SEPT. 12.
What I wished to tell you yesterday was what Miss Dix had just told me about her hospital in New Jersey. One gentleman has given money enough — several hundred dollars to place a fountain in the yard; another to buy a magic lantern for the amusement of the patients; and she had just asked a Mr. King, a member of the House, to give her money for a library, and he had given it. So she was all smiles and delight when I saw her. Think of her going round, first to establish hospitals; then to fill them, and to take care of them; and then to enrich them with libraries and apparatus, and beautify them with embellishments!
I have been writing so far while the clerk was calling the yeas and nays on the Fugitive-slave Bill, an outrageous bill; not so bad as the one I denounced in my second letter, but one which will make abolitionists by battalions and regiments.
It has just passed by a vote of 105 to 73, an enormous majority. I think this bill will inflame the country more than the Territorial bills; but I do not know but the nerve of the country has been so often excited, that it has lost its susceptibility. I cannot speak with any composure of this series of diabolical measures. What makes it all so terrible is, that these bills passed by treachery, the grossest treachery of those who were chosen to do directly the opposite thing. I wish I had my former force with which to curse the measures, if not the men!
SOURCE: Mary Tyler Peabody Mann, Life of Horace Mann, p. 326
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