<h1>Chapter XXIII.</h1>
<p>John Harrington and Josephine Thorn were married in
the autumn of that year, and six months later John
was elected to the Senate. With characteristic patience
he determined to await a favorable opportunity before
speaking at any length in the Capitol. He loved his
new life, and the instinct to take a leading part
was strong in him, but he knew too well the importance
of the first impression made by a long speech to thrust
himself forward until the right moment came.</p>
<p>It chanced that the presidential election took place
in that year, just a twelvemonth after John’s
marriage, and the unusual occurrences that attended
the struggle gave him the chance he desired. Three
candidates were supported nearly equally by the East,
the West, and the South, and on opening the sealed
documents in the presence of the two houses, it was
found that no one of the three had obtained the majority
necessary to elect him. The country was in a state
of unparalleled agitation. The imminent danger was
that the non-election of the candidate from the West
would produce a secession of the Western States from
the Union, in the same way that a revolution was nearly
brought about in 1876, during the contest between
Mr. Hayes and Mr. Tilden.</p>
<p>In this position of affairs, the electors being unable
to agree upon any one of the three candidates, the
election was thrown into the hands of Congress, in
accordance with the clause of the Constitution which
provides that in such cases the House of Representatives
shall elect a president, each State having but one
vote.</p>
<p>Harrington had made many speeches in different parts
of the country during the election campaign, and had
attracted much attention by his calm good sense in
such excited times. There was consequently a manifest
desire among senators and representatives to hear
him speak in the Capitol, and upon the day when the
final election of the President took place he judged
that his opportunity had come. Josephine was in the
ladies’ gallery, and as John rose to his feet
he looked long and fixedly up to her, gathering more
strength to do well what he so much loved to do, from
gazing at her whom he loved better than power, or
fame, or any earthly thing. His eyes shone and his
cheek paled; his old life with all its energy and active
work was associated in his mind with failure, with
discontent, and with solitude; his new life, with
her by his side, was brilliant, happy, and successful.
He felt within him the strength to move thousands,
the faith in his cause and in his power to help it
which culminates in great deeds. His strong voice
rang out, clear and far-heard, as he spoke.</p>
<p>“MR. PRESIDENT,–We are here to decide, on behalf
of our country, a great matter. Many of us, many more
who are scattered over the land, will look back upon
this day as one of the most important in our times,
and for their sakes as well as our own we are bound
to summon all our strength of intelligence and all
our calmness of judgment to aid us in our decision.</p>
<p>“The question in which a certain number of ourselves
are to become arbitrators is briefly this: Are we
to act on this occasion like partisans, straining
every nerve for the advantage of our several parties?
or are we to act like free men, exerting our united
forces in one harmonious body for the immediate good
of the whole country? The struggle may seem at first
sight to be a battle between the East, the West, and
the South. In sober earnest, it is a contest between
the changing principles of party politics on the one
hand and the undying principle of freedom on the other.</p>
<p>“I need not make any long statement of the case
to you. We are here assembled to elect a President.
Our position is almost unprecedented in the history
of the country. Instead of acquiescing in the declared
will of the people, our fellow-citizens, we are told
that the people’s wish is divided, and we are
called upon to act spontaneously for the people, in
accordance with the constitution of our country. By
our individual and unhampered votes the life of the
country is to be determined for the next four years.
