ANDREW JOHNSON
And let me say tonightnote
that my head has been threatened. It has been said that my blood was to be shed. Let me say to those who are still willing to sacrifice my life [derisive laughter and cheers], if you want a victim and my country requires it, erect your altar, and the individual who addresses you tonight, while here a visitor, ["No," "No," and laughter,] erect your altar if you still thirst for blood, and if you want it, take out the individual who now addresses you and lay him upon your altar, and the blood that now courses his veins and warms his existence shall be poured out as a last libation to Freedom. I love my country, and I defy any man to put his finger upon anything to the contrary. Then what is my offence? [Voices, "You ain't a radical," "Now to the Freedmen's Bureau. What was it? Four million slaves were
emancipated and given an equal chance and fair start to make their own
support-to work and produce; and having worked and produced, to have their own
property and apply it to their own support. But the Freedmen's Bureau comes and
says we must take charge of these 4,000,000 slaves. The bureau comes along and
proposes, at an expense of a fraction less than $12,000,000 a year, to take
charge of these slaves. You had already expended $3,000,000,000 to set them
free and give them a fair opportunity to take care of themselves
-then these gentlemen, who are such great friends of the people, tell us they
must be taxed $12,000,000 to sustain the Freedmen's Bureau. [Great
confusion.] I would rather speak to 500 men that would give me their
attention that to 100,000 that would not. [With all this mass of patronage he said he
could have declared himself dictator.]
The Civil
Rights bill was more enormous than the other. I have exercised the veto power,
they say. Let me say to you of the threats from your Stevenses,
Sumners, Phillipses, and
all that class, I care not for them. As they once talked about forming a
"league with
hell and a covenant with the devil,"
I tell you, my countrymen, here tonight, though the power of hell,
death and Stevens with all his powers combined, there is no power that can
control me save you the people and the God that spoke me into existence. In
bidding you farewell here tonight, I would ask you with all the pains Congress
has taken to calumniate and malign me, what has Congress done? Has it done
anything to restore the
And because I
stand now as I did when the rebellion commenced, I have been denounced as a
traitor. My countrymen here to-night, who has suffered more than I? Who has run
greater risk? Who has borne more than I? But Congress, factious, domineering,
tyrannical Congress has undertaken to poison the minds of the American people,
and create a feeling against me in consequence of the manner in which I have
distributed the public patronage.
While this
gang-this common gang of cormorants and bloodsuckers, have been fattening upon
the country for the past four of five years-men never going into the field, who
growl at being removed from their fat offices, they are great patriots! Look at
them all over your district? Everybody is a traitor that is against them. I
think the time has come when those who stayed at home and enjoyed fat offices
for the last four or five years -I think it would be more than right for them
to give way and let others participate in the benefits of office. Hence you can
see why it is that I am traduced and assaulted. I stood by these men who were
in the field, and I stand by them now.
I have been
drawn into this long speech, while I intended simply to make acknowledgments
for the cordial welcome; but if I am insulted while civilities are going on I
will resent it in a proper manner, and in parting here tonight I have no anger nor revengeful feelings to gratify. All I want now,
peace has come and the war is over, is for all patriotic men to rally round the
standard of their country, and swear by their altars and their God, that all
shall sink together but what this
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