Ohio History Journal

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ADDRESS OF REV

ADDRESS OF REV. EDWARD EVERETT HALE.

 

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN OF THE ILLINOIS COUNTY,

FELLOW-CITIZENS OF THE UNITED STATES: I certainly

shall detain you but a very few minutes. I am speaking

only because I am commissioned by the Governor of

Massachusetts. We think our State has spoken very well

here to-day already.

Massachusetts sends her hearty congratulations to you,

and, as Dr. Loring says, " Massachusetts does not forget

her children, her grandchildren, and the children of her

grandchildren." Indeed, they say, kindly or unkindly,

that Massachusetts does not forget any of her brethren

wherever they may be; and when they are such as she

looks upon so proudly here, why should she forget them?

Why should she forget them ?

There is a single contribution which the Governor

would ask me to make, I think, to those lessons for the

tuture that we have been speaking of, which have been

taught in all her history. It has been her fortune since

1620, when, unfortunately, there was no one else to speak

for the rights of men; it has been her fortune that, when

there has been any speaking for men, either in commemo-

ration of victory, or in prophesying fight, her speakers

should be among the first called forth, and it shall con-

tinue to be so in days to come.

It happened that it was Manasseh Cutler who was to be

the one who should call upon that Continental Congress

to do the duty which they had pushed aside for five or six

years. It happened that this diplomatist succeeded in

doing in four days what had not been done in four years

before.

What was the weight which Manasseh Cutler threw into

the scale? It was not wealth; it was not the armor of

the old time. It was simply the fact, known to all men,

that the men of New England would not emigrate into

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