Southern Institute of Slavery
Southern Institute of Slavery
Southern Institute of Slavery
HARVARD
COLLEGE
LIBRARY
SOUTHERN INSTITUTES;
OR,
AN INQUIRY
INTO THE
OP
WITH AN
WITH
Matts ainit (g^ommtnts
15 DEFEKCK OF THE
SOUTHERN INSTITUTIONS,
BY
GEORGE S.J.AWYER,
PHILADELPHIA:
1858.
^ I
US.SUSS'fl
SEP 24 '}:y4
rU/<AiC_
of PenmyWania.
Itobinsoi
PREFACE.
(•••V
m)
IV PREFACE.
PREFACE. V
VI FBBFAOE.
AN ANALYTICAL
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
ESSAY FIRST.
(Tii)
50-68
ESSAY THIRD.
GREEK SLAVERY.
ESSAY FOURTH.
ROMAN SLAVERY.
ESSAY FIFTH.
ESSAY SIXTH.
ESSAY SEVENTH.
ESSAY EIGHTH.
^
AN ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS. XI
ESSAY NINTH.
British Slavebt.
The tea and opium trade, salt monopoly, and all their attend-
ant consequences upon the poor natives — Sympathy of the
Abolitionists with— The history of conscience 280-293
ESSAY TENTH.
UNITED STATES.
Ilcmarks upon the Drcd Scott case— Criticism upon dissenting
opinions — Definition of slavery further considered — Expo-
sition of the master's right of property in a slave, or of
chattel slavery — Laws of different Shive States for the pro-
tection of slaves quoted, in a note — The power of the mas-
ter to sell and alienate the services of, a blessing to the
slave — The right of property in the services of the slave,
and to control his pei^on so far, exists at common law — It
is recognized by the earliest decisions of the Courts of Eng-
land — Numerous decisions and Acts of Parliament quoted —
The same in this country — Decisions of Massachusetts and
others — The foundation of the title of the master to 298-882
Their << fugitive slave law*' — Their Slave Trade, foreign and
domestic — Early manifestations upon, after formation of
the Union — Early legislation upon — Ordinance of 1787 —
Convention — Missouri Compromise — First violated by Abo-
litionists — Non-intervention — The rights of the South —
Abolition and Free-Soilism with reference to the Union and
its future prospects 832-888
APPENDIX 889L-898
SOUTHERN INSTITUTES.
^S^^^t^t^^^^S^t^l^^k^^^^^^^^^
INTRODUCTION.
14 INTRODUCTION.
INTRODUCTION. 15
ESSAY I.
SLAVE TRADE.
>
2* B
vC
their principles, the infloence the one has over the other, and
the perfect consistency that should at all times exist in relation
to them, that no jurist can be master of the science without
being a philosopher, a moralist, and, to some extent, a theo-
logian. It is as much the province of the jurist as the priest
to discuss all theological and moral questions, so far as they
affect the intei^pretation and force of the laws of the land.
Man, it has been very truly said, is a social creature ; that such
is the constitution and law of his being as to render society a
condition essential to the development of his faculties, the per-
fection of his nature, and the attainment of the final design
and end of his creation. But the existence of society neces-
sarily implies the existence of government. But governnient
is nothing but obedience to a system of law, which is essfintially
tHe foundation of society. Tne doctrine, then, of the supre-
macy of conscience, or that each one must be a law unto him-
self, would constitute each one of the individual members of the
body politic an independent sovereignty within themselves, and
resolve society into its original elements.
by the light and rule of enlightened life, both of whioh are inapplicable
to the principle. Paley approves it. Blac. Com. I., p. 423; i'riuoip.
Philos., p. 168.
^ See Essay on Political and Judicial Attitude of Slavery, post, p. 293.
of Noah, uttered soon after the flood, that Canaan, the offspring
of his unfilial son Ham, should be a servant of servants, would
thus have been wholly unintelligible to the world unless there
had been some distinct idea preserved in the memory of Noah
and his family, of the relations of master and servant that
existed before the deluge. And here its necessity would seem
to be the more imperious, as we read that the earth was then
filled with violence.
^ See the plates of the great works of Bclzoni, Champollion, and others,
taken from Egyptian art, to which reference is made post, p. 1C9, ct seq.
and Lot, his brother's son (xai Ttavxa ta wtapzovra avtuiv offa
ixtijoavro, xtU HoaauVf ^x^v ^v txttjdavto ex Xoppav*), and all the pro-
perty which they had gathered together [accumulated or pur-
chased], and all the souls that they had gotten in Haran" [or
every soul that they had purchased or acquired in Haran'].
house (xai *oi 'olxoysviii avfov, xai> 'ov apyvpvdvrjroL, i&C.), and
^ Septuagiat, Ttv. K. 12-5. In the Greek text the same verb is used to
denote the acquisition of the souls, that is used to denote that of the
property, and may be translated by bought or purehated,
« Gen. 12 : 6.
' Gen. 17 : 26, 27. The Greek text has koI 'oi apyv^vimi t\ aKXoytyiov
'tOiftaw. Sept., literally, **and those bought with silver from foreign nations."
* Gen. 12 : 16.
« Gen. 89 : 1 ; 44 : 9.
' Amos 2:6; 8:6. *< Because they sold the righteous for slaves and
the poor for a pair of shoes."
> Odyss. 15 : 488. H. 9 : 696, TU^a ii r SX\ot ayovei, &o. II. 22 : 62.
Odyss. 20 : 149.
* Arist. Polit., 1. i. p. 2.
^ Bancroft's Hist. U. S., vol. i., Art. Hist. Slave Trade. The French
word for slave is eselave; German, Selave; Dan., tlave, tclav; Sw., »laf;
Arm., tclaff; It., schiavo; Sp., ticlavo; Port., eaelavo: see Webster. This
terra is, therefore (as we shall show hereafter), of comparatively modem
origin.
all these long and exhausting sieges and campaigns, the law of
captivity was regularly enforced ; for centuries the two religions
waged a merciless war upon one another; and Christian,
Saracen, Jew, and Infidel, were indiscriminately sold in count-
less numbers into irredeemable slavery. At Lyons, in Venice,
and at Rome, they were exposed in market overt to be sold for
prices, and in lots, to suit purchasers. The whole number of
Moors brought under the yoke of the captor during the pro-
tracted wars of Granada, scarcely excels the number of Chris-
tians kidnapped and sold into slavery, by these roving corsairs
in Egypt and the Barbary States, after their expulsion and
emigration to Northern Africa.'
' 2d Black. 's, pp. 92, 93, by Monet. Lingard's Hist. £ng., toI. i. In
the abstract of the population of England, in the Doomsday Book, at the
close of the reign of William the Conqueror, the whole population is stated
at 283,242, of which the iervi are 26,166, the ancilUe, 967, &c. Sec Essay
on Slavery in the Middle Ages.
HEBREW SLAVERY. 29
ESSAY II.
HEBREW SLAVERY.
8*
30 HEBREW SL^VVERT.
that presents itself in this inquiry, is, whence arose this law
among the Patriarchs, in this early age of the Hebrew nation ?
Whence did Abraham, the fonnder of that nation, deriye his
right and authority to bny and hold slaves ? We answer, and
undertake to show, that it was derived from the universal cus-
tom of the age ; that the practice was adhered to by common
consent, and had become a principle of international and com-
mon law ; as much so as the right to purchase and hold flocks
and herds. It was one of the primordial classifications of
property, that, as we have seen, obtained in all nations ; that
grew up, propria vigorij and enforced obedience to its prin-
ciples, in all ages, without the aid of legislative enactment.
HEBREW SLAVERY. 31
32 HEBREW SLAVERY.
1 Na. 8 : 10.
> Neh. 5:8. " He that stealeth a man and eelleth him," &o. : Ezod.
21 : 16. Again, ** If a man be found stealing any of his brethren of the
children of Israel, and maketh merchandize of him or selleth him," &o. :
Dent. 24 : 7. Unless such things were possible and common, these penal
statutes would not have been enacted.
» Exod. 21 : 8.
^ Deut 15 : 12. This was forty years after the enacting of the former
statute in favor of men-serrants. See Deut 1 : 8.
HEBREW SLAVERY. 88
84 HSBREW SLAVXBT.
under the Jewish law could become such by the law of nations
condemning captives to a state of bondage ; but this related
more particularly to those of a heathen or foreign origin/ He-
brews might become slaves to one another, first, by debt;'
second, by theft, for the thief, if poor, was sold to repay the
property which he had stolen ; third, by birth, when the mother
was a slave — so that the children of the house, or bom in the
house, became, as it were, a kind of proper name for slaves ; ^
fourth, by sale or purchase. A man might sell himself^ if he
"waxed poor,"* which was not common, or another who owned
a slave might sell him, but the seventh year broke his bonds/
^ Ley. 25 : 25, 28, 89, 41. And by stealing them and selling them :
Ex. 21 : 16 ; Dent 24 : 7. *
• Gen. 17 : 12-14.
» Exod. 20 : 10; Deut 5 : 14; 12 : 17, 18; 16 : 10, 11.
" Exod. 20 : 10; Dent. 5 : 14; Deut 12 : 17, 18; 16 : 10, 11.
■\
HEBREW SLAVERY. 85
36 HEBREW SLAVERY.
HEBREW SLAVEBT. 37
they received the law from Him whose word is forever settled
in Heaven. A code destined to rear them up as his peculiar
people and render them a "kingdom of priests and a holy
nation." Here now was a mighty nation in embryo, purified
fh)m the sin of slavery, if such it was. They had atoned for
the iniquity of their fathers by four hundred years of servile
bondage. The question might well occur to their deliverer and
law-giver, Moses, whether the ancient institutions of their
fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, should be revived amongst
them. If the relation of master and servant were a sin, they
were the very people who could best appreciate the evil, having
80 long suffered the wrong, and it would seem that they would
have been the last people to have peaceably submitted to its
revival among them. Yet in the Mosaic enactments made at
this time, the relation seems to be recognized, and the right to
purchase and hold slaves, to be spoken of as firmly established,
and as natural and necessary as the relation of parent and
child, or of husband and wife. " If thou buy a Hebrew ser-
vant (as though the right to do so was unquestionable) six
years shall he serve thee. " ' Now whence arose this right to
buy a Hebrew servant, unless it was founded on the ancient
custom that existed among the patriarchs ? Here the right of
property, as also its ownership, is distinctly recognized, ^ough
the power of life and death seems to be, in a measure, modified
and taken away. ''If a man smite his servant or his maid
with a rod, and he die under his hand, he shall surely be pun-
ished ; notwithstanding, if he continue a day or two, he shall
not be punished, for he is his money.'*'
33 HEBBEW SLAVEBT.
become such ouly — Ist, by debt ; * 2d, by theft (for if the thief
was poor he was sold to pay for the property he had stolen) ;
3d, by birth, when the mother was a slave ; ' and 4th, by sale
and purchase, as a man might sell himself,' which, however,
was not common. Bat the seventh year, and particularly the
Jubilee, put an end to all this slavery, as regarded the men-
servants of Hebrew origin. Such is the picture of the slavery
of Hebrews among Hebrews. But why this provision of the
Jewish law that set the men free at the end of the sixth year
did not apply to the female slaves, does not appear. When
Moses enacted on Mount Sinai that the Hebrew men-servants
should be free after the sixth year, he did not,iay a word about
the female slaves. But, after forty years, when on the borders
of the promised land, he made the law, which before was
applicable only to males, equally applicable to females. What
was the reason of this?* Evidently such was the state of
feeling among the Israelites, in favor of the ancient and time-
honored institutions of their fathers, at the time Moses first
began to legislate upon the subject, that he would have excited
open rebellion among them had he at that time attempted to
have freed both males and females alike, after six years' service.
But it took him forty years to mould the manners, customs,
and feelings of the nation to permit this to be done. Here we
have the example of the great Jewish legislator acting under
the direct inspiration of heaven, of the moral rectitude and
expediency of temporizing with the feelings and prejudices of
the people. Moses had the wisdom and foresight to see that
no precipitate action could change the established internal
structure of a nation or commonwealth in a day ; that the public
mind and public feelings must be prepared for the event before
they could be enforced. Would not many of the rabid fanatics
of the present day do well to profit by their example ?
** Thou shalt not deliver unto the master the servant that has
escaped from his master unto thee. He shall dwell with thee,
even among you,"* &c. Here occurs another direction for the
treatment of runaway slaves ; the law says they shall not be
given up. But it is evident, from the language of the context,
and the wording of the law itself, that it has reference only to
such slaves as escape from heathen masters unto Israel. Moses
was here giving laws for the government and discipline of the
army, and the regulations of the camp, when they were at war
HEBREW SLAVEaY. 89
The ninth verse of the same chapter, and the sixth one pre-
ceding the text, says : ''When the host [an army] goeth forth
against thine enemies, then keep thou from every wicked thing."
Through the tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth
verses, follow a series of rales and disciplinary regulations for
the camp ; then follows the passage of law Just quoted : " Thou
shalt not deliver to his master the^ervant," &c. This has im-
mediate reference to deserters who came over from the enemy
to the camp of Israel. **They shall not be delivered up, but
they shall dwell with thee, even among you, in one of thy gates. ''
Such language could not be ascribed to an Hebrew slave, who
escaped from OEe tribe to another, for he would already be a
resident of Israel, and circumcised and dwelling among them.
It could mpply only to the stranger, who had come among them
from a foreign land. And they were commanded to suffer him
to remain with them when he pleased, and not to oppress him.
This law was dictated by the policy of war, as well as by the
policy of humanity ; it was a kind of proclamation of liberty
to the slaves of the enemy who would come over to their side.
It is precisely the course adopted by Great Britain towards the
United States during the revolutionary war. This provision
was also undoubtedly favored by Moses for the reason that it
would induce desertion, and bring many of the heathen to a
knowledge of the worship of the one living and true Ood. He
knew that the treatment of heathen masters was much more
rigorous than that tolerated by his own laws ; for the heathen
master possessed power over his slave, even to that of life and
death, and could whip, scourge and maltreat him with impu-
nity. But not so among the Hebrews. Humanity and religion
both pleaded for the protection of the fugitive ; and Moses,
therefore, would not suffer him to be forced back into the dark-
ness of heathenism. But let it not be supposed for a moment
that this rule could apply to a Hebrew slave, who had escaped
from the tribe of Levi to that of Benjamin, or from one Hebrew
master to another. For such an one to harbor and withhold
his neighbor's servant, would be a violation of the tenth com-
mandment ; he could claim his property, which the Mosaic law
gave him a right to hold.* But the law, so far, has reference
I '< And Nabal answered David's servants, and said, Who is David ? and
who is the son of Jesse ? there are many servants now-a-days that break
away every man from his master." The Greek text of the Septuagint is :
UteraDy, slaves running away from the vigilance of their own masters
are midtiplying all the time. Nabal was disposed to treat them as rona-
40 HBBSIW ELAVSBY.
vii^'i, ftnd give them nothing, as though it would be B siu tohnrbor them.
1 Sam. 25 : 10. " And it »m« to pnie, nt (ho end of three jears. tfakt
two of tho aerrants of Shimei r&n anfty unto Aobisb, eon of Mnnehsh.
king of Oath. And the; told Shimei, Bajing, Behold, thj aervanla ba in
0»t)i." Shimri aaddled bia asa and went down to Oath, and got hia aer-
Tiuits, and DO one harbored Iham rrotn him. 1 Einga, 2 : 39-41.
1 Ut. 26 : 44-40. * L«v. 25 1 40. ' Lev. 25 ; 46.
HEBREW SLAYERT. 41
The direct and necessary consequence of this law was to open and
keep open slave markets in the Gentile nations round about them.^
1 <* There ye shall be sold for bondmen and for bondwomen, and no
man shall buy you." Deut. 28 : C8 — i.e., in Egypt. "Ye haTe sold
yourselves for nought," &c. Is. 62 : 8. "Thou sellest thy people for
nought," &c. Ps. 44 : 12. " I will sell your sons and your daughters
into the hands of the children of Juda, and they shall sell them to the
Sabeans, to a people afar o£f." Joel, 8 : 8; 8 : 8. " And they have cast
lots for my people, and have given a boy for a harlot, and sold a girl for
wine," &c. "Yea, and what have ye to do with me, Tyre and Zidon,
and all the cost of Palestine." ..." Because ye have taken my silver *j
and my gold, and have carried it into your temples." " The children also
4*
42 HXBBSW BLAVERY.
of Juda and the ohildren of Jerusalem have ye sold unto the Grecians,
that yo might remove them far from their border." Joel, 3 : 8-7. And
ho said, 1 am a young man of Eg^'pt, ( J9«Xo() servant or slave to an Ama-
Ickite. 1 Sam. 30 : 13. — From this it would appear, that there were
slave markets open in all countries round about Palestine, as well as in
that country, and that a foreign and domestic slave-trade was extensively
carried on. — ** I got mo servants and maids, and had servants and maids
bom in my house: I also had great possessions." Ecel. 2 : 7.
