Douglas
- Lincoln Debates Ottawa, Illinois
August
21, 1858
Mr.
Douglas's Opening Speech.
LADIES
AND GENTLEMEN: I appear before you to-day
for the purpose of discussing the leading
political topics which now agitate the
public mind. By an arrangement between Mr.
Lincoln and myself, we are present here
to-day for the purpose of having a joint
discussion, as the representatives of the
two great political parties of the State
and Union, upon the principles in issue
between those parties; and this vast
concourse of people shows the deep feeling
which pervades the public mind in regard
to the questions dividing us.
Prior
to 1854 this country was divided into two
great political parties, known as the Whig
and Democratic parties. Both were national
and patriotic, advocating principles that
were universal in their application. An
old-line Whig could proclaim his
principles in Louisiana and Massachusetts
alike. Whig principles had no boundary
sectional line -- they were not limited by
the Ohio River, nor by the Potomac, nor by
the line of the free and slave States, but
applied and were proclaimed wherever the
Constitution ruled or the American flag
waved over the American soil. So it was,
and so it is with the great Democratic
party, which, from the days of Jefferson
until this period, has proven itself to be
the historic party of this nation. While
the Whig and Democratic parties differed
in regard to a bank, the tariff,
distribution, the specie circular, and the
sub-treasury, they agreed on the great
slavery question which now agitates the
Union. I say that the Whig party and the
Democratic party agreed on the slavery
question, while they differed on those
matters of expediency to which I have
referred. The Whig party and the
Democratic party jointly adopted the
compromise measures of 1850 as the basis
of a proper and just solution of the
slavery question in all its forms. Clay
was the great leader, with Webster on his
right and Cass on his left, and sustained
by the patriots in the Whig and Democratic
ranks who had devised and enacted the
compromise measures of 1850.
In
1851 the Whig party and the Democratic
party united in Illinois in adopting
resolutions indorsing and approving the
principles of the compromise measures of
1850, as the proper adjustment of that
question. In 1852, when the Whig party
assembled in convention at Baltimore for
the purpose of nominating a candidate for
the presidency, the first thing it did was
to declare the compromise measures of
1850, in substance and in principle, a
suitable adjustment of that question.
[Here the speaker was interrupted by loud
and long-continued applause.] My friends,
silence will be more acceptable to me in
the discussion of these questions than
applause. I desire to address myself to
your judgment, your understanding, and
your consciences, and not to your passions
or your enthusiasm. When the Democratic
convention assembled in Baltimore in the
same year, for the purpose of nominating a
Democratic candidate for the presidency,
it also adopted the compromise measures of
1850 as the basis of Democratic action.
Thus you see that up to 1853-54, the Whig
party and the Democratic party both stood
on the same platform with regard to the
slavery question. That platform was the
right of the people of each State and each
Territory to decide their local and
domestic institutions for themselves,
subject only to the Federal Constitution.
During
the session of Congress of 1853-54, I
introduced into the Senate of the United
States a bill to organize the Territories
of Kansas and Nebraska on that principle
which had been adopted in the compromise
measures of 1850, approved by the Whig
party and the Democratic party in Illinois
in 1851, and indorsed by the Whig party
and the Democratic party in national
convention in 1852. In order that there
might be no misunderstanding in relation
to the principle involved in the Kansas
and Nebraska bill, I put forth the true
intent and meaning of the act in these
words: "It is the true intent and
meaning of this act not to legislate
slavery into any State or Territory or to
exclude it there from, but to leave the
people thereof perfectly free to form and
regulate their domestic institutions in
their own way, subject only to the Federal
Constitution." Thus you see that up
to 1854, when the Kansas and Nebraska bill
was brought into Congress for the purpose
of carrying out the principles which both
parties had up to that time indorsed and
approved, there had been no division in
this country in regard to that principle
except the opposition of the
Abolitionists. In the House of
Representatives of the Illinois
legislature, upon a resolution asserting
that principle, every Whig and every
Democrat in the House voted in the
affirmative, and only four men voted
against it, and those four were old-line
Abolitionists.
In
1854 Mr. Abraham Lincoln and Mr. Lyman
Trumbull entered into an arrangement, one
with the other, and each with his
respective friends, to dissolve the Old
Whig party on the one hand, and to
dissolve the old Democratic party on the
other, and to connect the members of both
into an Abolition party, under the name
and disguise of a Republican party. The
terms of that arrangement between Lincoln
and Trumbull have been published by
Lincoln's special friend, James H.
Matheny, Esq., and they were that Lincoln
should have General Shield's place in the
United States Senate, which was then about
to become vacant, and that Trumbull should
have my seat when my term expired. Lincoln
went to work to Abolitionize the Old Whig
party all over the State, pretending that
he was then as good a Whig as ever; and
Trumbull went to work in his part of the
State preaching Abolitionism in its milder
and lighter form, and trying to
Abolitionize the Democratic party, and
bring old Democrats handcuffed and bound
hand and foot into the Abolition camp. In
pursuance of the arrangement, the parties
met at Springfield in October, 1854, and
proclaimed their new platform. Lincoln was
to bring into the Abolition camp the
old-line Whigs, and transfer them over to
Giddings, Chase, Fred Douglass, and Parson
Lovejoy, who were ready to receive them
and christen them in their new faith.
They
laid down on that occasion a platform for
their new Republican party, which was thus
to be constructed. I have the resolutions
of the State convention then held, which
was the first mass State convention ever
held in Illinois by the Black Republican
party, and I now hold them in my hands and
will read a part of them, and cause the
others to be printed. Here are the most
important and material resolutions of this
Abolition platform:
1.
Resolved, That we believe this
truth to be self-evident, that when
parties become subversive of the ends for
which they are established, or incapable
of restoring the government to the true
principles of the Constitution, it is the
right and duty of the people to dissolve
the political bands by which they may have
been connected therewith, and to organize
new parties upon such principles and with
such views as the circumstances and the
exigencies of the nation may demand.
2.
