed a territorial government.
Second, that in
various ways, the public had repudiated it, and demanded the repeal; and
therefore should not now complain of it.
And lastly, that
the repeal establishes a principle, which is intrinsically right.
I will attempt an
answer to each of them in its turn.
First, then, if
that country was in need of a territorial organization, could it not have had
it as well without as with the repeal? Iowa and Minnesota, to both of which the
Missouri restriction applied, had, without its repeal, each in succession,
territorial organizations. And even, the year before, a bill for Nebraska itself,
was within an ace of passing, without the repealing clause; and this in the
hands of the same men who are now the champions of repeal. Why no necessity
then for the repeal? But still later, when this very bill was first brought in,
it contained no repeal. But, say they, because the public had demanded, or
rather commanded the repeal, the repeal was to accompany the organization,
whenever that should occur.
Now I deny that
the public ever demanded any such thing---ever repudiated the Missouri
Compromise---ever commanded its repeal. I deny it, and call for the proof. It
is not contended, I believe, that any such command has ever been given in
express terms. It is only said that it was done in principle. The
support of the Wilmot Proviso, is the first fact mentioned, to prove that the
Missouri restriction was repudiated in principle, and the second is, the
refusal to extend the Missouri line over the country acquired from Mexico.
These are near enough alike to be treated together. The one was to exclude the chances
of slavery from the whole new acquisition by the lump; and the other was
to reject a division of it, by which one half was to be given up to
those chances. Now whether this was a repudiation of the Missouri line, in principle,
depends upon whether the Missouri law contained any principle requiring
the line to be extended over the country acquired from Mexico. I contend it did
not. I insist that it contained no general principle, but that it was, in every
sense, specific. That its terms limit it to the country purchased from France,
is undenied and undeniable. It could have no principle beyond the intention of
those who made it. They did not intend to extend the line to country which they
did not own. If they intended to extend it, in the event of acquiring
additional territory, why did they not say so? It was just as easy to say, that
``in all the country west of the Mississippi, which we now own, or may
hereafter acquire there shall never be slavery,'' as to say, what they did
say; and they would have said it if they had meant it. An intention to extend
the law is not only not mentioned in the law, but is not mentioned in any
contemporaneous history. Both the law itself, and the history of the times are
a blank as to any principle of extension; and by neither the known rules
for construing statutes and contracts, nor by common sense, can any such principle
be inferred.
Another fact
showing the specific character of the Missouri law---showing that it
intended no more than it expressed---showing that the line was not intended as
a universal dividing line between free and slave territory, present and
prospective---north of which slavery could never go---is the fact that by that
very law, Missouri came in as a slave state, north of the line. If that
law contained any prospective principle, the whole law must be looked to
in order to ascertain what the principle was. And by this rule, the
south could fairly contend that inasmuch as they got one slave state north of
the line at the inception of the law, they have the right to have another given
them north of it occasionally---now and then in the indefinite westward
extension of the line. This demonstrates the absurdity of attempting to deduce
a prospective principle from the Missouri Compromise line.
When we voted for
the Wilmot Proviso, we were voting to keep slavery out of the whole
Missouri [Mexican?] acquisition; and little did we think we were thereby
voting, to let it into Nebraska, laying several hundred miles distant.
When we voted against extending the Missouri line, little did we think we were
voting to destroy the old line, then of near thirty years standing. To argue
that we thus repudiated the Missouri Compromise is no less absurd than it would
be to argue that because we have, so far, forborne to acquire Cuba, we have
thereby, in principle, repudiated our former acquisitions, and
determined to throw them out of the Union! No less absurd than it would be to
say that because I may have refused to build an addition to my house, I thereby
have decided to destroy the existing house! And if I catch you setting fire to
my house, you will turn upon me and say I INSTRUCTED you to do it! The most
conclusive argument, however, that, while voting for the Wilmot Proviso, and
while voting against the EXTENSION of the Missouri line, we never thought of
disturbing the original Missouri Compromise, is found in the facts, that there
was then, and still is, an unorganized tract of fine country, nearly as large
as the state of Missouri, lying immediately west of Arkansas, and south of the
Missouri Compromise line; and that we never attempted to prohibit slavery as to
it. I wish particular attention to this. It adjoins the original Missouri
Compromise line, by its northern boundary; and consequently is part of the
country, into which, by implication, slavery was permitted to go, by that
compromise. There it has lain open ever since, and there it still lies. And yet
no effort has been made at any time to wrest it from the south. In all our
struggles to prohibit slavery within our Mexican acquisitions, we never so much
as lifted a finger to prohibit it, as to this tract. Is not this entirely
conclusive that at all times, we have held the Missouri Compromise as a sacred
thing; even when against ourselves, as well as when for us?
Senator Douglas
sometimes says the Missouri line itself was, in principle, only an
extension of the line of the ordinance of '87---that is to say, an extension of
the Ohio river. I think this is weak enough on its face. I will remark, however
that, as a glance at the map will show, the Missouri line is a long way farther
South than the Ohio; and that if our Senator, in proposing his extension, had
stuck to the principle of jogging southward, perhaps it might not have
been voted down so readily.
But next it is
said that the compromises of '50 and the ratification of them by both political
parties, in '52, established a new principle, which required the repeal
of the Missouri Compromise. This again I deny. I deny it, and demand the proof.
I have already stated fully what the compromises of '50 are. The particular
part of those measures, for which the virtual repeal of the Missouri compromise
is sought to be inferred (for it is admitted they contain nothing about it, in
express terms) is the provision in the Utah and New Mexico laws, which permits
them when they seek admission into the Union as States, to come in with or
without slavery as they shall then see fit. Now I insist this provision was
made for Utah and New Mexico, and for no other place whatever. It had no more
direct reference to Nebraska than it had to the territories of the moon. But,
say they, it had reference to Nebraska, in principle. Let us see. The
North consented to this provision, not because they considered it right in
itself; but because they were compensated---paid for it. They, at the same
time, got California into the Union as a free State. This was far the best part
of all they had struggled for by the Wilmot Proviso. They also got the area of
slavery somewhat narrowed in the settlement of the boundary of Texas. Also,
they got the slave trade abolished in the District of Columbia. For all these
desirable objects the North could afford to yield something; and they did yield
to the South the Utah and New Mexico provision. I do not mean that the whole
North, or even a majority, yielded, when the law passed; but enough yielded,
when added to the vote of the South, to carry the measure. Now can it be
pretended that the principle of this arrangement requires us to permit
the same provision to be applied to Nebraska, without any equivalent at all?
Give us another free State; press the boundary of Texas still further back,
give us another step toward the destruction of slavery in the District, and you
present us a similar case. But ask us not to repeat, for nothing, what you paid
for in the first instance. If you wish the thing again, pay again. That is the principle
of the compromises of '50, if indeed they had any principles beyond their
specific terms---it was the system of equivalents.
