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Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 10 (search)
dge before whom Mr. Garrison was arraigned, at the jail, the next day after the mob, is gone; the Sheriff who rode with him to the jail is gone; the city journals have changed hands, being more than once openly bought and sold. The editor of the Atlas, whose zeal in the cause of mob violence earned it the honor of giving its name to the day,--the Atlas mob many called it,--is gone; many of the prominent actors in that scene, twenty years ago, have passed away; the most eloquent of those whose Atlas mob many called it,--is gone; many of the prominent actors in that scene, twenty years ago, have passed away; the most eloquent of those whose voices cried Havoc! at Faneuil Hall has gone,--Mr. Otis has his wish, that the grave might close over him before it closed over the Union, which God speed in his good time;--but the same principle fills these same halls, as fresh and vital today, as self-fixed and resolute to struggle against pulpit and press, against wealth and majorities, against denunciation and unpopularity, and certain in the end to set its triumphant foot alike on man and everything that man has made. Here stands to-d