■\
HEBREW SLAVERY. 43
44 HEBREW SLAYERY.
HEBREW SLAVSRY. 45
1 But were polygamy and conoubinage generally allowed ? was there any
general permission giTen to them by statute ? I trow not. The sophistry
of this argument consists in placing the historical narratiTO of the private
▼ices of individoals on a par with Uie statute laws of Moses. The first
and great command upon the subject, " Thou shalt not commit adultery,"
covers the whole ground ; if there be any exception to this provided for
by Uw, it is strictly limited and for a specific purpose. (See Note, post,
IM^46.)
46 HEBREW 8LAVERT.
1 **Thoa shalt not commit adultery ;" what thus becomes of polygamy ?
" Do not prostitute thy daughter to cause her to be a whore," £c., Lev.
19 : 29. *' And he shall take a wife in her virginity," Lev. 21 : 18. If
there is any passage in the Mosaic statutes that gives a general permis-
sion to take a plurality of wives, or to keep any number of concubines,
it has .escaped my observation. The whole spirit of the Mosaic code
(with a single exception, and that for a specific purpose), from the seventh
commandment to the end of the law, is against it. ** And they say unto
him, Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in the very act Now
Moses in the law commanded us that such should be stoned," &c., John
8 : 4-6. ** Then shall they bring out the damsel to the door of her
father's house, and the men of the city shall stone her with stones that
she die," Deut. 22 : 21. Compare Deut 22 : 28-29 ; also 24 : 1-6. " For
this cause shall a man leave his father and mother and cleave to his wife ;
and they twain shall be one flesh," &c., Mark 10 : 2-9. Compare 1 Cor.
6 : 16-19, and 10 : 8. ** Neither shaU he multiply wives to himself," &c.,
Deut 17 : 17. Compare Mai. 2 : 16, ** And did he not make one," &e.
"Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister," &c., Lev. 18 : 18. ** My
dove, my undefiled is but one," &c., S. Sol. 6 : 9. '*Give not thy strength
unto women," &c, Prov. 81 : 8. ** The seed of the adulterer and the
whore," Is. 67 : 2-6. See Numb. 26 : 1-9. « For they be the children
of whoredom," &c., Hos. 2 : 4-8. See Ezek. 16 : 27-89 ; 28 : 86-88.
HEBREW SLAVERY. 47
The principal one of these texts, and the one most frequently
referred to, is that of Is. 58 : 6. ** Loose the bonds of wick-
edness ; undo the heavy burdens ; let the oppressed go free ;
break away every yoke.'' The prophet further enjoins that
they shall give bread to the hungry, shelter to the poor wan-
derers, and clothing to the naked. He then adds (by way of a
general duty to their brethren, including all the foregoing in-
junctions) : " Hide not thyself from thine own flesh I" Surely
it does not include heathen slaves. The prophet could not
have commanded the Jews in defiance of the Mosaic statute,
by virtue of which they held them as heritable property to be
their bondsmen forever ; to break their yoke and let them go
free. The term, "thine own flesh" means their kindred by
blood, fellow countrymen, citizens of the same commonwealth.'
48 HEBREW SLAVEBY.
• Prov. 81 : 8, 9. * Psalms, 82 : 8, 4.
HSBREW SLAVERT. 49
1 Ps. 82 : 2.
6 D
50 QREEK SLAVERY.
ESSAY III.
GREEK SLAVERY.
> At tho oommencement of the Christian era, the Roman empire ex-
tended over the ancient Greek nation, and those States were held subject
ti) the dominion of Rome, with which Christianity had to contend. Yet
onoh State retained its own peculiar kws, institutions, and municipal
reKultttions. Hence, it becomes necessary, in showing the proper relation
of OhriHtianity to the institutions of ciTil government in this particular,
and tho tnio ponition of Jesus Christ and his Apostles with regard to the
ulavery of the Roman empire at that time, to give an analysis of the
inwH and government of that institution in ancient Greece, as well aa
llome.
GREEK SLAVERY. 51
upon tliis subject, which we will show to be the same that are
used in the Scriptures of the New Testament, and that they
mean what we understand by the word slave. The reason why
that word is not used in the New Testament we will explain
hereafter.
Greece, like other nations in their infancy, was, in its early
ages, in a state of piratical warfare. The Pelasgic tribes seem
to have led somewhat of a nomadic life ; and cattle, as the great
means of subsistence, were the first objects of plunder. Here,
the same law of necessity gave rise to the custom of reducing
captives to bondage. To turn their slaves, so acquired, to
some profitable source of revenue, necessity again induced the
inhabitants, by degrees, to engage in agricultural pursuits;
finding them thus profitable, men, women and children were
eagerly sought after as slaves. A sea that had innumerable
islands, coasts and ports, would naturally offer powerful incen-
tives to the kidnapper. Hostilities would naturally ensue, and
hence might first arise the estimation of Greek piracy, which
laid the foundation of Greek commerce, and became such a
fruitful source of slavery.
52 GREEK SLAVERY.
Although the idea, that Greek could not justly enslave Greek,
put an end to the subjugation and slavery of their own coun-
trymen, yet we nowhere find a dissenting opinion to the legality
of the traffic in barbarian slaves.
not yet a national custom with the Greeks to be waited upon by purchased
slaves. Timseus apud Athen. vi. p. 264 : ** Xtoi wpur^t rw EXk^mai^ utr^
BirraX/m Kai AaxsiaifiQViovs ixfi^oatm Jo«Xoi(, niv iiivret cnjfftr avrcSv fi ror
avtow
rpo90w («(£roi(. Xiot il ffa^apovf icUnirral ro«{ ohttrat kuI rtfuiv ainiw
irani^iA-
X9imf" The Chianswere the first Greeks after the Theesalians and Laoe-
dnmonians who purchased slaves with money. This mode of acquiring
them was not yet customary with these people. But the Chians obtained
only barbarian Blaves, overcoming their valor.
GREEK SLAVEBT. 53
He says in the same passage : ** Two remedies now are left
as, either never to allow for the future any person's (Swxoj)
slave to be one another's fellow countryman, or, as far as pos-
sible, to prevent him even speaking the same language."
'' But he would, else, treat them all well, not only for their
own sake, but still more for their owners. The master should
behave towards them with as little insolence as possible. But
it is right to chastise them with justice ; not punishing them as
if they were freemen, so as to make them arrogant ; and every
word he addresses to them should be, in some sense, a com-
mand. A master ought never to play or jest with his (Bovxoi)
slaves, whether they be male or female. And as to the very
foolish manner in which some people treat their (6ovxoc) slaves,
allowing them great license and indulgence, they only make it
the more difficult for both parties ; the harder for the one to
command, and for the other to obey."*
Man consists of both soul and body ; and in all men rightly
constituted the soul commands the body ; though some men are
so grossly formed or constituted, that the body seems to rule
the soul. But here the order of nature is perverted. Those
men, therefore, whose powers are chiefly confined to the body,
and whose principal excellence consists in rendering bodily
service, those, I say, are naturally (dovxoi) slaves, because it is
for their interest to be so ; they can obey reason, though they
cannot exercise it, and though different from tame animals,
1 Athen. Diep. p. 412. The Athenians passed a law against those who
ill-treated their slaves, called the ** yp^ vfipiias.** Plato De Leg. vi.
5*
54 GREEK 8LAVEBT.
which are actuated merely by their sensual appetites, they stand
in a very similar relation, and become the property of other men
because their interests and safety require it.*
^ . . . . " vorcpev tvriw aptrij rU iovXoif irapd raf ofyytumc&f icai Stajto^tMOf
SXXri
Tlfiiu)T€fM rovrwv, oiow ow^foown coT avi^a gai 6iKaio9Wti , . . tirt yap hrt ri
iUl-
oove'i Tuiv IXsi^tptov ; tiri nfi iorltf, ivnav eu^Bpunuu^ itai Aoyov
KotHavovrrtur, armroy.**
> Athen. Deip., p. 411-12. Here are two instances of a sensible ex-
ercise of the glorious privileges of liberty, about which we hear so much ;
they enjoyed the liberty to choose between slavery or starvation and
death ; they chose the former ; and how many thousands of poor wretches
are there in the world that would fain follow their example !
* Gell's Greece, Art. Slavery ; Smith's Gi*eek and Roman Antiq., Art
Slaves.
Lucian Eunuch, 12. Thej made them strip naked at the pleasure of the
purchaser.
rov xv«Ab) vtficarwdl T9vt wtoXovftspovf.** Poll. 8, 78. The places in which
some kinds were sold, were called ^*the circlet" Thej were named from
the fact that the slaves stand around the [bidders] in a circle.
S <(l*(i)ir yap SlKiriav 6 fuv vov 6vo ftivtav i^lof toriv 6 ii ooJ' v/iifiyaZov, b
61 wi^n
/ilfdiy, 6 il «ai ivca. Nlilof J' o' Nicffparou Xcytral iviorarri¥ ct( rapyvpia
rpaltdai
ToXavTOk." Xenoph. Memor. ii. 6, 2. Some slaves are worth two mines
or thereabouts ($16), others less ; others, again, are worth five and six
mines. Nacias, the son of Niceratus, is said to have given a talent
($480) for an overseer for the mines.
« Plutarch, De Educ. 7.
certain father left by will thirty sword-makers, some worth two, and over
three ; some worth more than five or six ; and some, on the other hand,
worth not more than three minse; also twenty upholsterers, appraised
at the sum of forty minsB for these alone.
GREEK SLAVERY. 57
Plutarch adds : " O^nn fiv, Pw/i^Uof dUinn tM Arrhtof iptl.Tw dcmrory v«&rTW,
^* ^U yiyop^alw il 6ia\vcii\f oh^os itiya npdf n&trra 6 tBlv^ nri." Unlike the
Roman slave, the Grecian, while delving, conversed familiarly with his
master, thus becoming reconciled to one another ; the custom is greatly
preferable to all other kinds of treatment. Though Plato requires the
master always to observe a grave deportment towards his slaves. Leg. vi.
p. 777.
* . . . " Kal /i^ ti OtXolrt 9Ki4'a9$al wap* »/i(v avrols & avSpit 6iKa9Tatf r<
iovXop
4 tXtuOipov cirai iia^t^tl, rovro ^yltrw &v ih^oirt^ Sri ro2f /kv dovXoif t6 votfia
rwy
a Uttiftarmp anavrtav vnsvBvvov serif roif' i* WcoBcpoU vararov rovro wpoo^Ktt
koXo^sIw,"
58 OR£EK SLAVERT.
' This was called <« rov M^arof, or iy rv itpnarl n» tktyxiff^ itiSpat tO testify
OBEEK 8LAYERT. 59
On the other hand, it is, no doubt, true, that there were many
who, by the degradation of their nature, their want of fidelity
to their masters, and their vices of all kinds, might' well deserve
their lot. Runaway slaves were not uncommon, even when
there was no war to encourage their desertion.*
* A mark of some kind was branded upon the forehead, and many strove
to conceal it under their hair; hence the poet says,
Combing the hair forward, they call a religions rite ; but it is not for that
purpose — any one being branded, has this for a veil upon the forehead.
Pephilos, apud Athen. yi. p. 225.
^ Plato says, *'iroXXo( yap a^cX^v f^i^ ioitkil gal vUuvrM Kpitrrovf wftof Ofttni^
vaooM y«yofieve( atnkaffl itnorof Kal tcnifiara rag ts iiKiiatls aortav hXag.'*
Plato,
Leg. Ti. p. 776. ** For many, becoming slaves, are superior to certain
persons, brethren and their descendants, in all that is yirtuous, and pro-
tect their masters in a more faithful manner, and also their household
possessions." But here is no intimation of an intellectual inferiority or
distinct physical organisation. The net akX^Kov means, to some of their
own type or countrymen, and their descendants, who were superior only
in wealth, or some civil rank, or condition, conferred upon them by the
existing state of society.
> Plato, Protag. p. 310. On this account the slave preceded the master
when going out, instead of going behind, lest he should escape. Theophr.
Char. 18. **K.at rov walia ii aKoXovBovvra KtXtvttv aurov owloBsv fiti*' fiaSt^th
aAA'
iftwpovBof hd ^vXamioai avr^ /«>7 ^v n} i^ airo^pa«i|." ** He commanded the
lad accompanying him, not to go behind, but before, that he might watch
him, lest he should escape.** Slave rebellions were frequent Athen. vi.
p. 272; Plato, Leg. vi. p. 777.
60 QBXSK SLAVBRY.
s This explains the law proposed by the orator Lycargii3 — *< fatten £(cr-
voc A9)7yaiwv, fi^^i rwy o(«o«irrciy A09V9Viv, tXtWif9¥ aAfta 9piaa$tu hit iovXtt^
«
tAp oXi9K0^iint¥ dfycv rqc ro9 vpoWpov htonorov yviaft^,** ** It is permitted tO nO
^ Demosth. in Aristocr. p. 687 — " fttiri umHunnai'rat bi buaroi i»tw ri^ i|j<(-
Ttpoi yvwyi}(." Xen. (Econ. 9. 5. ** Slaves are not begotten without our
knowledge." . . . *' £uvXn luv li» m^iln, &«Xa) i) cXcvOfpu, i) anxXcoOcpu, warrwi
rov dttfvorov hfm rm ^vXits ro ycvvciififMv. *EAy U lii iKndtpaf iov\t^ ovyytynirut
rov dcomrov ivru to yiyvoyitvow roo oovXov. 'Eav S i( avn^ iotih^ h ^ Mko^ 'ovuk
cat nipn^atrtf tovt ^q, ro /up n^ yovaiKo; at yvpaiKSf tit &AA17V X(3fMU'
timfar6inwp ovw
T^ irarpt, to 6i row avSpof 01 yo/io^X<urc( vyy rii ytpyrioaatf.** Plato, Lex. xi.
p. 950.
*' Whether a female slave may have connection with a slave, or a freeman,
or an emancipated slave, let the offspring belong to the master, following
the condition of the mother (or female slave) in every instance. And,.on
the other hand, if a free woman should cohabit witli a slave, let the off-
spring also belong to the master, following the condition of the father (or
male slave}.* Whether the offspring descend from a freeman and a female
slave, or from a male slave and a free woman, it is manifestly the same.
Since* on the one hand, the female descendants succeed with the father
to a different condition from the mother; so, on the other hand, the male
descendants ^or guardians of the state) succeed with the mother to a
different condition from the father."
* "Edp S u avroB, &c. This clause of the passage maybe rendered thus:
But if a free woman is with child from her own slave, as a freeman has a
child by his own female slave, and the same is discovered, let the guar-
dians of the law banish the offspring of the freeman, with its mother ; and
in the other instance, let the mother send away her child, together with
its father, to another region.
GREEK SLAVEHT. 61
> B5ckh. Public. Econ. Athens, pp. 80-89. The following were some
of the legal enactments respecting slavery which were in force, at yarioas
times, at Athens: — Let no person who is a slave by birth be made free
of the city. Th^ only shall be recognized as citizens, both of whose pa-
rents were so. He shall be looked apon as an illegitimate, whose mother
is not free. No slave, or woman, other than free-bom, shall study or prac-
tice physic. No slave shall caress a free-bom youth; he who does so shall
receive fifty stripes. He that beats another man's slave may have an
action of battery brought against him. No one may sell a captive freed-
man into slavery, without ti^e consent of his former master. Slaves may
buy themselves out of bondage. All emancipated slaves shall pay certain
services to the masters who gave them liberty, choosing them only for
their patrons ; and they shall* not be wanting in the performance of those
duties to which they are under obligation by law. Patrons may by action
reduce them again to slavery for legal cause, such as remissness of duty.
He that redeems a prisoner of war may claim him as his own property,
unless the prisoner himself be able to pay his ransom. See Potter's Greek
Antiqs., vol. L p. 144; also, Smith's Greek and Roman Antiqs. (Slaves).
The law governing the condition of the slave derived from birth, was very
different, in Greece, from that of Rome, and all later nations: **partut
tequUur ventrum," is the maxim of the Roman law, which now universally
prevails, upon this subject. If the mother is free, the child is free, and
met vertd. But the whole policy of the Greek statute was in favor of
6
62 GREEK BLAVBRY.
slayer J, and the seryile condition of either parent tainted that of the
child. See translation of passage firom Plato, de Leg. xi. p. 930, tupra.