Again, if
Congress, at that time, intended that all future territories should, when
admitted as States, come in with or without slavery, at their own option, why
did it not say so? With such an universal provision, all know the bills could
not have passed. Did they, then---could they---establish a principle
contrary to their own intention? Still further, if they intended to establish
the principle that wherever Congress had control, it should be left to the
people to do as they thought fit with slavery why did they not authorize the
people of the District of Columbia at their adoption to abolish slavery within
these limits? I personally know that this has not been left undone, because it
was unthought of. It was frequently spoken of by members of Congress and by
citizens of Washington six years ago; and I heard no one express a doubt that a
system of gradual emancipation, with compensation to owners, would meet the
approbation of a large majority of the white people of the District. But
without the action of Congress they could say nothing; and Congress said
``no.'' In the measures of 1850 Congress had the subject of slavery in the
District expressly in hand. If they were then establishing the principle
of allowing the people to do as they please with slavery, why did they not
apply the principle to that people?
Again, it is
claimed that by the Resolutions of the Illinois Legislature, passed in 1851,
the repeal of the Missouri compromise was demanded. This I deny also. Whatever
may be worked out by a criticism of the language of those resolutions, the
people have never understood them as being any more than an endorsement of the
compromises of 1850; and a release of our Senators from voting for the Wilmot
Proviso. The whole people are living witnesses, that this only, was their view.
Finally, it is asked ``If we did not mean to apply the Utah and New Mexico
provision, to all future territories, what did we mean, when we, in 1852,
endorsed the compromises of '50?''
For myself, I can
answer this question most easily. I meant not to ask a repeal, or modification
of the fugitive slave law. I meant not to ask for the abolition of slavery in
the District of Columbia. I meant not to resist the admission of Utah and New
Mexico, even should they ask to come in as slave States. I meant nothing about
additional territories, because, as I understood, we then had no territory
whose character as to slavery was not already settled. As to Nebraska, I
regarded its character as being fixed, by the Missouri compromise, for thirty
years---as unalterably fixed as that of my own home in Illinois. As to new
acquisitions I said ``sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.'' When we make
new acquaintances, [acquisitions?] we will, as heretofore, try to manage them
some how. That is my answer. That is what I meant and said; and I appeal to the
people to say, each for himself, whether that was not also the universal
meaning of the free States.
And now, in turn,
let me ask a few questions. If by any, or all these matters, the repeal of the
Missouri Compromise was commanded, why was not the command sooner obeyed? Why
was the repeal omitted in the Nebraska bill of 1853? Why was it omitted in the
original bill of 1854? Why, in the accompanying report, was such a repeal
characterized as a departure from the course pursued in 1850? and its
continued omission recommended?
I am aware Judge
Douglas now argues that the subsequent express repeal is no substantial
alteration of the bill. This argument seems wonderful to me. It is as if one
should argue that white and black are not different. He admits, however, that
there is a literal change in the bill; and that he made the change in deference
to other Senators, who would not support the bill without. This proves that
those other Senators thought the change a substantial one; and that the Judge
thought their opinions worth deferring to. His own opinions, therefore, seem
not to rest on a very firm basis even in his own mind---and I suppose the world
believes, and will continue to believe, that precisely on the substance of that
change this whole agitation has arisen.
I conclude then,
that the public never demanded the repeal of the Missouri compromise.
I now come to
consider whether the repeal, with its avowed principle, is intrinsically right.
I insist that it is not. Take the particular case. A controversy had arisen
between the advocates and opponents of slavery, in relation to its
establishment within the country we had purchased of France. The southern, and
then best part of the purchase, was already in as a slave state. The
controversy was settled by also letting Missouri in as a slave State; but with
the agreement that within all the remaining part of the purchase, North of a
certain line, there should never be slavery. As to what was to be done with the
remaining part south of the line, nothing was said; but perhaps the fair
implication was, that it should come in with slavery if it should so choose.
The southern part, except a portion heretofore mentioned, afterwards did come
in with slavery, as the State of Arkansas. All these many years since 1820, the
Northern part had remained a wilderness. At length settlements began in it
also. In due course, Iowa, came in as a free State, and Minnesota was given a
territorial government, without removing the slavery restriction. Finally the
sole remaining part, North of the line, Kansas and Nebraska, was to be
organized; and it is proposed, and carried, to blot out the old dividing line
of thirty-four years standing, and to open the whole of that country to the
introduction of slavery. Now, this, to my mind, is manifestly unjust. After an
angry and dangerous controversy, the parties made friends by dividing the bone
of contention. The one party first appropriates her own share, beyond all power
to be disturbed in the possession of it; and then seizes the share of the other
party. It is as if two starving men had divided their only loaf; the one had
hastily swallowed his half, and then grabbed the other half just as he was
putting it to his mouth!
Let me here drop
the main argument, to notice what I consider rather an inferior matter. It is
argued that slavery will not go to Kansas and Nebraska, in any event.
This is a palliation---a lullaby. I have some hope that it will
not; but let us not be too confident. As to climate, a glance at the map shows
that there are five slave States---Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, and
Missouri---and also the District of Columbia, all north of the Missouri
compromise line. The census returns of 1850 show that, within these, there are
867,276 slaves---being more than one-fourth of all the slaves in the nation.
It is not
climate, then, that will keep slavery out of these territories. Is there any
thing in the peculiar nature of the country? Missouri adjoins these
territories, by her entire western boundary, and slavery is already within
every one of her western counties. I have even heard it said that there are
more slaves, in proportion to whites, in the north western county of Missouri,
than within any county of the State. Slavery pressed entirely up to the old
western boundary of the State, and when, rather recently, a part of that
boundary, at the north-west was moved out a little farther west, slavery
followed on quite up to the new line. Now, when the restriction is removed,
what is to prevent it from going still further? Climate will not. No
peculiarity of the country will---nothing in nature will. Will the
disposition of the people prevent it? Those nearest the scene, are all in favor
of the extension. The yankees, who are opposed to it may be more numerous; but
in military phrase, the battle-field is too far from their base of
operations.
But it is said,
there now is no law in Nebraska on the subject of slavery; and that, in
such case, taking a slave there, operates his freedom. That is good
book-law; but is not the rule of actual practice. Wherever slavery is, it has
been first introduced without law. The oldest laws we find concerning it, are
not laws introducing it; but regulating it, as an already existing
thing. A white man takes his slave to Nebraska now; who will inform the negro
that he is free? Who will take him before court to test the question of his
freedom? In ignorance of his legal emancipation, he is kept chopping, splitting
and plowing. Others are brought, and move on in the same track. At last, if
ever the time for voting comes, on the question of slavery, the institution
already in fact exists in the country, and cannot well be removed. The facts of
its presence, and the difficulty of its removal will carry the vote in its
favor. Keep it out until a vote is taken, and a vote in favor of it, can not be
got in any population of forty thousand, on earth, who have been drawn together
by the ordinary motives of emigration and settlement. To get slaves into the
country simultaneously with the whites, in the incipient stages of settlement,
is the precise stake played for, and won in this Nebraska measure.
The question is
asked us, ``If slaves will go in, notwithstanding the general principle of law
liberates them, why would they not equally go in against positive statute
law?---go in, even if the Missouri restriction were maintained?'' I answer,
because it takes a much bolder man to venture in, with his property, in the
latter case, than in the former---because the positive congressional enactment
is known to, and respected by all, or nearly all; whereas the negative
principle that no law is free law, is not much known except among
lawyers. We have some experience of this practical difference. In spite of the
Ordinance of '87, a few negroes were brought into Illinois, and held in a state
of quasi slavery; not enough, however to carry a vote of the people in favor of
the institution when they came to form a constitution. But in the adjoining
Missouri country, where there was no ordinance of '87---was no
restriction---they were carried ten times, nay a hundred times, as fast, and
actually made a slave State. This is fact---naked fact.
