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

CHAPTER IV
21/34

The immediate needs and problems of the hour pushed into the background all less pressing ones.

The slavery question amidst the clamor and babel of emergent and material interests, lost something of its sectional heat and character.

But its fires were not extinguished, only banked as events were speedily to reveal.
The application of Missouri for admission into the Union as a slave State four years after the Hartford Convention blew to a blaze the covered embers of strife between the sections.

The North was violently agitated.

For the admission of a new slave State meant two more slave votes in the Senate, and an increase on the old inequitable basis of slave representation in the lower House of Congress.


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