Again, the right to reduce the emancipated slave again to bondage by a
civil action, is peculiar to the Greek system. The maxim of the Roman
law, and the law generally, npon this subject, is, temel liber, temper ne,
once free, always so ; though there are some statutory exceptions, apply-
ing to vagrants and like offenders.
• Timie apud Athens, vi. 264. Saidus, on the word antim^ar; men-
tioned that the slaves employed in the sUver-nunes alone, and in countiy
labor, amounted to 150,000.
GREEK SLAVERY. 63
> The Greek slaves f^quently hired their time, but the master took
good care to reserve a large portion of the profits to himself. Aristotle,
De Repub., 8, 4, p. 1277. .fischines mentions the daily sum that each
had to pay. Shoemakers made nine and ten obli a day — 27 to 88} cents ;
out of which each had to pay six cents to his master. Timarch, p. 1 18.
64 OR££K SLAVEBT.
* . . , *^Y^ ^i^pynMi niaiofuoni ^a^soBai icai Ipya \sTra ttg t^» ayopa» £0^-
potwa.'' ^sohines in Timarch p. 118. <*The women were accustomed to
manufacture fine goods, and to carry fancj articles to the markets."
Another evidenoe that the slaves of Greece were of a high order of intel-
lectual character, equal in that respect to their masters and mistresses.
* Lucian, Lexiph. 25. This would, however, seem to depend upon the
peculiar style of each author. In Homer, Sophocles, as well as Thuoy-
dides, Xenophou, Herodotus, Plato, Aristotle, and others, together with
the Scriptures, the word inkij is used.
GREEK SLAVERY. 66
1 Lerit. 25 : 44: **Mi?^ EXA^ra ipa imXov UmoBal ftfju airovf, rots rt iWati
<<«a{ oi ov6l 01 T9Vf imrSrof mroKttlvairrcf, ihv n avro^ufM Xi^owcy ovS oirol
Ovtianrmlp ^' avrmif rta* nfomiKOvrtMr, oAAd wapaiti6airi¥ avrovt n) dfixfl Kara
nftavf
«ytfT«|i0t>( warpiovt" *' Indeed, the masters cannot kill their slaves, if caught
in the very act of theft (or offence), nor could they be put to death by
persons selected for the purpose, but they must give them up to the civil
authority, according to the laws of the country." Antipho. de Coede
Herod, p. 727. Hence Euripides says : —
6* E
66 QR££K SLAVEBT.
1 Leyit 25 : 89. See action ypcr^q v0pttH or for iignry done a slave,
^schin. in Tim. p. 41 ; also Pemosth. in Mid. p. 629.
' Abraham had 1600; and every wealthy Hebrew had great numbers of
men-servante and maid-servants. Gen. 14 : 12-16. (For numbers pos-
sessed by the Greeks, see notes above, and preceding remarks generally.)
^ The poor debtor and his children were liable to be sold as slaves for
debt. 2d Kings, 4:1. Isa. 60 : 1. Matt 26. Isocrates speaks (Platasus,
19, p. 414). (iiUpSi¥ UtM nnfioXatw iovUM^) of those bargaining to be-
come slaves on account of their insolvency, or straitened circumstances.
At Athens, the captive, not able to pay his ransom, was the slave of
him who paid it Demosth. Ado. Nicaoter, p. 1260.
GREEK SLAVERY. 67
This was also trne to a great extent among the Jews. They
had many hired servants as well as slaves ; * and that this insti-
tatJon, in both these nations, was derived from the same soarce
admits of no doabt.
** A freeman is better off to have a kind master than to Uto a low debased
life." Besides these, there was another class known as the mt\sv$tp6i, or
freed-men, though they still remained in the seryice of their masters, as
we haye seen, no one could purchase them without the consent of their
former masters.
It has been said by some, that these freedmen were the real ievXou
because they still remained in bond seryice to their masters, hence
("Ata^cfciv U fnot X^iTfOf 609X0V olffcrtfv » • , SU rv rvwt awiknOtpovf fih
imXovs In uvat, otKtrai ii radt ftil nis imivtmt ci^M/ictovf." Chrysippus says
there is a distinction between the iwXof and the ouctrn, because the freed-
men are still &>«Xm, whereas the oUtim belong to the class that are never
discharged from ownership. Athen. vi. p. 267.
Ion of Chios, in his Laertes, uses the word iovXtf in the same sense as
•ormrf. Athen. ;rL p. 269.
Plato, Aristotie, Xenophon, and all the most approved writers in the
Greek literature, use these words indiscriminately in the same sense. If
there could be any distinction between them, it must be derived, not from
the character of tiie slavery, but from the different avocations which they
followed ; the SnXot would seem to be a generic term comprehending all
classes of slaves, and the oMtrrn confined to the household, or family slaves,
might denote but a single species or class coming under it.
In like manner there were the Helots of Greece, who, because they
were subject to a peculiar kind of servitude and belonged to the State, were
never designated by any other term, though helot and inlXot are synony-
mous terms in Sparta. See Essay on Slavery in New Testament, post, p.
127, et seq.
G8 GREEK SLAVEHT.
But* all free men, and even freed-men, were designated by different
terms, hence ..." olOi ruXovms r^v T^i tv^os j^puav ryv W/ivy mmfir pUAti
. . . . **&vi Y' •pw/tcv pieBttTovs Kai 9tiTas ravh vn/psmrrat,** PlatO Polit.
p. 290. **We speak of the hired servants and the hireling domestios
employed as waiters by alL The same word is used by the Evangelist, in
Acts 15 : 17 — "llovoi itioBtoi rov varpot ti»v." ** How many hired servants
liath my father," &c.
This word is from the same theme, iitoBoff and has the same meaning as
the one used by Plato above ; it is only varied in its termination. And
here, it may be observed, that the terms iotXp^ and imrnst m we have shown
by the specific definition of Plato, Aristotle, and others, of the most ap-
proved Greek classics, are never used by Greek scholars, sacred or profane,
literally, in any other sense than that of a slave, a piece of property, a
living machine, a person subject by law or by nature to the ownership
and power of another. They are always used in contrast with (Xn9€p9f, a
freeman as we have seen : ** AooA*( ikXtiB^; ^if eoi ^uX/rw oXA' d km imvof^t
sXsvOtpot YtvioBal^" &c. 1 Oorinth. 7 : 21. " Art thou called, being a ser-
vant (slave), care not for it; but if thou mayest be maAe/ree" &c.
Also the same terms are used in the succeeding verse and in the same
i*ense. There is, however, a slight error in the translation of verse 22.
The language is ** *0 y^P ^* KvpUf K^Ods iovXos, awtXtoOtpos Kpi«v conv," which
should read, ** For he that is called in the Lord, being a servant (slave),
is the Lord*s freed-man ;" not tree man, as in the English text, and it
refers to " the liberty in which Christ has made him free."
EOMAN SLAVERY. 69
ESSAY IV.
ROMAN SLAVERY.
After the learned and lengthy dissertations upon its justice
and moral character, by the great masters of the schools of an-
tiquity, the fathers of law, logic, and philosophy, Plato and
Aristotle, and the conclusions to which they arrived, establish-
ing the institution upon the basis of law, justice, and truth, we
should not expect to find any schools of opposite tenets, in any
more modem nations, as long as their philosophy ruled the in-
tellectual world. And we find the truth verified in the subse-
quent history of nations. It is at no remote period from the
present, that their views upon this subject have met with oppo-
sition from any considerable weight or collective mass of public
opinion, as we shall endeavor to show in our subsequent re-
marks.
s •< AD eome free from the hand of their Creator ; nature has made no
man a Blave," &c. SchoL on Aristot Rhet Gill. Greece, vol. 2d, p. 887.
Kiv inX»s If rif vofma r^v tnrnv cc<( ^ct y^ ovSttf iovkog cycyi}9i| won 91* ^ aS
rtvr TO ffupa KarUovXtMor; Frag, of Philemon and M^nander, p. 410.
*< Thou^ any one may be a slave, yet he has the same flesh and blood
with ourselves, for by nature no one is bom a slave, though his body may,
urtif a» aifOtawof i). Id. p. 864. " Though any one may be a slave, yet he is
a man no less than his master, who is but a man."
' The power of life and death which the Romans held over their slaves
and children was known to no other civilized nation. ** Portentosus
70 ROMAN SLAVEBT.
See also Sen. Consol ad Helviam 16, who speaks of the custom as not
uncommon. See also Inst Just lib. 1, t. 8, 1. 1.
I Inst Just, Ub. 1, t 8d, sects. 8 and 4. Cato in Gallias, vu. 4, lib.
V. 22.
> These slave-dealers were termed mango, or venalitius. Plant, tom. ii.
2. 61. They exposed them openly in the slave markets where they were
sold by the prcteo* They were first stripped and placed on a scaffold ea-
Uuta^ their feet being whitened with chalk. (Lib. ii. 2. 69, quem scepe
coegit Barbara gypsastos feme catosta pedes.) They were sometimes put
upon an elevation of stone (hence the lapede emptus. Cicero in Pis. 16.
plant. Bach. iv. 7. 17), so that every one could see and touch them, nu-
dare, contrectare. Martin, vi. ^66, describes a scene when the yrtBco^ or
auctioneer, as an incentive to purchasers to bid, ** bis, terque, qua, terque,
basiavit,'* the girl who was offered for sale. Those offered for sale wore
a tablet hanging from their ooUars called the Mu^, upon whidi their
BOBiAN SLAYEBT. 71
^ The price of slayes was sometimes immense. In Hor. £p. ii. 25, a
favorite is put up at six hundred and forty pounds. While Martial, i. 69,
et xi. 10, mentions, **Pueros centenis millibus emptos." (Eight hundred
pounds, or about four thousand dollars.) Comp. Sen. £p. 27; Gall,
XT. 19.
* Qell. XX. 1, 45. <* Trans Tiberem vennm ibant." See, also, VaL Max.
tL 8, 4. Cic. de Or., 1, 4a Plant Trin., u. 4, 144.
72 ROMAN SLAVERY.
<*The clownish waiter, clad only to protect him from the rigor of the
climate, will hand you the plebeian cups, bought for a few pence. He is
no Phrygian or Lycian, or one purchased from the slave-dealer at a great
price. When you ask for anything, ask in Latin. They have all the
same style of dress ; their hair is close-cropped and straight, and only
combed to-day on account of company." He goes on further to say —
** One is a son of a hardy shepherd ; another of a neat herdsman ; he
sighs and pines for his mother, whom he has not seen for a long time, and
for his native hovel and playmates, the kids — a lad of ingenuous modesty,
such as those ought to be who are clothed in brilliant purple. He shall
hand you wine, made on the very hills from which he himself eame, and
under whose summits he has often played." It may be remarked that
the Romans enslaved nations and people in no manner inferior to them-
selves, except that they were enabled by their superior numbers to over-
power them ; nations which have since attained to the highest degrees of
civilization and refinement They were taken from nearly every nation
of Europe and Western Asia or Asia Minor; over these they held the
power of life and death, and, as we shall see, wantonly sacrificed them
to the gratification of their idle amusements, in the most brutal manner ;
of which the conflicts with wild animals, and the horrid butcheries of the
amphitheatres, are sufficient proofs.
The birth of thirty male and forty female children upon one estate in one
day is undoubtedly an exaggeration, but it gives us some idea of the
enormous numbers that were sometimes possessed by a single owner.
This immense number rendered it necessary that they should be classed
aocording to the diTisions and subdivisions of labor; and each class
ranked higher or lower, aocording to the functions assigned them to per-
form, of which we shall speak more particularly in our analysis of the
Roman family. The origin of the term Serri, according to , Justinian,
Inst lib. 1, t. 2, c. 8, is as follows: '^Senri autem ex eo appallati sunt
quod imperatores captivas vendere, ac per hoc servare nee occidere
solent; qui etiam mancipia dicti sunt; eo quod ad hostibus manu capi-
antur." Slaves are denominated Send from the practice of our generals
to sell their captives, and thus preserve (servare) and not slay them.
Slaves are also called mancipia, in that they are taken from the enemy
by hand (manucapti).
t4 ROMAN 8LAYEBY.
Rome.* Chrysostom says, that under Theodosius the Great,
and Arcadias, some persons had two and some three thoasand
slaves. From the time of Augastas to Justinian, we may
allow three slaves to one freeman ; and of the twenty-eight
millions of population in Italy, upwards of twenty millions were
slaves. ** After weighing every circumstance which could influ- .
ence the balance," says Gibbou, 'Mt seems probable that there
existed in the time of Claudius about twice as many provincials
as there were citizens of either sex and of every age, and that
the slaves were equal in number to the free inhabitants of the
Roman world.'' The total sum of this rough calculation
would rise to the amount of one hundred and twenty millions
of persons, one half of whom were slaves."
' See Essay of Home on popl. of Ancient Nations. Qibbon, Deo. and
Fall of the Roman Empire, eh. ii. Blair's Inquiry into State of Roman
Slavery, ch. 1.
* Idem et seq.
" The Getulian footman, or the bony hand of a black Moor, will hand
you the drinking cups, one whom you would not be willing to meet at
midnight while among the Latin tombs upon the steep way."
76 ROBfAN SLAVXRT.
from Phrygia and Cappadocia. There were six thoasand slavee
belonging to the temple of a goddess in Cappadocia. Slaves
appear to have reached the markets of Rome, under the Cflesars,
in separate bands, composed of the natives of their several
countries. The Gets, probably, came from a country to the
east of the Pontus. The Davi were an oriental race. Alex-
andria was a considerable place for the sale of slaves of a peca-
liar kind : slaves possessing certain accomplishments were pro-
cured at Cadiz. Corsica, Sardinia, and even Britain, were the
birth-places of slaves.
ROMAN SLAVXBT. 7f
^ Inst Just. lib. i, t. 8, o. 2. <* Semis autem est constitutio jaris gen-
tium, qua quia domino alieno contra natoram subjicitur." It is argued
that because this takes contra naturamy it is unjust; but the same argu-
ment would apply to all penal statutes; because all men are by nature
bom free, it does not follow that circumstances may not justly deprive
them of liberty.
' Inst Just. lib. i. t. 8, c. 1. The power of life and death here giyen
to the master over his slave, is peculiar to the Roman law, unless it may
exist in some barbarous nations who have no written law, or among the
different tribes and nations of Africa. This feature of law implies an
absolute ownership on the part of the master over his slave, as much as
OTer a stick of timber or a block of granite, and substitutes a relation
between them that has no just existence in natural, human, or diTine law.
It is not the just, humane, and divine relation of master and serrant, as
of parent and child, husband and wife, &c., but of lord and brute, man
and beast But this law was subsequently repealed by the constitution
of Antonius, in the second century of the Christian era. Dig. lib. i. t. 6;
Just. lib. i. t 8, c. 2. The heartless barbarity of this law, and its effect
upon the sensil>ilities of some (particularly Uie ladies), is strikingly set
forth by JuTenal, in a dispute l>etween the master ana mistress of some
unfortunate slaTo: —
78 ROMAN SLAVERY.
Rusticus."
«Then is he happy, indeed, when the torturer is summoned, and some
poor wretch is branded with the burning iron, for stealing a pair of
towels. What example does he set his son, who revels in the dank of
chains, and whom the brands of wretched slaves and the rustic dungeon
mi witii delight."
That the rule that gives the master the absolnte ownership
of his slave, so as to place the power of life and death over him
in his hands, is at war with the laws of humanity and the prin-
ciples of human nature, no one will deny. It is subversive of
the laws of creation that one man should thus own another.
But does the relation of master and slave, rendered just and
humane by good and wholesome laws, such as secure protection
to the life and person, and kind treatment to the slave, imply
any such a power ? or is it in itself liable to any such objections ?
We trow not.
*' Poor Precas, with naked shoulders and breast, dresses her hur. Bat
why is this curl too high ? " Instantly the cowhitfe avenges the heinous
crime of misplacing a hair. **But what has poor Precas done? what
crime is it of the poor girl's, if your own nose displeases you ? "
1 The writings of Seneca are fall of tender sympathy for the slave. He
says, **SerTi8 imperare moderate laus est; et in mancipio cogitandum
80 ROMAN SLAVERT.
Although many of the Roman poets and philosophers
abounded with passages of commiseration and reproof for the
unfortunate condition and treatment of the slaves, they at the
same time famish abundant proof that they were but little
heeded. Slaves seem to have been valued by some only so far
as they represented money. Hortensius is said to have cared
less for the health of his slaves than that of his fish. It was a
question of ingenious disputation, whether, in order to lighten
a vessel in a storm, one should sacrifice a valuable horse or a
worthless slave. '
It was the law at Rome, till long after the Christian Era,
that when a master was put to death by any one of his slaves,
the whole household of slaves, including the freedmen under the
roof, had to suffer the penalty of the law.'