Another LULLABY
argument is, that taking slaves to new countries does not increase their
number---does not make any one slave who otherwise would be free. There is some
truth in this, and I am glad of it, but it [is] not WHOLLY true. The African
slave trade is not yet effectually suppressed; and if we make a reasonable
deduction for the white people amongst us, who are foreigners, and the
descendants of foreigners, arriving here since 1808, we shall find the increase
of the black population out-running that of the white, to an extent
unaccountable, except by supposing that some of them too, have been coming from
Africa. If this be so, the opening of new countries to the institution,
increases the demand for, and augments the price of slaves, and so does, in
fact, make slaves of freemen by causing them to be brought from Africa, and
sold into bondage.
But, however this
may be, we know the opening of new countries to slavery, tends to the
perpetuation of the institution, and so does KEEP men in slavery who otherwise
would be free. This result we do not FEEL like favoring, and we are under no
legal obligation to suppress our feelings in this respect.
Equal justice to
the south, it is said, requires us to consent to the extending of slavery to
new countries. That is to say, inasmuch as you do not object to my taking my
hog to Nebraska, therefore I must not object to you taking your slave. Now, I
admit this is perfectly logical, if there is no difference between hogs and
negroes. But while you thus require me to deny the humanity of the negro, I
wish to ask whether you of the south yourselves, have ever been willing to do
as much? It is kindly provided that of all those who come into the world, only
a small percentage are natural tyrants. That percentage is no larger in the
slave States than in the free. The great majority, south as well as north, have
human sympathies, of which they can no more divest themselves than they can of
their sensibility to physical pain. These sympathies in the bosoms of the
southern people, manifest in many ways, their sense of the wrong of slavery,
and their consciousness that, after all, there is humanity in the negro. If
they deny this, let me address them a few plain questions. In 1820 you joined
the north, almost unanimously, in declaring the African slave trade piracy, and
in annexing to it the punishment of death. Why did you do this? If you did not
feel that it was wrong, why did you join in providing that men should be hung
for it? The practice was no more than bringing wild negroes from Africa, to
sell to such as would buy them. But you never thought of hanging men for
catching and selling wild horses, wild buffaloes or wild bears.
Again, you have
amongst you, a sneaking individual, of the class of native tyrants, known as
the ``SLAVE-DEALER.'' He watches your necessities, and crawls up to buy your
slave, at a speculating price. If you cannot help it, you sell to him; but if
you can help it, you drive him from your door. You despise him utterly. You do
not recognize him as a friend, or even as an honest man. Your children must not
play with his; they may rollick freely with the little negroes, but not with
the ``slave-dealers'' children. If you are obliged to deal with him, you try to
get through the job without so much as touching him. It is common with you to
join hands with the men you meet; but with the slave dealer you avoid the
ceremony---instinctively shrinking from the snaky contact. If he grows rich and
retires from business, you still remember him, and still keep up the ban of
non-intercourse upon him and his family. Now why is this? You do not so treat
the man who deals in corn, cattle or tobacco.
And yet again;
there are in the United States and territories, including the District of
Columbia, 433,643 free blacks. At $500 per head they are worth over two hundred
millions of dollars. How comes this vast amount of property to be running about
without owners? We do not see free horses or free cattle running at large. How
is this? All these free blacks are the descendants of slaves, or have been
slaves themselves, and they would be slaves now, but for SOMETHING which has
operated on their white owners, inducing them, at vast pecuniary sacrifices, to
liberate them. What is that SOMETHING? Is there any mistaking it? In all these
cases it is your sense of justice, and human sympathy, continually telling you,
that the poor negro has some natural right to himself---that those who deny it,
and make mere merchandise of him, deserve kickings, contempt and death.
And now, why will
you ask us to deny the humanity of the slave? and estimate him only as the
equal of the hog? Why ask us to do what you will not do yourselves? Why ask us
to do for nothing, what two hundred million of dollars could not induce
you to do?
But one great
argument in the support of the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, is still to
come. That argument is ``the sacred right of self government.'' It seems our
distinguished Senator has found great difficulty in getting his antagonists,
even in the Senate to meet him fairly on this argument---some poet has said
``Fools rush in
where angels fear to tread.''
At the hazzard of
being thought one of the fools of this quotation, I meet that argument---I rush
in, I take that bull by the horns.
I trust I understand,
and truly estimate the right of self-government. My faith in the proposition
that each man should do precisely as he pleases with all which is exclusively
his own, lies at the foundation of the sense of justice there is in me. I
extend the principles to communities of men, as well as to individuals. I so
extend it, because it is politically wise, as well as naturally just;
politically wise, in saving us from broils about matters which do not concern
us. Here, or at Washington, I would not trouble myself with the oyster laws of
Virginia, or the cranberry laws of Indiana.
The doctrine of
self government is right---absolutely and eternally right---but it has no just
application, as here attempted. Or perhaps I should rather say that whether it
has such just application depends upon whether a negro is not or is
a man. If he is not a man, why in that case, he who is a man may,
as a matter of self-government, do just as he pleases with him. But if the
negro is a man, is it not to that extent, a total destruction of
self-government, to say that he too shall not govern himself? When the
white man governs himself that is self-government; but when he governs himself,
and also governs another man, that is more than
self-government---that is despotism. If the negro is a man, why then my
ancient faith teaches me that ``all men are created equal;'' and that there can
be no moral right in connection with one man's making a slave of another.
Judge Douglas
frequently, with bitter irony and sarcasm, paraphrases our argument by saying
``The white people of Nebraska are good enough to govern themselves, but
they are not good enough to govern a few miserable negroes!!''
Well I doubt not
that the people of Nebraska are, and will continue to be as good as the average
of people elsewhere. I do not say the contrary. What I do say is, that no man
is good enough to govern another man, without that other's consent. I
say this is the leading principle---the sheet anchor of American republicanism.
Our Declaration of Independence says:
``We hold these
truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal; that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights,
governments are instituted among men, DERIVING THEIR JUST POWERS FROM THE
CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED.''
I have quoted so
much at this time merely to show that according to our ancient faith, the just
powers of governments are derived from the consent of the governed. Now the
relation of masters and slaves is, PRO TANTO, a total violation of this
principle. The master not only governs the slave without his consent; but he
governs him by a set of rules altogether different from those which he
prescribes for himself. Allow ALL the governed an equal voice in the
government, and that, and that only is self government.
Let it not be
said I am contending for the establishment of political and social equality
between the whites and blacks. I have already said the contrary. I am not now
combating the argument of NECESSITY, arising from the fact that the blacks are
already amongst us; but I am combating what is set up as MORAL argument for
allowing them to be taken where they have never yet been---arguing against the
EXTENSION of a bad thing, which where it already exists, we must of necessity,
manage as we best can.
