[William Lloyd Garrison by Archibald H. Grimke]@TWC D-Link bookWilliam Lloyd Garrison CHAPTER XI 8/41
The Abolitionists felt this and carried themselves the while with unusual circumspection.
They deemed it prudent to publish an address to neutralize the falsehoods with which they were assailed by their enemies.
The address drawn up by Garrison for the purpose was thought "too fiery for the present time," by his more cautious followers and was rejected.
The _Liberator_ office had already been threatened in consequence of a fiery article by the editor, denouncing the use of Faneuil Hall for the approaching pro-slavery meeting.
It seemed to the unawed and indignant champion of liberty that it were "better that the winds should scatter it in fragments over the whole earth--better that an earthquake should engulf it--than that it should be used for so unhallowed and detestable a purpose!" The anti-abolition feeling of the town had become so bitter and intense that Henry E.Benson, then clerk in the anti-slavery office, writing on the 19th of the month, believed that there were persons in Boston, who would assassinate George Thompson in broad daylight, and doubted whether Garrison or Samuel J.May would be safe in Faneuil Hall on the day of the meeting, and what seemed still more significant of the inflamed state of the public mind, was the confidence with which he predicted that a mob would follow the meeting. The wild-cat-like spirit was in the air--in the seething heart of the populace. The meeting was held August 21st, in the old cradle of liberty.
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