The power of life and death which the Roman master had
over his slaves, was first sought to be abolished by Adrian and
Antonius Pius, in the second century.^ As their numbers
multiplied great severity was necessary to keep them in subjec-
tion ; at times their oppression became so intolerable that they
revolted in various provinces and in vast numbers.*
est> non quantum illud impune pati passit Sed quantum tibi pumittat
aequi bonique natura." In the same place the conduct of Vadius Pollio
who fed his fish with the flesh of his slaves, is severely reprobated. De
Clem. i. 18.
The younger Pliny was a humane master, and many instances are
recorded by historians of the magnanimity and grateful conduct of slaves.
Dio Cassius, Hist Rom. i. 47, mentions .three slaves in the time of
Antony's proscription, who saved their masters at the loss of their own
lives. This feature of the institution was discountenanced and done away
with by the prevalence of Christianity, wherever it was encountered.
(See Essay on Slavery in the New Testament) This feature of the Roman
system never existed in India, as the provinces were left to their own
municipal regulations.
* Liv. iv. 45 ; do. xxii. 88 ; also xxxiii. 86. Diodorus mentions an in-
•urrvotion in Sicily, A. C. 186, the most dreadM that ever occurred.
ROMAN SLAYSRT. 81
1 The Roman family in the sense in which it is used signifies, first, the
whole collected sooie^ of the house, freemen and sUtcs, at the head of
which stands the pater familias. Cic. de Invent ii. 60. It has Tarious
other meanings wmch are here unnecessary to be mentioned, as we design
to treat principally of the slayes.
' See Just Inst liv. i. ts. 9-10. The patria potestas ceased, if the son
became a flamen dialis — a priest of the sacred order. Tac. Ann. It. 16.
OaL iii. 119. Other dignities made no difference. See Yal. Max. ▼. 4, 6.
In case of a daughter it ceased when she entered into marriage with
manus, or became a vestal virgin. Glell. i. 12., <*Eo statim tempore sine
emancipadone ac sine capitis minutione a patris potestas exit,'' Ulp. x. 6.
«< In potestas parentum esse desinunt at hi, qui Flamines inaugurantur,
et qu» Virginis Vestn capiuntur." QaL i. 180.
F
82 ROMAN SLAYSBT.
* JuTen. xiT. 68. '*As the voice of his master thundered, brandishing
his whip oTer his head.*'
The right of the father, also, to sell his children was unques-
tionably recognized by the Twelve Tables, though few instances
of the like can now be found ; it seems, therefore, to have been
early modified into a legal form of emancipation.'
The father could not renounce his authority over his son ex-
cept by suffering him to be adopted in the power of another,
or by this formality of emancipation.
eiTilUed nations, upon this sabject differed fVom the Roman in two
respects: — First, that the fathers power over his son oeased at his
arriTing at majority, or at his marriage, or on his being entered on the
list of citiiens. Secondly, bj the father having a right to terminate the
relation of parent and child, bj banishing him from his honse, or disin-
heriting him, without daring to iigore his life or liberty. Beck's GalL p.
178. Dion. ii. 26. '**0 re3» Panatwf vofnSlnK,** &0.
' A fragment of the Twelve Tables decreed : <* Si pater filium ter yenum
duit, filius a pater liber esto." Ulp. xi. Again (Idem.) : *<Liberi paren-
tum poteetate liberantur emancipatione, ie si posteaqaam mancipati fue-
rint manumissi sint Sed filius quidem ter mancipatus ter manumissus
sm juris fit Id enim lex xii. tabularum jubet his yerbis :" Si pater JUium
ter venum duit, filiue a pater liber eeto^
* ** Se filiam jure csssam judicare, ni ita esset, patrio jure in filium ani-
madyersurum ftdsse." Liy. 1 : 26.
84 BOBIAN SLAYEBT.
bat it was only as a natural right, and wholly distinct from the
marriage of free persons; hence the term applied to it was,
contubemiam, instead of matrimoninm, and the married pair
were called contnbemals. The master, in case of the slave, as
with his own children, decided apon the propriety of the
match.'
* <* Urbana familia et mstica, non looo sed genere distingmtar." Fest.
166.
* The slave family considered in this point has been treated by Pigno-
rias: **Do serris et eonim apadyeteres ministeriis." By Titos Papma,
De operis serrorom, and GK>ci in tbe explanation of the Columbarium Li-
bertorum et serrorum LiTiss Augusts), referred to in Blair's Enquiry into
the state of slavery among the Romans.
1 Snet GaU 12. This procurator most not be confounded with the
like term ooourring so often in legal matters ; the latter could onlj be a
freedman. Dig. lib. 18, t 8. Oio. p. Gael. 20. But domestic procnratores
were slaves or freedmen. Cio. de Crat i. 68. Ad. Attic, ziv. 16.
* Plaut Pseud, ii. 2; and hence, also, the Condus Promus. Plaut.
cap. iv. 2. 116.
86 BOICAM 8LAYKRT.
The astonishment which the art first excit^ was soon turned
into distrust, and sometimes into aversion. Gato eameatly
warned his son against the Greek physicians and the study of
medicine.* Even in the time of Pliny, the Romans themselves
attended but little to the art, though it was, as he says, very
profitable ; but it was, perhaps, for that Ireason lowered in the
estimation of the old Romans.*
ROMAN SLAVERY. 87
* Mart. X. 56.
* Plin. Ep. iii. 5. Cornelius Nepoe says of Atticus, " Nemo in convivio
ejus aliud agpaafta audivit, quam anagnostem (or lectorem). Neque unquam
sine aliqua lectione apud cum culnatium est" Cor. Nep. 1. 16. ** No one
at his dinner-table heard any exhibition, other than the lector or reader.
Nor did supper ever pass without some reading to him."
88 ROMAN SLAVXRT.
^ C»to the elder taught his son himself (Kalr«i x«^carr« ^»W Wxt y^^m^*'
ntf«v W0i* XX2m»«, mXXmv iUmn^r^ m^ — Plant lat Mag. 20), althoi^^
he had a alare, oalled CUoo, a moat elegant teacher, who taught many
other boya.
* Utj, xxxlx. 6.
* Cio. Mil. 21 ; Petron. o. 83. 47; Sen. Ep. 64. Seneca says, that in
their erening amuaementa there were more singers than formerlj in the
public theatrea. ** In commissationibus nostris phis cantonim est, quam
in theatrb elim ^»eetatoram Aiit*'
«Petr«tt.U.
^ Mart Ti. 89> describes ona» ** acuto capita et aaribvs longis, <fim de
aoTantur, «t sohnt iMlkrat'*
ROBIAN SLAVERT: 89
The dog was the only companion of the Janitor, and helped
him to guard the court and entrance to the house. He some-
* Sen. Ep. 60. " Harpasten, uxoris meeo fatnam 8018 hereditariam onus
in domo mea remanisse ; ipse enim avenissimas ab istU prodlgiis ; sam.
si qnando fatao deleotari toIo, non est mihi longe qnsBrendam me rideo."
* Gell. xix. 18, explains vavnty « brevi atqne humili oorpore homines
panlom supra terram extantes.'* Stat Silv. i. 6. 67.
8*
90 BOMAN 8LAVERT.
' ** lluDO vestri janitores, huno oubicalarii diligont; hano Hberi yestri,
hano senri anoUIfe que amant; hio cum Tenit, extra ordinem yocatur;
hio solus introducitur, o«teri ssspe frugalissimi homines exolndantar."
Cio. Verr. iii. 4. From this it would seem that the slaves had their pre-
ference, and would faTor men of rank, while it was their duty to admit
visitors in the order of their arrival Cio. ad Att 2. This oomplaint
might well apply to some iU-bred slaves of the present day ; they often
take it upon themselves to distinguish those of rank as they &noy theiM.
BOMAN SLAVXBT. 91
1 «Ad urbem ita veni, ut nemo alius ordinis homo nomenclatori non
notua,*' became a proverb. Sometimes, when their memory failed them,
they would plaj a trick and substitute a name. ** Vetulus nomenclator,
qui nomina non reddit, sed imponit" Sen. £p. 27. Perhaps Jack
Downing maj have borrowed the idea from this custom, when he volun-
teered his services to shake hands for Gen. Jackson.
92 ROMAN BLAVEKY.
1 ** Oh, how I wish some one from the rich Trassulians could meet him
(Cato) in the road driTine his runner Numidians and huge cload of dust
before him !** Sen. £p. 87. Seneca probably enTied Cato his display,
and would like to haTC seen him outdone.
ROBCAN SLAVERY. 93
oat the republic, and even np to the times of the Antonies, the
master held absolute coutrol over his slave ; he could practise
the most cruel barbarities on him, or even kill him with perfect
impunity.'
The slave likewise received his tunica and saguan ; for shoes
he received sculponee, a kind of sandal made of wood. If he
could manage to save anything out of his allowance by his
economy, he might thus acquire a little property to which his
master could lay no claim. Indeed, as in modem times, the
principle ''quodcunqne per servum acquiritur id domino ac-
quiritur," was not strictly adhered to, and the slave could thus
earn a '' peculium," by means of which he often purchased his
freedom.*
1 See JuTenal, vi. 218 : "Pone orncem servo," &o. «Apnd omnes
pneqne gentes animadyertere possuxniis, dominis in servos vitsd necisque
potestatem esse, et qnodconqne per senrom aoquiritnr id domino acquiri-
tur." Gai's Inst, i. 62.
* But this is not true of Greek and Hebrew slavery, generallj. Antiph.
de C»de Herod., p. 727. ** tf a man smite his servant with a rod, and
he die under hii hand, he shaU be punished." Ex. xzi. 20.
. . . <*Bogabat
Denique cur unquam fugisset, cui satis una
Farris libra foret, gracili sic tamque pusUlo."
Thus we see that bad diet, or scanty food, caused slaves to run away.
94 ROMAN SLAVERT.
There was no difference between the dress of the slave and that
of the humble freeman.' The punishments of the slaves, which
is the principal alleged sin against the institution of the present
day, were numerous, and even rendered more severe by the
increase of their numbers, the greater difficulty of keeping them
in subjection, and their greater turbulence and viciousness. In
treating upon this part of the subject, we must not overlook
the fact that the multitude of Roman slaves had so increased
as to greatly outnumber the freemen, and had become systemati-
cally demoralized and vitiated for a course of several centuries,
so that they were, as a class, of equal intellectual capacity with
the generality of freemen, of excessive cunning and audacity,
and could only be kept under by extreme severity.
* Ovid, Treat iv. 1, 6. Tib. ii. 6. 26. Col. i. 8, 16. Jnvenal viii. 180.
** Ergastulum mancipia vineta compedibns." The Ergastolam was the
abode of the mstio riaves. Thej most have been immense establishments
to afford each slave a separate cell; something upon the plan of a modem
penitentiary. There was a dungeon attached to it, a vast excavation
nnder ground, something like a modem cistern, with no entrance, except
through a small aperture at the top, bj a rope let down like a bucket into
a welL Here there were separate cells for the convicts in the walls, like
receiving tombs for the dead. Colum. i. 6, 8. See also Plant. PcenuDus,
Translation in Bohn's Library, vol ii. p. 404, note.
a03iAN SLAVSRT. 95
^ Lndl. in Non. i. 62. Plant, cap. ii. 2, 107 ; see also Translation in
Bohn's Library, vol. ii. p. 404, note.
' Plant Asin. ii. 2, 06. Pers. ii. 4. 7. Also with straps. Hor. Epist*
ii. 2. 16. There was also the pistrinum, where slaves, for punishment,
had to perform hard labor on a bridewell, called bj some a treadmiU.
Plant. Asin, i. 1. 21.
96 BOBiAN SLAVERY.
8 « Unless I manage this one thing to cook the dinner down in the
dungeon, then when cooked, we bring it up in small baskets," &o. Here
is another allusion to the dungeon ; he means to say that such a place will
alone prevent the thievish cooks from stealing everything that comes in
their way. Plant. Transl., Stylus or Parasite Rebuked, vol. i. p. 247.
Again, ** Is it among such men that you expect to find your ring? Chiur-
chus, Circonicus, Crimnus, Crisobalus, Calabus, were there; whipped-
neck, whipped-legs, iron-rubbed knaves. By faith, any one of these could
steal the sole from the shoe of a running foot-man." Plaut Tim. voL i.
p. 66.
> Sen. Ep. 101. '*PaUbulo pendere destriotum." Plant. Miles Gro-
riose, or the Braggart Captain, ii. 4, 7. " Credo tibi esse eundum aota-
tum extra portam despissis manibus patibulum eum habebis." Mart i.
1, 62. ** Ita te forabunt patibulum per vivas stimulis." Connifioes went
behind and beat and goaded the culprit
' Tacit Ann. ii. 82. Suet CUiud. 26. Tacit Ann. xv. 60. Death by
crucifixion was not uncommon. It was the Romans that introduced this
mode of punishment into Judea, by which the Saviour of the world was
put to death. He was crucified between two thieves, doubtless slaves, as
this kind of punishment was peculiar to them.
ROMAN SLAYSRT. 97
* Sen. Ep. 47. Cio. p. Mil. 22. ** De seryis nulla qusestio in dommas,
nisi de incestu.'' Val. Max. vi. 8, 1. Plin. Jlp. iii. 14, relates an in-
stance of such revenge.
9 o
98 ROMAN SLAYERT.
A slaye taken among the soldiers was cast from tho Capi-
toline Bock, having been first manumitted, that he might be
worthy of that punishment.^
^ lM\v i^Mwiu«, i. 48. As slaT««i couVl nol t«siify on the rack agminst
Ihf^ir o«u m*:kt«nk« Ui<y ir«r« 90U to oUi«ns and thus qiudified to testify.
Wo, l%«jk It. {«iT.
ESSAY V.
Paul also mentlona slayes as having been baptized. 1 Cor. xii. 18. Yet,
for all this, Christiamty did not condemn the institation in itself, but only
its abuse.
» Lb. X. 7, 9.
The rise of the star of Bethlehem was like the light of an-
other mom risen on mid-day ; it eclipsed all ancient systems of
religion, law, and refinement, in all things spiritual and divine.
The Mosaic covenant was but for the deliverance of a single
nation from temporal bondage, to establish them within the
borders of the promised land, and give them a constitution and
system of government according to the provisions of the '' Old
Testament." But the gospel dispensation was something be-
yond — a new bequest to all nations, appended, as it were, in a
codicil to the previous revelations of the ** Divine will."
9*
neath the vaulted roofs of her temples echoed the praises of the^
living God. .^
them ''from the bondage of sin and corrnption into the glorioas
liberty of the children of God.'** ** Ye shall know the tmth.
and the truth shall make you /ree.*'* " Where the spirit of
the Lord is, there is liberty."* "For, brethren, ye have been
called unto liberty, ^^^ ''Stand fast, therefore, in the liberty
wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not again entan-
gled in the yoke of bondage,^ ^^ "For ye are bought with a
» Luke 16 : 13.
^^ Luke 16 : 17-21. It will be noticed that the prodigal son was not
willing to become a iml)^ or ouctnif, a bond slave, like Onesimus, but rather
a ^ia6[o(^ hired servant.
N
BLAVERT IN THB NEW TESTAMENT. 105
saj to this man, Go, and he goeth ; and to another, Gome, and
I)e cometh ; and to my servant [dovxo^, slave]. Do this, and he
doethit''*
1 Matt 8:9. *< And he sent his serrant," &c. This figure is taken
from the Roman custom of sending oat invitations by slaves to their
guests, and of dispatching them to escort and usher in or announce the
indiyiduals as they arriyed. « Piso had ordered his slaves never to speak
about anything except when asked. On one occasion he had invited
Cladius to a banquet The guests all arrived but Claudius. Piso repeat-
edly sent his slave, who had carried the invitation, to look if he was
coming. At last he asked him whether he was sure that he invited him.
Quite sure, was the reply. Why does he not come, then ? inquired Piso.
Because he declined the invitation, was the reply of the slave. And why
didn't you tell me before? Because you did not ask me, replied the
slave." See Essay on Qreek Slavery, supra, p. 67. There were the
regular iervi ab officio admissionum. Cicero, by way of complaint of the
partiality of these servants toward their favorites, says : ** Hie eum venit,
extra oi^nem vocatur ; hie solus introducitur, cesteri ssepe frugallssimi
homines excluduntur." From which it would seem that visitors should
be admitted according to their arrival. Cic. Verr. iii. iv. ** Who is that
faithful steward," &c. This fig^e, also, has a direct reference to a cus-
tom peculiar to Roman slavery. There was always a principal steward,
that had the control of the household affairs of the Roman family, called
the ** procurator ." See Essay on Roman Slavery, supra, p. 86. Cic. De
Or. 1, 68. Si mandandum aliquid procuratore de agricultura aut impe-
randum villico sit Ad Attic. 14, 16. See Petron. 80. Sen. Epist 14.