Resolved, That the times
Imperatively demand the reorganization of
parties, and, repudiating all previous
party attachments, names and
predilections, we unite ourselves together
in defense of the liberty and Constitution
of the country, and will hereafter
cooperate as the Republican party, pledged
to the accomplishment of the following
purposes: To bring the administration of
the government back to the control of
first principles; to restore Nebraska and
Kansas to the position of free
Territories; that, as the Constitution of
the United States vests In the States, and
not in Congress, the power to legislate
for the extradition of fugitives from
labor, to repeal and entirely abrogate the
fugitive-slave law; to restrict slavery to
those States in which it exists; to
prohibit the admission of any more slave
States into the Union; to abolish slavery
in the District of Columbia; to exclude
slavery from all the Territories over
which the general government has exclusive
jurisdiction; and to resist the
acquirement of any more Territories unless
the practice of slavery therein forever
shall have been prohibited.
3.
Resolved, That in furtherance of
these principles we will use such
constitutional and lawful means as shall
seem best adapted to their accomplishment,
and that we will support no man for
office, under the general or State
government, who is not positively and
fully committed to the support of these
principles, and whose personal character
and conduct is
[p. 207]
not a guaranty that he is reliable, and
who shall not have abjured old party
allegiance and ties.
Now,
gentlemen, your Black Republicans have
cheered every one of those propositions,
and yet I venture to say that you cannot
get Mr. Lincoln to come out and say that
he is now in favor of each one of them.
That these propositions, one and all,
constitute the platform of the Black
Republican party of this day, I have no
doubt; and when you were not aware for
what purpose I was reading them, your
Black Republicans cheered them as good
Black Republican doctrines. My object in
reading these resolutions was to put the
question to Abraham Lincoln this day,
whether he now stands and will stand by
each article in that creed, and carry it
out. I desire to know whether Mr. Lincoln
today stands as he did in 1854, in favor
of the unconditional repeal of the
fugitive-slave law. I desire him to answer
whether he stands pledged to-day, as he
did in 1854, against the admission of any
more slave States into the Union, even if
the people want them. I want to know
whether he stands pledged against the
admission of a new State into the Union
with such a constitution as the people of
that State may see fit to make. I want to
know whether he stands to-day pledged to
the abolition of slavery in the District
of Columbia. I desire him to answer
whether he stands pledged to the
prohibition of the slave-trade between the
different States. I desire to know whether
he stands pledged to prohibit slavery in
all the Territories of the United States,
North as well as South of the Missouri
Compromise line. I desire him to answer
whether he is opposed to the acquisition
of any more territory unless slavery is
prohibited therein. I want his answer to
these questions. Your affirmative cheers
in favor of this Abolition platform are
not satisfactory. I ask Abraham Lincoln to
answer these questions, in order that when
I trot him down to lower Egypt, I may put
the same questions to him. My principles
are the same everywhere. I can proclaim
them alike in the North, the South, the
East, and the West. My principles will
apply wherever the Constitution prevails
and the American flag waves. I desire to
know whether Mr. Lincoln's principles will
bear transplanting from Ottawa to
Jonesboro? I put these questions to him
to-day distinctly, and ask an answer. I
have a right to an answer, for I quote
from the platform of the Republican party,
made by himself and others at the time
that party was formed, and the bargain
made by Lincoln to dissolve and kill the
Old Whig party, and transfer its members,
bound hand and foot, to the Abolition
party, under the direction of Giddings and
Fred Douglass. In the remarks I have made
on this platform, and the position of Mr.
Lincoln upon it, I mean nothing personally
disrespectful or unkind to that gentleman.
I have known him for nearly twenty-five
years. There were many points of sympathy
between us when we first got acquainted.
We were both comparatively boys, and both
struggling with poverty in a strange land.
I was a school-teacher in the town of
Winchester, and he a flourishing
grocery-keeper in the town of Salem. He
was more successful in his occupation than
I was in mine, and hence more fortunate in
this world's goods. Lincoln is one of
those peculiar men who perform with
admirable skill everything which they
undertake. I made as good a school-teacher
as I could, and when a cabinet-maker I
made a good bedstead and tables, although
my old boss said I succeeded better with
bureaus and secretaries than with anything
else; but I believe that Lincoln was
always more successful in business than I,
for his business enabled him to get into
the legislature. I met him there, however,
and had sympathy with him, because of the
up-hill struggle we both had in life. He
was then just as good at telling an
anecdote as now. He could beat any of the
boys wrestling, or running a foot-race, in
pitching quoits or tossing a copper; could
ruin more liquor than all the boys of the
town together, and the dignity and
impartiality with which he presided at a
horse-race or fistfight excited the
admiration and won the praise of everybody
that was present and participated. I
sympathized with him because he was
struggling with difficulties, and so was
I. Mr. Lincoln served with me in the
legislature in 1836, when we both retired,
and he subsided, or became submerged, and
he was lost sight of as a public man for
some years. In 1846, when Wilmot
introduced his celebrated proviso, and the
Abolition tornado swept over the country,
Lincoln again turned up as a member of
Congress from the Sangamon district. I was
then in the Senate of the United States,
and was glad to welcome my old friend and
companion. Whilst in Congress, he
distinguished himself by his opposition to
the Mexican War, taking the side of the
common enemy against his own country; and
when he returned home he found that the
indignation of the people followed him
everywhere, and he was again submerged or
obliged to retire into private life,
forgotten by his former friends. He came
up again in 1854, just in time to make
this Abolition or Black Republican
platform, in company with Giddings,
Lovejoy, Chase, and Fred Douglass, for the
Republican party to stand upon. Trumbull,
too, was one of our own contemporaries. He
was born and raised in old Connecticut,
was bred a Federalist, but removing to
Georgia, turned Nullifier when
nullification was popular, and as soon as
he disposed of his clocks and wound up his
business, migrated to Illinois, turned
politician and lawyer here, and made his
appearance in 1841 as a member of the
legislature. He became noted as the author
of the scheme to repudiate a large portion
of the State debt of Illinois, which, if
successful, would have brought infamy and
disgrace upon the fair escutcheon of our
glorious State. The odium attached to that
measure consigned him to oblivion for a
time. I helped to do it. I walked into a
public meeting in the hall of the House of
Representatives, and replied to his
repudiating speeches, and resolutions were
carried over his head denouncing
repudiation, and asserting the moral and
legal obligation of Illinois to pay every
dollar of the debt she owed and every bond
that bore her seal. Trumbull's malignity
has followed me since I thus defeated his
infamous scheme.