In support of his
application of the doctrine of self-government,
Senator Douglas
has sought to bring to his aid the opinions and examples of our revolutionary
fathers. I am glad he has done this. I love the sentiments of those old-time
men; and shall be most happy to abide by their opinions. He shows us that when
it was in contemplation for the colonies to break off from Great Britain, and
set up a new government for themselves, several of the states instructed their
delegates to go for the measure PROVIDED EACH STATE SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO
REGULATE ITS DOMESTIC CONCERNS IN ITS OWN WAY. I do not quote; but this in
substance. This was right. I see nothing objectionable in it. I also think it
probable that it had some reference to the existence of slavery amongst them. I
will not deny that it had. But had it, in any reference to the carrying of
slavery into NEW COUNTRIES? That is the question; and we will let the fathers
themselves answer it.
This same
generation of men, and mostly the same individuals of the generation, who
declared this principle---who declared independence---who fought the war of the
revolution through---who afterwards made the constitution under which we still live---these
same men passed the ordinance of '87, declaring that slavery should never go to
the north-west territory. I have no doubt Judge Douglas thinks they were very
inconsistent in this. It is a question of discrimination between them and him.
But there is not an inch of ground left for his claiming that their
opinions---their example---their authority---are on his side in this
controversy.
Again, is not
Nebraska, while a territory, a part of us? Do we not own the country? And if we
surrender the control of it, do we not surrender the right of self-government?
It is part of ourselves. If you say we shall not control it because it is ONLY
part, the same is true of every other part; and when all the parts are gone,
what has become of the whole? What is then left of us? What use for the general
government, when there is nothing left for it [to] govern?
But you say this
question should be left to the people of Nebraska, because they are more
particularly interested. If this be the rule, you must leave it to each
individual to say for himself whether he will have slaves. What better moral
right have thirty-one citizens of Nebraska to say, that the thirty-second shall
not hold slaves, than the people of the thirty-one States have to say that
slavery shall not go into the thirty-second State at all?
But if it is a
sacred right for the people of Nebraska to take and hold slaves there, it is
equally their sacred right to buy them where they can buy them cheapest; and
that undoubtedly will be on the coast of Africa; provided you will consent to
not hang them for going there to buy them. You must remove this restriction
too, from the sacred right of self-government. I am aware you say that taking
slaves from the States of Nebraska, does not make slaves of freemen; but the
African slave-trader can say just as much. He does not catch free negroes and
bring them here. He finds them already slaves in the hands of their black
captors, and he honestly buys them at the rate of about a red cotton
handkerchief a head. This is very cheap, and it is a great abridgement of the
sacred right of self-government to hang men for engaging in this profitable
trade!
Another important
objection to this application of the right of self-government, is that it
enables the first FEW, to deprive the succeeding MANY, of a free exercise of
the right of self-government. The first few may get slavery IN, and the
subsequent many cannot easily get it OUT. How common is the remark now in the
slave States---``If we were only clear of our slaves, how much better it would
be for us.'' They are actually deprived of the privilege of governing
themselves as they would, by the action of a very few, in the beginning. The
same thing was true of the whole nation at the time our constitution was
formed.
Whether slavery
shall go into Nebraska, or other new territories, is not a matter of exclusive
concern to the people who may go there. The whole nation is interested that the
best use shall be made of these territories. We want them for the homes of free
white people. This they cannot be, to any considerable extent, if slavery shall
be planted within them. Slave States are places for poor white people to remove
FROM; not to remove TO. New free States are the places for poor people to go to
and better their condition. For this use, the nation needs these territories.
Still further;
there are constitutional relations between the slave and free States, which are
degrading to the latter. We are under legal obligations to catch and return
their runaway slaves to them---a sort of dirty, disagreeable job, which I
believe, as a general rule the slave-holders will not perform for one another.
Then again, in the control of the government---the management of the
partnership affairs---they have greatly the advantage of us. By the
constitution, each State has two Senators---each has a number of
Representatives; in proportion to the number of its people---and each has a
number of presidential electors, equal to the whole number of its Senators and
Representatives together. But in ascertaining the number of the people, for
this purpose, five slaves are counted as being equal to three whites. The
slaves do not vote; they are only counted and so used, as to swell the
influence of the white people's votes. The practical effect of this is more
aptly shown by a comparison of the States of South Carolina and Maine. South
Carolina has six representatives, and so has Maine; South Carolina has eight
presidential electors, and so has Maine. This is precise equality so far; and,
of course they are equal in Senators, each having two. Thus in the control of
the government, the two States are equals precisely. But how are they in the
number of their white people? Maine has 581,813---while South Carolina has
274,567. Maine has twice as many as South Carolina, and 32,679 over. Thus each
white man in South Carolina is more than the double of any man in Maine. This
is all because South Carolina, besides her free people, has 384,984 slaves. The
South Carolinian has precisely the same advantage over the white man in every
other free State, as well as in Maine. He is more than the double of any one of
us in this crowd. The same advantage, but not to the same extent, is held by
all the citizens of the slave States, over those of the free; and it is an
absolute truth, without an exception, that there is no voter in any slave
State, but who has more legal power in the government, than any voter in any
free State. There is no instance of exact equality; and the disadvantage is
against us the whole chapter through. This principle, in the aggregate, gives
the slave States, in the present Congress, twenty additional
representatives---being seven more than the whole majority by which they passed
the Nebraska bill.
Now all this is
manifestly unfair; yet I do not mention it to complain of it, in so far as it
is already settled. It is in the constitution; and I do not, for that cause, or
any other cause, propose to destroy, or alter, or disregard the constitution. I
stand to it, fairly, fully, and firmly.
But when I am told
I must leave it altogether to OTHER PEOPLE to say whether new partners are to
be bred up and brought into the firm, on the same degrading terms against me. I
respectfully demur. I insist, that whether I shall be a whole man, or only, the
half of one, in comparison with others, is a question in which I am somewhat
concerned; and one which no other man can have a sacred right of deciding for
me. If I am wrong in this---if it really be a sacred right of self-government,
in the man who shall go to Nebraska, to decide whether he will be the EQUAL of
me or the DOUBLE of me, then after he shall have exercised that right, and
thereby shall have reduced me to a still smaller fraction of a man than I
already am, I should like for some gentleman deeply skilled in the mysteries of
sacred rights, to provide himself with a microscope, and peep about, and find
out, if he can, what has become of my sacred rights! They will surely be too
small for detection with the naked eye.
Finally, I
insist, that if there is ANY THING which it is the duty of the WHOLE PEOPLE to
never entrust to any hands but their own, that thing is the preservation and
perpetuity, of their own liberties, and institutions. And if they shall think,
as I do, that the extension of slavery endangers them, more than any, or all
other causes, how recreant to themselves, if they submit the question, and with
it, the fate of their country, to a mere hand-full of men, bent only on
temporary self-interest. If this question of slavery extension were an
insignificant one---one having no power to do harm---it might be shuffled aside
in this way. But being, as it is, the great Behemoth of danger, shall the
strong gripe of the nation be loosened upon him, to entrust him to the hands of
such feeble keepers?
I have done with
this mighty argument, of self-government. Go, sacred thing! Go in peace.
But Nebraska is
urged as a great Union-saving measure. Well I too, go for saving the Union.
