Homecoming Speech at Chicago
Stephen A. Douglas
July 9, 1858
(Note: This is Stephen A. Douglas, not Lincoln.)
MR. CHAIRMAN AND FELLOW-CITIZENS: I can find no language which can adequately
express my profound gratitude for the magnificent welcome which you have
extended to me on this occasion. This vast sea of human faces indicates how
deep an interest is felt by our people in the great questions which agitate
the public mind, and which underlie the foundations of our free institutions.
A reception like this, so great in numbers that no human voice can be heard
to its countless thousands—so enthusiastic that no one individual can be
the object of such enthusiasm—clearly shows that there is some great principle
which sinks deep in the heart of the masses, and involves the rights and
the liberties of a whole people, that has brought you together with a unanimity
and a cordiality never before excelled, if, indeed, equaled on any occasion.
I have not the vanity to believe that it is any personal compliment to me.
It is an expression of your devotion to that great principle of self-government,
to which my life for many years past has been, and in the future will be,
devoted. If there is any one principle dearer and more sacred than all others
in free governments, it is that which asserts the exclusive right of a free
people to form and adopt their own fundamental law, and to manage and regulate
their own internal affairs and domestic institutions.
When I found an effort being made during the recent session of Congress to
force a Constitution upon the people of Kansas against their will, and to
force that State into the Union with a Constitution which her people had
rejected by more than 10,000, I felt bound as a man of honor and a representative
of Illinois, bound by every consideration of duty, of fidelity, and of patriotism,
to resist to the utmost of my power the consummation of that fraud. With
others I did resist it, and resisted it successfully until the attempt was
abandoned. We forced them to refer that Constitution back to the people of
Kansas, to be accepted or rejected as they shall decide at an election, which
is fixed for the first Monday in August next. It is true that the mode of
reference, and the form of the submission, was not such as I could sanction
with my vote, for the reason that it discriminated between Free States and
Slave States; providing that if Kansas consented to come in under the Lecompton
Constitution it should be received with a population of 35,000; but that
if she demanded another Constitution, more consistent with the sentiments
of her people and their feelings, that it should not be received into the
Union until she has 93,420 inhabitants. I did not consider that mode of submission
fair, for the reason that any election is a mockery which is not free —that
any election is a fraud upon the rights of the people which holds out inducements
for affirmative votes, and threatens penalties for negative votes. But whilst
I was not satisfied with the mode of submission, whilst I resisted it to
the last, demanding a fair, a just, a free mode of submission, still, when
the law passed placing it within the power of the people of Kansas at that
election to reject the Lecompton Constitution, and then make another in harmony
with their principles and their opinions, I did not believe that either the
penalties on the one hand, or the inducements on the other, would force that
people to accept a Constitution to which they are irreconcilably opposed.
All I can say is, that if their votes can be controlled by such considerations,
all the sympathy which has been expended upon them has been misplaced, and
all the efforts that have been made in defense of their right to self-government
have been made in an unworthy cause.
Hence, my friends, I regard the Lecompton battle as having been fought and
the victory won, because the arrogant demand for the admission of Kansas
under the Lecompton Constitution unconditionally, whether her people wanted
it or not, has been abandoned, and the principle which recognizes the right
of the people to decide for themselves has been submitted in its place.
Fellow-citizens: While I devoted my best energies—all my energies, mental
and physical— to the vindication of the great principle, and whilst the result
has been such as will enable the people of Kansas to come into the Union,
with such a Constitution as they desire, yet the credit of this great moral
victory is to be divided among a large number of men of various and different
political creeds. I was rejoiced when I found in this great contest the Republican
party coming up manfully and sustaining the principle that the people of
each Territory, when coming into the Union, have the right to decide for
themselves whether slavery shall or shall not exist within their limits.
