William Lloyd Garrison eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about William Lloyd Garrison.

William Lloyd Garrison eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about William Lloyd Garrison.

But the scene had shifted from Boston to Bennington, and with the young reformer goes also his plan of campaign for anti-slavery work.  The committee of twenty, now nineteen since his departure, slumbered and slept in the land of benevolent intentions, a practical illustration of Lundy’s pungent saying, that “philanthropists are the slowest creatures breathing.  They think forty times before they act.”  The committee never acted, but its one member in Vermont did act, and that promptly and powerfully as shall shortly appear.  Garrison had gone to Bennington to edit the Journal of the Times in the interest of the reelection of John Quincy Adams to the Presidency.  For this object he was engaged as editor of the paper.  What he was engaged to do he performed faithfully and ably, but along with his fulfillment of his contract with the friends of Mr. Adams, he carried the one which he had made with humanity likewise.  In his salutatory he outlined his intentions in this regard thus:  “We have three objects in view, which we shall pursue through life, whether in this place or elsewhere—­namely, the suppression of intemperance and its associate vices, the gradual emancipation of every slave in the republic, and the perpetuity of national peace.  In discussing these topics what is wanting in vigor shall be made up in zeal.”  From the issue of that first number if the friends of Adams had no cause to complain of the character of his zeal and vigor in their service, neither had the friends of humanity.  What he had proposed doing in Massachusetts as a member of the anti-slavery committee of twenty, he performed with remarkable energy and success in Vermont.  It was to obtain signatures not by the hundred to a petition for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, but by the thousands, and that from all parts of the State.  He sent copies of the petition to every postmaster in Vermont with the request that he obtain signatures in his neighborhood.  Through his exertions a public meeting of citizens of Bennington was held and indorsed the petition.  The plan for polling the anti-slavery sentiment of the State worked admirably.  The result was a monster petition with 2,352 names appended.  This he forwarded to the seat of Government.  It was a powerful prayer, but as to its effect, Garrison had no delusions.  He possessed even then singularly clear ideas as to how the South would receive such petitions, and of the course which it would pursue to discourage their presentation.  He was no less clear as to how the friends of freedom ought to carry themselves under the circumstances.  In the Journal of the Times of November, 1828, he thus expressed himself:  “It requires no spirit of prophecy to predict that it (the petition) will create great opposition.  An attempt will be made to frighten Northern ‘dough-faces’ as in case of the Missouri question.  There will be an abundance of furious declamation, menace, and taunt.  Are we, therefore, to approach the subject timidly—­with

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William Lloyd Garrison from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.