Much as I hate slavery, I would consent to the extension of it rather than see
the Union dissolved, just as I would consent to any GREAT evil, to avoid a
GREATER one. But when I go to Union saving, I must believe, at least, that the
means I employ has some adaptation to the end. To my mind, Nebraska has no such
adaptation.
``It hath no
relish of salvation in it.''
It is an
aggravation, rather, of the only one thing which ever endangers the Union. When
it came upon us, all was peace and quiet. The nation was looking to the forming
of new bonds of Union; and a long course of peace and prosperity seemed to lie
before us. In the whole range of possibility, there scarcely appears to me to
have been any thing, out of which the slavery agitation could have been
revived, except the very project of repealing the Missouri compromise. Every
inch of territory we owned, already had a definite settlement of the slavery
question, and by which, all parties were pledged to abide. Indeed, there was no
uninhabited country on the continent, which we could acquire; if we except some
extreme northern regions, which are wholly out of the question. In this state
of case, the genius of Discord himself, could scarcely have invented a way of
again getting [setting?] us by the ears, but by turning back and destroying the
peace measures of the past. The councils of that genius seem to have prevailed,
the Missouri compromise was repealed; and here we are, in the midst of a new
slavery agitation, such, I think, as we have never seen before.
Who is
responsible for this? Is it those who resist the measure; or those who,
causelessly, brought it forward, and pressed it through, having reason to know,
and, in fact, knowing it must and would be so resisted? It could not but be
expected by its author, that it would be looked upon as a measure for the
extension of slavery, aggravated by a gross breach of faith. Argue as you will,
and long as you will, this is the naked FRONT and ASPECT, of the measure. And
in this aspect, it could not but produce agitation. Slavery is founded in the
selfishness of man's nature---opposition to it, is [in?] his love of justice.
These principles are an eternal antagonism; and when brought into collision so
fiercely, as slavery extension brings them, shocks, and throes, and convulsions
must ceaselessly follow. Repeal the Missouri compromise---repeal all compromises---repeal
the declaration of independence---repeal all past history, you still can not
repeal human nature. It still will be the abundance of man's heart, that
slavery extension is wrong; and out of the abundance of his heart, his mouth
will continue to speak.
The structure,
too, of the Nebraska bill is very peculiar. The people are to decide the
question of slavery for themselves; but WHEN they are to decide; or HOW they
are to decide; or whether, when the question is once decided, it is to remain
so, or is it to be subject to an indefinite succession of new trials, the law
does not say, Is it to be decided by the first dozen settlers who arrive there?
or is it to await the arrival of a hundred? Is it to be decided by a vote of
the people? or a vote of the legislature? or, indeed by a vote of any sort? To
these questions, the law gives no answer. There is a mystery about this; for
when a member proposed to give the legislature express authority to exclude
slavery, it was hooted down by the friends of the bill. This fact is worth
remembering. Some yankees, in the east, are sending emigrants to Nebraska, to
exclude slavery from it; and, so far as I can judge, they expect the question
to be decided by voting, in some way or other. But the Missourians are awake
too. They are within a stone's throw of the contested ground. They hold
meetings, and pass resolutions, in which not the slightest allusion to voting
is made. They resolve that slavery already exists in the territory; that more
shall go there; that they, remaining in Missouri will protect it; and that
abolitionists shall be hung, or driven away. Through all this, bowie-knives and
six-shooters are seen plainly enough; but never a glimpse of the ballot-box.
And, really, what is to be the result of this? Each party WITHIN, having
numerous and determined backers WITHOUT, is it not probable that the contest
will come to blows, and bloodshed? Could there be a more apt invention to bring
about collision and violence, on the slavery question, than this Nebraska
project is? I do not charge, or believe, that such was intended by Congress;
but if they had literally formed a ring, and placed champions within it to
fight out the controversy, the fight could be no more likely to come off, than
it is. And if this fight should begin, is it likely to take a very peaceful,
Union-saving turn? Will not the first drop of blood so shed, be the real knell
of the Union?
The Missouri
Compromise ought to be restored. For the sake of the Union, it ought to be
restored. We ought to elect a House of Representatives which will vote its
restoration. If by any means, we omit to do this, what follows? Slavery may or
may not be established in Nebraska. But whether it be or not, we shall have
repudiated---discarded from the councils of the Nation---the SPIRIT of
COMPROMISE; for who after this will ever trust in a national compromise? The
spirit of mutual concession---that spirit which first gave us the constitution,
and which has thrice saved the Union---we shall have strangled and cast from us
forever. And what shall we have in lieu of it? The South flushed with triumph
and tempted to excesses; the North, betrayed, as they believe, brooding on
wrong and burning for revenge. One side will provoke; the other resent. The one
will taunt, the other defy; one agrees [aggresses?], the other retaliates.
Already a few in the North, defy all constitutional restraints, resist the
execution of the fugitive slave law, and even menace the institution of slavery
in the states where it exists.
Already a few in
the South, claim the constitutional right to take to and hold slaves in the
free states---demand the revival of the slave trade; and demand a treaty with
Great Britain by which fugitive slaves may be reclaimed from Canada. As yet
they are but few on either side. It is a grave question for the lovers of the
Union, whether the final destruction of the Missouri Compromise, and with it
the spirit of all compromise will or will not embolden and embitter each of
these, and fatally increase the numbers of both.
But restore the
compromise, and what then? We thereby restore the national faith, the national
confidence, the national feeling of brotherhood. We thereby reinstate the
spirit of concession and compromise---that spirit which has never failed us in
past perils, and which may be safely trusted for all the future. The south
ought to join in doing this. The peace of the nation is as dear to them as to
us. In memories of the past and hopes of the future, they share as largely as
we. It would be on their part, a great act---great in its spirit, and great in
its effect. It would be worth to the nation a hundred years' purchase of peace
and prosperity. And what of sacrifice would they make? They only surrender to
us, what they gave us for a consideration long, long ago; what they have not
now, asked for, struggled or cared for; what has been thrust upon them, not
less to their own astonishment than to ours.
But it is said we
cannot restore it; that though we elect every member of the lower house, the
Senate is still against us. It is quite true, that of the Senators who passed
the Nebraska bill, a majority of the whole Senate will retain their seats in
spite of the elections of this and the next year. But if at these elections,
their several constituencies shall clearly express their will against Nebraska,
will these senators disregard their will? Will they neither obey, nor make room
for those who will?
But even if we
fail to technically restore the compromise, it is still a great point to carry
a popular vote in favor of the restoration. The moral weight of such a vote can
not be estimated too highly. The authors of Nebraska are not at all satisfied
with the destruction of the compromise---an endorsement of this PRINCIPLE, they
proclaim to be the great object. With them, Nebraska alone is a small
matter---to establish a principle, for FUTURE USE, is what they particularly
desire.
That future use
is to be the planting of slavery wherever in the wide world, local and
unorganized opposition can not prevent it. Now if you wish to give them this
endorsement---if you wish to establish this principle---do so. I shall regret
it; but it is your right. On the contrary if you are opposed to the
principle---intend to give it no such endorsement---let no wheedling, no
sophistry, divert you from throwing a direct vote against it.