Quinct Decl. 846. (Familiam per procuratores continetis): nihil scire
potni de domesticis rebus, de quibus acerbissime afflictor, quod qui eas
dispensavit, neque adest istic, neque ubi terrarum sit scio (Cic. Ad Attic,
xi. 1); meaning that he never knew where to find the procurator or
steward. He was also called the ** dis))ensator," which is used in the
Vulgate. Suet Qalb. 12. Mart 6, 42. Juv. 1, 91 ; 7, 219. The cen-
turion, too, was a Roman slaveholder ; yet he ** had not found so great
faith, no, not in Israel." So was the young man whom he commanded to
Bell all that he had ; ** for he had great possessions."
To pass over the charge which the Jews brought against him
of violating the first great commandment of the Mosaic Law,
by making himself God ; we will notice some instances of an
inferior grade, and of a municipal character. The first is his
opinion upon the form of a Jewish oath: ''Again ye have
heard that it hath been said of them of old time, thou shalt not
forswear thyself, but shall perform unto the Lord thine oaths.*'
** But I say unto you, swear not at all ;'* "But let your com-
munications be Yea, yea, and Nay, nay," *' For whatsoever is
more than these cometh of evil."^ Had the author of this
passage been clothed with the legislative authority of Moses as
a pro&ne lawgiver, it would be construed into an absolute ab-
rogation of the prevailing form of a civil and judicial oath, and
a positive direction as to what form should be observed.^ With
the theological construction of this paragraph, as well as the
following ones which we shall notice upon this point, we have
nothing to do. But if it was to be taken as the paramount law
of the land in a civil sense, here was a direct interference with
civil government in one of the most important principles that
enter into the organization of society. Upon the responsibility
and sacred character of an oath, depends the safety of the life,
liberty and property of mankind. And the form has ever been
cherished with the most sacred awe and veneration.' But the
1 Matt 6 : 86.
' The fonn of the Jewish oath was to ** swear by the Lord God of
heaven and earth," Qen. 14 : 8 ; to ** lift up the hand onto the Lord the
most high Qod," &o. Gen. 14 : 22. Deut 6 : 18. Jos. 2 : 12. I. Sam.
24 : 21.
* An oath among all nations has ever been held sacred, as an appeal to
some superior being by way of imprecation of divine vengeance upon the
affiant, should he not speak the truth. Among the Greeks there was
always used the expressions iona Ztvs, Oto¥ ii^pnfionaif and those of a similar
import, in the taking of oaths. Soph. Trach. 899. Antiq. 184. St. Paul
Gdat. 1 : 20. The Greeks were as a nation deeply imbued with religious
Again, ''Ye have heard that it hath been said^ an eye for
an eye and a tooth for a tooth ;" ** But I say unto you, resist
not evil." In this instance the penal statute of Moses upon the
subject of maiming is the subject of this remark ; the penalty
founded upon the lex talionis, was inconsistent with the
heavenly injunction to love your enemies, and the cardinal
virtues of Christian morality. What could constitute a more
direct and positive interference with the institutions of civil
government than those foregoing strictures upon the forms and
penal codes of both the Koman and Jewish law 7
feeling,, and paid high regard to the sanctity of an oath. They prided
themselyes in being superior to the barbarians in this respect ; aU their
treaties of peace, yows, alliances, compacts, and agreements between
nations and individuals were ratified by an oath. (Smith's Greek and
Rom. Antiqs. Art. Oath. ) The practice of swearing, or calling upon the
gods to witness the truth asserted, was as common among the Romans as
among the Greeks. Various expressions were used, as follows : Hercle,
or Mehercle ; Pol, Perpol, or Edepol, t. «., by Pollux ; also, per Gavem
Lupidem, per Superas; per Decs Immortnles, &c. The women never
swore by Hercules, nor the men by Castor. False swearing was not
regarded by the Romans as by us ; the culprit was responsible to the
deity alone. (Oper. Git.)
"Our law," says Mr. Phillips (after giving his reasons), "therefore,
like most other civilized countries, requires the witness to believe that
there is a God, and a future state of rewards and punishments."
(L Phil. Ev. p. 21.)
cally opposed to the Tax and dissolute forms of both the Roman
and Jewish law upon that subject.
"And Jesus answered and said unto them. For the hardness
of your hearts he wrote you this precept." "But from the
beginning of the creation God made them male and female."
" What therefore God has joined together let not man put
asunder."* •
1 Both by the Jewish and Roman law a voluntary separation might take
place between married persons. Matt. 6 : 81, 82. Dent. 24 : 2.
10
Let us next listen to the language of St. Paul upon this im-
portant branch of Christian duty. "Servants (6ovxo«, slaves)
be obedient to them that are your masters according to the
flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of heart as unto
Christ;" "not with eye-service, as men-pleasers ; but as the
servants of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart," &c.
* * " And ye masters do the same thing unto them, forbearing
threatening ; knowing that your Master also is in heaven ; nei-
ther is there respect of persons with him."
Rome, where he met with Paul and was conyerted to the Christian reli-
gion, and Bent back by Paul to his master ; there were many slaves at
Colosse.
« Titus 2 : 9-10.
10* H
the above quoted text, what would be the character of his com-
ment, and what would be his reflections as to their Christian
duty derived from this passage of Scripture. How would he
exhort them to " adorn the doctrine of Grod our Saviour in all
things V^ Would he adopt the language that Paul hero dic-
tates to Titus ? Gould he avoid it and preach the Gospel t
'' If any man teach otherurise, Ac. * * He is proud^ knowing
nothing,^ ^
The island of Crete, where Titus was located when this epis-
tle was written to him, is famous in Grecian history for the
laws and institutions that prevailed over it. It was the birth"
place of Grecian slavery.^
The damsel that followed Paul and Silas from Thyatira was
the slave of a Roman citizen, and brought her master great
gain by her power of divination; **but Paul being grieved,
commanded the unclean spirit to come out of her."' Here
was an instance not only of a direct and positive interference
> Can. xWii., Third Council of Paris. This is strictly according to the
teachings of Paul. "Let them that haye belieying masters not plot
against them;" *' These things teach and exhort, and whosoever shall
teach otherwise," &c.
* Civil Code, Lib. i. Tib. 10. Judsons serram Christiannm nee compa-
rare debebit ne largitatis ant alio qnocunqne titnlo conseqnetur." Again,
**non solum mancipii damno mulctetur, Temm etiam capital! sententia
punietur." Not only shall he be mulcted by the loss of the slaye, but he
shall be punished by a capital sentence. Again, ** Onecus, seu paganus,
et Judeus, et Samaritanus, et alius hssreticus, id est, non ezistens ortho-
doxus, non potest Christiannm manoipium habere.*' A Qreek or pagan,
a Jew, a Samaritan, and az^ heretic that is not orthodox, cannot hold a
Christian slaTe.
But it is stated that the word slave does not occur in the
Bible. This, however, is a mistake with reference to King
James' Translation of the New Testament. In that version
of the Revelation of St. John, the learned commissioners
rendered the last clause of the 18th verse of the 18th chapter,
" and ike slaves and the souls of men, " The writer of this
passage was enumerating the several articles of merchandize
usually bought and sold at Babylon; he mentions the mer-
chandize "of beasts, and sheep, and horses, and chariots, and
slaves, and souls ofmen,^^ Supplying the Greek word yoi»w
where it is properly understood, the original reads thus, x(u
yofU)y aafuvtutvj xa/ \vxo^ avdfxafCtap , literally, and the merchandize
of the bodies and the souls of men. There is no conceivable
reason why the making merchandize of the bodies and souls of
men at ancient Babylon, should render them slaves, more than at
Jerusalem, or Tyre, Sidon, Corinth, Delos, Athens, Rome, or
any one of the slave markets of the Roman Empire. Doubtless
the permission given to the Jews by the statutes of Moses to
"buy their bondmen and bondmaids of the heathen round about
them," included the market at Babylon as well as others; yet
the learned seventy of the Alexandrine school of critics, in
translating that statute into Greek, rendered the bondmen and
bondmaids so to be purchased, by dovxov; xal dovxa;,' meaning
<> Sept. Liv. 25 : 44. In Ezek. 27 : 13, tliis same Oriental slave trade is
alluded to.
slaves bought with money ; the same words which the English
translators have rendered male and female, or maid, servants,
aniyersally thronghont the Scriptures. So also in the family
of Abraham those slaves bought with his money are properly
called 60VX0K* In Joshua and in Judges the same word is used
in the Greek;' meaning, in the former, those slaves "cursed to
be hewers of wood and drawers of water;" and in the latter
the slaves of Gideon, which were either captives or ''bought
with his money." In other instances this word and a variety
of its derivations are used in the Septuagint in a similar sense.
If then the Greek word io%^Koi\ in its primitive and literal signi-
fication means what we understand by the word slave, a person
that belongs to another in a certain sense, as a piece of pro-
perty or merchandize, as defined by Aristotle and used by all
the Greek authors, why did the learned translators of King
James' version of the Bible universally render that word by
the English word aervantf and yet use the term slave in the
passage in Revelation ? or to put the question in a different
form, why does not the word slave occur more frequently in the
present English version of the Bible ?
'* This conversion," he says, ** seems to have arisen irith the French in
the eighth century, where the princes and bishops were rich in Sclavo-
nian captives, from whence the word extended to gradual use in all the
modem languages." Qib. Dee. and F. R. £., vol. 4, p. 88.
11*
the Bible. Soon after came the translations of the New Tes-
tament by John Wickliff, copies of which are still extant.
Next came TyndaPs Bible, revised by Mathews, 163T, known
as the Bishop's Bible. The Bible, however, as such, was re-
organized and read only in the Latin till a comparatively short
time previous to the publication of the royal version of King
James. The vulgate and the Bishop's Bible had been by a
royal order a short time previously submitted to the option of
the clergy and the people, and to lay side by side in the churches
uBud monasteries. A halo of superstitious veneration had so
enshrined this Latin text of St. Jerome in the heads and me-
mories of the church at that day, that it is with reluctance given
up by the priests even at the present time. To suit the whim-
sical notions of the age, great deference would naturally be paid
to the Latin Bible, and great care taken in all previous and
subsequent versions to preserve all the names and terms there
with as little alteration as possible. This, it appears, had been
partially done to suit the fantastical notions of the laymen and
the clergy in the version known as the Bishop's Bible. There-
fore, King James enjoined upon the. commissioners, which he
held appointed to prepare the present English version of the
Bible, the following instructions : 1st. The Bible, commonly
read in the churches, known as the Bishop's Bible, should be
altered as little as possible. 2d. All the old and venerable
Scripture names to be kept sacred according to all Scripture
usage. 3d. All ecclesiastical words to be retained. 4th.
When any word had several significations, that which had been
most commonly used by the most celebrated Christian Fathers
should be preferred.^ It would have been impossible for the
modem word slave to have been used in any versions of the
Scriptures during the Danish or Anglo-Saxon period of the
*>
Bacch. 1028 : ct>? <Te tneva^w^ douXo^ wv /lev aXX' 6fico^ xpfjof^k
dooXol^ cofKpopa Ta de<n:oT(uv. '*How I lament this, though a
slave ; yet slaves, if faithful, mourn the ruin of their masters."
Idem, line 291 : vofio^ J' iv ojiiv rolq r tXeoBtpoi^ i^oq nai toif
dooXoi(; alfiaro^ xtirai icspi " The laws of blood are equal to us
slaves f and to you our ft'eemen (or masters)."
Orestes, line 1522 : Ao6Xo^ tav ^ofiei rov Atdr^v^ dc <r' ajcaXXa^si
xax&v. Slave : Tla^ ^pi ^^ douXo^ f rec, rfisrai to ^^ opatv.
Orest. : ** Pears a slave death, the end of all his ills ?" Slave :
"To slave or free, sweet is the light of heaven."
Lib. ii. chap. 63 : Mj^di voiiitrai nepf evo^ fxovouy dooXeiaq avr
eXeoOspiaq, " Think not you have only one point at stake, the
alternative of slavery or freedom."
oore eXeuOepoq, ' ' Nor was there any other portion within the
wall, either slave or free."
Smxpdnj^, xa{ rl av oUi naOeh xaX6v ^iXri<ra^ ; J^ oox aof aurixa fxaXa
dooko<; ii£v iivai avr iXeudepop. "Miseram te, ait Socrates, qnid
eyentnnim tibi existimas, si formosum oscnleris ? anon sabito
pro libero semis esses?" (Leunclayias.)
Kupo^f x€ddv [id)^tcOatj onw^ fxij izori rt^ douXo^ fuXXot yevijffeodat
^v di dij iroXefiof xpartjirOei^j ij xal aXXov rtva rpoitov dooXotdti^j cttc-
j^etpwv rfe ^patyy^rat rob^ deiTTcora^ cmoffrepeTv eatrcou, rourov oo,
irpwToq eirrkf norepov <u^ ayaOov aydpa xai xaXd irparrovra Hfii^q ij cu?
ddixouvTOf ij Xafir^^f xoXaZsi^] xoXa^Wf e^. " It is indeed noble,
said Gyrus, to fight, in order not to be made a slave I But if
a man be conquered in war, or by other means reduced to
slavery, and be found attempting to throw off his master, do
you yourself first pronounce whether you reward or honor such
a one as an honest man, and as one that does noble things, or,
if you take him, do you punish him as one that acts unjustly ?
I punish him, said he."
them like slaves that haye run away and are discoyered, some
Lib. ii. chap. 3 : ^obXol di noXkoi etnovro, " They were at-
tended by a great many slaves, "
Lib. vii. cap. i: '0 ^ elicev AXX* fywye Ixay/^v vw/iit^to uuv dtxfpt
e/etV oihoi douXoi ttroorai can* eXeuOepufv. "And then he said, I
think myself sufficiently revenged, if these people, instead of
freemen, are to be made slaves.^ ^
Orat. iii. adv. Apho. p. 243 : dXXd xai dooXov tlvai r6v S^Opw-
TTov 7y 6vt{. " But cvcu a slave is a man in his being."
drawing lots with the master, will ever claim the private pro-
perty of the slave, as of his lord."
Philoe, line 995 : oi fioi rdXa^ ^Ai«? f^^v w^ douXou^ traipQ^ iraTijp
a/5 e^€^u(reVf ou^ eXeoOepou^, **0 me misernm I That our
father should have unfortunately begot us slaves, instead of
freemen."
Chap. 94: Aodol p.iv dij Ond UeptriQoi dedouXwvro, "Thus the
Lydians were enslaved by the Persians."
Idem, 173 : Ka{ ijv fiev yt yuvij dffTT^ dovXtp truvoiuTJffrjf ysvvala ra
Te»a vtv6fx[<TTaL "If any free woman cohabits with a slave,
the children begotten are subject to the law."
1 Hendrico Greek Lex. verb A)vX«roj, W«Ti!f. Scnrvill, do., Pickering, &c.
Lidell & Scott. Don. Groves, Robinson's Lex., Greek New Testament
ESSAY VI.
af
/•
^
>
I'
3 Such as the Lex Salica, the Code of the Ripuarii, Code of the Bur-
gundians, Lex Saxonom, &c.
' Dacange, under the word urvu»^ mentions, among others, the follow-
ing classes of slaves: **0f the field, benefidarii; attached to the soil,
ndteripti glebc^ eeruualts Mtrvi dvitalu ; public slaves, tervi eomiium ; con-
suetudinarii, a species of serfs; eeeUticutieif belonging to the Church;
12*
The person to be set free was led round the great altar with
a torch in his hand ; he took hold of the horns of the altar,
and there the solemn words of conferring liberty were pro-
nounced. The princes on the birth of a son, or other joyous
event, enfranchised a certain number of slaves as a testimony
of gratitude. The ohlati^ or voluntary slaves of the churches
or monasteries, were very numerous.
1 When Pope Gregory, towards the end of tho sixth century, granted
liberty to some of his slaves, he introduced this reason for it : '* Cum Re-
demptor noster, totius conditor natune, ad hoc propitiatus humanmm
oarnem voluerit assumere, ut divinitatis busb gratia, dirempto (quo teneba-
tur captivus) vinculo, pristinse nos restitueret liberati ; salubriter agitur,
si homines quos ab initio liberos natura protulit^ et jus gentium jugo sub-
Btituit servitutis, in ea, qua nati fuerant manumittentis benefioio, libertate
reddantur." But it should be remarked that the class of persons to
whom the Pope has reference were as capable of enjoying their liberty m
those who held them in bondage.