I have seen the time when that principle was controverted. I have seen the
time when all parties did not recognize the right of a people to have slavery
or freedom, to tolerate or prohibit slavery, as they deemed best; but claimed
that power for the Congress of the United States, regardless of the wishes
of the people to be affected by it, and when I found upon the Crittenden-Montgomery
bill the Republicans and Americans of the North, and I may say, too, some
glorious Americans and old line Whigs from the South, like Crittenden and
his patriotic associates, joined with a portion of the Democracy to carry
out and vindicate the right of the people to decide whether slavery should
or should not exist within the limits of Kansas, I was rejoiced within my
secret soul, for I saw an indication that the American people, when they
come to understand the principle, would give it their cordial support.
The Crittenden-Montgomery bill was as fair and as perfect an exposition of
the doctrine of popular sovereignty as could be carried out by any bill that
man ever devised. It proposed to refer the Lecompton Constitution back to
the people of Kansas, and give them the right to accept or reject it as they
pleased, at a fair election, held in pursuance of law, and in the event of
their rejecting it and forming another in its stead, to permit them to come
into the Union on an equal footing with the original States. It was fair
and just in all of its provisions! I gave it my cordial support, and was
rejoiced when I found that it passed the House of Representatives, and at
one time, I entertained high hope that it would pass the Senate.
I regard the great principle of popular sovereignty, as having been vindicated
and made triumphant in this land, as a permanent rule of public policy in
the organization of Territories and the admission of new States. Illinois
took her position upon this principle many years ago. You all recollect that
in 1850, after the passage of the Compromise measures of that year, when
I returned to my home, there was great dissatisfaction expressed at my course
in supporting those measures. I appeared before the people of Chicago at
a mass meeting, and vindicated each and every one of those measures; and
by reference to my speech on that occasion, which was printed and circulated
broad-cast throughout the State at that time, you will find that I then and
there said that those measures were all founded upon the great principle
that every people ought to possess the right to form and regulate their own
domestic institutions in their own way, and that that right being possessed
by the people of the States, I saw no reason why the same principle should
not be extended to all of the Territories of the United States. A general
election was held in this State a few months afterward, for members of the
Legislature, pending which all these questions were thoroughly canvassed
and discussed, and the nominees of the different parties instructed in regard
to the wishes of their constituents upon them. When that election was over,
and the Legislature assembled, they proceeded to consider the merits of those
Compromise measures and the principles upon which they were predicated. And
what was the result of their action? They passed resolutions, first repealing
the Wilmot proviso instructions, and in lieu thereof adopted another resolution,
in which they declared the great principle which asserts the right of the
people to make their own form of government and establish their own institutions.
That resolution is as follows:
Resolved, That our liberty and independence are based upon the right of the
people to form for themselves such a government as they may choose; that
this great principle, the birthright of freemen, the gift of Heaven, secured
to us by the blood of our ancestors ought to be secured to future generations,
and no limitation ought to be applied to this power in the organization of
any Territory of the United States, of either Territorial Government or State
Constitution, provided the Government so established shall be Republican,
and in conformity with the Constitution of the United States.
That resolution, declaring the great principle of self-government as applicable
to the Territories and new States, passed the House of Representatives of
this State by a vote of sixty-one in the affirmative, to only four in the
negative. Thus you find that an expression of public opinion, enlightened,
educated, intelligent public opinion on this question by the representatives
of Illinois, in 1851, approaches nearer to unanimity than has ever been obtained
on any controverted question. That resolution was entered on the journal
of the Legislature of the State of Illinois, and it has remained there from
that day to this, a standing instruction to her Senators and a request to
her Representatives in Congress, to carry out that principle in all future
cases. Illinois, therefore, stands pre-eminent as the State which stepped
forward early and established a platform applicable to this slavery question,
concurred in alike by Whigs and Democrats, in which it was declared to be
the wish of our people that thereafter the people of the Territories should
be left perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in
their own way, and that no limitation should be placed upon that right in
any form.
