Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1.

Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1.

Madam:  We, the ladies of the Dundee Antislavery Association, desire to add our feeble voices to the acclamations of a world, conscious that your fame and character need no testimony from us.  We are less anxious to honor you than to prove that our appreciation and respect are no less sincere and no less profound than those of the millions in other places and other lands, whom you have instructed, improved, delighted, and thrilled.  We beg permission to lay before you the expressions of a gratitude and an enthusiasm in some measure commensurate with your transcendent literary merit and moral worth.  We congratulate you on the success of the chef-d’oeuvre of your genius, a success altogether unparalleled, and in all probability never to be paralleled in the history of literature.  We congratulate you still more warmly on that nobility and benevolence of nature which made you from childhood the friend of the unhappy slave, and led you to accumulate unconsciously the materials for the immortal tale of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.  We congratulate you in having in that tale supported with matchless eloquence and pathos the cause of the crushed, the forgotten, the injured, of those who had no help of man at all, and who had even been blasphemously taught by professed ministers of the gospel of mercy that Heaven too was opposed to their liberation, and had blotted them out from the catalogue of man.  We recognize, too, with delight, the spirit of enlightened and evangelical piety which breathes through your work, and serves to confute the calumny that none but infidels are interested in the cause of abolition—­a calumny which cuts at Christianity with a yet sharper edge than at abolition, but which you have proved to be a foul and malignant falsehood.  We congratulate you not only on the richness of the laurels which you have won, but on the dignity, the meekness, and the magnanimity with which these laurels have been worn.  We hail in you our most gifted sister in the great cause of liberty—­we bid you warmly welcome to our city, and we pray Almighty God, the God of the oppressed, to pour his selectest blessings on your head, and to spare your invaluable life, till yours, and ours, and others’ efforts for the cause of abolition are crowned with success, and till the shouts of a universal jubilee shall proclaim that in all quarters of the globe the African is free.”

The address was handed to Mrs. Stowe amid great applause.  MR. GILFILLAN continued:  “In addition to the address which I have now read, I have been requested to add a few remarks; and in making these I cannot but congratulate Dundee on the fact that Mrs. Stowe has visited it, and that she has had a reception worthy of her distinguished merits. [Applause.] It is not Dundee alone that is present here to-night:  it is Forfarshire, Fifeshire, and I may also add, Perthshire:—­that are here to do honor to themselves in doing honor to our illustrious guest. [Cheers.] There are assembled

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Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.