'\
1 See Oenl. Introd. to Doomsday Book, by Sir Henry Ellis, 2 vols., 1888.
In 1615, the Tiers Etat prayed the king to cause all the serfs
to be emancipated on paying a fair compensation, but this was
^ Dalaire, Hist de Paris, torn. iii. p. 546. Brond Cout de Par. 21.
I
SLAYERT IN THE MIDDLE AGES. 143
Thus the history of the world shows us that slavery and the
slave trade are not local, and created only by special laws, as
asserted by Justices McLean and Curtis, in their dissenting
opinions in the Dred Scott case, but rather that they are ori-
ginally universal, founded upon immemorial custom and uni-
versal principles of international law ; and that all free terri-
tory, or territory where this right can no longer exist, has
originated from some abrogation of this time-honored custom,
or some modification of these long-established rights of pro-
perty and of persons, by the potent arm of legislation. This
is a historical fact, that the decision of no court, nor the dictum
of any individual, can alter.
"It was not long'' (says the same author) ''after the first
conquest of the Portuguese in Barbary, that the passion for
gain, the love of conquest, and the hatred of the infidels, eon-
dncted their navy to the ports of Western Africa ; and the first
ships that sailed so far soath as Gape Blanco, returned not with
negroes, but with Moors. ''^
\^
and Ferdinand a fourth part of all the slaves which the new
kingdoms might contain.* The slavery of the Indians was
recognized as lawfnl, and was practised in the early settlements
of New England by our Puritan fathers.* The practice of
selling the natives of North America into foreign bondage con-
tinned for nearly two centuries, and even the severest morality
pronounced the sentence of slavery and exile on the captives
whom the field of battle had spared.
It was not Las Casas who first suggested the plan of trans-
porting African slaves to Hispaniola ; Spanish slave-holders,
as they emigrated, were accompanied by their negroes. The
royal ordinances of Spain authorized negro slavery in America.
Bang Ferdinand himself sent fifty slaves from Seville, to labor
in the mines ; and because it was said that one negro could do
the work of four Indians, the direct traffic in slaves between
Gainea and Hispaniola was enjoined by a royal ordinance and
deliberately sanctioned by repeated decrees. The very year in
which Charles Y. sailed with a powerful expedition against
Tunis, to check the piracies of the Barbary States, and to
emancipate Christian slaves in Africa, he gave an open legal
sanction to the African slave-trade. The sins of the corsairs
were to be visited on the negroes ; and the monopoly for eight
years of annually transporting four thousand negro slaves to
the West Indies, was eagerly seized by La Bresa, a favorite
of the Spanish monarch, and was sold to the Genoese, who
porchased their cargoes of Portugal.
13
ESSAY VII.
Wb will take the " golden rule" for our theme in this essay ;
"Whatsoever ye would that men should do to yon do ye even
80 to them."^
Take again the case of the miser who has plodded on through
life, freezing his soul over the chilling themes of worldly policy
and golden gains till the last spark of animated existence be-
comes extinct, he meets the beggar boy in the street, who asks
snch a portion of his goods as to make him rich ; because the
miser would, through the sinful covetousness of his disposition,
in a change of circumstances and place, earnestly desire the
same thing ; is he, therefore, bound to comply with the beggar's
request ? No one will pretend it, and why ? because the de-
sire in the first instance is not such a one as the law permits ; it
is a violation of the tenth commandment.^
^ We do not here allade to the duty of bestowing charity upon the poor,
bat the hypothesis is predicated upon a covetous desire of his neighbor's
goods, not for the relief of immediate wants, but to place the beggar in
opulent circumstances.
18*
Snch was the object of Jesus Christ and his Apostles ; such,
as we have seen, was the object of the Christian Fathers during
the Apostolic ages, and eyen down to a late period in the his-
tory of the Chnrch. And such is the object of the enlightened
and sincere Christian moralist of the present day.
But, when the Scriptures say : " All things were [iyifero]
made by him," &c.,' the verb yalvofial is used, signifying to
cause to be, or to exist. The one means the immediate work
of his hand, in an active transitive sense ; the other simply the
cause in a passive signification, as by enacting and upholding
the laws of nature. But how does this comport with the theory
of the unity and common origin of all mankind ? If there is
any meaning in Scripture language, God made [nav idyo;] every
race as type of men, as certain as he did man himself; for the
same language is used in both instances.^
« Matt 19 : 4, » Acts 14 : 6.
* iOwof is used with reference to the natural, rather than ciyil, diyisions
of mankind, and means a race or type, whence the science of ethnology.
' navroc f0rev(, **/rom every nation" Acts 2:5. wis •' ycycwnifA'Of, " every
The only exception that can be fonnd to this rale in the New
Testament is in the passage in dispate. In Acts 2 : 5 (ttavtf
i$vwi), is correctly rendered '* every nation ;^^ respectively,
being in the singular. Then why should (nav tOvoi) be rendered
*' all nations f^^ collectively, in the passage in Acts IT : 26?
Let it be remembered that this is the only instance of the kind
in the New Testament, and contravenes its established use of
one bom [of the spirit]." John 8:8. 9&» itknua, ^^ every branch,** John
15 : 2. Ixoi'tI nat^rl, *Uo every one having,** &c. Matt 25 : 29. n(yitp^r«w,
^^ every one cuking,** &c. Matt. 7 : 8. nHv Uvi(»» ayaBov, ^^ every good tree,
&c. Matt. 7:17. o6 irflj o' Afyow, ^^not every one toying" &c. Matt 7 : 21.
irdtftf rri xrioci, ** to tvery Creature,** Mark 16 : 15. lit naohv nAIy, ** into
every
city.** Luke 10 : 1. n&tufi rt3 irtartvovH, ** to every one believing,** Rom. 1 :
16. On the other hand, in the plural it is rendered all, collectively.
wool roit ISvutiv, [*< shall be called] by all nations" Mark 11 : 17. Hi wmar€
rA Idvvy [*' shall be led captiYe] into all nations.** Luke 21 : 24. wavrti ri
ievriy [**suflfered] all nations.** Acts 14 : 16. idyn Ura, ^^ seven nations.**
Acts 18:19. x4l M»^a ri iOwri, ** and all nations.** Acts 15 : 17. arepunig
naol, **all men, &o. Acts 17 : 80. npot navrat akdpu)vov(, *' to all men.** Acts
21 : 15. nai^ra Idyn, '' aU nations.** Rev. 18: 28; also 17 : 13; 14 : a
But the same rule, generally, is observed by the learned Seventy in tlM
Septuagint See Gen. 1 : 25; 29 : 2, 5, 16.
1 Wherever irflf denotes all collectively, the noun is not used in the plural,
as niv mookf all manner of sickness, &c. Matt 4 : 23.
' But snch is not the meaning of the passage ; it means the distributing
the nations into different countries, separated by boundaries. Gen. 10 :
6, 25 ; 11 : 9. Deut 82 . 8 ; 2 : 6, 9, 10, 12, 19. If God made the races
to inhabit every clime, or ^*all the face of the earthy" would he have created
them all in one man and left them to find their way by chance into the
different parts of the earth ? No ; if he made the nations to dwell in dif-
ferent parts of the earth, he must have adapted them to the several
elimes ; there is no other meaning in the language ; MtoUtiv is a verb in
the infinitive mood and governed by f0Mc, meaning that the races were
fitted to dwell in, or inhabit every variety of clime.
1 "Eff' uixarCiv niv xpovtov, " in the last times." 1 Pet. 1 : 20. Xpovvs riic
•yyolas, ** times of ignorance." Acts 17 : 80. Kai ut TtooapwnvratTii xp«»«»i
"for about the space of forty years." Acts 18 : 18. 'O Irtpaif ycvMff,
** which in other ages." Eph. 8 : 5. Mera too^Xtov xpovop^ '* after so long a
time. Ilcb. 4:7; also 9 : 27; Acts, 15 : 21. 'OH xpof^os o€k Urai tii, <<th*t
time shall be no more." Bey. 10 : 6.
* 'T6v Kaipov tM tntffKomit oofi, "the time of thy yisitation." Luke 19 : 44.
'O Kaipof b e/tof oivu waptcrlp^ **mj time is not yet come." John 7 : 6, 8.
Oi yap ^p Kaif»( wKtap, "for the time of figs was not yet" Mark 11 : 18.
'Eiiortf t6v Kaipop, "and knowing the time," i.e. the hour. Bom. 18 : 11;
see also 1 Cor. 7 : 29; 2 Cor. 6 : 2; Eph. 5 : 16; Col. 4 : 5. 'OTt iX2yw
Kaipop ixu, "he hath but a short time." Rev. 12 : 12; Matt 11 : 26; 12:
1; 14 : 1. itifaia rutp Kaipoip d dvpoodt, "cannot discern the signs ef the
times." Mat. 16 : 8. Axpr wXtipudtMl KaXpoi IBpCip, "until the times of the
Gentiles be fulfiUed." Luke 21 : 24.
401. Kc/pov vtpa, *< beyond measure, undulj." Escb. Pr. 607. ftur^uv r«v
ntfn yoffmp, **tbe greatest longing for an opportunity, as a good appetite
for dinner.'' Xen. Symp. 2. 11. 'Eoxaro^ Ka(pa{, ** extreme danger." Pub.
Of place, it means, the right or fit place or spot. Thnc. 4. 54. 90. Also, a
vital part of the body; hence, is italpo» rmnivai, "hit in the vital parts or
right place. Eurip. Andr. 1120. rap TtXnraitt x*pi» nlpov ixowa, *• having
the last favorable opportunity." Thuc. 1. 42. Tiifr ^afpidy riiv Utipov Kalp»»
9^nf9¥ ponUairras^ ** considering his unfavorable, your favorable situation."
Demosth. Olinth. 1. 16. El 4»(XX(n( Xafiol Koff Jinuv r«iovrer Kmipov^ **if Philip
should seize upon such an opportunity against you." Id. Tadrc nli^ai
coifpoy fxpvrct, '* these things must be done while there is an opportunity." Id.
^ Homer uses only the adjective iraipfo^, and always in III. with reference
to place, as being or happening in the right place. See Lex. Lidd, and
Seott, et al.
14
158 THE M<ttAL ATTITUDB OP
1 Lake 21 : 24.
There are scarcely two commentators who agree upon the exact mean-
ing of this claose. The obscurity and diffic^tj attending the p r es e nt
English Tendon first led me to examine the origina] more critically: by ao
doing, I became satisfied that it was snseeptible of a different idea. As
to the rendering of the first clause of this Terse, I am satisfied that onis
is the only consistoit and correct rendering that can be giTen to it; M
to the remainder, I am not so well satisfied, and I leaTe it for the readtf to
derise a more consistent and satisfii^ctory one, if he can, for himsdf —
baring presented the facts.
and he still insbts that it means all nations collectivelj, then we submit
whether these uniTersal terms are not used in a limited meaning in the
text, as in numerous instances that have been and may be cited. The
firequent use of universal terms, in the Scriptures, in a limited significa^
tion, renders it unsafe to predicate any idea of universality upon them,
except firom the positive requirement of the subject-matter of the text.
See quotations, above, of the word wot, p. 156, n. 1 ; infra, p. 168, n. 1.
The passage in the Targum, above referred to, has reference to Gen. 1 :
26, 27. '* And God said rnoi^u/uv avBpunw), Let ut make man," &c., " and
[iincJtrwrop'] let them have dominion over the fish of the sea," &c. '* And God
(inlifvcyrdr itrBpwrov) made man, &c., (&p9t» kuI 9i)Xo Ivolrioiv alrovt), male and
female created he them." Such language as this could hardly refer to a
single individual. Man in its widest sense, means the whole human
family, and would seem to refer here to the genus homo. If it meant but
one man, the Greek text would read [«a2 Sfxtrta"} and let him have dominion,
&c. But there rather seems to be a plurality of them, hence ** let them
have dominion," &c. ; and «male and female created he them.** And the
Targum says they were *' created red, White and black." I have quoted
the Septuagint as the best acknowledged authority upon the Hebrew text
The article seems to be used or omitted arbitrarily with reference to man
in the several verses of the second chapter, by the English translators.
According to the Greek text there i^ no possible reason for the use that is
thus made of it. **And Adam called the name of his wife Ztah [life, ex-
istence], because she was the mother of all the living," Gen. 8 : 20. But
who named Adam 7 he must have taken his name from the import of the
term, which means [in the Heb. Ch. Lyr. Etta. Ar.l man, primarily the
human species, mankind, &c., N. Web. ** This it the book of the generations
nf Adam" [Greek ynXotwi ay^pwmv,] ** and this is the book of the genera-
lions of men [instead of Adam], Gen. 6:1. **Male and female created he
than;** " and called their name Adam" [or man, or mankind]. The name
Adam seems to be used in the Scriptures sometimes in a generic and
sometimos in an individual sense : it seems to apply to created man, in
eontradistinction firom man that Is bom of woman.
People of a common stock may have had several or many origins.
Such appears to be the fact not only with men, but all the inferior ani-
mals. We are nowhere told that they were created in a single pair, but
1 It o<rald not be expected that the English translators, under their royal
inatmetions, would presume to innoTate, in rendering this passage, upon
the eommonly received dogma of that day relative to the Mosaio account
of the origin and distribution of mankind. See Instructions, sup. p. 126.
If God has made ftrom one source every nation of man to inhabit every
different portion of the earth, who can say that he did not form them into
the varieties in which they are now found in those regions T How could
they be made to inhabit them unless they were suited to the climate, and
destined for a specific mode of life ?
14* L
^ ** ETen Dr. Pritchard, the Magnus Apollo of the theory of the vni^
and common origin of mankind, in the last page of Uie fifth and lart
Tolame of his great work, gives it as his matured opinion, that the human
race has been chilliads of years upon the earth. He also admits the
deluge was but a partial phenomenon, and that no known physioal
causes could have produced the existing diyersities among men.**
(Morton.) But it may be that some of the blood of the defunct types
was preserved in the ark (as contended for bj Mr. Fletcher), and that the
curse of Noah upon the descendants of Ham was but a declaration of
the physiological fact that thej would possess the color, as well as the
physical and mental characteristics of the people of Africa : we have no
objection to such a theory.
<'And the whole earth was of one language," &o. Qen. 11 : 1. Does
this include China, Lapland, Patagonia, Peru, and New Holland? *<And
the queen of the South came from the ends of the earth to hear the wis-
dom of Solomon." Matt 12 : 42. <*And it came to pass in those days,
that a decree went forth from C«sar Augustus that all the world should
be taxed." Luke 2:1. «• I have set thee to be a light of the Oentilee,
that thou shouldst be for sanation to the ends of the earth." Acts 18 : 47 ;
Isa. 47 : 6. ** Yes, yerily, their sounds went into all the earth, and their
words unto the ende of the world.'* Rom. 10 : 18. Ps. 19 : 4.
> It is well established that the different species of man cannot be ac-
counted for upon physiological principles — nothing less than a miracle
could have produced such an effect: it matters not, then, how this
miracle was wrought, whether by the transformation of mankind into
different species after their creation, or by creating them in yarieties.
The confusion of tongues would be no less a miracle than such a trans-
formation. And we say that the Creator might as well haye formed the
different species by suiting them to the different regions, when He dis-
persed them abroad over the earth from the tower of Babel, as to hare
formed from one all the yarieties of language which they should speak,
BO that they would no longer understand one another. Either is a miracle,
and one quite as probable as the other.
* In certain coal deposits, and among the fossil remains of high north-
em localities, there are found the remains of certain plants and animals
that are known to exist only in the tropical countries (such as the coal
deposit near the mouth of Mackenzie river, and the fossil remains of
elephants in Siberia and other high northern latitudes). Hence the con-
clusion of geologists, that a tropical climate once pervaded those regions.
Lyell's P. Geol.
When Cain went down into the land of Nod, he must have found a wifi»,
neither his sister nor his niece.
sand and five hundred years has made no inroads upon their
lines of demarkation, but left them identically the same, how
far back into the eternity of the past must we trace these lines
of descent to bring them to a termination in a single point ?
If they have run parallel for near four thousand years, what
is the geometrical conclusion with regard to their ever meeting
in the past ? and what must be our hopes, expectations, and
theory, with regard to their destiny in the future ?
15
** The men," says Dr. Nott, *' present altogether a very pecu-
liar type ; they are black, but without the woolly heads and
other characteristics of the negroes.'' ** Beyond, we find Yan
Diemen's Land, reaching to the 44° south, which presents a
temperate climate not unlike that of France; and what is
remarkable, its inhabitants, unlike those of New Holland, are
black, with frizzled heads, very similar to the African race."*
* Des Monlins des Races Humaines, p. 169. All the intermediate shades
from white to black are found in those races of oTal faces, large facial
angle, smooth hair, which Blomenbach ranks under the head of Caucasian.
