Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

But it is said that we shall throw away our votes, and that our opposition will fail.  Sir! no honest, earnest effort in a good cause ever fails.  It may not be crowned with the applause of men; it may not seem to touch the goal of immediate worldly success, which is the end and aim of so much of life.  But still it is not lost.  It helps to strengthen the weak with new virtue; to arm the irresolute with proper energy; to animate all with devotion to duty, which in the end conquers all.  Fail!  Did the martyrs fail, when with their precious blood they sowed the seed of the Church?  Did the discomfited champions of Freedom fail, who have left those names in history which can never die?  Did the three hundred Spartans fail, when, in the narrow pass, they did not fear to brave the innumerable Persian hosts, whose very arrows darkened the sun?  No!  Overborne by numbers, crushed to earth, they have left an example which is greater far than any victory.  And this is the least we can do.  Our example shall be the source of triumph hereafter.  It will not be the first time in history that the hosts of Slavery have outnumbered the champions of Freedom.  But where is it written that Slavery finally prevailed.

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Returning to our forefathers for our principles, let us borrow, also, something of their courage and union.  Let us summon to our sides the majestic forms of those civil heroes, whose firmness in council was equalled only by the firmness of Washington in war.  Let us listen again to the eloquence of the elder Adams, animating his associates in Congress to independence:  let us hang anew upon the sententious wisdom of Franklin; let us be enkindled, as were the men of other days, by the fervid devotion to Freedom, which flamed from the heart of Jefferson.  Deriving instruction from our enemies, let us also be taught by the Slave Power.  The two hundred thousand slaveholders are always united in purpose.  Hence their strength.  Like arrows in a quiver, they cannot be broken.  The friends of Freedom have thus far been divided. Union, then, must be our watchword,—­union, among men of all parties.  By such a union we shall consolidate an opposition which must prevail.

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From a Speech, September 16, 1863.

=_98._= OUR FOREIGN RELATIONS.

It only remains that the Republic should lift itself to the height of its great duties.  War is hard to bear,—­with its waste, its pains, its wounds, its funerals.  But in this war we have not been choosers.  We have been challenged to the defence of our country, and in this sacred cause, to crush Slavery.  There is no alternative.  Slavery began the combat, staking its life, and determined to rule or die.  That we may continue freemen there must be no slaves; so that our own security is linked with the redemption of a race.  Blessed lot, amidst the harshness of war, to wield the arms and deal the blows under which the monster will surely fall!

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Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.