Let us not forget the vast responsibility that is upon
us. Let us join our hands and say to each other, ’We
are no longer Republicans, nor Democrats, nor Independents–we
are one party, the party of the Union, and there are
none against us.’</p>
<p>“A partisan is not necessarily a man who asserts
a truth and defends it with his whole strength. A
partisan means one who takes up his position with
a party. There is a limit where a partisan becomes
an asserter of falsehood, and that limit is reached
when a man resigns his own principles into the judgment
of another, his conscience into another’s keeping;
when a man gives up free thought, free judgment, and
free will in absolute and blind adherence to a set
of thoughts, judgments, and decisions over which he
exercises no control, and in the formation of which
he has but one voice in many millions. Every one remembers
the fable of the old man who, when dying, made his
sons break their staves one by one, and then bade
them bind a bundle of others together, and to try and
break them by one effort. In the uniting of individuals
in a party there is strength, but there must also
be complete unity. If the old man had bidden his sons
bind their staves in several bundles instead of in
one, the result would have been doubtful. That is
what party spirit makes men do. Party spirit is a
universal solvent; it is the great acid, the <i>aqua
fortis</i> of political alchemy, which eats through
bands of steel and corrodes pillars of iron in its
acrid virulence, till the whole engine of a nation’s
government is crumbled and dissolved into a shapeless
and a worse than useless mass of broken metal.</p>
<p>“Man is free, his will is free, his choice,
his judgments, his capacity for thought, and his power
to profit by it are all as free as air, just so long
as he remembers that they are his own–no longer. When
he forgets that he is his own master, absolutely and
entirely, he becomes another man’s slave.</p>
<p>“The contest here is between political passion
roused to its fiercest pitch by the antagonism of
parties, and the universal liberty of opinion, which
we all say we possess, while so few of us dare honestly
exercise it. This passion, this political frenzy that
seizes men and whirls them in its eddies, is a most
singular compound of patriotism, of enthusiasm for
an individual, and of the personal hopes, fears, generosity,
and avarice of the individual who is enthusiastic.
It is a passion which, existing in others, can be
turned to account by the cool leader who does not possess
it, but which may too easily bring ruin upon the man
who is led.</p>
<p>“The danger ahead is this same party spirit,
this wild and thoughtless frenzy in matters where
unbiased judgment is most of all necessary. It is
a rock upon which we have split before; it has taken
us many years to recover from the shock, and now we
are in danger of altogether losing our political life
upon the same reef. Unless we mend our course we inevitably
shall. Men forego every consideration of public honor
and private conscience for the sake of electing a
party candidate. The man at the helm of the party
ship has declared that he will sail due north, or south,
or east, or west, whatever happens, and his crew laugh
together and keep no lookout; they even feel a certain
pride in their leader, who thus defies the accidents
of nature for the sake of sailing in a fixed direction.</p>
<p>“What is the result of all this? It is here
before us. The country is splitting into parties.
Three candidates are set up for the office of President.
Three distinct parties stand in the field, each one
vowing vengeance, secession, revolution, utter dismemberment
of the Union, unless its chosen champion is elected
to be chief of the Executive Department. Is this to
be the life of our Republic in future? Is this all
that so many millions of free citizens can do for
the public good and for public harmony? What shall
we gain by electing the candidate from the North, if
the defeated candidate from the South is determined
to produce a revolution; and if the disappointed candidate
from the West threatens to touch off the dry powder
and spring the mine of a great western secession?
Have we not seen all this before? Has not the bitter
cry of a nation’s broken heart gone up to heaven
already in mortal agony for these very things to which
our uncontrollable political passions are hourly leading
us?</p>
<p>“The contest is between political passion on
the one hand and universal liberty on the other.</p>
<p>“Liberty in some countries is a kind of charade
word, an anagram, a symbol representing an imaginary
quantity, a password invented by unhappy men to express
all that they do not possess; a term meaning in the
minds of slaves a conglomerate of conditions so absurd,
of aspirations so futile, of imaginary delights so
fantastically unreasonable, that if the ideal state
of which the chained dreamers rave were realized but
for one moment, humanity would start in amazement
at the first glimpse of so much monstrosity, and by
and by would hold its sides with laughter at the folly
of its deluded fellows. In most countries where liberty
is talked of it is but a dream, and such a dream as
could only occur to the sickened fancy of a generation
of bondsmen. But it means something else with us. It
is here, in this country, in this capital, in this
hall, it is in the air we breathe, in the light we
see, in the strong, free pulses of our blood; it is
the heritage of men whose sires died for it, whose
fathers laid down all they had for it, of men whose
own veins have bled for it–and not in vain. In these
United States, liberty is a fact.</p>
<p>“We must decide quickly, then, between the conditions
of our liberty and the requirements of frantic political
passion. We must decide between peace and war, for
that is where the issue will come in the end. Between
freedom, prosperity, and peace on the one side, and
a civil war on the other; an alternative so horrible
and inhuman and hideous, that the very mention of
it makes brave men shiver in disgust at the memories
the word recalls. Do you think we are much further
from it now than we were in 1860? Do you think we
were far from it in 1876? It is a short step from
the threat to the deed when political passion is already
turning to bitter personal hate.</p>
<p>“In our times there is much talk of civilization
and culture. Two words define all that is necessary
to be known about them. Civilization is peace. The
uncivilized state of man is incessant war. Culture
is conscience, because conscience means the exercise
of honest judgment, and an ignorant people can form
no honest judgment of their own which can be exercised.</p>
<p>“In a state of peace, educated and truthful
men judge fairly, and act sensibly on their decisions.