These
two men having formed this combination to Abolitionize
the Old Whig party and the old Democratic
party, and put themselves into the Senate
of the United States, in pursuance of
their bargain, are now carrying out that
arrangement. Matheny states that Trumbull
broke faith; that the bargain was that
Lincoln should be the senator in Shields's
place, and Trumbull was to wait for mine;
and the story goes that Trumbull cheated
Lincoln, having control of four or five
Abolitionized Democrats who were holding
over in the Senate; he would not let them
vote for Lincoln, which obliged the rest
of the Abolitionists to support him in
order to secure an Abolition senator.
There are a number of authorities for the
truth of this besides Matheny, and I
suppose that even Mr. Lincoln will not
deny it.
Mr.
Lincoln demands that he shall have the
place intended for Trumbull, as Trumbull
cheated him and got his, and Trumbull is
stumping the State traducing me for the
purpose of securing the position for
Lincoln, in order to quiet him. It was in
consequence of this arrangement that the
Republican convention was impaneled to
instruct for Lincoln and nobody else, and
it was on this account that they passed
resolutions that he was their first, their
last, and their only choice. Archy
Williams was nowhere, Browning was nobody,
Wentworth was not to be considered; they
had no man in the Republican party for the
place except Lincoln, for the reason that
he demanded that they should carry out the
arrangement.
Having
formed this new party for the benefit of
deserters from Whiggery and deserters from
Democracy, and having laid down the
Abolition platform which I have read,
Lincoln now takes his stand and proclaims
his Abolition doctrines. Let me read a
part of them. In his speech at Springfield
to the convention which nominated him for
the Senate, he said:
In
my opinion it will not cease until a
crisis shall have been reached and passed.
"A house divided against itself
cannot stand." I believe this
government cannot endure permanently half
slave and half free. I do not expect the
Union to be dissolved -- I do not expect
the house to fall -- but I do expect it
will cease to be divided. It will become
all one thing, or all the other. Either
the opponents of slavery will arrest the
further spread of it, and place It where
the public mind shall rest in the belief
that it is in the course of ultimate
extinction, or Its advocates will push it
forward till it shall become alike lawful
in all States -- old as well as new, North
as well as South.
["Good,"
"Good" and Cheers.]
I
am delighted to hear you Black Republicans
say "good." I have no doubt that
doctrine expresses your sentiments, and I
will prove to you now, if you will listen
to me, that it is revolutionary and
destructive of the existence of this
government. Mr. Lincoln, in the extract
from which I have read, says that this
government cannot endure permanently in
the same condition in which it was made by
its framers -- divided into free and slave
States. He says that it has existed for
about seventy years thus divided, and yet
he tells you that it cannot endure
permanently on the same principles and in
the same relative condition in which our
fathers made it. Why can it not exist
divided into free and slave States?
Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison,
Hamilton, Jay, and the great men of that
day made this government divided into free
States and slave States, and left each
State perfectly free to do as it pleased
on the subject of slavery. Why can it not
exist on the same principles on which our
fathers made it? They knew when they
framed the Constitution that in a country
as wide and broad as this, with such a
variety of climate, production, and
interest, the people necessarily required
different laws and institutions in
different localities. They knew that the
laws and regulations which would suit the
granite hills of New Hampshire would be
unsuited to the rice-plantations of South
Carolina, and they therefore provided that
each State should retain its own
legislature and its own sovereignty, with
the full and complete power to do as it
pleased within its own limits, in all that
was local and not national. One of the
reserved rights of the States was the
right to regulate the relations between
master and servant, on the slavery
question. At the time the Constitution was
framed, there were thirteen States in the
Union, twelve of which were slave-holding
States and one a free State. Suppose this
doctrine of uniformity preached by Mr.
Lincoln, that the States should all be
free or all be slave, had prevailed, and
what would have been the result? Of
course, the twelve slave-holding States
would have overruled the one free State,
and slavery would have been fastened by a
constitutional provision on every inch of
the American republic, instead of being
left, as our fathers wisely left it, to
each State to decide for itself. Here I
assert that uniformity in the local laws
and institutions of the different States
is neither possible nor desirable. If
uniformity had been adopted when the
government was established, it must
inevitably have been the uniformity of
slavery everywhere, or else the uniformity
of negro citizenship and negro equality
everywhere.
We
are told by Lincoln that he is utterly
opposed to the Dred Scott decision, and
will not submit to it, for the reason that
he says it deprives the negro of the
rights and privileges of citizenship. That
is the first and main reason which he
assigns for his warfare on the Supreme
Court of the United States and its
decision. I ask you, are you in favor of
conferring upon the negro the rights and
privileges of citizenship? Do you desire
to strike out of our State constitution
that clause which keeps slaves and free
negroes out of the State, and allow the
free negroes to flow in, and cover your
prairies with black settlements? Do you
desire to turn this beautiful State into a
free negro colony, in order that when
Missouri abolishes slavery she can send
one hundred thousand emancipated slaves
into Illinois, to become citizens and
voters, on an equality with yourselves? If
you desire negro citizenship, if you
desire to allow them to come into the
State and settle with the white man, if
you desire them to vote on an equality
with yourselves, and to make them eligible
to office, to serve on juries, and to
adjudge your rights, then support Mr.
Lincoln and the Black Republican party,
who are in favor of the citizenship of the
negro. For one, I am opposed to negro
citizenship in any and every form. I
believe this government was made on the
white basis. I believe it was made by
white men, for the benefit of white men
and their posterity forever, and I am in
favor of confining citizenship to white
men, men of European birth and descent,
instead of conferring it upon negroes,
Indians, and other inferior races.
Mr.
Lincoln, following the example and lead of
all the little Abolition orators who go
around and lecture in the basements of
schools and churches, reads from the
Declaration of Independence that all men
were created equal, and then asks how can
you deprive a negro of that equality which
God and the Declaration of Independence
award to him? He and they maintain that
negro equality is guaranteed by the laws
of God, and that it is asserted in the
Declaration of Independence. If they think
so, of course they have a right to say so,
and so vote. I do not question Mr.
