Discourse, 30 June 1843, as Reported by Wilford Woodruff
Discourse, 30 June 1843, as Reported by Wilford Woodruff
Source Note
Source Note
JS, Discourse, [, Hancock Co., IL, 30 June 1843]. Featured version copied [ca. 30 June 1843] in Wilford Woodruff, Journal, vol. 5, 1 Jan. 1843–31 Dec. 1844, pp. [54]–[63]; handwriting of . For more complete source information, see the source note for Discourse, 17 Jan. 1843, as Reported by Wilford Woodruff.
Historical Introduction
Historical Introduction
See Historical Introduction to Discourse, 30 June 1843, as Reported by Willard Richards.
me from him, & had an opportunity to have killed him but I had no temptation to do it to him nor any other man, my worst enemy not even in fact he would have more hell to live in the reflection of his past life than to die. My freedom commenced from that time the old man came to me & would talk to me we came direct from to we got our writ directed to the nearest Court having authority to try try the case & we came to It did my soul good to see your feelings & love manifest towards me
I thank God that I have the honor to lead so virtuous & honest a people to be your leader & lawyier as Moses to the children of Israel Hosannah Hosannah Hosannah Hosannah to the name of the Most High God I commend you to his grace & may the Blessings of heaven rest upon you in the name of Jesus Christ Amen
Furthermore if continues her warfare & continues to Issue her writs against me & this peopl unlawfully & unjustly as they have done & our rights are trampled upon & they under take to take away my rights I swaire with uplifted hands to Heaven I will spill my Blood in its defence they shall not take away our rights & if they dont stop leading me by the nose I will lead them by the nose & if they dont let me alone I will turn up the world I will make war, when we shake our own bushes we want to ketch our own fruit The Lawyiers 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 for all other Courts were restricted [p. [62]]
Source Note
Source Note
Document Transcript
Document Information
Document Information
Footnotes
Footnotes
- [7]
JS is referring to the May 1842 shooting of former Missouri governor Lilburn W. Boggs and the subsequent allegation—which JS denied—that JS conspired with Latter-day Saint Orrin Porter Rockwell to assassinate Boggs. (See “Part 1: March 1843.”)
- [8]
TEXT: Woodruff underlined each of the words “Jesus Christ Amen” three times.
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