I deny, sir, this charge, and call for the proof;
it is gratuitous, uncalled for, and unjust towards
my fellow citizens. This is the language of a
stricken conscience, seeking for the palliation of
its own acts by charging guilt upon others. It
is the language of those who, failing in argument,
endeavor to cast suspicion upon the character of their
opponents, in order to draw public attention from themselves.
It is the language of disguise and concealment, and
not that of fair and honorable investigation, the
object of which is truth. I again put in a broad
denial to this charge, that any portion of these petitioners,
whom I represent, seek to excite one portion of the
country against another; and without proof I cannot
admit that the assertion of the honorable Senator
establishes the fact. It is but opinion, and naked
assertion only. The Senator complains that the
means and views of the abolitionists are not confined
to securing the right of petition only; no, they resort
to other means, he affirms, to the BALLOT BOX; and
if that fail, says the Senator, their next appeal
will be to the bayonet. Sir, no man, who is an
American in feeling and in heart, but ought to repel
this charge instantly, and without any reservation
whatever, that if they fail at the ballot box they
will resort to the bayonet. If such a fratricidal
course should ever be thought of in our country, it
will not be by those who seek redress of wrongs, by
exercising the right of petition, but by those only
who deny that right to others, and seek to usurp the
whole power of the Government. If the ballot box
fail them, the bayonet may be their resort, as mobs
and violence now are. Does the Senator believe
that any portion of the honest yeomanry of the country
entertain such thoughts? I hope he does not.
If thoughts of this kind exist, they are to be found
in the hearts of aspirants to office, and their adherents,
and none others. Who, sir, is making this question
a political affair? Not the petitioners.
It was the slaveholding power which first made this
move. I have noticed for some time past that
many of the public prints in this city, as well as
elsewhere, have been filled with essays against abolitionists
for exercising the rights of freemen.
Both political parties, however, have courted them
in private and denounced them in public, and both
have equally deceived them. And who shall dare
say that an abolitionist has no right to carry his
principles to the ballot box? Who fears the
ballot box? The honest in heart, the lover of
our country and its institutions? No, sir!
It is feared by the tyrant; he who usurps power, and
seizes upon the liberty of others; he, for one, fears
the ballot box. Where is the slave to party in
this country who is so lost to his own dignity, or
so corrupted by interest or power, that he does not,
or will not, carry his principles and his judgment
into the ballot box? Such an one ought to have
the mark of Cain in his forehead, and sent to labor