Lincoln's conscientious belief that the
negro was made his equal, and hence is his
brother; but for my own part, I do not
regard the negro as my equal, and
positively deny that he is my brother or
any kin to me whatever. Lincoln has
evidently learned by heart Parson
Lovejoy's catechism. He can repeat it as
well as Farnsworth, and he is worthy of a
medal from Father Giddings and Fred
Douglass for his Abolitionism. He holds
that the negro was born his equal and
yours, and that he was endowed with
equality by the Almighty, and that no
human law can deprive him of these rights
which were guaranteed to him by the
Supreme Ruler of the universe. Now, I do
not believe that the Almighty ever
intended the negro to be the equal of the
white man. If he did, he has been a long
time demonstrating the fact. For thousands
of years the negro has been a race upon
the earth, and during all that time, in
all latitudes and climates, wherever he
has wandered or been taken, he has been
inferior to the race which he has there
met. He belongs to an inferior race, and
must always occupy an inferior position. I
do not hold that because the negro is our
inferior therefore he ought to be a slave.
By no means can such a conclusion be drawn
from what I have said. On the contrary, I
hold that humanity and Christianity both
require that the negro shall have and
enjoy every right, every privilege, and
every immunity consistent with the safety
of the society in which he lives. On that
point, I presume, there can be no
diversity of opinion. You and I are bound
to extend to our inferior and dependent
beings every right, every privilege, every
facility and immunity consistent with the
public good. The question then arises,
what rights and privileges are consistent
with the public good? This is a question
which each State and each Territory must
decide for itself-Illinois has decided it
for herself. We have provided that the
negro shall not be a slave, and we have
also provided that he shall not be a
citizen, but protect him in his civil
rights, in his life, his person and his
property, only depriving him of all
political rights whatsoever, and refusing
to put him on an equality with the white
man. That policy of Illinois is
satisfactory to the Democratic party and
to me, and if it were to the Republicans,
there would then be no question upon the
subject; but the Republicans say that he
ought to be made a citizen, and when he
becomes a citizen he becomes your equal,
with all your rights and privileges. They
assert the Dred Scott decision to be
monstrous because it denies that the negro
is or can be a citizen under the
Constitution.
Now,
I hold that Illinois had a right to
abolish and prohibit slavery as she did,
and I hold that Kentucky has the same
right to continue and protect slavery that
Illinois had to abolish it. I hold that
New York had as much right to abolish
slavery as Virginia has to continue it,
and that each and every State of this
Union is a sovereign power, with the right
to do as it pleases upon this question of
slavery, and upon all its domestic
institutions. Slavery is not the only
question which comes up in this
controversy. There is a far more important
one to you, and that is, what shall be
done with the free negro? We have settled
the slavery question as far as we are
concerned; we have prohibited it in
Illinois forever, and in doing so, I think
we have done wisely, and there is no man
in the State who would be more strenuous
in his opposition to the introduction of
slavery than I would; but when we settled
it for our selves, we exhausted all our
power over that subject. We have done our
whole duty, and can do no more. We must
leave each and every other State to decide
for itself the same question. In relation
to the policy to be pursued toward the
free negroes, we have said that they shall
not vote; whilst Maine, on the other hand,
has said that they shall vote. Maine is a
sovereign State, and has the power to
regulate the qualifications of voters
within her limits. I would never consent
to confer the right of voting and of
citizenship upon a negro, but still I am
not going to quarrel with Maine for
differing from me in opinion. Let Maine
take care of her own negroes, and fix the
qualifications of her own voters to suit
herself, without interfering with
Illinois, and Illinois will not interfere
with Maine. So with the State of New York.
She allows the negro to vote provided he
owns two hundred and fifty dollars' worth
of property, but not otherwise. While I
would not make any distinction whatever
between a negro who held property and one
who did not, yet if the sovereign State of
New York chooses to make that distinction
it is her business and not mine, and I
will not quarrel with her for it. She can
do as she pleases on this question if she
minds her own business, and we will do the
same thing Now, my friends, if we will
only act conscientiously and rigidly upon
this great principle of popular
sovereignty, which guarantees to each
State and Territory the right to do as it
pleases on all things, local and domestic,
instead of Congress interfering, we will
continue at peace one with another. Why
should Illinois be at war with Missouri,
or Kentucky with Ohio, or Virginia, with
New York, merely because their
institutions differ? Our fathers intended
that our institutions should differ. They
knew that the North and the South, having
different climates, productions, and
interests, required different
institutions. This doctrine of Mr.
Lincoln, of uniformity among the
institutions of the different States, is a
new doctrine, never dreamed of by
Washington, Madison, or the framers of
this government. Mr. Lincoln and the
Republican party set themselves up as
wiser than these men who made this
government, which has flourished for
seventy years under the principle of
popular sovereignty, recognizing the right
of each State to do as it pleased. Under
that principle, we have grown from a
nation of three or four millions to a
nation of about thirty millions of people;
we have crossed the Allegheny mountains
and filled up the whole Northwest, turning
the prairie into a garden, and building up
churches and schools, thus spreading
civilization and Christianity where before
there was nothing but savage barbarism.
Under that principle we have become, from
a feeble nation, the most powerful on the
face of the earth, and if we only adhere
to that principle, we can go forward
increasing in territory, in power, in
strength, and in glory until the Republic
of America shall be the north star that
shall guide the friend of freedom
throughout the civilized world. And why
can we not adhere to the great principle
of self-government upon which our
institutions were originally based? I
believe that this new doctrine preached by
Mr. Lincoln and his party will dissolve
the Union if it succeeds. They are trying
to array all the Northern States in one
body against the South, to excite a
sectional war between the free States and
the slave States, in order that the one or
the other may be driven to the wall.
I
am told that my time is out. Mr. Lincoln
will now address you for an hour and a
half, and I will then occupy a half hour
in replying to him.
Mr.
Lincoln's Reply in the Ottawa Joint
Debate.
MY
FELLOW-CITIZENS: When a man hears himself
somewhat misrepresented, it provokes
him-at least, I find it so with myself;
but when misrepresentation becomes very
gross and palpable, it is more apt to
amuse him. The first thing I see fit to
notice is the fact that Judge Douglas
alleges, after running through the history
of the old Democratic and the old Whig
parties, that Judge Trumbull and myself
made an arrangement in 1854 by which I was
to have the place of General Shields in
the United States Senate, and Judge
Trumbull was to have the place of Judge
Douglas. Now all I have to say upon that
subject is that I think no man-not even
Judge Douglas-can prove it, because it is
not true. I have no doubt he is
"conscientious" in saying it. As
to those resolutions that he took such a
length of time to read, as being the
platform of the Republican party in 1854,
I say I never had anything to do with
them, and I think Trumbull never had.