Some men, mostly
whigs, who condemn the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, nevertheless hesitate
to go for its restoration, lest they be thrown in company with the
abolitionist. Will they allow me as an old whig to tell them good humoredly,
that I think this is very silly? Stand with anybody that stands RIGHT. Stand
with him while he is right and PART with him when he goes wrong. Stand WITH the
abolitionist in restoring the Missouri Compromise; and stand AGAINST him when
he attempts to repeal the fugitive slave law. In the latter case you stand with
the southern disunionist. What of that? you are still right. In both cases you
are right. In both cases you oppose [expose?] the dangerous extremes. In both
you stand on middle ground and hold the ship level and steady. In both you are
national and nothing less than national. This is good old whig ground. To
desert such ground, because of any company, is to be less than a whig---less
than a man---less than an American.
I particularly
object to the NEW position which the avowed principle of this Nebraska law
gives to slavery in the body politic. I object to it because it assumes that
there CAN be MORAL RIGHT in the enslaving of one man by another. I object to it
as a dangerous dalliance for a few [free?] people---a sad evidence that,
feeling prosperity we forget right---that liberty, as a principle, we have
ceased to revere. I object to it because the fathers of the republic eschewed,
and rejected it. The argument of ``Necessity'' was the only argument they ever
admitted in favor of slavery; and so far, and so far only as it carried them,
did they ever go. They found the institution existing among us, which they
could not help; and they cast blame upon the British King for having permitted
its introduction. BEFORE the constitution, they prohibited its introduction
into the north-western Territory---the only country we owned, then free from
it. AT the framing and adoption of the constitution, they forbore to so much as
mention the word ``slave'' or ``slavery'' in the whole instrument. In the
provision for the recovery of fugitives, the slave is spoken of as a ``PERSON
HELD TO SERVICE OR LABOR.'' In that prohibiting the abolition of the African
slave trade for twenty years, that trade is spoken of as ``The migration or
importation of such persons as any of the States NOW EXISTING, shall think
proper to admit,'' &c. These are the only provisions alluding to slavery.
Thus, the thing is hid away, in the constitution, just as an afflicted man
hides away a wen or a cancer, which he dares not cut out at once, lest he bleed
to death; with the promise, nevertheless, that the cutting may begin at the end
of a given time. Less than this our fathers COULD not do; and NOW [MORE?] they WOULD
not do. Necessity drove them so far, and farther, they would not go. But this
is not all. The earliest Congress, under the constitution, took the same view
of slavery. They hedged and hemmed it in to the narrowest limits of necessity.
In 1794, they prohibited
an out-going slave-trade---that is, the taking of slaves FROM the United States
to sell.
In 1798, they
prohibited the bringing of slaves from Africa, INTO the Mississippi
Territory---this territory then comprising what are now the States of Mississippi
and Alabama. This was TEN YEARS before they had the authority to do the same
thing as to the States existing at the adoption of the constitution.
In 1800 they
prohibited AMERICAN CITIZENS from trading in slaves between foreign
countries---as, for instance, from Africa to Brazil.
In 1803 they
passed a law in aid of one or two State laws, in restraint of the internal
slave trade.
In 1807, in
apparent hot haste, they passed the law, nearly a year in advance to take
effect the first day of 1808---the very first day the constitution would
permit---prohibiting the African slave trade by heavy pecuniary and corporal
penalties.
In 1820, finding
these provisions ineffectual, they declared the trade piracy, and annexed to
it, the extreme penalty of death. While all this was passing in the general
government, five or six of the original slave States had adopted systems of
gradual emancipation; and by which the institution was rapidly becoming extinct
within these limits.
Thus we see, the
plain unmistakable spirit of that age, towards slavery, was hostility to the
PRINCIPLE, and toleration, ONLY BY NECESSITY.
But NOW it is to
be transformed into a ``sacred right.'' Nebraska brings it forth, places it on
the high road to extension and perpetuity; and, with a pat on its back, says to
it, ``Go, and God speed you.'' Henceforth it is to be the chief jewel of the
nation---the very figure-head of the ship of State. Little by little, but
steadily as man's march to the grave, we have been giving up the OLD for the
NEW faith. Near eighty years ago we began by declaring that all men are created
equal; but now from that beginning we have run down to the other declaration,
that for SOME men to enslave OTHERS is a ``sacred right of self-government.''
These principles can not stand together. They are as opposite as God and
mammon; and whoever holds to the one, must despise the other. When Pettit, in
connection with his support of the Nebraska bill, called the Declaration of
Independence ``a self-evident lie'' he only did what consistency and candor
require all other Nebraska men to do. Of the forty odd Nebraska Senators who
sat present and heard him, no one rebuked him. Nor am I apprized that any
Nebraska newspaper, or any Nebraska orator, in the whole nation, has ever yet
rebuked him. If this had been said among Marion's men, Southerners though they
were, what would have become of the man who said it? If this had been said to
the men who captured Andre, the man who said it, would probably have been hung
sooner than Andre was. If it had been said in old Independence Hall,
seventy-eight years ago, the very door-keeper would have throttled the man, and
thrust him into the street.
Let no one be
deceived. The spirit of seventy-six and the spirit of Nebraska, are utter
antagonisms; and the former is being rapidly displaced by the latter.
Fellow
countrymen---Americans south, as well as north, shall we make no effort to
arrest this? Already the liberal party throughout the world, express the
apprehension ``that the one retrograde institution in America, is undermining
the principles of progress, and fatally violating the noblest political system
the world ever saw.'' This is not the taunt of enemies, but the warning of
friends. Is it quite safe to disregard it---to despise it? Is there no danger
to liberty itself, in discarding the earliest practice, and first precept of
our ancient faith? In our greedy chase to make profit of the negro, let us
beware, lest we ``cancel and tear to pieces'' even the white man's charter of
freedom.
Our republican robe
is soiled, and trailed in the dust. Let us repurify it. Let us turn and wash it
white, in the spirit, if not the blood, of the Revolution. Let us turn slavery
from its claims of ``moral right,'' back upon its existing legal rights, and
its arguments of ``necessity.'' Let us return it to the position our fathers
gave it; and there let it rest in peace. Let us re-adopt the Declaration of
Independence, and with it, the practices, and policy, which harmonize with it.
Let north and south---let all Americans---let all lovers of liberty
everywhere---join in the great and good work. If we do this, we shall not only
have saved the Union; but we shall have so saved it, as to make, and to keep
it, forever worthy of the saving. We shall have so saved it, that the succeeding
millions of free happy people, the world over, shall rise up, and call us
blessed, to the latest generations.
At Springfield,
twelve days ago, where I had spoken substantially as I have here, Judge Douglas
replied to me---and as he is to reply to me here, I shall attempt to anticipate
him, by noticing some of the points he made there.
He commenced by
stating I had assumed all the way through, that the principle of the Nebraska
bill, would have the effect of extending slavery. He denied that this was
INTENDED, or that this EFFECT would follow.
I will not
re-open the argument upon this point. That such was the intention, the world
believed at the start, and will continue to believe. This was the COUNTENANCE
of the thing; and, both friends and enemies, instantly recognized it as such.
That countenance can not now be changed by argument. You can as easily argue
the color out of the negroes' skin. Like the ``bloody hand'' you may wash it,
and wash it, the red witness of guilt still sticks, and stares horribly at you.
