The congregation is large; I shall require attention. I discovered
what the emotions of the people were on my arrival at this city, and I
have come here to say, "How do you do?" to all parties, and I do now
at this time say to all, "How do you do?" I meet you with a heart full
of gratitude to Almighty God; and I presume you all feel the same. I
am well—I am hearty. I hardly know how to express my feelings—I feel
as strong as a giant. I pulled sticks with the men coming
along, and I pulled up with one hand the strongest man that could be
found: then two men tried, but they could not pull me up; and I
continued to pull mentally until I pulled Missouri to Nauvoo. But I
will pass from that subject.
There has been great excitement in the country since Joseph H.
Reynolds and Harmon Wilson took me; but I have been cool and
dispassionate through the whole. Thank God, I am now a prisoner in the
hands of the Municipal Court of Nauvoo, and not in the hands of
Missourians.
It is not so much my object to tell of my afflictions, trials, and
troubles, as to speak of the writ of Habeas Corpus, so that the minds
of all may be corrected. It has been asserted by the great and wise
men, lawyers and others, that our municipal powers and legal tribunals
are not to be sanctioned by the authorities of the State; and
accordingly they want to make it lawful to drag away innocent men from
their families and friends, and have them put to death by ungodly men
for their religion! Relative to our city charter, courts, right of
Habeas Corpus, &c., I wish you to know and publish that we have all
power; and if any man from this time forth says anything to the
contrary, cast it into his teeth. There is a secret in this; if there
is not power in our charter and courts, then there is not power in the
State of Illinois, nor in the Congress or Constitution of the United
States, for the United States gave unto Illinois her constitution or
charter, and Illinois gave unto Nauvoo her charters, ceding unto us
our vested rights, which she has no right or power to take from us;
all the power there was in Illinois she gave to Nauvoo; and any man
that says to the contrary, is a fool. The Municipal Court has all the
power to issue and determine writs of Habeas Corpus, within the limits
of this city, that the Legislature can confer. This city has all the
power that the State Courts have, and was given by the same
authority—the Legislature.
I want you to hear and learn, O Israel! this day, what is for the
happiness and peace of this city and people. If our enemies are
determined to oppress us, and deprive us of our constitutional rights
and privileges as they have done; and if the authorities that are on
the earth will not sustain us in our rights, nor give us that
protection which the laws and constitution of the United States, and
of this State, guarantee unto us, then we will claim them from a
higher power—from Heaven—yea, from God Almighty.
I have dragged these men here by my hand, and will do it again; but I
swear I will not deal so mildly with them again; for the time has come
when forbearance is no longer a virtue; and if you or I are again
taken unlawfully, you are at liberty to give loose to blood and
thunder. But be cool, be deliberate, be wise, act with almighty power,
and when you pull, do it effectually—make a sweepstakes for once!
My lot has always been cast among the warmest-hearted people; in every
time of trouble, friends, even among strangers, have been raised up
unto me, and assisted me.
The time has come when the veil is torn off from the State of
Illinois, and its citizens have delivered me from the State of
Missouri; friends that were raised up unto me would have spilt their
life's blood, to have torn me from the hands of Reynolds and Wilson,
if I had asked them; but I told them not. I would be delivered by the
power of God, and generalship; and I have brought these men to Nauvoo,
and committed them to her from whom I was torn, not as prisoners in
chains, but as prisoners of kindness. I have treated them
kindly, I have had the privilege of rewarding them good for evil. They
took me unlawfully, treated me rigorously, strove to deprive me of my
rights, and would have run with me into Missouri to have been
murdered, if Providence had not interposed; but now they are in my
hands, and I have taken them into my house, set them at the head of my
table, and placed before them the best which my house afforded; and
they were waited upon by my wife, whom they deprived of seeing me when
I was taken.
I have no doubt but I shall be discharged by the Municipal Court: were
I before any good tribunal I should be discharged, as the Missouri
writs are illegal, and good for nothing—they are "without form and
void."
But before I will bear this unhallowed persecution any longer—before I
will be dragged away again, among my enemies for trial, I will spill
the last drop of blood in my veins, and will see all my enemies IN
HELL! To bear it any longer would be a sin, and I will not bear it any
longer. Shall we bear it any longer? [One universal "No!" ran through
all the vast assembly, like a loud peal of thunder.]
I wish the lawyer who says we have no powers in Nauvoo may be choked
to death with his own words. Don't employ lawyers, or pay them money
for their knowledge, for I have learnt they don't know anything. I
know more than they all.
Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel; he that believeth in
our chartered rights may come here and be saved, and he that does not
shall remain in ignorance. If any lawyer shall say there is more power
in other places and charters, with respect to Habeas Corpus, than in
Nauvoo, believe it not. I have converted this candidate for Congress, that the right of Habeas Corpus is
included in our charter. If he continues converted, I will vote for
him.
I have been with these lawyers, and they have treated me well; but I
am here in Nauvoo, and the Missourian too. I got here by a lawful writ
of Habeas Corpus, issued by the Master in chancery of Lee County, and
made returnable to the nearest tribunal in the Fifth Judicial District
having jurisdiction to try and determine such writs: and here is that
tribunal, just as it should be.
However indignant you may feel about the high hand of oppression which
has been raised against me by these men, use not the hand of violence
against them; for they could not be prevailed upon to come here till I
pledged my honor and my life that a hair of their heads should not be
hurt. Will you all support my pledge, and thus preserve my honor? [One
universal "Yes!" burst from the assembled thousands.] This is another
proof of your attachment to me. I know how ready you are to do right;
you have done great things, and manifested your love towards me in
flying to my assistance on this occasion. I bless you, in the name of
the Lord, with all the blessings of heaven and earth you are capable
of enjoying.
I have learned we have no need to suffer as we have heretofore—we can
call others to our aid. I know the Almighty will bless all good men—He
will bless you; and the time has come when there will be such a
flocking to the standard of liberty as never has been, or shall be
hereafter. What an era has commenced! Our enemies have prophesied that
we would establish our religion by the sword; is it true? No, but if
Missouri will not stay her cruel hand in her unhallowed persecutions
against us, I restrain you not any longer: I say, in the name of Jesus
Christ, by the authority of the Holy Priesthood, I this day turn the
key that opens the heavens to restrain you no longer from this
time forth. I will lead you to battle; and if you are not afraid to
die, and feel disposed to spill your blood in your own defense, you
will not offend me. Be not the aggressor—bear until they strike you on
the one cheek; then offer the other and they will be sure to strike
that; then defend yourselves, and God will bear you off, and you shall
stand forth clear before His tribunal.
If any citizens of Illinois say we shall not have our rights, treat
them as strangers and not friends, and let them go to hell and be
damned! Some say they will mob us; let them mob and be damned! If we
have to give up our chartered rights, privileges, and freedom, which
our fathers fought, bled, and died for, and which the Constitution of
the United States, and of this State, guarantee unto us, we will do it
only at the point of the sword and bayonet.
Many lawyers contend for those things which are against the rights of
men, and I can only excuse them because of their ignorance. Go forth
and advocate the laws and rights of the people, ye lawyers; if not,
don't get into my hands, or under the lash of my tongue.
Lawyers say the powers of the Nauvoo charter are dangerous; but I ask,
is the Constitution of the United States, or of this State, dangerous?
No; neither are the charters granted unto Nauvoo by the Legislature of
Illinois dangerous, and those who say they are, are fools. We have not
enjoyed unmolested those rights which the Constitution of the United
States of America, and our charters grant. Missouri and all wicked men
raise the hue and cry against us, and are not satisfied. Some
political aspirants of this State also are raising the hue and cry
that the powers in the charters granted unto the city of Nauvoo are
dangerous; and although the General Assembly have conferred them upon
our city, yet the whine is raised—"Repeal them, take them away;" like
the boy who swapped off his jack-knife, and then cried, "Daddy, daddy,
I have sold my jack-knife, and got sick of my bargain, and I want to
get it back again." But how are they going to help themselves? Raise
mobs? And what can mobocrats do in the midst of Kirkpatrickites? No
better than a hunter in the claws of a bear. If mobs come upon you any
more here, dung your gardens with them. We don't want any excitement;
but after we have done all, we will rise up, Washington-like, and
break off the hellish yoke that oppresses us, and we will not be
mobbed.
The day before I was taken at Inlet Grove, I rode with my wife through
Dixon to visit some friends, and I said to her, "Here is a good
people." I felt this by the Spirit of God. The next day I was a
prisoner in their midst, in the hands of Reynolds of Missouri, and
Wilson of Carthage. As the latter drove up, he exclaimed, "Ha, ha, ha,
by God we have got the Prophet now!" He gloried much in it; but he is
now our prisoner. When they came to take me, they held two cocked
pistols to my head, and saluted me with "God damn you, I'll shoot you!