Judge Douglas cannot show that either of
us ever did have anything to do with them.
I believe this is true about those
resolutions. There was a call for a
convention to form a Republican party at
Springfield, and I think that my friend
Mr. Lovejoy, who is here upon this stand,
had a hand in it. I think this is true,
and I think if he will remember accurately
he will be able to recollect that he tried
to get me into it, and I would not go in.
I believe it is also true that I went away
from Springfield, when the convention was
in session, to attend court in Tazewell
County. It is true they did place my name,
though without authority, upon the
committee, and afterward wrote me to
attend the meeting of the committee, but I
refused to do so, and I never had anything
to do with that organization. This is the
plain truth about all matter of the
resolutions.
Now,
about this story that Judge Douglas tells
of Trumbull bargaining to sell out the old
Democratic party, and Lincoln agreeing to
sell out the Old Whig party, I have the
means of knowing about that; Judge Douglas
cannot have; and I know there is no
substance to it whatever. Yet I have no
doubt he is "conscientious"
about it. I know that after Mr. Lovejoy
got into the legislature that winter, he
complained of me that I had told all the
Old Whigs of his district that the Old
Whig party was good enough for them, and
some of them voted against him because I
told them so. Now, I have no means of
totally disapproving such charges as this
which the judge makes. A man cannot prove
a negative, but he has a right to claim
that when a man makes an affirmative
charge, he must offer some proof to show
the truth of what he says. I certainly
cannot introduce testimony to show the
negative about things, but I have a right
to claim that if a man says he knows a
thing, then he must show how he knows it.
I always have a right to claim this, and
it is not satisfactory to me that he may
be "conscientious" on the
subject.
Now,
gentlemen, I hate to waste my time on such
things, but in regard to that general
Abolition tilt that Judge Douglas makes,
when he says that I was engaged at that
time in selling out and Abolitionizing the
Old Whig party, I hope you will permit me
to read a part of a printed speech that I
made then at Peoria, which will show
altogether a different view of the
position I took in that contest of 1854.
[Voice: "Put on your specs."]
Yes, sir, I am obliged to do so. I am no
longer a young man.
This
is the repeal of the Missouri Compromise.
The foregoing history may not be precisely
accurate in every particular; but I am
sure it is sufficiently so for all the
uses I shall attempt to make of it, and in
it we have before us the chief materials
enabling us to correctly judge whether the
repeal of the Missouri Compromise is right
or wrong.
I
think, and shall try to show, that it is
wrong; wrong in its direct effect, letting
slavery into Kansas and Nebraska and wrong
in its prospective principle, allowing it
to spread to every other part of the wide
world where men can be found inclined to
take it.
This
declared indifference, but, as I must
think, covert real zeal for the spread of
slavery, I cannot but hate. I hate it
because of the monstrous injustice of
slavery itself. I hate it because it
deprives our republican example of its
just influence in the world; enables the
enemies of free institutions, with
plausibility, to taunt us as hypocrites;
causes the real friends of freedom to
doubt our sincerity, and especially
because it forces so many really good men
amongst ourselves into an open war with
the very fundamental principles of civil
liberty - criticizing the Declaration of
Independence, and insisting that there is
no right principle of action but
self-interest.
Before
proceeding, let me say I think I have no
prejudice against the Southern people.
They are just what we would be in their
situation. If slavery did not now exist
among them, they would not introduce it.
If it did now exist among us, we should
not instantly give it up. This I believe
of the masses North and South. Doubtless
there are individuals on both sides who
would not hold slaves under any
circumstances; and others who would gladly
introduce slavery anew, if it were out of
existence. We know that some Southern men
do free their slaves, go North, and become
tip-top Abolitionists; while some Northern
ones go South, and become most cruel slave-masters.
When
Southern people tell us they are no more
responsible for the origin of slavery than
we, I acknowledge the fact. When it is
said that the institution exists, and that
it is very difficult to get rid of it in
any satisfactory way, I can understand and
appreciate the saying. I surely will not
blame them for not doing what I should not
know how to do myself. If all earthly
power were given me, I should not know
what to do as to the existing institution.
My first impulse would be to free all the
slaves, and send them to Liberia - to
their own native land. But a moment's
reflection would convince me that whatever
of high hope (as I think there is) there
may be in this in the long run, its sudden
execution is impossible. If they were all
landed there in a day, they would all
perish in the next ten days; and there are
not surplus shipping and surplus money
enough in the world to carry them there in
many times ten days. What then? Free them
all, and keep them among us as underlings?
Is it quite certain that this betters
their condition? I think I would not hold
one in slavery at any rate; yet the point
is not clear enough to me to denounce
people upon. What next? Free them, and
make them politically and socially our
equals? My own feelings will not admit of
this; and if mine would, we well know that
those of the great mass of white people
will not. Whether this feeling accords
with justice and sound judgment is not the
sole question, if indeed, it is any part
of it. A universal feeling, whether well
or ill-founded, cannot be safely
disregarded. We cannot make them equals.
It does seem to me that systems of gradual
emancipation might be adopted; but for
their tardiness in this, I will not
undertake to judge our brethren of the
South.
When
they remind us of their constitutional
rights, I acknowledge them, not
grudgingly, but fully and fairly; and I
would give them any legislation for the
reclaiming of their fugitives, which
should not, in its stringency, be more
likely to carry a free man into slavery,
than our ordinary criminal laws are to
hang an innocent one.
But
all this, to my judgment, furnishes no
more excuse for permitting slavery to go
info our own free territory, than it would
for reviving the African slave trade by
law. The law which forbids the bringing of
slaves from Africa, and that which has so
long forbidden the taking of them to
Nebraska, can hardly be distinguished on
any moral principle; and the repeal of the
former could find quite as plausible
excuses as that of the latter.
I
have reason to know that Judge Douglas
knows that I said this. I think he has the
answer here to one of the questions he put
to me. I do not mean to allow him to
catechize me unless he pays back for it in
kind. I will not answer questions one
after another, unless he reciprocates; but
as he has made this inquiry, and I have
answered it before, he has got it without
my getting anything in return. He has got
my answer on the fugitive-slave law.
