[907] Congressional Globe, Twenty-fifth Congress, Third Session, p. 34.

[908] Wilson, Rise and Fall of the Slave Power, Vol. I, pp. 552, 553.

[909] Ibid., p. 563.

[910] "The wonder is how such an Act came to pass, even by so lean a vote as it received; for it was voted for by less than half of the Senate, and by six less than the number of senators from the slave states alone. It is a wonder how it passed at all; and the wonder increases on knowing that, of the small number that voted for it, many were against it, and merely went along with those who had constituted themselves the particular guardians of the rights of the slave states, and claimed a lead in all that concerned them. These self-instituted guardians were permitted to have their own way, some voting with them unwillingly, others not voting at all. It was a part of the plan of 'compromise and pacification' which was then deemed essential to save the Union; under the fear of danger to the Union on one hand, and the charms of pacification and compromise on the other, a few heated spirits got the control and had things their own way." Benton's Thirty Years' View, Vol. II, p. 780.

[911] See Rhodes' History of the United States, Vol. I, pp. 130-136, for a discussion of the question whether the Union was in danger in 1850.

[912] Congressional Globe, Thirty-first Congress, First Session, Appendix, p. 1583.

[913] Life and Speeches of Henry Clay, Vol. II, pp. 641, 643. The speech from which the above quotations are made was delivered Feb. 5 and 6, 1850.

[914] Congressional Globe, Thirty-first Congress, Second Session, Appendix, p. 1051; McDougall, Fugitive Slaves, p. 31.

[915] Congressional Globe, Thirty-first Congress, First Session, Appendix, p. 1615.

[916] Ibid., p. 1592.