home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1993-01-28 | 79.2 KB | 1,496 lines |
- 23 page printout
-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
- Contents of this file page
- BROOKLYN SPEECH. 1
- THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL 22
- **** ****
-
- This file, its printout, or copies of either
- are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
-
- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
-
- The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
-
- **** ****
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- 1880.
-
- LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: Years ago I made up my mind that there
- was no particular argument in slander. I made up my mind that for
- parties, as well as for individuals, honesty in the long-run is the
- best policy. I made up my mind that the people were entitled to
- know a man's honest thoughts, and I propose to-night to tell you
- exactly what I think. And it may be well enough, in the first
- place, for me to say that no party has a mortgage on me. I am the
- sole proprietor of myself. No party, no organization, has any deed
- of trust on what little brains I have, and as long as I can get my
- part of the common air I am going to tell my honest thoughts. One
- man in the right will finally get to be a majority. I am not going
- to say a word to-night that every Democrat here will not know is
- true, and, whatever he may say, I will compel him in his heart to
- give three cheers.
-
- In the first place, I wish to admit that during the war there
- were hundreds of thousands of patriotic Democrats. I wish to admit
- that if it had not been for the War Democrats of the North, we
- never would have put down the Rebellion. Let us be honest. I
- further admit that had it not been for other than War Democrats
- there never would have been a rebellion to put down. War Democrats!
- Why did we call them War Democrats? Did you ever hear anybody talk
- about a War Republican? We spoke of War Democrats to distinguish
- them from those Democrats who were in favor of peace upon any
- terms.
-
- I also wish to admit that the Republican party is not
- absolutely perfect. While I believe that it is the best party that
- ever existed. while I believe it has, within its organization, more
- heart, more brain, more patriotism than any other organization that
- ever existed beneath the sun, I still admit that it is not entirely
- perfect. I admit, in its great things, in its splendid efforts to
- preserve this nation, in its grand effort to keep our flag in
- heaven, in its magnificent effort to free four millions of slaves,
- in its great and sublime effort to save the financial honor of this
- Nation, I admit that it has made some mistakes. In its great effort
- to do right it has sometimes by mistake done wrong. And I also wish
- to admit that the great Democratic party, in its effort to get
- office has sometimes by mistake done right. You see that I am
- inclined to be perfectly fair.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 1
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- I am going with the Republican party because it is going my
- way; but if it ever turns to the right or left, I intend to go
- straight ahead.
-
- In every government there is. something that ought to be
- preserved, in every government there are many things that ought to
- be destroyed. Every good man, every patriot, every lover of the
- human race, wishes to preserve the good and destroy the bad; and
- every one in this audience who wishes to preserve the good will go
- with that section of our common country -- with that party in our
- country that he honestly believes will preserve the good and
- destroy the bad. It takes a great deal of trouble to raise a good
- Republican. It is a vast deal of labor. The Republican party is the
- fruit of all ages -- of self-sacrifice and devotion. The Republican
- party is born of every good thing that was ever done in this world.
- The Republican party is the result of all martyrdom, of all heroic
- blood shed for the right. It is the blossom and fruit of the great
- world's best endeavor. In order to make a Republican you have to
- have schoolhouses. You have to have newspapers and magazines. A
- good Republican is the best fruit of civilization, of all there is
- of intelligence, of art, of music and of song. If you want to make
- Democrats, let them alone. The Democratic party is the settlings of
- this country. Nobody hoes weeds. Nobody takes especial pains to
- raise dog-fennel, and yet it grows under the very hoof of travel.
- The seeds are sown by accident and gathered by chance. But if you
- want to raise wheat and corn you must plough the ground. You must
- defend and you must harvest the crop with infinite patience and
- toil. It is precisely that way -- if you want to raise a good
- Republican you must work, If you wish to raise a Democrat give him
- wholesome neglect. The Democratic party flatters the vices of
- mankind. That party says to the ignorant man, "You know enough." It
- says to the vicious man, "You are good enough."
-
- The Republican party says, "You must be better next year than
- you are this." A Republican takes a man by the collar and says,
- "You must do your best, you must climb the infinite hill of human
- progress as long as you live." Now and then one gets tired. He
- says, "I have climbed enough and so much better than I expected to
- do that I do not wish to travel any farther. Now and then one gets
- tired and lets go all hold, and he rolls down to the very bottom,
- and as he strikes the mud he springs upon his feet transfigured,
- and says: Hurrah for Hancock!"
-
- There are things in this Government that I wish to preserve,
- and there are things that I wish to destroy; and in order to
- convince you that you ought to go the way that I am going, it is
- only fair that I give to you my reasons. This is a Republic founded
- upon intelligence and the patriotism of the people, and in every
- Republic it is absolutely necessary that there should be free
- speech. Free speech is the gem of the human soul. Words are the
- bodies of thought, and liberty gives to those words wings, and the
- whole intellectual heavens are filled with light. In a Republic
- every individual tongue has a right to the general ear. In a
- Republic every man has the right to give his reasons for the course
- he pursues to all his fellow-citizens, and when you say that a man
- shall not speak, you also say that others shall not hear. When you
- say a man shall not express his honest thought you say his fellow-
- citizens shall be deprived of honest thoughts; for of what use is
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 2
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- it to allow the attorney for the defendant to address the jury if
- the jury has been bought? Of what use is it to allow the jury to
- bring in a verdict of "not guilty," if the defendant is to be hung
- by a mob? I ask you to-night, is not every solitary man here in
- favor of free speech? Is there a solitary Democrat here who dares
- say he is not in favor of free speech? In which part of this
- country are the lips of thought free -- in the South or in the
- North? Which section of our country can you trust the inestimable
- gem of free speech with? Can you trust it to the gentlemen of
- Mississippi or to the gentlemen of Massachusetts? Can you trust it
- to Alabama or to New York? Can you trust it to the South or can you
- trust it to the great and splendid North? Honor bright -- honor
- bright, is there any freedom of speech in the South? There never
- was and there is none to-night-and let me tell you why.
-
- They had the institution of human slavery in the South, which
- could not be defended at the bar of public reason. It was an
- institution that could not be defended in the high forum of human
- conscience. No man could stand there and defend the right to rob
- the cradle -- none to defend the right to sell the babe from the
- breast of the agonized mother -- none to defend the claim that
- lashes on a bare back are a legal tender for labor performed. Every
- man that lived upon the unpaid labor of another knew in his heart
- that he was a thief. And for that reason he did not wish to discuss
- that question. Thereupon the institution of slavery said, "You
- shall not speak; you shall not reason," and the lips of free
- thought were manacled. You know it. Every one of you. Every
- Democrat knows it as well as every Republican. There never was free
- speech in the South.
-
- And what has been the result? And allow me to admit right
- here, because I want to be fair. there are thousands and thousands
- of most excellent people in the South -- thousands of them. There
- are hundreds and hundreds of thousands there who would like to vote
- the Republican ticket. And whenever there is free speech there and
- whenever there is a free ballot there, they will vote the
- Republican ticket. I say again, there are hundreds of thousands of
- good people in the South; but the institution of human slavery
- prevented free speech, and it is a splendid fact in nature that you
- cannot put chains upon the limbs of others without putting
- corresponding manacles upon your own brain. When the South enslaved
- the negro, it also enslaved itself, and the result was an
- intellectual desert. No book has been produced, with one exception,
- that has added to the knowledge of mankind; no paper, no magazine,
- no poet, no philosopher, no philanthropist, was ever raised in that
- desert. Now and then some one protested against that infamous
- institution, and he came as near being a philosopher as the society
- in which he lived permitted. Why is it that New England, a rock-
- clad land, blossoms like a rose? Why is it that New York is the
- Empire State of the great Union? I will tell you. Because you have
- been permitted to trade in ideas. Because the lips of speech have
- been absolutely free for twenty years. We never had free speech in
- any State in this Union until the Republican party was born. That
- party was rocked in the cradle of intellectual liberty, and that is
- the reason I say it is the best party that ever existed in the
- wide, wide world. I want to preserve free speech, and, as an honest
- man, I look about me and I say, "How can I best preserve it?" By
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 3
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- giving it to the South or North; to the Democracy or to the
- Republican party? And I am bound, as an honest man, to say free
- speech is safest with its earliest defenders. Where is there such
- a thing as a Republican mob to prevent the expression of an honest
- thought? Where? The people of the South are allowed to come to the
- North; they are allowed to express their sentiments upon every
- stump in the great East, the great West, and in the great Middle
- States; they go to Maine, to Vermont, and to all our States, and
- they are allowed to speak, and we give them a respectful hearing,
- and the meanest thing we do is to answer their arguments.
