登陆注册
5266100000038

第38章 Chapter XIII. The Illinois Campaign.(1)

Congress adjourned on June 16th and Douglas, after spending a few days in New York, returned to Chicago. Meanwhile the people of Illinois had awakened to great political activity. On April 21st the regular Democratic Convention was held at Springfield and without opposition passed a resolution endorsing his candidacy for re-election. On June 9th the "Administration Democracy," consisting of the Federal office holders and those democrats who condemned his anti-Lecompton battle, held a Convention at Springfield, the purpose of which was to divide the party and insure his defeat. On the 17th the Republicans held their Convention at Springfield and chose Lincoln as their candidate for United States Senator.

The nomination of Lincoln was not an accident. He was prepared to accept it in a speech that should serve as the text of his campaign and was destined to great fame in after years. Against the resolve of his friends he announced the dangerous doctrine that the Government could not endure permanently half slave and half free. "A house divided against itself cannot stand." He did not expect the Union to be dissolved or the house to fall, but that it would cease to be divided. "Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the States, old as well as new, North as well as South."The repeal of the Missouri Compromise and the establishment of squatter sovereignty was a great step towards the nationalization of slavery. This was followed by the Dred Scott decision forbidding Congress to interfere with it in the Territories. All the legislation of Congress had carefully reserved a place for this expected decision. Douglas had hinted it in the Senate long before it was announced. Pierce and Buchanan had proclaimed it before the Judges. "We cannot absolutely know that all these exact adaptations are the result of preconcert. But when we see a lot of framed timbers, different portions of which we know have been gotten out at different times and different place, and by different workmen,--Stephen, Franklin, Roger and James, for instance,--and when we see these timbers all joined together and see they exactly make the frame of a house or mill, all the tenons and mortises exactly fitting, * * * * * we find it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James all understood one another from the beginning and all worked upon a common plan or draft drawn up before the first blow was struck."He repelled the suggestion made in some quarters that the Republicans ought to cease their fight on Douglas and rally to his support in his contest with the slavery propagandists. He reminded them that the very essence of Republican faith was hostility to slavery, while Douglas frankly declared that he did not care whether it was voted up or voted down. The cause must be entrusted to those whose hearts were in the work and who did care for the result.

On the 9th of July Douglas returned to Chicago and received a royal welcome. A special train loaded with prominent citizens was dispatched to meet him. On his arrival he was greeted with tumultuous applause. He addressed the vast multitude from the balcony of the Tremont House. Thirty thousand people are said to have gathered to hear him. He was profoundly pleased by this splendid ovation so strikingly in contrast with the reception four years before, when his neighbors refused even to hear him in defense of his course. Among the distinguished visitors on the speakers' stand sat Lincoln.

After thanking his audience for the enthusiastic reception, he plunged into the subject then uppermost in the public mind by rehearsing his relation to the whole Kansas problem. He reminded them of his early and consistent devotion to popular sovereignty, which had been so utterly outraged by the Lecompton Constitution. He assured his hearers, however, that his opposition to that Constitution arose from no sentimental morality and bore no relation to the ethics of slavery. He insisted, not that it be good or just, but that it be submitted to a vote of the settlers.

He then addressed himself to Lincoln's Springfield speech. He attacked his extreme doctrines with characteristic adroitness.

Lincoln's speech was of doubtful prudence as a campaign argument.

It really foreboded civil war or a peaceful dissolution of the Union. While this alternative was, perhaps, inevitable, political expediency forbade its avowal. Douglas declared the necessary result of his philosophy to be a war of sections, a war of the North against the South, of the free States against the slave States, to be continued relentlessly until the one or the other should be subdued and all should either become free States or all become slave States. But this was not the true theory of the American Union. The States differed widely in soil, climate, resources, tastes and habits. Their laws and institutions were utterly unlike.

New Hampshire's laws were unfit for South Carolina; those of New York were not suited to the Pacific Coast. Uniformity in local and domestic affairs would be destructive of State rights, State sovereignty and personal liberty. Uniformity was the parent of despotism the world over. The only way of attaining Lincoln's proposed uniformity would be to abolish State legislatures, blot out State sovereignty and merge the States into one consolidated empire. But diversity, dissimilarity, variety in all their local and domestic institutions was the great safeguard of their liberties.

He insisted on reverently bowing to the Supreme Court as the authoritative expounder of the Constitution, rather than appealing from it to a tumultuous town meeting where constitutional questions arose. The Federal Government was founded on the white basis.

同类推荐
  • 一瓢医案

    一瓢医案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 沩山古梅冽禅师语录

    沩山古梅冽禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 剑关子益禅师语录

    剑关子益禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Hated Son

    The Hated Son

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 仁术便览

    仁术便览

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 我欲屠天

    我欲屠天

    无极大陆,大周皇朝衰败,七国征战无数年,家族、宗门林立,是时百家争鸣,无数强者幡然崛起,大陆乱,各族争霸,荒兽窥探,人族生灵涂炭。强者享天地封号,掌御众生;弱者命如萍草,无立锥之地。且看一代废柴少年,如何逆天崛起……
  • 愤怒之乡