Commence, for instance, with the fair Fins and SclaTonians with blonde
hair, and pass successively through the Celts, Iberians, Italian?, Greeks,
Arabs, Egyptians, and Hindoos, till you reach the inhabitants of Malabar,
and you find these last to be as blaiok as negroes. M. Jaoquinet, Cans.
Anthro. &c.
tants of Africa ; here yoa find every tint from the pale yellov
Hottentot and Bashman, to the dusky brown Gaffir, and the
coal-black negro of the tropics and confines of Egypt.
From the vast field that is laid open before us, we shall
select bat a few instances, to illustrate the truth that is pre«
sented in answer to this question.
16*
The same breeze, too, still blows over Rome that wafted
Sabean odors and spicy gales over the imperial city ; the same
moon and stars now look down upon her that saw the rise and
fall of her mighty empire ; but all else how changed 1 No
Cincinnatus now commands her arms, no Cicero now watches
over the destinies of the Republic ; but these ancient trees of
knowledge have sown their seeds broadcast upon the world,
from which, like the fabled teeth of the dragon, will spring up
armed men, to strike for their homes, the land of their sires ;
to disentomb the birthplace of heroes, poets and philosophers,
from the grrave of centuries, and call up their slumbering ghosts,
like the Phoenix spirit, from their own ashes. Genius is pro-
gressive, and the natural course of the human mind is upward
and onward in all nations where the intellectual predominates
over the animal. To what, then, can be attributed this retro-
gradation in the progress of society, but to the intellectual
inferiority of the present dominant race.
The region, now called Cape Colony, lies between 30^ and
35^ south latitude ; it rises as you recede from the coast into
high table-lands and mountains, and possesses a most delightful
climate. The tints of vegetation are of a deep and brilliant
dye ; it resembles that which skirts the mountain-sides, receding
to the north-east, till they reach perpetual summer at the equa-
tor. The forests are clad in a foliage that never sears, and the
shrubs and flowers decorate the landscape upon the plains with
their tinctured shades of evergreen. Yet, in this delightful re-
gion, we find the lowest grade, perhaps, of the human species.'
« " Africa and the American Flag," by Capt. Foote, U. S. N., p. 69.
V
'* Taking our departure from the Cape," says Dr. Nott, **if
we continue our examinations along the coast, easterly or west-
erly (the interior being unexplored), as far as the transverse
belt of highlands, just above the equator, that separates the
two great deserts, northern and southern, we find a succession
of well-marked types seemingly indigenous to their respective
localities. " Along the eastern coast we find the various tribes
inhabiting Inhambane, Sabia, Lofala, Botonga, Mozambique,
Zanguebar, &c., each presenting physical characters more or
less hideous, and almost, without exception, in not only a bar-
barous, but a superlatively savage state. All hopes of eventu-
ally improving them, or reclaiming them from their brutish
habits, must be given up ; even the slaver has always rejected
s " Africa and the American Flag,'' by Capt Foote, U. S. N., p. 69.
' Opera cit., also Expedition of Bowditch, Forbes, Donean, and others.
''All along the coast from the Equator to the north of the
Gulf of Guinea, they did not eat without throwing a portion
of their food upon the ground for the benefit of the dead. To
attempt to describe minutely the customs of the numerous tribes
of this section, and to wade through the horrid and revolting
scenes of bloodshed, cruelty, filth, and pollution that charac-
terize their adoration for man, beast, bird, fish, serpent, reptiles,
and the like, would require a volume of itself and carry us far
beyond the design of this treatise upon this subject. We shall
therefore present but a few remarks upon the two principal
nations on the western coast, ^ahomey and Ashantee. These
=?^wo nations are acknowledged" by all travellers to be far in
' advance of all the surrounding nations and tribes in their
habits, manners and customs, and mode of living. And we
invite the careful attention of the reader to their comparative
condition, and then ask him to say in the honesty of his con-
viction, whether the children of these nations and their posterity
have been degraded by their condition and treatment in
America. "The people of Dahomey and Ashantee," says a
modem traveller among them, ''are acknowledged to be con-
siderably in advance of all others living upon the western coast.
They have some agricnltural implements, such as the hoe, and
cultivate the ground to some extent ; they also manufacture some
coarse goods from cotton, and live in villages."
" The Ashantees are also qaite a large tribe in the west of
Africa. Among this tribe they are mach given to the belief in
witchcraft; and those who are accused of it are tortured to
death. " (A custom that once prevailed in the early settlements
of Kew England.)
J* The master here may kill his slave with as little fear or
compunction as his dog. They believe in a paradise of
sensuality and luxury for the nobles and better class. Hence a
large number of cooks, butlers, and domestics of various
descriptions are sacrificed at their funerals and on their tombs.
They believe that a higher class of gods preside over the
destinies of the white man than over that of the black ; and
hence their jealousy, prejudice, and dread of the whites. The
most horrid of all their customs is the sacrifice of human beings,
and all the horrors preparatory to that event. These take
place at all their principal festivals, and there are not less than
one hundred victims immolated at a time, and sometimes five
times that number. Besides, at the death of every person of
rank a large sacrifice is made ; and these are repeated at every
anniversary of the death for years afterwards. Sometimes they
are renewed monthly for a long time. On the occasion of the
death of his mother, the king butchered three hundred slaves.
The funeral rites of certain great captains were repeated
weekly for twelve weeks ; and two hundred slaves immolated
at a time, making in all twenty-four hundred human beings for
each one." He gives a most horrid description of a sacrifice
that he witnessed, too horrid to relate ; yet it was all conscien-
tious and to them seemingly right, and the victims submitted
with astonishing fortitude to their direful fate. "They have
no implements of agriculture but the hoe. The tropical fruits
all grow spontaneously. The great obstacle to cultivating
commercial intercourse with these African chieftains by the
Europeans, is the fact that they have rejected the slave trade,
which constituted their main inducement to treat with other
nations. The continuance of this trade by the Spanish, keeps
np a constant interchange of commodities between them. " He
says, that during his stay there, more than one thousand slaves
left for two Spanish schooners lying off the coast. Commander
Forbes, of the British Navy, in 1850, the latest visitor to that
country, tells what he saw. He says : '' There is something
fearful in the state of subjection, in which, in outward show,
the kings of Dahomey hold their highest offices ; yet when the
system is examined, these protestations are merely keeping up
of ancient customs. Although no man's head, in Dahomey,
16
^ They are called the Amazons. Queen Victoria has recently sent a
thoQsaDd ornamental caps to them as a present to the King of Dahomey.
Af. and Am. Flag, p. 84.
16*
Yet these people, like the other branches of the family, the
Abyssinians, Nubians, and Egyptians, have preserved enough
of their original characteristics, both in their physiology and
language, to prove conclusively to all the most celebrated tra-
vellers among them, that they are a race (including all their
several branches) distinct from all others, and indigenous to
the zoological locations that they inhabit. *
blast of the final trampet, she has shaken from her beauty the
ashes of centuries, and once more speaks to the world in the
hieroglyphic language of the builders of her citadels. There
stand her gigantic ruins, with ntter desolation perched upon
their dilapidated walls. Egypt, mouldering relic of a former
world 1 — strange redemption from the sepulchre ! — how Tirid
are the historic memoirs that cluster around her I Her loneli-
ness is rife with tongues, for the shadows of many ages are cast
upon her walls. Man treads her desolate and forgotten streets,
and is lost in the dreams of other days. Venerable and eter-
nal relic 1 The storied urn of a nation's memory I A disen-
tombed and risen witness from the dead ! Every stone in the
walls of her tombs and her monuments is immortal !
"^ When we cast around for a spot on which to locate the first
traces of human existence upon the earth, with their magic
signers they point to the banks of the sacred Nile. Egypt's
proud pyramids, if we credit the Champollion school, elevates
us at least one thousand years above all other profane traces
of nationality. ''And what is most remarkable," says Mr.
Oliddon, ''when Egypt first presents herself to our view, she
stands forth not in childhood, but with the maturity of man-
hood's age, arrayed in the time-worn habiliments of civiliza-
tion.'"
^ At the head of this list we would place the first part of the " Types
of Mankind," by Nott & Gliddon : Phila. ed. 1854. This is the latest
book upon this subject, and a work of great learning and research, em-
bodying a Tast amount of Taluable information, collected from the most
authentic sources. *< Natural History of Man,*' in fiye Tolumes, Lend,
ed. 1848, by Dr. Pritchard; also *' Varieties of Man," Lond ed. 1851.
** Knox's Races of Men," Phila. ed. 1850. The great work of Jaquinot,
** Considerations 06n4rales sur 1' Anthropologic Zoologie," 1846. The
works of Charles Pickering, Naturalist to the U. S. Exploring Expedi-
tion. The Researches of I^psius, an explorer sent out to Egypt by the
Prussian GoTernment, in 1842-3 — the translations of which may be
found in Bohn's Library. Also the great works of Champollion, Belxoni,
and Rosellini, with their plates, copied accurately from the Egyptian;
which may be seen, on a folio scale, in Harrard College Library. ** Cra-
nia iEgj'ptiaca," by Dr. Morton, Phila. 1844; also <* Crania Americana."
"Otia iEgyptiaca," by G. R. Gliddon, a collection of facta from twenty
years' residence in Egypt.
And how long a time will be required from him to roll back
the wave of oblivion that has passed over this ancient seat of
Nilotic civilization ; to turn back the tide of five thousand
years, and recall from the dark abyss of the past the long-lost
arts and sciences, all traces of which have nearly aded from
the memory of man ; to reconstruct and readorn those ancient
and modem wonders of the world whose gigantic ruins have
withstood the dilapidating scourges of time for more than five
thousand years ? Is such a dream within the range of human
possibility ? We answer, no : nothing but a miracle can ever
produce such an effect.
^ The snake's poison anns their weapons, and her body is eaten.
Throughout all the deserts, as in ancient times, the grasshopper is used
as an article of food. — Africa and Am. Flag, p. 92. It is said that slavery
and oppression have been the cause of their present degradation. But
what other nation has not been weighed down by the same incubus ?
' Tet the Africans Uto in similar latitudes, and in some of the finest
climates in the world.
stars that she left in her trail 1 Oreat Britain was once peopled
bj a race of Cannibals, once tributary to the great Roman
Conqaeror, and her sons fit only to be the slaves of Romans.
Yet, by the commingling of a five-fold race there has grown op
a mighty nation, who claims to be master of the sea, and upon
whose empire the sun always shines.'
^ And she carried along with her, from her earliest history, the worst
form of slaTery. (Yid. supra.)
' They haye all adyanced with the inoubns of slaTery hanging to the
ear.
who are not classed as citizens or members of the body politic by the con-
stitution, not capable of being entmsted with the rights and duties of a
sitizen in the United States.
1 Their inferiority and unfitness for companionship with the whites has
often been made a matter of legislative enactment, by prohibiting mar-
riages between the two races, and in excluding them from all the highest
functions of citizens and social beings with the whites. See collection of
legislatiTe enactaients upon this subject in the opinion of the Supreme
Court of the United States in the Dred Scott oase, 19 How. Rep. p. 416.
SLAYSBT IN THE UNITED BTATE8. 195
^ He may thus run the race out into a monad. See " Vestiges of
CreaUon.*'
* There may be some very rare instances of this in the higher species,
from some local cause, but with the negro it is quite common as a habit.
17*
ESSAY VIII.
1 These trnths are set forth in a strikiDg light in the very learned and
masterly opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the Dred
Seott case. See 19 Hou. Rep. p. 408-410. It is there decided that the
descendants of African slaxes are not citizens of the United States within
the meaning of the Constitution, even: though they be free.
which ever have been, and ever will be, sooner or later, when
left to themselves, in a state of barbarism. Their condition
among the whites is necessarily that of pupilage and dependence.
yy^ Considerations of this kind first induced civilized nations to
^ purchase them as slaves. Slavery, as we have before said, bad
its origin in the stern yet merciful dictates of humanity ; the
very word from which they take their name in the Latin lan-
guage, indicates the act of mercy that spared their lives. ^
Slavery originated from the same cause, and existed by the same
laws in Africa.' This principle of national law that governed
the whole ancient world, took effect there also ; and thousands
and millions of the hapless wretches who fell into the hands of
their otherwise merciless captors, were by its benign influence
snatched, as it were, from the jaws of death. But by the
barbarous customs of the country, their blood was spared but
for a time ; till the anniversary of some funeral rites or festive
occasion, to water the graves of the ancestors of their victors.
Wars and revolutions had destroyed and enslaved nations, till
one-sixth owned and held the other five-sixths of the entire
population in bondage. The less the demand for these preserved
captives as merchandize, the less value and consequence they
became to their African owners, and even burdensome to sap-
port ; and hence the greater number could be sacrificed on all
occasions, and the more shocking these scenes of carnage and
bloodshed became to glut the blood-thirsty mania of these
African savages.
' Wheat's Elements of Inter. Law, p. 194. The slave trade is not pro-
hibited bj the code of nations ; this principle of national law is still in
force in Africa, and in all nations where it has not been abolished by
municipal regulations. Op. oit. (in loco.). Case of Diana StoweU,
1 Dod. p. 95.
> It will, doubtless, be asked why they were, when resoaed, still kept
as slaves. The answer is, because commeroe was the only channel
through which they could be reached, and even this change was fraught
with great blessings to the slave.
Every human being with African blood in his veins, who has
escaped from this maelstrom of African slavery and of human
. misery, lived through the horrors of the middle passage, and
**0f course, this is only a revival of the African slave trade, under the
hypocritical name of apprenticeship."
to bring back the women, and also the people from the slaughter
of .Chederlaomer and the kings that were with him at the bat-
tle of Shay eh, to pay tithes of all to Melchisedec, the Jewish
High Priest ; and to divide the spoils with the king of Sodom
and give him the people;^ the same principle of national law
that permitted the Hebrew slave-dealers ander the Mosaic code
to purchase the captives of the heathen roand about them ; the
same principle that permitted governor Winthrop to brand the
captive Peqnods on the shoulder, and send them with the ne-
groes to the West Indies for slaves, has also, from the earliest
ages, prevailed in Africa, as well as all other nations.' By this
law of captivity, the custom of sparing the lives of their cap-
tives made them their property, as it did in ancient Greece,
Rome, and all the nations of Europe. This law, as we have
before remarked, was founded in mercy ; it was one step in the
progress of civilization ; it was enacted in favor of human life.
In Africa, as in all nations, these captives were lawful arti-
cles of commerce ; the right of the African owner to sell them
was perfect and indefeasible, and (as we shall show more fully
hereafter), has been universally so held by the judicial tribunals
of all civilized nations. Therefore, slaves were originally pro-
cured from Africa in a regular and lawful course of trade ; it
was a legal commerce, carried on by many pious men, under
the permission and patronage of Christian sovereigns. As in
all other commercial enterprises, companies were chartered by
the British Parliament to promote this kind of trade with
Africa. At length, bad men engaged in the trade, perverted
its original purpose, and abused this privilege.
^«
18
were mostlj reshipped at these places for the We6t Indies and
Southern markets.^ England, France, Spain, and Portugal,
were, for a long time, and some still are, deeply engaged in
this traffic. The British Colonies in America made sereral in-
effectnal attempts to suppress it, but were always overpowered
by the authority of the mother country.
• Census U. S. 1850.
But is not the same true of the East India company ? look
at the horrors and abuse of the opium trade, and others, which
will be more fully set forth hereafter. The following passage,
it is said, was originally inserted in the Declaration of Inde-
pendence, by Mr. Jefferson. Speaking of the king of England,
he says, "He has waged a cruel war against human nature
itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the
persons of a distant people who never offended him ; capturing
and carrying them away into slavery in another hemisphere, or
to incur a miserable death in their transportation thither. This
piratical warfare, the opprobrium of infidel powers, is the warfare
of the Christian king of Oreat Britain. Determined to keep
open a market where men should be bought and sold, he has
prostituted his negative for the suppressing of every legislative
attempt to prohibit or restrain this execrable commerce." In
the first place, it can hardly be said that the British nation
waged a war against human nature in permitting and encour-
aging the African slave trade ; it was, as we have said, in its
real design, or as patronized by government, dictated by
humanity. In the second place, it violated no rights of life or
liberty by capturing and carr3ring away a distant people into
slavery ; it found them already in slavery and doomed to inevi-
table destruction in their native country. It found them lawfully
held and owned by their native masters, and purchased them in
a fair and legitimate course of trade ; capturing and kidnapping
were never sanctioned by royal authority. Neither was it " the
opprobrium of infidel powers." Africa has been visited by
the slave merchant of nearly every nation of the earth, as a
lawful commerce ; and the traffic is given up by African poten-
tates at this day, with the greatest reluctance. It is even the
source of a violent prejudice in Africa against those who have
abolished it, and becomes a great obstacle to their commerce
with those nations.