-
- I say to-night that we ought to have the same liberty to
- discuss these questions in the South that Southerners have in the
- North. And I say more than that, the Democrats of the North ought
- to compel the Democrats of the South to treat the Republicans of
- the South as well as the Republicans of the North treat them. We
- treat the Democrats well in the North; we treat them like gentlemen
- in the North; and yet they go into partnership with the Democracy
- of the South, knowing that the Democracy of the South will not
- treat Republicans in that section with fairness. A Democrat ought
- to be ashamed of that.
-
- If my friends will not treat other people as well as the
- friends of the other people treat me, I'll swap friends.
-
- First, then, I am in favor of free speech, and I am going with
- that section of my country that believes in free speech; I am going
- with that party that has always upheld that sacred right. When you
- stop free speech, when you say that a thought shall die in the womb
- of the brain, -- why, it would have the same effect upon the
- intellectual world that to stop springs at their sources would have
- upon the physical world. Stop the springs at their sources and they
- cease to gurgle, the streams cease to murmur, and the great rivers
- cease rushing to the embrace of the sea. So you stop thought. Stop
- thought in the brain in which it is born, and theory dies; and the
- great ocean of knowledge to which all should be permitted to
- contribute, and from which all should be allowed to draw, becomes
- a vast desert of ignorance.
-
- I have always said, and I say again, that the more liberty
- there is given away, the more you have. I endeavor to be consistent
- in my life and action. I am a believer in intellectual liberty, and
- wherever the torch of knowledge burns the whole horizon is filled
- with a glorious halo. I am a free man. I would be less than a man
- if I did not wish to hand this flame to my child with the flame
- increased rather than diminished.
-
- Whom will we trust to take care of free speech? Let us
- consider and be honest with one another. The gem of the brain is
- the innocence of the soul.
-
- I am not only in favor of free speech, but I am also in favor
- of an absolutely honest ballot. There is only one emperor in this
- country; there is one czar; only one supreme crown and king, and
- that is the will, the legally expressed will of the majority. Every
- American citizen is a sovereign. The poorest and humblest may wear
- that crown, the beggar holds in his hand that scepter equally with
- the proudest and richest, and so far as his sovereignty is
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 4
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- concerned, the poorest American, he who earns but one dollar a day,
- has the same voice in controlling the destiny of the United States
- as the millionaire. The man who casts an illegal vote, the man who
- refuses to count a legal vote, poisons the fountain of power,
- poisons the springs of justice, and is a traitor to the only king
- in this land. The Government is upon the edge of Mexicanization
- through fraudulent voting. The ballot-box is the throne of America;
- the ballot-box is the ark of the covenant. Unless we see to it that
- every man who has a right to vote, votes, and unless we see to it
- that every honest vote is counted, the days of this Republic are
- numbered.
-
- When you suspect that a Congressman is not elected; when you
- suspect that a judge upon the bench holds his place by fraud, then
- the people will hold the law in contempt and will laugh at the
- decisions of courts, and then come revolution and chaos.
-
- It is the duty of every good man to see to it that the ballot-
- box is kept absolutely pure. It is the duty of every patriot,
- whether he is a Democrat or Republican -- and I want further to
- admit that I believe a large majority of Democrats are honest in
- their opinions, and I know that all Republicans must be honest in
- their opinions. It is the duty, then, of all honest men of both
- parties to see to it that only honest votes are cast and counted.
- Now, honor bright, which section of this Union can you trust the
- ballot-box with?
-
- Do you wish to trust Louisiana, or do you wish to trust
- Alabama that gave, in 1872, thirty-four thousand eight hundred and
- eighty-eight Republican majority and now gives ninety-two thousand
- Democratic majority? And of that ninety-two thousand majority,
- every one is a lie! A contemptible, infamous lie! Because if every
- voter had been allowed to vote, there would have been forty
- thousand Republican majority. Honor bright, can you trust it with
- the masked murderers who rode in the darkness of night to the hut
- of the freedman and shot him down, notwithstanding the supplication
- of his wife and the tears of his babe? Can you trust it to the men
- who since the close of our war have killed more men, simply because
- those men wished to vote, simply because they wished to exercise a
- right with which they had been clothed by the sublime heroism of
- the North -- who have killed more men than were killed on both
- sides in the Revolutionary war; than were killed on both sides
- during the War of 1812; than were killed on both sides in both
- wars? Can you trust them? Can you trust the gentlemen who invented
- the tissue ballot? Do you wish to put the ballot-box in the keeping
- of the shot-gun, of the White-Liners, of the Ku Klux? Do you wish
- to put the ballot-box in the keeping of men who openly swear that
- they will not be ruled by a majority of American citizens if a
- portion of that majority is made of black men? And I want to tell
- you right here, I like a black man who loves this country better
- than I do a white man who hates it. I think more of a black man who
- fought for our flag than for any white man who endeavored to tear
- it out of heaven
-
- I say, can you trust the ballot-box to the Democratic party?
- Read the history of the State of New York. Read the history of this
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 5
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- great and magnificent city -- the Queen of the Atlantic -- read her
- history and tell us whether you can implicitly trust Democratic
- returns? Honor bright!
-
- I am not only, then, for free speech, but I am for an honest
- ballot; and in order that you may have no doubt left upon your
- minds as to which party is in favor of an honest vote, I will call
- your attention to this striking fact. Every law that has been
- passed in every State of this Union for twenty long years, the
- object of which was to guard the American ballot-box, has been
- passed by the Republican party, and in every State where the
- Republican party has introduced such a bill for the purpose of
- making it a law; in every State where such a bill has been
- defeated, it has been defeated by the Democratic party. That ought
- to satisfy any reasonable man to satiety.
-
- I am not only in favor of free speech and an honest ballot,
- but I am in favor of collecting and disbursing the revenues of the
- United States. I want plenty of money to collect and pay the
- interest on our debt. I want plenty of money to pay our debt and to
- preserve the financial honor of the United States. I want money
- enough to be collected to pay pensions to widows and orphans and to
- wounded soldiers. And the question is, which section in this
- country can you trust to collect and disburse that revenue? Let us
- be honest about it. Which section can yon trust? In the last four
- years we have collected four hundred and sixty-eight million
- dollars of the internal revenue taxes. We have collected
- principally from taxes upon high wines and tobacco, four hundred
- and sixty-eight million dollars, and in those four years we have
- seized, libeled and destroyed in the Southern States three thousand
- eight hundred and seventy-four illicit distilleries. And during the
- same time the Southern people have shot to death twenty-five
- revenue officers and wounded fifty-five others, and the only
- offence that the wounded and dead committed was an honest effort
- to collect the revenues of this country. Recollect it -- don't you
- forget it. And in several Southern States to-day every revenue
- collector or officer connected with the revenue is furnished by the
- Internal Revenue Department with a breech-loading rifle and a pair
- of revolvers, simply for the purpose of collecting the revenue.
-
- I don't feel like trusting such people to collect the revenue
- of my Government.
