Page:The World's Famous Orations Volume 9.djvu/205

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

YANCEY honor of families, the lives, perhaps, of all of us. It all rests upon what your course may ulti- mately make out of a great heaving volcano of passion. Bear with us then, while we standi sternly upon what is yet a dormant volcano, and say that we can yield no position until we are convinced that we are wrong. We are in a posi- tion to ask you to yield. What right of yours, gentlemen of the North, have we of the South ever invaded ? What institution of yours have we ever assailed, directly or indirectly? What laws, have w^e ever passed that have invaded, or in- duced others to invade, the sanctity of your homes, or to put your lives in jeopardy, or that were likely to destroy the fundamental institu- tions of your States ? The wisest, the most learn- ed and the best among you remain silent, be- cause you can not say that we have done this thing. If your view is right and ours is not out strictly supported by the compact, still the con- sequence, in a remote degree, of your proposi- tion, may bring a dreaded result upon us all. If you have no domestic, no municipal peace at stake, and no property at stake, and no funda- mental institutions of your liberties at stake, are we asking any too much of you to-day when we ask you to yield to us in this matter as broth- ers, in order to quiet our doubts? For in yield- ing you lose nothing that is essentially right. Do I state that proposition, gentlemen, any stronger than your own intellects and your own judgment 195