I'll shoot you, God damn you;" repeating these threats nearly fifty
times from first to last. I asked them what they wanted to shoot me
for. They said they would do it if I made any resistance. "O very
well," I replied, "I have no resistance to make." They then dragged me
away, and I asked them by what authority they did these things. They
said, "By a writ from the Governors of Missouri and Illinois." I then
told them I wanted a writ of Habeas Corpus. Their reply was, "God damn
you, you shan't have it." I told a man to go to Dixon, and get me a
writ of Habeas Corpus. Wilson then repeated, "God damn you, you shan't
have it; I'll shoot you." When we arrived at Dixon, I sent for
a lawyer, who came, and Reynolds shut the door in his face, and would
not let me speak to him, repeating "God damn you, I'll shoot you." I
turned to him, opened my bosom, and told him to "shoot away; I have
endured so much persecution and oppression that I am sick of life; why
then don't you shoot, and have done with it, instead of talking so
much about it?" This somewhat checked his insolence. I then told him
that I would have counsel to consult; and eventually I obtained my
wish. The lawyers came to me, and I got a writ of Habeas Corpus for
myself, and also a writ against Reynolds and Wilson for unlawful
proceedings and cruel treatment towards me. Thanks to the good
citizens of Dixon, who nobly took their stand against such
unwarrantable and unlawful oppression, my persecutors could not get
out of town that night; although, when they first arrived, they swore
I should not remain in Dixon five minutes; and I found they had
ordered horses accordingly to proceed to Rock Island. I pledged my
honor to my counsel that the Nauvoo city charter conferred
jurisdiction to investigate the subject; so we came to Nauvoo, where I
am now prisoner in the custody of a higher tribunal than the circuit
court.
The charter says that "the city council shall have power and authority
to make, ordain, establish, and execute such ordinances, not repugnant
to the Constitution of the United States, or of this State, as they
may deem necessary for the peace, benefit, and safety of the
inhabitants of said city;" and also that "the Municipal Court shall
have power to grant writs of Habeas Corpus in all cases arising under
the ordinances of the city council." The city council have passed an
ordinance "that no citizen of this city shall be taken out of this
city by any writ, without the privilege of a writ of Habeas Corpus."
There is nothing but what we have power over, except where restricted
by the Constitution of the United States. "But," say the mob, "what
dangerous powers!" Yes, dangerous, because they will protect the
innocent, and put down mobocrats. The Constitution of the United
States declares that the privilege of the writ of Habeas Corpus shall
not be denied. Deny me the right of Habeas Corpus, and I will fight
with gun, sword, cannon, whirlwind, and thunder, until they are used
up like the Kilkenny cats.
We have more power than most charters confer, because we have power to
go behind the writ, and try the merits of the case.
If these powers are dangerous, then the Constitution of the United
States, and of this State, are dangerous; but they are not dangerous
to good men; they are only so to bad men who are breakers of the laws.
So with the laws of the country, and so with the ordinances of Nauvoo;
they are dangerous to mobs, but not to good men who wish to keep the
laws.
We do not go out of Nauvoo to disturb anybody, or any city, town, or
place; why then need they be troubled about us? Let them not meddle
with our affairs, but let us alone. After we had been deprived of our
rights and privileges of citizenship, driven from town to town, place
to place, and State to State, with the sacrifice of our homes and
lands, our blood has been shed, many having been murdered; and all
this because of our religion—because we worship Almighty God according
to the dictates of our own consciences. Shall we longer bear these
cruelties, which have been heaped upon us for the last ten years in
the face of heaven, and in open violation of the Constitution and laws
of these United States, and of this State? God forbid! I will
not bear it: if they take away my rights, I will fight for them
manfully and righteously until I am used up. We have done nothing
against the rights of others.
You speak of lawyers; I am a lawyer too, but the Almighty God has
taught me the principle of law; and the true meaning and intent of the
writ of Habeas Corpus is to defend the innocent, and investigate the
subject. Go behind the writ, and if the form of one that is issued
against an innocent man is right, he should not be dragged to another
State, and there be put to death, or be in jeopardy of life and limb,
because of prejudice, when he is innocent. The benefits of the
Constitution and Laws are alike for all; and the great Eloheim has
given me the privilege of having the benefits of the Constitution, and
the writ of Habeas Corpus, and I am bold to ask for this privilege
this day; and I ask, in the name of Jesus Christ, and all that is
sacred, that I may have your lives and all your energies to carry out
the freedom which is chartered to us. Will you all help me? If so,
make it manifest by raising the right hand. [There was a unanimous
response, a perfect sea of hands being elevated.] Here is truly a
committee of the whole.
