[Daniel Webster by Henry Cabot Lodge]@TWC D-Link book
Daniel Webster

CHAPTER II
43/61

To this last extreme of party opposition to the administration, Mr.Webster went.

It was as far as he could go and remain loyal to the Union.

But there he stopped absolutely.

With the next step, which went outside the Union, and which his friends at home were considering, he would have nothing to do, and he would not countenance any separatist schemes.

In the national Congress, however, he was prepared to advance as far as the boldest and bitterest in opposition, and he either voted against the war taxes or abstained from voting on them, in company with the strictest partisans of the Pickering type.
There is no need to suppose from this that Mr.Webster had lost in the least the liberality or breadth of view which always characterized him.


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