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1 Crime against Kansas: Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, in the Senate of the United States, May 19, 1856 1856

handle is hein.beal/criagks0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 

THE  CRIME  AGAINST  KANSAS.


SPEECH

         OF


HON,


CHARLES


SUMNER,


                     OF MASSACHUSETTS.


IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, MAY 19, 1856.


                     MONDAY, -May 19, 1856.
  MR. PRESIDENT: You are now called to re-
dress a great transgression. Seldom in the
history of nations has such a question been
presented. Tariffs, army bills, navy bills, land
bills, are important, and justly occupy your
care; nbut these all belong to the course of
ordinary legislation. As means and instru-
ments only, they are necessarily subordinate
to the conservation of government itself.
Grant them or deny them, in greater or less
degree, and you will inflict no shock. The
machinery of government will continue to
move. Th.State will not cease to exist. Far
otherwise is it with the eminent question now
before you, involving, as it does, liberty in a
broad territory, and also involving the peace
of the whole country with our good name in
history for evermore.
  Take down your map, sir, and you will find
that the territory of Kansas, more than any
other region, occupies the middle spot of
North America, equally distant from the At-
lantic on the east, and the Pacific on the west;
from the frozen waters of Hudson's Bay on
the north, and the tepid gulf stream on the
south, constituting the precise territorial centre
of the whole vast continent. To such advan-
tage of situation, on the very highway between
two oceans, are added a soil of unsurpassed
richness, and a fascinating, undulating beauty
of surface, with a health-giving climate, cal-
culated to nurture a powerful and generous
people, worthy to be a central pivot of Ame-
rican institutions.'
  A few short months only have passed since
this spacious mediterranean country was open
only to the savage, who ran wild in its woods
and prairies; and now it has already drawn
to its bosom a population of freemen larger
than Athens crowded within her historic
gates, when her sons, under Miltiades, won
liberty for mankind on the field of Marathon;


more than Sparta contained when she ruled
Greece, and sent forth her devoted children,
quickened by a mother's benediction, to return
with their shields or on them; more than
Rome gathered on her seven hills, when,
under her kings, she commenced that sove-
reign sway, which afterwards embraced the
whole earth; more than London held, when,
on the fields of Crecy and Agincourt, the
English banner was carried victoriously over
the chivalrous hosts of France.
  Against this territory, thus fortunate in
position and population, a crime has been com-
mitted, which is without example in the
records of the past. Not in plundering pro-
vinces, nor in the cruelties of selfish gov-
ernors will you find its parallel; and yet there
is an ancient instance, which may show at
least the path of justice. In the terrible im-
peachment by which the great Roman Orator
has blasted through all time the name of
Verres, amidst charges of robbery and sacri-
lege, the enormity which most aroused the
indignant voice of his accuser, and which still
stands forth with strongest distinctness, ar-
resting the sympathetic indignation of all who
read the story, is, that away in Sicily he had
scourged a citizcn of Rome-that the cry-
I am a Roman citizen, had been interposed
in vain against the lash of the tyrant governor.
Other charges were, that he had carried away
productions of art, and that he had violated
the sacred shrines.
  It was in the presence of the Roman Senate
that this arraignment proceeded; in a temple
of the Forum, amidst crowds -such as no
orator had ever before drawn    together-
thronging the porticoes and colonnades, even
clinging to the house-tops and neighboring
slopes-and under the anxious gaze of witnes-
ses summoned from the scene of crime. But
an audience grander far-of higher dignity-
of more various people, and of wider intelli-


     FOR SALE AT THE OFFICE OF THE NEW YoRx TRIBUNE. PRICE, PER DOZEN COPIES 40c.;
                      PER HUNDRED, $2 50; PER THOUSAND, $20.
    GOVERNOR      SEWARD'S SPEECH.-The Great Speech of Governor SEWARD, On th
Immediate Admission of Kansas, is now ready, in pamphlet form. Price, per dozen, 20 cents; per
hundred, $l 25 ; per thousand, $10 00. Orders inclosing the cash will be promptly attended to by
addressing                                       GREELEY & McELRATH, New-York.

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