Hence what was my duty, in 1854, when it became necessary to bring forward
a bill for the organization of the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska? Was
it not my duty, in obedience to the Illinois platform, to your standing instructions
to your Senators, adopted with almost entire unanimity, to incorporate in
that bill the great principle of self-government, declaring that it was "the
true intent and meaning of the act not to legislate slavery into any State
or Territory, or to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their
own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States?" I did incorporate
that principle in the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and perhaps I did as much as
any living man in the enactment of that bill, thus establishing the doctrine
in the public policy of the country. I then defended that principle against
assaults from one section of the Union. During this last winter it became
my duty to vindicate it against assaults from the other section of the Union.
I vindicated it boldly and fearlessly, as the people of Chicago can bear
witness, when it was assailed by Freesoilers; and during this winter I vindicated
and defended it as boldly and fearlessly when it was attempted to be violated
by the almost united South. I pledged myself to you on every stump in Illinois
in 1854, I pledged myself to the people of other States, North and South—wherever
I spoke—and in the United States Senate and elsewhere, in every form in which
I could reach the public mind or the public ear, I gave the pledge that I,
so far as the power should be in my hands, would vindicate the principle
of the right of the people to form their own institutions, to establish Free
States or Slave States as they chose, and that that principle should never
be violated either by fraud, by violence, by circumvention, or by any other
means, if it was in my power to prevent it. I now submit to you, my fellow-citizens,
whether I have not redeemed that pledge in good faith! Yes, my friends, I
have redeemed it in good faith, and it is a matter of heart-felt gratification
to me to see these assembled thousands here to-night bearing their testimony
to the fidelity with which I have advocated that principle and redeemed my
pledges in connection with it.
I will be entirely frank with you. My object was to secure the right of the
people of each State and of each Territory, North or South, to decide the
question for themselves, to have slavery or not, just as they chose; and
my opposition to the Lecompton Constitution was not predicated upon the ground
that it was a proslavery Constitution, nor would my action have been different
had it been a Freesoil Constitution. My speech against the Lecompton fraud
was made on the 9th of December, while the vote on the slavery clause in
that Constitution was not taken until the 21st of the same month, nearly
two weeks after. I made my speech against the Lecompton monstrosity solely
on the ground that it was a violation of the fundamental principles of free
government; on the ground that it was not the act and deed of the people
of Kansas; that it did not embody their will; that they were averse to it;
and hence I denied the right of Congress to force it upon them, either as
a free State or a slave State. I deny the right of Congress to force a slaveholding
State upon an unwilling people. I deny their right to force a free State
upon an unwilling people. I deny their right to force a good thing upon a
people who are unwilling to receive it. The great principle is the right
of every community to judge and decide for itself, whether a thing is right
or wrong, whether it would be good or evil for them to adopt it; and the
right of free action, the right of free thought, the right of free judgment
upon the question is dearer to every true American than any other under a
free government. My objection to the Lecompton contrivance was, that it undertook
to put a Constitution on the people of Kansas against their will, in opposition
to their wishes, and thus violated the great principle upon which all our
institutions rest. It is no answer to this argument to say that slavery is
an evil, and hence should not be tolerated. You must allow the people to
decide for themselves whether it is a good or an evil. You allow them to
decide for themselves whether they desire a Maine liquor law or not; you
allow them to decide for themselves what kind of common schools they will
have; what system of banking they will adopt, or whether they will adopt
any at all; you allow them to decide for themselves the relations between
husband and wife, parent and child, guardian and ward; in fact, you allow
them to decide for themselves all other questions, and why not upon this
question? Whenever you put a limitation upon the right of any people to decide
what laws they want, you have destroyed the fundamental principle of self-government.
In connection with this subject, perhaps, it will not be improper for me
on this occasion to allude to the position of those who have chosen to arraign
my conduct on this same subject. I have observed from the public prints,
that but a few days ago the Republican party of the State of Illinois assembled
in Convention at Springfield, and not only laid down their platform, but
nominated a candidate for the United States Senate, as my successor. I take
great pleasure in saying that I have known, personally and intimately, for
about a quarter of a century, the worthy gentleman who has been nominated
for my place, and I will say that I regard him as a kind, amiable, and intelligent
gentleman, a good citizen and an honorable opponent; and whatever issue I
may have with him will be of principle, and not involving personalities.