In other words, the majority is right and free. In
times of war and in times of great ignorance majorities
have rarely been either free or right.</p>
<p>“It is a bad sign of the times when education
increases and truth disappears. They ought to grow
together, for education means absolutely nothing but
the teaching and learning of what is true. If it does
not mean that, it means nothing. In some countries
the idea of truth is coexistent with the idea of destroying
all existing forms of belief. Some silly person recently
went so far as to raise the cry in this country, ’Separate
Church and State!’ If there is a country where
they are absolutely separated, it is ours; but let
the beliefs of mankind take care of themselves. I
dare say there will be Christians left in the world
even when Professor Huxley has written his last book,
and when Colonel Ingersoll has delivered his last
lecture. I am reminded of the Chinese philosopher
and political economist, who answered when he was asked
about religious matters: ’Do you understand
this world so well that you need occupy yourselves
with another?’</p>
<p>“The issue turns upon no such absurdities, neither
does it rest with any consideration of so-called platforms–free
trade, civil service, free navigation, tariff reform,
and all the rest of those things. The real issue is
between civilization and barbarism, between peace and
war.</p>
<p>“Be warned in this great strait. I believe we
need few principles, but universal ones. I believe
in the republic because it was founded in simplicity,
and has been built up in strength by the strongest
of strong men; because its existence proves the greatest
truth with which we ever have to do, namely, that
men are born equal and free, although they may grow
up slaves to their evil passions, and become greater
or less according as they manfully put their hands
to the plough, or ignobly lie down and let themselves
be trampled upon. The battle of life is to the stronger,
but no man is so weak that he cannot raise himself
a little if he will, according to the abilities that
are born in him; and nowhere can he raise himself
so speedily and securely as on this free soil of ours.
Nowhere can he go so far without being molested; for
nowhere can man put himself so closely and trustfully
in the keeping of nature, certain that she will not
fail him, certain that she will yield him a thousand
fold for his labor.</p>
<p>“There are indeed times in the history of a
great institution when it is just as well as necessary
to reconsider the principles upon which it is founded.
There are times in the life of a great nation when
it behooves her chief men to examine and see whether
the basis of her constitution is a sound one, and
whether she can continue to grow great without any
change in the fundamental conditions of her development.
It is a bad and a dangerous time for a growing nation,
but it is an almost inevitable stage in her life.
Thank God, that time is past with us! Let us not think
of the possibility of exposing ourselves again to
civil war as an alternative against retrogression
into barbarism.</p>
<p>“Civilization is peace, and to extend civilization
is to increase the security of property in the world–of
property and life and conscience. The natural and
barbarous state of man is that where the human animal
satisfies its cravings without any thought of consequences.
