and I dared to suggest to him that there was an implied
promise that when he investigated it he would make
known the result. I dared to suggest to the Judge
that he could not expect to be quite clear of suspicion
of that fraud, for since the time that promise was
made he had been with those friends, and had not kept
his promise in regard to the investigation and the
report upon it. I am not a very daring man, but
I dared that much, Judge, and I am not much scared
about it yet. When the Judge says he would n’t
have believed of Abraham Lincoln that he would have
made such an attempt as that he reminds me of the
fact that he entered upon this canvass with the purpose
to treat me courteously; that touched me somewhat.
It sets me to thinking. I was aware, when it
was first agreed that Judge Douglas and I were to
have these seven joint discussions, that they were
the successive acts of a drama, perhaps I should say,
to be enacted, not merely in the face of audiences
like this, but in the face of the nation, and to some
extent, by my relation to him, and not from anything
in myself, in the face of the world; and I am anxious
that they should be conducted with dignity and in
the good temper which would be befitting the vast
audiences before which it was conducted. But when
Judge Douglas got home from Washington and made his
first speech in Chicago, the evening afterward I made
some sort of a reply to it. His second speech
was made at Bloomington, in which he commented upon
my speech at Chicago and said that I had used language
ingeniously contrived to conceal my intentions, or
words to that effect. Now, I understand that this
is an imputation upon my veracity and my candor.
I do not know what the Judge understood by it, but
in our first discussion, at Ottawa, he led off by charging
a bargain, somewhat corrupt in its character, upon
Trumbull and myself,—that we had entered
into a bargain, one of the terms of which was that
Trumbull was to Abolitionize the old Democratic party,
and I (Lincoln) was to Abolitionize the old Whig party;
I pretending to be as good an old-line Whig as ever.
Judge Douglas may not understand that he implicated
my truthfulness and my honor when he said I was doing
one thing and pretending another; and I misunderstood
him if he thought he was treating me in a dignified
way, as a man of honor and truth, as he now claims
he was disposed to treat me. Even after that time,
at Galesburgh, when he brings forward an extract from
a speech made at Chicago and an extract from a speech
made at Charleston, to prove that I was trying to
play a double part, that I was trying to cheat the
public, and get votes upon one set of principles at
one place, and upon another set of principles at another
place,—I do not understand but what he
impeaches my honor, my veracity, and my candor; and
because he does this, I do not understand that I am
bound, if I see a truthful ground for it, to keep
my hands off of him. As soon as I learned that
Judge Douglas was disposed to treat me in this way,