Now,
gentlemen, I don't want to read at any
great length, but this is the true
complexion of all I have ever said in
regard to the institution of slavery and
the black race. This is the whole of it,
and anything that argues me into his idea
of perfect social and political equality
with the negro is but a specious and
fantastic arrangement of words, by which a
man can prove a horse-chestnut to be a
chestnut horse. I will say here, while
upon this subject, that I have no purpose,
either directly or indirectly, to
interfere with the institution of slavery
in the States where it exists. I believe I
have no lawful right to do so, and I have
no inclination to do so. I have no purpose
to introduce political and social equality
between the white and the black races.
There is a physical difference between the
two, which, in my judgment, will probably
forever forbid their living together upon
the footing of perfect equality; and
inasmuch as it becomes a necessity that
there must be a difference, I, as well as
Judge Douglas, am in favor of the race to
which I belong having the superior
position. I have never said anything to
the contrary, but I hold that,
notwithstanding all this, there is no
reason in the world why the negro is not
entitled to all the natural rights
enumerated in the Declaration of
Independence-the right to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness. I hold that
he is as much entitled to these as the
white man. I agree with Judge Douglas he
is not my equal in many respects-certainly
not in color, perhaps not in moral or
intellectual endowment. But in the right
to eat the bread, without the leave of
anybody else, which his own hand earns, he
is my equal and the equal of Judge
Douglas, and the equal of every living
man.
Now
I pass on to consider one or two more of
these little follies. The judge is
woefully at fault about his early friend
Lincoln being a
"grocery-keeper." I don't know
that it would be a great sin if I had
been; but he is mistaken. Lincoln never
kept a grocery anywhere in the world. It
is true that Lincoln did work the latter
part of one winter in a little still-house
up at the head of a hollow. And so I think
my friend, the judge, is equally at fault
when he charges me at the time when I was
in Congress of having opposed our soldiers
who were fighting in the Mexican War. The
judge did not make his charge very
distinctly, but I tell you what he can
prove, by referring to the record. You
remember I was an Old Whig, and whenever
the Democratic party tried to get me to
vote that the war had been righteously
begun by the President, I would not do it.
But whenever they asked for any money, or
land-warrants, or anything to pay the
soldiers there, during all that time, I
gave the same vote that Judge Douglas did.
You can think as you please as to whether
that was consistent. Such is the truth;
and the judge has the right to make all he
can out of it. But when he, by a general
charge, conveys the idea that I withheld
supplies from the soldiers who were
fighting in the Mexican War, or did
anything else to hinder the soldiers, he
is, to say the least, grossly and
altogether mistaken, as a consultation of
the records will prove to him.
As
I have not used up so much of my time as I
had supposed, I will dwell a little longer
upon one or two of these minor topics upon
which the judge has spoken. He has read
from my speech in Springfield in which I
say that "a house divided against
itself cannot stand." Does the judge
say it can stand? I don't know whether he
does or not. The judge does not seem to be
attending to me just now, but I would like
to know if it is his opinion that a house
divided against itself can stand. If he
does, then there is a question of
veracity, not between him and me, but
between the judge and an authority of a
somewhat higher character.
Now,
my friends, I ask your attention to this
matter for the purpose of saying something
seriously. I know that the judge may
readily enough agree with me that the
maxim which was put forth by the Saviour
is true, but he may allege that I misapply
it; and the judge has a right to urge that
in my application I do misapply it, and
then I have a right to show that I do not
misapply it. When he undertakes to say
that because I think this nation, so far
as the question of slavery is concerned,
will all become one thing or all the
other, I am in favor of bringing about a
dead uniformity in the various States in
all their institutions, he argues
erroneously. The great variety of the
local institutions in the States,
springing from differences in the soil,
differences in the face of the country,
and in the climate, are bonds of union.
They do not make "a house divided
against itself," but they make a
house united. If they produce in one
section of the country what is called for
by the wants of another section, and this
other section can supply the wants of the
first, they are not matters of discord but
bonds of union, true bonds of union. But
can this question of slavery be considered
as among these varieties in the
institutions of the country? I leave it to
you to say whether, in the history of our
government, this institution of slavery
has not always failed to be a bond of
union, and, on the contrary, been an apple
of discord and an element of division in
the house. I ask you to consider whether,
so long as the moral constitution of men's
minds shall continue to be the same, after
this generation and assemblage shall sink
into the grave, and another race shall
arise with the same moral and intellectual
development we have -- whether, if that
institution is standing in the same
irritating position in which it now is, it
will not continue an element of division?
If so, then I have a right to say that, in
regard to this question, the Union is a
house divided against itself; and when the
judge reminds me that I have often said to
him that the institution of slavery has
existed for eighty years in some States,
and yet it does not exist in some others,
I agree to the fact, and I account for it
by looking at the position in which our
fathers originally placed it --
restricting it from the new Territories
where it had not gone, and legislating to
cut off its source by the abrogation of
the slave-trade, thus putting the seal of
legislation against its spread. The public
mind did rest in the belief that it was in
the course of ultimate extinction. But
lately, I think -- and in this I charge
nothing on the judge's motives -- lately,
I think, that he, and those acting with
him, have placed that institution on a new
basis, which looks to the perpetuity and
nationalization of slavery. And while it
is placed upon this new basis, I say, and
I have, that believe we shall not have
peace upon the question until the
opponents of slavery arrest the further
spread of it, and place it where the
public mind shall rest in the belief that
it is in the course of ultimate
extinction; or, on the other hand, that
its advocates will push it forward until
it shall become alike lawful in all the
States, old as well as new, North as well
as South. Now I believe if we could arrest
the spread, and place it where Washington
and Jefferson and Madison placed it, it
would be in the course of ultimate
extinction, and the public mind would, as
for eighty years past, believe that it was
in the course of ultimate extinction. The
crisis would be past, and the institution
might be let alone for a hundred years --
if it should live so long -- in the States
where it exists, yet it would be going out
of existence in the way best for both the
black and the white races. [A voice:
"Then do you repudiate popular
sovereignty?"] Well, then, let us
talk about popular sovereignty! What is
popular sovereignty? Is it the right of
the people to have slavery or not have it,
as they see fit, in the Territories? I
will state -- and I have an able man to
watch me -- my understanding is that
popular sovereignty, as now applied to the
question of slavery, does allow the people
of a Territory to have slavery if they
want to, but does not allow them not to
have it if they do not want it. I do not
mean that if this vast concourse of people
were in a Territory of the United States,
any one of them would be obliged to have a
slave if he did not want one; but I do say
that, as I understand the Dred Scott
decision if any one man wants slaves, all
the rest have no way of keeping that one
man from holding them.
