- Joined
- Feb 20, 2005
- Location
- Ocala, FL (as of December, 2015).
Stevens in a speech at Philadelphia, PA, October 4, 1864, as recorded in the Union League Gazette.
"...The slaveholding madmen rejected the offers and spurned the prostrate suppliants with scorn while yet kneeling in the dust. Their folly was the salvation of freedom. Had not the gods made them mad we should this day have been in shackles instead of having stricken them from others. Now that there is not a slave in the American continent, shall we agree for the sake of a disgraceful and precarious peace to reenslave four million human beings? Shall we aid to rivet the chains on a whole race of God's children that we may purchase the poor boon of a temporary peace from triumphant traitors? If we are men we will resist it to the death. If we are Christians we will sooner suffer martyrdom. Furthermore let us consent to no peace merely on the simple condition of the maintenance of the Union. That would be a weak betrayal of noble men who have fought our battles. Men who make such suggestions, in the Cabinet or out, can be naught else than miserable cowards or moral traitors. Men who aspire to march at the head of a nation or to be foremost in the party of progress, have no right to tremble or despair when danger threatens. My young friends, I know not how such poltroonery stirs your warm blood, but, old as I am, it makes the blood boil in my thin worn veins. It is not by such trembling and trimming in compromises that great nations are established or sustained."
Unionblue
"...The slaveholding madmen rejected the offers and spurned the prostrate suppliants with scorn while yet kneeling in the dust. Their folly was the salvation of freedom. Had not the gods made them mad we should this day have been in shackles instead of having stricken them from others. Now that there is not a slave in the American continent, shall we agree for the sake of a disgraceful and precarious peace to reenslave four million human beings? Shall we aid to rivet the chains on a whole race of God's children that we may purchase the poor boon of a temporary peace from triumphant traitors? If we are men we will resist it to the death. If we are Christians we will sooner suffer martyrdom. Furthermore let us consent to no peace merely on the simple condition of the maintenance of the Union. That would be a weak betrayal of noble men who have fought our battles. Men who make such suggestions, in the Cabinet or out, can be naught else than miserable cowards or moral traitors. Men who aspire to march at the head of a nation or to be foremost in the party of progress, have no right to tremble or despair when danger threatens. My young friends, I know not how such poltroonery stirs your warm blood, but, old as I am, it makes the blood boil in my thin worn veins. It is not by such trembling and trimming in compromises that great nations are established or sustained."
Unionblue

