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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 3: the Clerical appeal.—1837. (search)
ntially reproduced, without quotation marks, from the New York nation (32.264); but the present writer can plead, with Moliere, Je reprends mon bien ou je le trouve. Of this mob every citizen of Boston and its vicinity must have been reminded when the news came—not as now by telegraph It reached Boston on the forenoon of Sunday, Nov. 19, 1837 (Lib. 7.191).—of Lovejoy's fate. Only a few days before, and in partial reference to the previous destruction of the Observer's presses, Alexander H. Everett, The elder and abler brother of Gov. Edward Everett, already distinguished in the diplomatic service of the country, as an original writer of several works, and more recently as editor of the North American Review. He was at this time a candidate for Congress from the Dorchester (Mass.) district, and was responding to the catechism which the abolitionists had invented for politicians. warning his fellow-electors that the right of free discussion is not only endangered, but, for the