-
- During the same four years we have arrested and have indicted
- seven thousand and eighty-four Southern Democrats for endeavoring
- to defraud the revenue of the United States. Recollect -- three
- thousand eight hundred and seventy-four distilleries seized.
- Twenty-five revenue officers killed, fifty-five wounded, and seven
- thousand and eighty-four Democrats arrested. Can we trust them?
-
- The State of Alabama in its last Democratic convention passed
- a resolution that no man should be tried in a Federal Court for a
- violation of the revenue laws -- that he should be tried in a State
- Court. Think of it -- he should be tried in a State Court! Let me
- tell you how it will come out if we trust the Southern States to
- collect this revenue. A couple of Methodist ministers had been
- holding a revival for a week, and at the end of the week one said
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 6
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- to the other that he thought it time to take up a collection. When
- the hat was returned he found in it pieces of slate-pencils and
- nails and buttons, but not a single solitary cent -- not one -- and
- his brother minister got up and looked at the contribution, and
- said, -- "Let us thank God!" And the owner of the hat said, "What
- for?" And the brother replied, "Because you got your hat back." If
- we trust the South we shan't get our hats back.
-
- I am next in favor of honest money. I am in favor of gold and
- silver, and paper with gold and silver behind it. I believe in
- silver, because it is one of the greatest of American products, and
- I am in favor of anything that will add to the value of an American
- product. But I want a silver dollar worth a gold dollar, even if
- you make it or have to make it four feet in diameter. No government
- can afford to be a clipper of coin. A great Republic cannot afford
- to stamp a lie upon silver or gold. Honest money, an honest people,
- an honest Nation. When our money is only worth eighty cents on the
- dollar, we feel twenty per cent. below par. When our money is good
- we feel good. When our money is at par, that is where we are. I am
- a profound believer in the doctrine that for nations as well as
- men, honesty is the best policy, always, everywhere, and forever.
-
- What section of this country, what party, will give us honest
- money -- honor bright -- honor bright? I have been told that during
- the war, we had plenty of money. I never saw it. I lived years
- without seeing a dollar. I saw promises for dollars, but not
- dollars. And the greenback, unless you have the gold behind it, is
- no more a dollar than a bill of fare is a dinner. You cannot make
- a paper dollar without taking a dollar's worth of paper. We must
- have paper that represents money. I want it issued by the
- Government, and I want behind every one of these dollars either a
- gold or silver dollar, so that every greenback under the flag can
- lift up its hand and sear, "I know that my redeemer liveth."
-
- When we were running into debt, thousands of people mistook
- that for prosperity, and when we began paying they regarded it as
- adversity. Of course we had plenty when we bought on credit. No
- man has ever starved when his credit was good, if there were no
- famine in that country. As long as we buy on credit we shall have
- enough. The trouble commences when the pay-day arrives. And I do
- not wonder that after the war thousands of people said, "Let us
- have another inflation." Which party said, "No, we must pay the
- promise made in war"? Honor bright! The Democratic party had once
- been a hard money party, but it drifted from its metallic moorings
- and floated off in the ocean of inflation, and you know it. They
- said, "Give us more money;" and every man that had bought on credit
- and owed a little something on what he had purchased, when the
- property went down commenced crying, or many of them did, for
- inflation. I understand it.
-
- A man, say, bought a piece of land for six thousand dollars;
- paid five thousand dollars on it; gave a mortgage for one thousand
- dollars, and suddenly, in 1873, found that the land would not pay
- the other thousand. The land had resumed, and then he said, looking
- lugubriously at his note and mortgage, "I want another inflation."
- And I never heard a man call for it that did not also say, "If it
- ever comes, and I don't unload, you may shoot me."
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 7
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- It was very much as it is sometimes in playing poker, and I
- make this comparison knowing that hardly a person here will
- understand it. I have been told that along toward morning the man
- that is ahead suddenly says, "I have got to go home. The fact is,
- my wife is not well." And the fellow who is behind says, "Let us
- have another deal; I have my opinion of the fellow that will jump
- a game." And so it was in the hard times of 1873. They said: "Give
- us another deal; let us get our driftwood back into the center of
- the stream." And they cried out for more money. But the Republican
- party said -- "We do want more money, but not more promises. We
- have got to pay this first, and if we start out again upon that
- wide sea of promise we may never touch the shore."
-
- A thousand theories were born of want; a thousand theories
- were born of the fertile brain of trouble; and these, people said,
- "After all, what is money? Why, it is nothing but a measure of
- value, just the same as a half bushel or yardstick." True; and
- consequently it makes no difference whether your half bushel is of
- wood or gold or silver or paper; and it makes no difference whether
- your yardstick is gold or paper. But the trouble about that
- statement is this: A half bushel is not a measure of value; it is
- a measure of quantity, and it measures rubies, diamonds and pearls
- precisely the same as corn and wheat. The yardstick is not a
- measure of value; it is a measure of length, and it measures lace
- worth one hundred dollars a yard precisely as it does cent tape.
- And another reason why it makes no difference to the purchaser
- whether the half bushel is gold or silver, or whether the yardstick
- is gold or paper, you do not buy the yardstick; you do not get the
- half bushel in the trade. And if it were so with money -- if the
- people that had the money at the start of the trade, kept it after
- the consummation of the bargain -- then it would not make any
- difference what you made your money of. But the trouble is the
- money changes hands. And let me say to-night, money is a thing --
- it is a product of nature -- and you can no more make a "fiat"
- dollar than you can make a fiat star. I am in favor of honest
- money. Free speech is the brain of the Republic; an honest ballot
- is the breath of its life, and honest money is the blood that
- courses through its veins.
-
- If I am fortunate enough to leave a dollar when I die, I want
- it to be a good one. -- I do not wish to have it turn to ashes in
- the hands of widowhood, or become a Democratic broken promise. in
- the pocket of the orphan; I want it money. I want money that will
- outlive the Democratic party. They told us -- and they were honest
- about it -- they said, "When we have plenty of money, we are
- prosperous." And I said, "When we are prosperous, we have plenty of
- money." When we are prosperous, then we have credit, and credit
- inflates the currency. Whenever a man buys a pound of sugar and
- says, "Charge it," he inflates the currency; whenever he gives his
- note, he inflates the currency; whenever his word takes the place
- of money, he inflates the currency. The consequence is that when we
- are prosperous, credit takes the place of money, and we have what
- we call "plenty."
-
- But you cannot increase prosperity simply by using promises to
- pay. Suppose you should come to a river that was about dry, so dry
- that the turtle had to help the catfish over the shoals, and there
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 8
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- you would see the ferryboat, and the gentleman who kept the ferry,
- up on the sand, high and dry, and the cracks all opening in the
- sun, filled with loose oakum, looking like an average Democratic
- mouth listening to a constitutional argument, and you should say to
- him, "How is business?" And he would say, "Dull." And then you
- would say to him, "Now, what you want is more boat." He would
- probably answer, "If I had a little more water I could get along
- with this one."
-
- Suppose I next came to a man running a railroad, complaining
- of hard times. "Why," said he, "I did a million dollars' worth of
- business the first year and used five hundred thousand dollars'
- worth of grease. The second year I did five hundred thousand
- dollars' worth of business and used four hundred thousand dollars'
- worth of grease." "Well," said I, "the reason your road fell off
- was because you did not use enough grease."
