who voted for me for United States Senator in 1855,
after the election of 1854. They were pledged
to certain things here at home, and were determined
to have pledges from me; and if he will find any of
these persons who will tell him anything inconsistent
with what I say now, I will resign, or rather retire
from the race, and give him no more trouble.
The plain truth is this: At the introduction
of the Nebraska policy, we believed there was a new
era being introduced in the history of the Republic,
which tended to the spread and perpetuation of slavery.
But in our opposition to that measure we did not agree
with one another in everything. The people in
the north end of the State were for stronger measures
of opposition than we of the central and southern
portions of the State, but we were all opposed to
the Nebraska doctrine. We had that one feeling
and that one sentiment in common. You at the
north end met in your conventions and passed your
resolutions. We in the middle of the State and
farther south did not hold such conventions and pass
the same resolutions, although we had in general a
common view and a common sentiment. So that these
meetings which the Judge has alluded to, and the resolutions
he has read from, were local, and did not spread over
the whole State. We at last met together in 1886,
from all parts of the State, and we agreed upon a
common platform. You, who held more extreme notions,
either yielded those notions, or, if not wholly yielding
them, agreed to yield them practically, for the sake
of embodying the opposition to the measures which
the opposite party were pushing forward at that time.
We met you then, and if there was anything yielded,
it was for practical purposes. We agreed then
upon a platform for the party throughout the entire
State of Illinois, and now we are all bound, as a
party, to that platform.
And I say here to you, if any one expects of me—in
case of my election—that I will do anything
not signified by our Republican platform and my answers
here to-day, I tell you very frankly that person will
be deceived. I do not ask for the vote of any
one who supposes that I have secret purposes or pledges
that I dare not speak out. Cannot the Judge be
satisfied? If he fears, in the unfortunate case
of my election, that my going to Washington will enable
me to advocate sentiments contrary to those which
I expressed when you voted for and elected me, I assure
him that his fears are wholly needless and groundless.
Is the Judge really afraid of any such thing?
I’ll tell you what he is afraid of. He
is afraid we’ll all pull together. This
is what alarms him more than anything else. For
my part, I do hope that all of us, entertaining a
common sentiment in opposition to what appears to us
a design to nationalize and perpetuate slavery, will
waive minor differences on questions which either
belong to the dead past or the distant future, and
all pull together in this struggle. What are your
sentiments? If it be true that on the ground