When
I made my speech at Springfield, of which
the judge complains, and from which he
quotes, I really was not thinking of the
things which he ascribes to me at all. I
had no thought in the world that I was
doing anything to bring about a war
between the free and slave States. I had
no thought in the world that I was doing
anything to bring about a political and
social equality of the black and white
races. It never occurred to me that I was
doing anything or favoring anything to
reduce to a dead uniformity all the local
institutions of the various States. But I
must say, in all fairness to him, if he
thinks I am doing something which leads to
these bad results, it is none the better
that I did not mean it. It is just as
fatal to the country, if I have any
influence in producing it, whether I
intend it or not. But can it be true, that
placing this institution upon the original
basis -- the basis upon which our fathers
placed it -- can have any tendency to set
the Northern and the Southern States at
war with one another, or that it can have
any tendency to make the people of Vermont
raise sugar-cane because they raise it in
Louisiana, or that it can compel the
people of Illinois to cut pine logs on the
Grand Prairie, where they will not grow,
because they cut pine logs in Maine, where
they do grow? The judge says this is a new
principle started in regard to this
question. Does the judge claim that he is
working on the plan of the founders of the
government? I think he says in some of his
speeches -- indeed, I have one here now --
that he saw evidence of a policy to allow
slavery to be south of a certain line,
while north of it should be excluded, and
he saw an indisposition on the part of the
country to stand upon that policy, and
therefore he set about studying the
subject upon original principles, and upon
original principles he got up the Nebraska
bill! I am fighting it upon these
"original principles" --
fighting it in the Jeffersonian,
Washingtonian, and Madisonian fashion.
Now,
my friends, I wish you to attend for a
little while to one or two other things in
that Springfield speech. My main object
was to show, so far as my humble ability
was capable of showing to the people of
this country, what I believed was the
truth -- that there was a tendency, if not
a conspiracy, among those who have
engineered this slavery question for the
last four or five years, to make slavery
perpetual and universal in this nation.
Having made that speech principally for
that object, after arranging the evidences
that I thought tended to prove my
proposition, I concluded with this bit of
comment:
We
cannot absolutely know that these exact
adaptations are the result of pre-concert,
but when we see a lot of framed timbers,
different portions of which we know have
been gotten out at different times and
places, and by different workmen --
Stephen, Franklin, Roger, and James, for
instance; and when we see these timbers
joined together, and see they exactly make
the frame of a house or a mill, all the
tenons and mortises exactly fitting, and
all the lengths and proportions of the
different pieces exactly adapted to their
respective places, and not a piece too
many or too few, -- not omitting even the
scaffolding, -- or if a single piece be
lacking, we see the place in the frame
exactly fitted and prepared to yet bring
such piece in -- in such a case we feel it
impossible not to believe that Stephen and
Franklin, and Roger and James, all
understood one another from the beginning
and all worked upon a common plan or draft
drawn before the first blow was struck.
When
my friend, Judge Douglas, came to Chicago
on the 9th of July, this speech having
been delivered on the 16th of June, he
made an harangue there in which he took
hold of this speech of mine, showing that
he had carefully read it; and while he
paid no attention to this matter at all,
but complimented me as being a "kind,
amiable, and intelligent gentleman,"
notwithstanding I had said this, he goes
on and deduces, or draws out, from my
speech this tendency of mine to set the
States at war with one another, to make
all the institutions uniform, and set the
niggers and white people to marry
together. Then, as the judge had
complimented me with these pleasant titles
(I must confess to my weakness), I was a
little "taken," for it came from
a great man. I was not very much
accustomed to flattery, and it came the
sweeter to me. I was rather like the
Hoosier with the gingerbread, when he said
he reckoned he loved it better than any
other man, and got less of it. As the
judge had so flattered me, I could not
make up my mind that he meant to deal
unfairly with me; so I went to work to
show him that he misunderstood the whole
scope of my speech, and that I really
never intended to set the people at war
with one another. As an illustration, the
next time I met him, which was at
Springfield, I used this expression, that
I claimed no right under the Constitution,
nor had I any inclination, to enter into
the slave States and interfere with the
institutions of slavery. He says upon
that: Lincoln will not enter into the
slave States but will go to the banks of
the Ohio, on this side, and shoot over! He
runs on, step by step in the
horse-chestnut style of argument, until in
the Springfield speech he says,
"Unless he shall be successful in
firing his batteries, until he shall have
extinguished slavery in all the States,
the Union shall be dissolved." Now I
don't think that was exactly the way to
treat "a kind, amiable, intelligent
gentleman." I know if I had asked the
judge to show when or where it was I had
said, that if I didn't succeed in firing
into the slave States until slavery should
be extinguished, the Union should be
dissolved, he could not have shown it. I
understand what he would do. He would say,
"I don't mean to quote from you, but
this was the result of what you say."
But I have the right to ask, and I do ask
now, did you not put it in such a form
that an ordinary reader or listener would
take it as an expression from me?
In
a speech at Springfield on the night of
the 17th, I thought I might as well attend
to my business a little, and I recalled
his attention as well as I could to this
charge of conspiracy to nationalize
slavery. I called his attention to the
fact that he had acknowledged in my
hearing twice that he had carefully read
the speech; and, in the language of the
lawyers, as he had twice read the speech,
and still had put in no plea or answer, I
took a default on him. I insisted that I
had a right then to renew that charge of
conspiracy. Ten days afterward I met the
judge at Clinton -- that is to say, I was
on the ground, but not in the discussion
-- and heard him make a speech. Then he
comes in with his plea to this charge, for
the first time, and his plea when put in,
as well as I can recollect it, amounted to
this: that he never had any talk with
Judge Taney or the President of the United
States with regard to the Dred Scott
decision before it was made. I (Lincoln)
ought to know that the man who makes a
charge without knowing it to be true,
falsifies as much as he who knowingly
tells a falsehood; and lastly, that he
would pronounce the whole thing a
falsehood; but he would make no personal
application of the charge of falsehood,
not because of any regard for the
"kind, amiable, intelligent
gentleman," but because of his own
personal self-respect! I have understood
since then (but [turning to Judge Douglas]
will not hold the judge to it if he is not
willing) that he has broken through the
"self-respect," and has got to
saying the thing out. The judge nods to me
that it is so. It is fortunate for me that
I can keep as good-humored as I do, when
the judge acknowledges that he has been
trying to make a question of veracity with
me. I know the judge is a great man, while
I am only a small man but I feel that I
have got him. I demur to that plea. I
waive all objections that it was not filed
till after default was taken, and demur to
it upon the merits. What if Judge Douglas
never did talk with Chief Justice Taney
and the President before the Dred Scott
decision was made; does it follow that he
could not have had as perfect an
understanding without talking as with it?