Mr. Lincoln made a speech before that Republican Convention which unanimously
nominated him for the Senate—a speech evidently well prepared and carefully
written—in which he states the basis upon which he proposes to carry on the
campaign during this summer. In it he lays down two distinct propositions
which I shall notice, and upon which I shall take a direct and bold issue
with him.
His first and main proposition I will give in his own language, scripture
quotations and all [laughter]; I give his exact language —"'A house divided
against itself cannot stand.' I believe this government cannot endure, permanently,
half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved. I do
not expect the house to fall; but I do expect it to cease to be divided.
It will become all one thing or all the other."
In other words, Mr. Lincoln asserts, as a fundamental principle of this government,
that there must be uniformity in the local laws and domestic institutions
of each and all the States of the Union; and he therefore invites all the
non-slaveholding States to band together, organize as one body, and make
war upon slavery in Kentucky, upon slavery in Virginia, upon the Carolinas,
upon slavery in all of the slaveholding States in this Union, and to persevere
in that war until it shall be exterminated. He then notifies the slaveholding
States to stand together as a unit and make an aggressive war upon the free
States of this Union with a view of establishing slavery in them all; of
forcing it upon Illinois, of forcing it upon New York, upon New England,
and upon every other free State, and that they shall keep up the warfare
until it has been formally established in them all. In other words, Mr. Lincoln
advocates boldly and clearly a war of sections, a war of the North against
the South, of the free States against the slave States—a war of extermination—to
be continued relentlessly until the one or the other shall be subdued, and
all the States shall either become free or become slave.
Now, my friends, I must say to you frankly, that I take bold, unqualified
issue with him upon that principle. I assert that it is neither desirable
nor possible that there should be uniformity in the local institutions and
domestic regulations of the different States of this Union. The framers of
our government never contemplated uniformity in its internal concerns. The
fathers of the Revolution, and the sages who made the Constitution, well
understood that the laws and domestic institutions which would suit the granite
hills of New Hampshire would be totally unfit for the rice plantations of
South Carolina; they well understood that the laws which would suit the agricultural
districts of Pennsylvania and New York would be totally unfit for the large
mining regions of the Pacific, or the lumber regions of Maine. They well
understood that the great varieties of soil, of production and of interests,
in a Republic as large as this, required different local and domestic regulations
in each locality, adapted to the wants and interests of each separate State,
and for that reason it was provided in the Federal Constitution that the
thirteen original States should remain sovereign and supreme within their
own limits in regard to all that was local, and internal, and domestic, while
the Federal Government should have certain specified powers which were general
and national, and could be exercised only by federal authority.
The framers of the Constitution well understood that each locality, having
separate and distinct interests, required separate and distinct laws, domestic
institutions, and police regulations adapted to its own wants and its own
condition; and they acted on the presumption, also, that these laws and institutions
would be as diversified and as dissimilar as the States would be numerous,
and that no two would be precisely alike, because the interests of no two
would be precisely the same. Hence, I assert, that the great fundamental
principle which underlies our complex system of State and Federal Governments,
contemplated diversity and dissimilarity in the local institutions and domestic
affairs of each and every State then in the Union, or thereafter to be admitted
into the Confederacy. I therefore conceive that my friend, Mr. Lincoln, has
totally misapprehended the great principles upon which our government rests.
Uniformity in local and domestic affairs would be destructive of State rights,
of State sovereignty, of personal liberty and personal freedom. Uniformity
is the parent of despotism the world over, not only in politics, but in religion.
Wherever the doctrine of uniformity is proclaimed, that all the States must
be free or all slave, that all labor must be white or all black, that all
the citizens of the different States must have the same privileges or be
governed by the same regulations, you have destroyed the greatest safeguard
which our institutions have thrown around the rights of the citizen.
How could this uniformity be accomplished, if it was desirable and possible?