When at Dixon, a lawyer came to me as counsel; Reynolds and Wilson
said I should not speak to any man, and they would shoot any man who
should dare to speak to me. An old greyheaded man came up, and said I
should have counsel, and he was not afraid of their pistols. The
people of Dixon were ready to take me from my persecutors, and I could
have killed them notwithstanding their pistols; but I had no
disposition to kill any man, though my worst enemy—not even Boggs: in
fact he would have more hell to live in the reflection of his past
crimes, than to die. After this, I had lawyers enough, and I obtained
a writ for Joseph H. Reynolds, and Harmon Wilson, for damage, assault,
and battery, as well as the writ of Habeas Corpus.
We started for Ottoway, and arrived at Pawpaw Grove, thirty-two miles,
where we stopped for the night. Squire Walker sent Mr. Campbell,
Sheriff of Lee County, to my assistance, and he came, and slept by me.
In the morning, certain men wished to see me, but I was not allowed to
see them. The news of my arrival had hastily circulated about the
neighborhood; and very early in the morning the largest room in the
hotel was filled with citizens, who were anxious to hear me preach,
and requested me to address them. Sheriff Reynolds entered the room,
and said, pointing to me, "I wish you to understand this man is my
prisoner, and I want you should disperse; you must not gather round
here in this way." Upon which an aged gentleman who was lame, and
carried a large hickory walking-stick, advanced towards Reynolds,
bringing his hickory upon the floor, said, "You damned infernal puke;
we'll learn you to come here and interrupt gentlemen: sit down there,and sit still, don't open your head
till General Smith gets through talking; if you never learned manners
in Missouri, we'll teach you that gentlemen are not to be imposed upon
by a nigger driver: you cannot kidnap men here, if you do in
Missouri; and if you attempt it here, there's a committee in this
Grove that will sit on your case; and, sir, it is the highest
tribunal in the United States, as from its decision there is no
appeal." Reynolds, no doubt aware that the person addressing him was
at the head of a committee, who had prevented the settlers on the
public domain from being imposed upon by land speculators, sat down in
silence, while I addressed the assembly for an hour and a half on the subject of marriage; my visitors having requested me to give
them my views of the law of God respecting marriage.
My freedom commenced from that hour. We came direct from Paw-paw Grove
to Nauvoo, having got our writ directed to the nearest court having
authority to try the case, which was the Municipal Court of this city.
It did my soul good to see your feelings and love manifested towards
me. I thank God that I have the honor to lead so virtuous and honest a
people, to be your leader and lawyer, as was Moses to the children of
Israel. Hosannah! Hosannah!! HOSANNAH!! to Almighty God, who has
delivered us thus from out of the seven troubles! I commend you to His
grace, and may the blessings of heaven rest upon you, in the name of
Jesus Christ. Amen.
[President Smith then introduced Mr. Cyrus Walker to the assembled
multitude; and remarked to him]—These are the greatest dupes, as a
body of people, that ever lived, or I am not as big a rogue as I am
reported to be. I told Mr. Warren I would not discuss the subject of
religion with you. I understand the Gospel, and you do not; you
understand the quackery of law, and I do not.
[Mr. Walker then addressed the people to the effect that from what he
had seen in the Nauvoo city charter, it gave the power to try writs of
Ha
If the Legislature have granted Nauvoo the right of determining cases
of Habeas Corpus, it is no more than they ought to have done, or more
than our fathers fought for.
Furthermore, if Missouri continues her warfare, and to issue her writs
against me and this people unlawfully and unjustly as she has done,
and to take away and trample upon our rights, I swear in the name of
Almighty God, and with uplifted hands to heaven, I will spill my
heart's blood in our defense. They shall not take away our rights; and
if they don't stop leading me by the nose, I will lead them by the
nose; and if they don't let me alone, I will turn up the world—I will
make war. When we shake our own bushes, we want to catch our own
fruit.
The lawyers themselves acknowledge that we have all power granted us
in our charters that we could ask for—that we had more power than any
other court in the state; for all other courts were restricted, while
ours was not; and I thank God Almighty for it. I will not be rode down
to hell by the Missourians any longer; and it is my privilege to speak
in my own defense; and I appeal to your integrity and honor, that you
will stand by and help me, according to the covenant you have this day
made.