-
- But I want to be fair, and I wish to-night to return my thanks
- to the Democratic party. You did a great and splendid work. You
- went all over the United States and you said upon every stump that
- a greenback was better than gold. You said, "We have at last found
- the money of the poor man. Gold loves the rich; gold haunts banks
- and safes and vaults; but we have money that will go around
- inquiring for a man that is dead broke. We have finally found money
- that will stay in a pocket with holes in it." But, after all, do
- you know that money is the most social thing in this world? If a
- fellow has one dollar in his pocket, and he meets another with two,
- do you know that dollar is absolutely homesick until it gets where
- the other two are? And yet the Greenbackers told us that they had
- finally invented money that would be the poor man's friend. They
- said, "It is better than gold, better than silver," and they got so
- many men to believe it that when we resumed and said, "Here is your
- gold for your greenback," the fellows who had the greenback said,
- We don't want it. The greenbacks are good enough for us." Do you
- know, if they had wanted it we could not have given it to them? And
- so I return my thanks to the Greenback party. But allow me to say
- in this connection, the days of their usefulness have passed
- forever.
-
- Now, I am not foolish enough to claim that the Republican
- party resumed. I am not silly enough to say that John Sherman
- resumed. But I will tell you what I do say. I say that every man
- who raised a bushel of corn or a bushel of wheat or a pound of beef
- or pork for sale helped to resume. I say that the gentle rain and
- the loving dew helped to resume. The soil of the United States
- impregnated by the loving sun helped to resume. The men that dug
- the coal and the iron and the silver and the copper and the gold
- helped to resume. And the men upon whose foreheads fell the light
- of furnaces helped to resume. And the sailors who fought with the
- waves of the seas helped to resume.
-
- I admit to-night that the Democrats earned their share of the
- money to resume with. All I claim is that the Republican party
- furnished the honesty to pay it over. That is what I claim; and the
- Republican party set the day, and the Republican party worked to
- the promise. That is what I say. And had it not been for the
- Republican party this Nation would have been financially
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 9
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- dishonored. I am for honest money, and I am for the payment of
- every dollar of our debt, and so is every Democrat now, I take it.
- But what did you say a little while ago? Did you say we could
- resume? No; you swore we could not, and you swore our bonds would
- be worthless as the withered leaves of winter. And now when a
- Democrat goes to England and sees an American four per cent. quoted
- at one hundred and ten he kind of swells up, and says: "That's the
- kind of man I am." In that country he pretends he was a Republican
- in this. And I do not blame him. I do not begrudge him enjoying
- respectability when away from home. The Republican party is
- entitled to the credit for keeping this Nation grandly and
- splendidly honest. I say, the Republican party is entitled to the
- credit of preserving the honor of this Nation.
-
- In 1873 came the crash, and all the languages of the world
- cannot describe the agonies suffered by the American people from
- 1873 to 1879. A man who thought he was a millionaire came to
- poverty; he found his stocks and bonds ashes in the paralytic hand
- of old age. Men who expected to live all their lives in the
- sunshine of joy found themselves beggars and paupers. The great
- factories were closed, the workmen were demoralized, and the roads
- of the United States were filled with tramps. In the hovel of the
- poor and the palace of the rich came the serpent of temptation and
- whispered in the American ear the terrible word Repudiation." But
- the Republican party said, No; we will pay every dollar. No; we
- have started toward the shining goal of resumption and we never
- will turn back." And the Republican party struggled until it had
- the happiness of seeing upon the broad shining forehead of American
- labor the words "Financial Honor."
-
- The Republican party struggled until every paper promise was
- as good as gold. And the moment we got back to gold then we
- commenced to rise again. We could not jump until our feet touched
- something that they could be pressed against. And from that moment
- to this we have been going, going, going higher and higher, more
- prosperous every hour. And now they say, "Let us have a change."
- When I am sick I want a change; when I am poor I want a change; and
- if I were a Democrat I would have a personal change. We are
- prosperous to-day, and must keep so. We are back to gold and
- silver. Let us stay there; and let us stay with the party that
- brought us there.
-
- Now, I am not only in favor of free speech and an honest
- ballot-box and an honest collection of the revenue of the United
- States, and an honest money, but I am in favor of the idea, of the
- great and splendid truth, that this is a Nation one and
- indivisible. I deny that we are a confederacy bound together with
- ropes of cloud and chains of mist. This is a Nation, and every man
- in it owes his first allegiance to the grand old flag for which
- more brave blood was shed than for any other flag that waves in the
- sight of heaven. There is another thing; we all want to live in a
- land where the law is supreme. We desire to live beneath a flag
- that will protect every citizen beneath its folds. We desire to be
- citizens of a Government so great and so grand that it will command
- the respect of the civilized world. Most of us are convinced that
- our Government is the best upon this earth. It is the only
- Government where manhood, and manhood alone, is not made simply a
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 10
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- condition of citizenship, but where manhood, and manhood alone,
- permits its possessor to have his equal share in control of the
- Government. It is the only Government in the world where poverty is
- upon an exact equality with wealth, so far as controlling the
- destiny of the Republic is concerned. It is the only Nation where
- the man clothed in rags stands upon an equality with the one
- wearing purple. It is the only country in the world where,
- politically, the hut is upon an equality with the palace.
-
- For that reason every poor man should stand by this
- Government, and every poor man who does not is a traitor to the
- best interests of his children; every poor man who does not is
- willing his children should bear the badge of political
- inferiority; and the only way to make this Government a complete
- and perfect success is for the poorest man to think as much of his
- manhood as the millionaire does of his wealth. A man does not vote
- in this country simply because he is rich; he does not vote in this
- country simply because he has an education; he does not vote simply
- because he has talent or genius; we say that he votes because he is
- a man and that he has his manhood to support; and we admit in this
- country that nothing can be more valuable to any human being than
- his manhood, and for that reason we put poverty on an equality with
- wealth. We say in this country manhood is worth more than gold. We
- say in this country that without Liberty the Nation is not worth
- preserving, Now, I appeal to-day to every poor man; I appeal to-day
- to every laboring man, and I ask him, if there another country on
- this globe where you can have equal rights with others? There is
- another thing; do you want a Government of law or of brute force?
- In which part of this country do you find law supreme? In which
- part of this country can a man find justice in the courts; in the
- North or in the South? Where is crime punished? Where is innocence
- protected, in the North or in the South? Which section of this
- country will you trust?
-
- You can tell what a man is by the way he treats persons in his
- power, and the man that will sneak and crawl in the presence of
- greatness, will trample the weak when he gets them in his power.
- What class of people does the State have in its power? Criminals
- and creditors; and you can judge of a State by the way it treats
- its criminals and creditors. Georgia is the best State in the
- South. They have a penitentiary system by which they hire out their
- convict labor. Only two years ago the whole thing was examined by
- a friend of mine, Col. Allston. He had been in the rebel army and
- was my good friend. He used to come to my house day after day to
- see me. He got converted and had the grit to say so. Being a member
- of the Legislature, he had a committee of investigation appointed.
- Now, in order that you may understand the difference, you must know
- that in the Northern penitentiaries the average annual death rate
- is one per cent.; that is, of one thousand convicts, ten will die
- in a year, on the average. That low death rate is because we are
- civilized, because we do not kill; but in the Georgia penitentiary
- it was as high as fifteen, twenty-seven and forty-seven per cent.,
- at a time when there was no typhoid or yellow fever, or epidemic of
- any kind. They died for four months at a rate of ten per cent. per
- month. They crowded the convicts in together, regardless of sex.
- They treated them precisely as wild beasts, and many of them were
- shot down. Persons high in authority, Senators of the United
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 11
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- States, held interests in those contracts, and Robert Allston
- denounced them. When on a visit he said, "I believe when I get home
- I shall be killed." I told him not to go back to Georgia, but to
- stay in the civilized North; but no, he would go back, and on the
- very day of his arrival he was murdered in cold blood. Do you want
- to trust such men? * * *
-
- The Southern people say this is a Confederacy and they are
- honest in it. They fought for it, they believed it. They believe in
- the doctrine of State Sovereignty, and many Democrats of the North
- believe in the same doctrine. No less a man than Horatio Seymour --
- standing it may be at the head of Democratic statesmen -- said, if
- he has been correctly reported, only the other day, that he
- despised the word "Nation." I bless that word. I owe my first
- allegiance to this Nation, and it owes its first protection to me.