There is but one mode in which it could be obtained, and that must be by
abolishing the State Legislatures, blotting out State sovereignty, merging
the rights and sovereignty of the States in one consolidated empire, and
vesting Congress with the plenary power to make all the police regulations,
domestic and local laws, uniform throughout the limits of the Republic. When
you shall have done this, you will have uniformity. Then the States will
all be slave or all be free; then negroes will vote everywhere or nowhere;
then you will have a Maine liquor law in every State or none; then you will
have uniformity in all things, local and domestic, by the authority of the
Federal Government. But when you attain that uniformity, you will have converted
these thirty-two sovereign, independent States into one consolidated empire,
with the uniformity of disposition reigning triumphant throughout the length
and breadth of the land.
From this view of the case, my friends, I am driven irresistibly to the conclusion
that diversity, dissimilarity, variety in all our local and domestic institutions,
is the great safeguard of our liberties; and that the framers of our institutions
were wise, sagacious, and patriotic, when they made this government a confederation
of sovereign States, with a Legislature for each, and conferred upon each
Legislature the power to make all local and domestic institutions to suit
the people it represented, without interference from any other State or from
the general Congress of the Union. If we expect to maintain our liberties,
we must preserve the rights and sovereignty of the States; we must maintain
and carry out that great principle of self-government incorporated in the
compromise measures of 1850; indorsed by the Illinois Legislature in 1851;
emphatically embodied and carried out in the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and vindicated
this year by the refusal to bring Kansas into the Union with a Constitution
distasteful to her people.
The other proposition discussed by Mr. Lincoln in his speech consists in
a crusade against the Supreme Court of the United States on account of the
Dred Scott decision. On this question, also, I desire to say to you unequivocally,
that I take direct and distinct issue with him. I have no warfare to make
on the Supreme Court of the United States, either on account of that or any
other decision which they have pronounced from that bench. The Constitution
of the United States has provided that the powers of government (and the
Constitution of each State has the same provision) shall be divided into
three departments-executive, legislative, and judicial. The right and the
province of expounding the Constitution, and constructing the law, is vested
in the judiciary established by the Constitution. As a lawyer, I feel at
liberty to appear before the Court and controvert any principle of law while
the question is pending before the tribunal; but when the decision is made,
my private opinion, your opinion, all other opinions must yield to the majesty
of that authoritative adjudication. I wish you to bear in mind that this
involves a great principle, upon which our rights, our liberty and our property
all depend. What security have you for your property, for your reputation,
and for your personal rights, if the courts are not upheld, and their decisions
respected when once fairly rendered by the highest tribunal known to the
Constitution? I do not choose, therefore, to go into any argument with Mr.
Lincoln in reviewing the various decisions which the Supreme Court has made,
either upon the Dred Scott case or any other. I have no idea of appealing
from the decision of the Supreme Court upon a Constitutional question to
the decisions of a tumultuous town meeting. I am aware that once an eminent
lawyer of this city, now no more, said that the State of Illinois had the
most perfect judicial system in the world, subject to but one exception,
which could be cured by a slight amendment, and that amendment was to so
change the law as to allow an appeal from the decisions of the Supreme Court
of Illinois, on all Constitutional questions, to Justices of the Peace.
My friend, Mr. Lincoln, who sits behind me, reminds me that that proposition
was made when I was Judge of the Supreme Court. Be that as it may, I do not
think that fact adds any greater weight or authority to the suggestion. It
matters not with me who was on the bench, whether Mr. Lincoln or myself,
whether a Lockwood or a Smith, a Taney or a Marshall; the decision of the
highest tribunal known to the Constitution of the country must be final till
it has been reversed by an equally high authority. Hence, I am opposed to
this doctrine of Mr. Lincoln, by which he proposes to take an appeal from
the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, upon this high constitutional
question, to a Republican caucus sitting in the country. Yes, or any other
caucus or town meeting, whether it be Republican, American, or Democratic.