The cultivated state is that where humanity has ceased
to be merely animal, and considers the consequences
first and the cravings afterwards. Civilization unites
men so that they dwell together in harmony; to separate
them into parties that strive to annihilate each other
is to undo the work of civilization, to plunge the
state into civil war; to hew it in pieces, and split
it and tear it to shreds, till the magnificent body
of thinking beings, acting as one man for the public
good, is reduced to the miserable condition of a handful
of hostile tribes, whose very existence depends upon
successful robbery and well-timed violence.</p>
<p>“Party spirit, so long as it is only a force
which binds together a number of men of honest purposes
and opinions, is a good thing, and it is by its means
that just and powerful majorities are formed and guided.
But where party spirit loses sight of the characters
of men, and judges them according as they are Republicans
or Democrats, instead of considering whether they
are good or bad citizens; when party spirit becomes
a machine for obtaining power by fair or foul means,
instead of a fixed principle for upholding the fair
against the foul–then there is great danger that
the majority itself is losing its liberty, and upon
the liberty of majorities depends ultimately the stability
and prosperity of the republic.</p>
<p>“Consider what is the history of the average
politician to-day, of the man whose personal character
is as good as that of his neighbor, who has always
belonged to the same party, and who looks forward to
the hope of political distinction. Consider how he
has struggled through all manner of difficulties to
his present position, striving always to maintain good
relations with the chiefs of his party, while often
acknowledging in his heart that he would act differently
were his connection with those chiefs a matter of
less vital importance to himself. He probably will
tell you that his profession is politics. He has sacrificed
much to obtain his seat in Congress, or his position
in office, and he knows that henceforth he must live
by it or else begin life over again in another sphere.
At all events, for a term of years, his personal prosperity
depends upon the use he can make of his hold upon
the public goods. He is not individually to be blamed,
perhaps, for he follows a precedent as widely recognized
as it is universally pernicious. It is the system
that is to be blamed, the general belief that a man
can, and justly may, support himself by clinging to
a set of principles of which he does not honestly approve;
that he may earn his daily meal, since it comes to
that in the end, by doing jobs which in the free state
he would despise as unworthy, and by speaking boldly
in support of measures which he knows to be injurious
to the welfare of the country. That is the history,
the epitome of the ends and aims and manner of being
of the average politician in our day. He has ventured
into the waters of political life, and they have risen
around him till he must use all his strength in keeping
his head above them, though the torrent carry him
whither it will and whither he would not. There are
no compromises when a man is drowning.</p>
<p>“There are many who are not in any such position.
There are men great and honest, and disinterested
in the highest sense of the word–men whose whole
lives prove it, whose whole record is one of honor
and truth, whose following consists of men they have
themselves chosen as their friends. We are not obliged
to select a drowning man for our President; we can
choose a man who stands on his own feet upon dry ground.</p>
<p>“There is an old proverb which contains much
wisdom: ’Tell me who are your friends, and I
will tell you what you are.’ Is a man fit to
stand at the head of a community of men when he has
associated with a set of parasites, who live upon
his leavings, and will starve him if they can, in order
to enjoy his portion? Consider what is the position
of the President of the United States. Think what
vast power is placed in the hands of one man; what
vast interests of public and private good are at stake;
what an endless sequence of events and results of
events must follow upon the individual action of the
chief of the Executive Department; and remember how
free and untrammeled that individual action is. A people
who elect an officer to such a position need surely
to be cautious in their choice and circumspect in
their judgment of the man elected. They must satisfy
themselves about what he is likely to do by judging
honestly what he has done; they must know who are
his friends, his supporters, his advisers, in order
to judge of the friends he will make. They must take
into their consideration also the character of his
colleague, the vice-president, and the effect upon
the country and the country’s relation with,
the world, should any disaster suddenly throw the
vice-president into office. We cannot afford to elect
a vice-president who would destroy the national credit
in a week, should the President himself be overtaken
by death. We must remember to count the cost of what
we are doing, not passing over one item because another
item seems just. We cannot overlook the future, nor
disregard the influence which our election has upon
the next; the steps which men, once in office, may
take in order to secure to themselves another term,
or to strengthen the position of the men whom they
desire to succeed them.</p>
<p>“In a word, we must put forth all our strength.