- I am talking here to-night, not because I am protected by the flag
- of New York. I would not know that flag if I should see it. I am
- talking here, and have the right to talk here, because the flag of
- my country is above us. I have the same right as though I had been
- born upon this very platform. I am proud of New York because it is
- a part of my country. I am proud of my country because it has such
- a State as New York in it, and I will be prouder of New York on a
- week from next Tuesday than ever before in my life. I despise the
- doctrine of State Sovereignty. I believe in the rights of the
- States, but not in the sovereignty of the States. States are
- political conveniences. Rising above States, as the Alps above
- valleys, are the rights of man. Rising above the rights of the
- Government, even in this Nation, are the sublime rights of the
- people. Governments are good only so long as they protect human
- rights. But the rights of a man never should be sacrificed upon the
- altar of the State, or upon the altar of the Nation.
-
- Let me tell you a few objections that I have to State
- Sovereignty. That doctrine has never been appealed to for any good.
- The first time it was appealed to was when our Constitution was
- made. And the object then was to keep the slave-trade open until
- the year 1808. The object then was to make the sea the highway of
- piracy -- the object then was to allow American citizens to go into
- the business of selling men and women and children, and feed their
- cargo to the sharks of the sea, and the sharks of the sea were as
- merciful as they. That was the first time that the appeal to the
- doctrine of State Sovereignty was made, and the next time was for
- the purpose of keeping alive the interstate slave-trade, so that a
- gentleman in Virginia could sell the slave, who had nursed him, and
- rob the cradles of their babes. Think of it! It was made so they
- could rob the cradle in the name of law. Think of it! Think of it!
- And the next time they appealed to the doctrine of State
- Sovereignty was in favor of the Fugitive Slave Law -- a law that
- made a bloodhound of every Northern man; that made charity a crime;
- a law that made love a state-prison offence; that branded the
- forehead of charity as if it were a felon. Think of it!
-
- It is a part of my honor to hate such principles. I have no
- respect for any man who is so mean, cruel and wicked, as to allow
- himself to be transformed into a bloodhound to bay upon the tracks
- of innocent human prey. I will follow my logic, no matter where it
- goes, after it has consulted with my heart. If you ever come to a
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 12
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- conclusion without calling the heart in, you will come to a bad
- conclusion.
-
- A good man is pretty apt to be right; a perfectly honest man
- is like the surface of the stainless mirror, that gives back by
- simply looking at him, the image of the one who looks.
-
- The next time they appealed to the doctrine of State
- Sovereignty was to increase the area of human slavery, so that the
- bloodhound, with clots of blood dropping from his loose and hanging
- jaws, might traverse the billowy plains of Kansas. Think of it!
-
- The Democratic party then said the Federal Government had a
- right to cross the State line. And the next time they appealed to
- that infamous doctrine was in defence of secession and treason; a
- doctrine that cost us six thousand millions of dollars; a doctrine
- that cost four hundred thousand lives; a doctrine that filled our
- country with widows, our homes with orphans. And I tell you, the
- doctrine of State Sovereignty is the viper in the bosom of this
- Republic, and if we do not kill that viper it will kill us.
-
- The Democrats tell us that in the olden time the Federal
- Government had a right to cross a State line to put shackles upon
- the limbs of men. It had the right to cross a State line to trample
- upon the rights of human beings, but now it has no right to cross
- those lines upon an errand of mercy or justice. We are told that
- now, when the Federal Government wishes to protect a citizen, a
- State line rises like a Chinese wall, and the sword of Federal
- power turns to air the moment it touches one of those lines. I deny
- it and I despise, abhor and execrate the doctrine of State
- Sovereignty. The Democrats tell us if we wish to be protected by
- the Federal Government we must leave home. I wish they would try it
- for about ten days. They say the Federal Government can defend a
- citizen in England, France, Spain or Germany, but cannot defend a
- child of the Republic sitting around the family hearth. I deny it.
- A Government that cannot protect its citizens at home is unfit to
- be called a Government. I want a Government with an ear so good
- that it can hear the faintest cry of the oppressed wherever its
- flag floats. I want a Government with an arm long enough and a
- sword sharp enough to cut down treason wherever it may raise its
- serpent head I want a Government that will protect a freedman,
- standing by his little log hut, with the same alacrity and with the
- same efficiency that it would protect Vanderbilt, living in a
- palace of marble and gold. Humanity is a sacred thing, and manhood
- is a thing to be preserved. Let us look at it. For instance, here
- is a war, and the Federal Government says to a man, "We want you,"
- and he says, "No, I don't want to go," and then they put a lot of
- pieces of paper in a wheel and on one of those pieces is his name,
- and another man turns the crank, and then they pull it out and
- there is his name, and they say, "Come," and so he goes. And they
- stand him in front of the brazen-throated guns; they make him fight
- for his native land, and when the war is over he goes home and he
- finds the war has been unpopular in his neighborhood, and they
- trample on his rights, and he says to the Federal Government,
- "Protect me." And he says to the Government, "I owe my allegiance
- to you. You must protect me." What will you say of that Government
- if it says to him, "You must look to your State for protection"?
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 13
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- Ah, but," he says, "my State is the very power trampling upon me,"
- and, of course, the robber is not going to send for the police. It
- is the duty of the Government to defend even its drafted men; and
- it that is the duty of the Government, what shall I say of the
- volunteer, who for one moment holds his wife in a tremulous and
- agonized embrace, kisses his children, shoulders his musket, goes
- to the field and says, "Here I am, ready to die for my native
- land"? A Nation that will not defend its volunteer defenders is a
- disgrace to the map of this world. This is a Nation. Free speech is
- the brain of the Republic; an honest ballot is the breath of its
- life; honest money is the blood of its veins; and the idea of
- nationality is its great, beating, throbbing heart. I am for a
- Nation. And yet the Democrats tell me that it is dangerous to have
- centralized power. How would you have it? I believe in the
- localization of power; I believe in having enough of it localized
- in one place to be effectively used; I believe in a local-nation of
- brain. I suppose Democrats would like to have it spread all over
- your body, and they act as though theirs was.
-
- There is another thing in which I believe: I believe in the
- protection of American labor. The hand that holds Aladdin's lamp
- must be the hand of toil. This Nation rests upon the shoulders of
- its workers, and I want the American laboring, man to have enough
- to wear; I want him to have enough to eat: I want him to have
- something for the ordinary misfortunes of life; I want him to have
- the pleasure of seeing his wife well-dressed; I want him to see a
- few blue ribbons fluttering about his children; I want him to see
- the flags of health flying in their beautiful cheeks; I want him to
- feel that this is his country, and the shield of protection is
- above his labor.
-
- And I will tell you why I am for protection, too. If we were
- all farmers we would be stupid. If we were all shoemakers we would
- be stupid. If we all followed one business, no matter what it was,
- we would become stupid. Protection to American labor diversifies
- American industry, and to have it diversified touches and develops
- every part of the human brain. Protection protects ingenuity; it
- protects intelligence; and protection raises sense; and by
- protection we have greater men, better looking women and healthier
- children. Free trade means that our laborer is upon an equality
- with the poorest paid labor of this world. And allow me to tell you
- that for an empty stomach, "Hurrah for Hancock!" is a poor
- consolation. I do not think much of a Government where the people
- do not have enough to eat. I am a materialist to that extent; I
- want something to eat. I have been in countries where the laboring
- man had meat once a year; sometimes twice -- Christmas and Easter,
- And I have seen women carrying upon their heads a burden that no
- man in this audience could carry, and at the same time knitting
- busily with both hands, and those women lived without meat; and
- when I thought of the American laborer, I said to myself, "After
- all, my country is the best in the world." And when I came back to
- the sea and saw the old flag flying, it seemed to me as though the
- air from pure joy had burst into blossom.