I am not disposed to stand upon my legal
advantage. I am disposed to take his
denial as being like an answer in
chancery, that he neither had any
knowledge, information, nor belief in the
existence of such a conspiracy. I am
disposed to take his answer as being as
broad as though he had put it in these
words. And now, I ask, even if he had done
so, have not I a right to prove it on him,
and to offer the evidence of more than two
witnesses, by whom to prove it; and if the
evidence proves the existence of the
conspiracy, does his broad answer, denying
all knowledge, information, or belief,
disturb the fact? It can only show that he
was used by conspirators, and was not a
leader of them.
Now,
in regard to his reminding me of the moral
rule that persons who tell what they do
not know to be true, falsify as much as
those who knowingly tell falsehoods. I
remember the rule, and it must be borne in
mind that in what I have read to you, I do
not say that I know such a conspiracy to
exist. To that I reply, I believe it. If
the Judge says that I do not believe it,
then he says what he does not know, and
falls within his own rule that he who
asserts a thing which he does not know to
be true, falsifies as much as he who
knowingly tells a falsehood. I want to
call your attention to a little discussion
on that branch of the case, and the
evidence which brought my mind to the
conclusion which I expressed as my belief.
If, in arraying that evidence, I had
stated anything which was false or
erroneous, it needed but that Judge
Douglas should point it out, and I would
have taken it back with all the kindness
in the world. I do not deal in that way.
If I have brought forward anything not a
fact, if he will point it out, it will not
even ruffle me to take it back. But if he
will not point out anything erroneous in
the evidence, is it not rather for him to
show by a comparison of the evidence that
I have reasoned falsely, than to call the
"kind, amiable, intelligent
gentleman" a liar? If I have reasoned
to a false conclusion, it is the vocation
of an able debater to show by argument
that I have wandered to an erroneous
conclusion. I want to ask your attention
to a portion of the Nebraska bill which
Judge Douglas has quoted: "It being
the true intent and meaning of this act,
not to legislate slavery into any
Territory or State, nor to exclude it
therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
perfectly free to form and regulate their
domestic institutions in their own way,
subject only to the Constitution of the
United States." Thereupon Judge
Douglas and others began to argue in favor
of "popular sovereignty" -- the
right of the people to have slaves if they
wanted them, and to exclude slavery if
they did not want them. "But,"
said, in substance, a senator from Ohio
(Mr. Chase, I believe), "we more than
suspect that you do not mean to allow the
people to exclude slavery if they wish to;
and if you do mean it, accept an amendment
which I propose expressly authorizing the
people to exclude slavery." I believe
I have the amendment here be-for me, which
was offered, and under which the people of
the Territory, through their proper
representatives, might, if they saw fit,
prohibit the existence of slavery therein.
And now I state it as a fact, to be taken
back if there is any mistake about it,
that Judge Douglas and those acting with
him voted that amendment down. I now think
that those men who voted it down had a
real reason for doing so. They know what
that reason was. It looks to us, since we
have seen the Dred Scott decision
pronounced, holding that, under the
Constitution the people cannot exclude
slavery -- I say it looks to outsiders,
poor, simple, "amiable, intelligent
gentlemen," as though the niche was
left as a place to put that Dred Scott
decision in, a niche which would have been
spoiled by adopting the amendment. And now
I say again, if this was not the reason,
it will avail the Judge much more to
calmly and good-humoredly point out to
these people what that other reason was
for voting the amendment down, than
swelling himself up to vociferate that he
may be provoked to call somebody a liar.
Again:
there is in that same quotation from the
Nebraska bill this clause: "It being
the true intent and meaning of this bill
not to legislate slavery into any
Territory or State." I have always
been puzzled to know what business the
word "State" had in that
connection. Judge Douglas knows. He put it
there. He knows what he put it there for.
We outsiders cannot say what he put it
there for. The law they were passing was
not about States, and was not making
provision for States. What was it placed
there for? After seeing the Dred Scott
decision which holds that the people
cannot exclude slavery from a Territory,
if another Dred Scott decision shall come,
holding that they cannot exclude it from a
State, we shall discover that when the
word was originally put there, it was in
view of something which was to come in due
time, we shall see that it was the other
half of something. I now say again, if
there is any different reason for putting
it there, Judge Douglas, in a good-humored
way, without calling anybody a liar, can
tell what the reason was.
When
the judge spoke at Clinton, he came very
near making a charge of falsehood against
me. He used, as I found it printed in a
newspaper, which, I remember was very
nearly like the real speech, the following
language:
I
did not answer the charge [of conspiracy]
before for the reason that I did not
suppose there was a man in America with a
heart so corrupt as to believe such a
charge could be true. I have too much
respect for Mr. Lincoln to suppose he is
serious in making the charge.
I
confess this is rather a curious view,
that out of respect for me he should
consider I was making what I deemed rather
a grave charge in fun. I confess it
strikes me rather strangely. But I let it
pass. As the judge did not for a moment
believe that there was a man in America
whose heart was so "corrupt" as
to make such a charge, and as he places me
among the "men in America" who
have hearts base enough to make such a
charge, I hope he will excuse me if I hunt
out another charge very like this; and if
it should turn out that in hunting I
should find that other, and it should turn
out to be Judge Douglas himself who made
it, I hope he will reconsider this
question of the deep corruption of heart
he has thought fit to ascribe to me. In
Judge Douglas's speech of March 22, 1858,
which I hold in my hand, he says:
In
this connection there is another topic to
which I desire to allude. I seldom refer
to the course of newspapers, or notice the
articles which they publish in regard to
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