We must be cool, far-sighted, and impartial in such
times as these. And yet, how has this campaign been
hitherto conducted? Practically, by raising a party
cry; by exciting every species of evil passion of
which man is capable; by tickling the cupidity of
one man and flattering the ambitions of another; by
intimidating the weak, and groveling before the strong;
by every species of fawning sycophancy on the one
hand, and brutal overbearing bullying on the other.</p>
<p>“Party, party, party! A man would rather commit
a crime than vote against his party. The evil runs
through the country from East to West, from North
to South, eating at the nation’s heartstrings,
gnawing at her sinews, and undermining her strength.
The time is coming, is even now come, when two or
three parties no longer suffice to express the disunion
of the Union. There are three to-day: to-morrow there
will be five, the next day ten, twenty, a hundred,
till every man’s hand is against his fellow,
and his fellow’s against him. The divisions
have grown so wide that the majority and the minority
are but the extremities of a countless set of internecine
majorities and minorities.</p>
<p>“Members of parties are bound no longer by the
honest determination to do the right, to choose the
right, and to uphold the right–they are bound by
fearful penalties to support their own man, were he
the very chiefest outcast of the earth, lest the man
of another party be elected in his place. The adverse
candidate is perhaps avowedly better fitted for the
office, a hundred times more honest, more experienced,
more worthy of respect. But he belongs to the enemy.
Down with him! let him perish in his honesty and righteousness!
There is no good in him, for he is a Democrat! There
is no good in him, for he is a Republican! He is a
scoundrel, for he is a Southerner! He is a thief,
for he is a Northerner! He is the prince of liars,
for he comes from the West! He is the scum of mankind,
for he is from the East! The people rage and rend
each other, and the frenzy grows apace with the hour,
till honor and justice, truth and manliness, are lost
together in the furious chaos of human elements. The
tortured airs of heaven howl out curses in a horrid
unison, this fair free soil of ours, dishonored and
befouled, moans beneath our feet in a dismal drone
of hopeless woe; there is no rock or cavern or ghostly
den of our mighty land but hisses back the echo of
some hideous curse, and hell itself is upon earth,
split and rent into multiplied hells.</p>
<p>“And the ultimate expression of the senses of
these things is money. There is the chiefest disgrace.
We are not worse than the old nations, but we have
a right to be very much better; we have the obligation
to be better, the unchanging moral obligation which
lies upon every man to use the advantage he has. We
alone among nations are free, we alone among nations
inhabit a quarter of the world by ourselves, and live
and grow great in our own way with no thought of the
rest. Let us think more of living greatly than of
prosecuting greatness for the sake of its pecuniary
emoluments. Let us elect presidents who will give their
efforts to making us all great together, and not to
making some citizens rich at the expense of others
who are also citizens. A President can do much toward
either of these results, bad or good. He has the future
of the republic in his hands, as well as the present.
Let us be the richest among nations, since the course
of events makes us so, but let us not be the most sordid.
Let it never be said, in the land which has given
birth to the only true liberty the world has ever
seen, that liberty can be sold for a few dollars in
the market-place, and bartered against the promise
of four years of civil employment at a small salary!</p>
<p>“This party spirit, this miserable craving for
the good things that may be extracted from the service
of a party, has produced the crying evil of our times.
A certain class–a very large class–call our politics
dirty, and our politicians dishonest. Young men whose
education and position in the commonwealth entitle
them to a voice in public matters withdraw entirely
from all contact with the real life of the country.