-
- Labor has more to eat and more to wear in the United States
- than in any other land of this earth. I want America to produce
- everything that Americans need. I want it so that if the whole
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 14
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- world should declare war against us, if we were surrounded by walls
- of cannon and bayonets and swords, we could supply all our material
- wants in and of ourselves. I want to live to see the American woman
- dressed in American silk; the American man in everything, from hat
- to boots, produced in America by the cunning hand of American toil.
- I want to see the workingman have a good house, painted white,
- grass in the front yard, carpets on the floor, pictures on the
- wall. I want to see him a man, feeling that he is a king by the
- divine right of living in the Republic. And every man here is just
- a little bit a king, you know. Every man here is a part of the
- sovereign power. Every man wears a little of purple; every man has
- a little of crown and a little of scepter; and every man that will
- sell his vote for money or be ruled by prejudice is unfit to be an
- American citizen.
-
- I believe in American labor, and I will tell you why. The
- other day a man told me that we had produced in the United States
- of America one million tons of steel rails. How much are they
- worth? Sixty dollars a ton. In other words, the million tons are
- worth sixty million dollars. How much is a ton of iron worth in the
- ground? Twenty-five cents. American labor takes twenty-five cents
- worth of iron in the ground and adds to it fifty-nine dollars and
- seventy-five cents. One million tons of rails, and the raw material
- not worth twenty-four thousand dollars! We build a ship in the
- United States worth five hundred thousand dollars, and the value of
- the ore in the earth, of the trees in the great forest, of all that
- enters into the composition of that ship bringing five hundred
- thousand dollars in gold is only twenty thousand dollars; four
- hundred and eighty thousand dollars by American labor, American
- muscle, coined into gold; American brains made a legal tender the
- world round.
-
- I propose to stand by the Nation. I want the furnaces kept
- hot. I want the sky to be filled with the smoke of American
- industry, and upon that cloud of smoke will rest forever the bow of
- perpetual promise. That is what I am for. Where did this doctrine
- of a tariff for revenue only come from? From the South. The South
- would like to stab the prosperity of the North. They would rather
- trade with Old England than with New England. They would rather
- trade with the people who were willing to help them in war than
- with those who conquered the Rebellion. They knew what gave us our
- strength in war. They knew that all the brooks and creeks and
- rivers of New England were putting down the Rebellion. They knew
- that every wheel that turned, every spindle that revolved, was a
- soldier in the army of human progress. It won't do! They were so
- lured by the greed of office that they were willing to trade upon
- the misfortunes of a Nation. It won't do! I do not wish to belong
- to a party that succeeds only when my country fails. I do not wish
- to belong to a party whose banner went up with the banner of
- rebellion. I do not wish to belong to a party that was in
- partnership with defeat and -- disaster. I do not. And there is not
- a Democrat here who does not know that a failure of the crops this
- year would have helped his party. You know that an early frost
- would have been a godsend to them. You know that the potato-bug
- could have done them more good than all their speakers.
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 15
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- I wish to belong to that party which is prosperous when the
- country is prosperous. I belong to that party which is not poor
- when the golden billows are running over the seas of wheat. I
- belong to that party which is prosperous when there are oceans of
- corn, and when the cattle are upon the thousand hills. I belong to
- that party which is prosperous when the furnaces are aflame, and
- when you dig coal and iron and silver; when everybody has enough to
- eat; when everybody is happy; when the children are all going to
- school, and when joy covers my Nation as with a garment. That party
- which is prosperous then, is my party.
-
- Now, then, I have been telling you what I am for. I am for
- free speech, and so ought you to be. I am for an honest ballot, and
- if you are not you ought to be. I am for the collection of the
- revenue. I am for honest money. I am for the idea that this is a
- Nation forever. I believe in protecting American labor. I want the
- shield of my country above every anvil, above every furnace, above
- every cunning head and above every deft hand of American labor.
-
- Now, then, which section of this country will be the more apt
- to carry these ideas into execution? Which party will be the more
- apt to achieve these grand and splendid things? Honor bright? Now
- we have not only to choose between sections of the country; we have
- to choose between parties. Here is the Democratic party, and I
- admit there are thousands of good Democrats who went to the war,
- and some of those that stayed at home were good men; and I want to
- ask you, and I want you to tell me in reply what that party did
- during the war when the War Democrats were away from home. What did
- they do? That is the question. I say to you, that every man who
- tried to tear our flag out of heaven was a Democrat. The men who
- wrote the ordinances of secession, who fired upon Fort Sumter; the
- men who starved our soldiers, who fed them with the crumbs that the
- worms had devoured before, they were Democrats. The keepers of
- Libby, the keepers of Andersonville, were Democrats -- Libby and
- Andersonville, the two mighty wings that will bear the memory of
- the Confederacy to eternal infamy! The men who wished to scatter
- yellow fever in the North and who tried to fire the great cities of
- the North -- they were all Democrats. He who said that the
- greenback would never be paid and he who slandered sixty cents out
- of every dollar of the Nation's promises were Democrats. Who were
- joyful when your brothers and your sons and your fathers lay dead
- on a field of battle that the country had lost? They were
- Democrats. The men who wept when the old banner floated in triumph
- above the ramparts of rebellion -- they were Democrats. You know
- it. The men who wept when slavery was destroyed, who believed
- slavery to be a divine institution, who regarded bloodhounds as
- apostles and missionaries, and who wept at the funeral of that
- infernal institution -- they were Democrats. Bad company -- bad
- company!
-
- And let me implore all the young men here not to join that
- party. Do not give new blood to that institution. The Democratic
- party has a yellow passport. On one side it says "dangerous." They
- imagine they have not changed, and that is because they have not
- intellectual growth. That party was once the enemy of my country,
- was once the enemy of our flag, and more than that, it was once the
- enemy of human liberty, and that party to-night is not willing that
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 16
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- the citizens of the Republic should exercise all their rights
- irrespective of their color And allow me to say right here that I
- am opposed to that party.
-
- We have not only to choose between parties, but to choose
- between candidates. The Democracy have put forward as the bearers
- of their standard General Hancock and William H. English. The
- Democrats have at last nominated a Union soldier. They nominated
- George B. McClellan once, because he failed to whip the South; they
- nominated Mr. Greeley, when they despised him, and now they have
- nominated General Hancock. Do they think the South loves him? At
- Gettysburg they say he fought against them, and that is one great
- reason why he should be President -- that he shot rebels. Do the
- men that fought at Gettysburg still believe in State Sovereignty?
- Wade Hampton says, "We must vote as Lee and Jackson fought." They
- fought for State Sovereignty. Has the South changed? Hancock went
- to kill them then; they want to vote for him now. Who has changed?
- [A voice: "Hancock."] I think so. They are using him as a figure-
- head. They have dressed him in the noble blue, with the patriotic
- coat and Union buttons, and they do not like him any better than
- they did at Gettysburg. It would be just as consistent for the
- Republicans to have nominated Wade Hampton. Did General Hancock
- believe in State Sovereignty when he was at Gettysburg? If he did,
- he was a murderer, and not a Union soldier -- he was killing men he
- believed to be in the right, and a man cannot fight unless his
- conscience approves of what his sword does, and if he was honest at
- that time, he did not believe in State Sovereignty, and it seems to
- me he would hate to have the men who tried to destroy this
- Government cheering him. All the glory he ever got was in the
- service of the Republican party, and if he does not look out he
- will lose it all in the service of the Democratic party. He had a
- conversation with General Grant. It was a time when he had been
- appointed at the head of the Department of the Gulf. In that
- conversation he stated to General Grant that he was opposed to
- "nigger domination." Grant said to him, "We must obey the laws of
- Congress. We are soldiers." And that meant, the military is not
- above the civil authority. And I tell you to-night, that the army
- and the navy are the right and left hands of the civil power. Grant
- said to him: "Three or four million ex-slaves, without property and
- without education, cannot dominate over thirty or forty millions of
- white people, with education and property." General Hancock replied
- to that: "I am opposed to nigger domination."' Allow me to say that
- I do not believe any man fit for the presidency of the great
- Republic, who is capable of insulting a down-trodden race. I never
- meet a negro that I do not feel like asking his forgiveness for the
- wrongs that my race has inflicted on his. I remember that from the
- white man he received for two hundred years agony and tears; I
- remember that my race sold a child from the agonized breast of a
- mother; I remember that my race trampled with the feet of greed
- upon all the holy relations of life; and I do not feel like
- insulting the colored man; I feel rather like asking the
- forgiveness of his race for the crimes that my race have put upon
- him. "Nigger domination!" What a fine scabbard that makes for the
- sword of Gettysburg! It won't do!
