GDG- already dead in the South

Dennis Lawrence denlaw at fone.net
Tue Jul 31 10:24:01 CDT 2007


Henry Asbury, Esq Springfield,
My dear Sir July 31. 1858.

Yours of the 28th. is received. The points you propose to press upon 
Douglas, he will be very hard to get up to. But I think you labor under a 
mistake when you say no one cares how he answers. This implies that it is 
equal with him whether he is injured here or at the South. That is a 
mistake. He cares nothing for the South---he knows he is already dead 
there. He only leans Southward now to keep the Buchanan party from growing 
in Illinois. You shall have hard work to get him directly to the point 
whether a teritorial Legislature has or has not the power to exclude 
slavery. But if you succeed in bringing him to it, though he will be 
compelled to say it possesses no such power; he will instantly take ground 
that slavery can not actually exist in the teritories, unless the people 
desire it, and so give it protective teritorial legislation. If this 
offends the South he will let it offend them; as at all events he means to 
hold on to his chances in Illinois. You will soon learn by the papers that 
both the Judge and myself, are to be in Quincy on the 13th. of October, 
when & where I expect the pleasure of seeing you.

Yours very truly A. LINCOLN.

Annotation

[1]   ALS, ORB. Henry Asbury was an attorney of Quincy, Illinois. 
Accompanying the original letter is a signed statement by Asbury dated 
July, 1883, stating that, ``The main Question I had urged Mr. Lincoln to 
put to Judge Douglas . . . was the Question 2 at Freeport `Can the people 
of a United States territory in any lawful way against the wish of any 
citizen of the united States exclude Slavery from its limits prior to the 
formation of a state constitution.' ''
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