“Entertain no proposition for a compromise in regard to the extension of slavery,” Lincoln wrote to key senators and congressmen. “The tug has to come, & better now, than any time hereafter.” Crittenden’s compromise, Lincoln told Weed and Seward, “would lose us everything we gained by the election. . . . Filibustering for all South of us, and making slave states would follow . . . to put us again on the high-road to a slave empire.” The very notion of a territorial compromise, Lincoln pointed out, “acknowledges that slavery has equal rights with liberty, and surrenders all we have contended
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