Writings of Abraham Lincoln, the — Volume 3: the Lincoln-Douglas debates eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about Writings of Abraham Lincoln, the — Volume 3.

Writings of Abraham Lincoln, the — Volume 3: the Lincoln-Douglas debates eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about Writings of Abraham Lincoln, the — Volume 3.

He tries to persuade us that there must be a variety in the different institutions of the States of the Union; that that variety necessarily proceeds from the variety of soil, climate, of the face of the country, and the difference in the natural features of the States.  I agree to all that.  Have these very matters ever produced any difficulty amongst us?  Not at all.  Have we ever had any quarrel over the fact that they have laws in Louisiana designed to regulate the commerce that springs from the production of sugar?  Or because we have a different class relative to the production of flour in this State?  Have they produced any differences?  Not at all.  They are the very cements of this Union.  They don’t make the house a house divided against itself.  They are the props that hold up the house and sustain the Union.

But has it been so with this element of slavery?  Have we not always had quarrels and difficulties over it?  And when will we cease to have quarrels over it?  Like causes produce like effects.  It is worth while to observe that we have generally had comparative peace upon the slavery question, and that there has been no cause for alarm until it was excited by the effort to spread it into new territory.  Whenever it has been limited to its present bounds, and there has been no effort to spread it, there has been peace.  All the trouble and convulsion has proceeded from efforts to spread it over more territory.  It was thus at the date of the Missouri Compromise.  It was so again with the annexation of Texas; so with the territory acquired by the Mexican war; and it is so now.  Whenever there has been an effort to spread it, there has been agitation and resistance.  Now, I appeal to this audience (very few of whom are my political friends), as national men, whether we have reason to expect that the agitation in regard to this subject will cease while the causes that tend to reproduce agitation are actively at work?  Will not the same cause that produced agitation in 1820, when the Missouri Compromise was formed, that which produced the agitation upon the annexation of Texas, and at other times, work out the same results always?  Do you think that the nature of man will be changed, that the same causes that produced agitation at one time will not have the same effect at another?

This has been the result so far as my observation of the slavery question and my reading in history extends.  What right have we then to hope that the trouble will cease,—­that the agitation will come to an end,—­until it shall either be placed back where it originally stood, and where the fathers originally placed it, or, on the other hand, until it shall entirely master all opposition?  This is the view I entertain, and this is the reason why I entertained it, as Judge Douglas has read from my Springfield speech.

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Writings of Abraham Lincoln, the — Volume 3: the Lincoln-Douglas debates from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.