I respect the decisions of that august tribunal; I shall always bow in deference
to them. I am a law-abiding man. I will sustain the Constitution of my country
as our fathers have made it. I will yield obedience to the laws, whether
I like them or not, as I find them on the statute book. I will sustain the
judicial tribunals and constituted authorities in all matters within the
pale of their jurisdiction as defined by the Constitution.
But I am equally free to say that the reason assigned by Mr. Lincoln for
resisting the decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott case, does
not in itself meet my approbation. He objects to it because that decision
declared that a negro descended from African parents, who were brought here
and sold as slaves, is not, and cannot be, a citizen of the United States.
He says it is wrong, because it deprives the negro of the benefits of that
clause of the Constitution which says that citizens of one State shall enjoy
all the privileges and immunities of citizens of the several States; in other
words, he thinks it wrong because it deprives the negro of the privileges,
immunities and rights of citizenship, which pertain, according to that decision,
only to the white man. I am free to say to you that in my opinion this government
of ours is founded on the white basis. It was made by the white man, for
the benefit of the white man, to be administered by white men, in such manner
as they should determine. It is also true that a negro, an Indian, or any
other man of inferior race to a white man, should be permitted to enjoy,
and humanity requires that he should have all the rights, privileges and
immunities which he is capable of exercising consistent with the safety of
society. I would give him every right and every privilege which his capacity
would enable him to enjoy, consistent with the good of the society in which
he lived. But you may ask me, what are these rights and these privileges?
My answer is, that each State must decide for itself the nature and extent
of these rights. Illinois has decided for herself. We have decided that the
negro shall not be a slave, and we have at the same time decided that he
shall not vote, or serve on juries, or enjoy political privileges. I am content
with that system of policy which we have adopted for ourselves. I deny the
right of any other State to complain of our policy in that respect, or to
interfere with it, or to attempt to change it. On the other hand, the State
of Maine has decided that in that State a negro man may vote on an equality
with the white man. The sovereign power of Maine had the right to prescribe
that rule for herself. Illinois has no right to complain of Maine for conferring
the right of negro suffrage, nor has Maine any right to interfere with, or
complain of Illinois because she has denied negro suffrage
.
The State of New York has decided by her Constitution that a negro may vote,
provided that he own $250 worth of property, but not otherwise. The rich
negro can vote, but the poor one cannot. Although that distinction does not
commend itself to my judgment, yet I assert that the sovereign power of New
York had a right to prescribe that form of the elective franchise. Kentucky,
Virginia and other States have provided that negroes, or a certain class
of them in those States, shall be slaves, having neither civil or political
rights. Without indorsing the wisdom of that decision, I assert that Virginia
has the same power by virtue of her sovereignty to protect slavery within
her limits, as Illinois has to banish it forever from our own borders. I
assert the right of each State to decide for itself on all these questions,
and I do not subscribe to the doctrine of my friend, Mr. Lincoln, that uniformity
is either desirable or possible. I do not acknowledge that the States must
all be free or must all be slave.
I do not acknowledge that the negro must have civil and political rights
everywhere or nowhere. I do not acknowledge that the Chinese must have the
same rights in California that we would confer upon him here. I do not acknowledge
that the Cooley imported into this country must necessarily be put upon an
equality with the white race. I do not acknowledge any of these doctrines
of uniformity in the local and domestic regulations in the different States.
Thus you see, my fellow-citizens, that the issues between Mr. Lincoln and
myself, as respective candidates for the U.S. Senate, as made up, are direct,
unequivocal, and irreconcilable. He goes for uniformity in our domestic institutions,
for a war of sections, until one or the other shall be subdued. I go for
the great principle of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, the right of the people
to decide for themselves.