    愤怒之乡

    那年秋天,我们五仓村成了一个愤怒的村庄,这都是由于我的姐姐杨小凤。我姐姐是个腼腆而不爱说话的姑娘,她和村子里其他的姑娘没什么两样,她们都在杨子彪的轴承厂上班。她身上有一股混合了香水和机油的味道,那股味道一到吃饭的时候就冒出来,直扑我的鼻子,为此,我没少和她吵嘴。吵归吵,我姐姐,仍然要在身上洒很多很多的劣质香水,以便把轴承厂的机油味掩盖住。我姐姐长得很白,稍微有一点情绪激动,她就爱脸红。但是那个秋天,她的脸始终是阴沉着的。我的姐姐,她年轻的生命在寒冷到来之前,提前进入了冬天。
  • 木兰奇女传

    木兰奇女传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伽利略:近代科学之父

    伽利略:近代科学之父

    《图说世界名人:伽利略(近代科学之父)》介绍了,伽利略·伽利莱,意大利物理学家、天文学家和哲学家,近代实验科学的先驱者。其成就包括改进望远镜,进行天文观测,以及支持哥白尼的日心说。当时,人们争相传颂:“哥伦布发现了新大陆,伽利略发现了新宇宙。”今天,史蒂芬·霍金说:“自然科学的诞生要归功于伽利略,他这方面的功劳大概无人能及。”
  • 渌水泱泱仙如月

    渌水泱泱仙如月

    乾坤四界,仙佛人鬼古神旧址,回望萧瑟为造新神,冥冥轮转妖魔现世,归容无依是男是女,禁忌子身弱蝶扶梅,白莲生心月下仙曲,泱泱鸣缠
  • 快穿系统王者归来众生退避

    快穿系统王者归来众生退避

    苏简是一个老实巴交的中医医师(至少表面上是这样),悬壶济世什么的,不存在的,她只救自己想救的人,只救该救之人,就是这么任性(?>ω<*?),某日因医患纠纷而殒命,从此遇上霸道系统,王者归来,众生避让,什么?_?有个妖孽自称她老公?从此妇唱夫随^O^小日子不要太滋润……
  • 抹布

    抹布

    被视为女人河的那条大河套因长年干涸而堆满了生活垃圾。葫芦镇的女人们失去了聚会的天堂。镇子上新生的一代放弃了父辈们的政治热情,三五个人聚在一起共谋国家大事的爱好和传统未能继承下来。没有人围坐在一起听老人讲“瞎话”——鬼怪故事了,至于以“放香屁”为标志的葫芦镇的民间文学早已无人问津了。他说,在他看来,葫芦镇只是一个“在”,而且“在在者的在中存在着”。他的话,除了伊十谁也不懂。
  • 玄界灵主

    玄界灵主

    一万多年前,他苏醒了,却被束缚,却有着整个世界都会颤抖的力量,一万年后,束缚解开,行走于世界每个角落。万年孤寂,谁又能懂,看着身边的人一个一个死去,却无能为力。曾选择过自杀,也一直在做,却怎么也死不了。他到底因何而生,存在的意义到底是什么?
  • 邪魅总裁娇媚妻

    邪魅总裁娇媚妻

    甜心系列一之《总裁的杀手甜心》"你是坠入人间的天使,是上天赐予我最珍贵的礼物。"男人用迷惑的眼神看着她,她为了这句话,脸红了。怀抱自己发誓要守护一生一世的爱人,男人相信爱情可以永永远远。她嘟着嘴,"如果我是一个杀手呢?"甜心系列二之《总裁的女佣甜心》"亲爱的,为什么家里又要招聘女佣了?"她好奇地看着招聘广告。"因为我舍不得你累着啊。"他真的不想半夜起来偷偷搞卫生了…"可是你招聘了女佣,我做什么啊?""做我一生的妻子就好。"甜心系列三之《狼少的通缉军火妻》"老大,大嫂炸了后院的网球场…"某人走进办公室,晃了晃手机。"再建一个让她炸。""老大,大嫂抢了我们对面的银行…"某人跑进办公室窗边,指着被抢的银行。"下次存多点钱让她抢。""老大,大嫂在挖黑泽家的祖墓…"某人直接坐在办公室,打着内线电话。"你去看看少什么赶紧让人搬进去,省得她不开心。"【邪魅总裁娇媚妻简介】"儿子,那个人怎么那么像你爹地啊"萧婷婷看着一群人拥着的邪魅男人,你们让一让可以不可以啊!欺负我人矮啊!萧婷婷一气愤往旁边的座椅上一站,总算看清楚了。"妈咪你不用站那么高,那确实是不要你和我们、你常和我们说的那个坏蛋爹地。"酷酷的萧唯君拿了瓶牛奶给妹妹喝。"哥哥,坏蛋爹地为什么不要我们"就着哥哥手上拿着的牛奶喝了起来,萧唯婷坐在小椅子上晃动自己的小腿。无意中遇见了你,就该问问当年你为什么离我而去,但是一定要首先声明没有你我们也能活得很快乐哦。虽然不能每天吃肉---吃多了肉会腻虽然不能住白宫那样的房子---我们家也蛮大的虽然我不够你有钱---我的账户也有好多个零虽然.
  • 蜀山仙侣传

    蜀山仙侣传

    陈年旧事引起新一代人之间的恩恩怨怨,谁知天赐良缘,配得才子佳人成双结对。事从此行,其中却隐藏着一个巨大的阴谋,姻缘之中难免一次次劫波厄难!这段情比金坚的爱情是否可以顶得住天昏地暗?这就要看主人公们的造化如何了。江湖恩怨,难了难断,修理还乱,甚至会惹火自焚!天下真的会永远太平么?江湖就真的永远不会有恩怨纷争了么?如果真的是这样的话,那天下不足称之为天下,也就更没有所谓的江湖了!因为,悲欢离合,情仇恩怨就是江湖!