Liberty has become a leper, a blind outcast in the
eyes of the gilded youth of to-day. She sits apart
in ashes and in rags, and asks a little charity of
the richest of her children–a miserable mother despised
and cast out by her sons. They will not own her for
their mother, nor spare one crust to feed her from
their plenty. They pass by on the other side, staring
in admiration at the image they have set up for themselves–the
image of what they consider social excellence, an
idol compounded of decayed customs, and breathing
the poisonous emanations of a dead world, a monument
raised to the prejudices of former times, to the petty
thirst for aristocratic distinctions which they cherish
in their hearts, to their love of money, show, superficial
culture, and armorial bearings.</p>
<p>“Truly let them perish in the fruition of their
contemptible desires! Let them set up a thing called
society and worship it; let them lose themselves in
the contemplation of objects whose beauty they can
never appreciate save by counting the cost; let them
disgrace the names their honest fathers bore, by striving
to establish their descent from houses stained with
crime and denied with blood; let them disown their
fathers and spit in their mothers’ faces,–but
let them not call themselves free, nor give themselves
the airs of men. They toss their foolish heads in
scorn of all that a man holds truest and best. We can
afford to let them speak, if they please, even words
of contempt and dishonor; we can afford to let them
say that in laboring for our country we are groveling
in mud and defiling our hands with impurity; but we
cannot afford to let them steal our children from
us, nor to submit to the pestilent influence of their
corruption in our ranks. Those who would be of the
republic must labor for the public good, instead of
insolently asserting that there is no good in the
public on which they have fattened and thriven so well.</p>
<p>“All honor to those who have set their faces
against the growing evil, to check it if they can,
and to lay the foundation of a barrier against which
the tidal wave of corruption and dishonesty shall break
in vain. All praise to the brave men who might live
in the indolent lotus-eating atmosphere of wasteful
idleness, but who have put their hand to the wheel
of state, determined to bear all their might upon the
whirling spokes rather than see the good ship go to
pieces on the rock ahead. They have begun a good work,
and they have sown a good seed; they ask for no reward,
nor look for the reaping of the harvest. They mean
to do right, and they do it, because right is right,
not because they expect to be rewarded with the spoils
or fed with fat tit-bits from the feast of party. Upon
such men as these, be they rich or poor, we must rely.
The poor man can make sacrifices as great as the rich,
for he can forego for his country’s sake, the
promise of ease and the hope of wealth as well as any
million-maker in the land.</p>
<p>“In the tremendous issue now before us we are
called to decide upon the life of the country during
the next four years. We are chosen to direct the course
of a stream from its very source, and to turn it into
a channel where it will run smoothly to the end. For
the four years of an administration are like a river.
The water rises suddenly from the spring and flows
swiftly, ever increasing in volume as it is swollen
by tributaries and absorbs into itself other rivers
by the way. It may run smoothly in a fair stream,
moistening barren lands and softening the parched
desert into fertility; moving great engines of industry
with a ceaseless, even strength; bearing the burden
of a mighty and prosperous commerce on its broad bosom;
spreading plenty and refreshment through the wide
pastures by its banks, fed on its way by waters so
clear that at the last it merges untainted and unsullied
into the ocean, whence its limpid drops may again
be taken up and poured in soft, life-giving rain upon
the earth.</p>
<p>“But in digging for a spring men may find suddenly
a torrent that they cannot control. It suddenly bursts
its bounds and banks, and rushes headlong down, carrying
everything before it in a resistless whirl of devastation,
tearing great trees up by the roots, crashing through
villages and towns and factories, girding the world
with a liquid tempest that sends the works of man
spinning down upon its dreadful course, till it plunges
into the abyss, a frantic chaos of indiscriminate destruction,
storm, and death.</p>
<p>“Can any of us here present say that he will,
that he dare, take upon himself the responsibility
of electing a President from motives of party prejudice?
