A Letter to a Friend in a Slave State

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" Boston, Jan. 15, 1845. "Wendell Phillips. " The resolution entire, of the Anti-Slavery Society, was as follows : " Resolved, That secesssion from the present United Stales Government, is " the duty of every Abolitionist, since no one can take office, or throw a vote "for another to hold office, under the United States Constitution, without vio- " lating his anti-slavery principles, and rendering himself an abettor of the "slaveholder in his sin. " 41 agogues. Patrick Henry in Virginia, Mr. Fa...tes and Mr. Lansing in New York, the distinguished men in all parts of the country who opposed the Constitution, the leaders of the large minorities of the Massachu- setts and other conventions, which by majorities only, adopted it, the conventions of the States of Rhode Island and North Carolina, which, at first, wholly rejected it, mainly based their opposition upon the necessity of the States retaining their full power, as well as right, of sove- reignty. Patrick Henry, to the position taken in argument, in the Virginia Convention, that the States, by the terms of the compact, would have the right, if oppressed by the Federal Government, to secede from the Union, answered, True, we will have the right, but not the power.

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