On the other point, Mr. Lincoln goes for a warfare upon the Supreme Court
of the United States, because of their judicial decision in the Dred Scott
case. I yield obedience to the decisions in that court—to the final determination
of the highest judicial tribunal known to our constitution. He objects to
the Dred Scott decision because it does not put the negro in the possession
of the rights of citizenship on an equality with the white man. I am opposed
to negro equality. I repeat that this nation is a white people —a people
composed of European descendants—a people that have established this government
for themselves and their posterity, and I am in favor of preserving not only
the purity of the blood, but the purity of the government from any mixture
or amalgamation with inferior races. I have seen the effects of this mixture
of superior and inferior races—this amalgamation of white men and Indians
and negroes; we have seen it in Mexico, in Central America, in South America,
and in all the Spanish-American States, and its result has been degeneration,
demoralization, and degradation below the capacity for self-government.
I am opposed to taking any step that recognizes the negro man or the Indian
as the equal of the white man. I am opposed to giving him a voice in the
administration of the government. I would extend to the negro, and the Indian,
and to all dependent races every right, every privilege, and every immunity
consistent with the safety and welfare of the white races; but equality they
never should have, either political or social, or in any other respect whatever.
My friends, you see that the issues are distinctly drawn. I stand by the
same platform that I have so often proclaimed to you and to the people of
Illinois heretofore. I stand by the Democratic organization, yield obedience
to its usages, and support its regular nominations. I indorse and approve
the Cincinnati platform, and I adhere to and intend to carry out, as part
of that platform, the great principle of self-government, which recognizes
the right of the people in each State and Territory to decide for themselves
their domestic institutions. In other words, if the Lecompton issue shall
arise again, you have only to turn back and see where you have found me during
the last six months, and then rest assured that you will find me in the same
position, battling for the same principle, and vindicating it from assault
from whatever quarter it may come, so long as I have the power to do it.
Fellow-citizens, you now have before you the outlines of the propositions
which I intend to discuss before the people of Illinois during the pending
campaign. I have spoken without preparation and in a very desultory manner,
and may have omitted some points which I desired to discuss, and may have
been less implicit on others than I could have wished. I have made up my
mind to appeal to the people against the combination which has been made
against me. The Republican leaders have formed an alliance, an unholy, unnatural
alliance with a portion of the unscrupulous federal office-holders. I intend
to fight that allied army wherever I meet them. I know they deny the alliance
while avoiding the common purpose, but yet these men who are trying to divide
the Democratic party for the purpose of electing a Republican Senator in
my place, are just as much the agents, the tools, the supporters of Mr. Lincoln
as if they were avowed Republicans, and expect their reward for their services
when the Republicans come into power. I shall deal with these allied forces
just as the Russians dealt with the allies at Sebastopol. The Russians, when
they fired a broadside at the common enemy, did not stop to inquire whether
it hit a Frenchman, an Englishman, or a Turk, nor will I stop, nor shall
I stop to inquire whether my blows hit the Republican leaders or their allies,
who are holding the federal offices and yet acting in concert with the Republicans
to defeat the Democratic party and its nominees. I do not include all of
the federal office-holders in this remark. Such of them as are Democrats
and show their Democracy by remaining inside of the Democratic organization
and supporting its nominees, I recognize as Democrats, but those who, having
been defeated inside of the organization, go outside and attempt to divide
and destroy the party in concert with the Republican leaders, have ceased
to be Democrats, and belong to the allied army, whose avowed object is to
elect the Republican ticket by dividing and destroying the Democratic party.
My friends, I have exhausted myself, and I certainly have fatigued you, in
the long and desultory remarks which I have made. It is now two nights since
I have been in bed, and I think I have a right to a little sleep. I will,
however, have an opportunity of meeting you face to face, and addressing
you on more than one occasion before the November election. In conclusion,
I must again say to you, justice to my own feelings demands it, that my gratitude
for the welcome you have extended to me on this occasion knows no bounds,
and can be described by no language which I can command. I see that I am
literally at home when among my constituents. This welcome has amply repaid
me for every effort that I have made in the public service during nearly
twenty-five years that I have held office at your hands. It not only compensates
me for the past, but it furnishes an inducement and incentive for future
effort which no man, no matter how patriotic, can feel who has not witnessed
the magnificent reception you have extended to me tonight on my return.