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Principles For Life
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Abraham Lincoln
The Declaration of Independence was formed by the representatives of American liberty
from thirteen states of the confederacy--twelve of which were slaveholding communities.
We need not discuss the way or the reason of their becoming slaveholding communities.
It is sufficient for our purpose that all of them greatly deplored the evil and that they
placed a provision in the Constitution which they supposed would gradually remove the
disease by cutting off its source. This was the abolition of the slave trade.
So general was conviction -- the public determination -- to abolish the African slave trade,
that the provision which I have referred to as being placed in the Constitution,
declared that it should not be abolished prior to the year 1808. A Constitutional
provision was necessary to prevent the people, through Congress, from putting a
stop to the traffic immediately at the close of the war. Now, if slavery had been a
good thing, would the Fathers of the Republic had taken a step calculated to diminish
its beneficent influences among themselves, and snatched the boon wholly from their posterity?
These communities, by their representatives in old Independence Hall, said to the whole world
of men: "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness." This was their majestic interpretation of the
economy of the Universe. This was their lofty, and wise, and noble understanding of the
justice of the Creator to His creatures. Yes, gentlemen, to all His creatures, to the
whole great family of man. In their enlightened belief, nothing stamped with the divine
image and likeness was sent into the world to be trodden on, and degraded, and imbruted
by its fellows. They grasped not only the whole race of man then living, but they reached
forward and seized upon the farthest posterity. They erected a beacon to guide their
children and their childrens' children, and the countless myriads who should inhabit the
earth in other ages. Wise statesmen as they were, they knew the tendency of prosperity to
breed tyrants, and so they established these great self-evident truths, that when in the
distant future some man, some faction, some interest, should set up the doctrine that none
but rich men, or none but white men, were entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness, their posterity might look up again to the Declaration of Independence and take
courage to renew the battle which their fathers began -- so that truth, and justice, and mercy,
and all the humane and Christian virtues might not be extinguished from the land; so that no
man would hereafter dare to limit and circumscribe the great principles on which the temple of
liberty was being built.
Now, my countrymen if you have been taught doctrines conflicting with the great landmarks
of the Declaration of Independence; if you have listened to suggestions which would take
away from its grandeur, and mutilate the fair symmetry of its proportions; if you have been
inclined to believe that all men are not created equal in those inalienable rights enumerated
by our chart of liberty, let me entreat you to come back. Return to the fountain whose
waters spring close by the blood of the Revolution. Think nothing of me -- take no thought
for the political fate of any man whomsoever -- but come back to the truths that are in
the Declaration of Independence. You may do anything to me you may choose, if you will
but heed these sacred principles. You may not only defeat me for the Senate, but may
take me and put me to death. While pretending no indifference to earthly honors, I do
claim to be actuated in this contest by something higher than an anxiety for office.
I charge you to drop every paltry and inignificant thought for any man's success.
It is nothing; I am nothing; Judge Douglas is nothing. But do not destroy that immortal
emblem of humanity -- the Declaration of American Independence.
from the Lincoln/Douglas Debates of 1858
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