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id Gerrit Smith write to Ms. July 18, 1854. Mr. Garrison: I have acquired no new hope of the peaceful termination of slavery by coming to Washington. I go home more discouraged than ever. Mr. Smith had been elected to Congress in the fall of 1852 (Lib. 22: 163, [182]). He was now going home for good, having resigned on account of his health. Giddings, Chase, J. R. Giddings. S. P. Chase. etc. are full of hope, but I am yet to see that there is a North. Well did Lysander Spooner write to t and nobody. . . . This evening I am going with the Gibbonses to see some spiritual manifestations. See Mr. Garrison's account of these in Lib. 24: 34. The impersonations were of Isaac T. Hopper (father of Mrs. Abby H. Gibbons), deceased in 1852, and of Jesse Hutchinson (one of the famous singers), deceased in 1853. Various articles in the room were displaced or concealed. Jesse beat a march very true, and also beat time to tunes sung by the company; and, at Mr. Garrison's request, held
eriment. It succeeded beyond all expectation. I spoke precisely two hours, and was continually applauded throughout. Not a note of disapprobation was heard-yet I spared nothing and nobody. . . . This evening I am going with the Gibbonses to see some spiritual manifestations. See Mr. Garrison's account of these in Lib. 24: 34. The impersonations were of Isaac T. Hopper (father of Mrs. Abby H. Gibbons), deceased in 1852, and of Jesse Hutchinson (one of the famous singers), deceased in 1853. Various articles in the room were displaced or concealed. Jesse beat a march very true, and also beat time to tunes sung by the company; and, at Mr. Garrison's request, held the latter's foot down and rapped under it vibratingly, and then patted his right hand held between his knees—all other hands being on the table. The medium was Mrs. Leah Brown, one of the Fox sisters. . . . The Tabernacle lecture was an excellent exposition of the Lib. 24.29. sanity, logic, and moderation of the
Chapter 14: the Nebraska Bill.—1854. The abrogation of the Missouri Compromise produces a powerful reaction at the North, by which theng the Constitution on the Fourth of July. The Civil War began in 1854 with the passage of the Lib. 24.82. Nebraska Bill. By this measurerate, and the New England clergy to Lib. 24.33, 35; Ms. Feb. (18?), 1854, Mrs. Stowe to W. L. G. Lib. 24:[42], 57. come out in a petition morne feels that the Fugitive Slave Law was a weakener of resistance in 1854, since it afforded a satisfying scapegoat to outraged Northern feelit morning it was published entire in that paper, occupying Feb. 15, 1854. more than four columns of the smallest type. Was not that marvellol defeat which this party inflicted on them at the fall elections of 1854 really inured to their great and sudden Lib. 24.182. advantage in t The Know-Nothing Massachusetts Legislature elected sweepingly in 1854 was, as Mr. Garrison remarked (Lib. 25.86), the most democratic know
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