Next he says,
congressional intervention never prevented slavery, any where---that it did not
prevent it in the north west territory, now [nor?] in Illinois---that in fact,
Illinois came into the Union as a slave State---that the principle of the
Nebraska bill expelled it from Illinois, from several old States, from every
where.
Now this is mere
quibbling all the way through. If the ordinance of '87 did not keep slavery out
of the north west territory, how happens it that the north west shore of the
Ohio river is entirely free from it; while the south east shore, less than a
mile distant, along nearly the whole length of the river, is entirely covered
with it?
If that ordinance
did not keep it out of Illinois, what was it that made the difference between
Illinois and Missouri? They lie side by side, the Mississippi river only
dividing them; while their early settlements were within the same latitude.
Between 1810 and 1820 the number of slaves in Missouri INCREASED 7,211; while
in Illinois, in the same ten years, they DECREASED 51. This appears by the
census returns. During nearly all of that ten years, both were
territories---not States. During this time, the ordinance forbid slavery to go
into Illinois; and NOTHING forbid it to go into Missouri. It DID go into
Missouri, and did NOT go into Illinois. That is the fact. Can any one doubt as
to the reason of it?
But, he says,
Illinois came into the Union as a slave State. Silence, perhaps, would be the
best answer to this flat contradiction of the known history of the country.
What are the facts upon which this bold assertion is based? When we first
acquired the country, as far back as 1787, there were some slaves within it,
held by the French inhabitants at Kaskaskia. The territorial legislation, admitted
a few negroes, from the slave States, as indentured servants. One year after
the adoption of the first State constitution the whole number of them
was---what do you think? just 117---while the aggregate free population was
55,094---about 470 to one. Upon this state of facts, the people framed their
constitution prohibiting the further introduction of slavery, with a sort of
guaranty to the owners of the few indentured servants, giving freedom to their
children to be born thereafter, and making no mention whatever, of any supposed
slave for life. Out of this small matter, the Judge manufactures his argument
that Illinois came into the Union as a slave State. Let the facts be the answer
to the argument.
The principles of
the Nebraska bill, he says, expelled slavery from Illinois? The principle of
that bill first planted it here---that is, it first came, because there was no
law to prevent it---first came before we owned the country; and finding it
here, and having the ordinance of '87 to prevent its increasing, our people
struggled along, and finally got rid of it as best they could.
But the principle
of the Nebraska bill abolished slavery in several of the old States. Well, it
is true that several of the old States, in the last quarter of the last century,
did adopt systems of gradual emancipation, by which the institution has finally
become extinct within their limits; but it MAY or MAY NOT be true that the
principle of the Nebraska bill was the cause that led to the adoption of these
measures. It is now more than fifty years, since the last of these States
adopted its system of emancipation. If Nebraska bill [3] is the real author of these
benevolent works, it is rather deplorable, that he has, for so long a time,
ceased working all together. Is there not some reason to suspect that it was
the principle of the REVOLUTION, and not the principle of Nebraska bill, that
led to emancipation in these old States? Leave it to the people of those old
emancipating States, and I am quite sure they will decide, that neither that,
nor any other good thing, ever did, or ever will come of Nebraska bill.
In the course of
my main argument, Judge Douglas interrupted me to say, that the principle [of]
the Nebraska bill was very old; that it originated when God made man and placed
good and evil before him, allowing him to choose for himself, being responsible
for the choice he should make. At the time I thought this was merely playful;
and I answered it accordingly. But in his reply to me he renewed it, as a
serious argument. In seriousness then, the facts of this proposition are not
true as stated. God did not place good and evil before man, telling him to make
his choice. On the contrary, he did tell him there was one tree, of the fruit
of which, he should not eat, upon pain of certain death. I should scarcely wish
so strong a prohibition against slavery in Nebraska.
But this argument
strikes me as not a little remarkable in another particular---in its strong
resemblance to the old argument for the ``Divine right of Kings.'' By the
latter, the King is to do just as he pleases with his white subjects, being
responsible to God alone. By the former the white man is to do just as he
pleases with his black slaves, being responsible to God alone. The two things
are precisely alike; and it is but natural that they should find similar
arguments to sustain them.
I had argued,
that the application of the principle of self-government, as contended for,
would require the revival of the African slave trade---that no argument could
be made in favor of a man's right to take slaves to Nebraska, which could not
be equally well made in favor of his right to bring them from the coast of
Africa. The Judge replied, that the constitution requires the suppression of
the foreign slave trade; but does not require the prohibition of slavery in the
territories. That is a mistake, in point of fact. The constitution does NOT
require the action of Congress in either case; and it does AUTHORIZE it in
both. And so, there is still no difference between the cases.
In regard to what
I had said, the advantage the slave States have over the free, in the matter of
representation, the Judge replied that we, in the free States, count five free
negroes as five white people, while in the slave States, they count five slaves
as three whites only; and that the advantage, at last, was on the side of the
free States.
Now, in the slave
States, they count free negroes just as we do; and it so happens that besides
their slaves, they have as many free negroes as we have, and thirty-three
thousand over. Thus their free negroes more than balance ours; and their
advantage over us, in consequence of their slaves, still remains as I stated
it.
In reply to my
argument, that the compromise measures of 1850, were a system of equivalents;
and that the provisions of no one of them could fairly be carried to other
subjects, without its corresponding equivalent being carried with it, the Judge
denied out-right, that these measures had any connection with, or dependence
upon, each other. This is mere desperation. If they have no connection, why are
they always spoken of in connection? Why has he so spoken of them, a thousand
times? Why has he constantly called them a SERIES of measures? Why does
everybody call them a compromise? Why was California kept out of the Union, six
or seven months, if it was not because of its connection with the other
measures? Webster's leading definition of the verb ``to compromise'' is ``to
adjust and settle a difference, by mutual agreement with concessions of claims
by the parties.'' This conveys precisely the popular understanding of the word
compromise. We knew, before the Judge told us, that these measures passed
separately, and in distinct bills; and that no two of them were passed by the
votes of precisely the same members. But we also know, and so does he know,
that no one of them could have passed both branches of Congress but for the understanding
that the others were to pass also. Upon this understanding each got votes,
which it could have got in no other way. It is this fact, that gives to the
measures their true character; and it is the universal knowledge of this fact,
that has given them the name of compromise so expressive of that true
character.
I had asked ``If
in carrying the provisions of the Utah and New
Mexico laws to
Nebraska, you could clear away other objection, how can you leave Nebraska
``perfectly free'' to introduce slavery BEFORE she forms a
constitution---during her territorial government?---while the Utah and New
Mexico laws only authorize it WHEN they form constitutions, and are admitted
into the Union?'' To this Judge Douglas answered that the Utah and New Mexico
laws, also authorized it BEFORE; and to prove this, he read from one of their
laws, as follows: ``That the legislative power of said territory shall extend
to all rightful subjects of legislation consistent with the constitution of the
United States and the provisions of this act.''