-
- What is General Hancock for, besides the presidency? How does
- he stand upon the great questions affecting American prosperity? He
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 17
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- told us the other day that the tariff is a local question. The
- tariff affects every man and woman, live they in hut, hovel or
- palace; it affects every man that has a back to be covered or a
- stomach to be filled, and yet he says it is a local question. So is
- death. He also told us that he heard that question discussed once,
- in Pennsylvania. He must have been eavesdropping. And he tells us
- that his doctrine of the tariff will continue as long as Nature
- lasts. Then Senator Randolph wrote him a letter. I do not know
- whether Senator Randolph answered it or not; but that answer was
- worse than the first interview; and I understand now that another
- letter is going through a period of incubation at Governor's
- Island, upon the great subject of the tariff. It won't do!
-
- They say one thing they are sure of, he is opposed to paying
- Southern pensions and Southern claims. He says that a man that
- fought against this Government has no right to a pension. Good! I
- say a man that fought against this Government has no right to
- office. If a man cannot earn a pension by tearing our flat, out of
- the sky, he cannot earn power. [A Voice -- "How about Longstreet?"]
- Longstreet has repented of what he did. Longstreet admits that he
- was wrong. And there was no braver officer in the Southern
- Confederacy. Every man of the South who will say, "I made a
- mistake" -- I do not want him to say that he knew he was wrong --
- all I ask him to say is that he now thinks he was wrong; and every
- man of the South to-day who says he was wrong, and who says from
- this day forward, henceforth and forever, he is for this being a
- Nation, I will take him by the hand. But while he is attempting to
- do at the ballot-box what he failed to accomplish upon the field of
- battle, I am against him -- while he uses a Northern general to
- bait a Southern trap, I won't bite. I will forgive men when they
- deserve to be forgiven; but while they insist that they were right,
- while they insist that State Sovereignty is the proper doctrine, I
- am opposed to their climbing into power.
-
- Hancock says that he will not pay these claims he agrees to
- veto a bill that his party may pass; he agrees in advance that he
- will defeat a party that he expects will elect him; he, in effect,
- says to the people, "You can not trust that party, but you can
- trust me." He says, "Look at them; I admit they are a hungry lot;
- I admit that they haven't had a bite in twenty years; I admit that
- an ordinary famine is satiety compared to the hunger they feel. But
- between that vast appetite known as the Democratic party, and the
- public treasury, I will throw the shield of my veto." No man has a
- right to say in advance what he will veto, any more than a judge
- has a right to say in advance how he will decide a case. The veto
- power is a distinction with which the Constitution has clothed the
- Executive, and no President has a right to say that he will veto
- until he has heard both sides of the question. But he agrees in
- advance.
-
- I would rather trust a party than a man. Death may veto
- Hancock, and Death has not been a successful politician in the
- United States. Tyler, Fillmore, Andy Johnson -- I do not wish Death
- to elect any more Presidents; and if he does, and if Hancock is
- elected, William H. English becomes President of the United States.
- No, no, no! All I need to say about him is simply to pronounce his
- name; that is all. You do not want him. Whether the many stories
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 18
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- that have been told about him are true or not I do not know, and I
- will not give currency to a solitary word against the reputation of
- an American citizen unless I know it to be true. What I have
- against him is what he has done in public life. When Charles
- Sumner, that great and splendid publicist -- Charles Sumner, the
- philanthropist, one who spoke to the conscience of his time and to
- the history of the future -- when he stood up in the United States
- Senate and made a great and glorious plea for human liberty, there
- crept into the Senate a villain and struck him down as though he
- had been a wild beast. That man was a member of Congress, and when
- a resolution was introduced in the House, to expel that man,
- William H. English voted, "No." All the stories in the world could
- not add to the infamy of that public act. That is enough for me,
- and whatever his private life may be, let it be that of an angel,
- never, never, never would I vote for a man that would defend the
- assassin of free speech. General Hancock, they tell me, is a
- statesman; that what little time he has had to spare from war he
- has given to the tariff, and what little time he could spare from
- the tariff he has given to the Constitution of his country; showing
- under what circumstances a Major-General can put at defiance the
- Congress of the United States. It won't do!
-
- But while I am upon that subject it may be well for me to
- state that he never will be President of the United States. Now, I
- say that a man who in time of peace prefers peace, and prefers the
- avocations of peace; a man who in the time of peace would rather
- look at the corn in the air of June, rather listen to the hum of
- bees, rather sit by his door with his wife and children; the man
- who in time of peace loves peace, and yet when the blast of war
- blows in his ears, shoulders a musket and goes to the field of war
- to defend his country, and when the war is over goes home and again
- pursues the avocations of peace -- that man is just as good, to say
- the least of it, as a man who in a time of profound peace makes up
- his mind that he would like to make his living killing other folks.
- To say the least of it, he is as good.
-
- The Republicans have named as their standard bearers James A.
- Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. James A. Garfield was a volunteer
- soldier, and he took away from the field of Chickamauga as much
- glory as any one man could carry. He is not only a soldier -- he is
- a statesman. He has studied and discussed all the great questions
- that affect the prosperity and well-being of the American people.
- His opinions are well known, and I say to you to-night that there
- is not in this Nation, there is not in this Republic a man with
- greater brain and greater heart than James A. Garfield. I know him
- and I like him. I know him as well as any other public man, and I
- like him. The Democratic party say that he is not honest. I have
- been reading some Democratic papers to-day, and you would say that
- every one of their editors had a private sewer of his own into
- which has been emptied for a hundred years the slops of hell. They
- tell me that James A. Garfield is not honest. Are you a Democrat?
- Your party tried to steal nearly half of this country. Your party
- stole the armament of a nation. Your party was willing to live upon
- the unpaid labor of four millions of people. You have no right to
- the floor for the purpose of making a motion of honesty. James A.
- Garfield has been at the head of the most important committees of
- Congress; he is a member of the most important one of the whole
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 19
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- House. He has no peer in the Congress of the United States. And you
- know it. He is the leader of the House. With one wave of his hand
- he can take millions from the pocket of one industry and put it
- into the pocket of another; with a motion of his hand he could have
- made himself a man of wealth, but he is to-night a poor man. I know
- him and I like him. He is as genial as May and he is as generous as
- Autumn. And the men for whom he has done unnumbered favors, the men
- whom he had pity enough not to destroy with an argument, the men
- who, with his great generosity, he has allowed, intellectually, to
- live, are now throwing filth at the reputation of that great and
- splendid man.
-
- Several ladies and gentlemen were passing a muddy place around
- which were gathered ragged and wretched urchins. And these little
- wretches began to throw mud at them; and one gentleman said, "If
- you don't stop I will throw it back at you." And a little fellow
- said, "You can't do it without dirtying your hands, and it doesn't
- hurt us anyway."
