GOVERNOR RUSSELL AND HIS CANVASS OF CAPE COD. November 7Th, 1892. "All free governments, whatever their name, are in reality govern- ments by public opinion, and it is on the quality of this public opinion that their prosperity depends. * * * Democracy in its best" sense is merely the letting in of light and air." — Lowell : Democracy. THE REPUBLIC PRESS: NEW YORK. 1893. Book^KSJ- GOVERNOR RUSSELL A>JD HIS CA^^VASS OF CAPE COD. November yxH, 1892.. "All free governments, whatever their name, ar^ in reality govern- ments by public opinion, and it is on the quality oi^this public opinion that their prosperity depends. * * * Democracy in its best sense is merely the letting in of light and air." — Lowell : Democracy. .^ XX^^k. W\M<^ Cr-->-v THE REPUBLIC PRESS: NEW YORK. 1893. To Henry C. Thacher and Thomas C. Thacher. NOBIS HA EC OTIA. 500 COPIES PRINTED FOR PRIVATE DlSTRlliUTlON. PREFACE. " I ^HIS sketch of a notable event, of which the writer was a fortunate eye-witness, was originally prepared for publication immediately after the last election, but subsequently with- held, that the substance of it mitrht be related at a dinner given by Mr. Henry Villard to President-elect Cleveland, at Sherry's, New York, November 17th, 1892. This honorable delay, however, closed the columns in which the writer had hoped to publish his article — for it was no longer " news," nor had it yet become history. Three months have now passed since the elec- tions and the excitement attending them has entirely abated ; but friends, in wdiose judgment the writer has every confidence, are still urging him to put his sketch in a form for permanent preservation, and he now does so, not only in deference to their advice, but because he believes the remarkable achievement which he has nar- rated belongs to and will take its place in our political annals ; and because, so far as he knows, although he writes as a frank (and, he hopes, a fair) partisan, this is the only account of it extant which was leisurely written, from full notes made at the time, with no view to colorings or obscuring the facts, and with no compulsion on the writer to subordinate the pleasing sim- plicity of the scenes through which he was passing to the demands of a "breezy" or "hu- morous " newspaper narrative. L. McK. G. Llewellyn Park. A,^ _^