[William Lloyd Garrison by Archibald H. Grimke]@TWC D-Link book
William Lloyd Garrison

CHAPTER III
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The white heat of the address destroyed for the instant all capacity for such thinking.

"Who can be amazed, temperate, and furious--in a moment?
No man.

The expedition of his violent love outran the pauser reason" He had accepted the colonization scheme as an instrument for removing the evil, and called on all good citizens "to assist in establishing auxiliary colonization societies in every State, county, and town"; and implored "their direct and liberal patronage to the parent society." He had not apparently, so much as dreamed of any other than gradual emancipation.
"The emancipation of all the slaves of this generation is most assuredly out of the question," he said; "the fabric which now towers above the Alps, must be taken away brick by brick, and foot by foot, till it is reduced so low that it may be overturned without burying the nation in its ruins.

Years may elapse before the completion of the achievement; generations of blacks may go down to the grave, manacled and lacerated, without a hope for their children." He was on the Fourth of July a firm and earnest believer in the equity and efficacy of gradualism.

But after that day, and some time before his departure for Baltimore, he began to think on this subject.


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