-
- I never was more profoundly happy than on the night of that
- 12th day of October when I found that between an honest and a
- kingly man and his malingers, two great States had thrown their
- shining shields. When Ohio said, "Garfield is my greatest son, and
- there never has been raised in the cabins of Ohio a grander man" --
- and when Indiana held up her hands and said, "Allow me to indorse
- that verdict" I was profoundly happy, because that said to me,
- "Garfield will carry every Northern State;" that said to me, "The
- Solid South will be confronted by a great and splendid North."
-
- I know Garfield -- I like him. Some people have said, "How is
- it that you support Garfield, when he was a minister?"! How is it
- that you support Garfield when he is a Christian?" I will tell you.
- There are two reasons. The first is I am not a bigot; and secondly,
- James A. Garfield is not a bigot. He believes in giving to every
- other human being every right he claims for himself. He believes in
- freedom of speech and freedom of thought; untrammeled conscience
- and upright manhood. He believes in an absolute divorce between
- church and state. He believes that every religion should rest upon
- its morality, upon its reason, upon its persuasion, upon its
- goodness, upon its charity, and that love should never appeal to
- the sword of civil power. He disagrees with me in many things; but
- in the one thing, that the air is free for all, we do agree. I want
- to do equal and exact justice everywhere.
-
- I want the world of thought to be without a chain, without a
- wall, and I wish to say to you, [turning toward Mr. Beecher and
- directly addressing him] that I thank you for what you have said
- to-night, and to congratulate the people of this city and country
- that you have intellectual horizon enough, intellectual sky enough
- to take the hand of a man, howsoever much he may disagree in some
- things with you, on the grand platform and broad principle of
- citizenship. James A. Garfield, believing with me as he does,
- disagreeing with me as he does, is perfectly satisfactory to me. I
- know him, and I like him.
-
- Men are to-day blackening his reputation, who are not fit to
- blacken his shoes. He is a man of brain. Since his nomination he
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 20
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- must have made forty or fifty speeches, and every one has been full
- of manhood and genius. He has not said a word that has not
- strengthened him with the American people. He is the first
- candidate who has been free to express himself and who has never
- made a mistake. I will tell you why he does not make a mistake;
- because he spoke from the inside out. Because he was guided by the
- glittering Northern Star of principle. Lie after lie has been told
- about him. Slander after slander has been hatched and put in the
- air, with its little short wings, to fly its day, and the last lie
- is a forgery.
-
- I saw to-day the fac-simile of a letter that they pretend he
- wrote upon the Chinese question. I know his writing; I know his
- signature; I am well acquainted with his writing. I know
- handwriting, and I tell you to-night, that letter and that
- signature are forgeries. A forgery for the benefit of the Pacific
- States; a forgery for the purpose of convincing the American
- workingman that Garfield is without heart. I tell you, my fellow-
- citizens, that cannot take from him a vote. But Ohio pierced their
- center and Indiana rolled up both flanks and the rebel line cannot
- re-form with a forgery for a standard. They are gone!
-
- Now, some people say to me, "How long are you going to preach
- the doctrine of hate?" I never did preach it. In many States of
- this Union it is a crime to be a Republican. I am going to preach
- my doctrine until every American citizen is permitted to express
- his opinion and vote as he may desire in every State of this Union.
- I am going to preach my doctrine until this is a civilized country.
- That is all. I will treat the gentlemen of the South precisely as
- we do the gentlemen of the North. I want to treat every section of
- the country precisely as we do ours. I want to improve their rivers
- and their harbors; I want to fill their land with commerce; I want
- them to prosper; I want them to build schoolhouses; I want them to
- open the lands to immigration to all people who desire to settle
- upon their soil. I want to be friends with them; I want to let the
- past be buried forever; I want to let bygones be bygones, but only
- upon the basis that we are now in favor of absolute liberty and
- eternal justice. I am not willing to bury nationality or free
- speech in the grave for the purpose of being friends. Let us stand
- by our colors; let the old Republican party that has made this a
- Nation -- the old Republican party that has saved the financial
- honor of this country -- let that party stand by its colors.
-
- Let that party say, "Free speech forever!" Let that party say,
- "An honest ballot forever!" Let that party say, "Honest money
- forever! the Nation and the flag forever! "And let that party stand
- by the great men carrying her banner, James A. Garfield and Chester
- A. Arthur. I would rather trust a party than a man. If General
- Garfield dies, the Republican party lives; if General Garfield
- dies, General Arthur will take his place -- a brave, honest, and
- intelligent gentleman, upon whom every Republican can rely. And if
- he dies, the Republican party lives, and as long as the Republican
- party does not die, the great Republic will live. As long as the
- Republican party lives, this will be the asylum of the world. Let
- me tell you, Mr. Irishman, this is the only country on the earth
- where Irishmen have had enough to eat. Let me tell you, Mr. German,
- that you have more liberty here than you had in the Fatherland. Let
- me tell you, all men, that this is the land of humanity.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 21
-
- BROOKLYN SPEECH.
-
- Oh! I love the old Republic, bounded by the seas, walled by
- the wide air, domed by heaven's blue, and lit with the eternal
- stars. I love the Republic; I love it because I love liberty,
- Liberty is my religion, and at its altar I worship, and will
- worship.
-
-
- END
-
- **** ****
-
- THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL
-
- CATECHISM.
-
- I SUPPOSE the Government has a right to ask all of these
- questions, and any more it pleases, but undoubtedly the citizen
- would have the right to refuse to answer them. Originally the
- census was taken simply for the purpose of ascertaining the number
- of people -- first, as a basis of representation; second, as a
- basis of capitation tax; third, as a basis to arrive at the number
- of troops that might be called from each State; and it may be for
- some other purposes, but I imagine that all are embraced in the
- foregoing.
-
- The Government has no right to invade the privacy of the
- citizen; no right to inquire into his financial condition, as
- thereby his credit might be injured; no right to pry into his
- affairs, into his diseases, or his deformities; and, while the
- Government may have the right to ask these questions, I think it
- was foolish to instruct the enumerators to ask them, and that the
- citizens have a perfect right to refuse to answer them. Personally,
- I have no objection to answering any of these questions, for the
- reason that nothing is the matter with me that money will not cure.
-
- I know that it is thought advisable by many to find out the
- amount of mortgages in the United States, the rate of interest that
- is being paid, the general indebtedness of individuals, counties,
- cities and States, and I see no impropriety in finding this out in
- any reasonable way. But I think it improper to insist on the debtor
- exposing his financial condition. My opinion is that Mr. Porter
- only wants what is perfectly reasonable, and if left to himself,
- would ask only those questions that all people would willingly
- answer.
-
- I presume we can depend on medical statistics -- on the
- reports of hospitals, etc., in regard to diseases and deformities,
- without interfering with the patients. As to the financial standing
- of people, there are already enough of spies in this country
- attending to that business. I don't think there is any danger of
- the courts compelling a man to answer these questions. Suppose a
- man refuses to tell whether he has a chronic disease or not, and he
- is brought up before a United States Court for contempt. In my
- opinion the judge would decide that the man could not be compelled
- to answer. It is bad enough to have a chronic disease without
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 22
-
- THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL
-
- publishing it to the world. All intelligent people, of course, will
- be desirous of giving all useful information of a character that
- cannot be used to their injury, but can be used for the benefit of
- society at large.
-
- If, however, the courts shall decide that the enumerators have
- the right to ask these questions, and that everybody must answer
- them, I doubt if the census will be finished for many years, There
- are hundreds and thousands of people who delight in telling all
- about their diseases, when they were attacked, what they have
- taken, how many doctors have given them up to die, etc., and if the
- enumerators will stop to listen, the census of 1890 will not be
- published until the next century. --
-
- The World, Now York, June 1890.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- **** ****
-
-
-
-
-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
- scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
- suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
- Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
- nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
- religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
- the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
- that America can again become what its Founders intended --
-
- The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
-
-
- **** ****
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 23