Now it is
perceived from the reading of this, that there is nothing express upon the
subject; but that the authority is sought to be implied merely, for the general
provision of ``all rightful subjects of legislation.'' In reply to this, I
insist, as a legal rule of construction, as well as the plain popular view of
the matter, that the EXPRESS provision for Utah and New Mexico coming in with
slavery if they choose, when they shall form constitutions, is an EXCLUSION of
all implied authority on the same subject---that Congress, having the subject
distinctly in their minds, when they made the express provision, they therein
expressed their WHOLE meaning on that subject.
The Judge rather
insinuated that I had found it convenient to forget the Washington territorial
law passed in 1853. This was a division of Oregon, organizing the northern
part, as the territory of Washington. He asserted that, by this act, the
ordinance of '87 theretofore existing in Oregon, was repealed; that nearly all
the members of Congress voted for it, beginning in the H.R., with Charles Allen
of Massachusetts, and ending with Richard Yates, of Illinois; and that he could
not understand how those who now oppose the Nebraska bill, so voted then,
unless it was because it was then too soon after both the great political
parties had ratified the compromises of 1850, and the ratification therefore
too fresh, to be then repudiated.
Now I had seen
the Washington act before; and I have carefully examined it since; and I aver
that there is no repeal of the ordinance of '87, or of any prohibition of
slavery, in it. In express terms, there is absolutely nothing in the whole law
upon the subject---in fact, nothing to lead a reader to THINK of the subject.
To my judgment, it is equally free from every thing from which such repeal can
be legally implied; but however this may be, are men now to be entrapped by a
legal implication, extracted from covert language, introduced perhaps, for the
very purpose of entrapping them? I sincerely wish every man could read this law
quite through, carefully watching every sentence, and every line, for a repeal
of the ordinance of '87 or any thing equivalent to it.
Another point on
the Washington act. If it was intended to be modelled after the Utah and New
Mexico acts, as Judge Douglas, insists, why was it not inserted in it, as in
them, that Washington was to come in with or without slavery as she may choose
at the adoption of her constitution? It has no such provision in it; and I defy
the ingenuity of man to give a reason for the omission, other than that it was
not intended to follow the Utah and New Mexico laws in regard to the question
of slavery.
The Washington
act not only differs vitally from the Utah and New Mexico acts; but the
Nebraska act differs vitally from both. By the latter act the people are left
``perfectly free'' to regulate their own domestic concerns, &c.; but in all
the former, all their laws are to be submitted to Congress, and if disapproved
are to be null. The Washington act goes even further; it absolutely prohibits
the territorial legislation [legislature?], by very strong and guarded
language, from establishing banks, or borrowing money on the faith of the
territory. Is this the sacred right of self-government we hear vaunted so much?
No sir, the Nebraska bill finds no model in the acts of '50 or the Washington
act. It finds no model in any law from Adam till today. As Phillips [4] says of Napoleon, the Nebraska act
is grand, gloomy, and peculiar; wrapped in the solitude of its own originality;
without a model, and without a shadow upon the earth.
In the course of
his reply, Senator Douglas remarked, in substance, that he had always
considered this government was made for the white people and not for the
negroes. Why, in point of mere fact, I think so too. But in this remark of the
Judge, there is a significance, which I think is the key to the great mistake
(if there is any such mistake) which he has made in this Nebraska measure. It
shows that the Judge has no very vivid impression that the negro is a human;
and consequently has no idea that there can be any moral question in
legislating about him. In his view, the question of whether a new country shall
be slave or free, is a matter of as utter indifference, as it is whether his
neighbor shall plant his farm with tobacco, or stock it with horned cattle.
Now, whether this view is right or wrong, it is very certain that the great
mass of mankind take a totally different view. They consider slavery a great
moral wrong; and their feelings against it, is not evanescent, but eternal. It
lies at the very foundation of their sense of justice; and it cannot be trifled
with. It is a great and durable element of popular action, and, I think, no
statesman can safely disregard it.
Our Senator also
objects that those who oppose him in this measure do not entirely agree with
one another. He reminds me that in my firm adherence to the constitutional
rights of the slave States, I differ widely from others who are co-operating
with me in opposing the Nebraska bill; and he says it is not quite fair to
oppose him in this variety of ways. He should remember that he took us by
surprise---astounded us---by this measure. We were thunderstruck and stunned;
and we reeled and fell in utter confusion. But we rose each fighting, grasping
whatever he could first reach---a scythe---a pitchfork---a chopping axe, or a
butcher's cleaver. We struck in the direction of the sound; and we are rapidly
closing in upon him. He must not think to divert us from our purpose, by
showing us that our drill, our dress, and our weapons, are not entirely perfect
and uniform. When the storm shall be past, he shall find us still Americans; no
less devoted to the continued Union and prosperity of the country than
heretofore.
Finally, the
Judge invokes against me, the memory of Clay and of Webster. They were great
men; and men of great deeds. But where have I assailed them? For what is it,
that their life-long enemy, shall now make profit, by assuming to defend them
against me, their life-long friend? I go against the repeal of the Missouri
compromise; did they ever go for it? They went for the compromise of 1850; did
I ever go against them? They were greatly devoted to the Union; to the small
measure of my ability, was I ever less so? Clay and Webster were dead before
this question arose; by what authority shall our Senator say they would espouse
his side of it, if alive? Mr. Clay was the leading spirit in making the
Missouri compromise; is it very credible that if now alive, he would take the
lead in the breaking of it? The truth is that some support from whigs is now a
necessity with the Judge, and for thus it is, that the names of Clay and
Webster are now invoked. His old friends have deserted him in such numbers as
to leave too few to live by. He came to his own, and his own received him not,
and Lo! he turns unto the Gentiles.
A word now as to
the Judge's desperate assumption that the compromises of '50 had no connection
with one another; that Illinois came into the Union as a slave state, and some
other similar ones. This is no other than a bold denial of the history of the
country. If we do not know that the Compromises of '50 were dependent on each
other; if we do not know that Illinois came into the Union as a free state---we
do not know any thing. If we do not know these things, we do not know that we
ever had a revolutionary war, or such a chief as Washington. To deny these
things is to deny our national axioms, or dogmas, at least; and it puts an end
to all argument. If a man will stand up and assert, and repeat, and re-assert,
that two and two do not make four, I know nothing in the power of argument that
can stop him. I think I can answer the Judge so long as he sticks to the
premises; but when he flies from them, I can not work an argument into the
consistency of a maternal gag, and actually close his mouth with it. In such a
case I can only commend him to the seventy thousand answers just in from
Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana.
Annotation
[1]
Illinois Journal, October 21, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 1854.
[2]
Lincoln later authorized correction of this statement; it was not a condition
of the deed. See Lincoln to John L. Scripps, June 16, 1860, and to James O.
Putnam, September 13, 1860, infra.
[3]
Lincoln seems to be personifying here; otherwise, omission of ``the'' would not
have been consistent in this and succeeding references in this paragraph. Editorials
in Illinois newspapers prior to this speech refer to the villain ``Nebraska
Bill'' as a person, indicating a common usage during the campaign.
[4]
Charles Phillips, famed British orator, to whose oration The Character of
Napoleon. . . . (1817) Lincoln probably refers.
Source: Basler, Collected
Works, Vol. II, pp. 247-283. [Downloaded
4/5/2015 from http://quod.lib.umich.edu/l/lincoln/.]