The Great Conspiracy, Volume 4 by John Alexander Logan
page 18 of 106 (16%)
page 18 of 106 (16%)
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her. I have seen her bound to the stake; I have seen them give her
ashes to the winds. But when they turned to exult, I have seen her again meet them face to face, resplendent in complete steel, brandishing in her strong right hand a flaming sword, red with Insufferable light! I take courage. The People gather around her. The genius of America will, at last, lead her sons to Freedom." Never were grander utterances delivered by man in all the ages; never was there exhibited a more sublime faith; never a truer spirit of prophecy; never a more heroic spirit. He was then on his way to Washington; on his way to perform the last acts in the drama of his own career--on his way to death. He knew the time had come, of which, ten years before, he had prophetically spoken in the House of Representatives, when he said: "I have only to say that, if the time should come when Disunion rules the hour, and discord is to reign supreme, I shall again be ready to give the best blood in my veins to my Country's Cause. I shall be prepared to meet all antagonists with lance in rest, to do battle in every land, in defense of the Constitution of the Country which I have sworn to support, to the last extremity, against Disunionists, and all its Enemies, whether of the South or North; to meet them everywhere, at all times, with speech or hand, with word or blow, until thought and being shall be no longer mine." And right nobly did he fulfil in all respects his promise; so that at the end--as was afterward well said of him by Mr. Colfax--he had mounted so high, that, "doubly crowned, as statesman, and as warrior-- 'From the top of Fame's ladder he stepped to the Sky!'" [This orator and hero was a naturalized Englishman, and commanded |
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