I think was alright on every account. are you high?
I think was alright on every account. are you high?
Because he was a religious fanatic, not a politician.
Here are three sentences using the word 'fanatic': "Jess is a ballet fanatic and goes to watch ballet every week." "John has been a music fanatic since he first went to a concert." "Tom is a Beano fanatic and owns all of the magazines."
Flip a coin. Both explanations have been offered. I suspect that elements of both explanations factored in to his actions.
He was an abonlitionist who raided Haper Ferry, Virginia in 1859 and was never a slave. He was born in Connecticut, aspired to be a Congregational minister, was raised in Ohio, ran a tannery and farmed in Pennsylvania, traded cattle, raised sheep, went bankrupt and fathered 21 children. Some consider him to have been a martyr to the abolitionist cause while others considered him to be a madman. Lincoln called him a "misguided fanatic".
No side. He was an Abolitionist fanatic, not at all representative of the North as a whole. His actions led the South to believe that the North was in favour of an armed rebellion of slaves, and that war was inevitable.
Misguided is a word in English - your question is misguided.
misguided
misguided
(John Brown)
John Brown, Esq
remove fanatic