Having it in our power to agree upon the very best
man, would any of us remember this day without shame
if we disgraced those who trust us, by giving our
votes to a mere party candidate? The danger is great,
imminent, universal. We can save the country from it,
I would almost say from, death itself, by acting in
accordance with our honest convictions. Is any man
so despicable, so lost to honor, that in such a case
he will put aside the welfare of a nation for the
miserable sake of party popularity? Are we to stand
here in the guise and manner of free men, knowing
that we are driven together like a flock of sheep into
the fold by the howling of the wolves outside? Are
we to strut and plume ourselves upon our unhampered
freedom, while we act like slaves? Worse than slaves
we should be if we allowed one breath of party spirit,
one thought of party aggrandizement, to enter into
the choice we are about to make. Slaves are driven
to their work; shall we willingly let ourselves be
beaten into doing the dirty work of others by sacrificing
the nobility of our manhood? Do we meet here, like
paid gladiators of old, to cut each other’s
throats in earnest while attacking and defending a
sham fortress, raised in the arena for the diversion
of those who set us on to the butchery and promise
to pay the survivors? Are we to provide a feast of
carrion for a flock of vultures and unclean beasts
of prey, when we need only stand together, and be
true to ourselves and to each other, to accomplish
one of the greatest acts in history? The vultures will
leave us alone unless we destroy each other; we need
not fear them. We are not slaves to be terrified into
compliance with evil, neither are we sheep that we
need huddle trembling together at the snarling of a
wolf.”</p>
<p>“No, no, indeed!” were the words heard
on all sides in the audience, now thoroughly roused.</p>
<p>“I do not say, elect this candidate, or that
one. I am not canvassing for any candidate. It is
too late for that, even if it were seemly for me to
do so. I am canvassing for the cause of liberty against
slavery, as better men have done before me in this
very house. I am defending the reputation of unity
against the slanderous attack of disunion, against
the fearful peril of secession. I appeal to you, as
you are men, to act as men in this great crisis, to
put out your strong hands together and avert the overwhelming
disaster that threatens us; to stand side by side as
brothers,–for we are indeed brothers, children of
one father and one mother, heirs of such magnificent
heritage as has not fallen to the lot of mortality
before, co-heirs of freedom, and inheritors of the
free estate, five and fifty millions of free children,
born to our mother, the great republic, who bow the
knee to no man, and call no man master.”</p>
<p>Loud applause greeted this part of the speech.</p>
<p>“I appeal from license to law, from division
to harmony, from the raging turmoil of angry and devouring
passion without to the calm serenity that reigns within
these walls. As we turn in horror and loathing from
the unbridled fury of human beings, changed almost
to beasts, so let us turn in hope and security to
those things we can honor and respect, to the dignity
of truth and the unbending strength of unquestioned
right.</p>
<p>“I appeal to you to make this day the greatest
in your lives, the most memorable in our history as
a nation. Lay aside this day the memories of the past,
and look forward to the brightness of the future. Throw
down the weapons of petty and murderous strife, and
join together in perfect harmony of mutual trust.
Be neither Republicans, nor Democrats, nor Independents.
Be what it is your greatest privilege to be–American
citizens. Cast parties to the winds, and uphold the
state. Trample under your free-born feet the badges
of party bondage, the ignoble chains of party slavery,
the wretched hopes of party preferment.”</p>
<p>“Yes. Hear, hear! He is right!” cried
many voices.</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered John Harrington, in tones
that rose to the very roof of the vast building.</p>
<blockquote>“’Yes, by that blood our fathers shed,<br/>
O Union, in thy sacred cause,<br/>
Whilst, streaming from the gallant dead,<br/>
It sealed and sanctified thy laws.’</blockquote>
<p>“Yes, and strong hearts and strong hands will
hold their own; the promise of brave men will prevail,
and echoing down the avenues of time will strike grand
chords of harmony in the lives of our children and
children’s children. So, in the far-off ages,
when hundreds of millions of our flesh and blood shall
fill this land, dwelling together in the glory of such
peace as no turmoil can trouble and no discontent disturb,
those men of the dim future will remember what we
swore to do, and what we did; and looking back, they
will say one to another: ’On that day our fathers
struck a mighty blow, and shattered and crushed and
trampled out all dissensions and all party strife
forever and ever.’</p>
<p>“Choose, then, of your own heart and will a
man to be our President and our leader. Elect him
with one accord, and as you give your voices in the
choice, stand here together, knee to knee, shoulder
to shoulder, hand to hand; and let the mighty oath
go thundering up to heaven,</p>
<p>“‘<span class="smallcaps">This Union shall not be broken</span>!’”</p>
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