18* o
^ The Sapreme Court of the United States have recently decided that
negroes are not citizens of the United States within the meaning of the
Constitution of the U. S. ; that the principles of our government do not
apply to them ; that the government of Uie United States was designed
for tile white man, and that slaves are lawful property. (Dred Scott Case.)
* CiTil code of La., Art. 86, Domat. torn. 2, sect. 97; ff. D. lib. 1, 5, 1.
4, 8. 1, et Tit 6, 1. 1, sect. 1. This definition does not make a slare, but
presupposes his existence. A thing cannot be defined that has no exi!<t-
ence.
slave who is dissatisfied with his master can select another more
congenial to his notion, and by requesting the change, the
master will generally find it to his interest to grant his request,
as the value of the slave's services consists, in a great measare,
in his being contented and satisfied with his master. For this
reason, slaves are seldom sold except in families. The idea is
prevalent among the misinformed upon this subject, that no
heed is given to the desires of the slave in this particular ; but
this the universal experience of every man acquainted with the
management of slaves will contradict. Though the slave's
right to property is not known de jure^ yet it exists, and is
practically recognised de facto — as much so as the property of
a free person ; and in their intercourse with the world it is uni-
versally observed and respected. Like the Roman slaves they
have their pecu/ii/m, to which the master lays no claim.* And
many a one, by industry and economy, acquires sufficient means
to purchase his freedom. But comparatively few are willing to
invest it in that way. The remark of an industrious and eco-
nomical negro man, belonging to a friend of mine, illustrates
their general ideas of freedom. It was generally supposed
that he had accumulated a considerable amount of money. I
asked him one day, in the presence of his master, why he did
not purchase his freedom, to which he replied that negro pro-
perty was so fluctuating that he considered it a poor investment,
and he was looking out for a better speculation.
Thus, any slave, who has been well disciplined and enured to
habits of industry and economy, who will improve his opportu-
nity, may actually save as much for himself, besides the service
that his master claims, as the majority of laborers in the free
States, who labor for from ten to fifteen dollars per month,
clothe themselves, and sustain all losses from sickness, want of
employment, &c.
attending church ; but such men are not peculiar to the slave
States.
The relation of master and slave puts the latter in hit power
The same animal propensities that produce the lax and dis-
solute vices of the females, produce the jealousy and disaffection
of the males. Jealousy, the invariable concomitant of a weak
and dissolute mind, is the enslaving sin of the black man. He
18 naturally the most jealous of all creatures, and comes nearest
to a monomaniac upon this subject of any being in the world.
This is a constant source of family bickerings, broils and diffi-
culties, that sometimes end in tragical scenes of blood. Hence
arise the difficulties and trials of the master in preserving the
proper discipline and government of the quarter. It therefore
19*
\^
When age and infirmities have rendered them unfit for the
daily duties of regular hands, the men are assigned some light
task about the garden or the quarter, suited to their ability ;
and the old women are left to attend to the children, knit, sew,
or spin, and sometimes, when they are able, to cook. They
^ We find in the census that of the f^ee negroes there are 24,160 over
the age of sixty. Who shaU provide for these decrepid men and helpless
P
women ? Left to the cold charities of strangers, they linger out a misera-
ble existence: not so with the slave; of these, we have 114,752 over the
age of sixty ; yet are they, for their faithful services, kindly treated by
their masters. The free States, in 18,000,000, have but 5,641 over the
age of ninety; while of the slaves, in 8,200,412, there are 4,109 over
that age, which is indisputable evidence of their kind treatment. (See
post, p. 867.)
Like the heroic pilot upon the burning ship, tossed upon the
high and giddy wave, he bravely kept his post to the last.
One by one, to the number of some eighteen or twenty, in the
space of a few days, he carefully consigned them to the dust ;
till his own choice spirit, glowing with the warmest sympathies
for sufiFering humanity, took its flight, and his weeping servants
in turn sorrowfully bore a kind and humane master to the gates
of the grave.*
South have no affection for their masters and mistresses ; bat bow mis-
taken would they find themselves could they but witness their lamenta-
tions and sorrowings frequently at the death and burial of those who
haye long kindly and carefully watched over them I While masters and
mistresses will peril their lives for their servants, they, in turn, are as
faithful and devoted to them as their own children in time of sickness.
This is abundantly proven by the numerous instances of self-sacrifioe and
heroic devotion of the slaves to their masters and mistresses, recently
Bhown in Portsmouth and Norfolk, Va.
^ Who would not rather be the fictitious Simeon Legree than the real
Thomas Ward?
The history of the present and the past proves that the con-
dition of the American slave is the happiest one that he is
capable of enjoying. In no age or nation have the same number
of Africans attained to so high an elevation in their character
and condition. Nowhere else have they enjoyed so many of the
blessings of Christian society and the privileges of civilize^
life. They are well fed, well clothed, well cared for in sickness
and in health, in infancy and old age. Enjoying religions
privileges in common with the free white population, they are
wholly devoid of cares and anxieties for themselves and their
families.
'* This is a striking testimony, as the New York Express justly remarks,
to the humanizing and elerating influences with which the African is
•nrrounded in the United (Southern) States." — Richmond ( Va.) Dispatch.
of the evil would condemn civil f]^overnment, and all its coercive
measures. Besides, the idea of laboring without compensation
supposes an impossibility ; the food and raiment necessary to the
existence of the slave is an essential compensation. Its adequacy
has no reference to the definition. Therefore we must seek for
some other definition of the sin of this relation. It consists,
says another, in unjustly depriving the slave of his liberty ; but
this is but another form of the same idea, and in part the peti'
tio principii. The question of justice or injustice in depriving
any subject of his liberty, is one to be determined with refer-
ence to the rights of all parties, and the end and object of all
government. But, says another, its sin consists in degrading
the slave to a chattel, and making him -liable to be bought and
sold as an article of merchandize. But who is responsible for
this ? We have shown that government and law do not places
hut find him in that condition — a condition, in many instances,
from which they are incapable of extricating him, as in case of
the negro in the Slave States. But this point we shall con-
sider more fully hereafter.
fonnded upon the same reasons, and exist from the same neces-
sity. One of the principal reasons that sustains them, and
renders them both alike necessary, is the peace, prosperity and
safety of society ; or, in other words, the greatest amount of
good to the greatest number. To this end all governments
have a right, and it is their leading object, to shape their laws.
All governments have the right, and it is their object, to secure,
first, their own permanency, preservation and perpetuity ; and
second, the best possible state of society in the best possible
manner. They must, therefore, be their own judges of the
manner in which this end shall be obtained, and have the right
to employ the most expedient measures to secure the same
Hence, the right of any independent government to regulate
and uphold the institution of slavery, so long as it may be
deemed expedient, and conducive to the common defence and
general welfare of the State, is indisputable.
On the other hand, it is the duty of the slave to ' ' obey hia
master with fear and trembling ^^^ i, e, with a high sense of
reverence for their superiors ; and ^*vnth singleness of heart,^^
t. e. with a willingness and sincerity; **as unto Christ,^^ i. e,
they owe, in a degree, the same faithful obedience, reverence
and devotion to their earthly, that they do to their Heavenly
Master; **not with eye-service, as men-pleasers, but as the
servants of Christy doing the will of Ood from the heart ;^^
** with good will doing service as to the Lord, and not to men."
ESSAY IX.
tensive public works ; the army ; the navy ; the marine laws
and regulations, and a thousand other collections and associa-
tions that might be mentioned. To be consistent, these fasti-
dious conservators of public morals, who believe in their dele-
terious influences upon morals and religion, should wage the
same war of extermination against them all.
But slavery is condemned by the golden rule, ''Whatsoever
ye would that men should do to you do ye even so to them. "
This, we have endeavored to show, imposes no obligation upon
the master to liberate his slave, but directly the reverse. But
it denies the slave all means of education and hope of improve-
ment, and thus puts an interdict on his advancement. This
position is one of the fundamental errors in the creed of the
Abolitionists. The relation of the slave to his master, and his
association with civilized life, instead of denying him the
sources of education and means of improvement, is a constant
source of education and means of improving his character and
condition ; instead of interdicting his advancement it prevents
him from degenerating into his native barbarism.^
> See Essay on the Political Aspect of Slarery, &o., post, 812, et seq.
and wife, parent and child, guardian and ward, tntor and papO,
master and apprentice, and every other instance of the iodi?!-
dual authority of one person over another. No honest philo-
sopher can fail to see the analogy of these relations in this
particular. It is said, that in the association of husband and
wife, and parent and child, there is a natural guarantee for the
discharge of reciprocal duties and for kind treatment in the
incentive for conjugal and parental affection, that is unknown
to any other relation. But this conclusion, it will be readily
seen, rests upon false premises. The relation itself furnishes
no more assurance in one instance than in the other of the dis-
charge of these reciprocal duties. On the contrary, where the
domestic relation is unfortunate, the very reverse of this is
true.
back of her residence, bat she told her hnsband, who pnrsned
the ruffian, and would have killed him, but his gun missed fire."
— Missouri Democrat,
bis house early one Monday mornin}^, and went sporting in the
woods with his gun and dog, leaving a wife and child locked np
in the house, both of whom were dangerously sick, without food
or drink of any description within their reach. The inhuman
wretch remained away all day, and uptil nearly 12 o'clock that
night. About 10 o'clock in the evening some of the neighbors
were alarmed by the groans of the woman, and the crying of
the child — heard cries for food, water, Ac, Ac. The doors
were forced open, and a horrible sight presented itself. The
woman was in the last agonies of death, the immediate cause
of which was undoubtedly neglect and starvation. She died in
about one hour after being discovered. The child, about a
year and six months old, was cared for by the neighbors, and
exhibited painful symptoms of hunger, disease, and most
wanton and brutal neglect. The wretch of a father returned
before his wife died, but could give no excuse for his unpardon-
able absence, or for leaving his family in such a destitute con-
dition. " — Louisville Democrat.
mm
^^mm
the age — and all who feel interested in the welfare of the whole
human race, should serionslj consider the subject. Manj
women — as well as men — are not conscious of the necessitj of
it — not now — not feeling wronged by popular usages, having
favored positions, or being content to be the mere appendages
of men, if not their slaves. Into some women's souls, however,
the iron has entered, and here follows a record of wrongs
endured bj a few which we take from The Una for the present
month. They are extracts from letters addressed to Mrs. Davis,
whose editorial comments follow them." w. h. f.
"Letter No, 1. — Please do not send the ' Una' any more—
I cannot receive it. My husband tore the last one from my
hands and burned it. Oh, for an hour of peace, of rest ! A
blessing which I shall never again enjoy, till I hear ' the songs
of angels round the Throne. ' Sometimes I wish my ears were
duller than they are, I hear so many heart-grieving, wrath-
provoking things ; but patience, patience, says my proud, firm
heart. *To bear, is to conquer our fate. ^
the protection of the wife and children, fails of its object among
the "Christian Socialists" of Massachusetts. They are laboring
and longing for the millenniam of ''Free Loveism" (as they
term it). The only security for coig'ugal attachment, fidelity, and
happiness, consists i^pt in the respect of the relation itself, bat in
the kind and amiable disposition of the parties. Bnt will the
same cause secure no kind treatment to the slaye f Whateyer
secures family peace, prosperity and happiness, secures also
kind and humane treatment to him. When all other motives
fail, the slave has the security, for food and raiment, at least,
from the love of gain and pecuniary considerations of his
master, an incentive ever opposed to the claims of the wife and
children upon his clemency. Another school of Abolitionists,
in carrying out their principles to their legitimate results, lay the
axe at the root of all government and laws that forcibly deprive
men of their liberty in their administration and execution.
They stand upon the broad platform of abolition, non-resist-
ance, and the anH-coerdtione regni. Among the thousand
ludicrous extracts that might be made from their publications,
we submit only the following letter of Thomas Haskell to Adam
Ballon, editor of the Practical Christian.
21*
246 THE abolitionists:
* Who can wonder, however much they may deplore the error,
that sach men should recruit their exhausted energies with an
artificial stimulus V
But ' ' a prophet is not without honor, save in his own coun-
try ;" therefore these Abolitionists and fomenters of disaffection
and disunion, have to look to a foreign land in hope of reward.
They must go to Great Britain for sympathy, to receive the
congratulations and praises of the oppressive and tyrannical
aristocracy of England. There are treasured up for them
crowna of glory, and honors immortal. And Great Britain
herself, with a laboring population literally weltering in their
own grim misery, starvation and despair^ is sending back her
British Slavery.
* See White Slaves of £ngland, p. 16. This most excellent work con-
tain! a compilation of testimony and facts collected entirely firom foreigm
sources of the most reliable kind.
two rooms, one above, one below ; gutters raDDing through the
lower room to let off the water ; onglazed window-frames, now
boarded up, now nncovered to the elements, the boarding going
for firewood ; the inmates disabled by rheumatism, agne, and
typhus: broad, stagnant, open ditches, close to the doors;
heaps of abominations piled round the dwellings ; and it is in
these worse than pig-styes that one of the most beautiful fabrics
that luxury demands, or art supplies, is fashioned. The parish
houses are still worse. In each room live a family night and
day, the space being about twelve feet square. In one (says
our author), were a man, bis wife, and eight children; the
father and mother and two children lay in one bed, the remain-
ing six were huddled together head and foot, three at the top
and three at the foot, in the other bed. The eldest girl being
fifteen or sixteen, the eldest boy between fourteen and fifteen.
Is it not horrible to think of men and women being brought up
in this brutish manner in Christian England I The lowest of
savages are not worse cared for than these children of a luxu-
rious and refined country. »'»
** that moment their langs receive our air, their shackles fall."
Bat, tnrn to Catholic Ireland, with her qaintnple population,
in rags and wretchedness, staining the sweetest scenery ever eye
reposed on I Scenery that hath wreathed the immortal sham-
rock around the brow of painting, poetry, and eloquence. Talk
of ancient miseries in the mines of Lanrian ; talk of the tears
and groans of the Roman Ergastnla; talk of the bondage and
chains of the Ottoman's slave, of the degradation and soffer-
ings of the subjects of Moslem power I
pig-
Oaunt, ragged figures crawl out of these hovels and plant
food of the inmates during the year, or swarm the roads and
thoroughfares as wretched beggars. But the tenure even of
the tender mercies of the lay proctor of some absent lord, and
If they do not pay their rent at a proper time, they are liable
22
So scant are the earnings of those who labor day and night
in the cities and towns, that they may become panpers if thrown
out of employment a single week. Upon an average a hard- ^
working peasant can earn five shillings a week ; two of which
must go for rent, leaving him only three shillings to buy his
food and raiment. The slaves of Great Britain are not attached
to the soil, and bought and sold with it like the serfs of Russia,
or the negroes of the United States ; but far better would it be
for them were such their destiny. Then the rich landlord who
enjoys the labor of his hundred, would also incur the responsi-
bility of their maintenance in sickness, and in infancy and old
age. But they are called freemen to enable their lords to
detach them from the soil at will, and after spending long and
faithful lives in their service, till they have passed their days
of usefulness, then to turn them adrift and drive them forth to
starve, perish, or become paupers at public charge, without
incurring any penalties for their cruelties, such as the slave-
holders of other countries would sufifer. The Russian, the
Spanish, and the North American slave-holder must support his
slaves in sickness and helpless old age, or suffer the penalties
of the law for his neglect. But the British slave-holder is
exempt from such a tax ; he may leave them to perish by thou-
sands with impunity. His Irish slaves may be saved from star-
vation by American bounty, but neither American or any other
human law can punish the offender. Truly then did Southey
write:
* How much of this was the proceeds of the slave labor of the South,
oontribated as thousands were by the people of the Southern States for
the relief of starring Ireland f
the rest of mankind, little has hitherto been known aboat them.
Unlike the other inhabitants upon the face of the earth, they
liTe by rifling its bowels ; and, like the children of Erebus,
they are doomed to spend their lives in the lowest depth of her
treasures. In vain is the light in its coming ; it shines only
upon their tenantless dwellings. In vain do the jubilant Toices
of the morning sound through the land ; in vain are the waning
seasons succeeded in their course, and nature robed in her
varying mantle ; their eyes seldom behold th^se glowing beau-
ties, their ears seldom hear these joyAil sounds. Their lot is
cast in those subterranean regions of darkness, where not a ray
of heaven's light can penetrate their gloomy abodes. There
they toil on from week to week in darkness, scarcely at any time
beholding the light of day. Their lives are as monotonous
and mechanical as the evolutions of a tread-mill. It never
varies from the same routine of ascending and descending by
tlie same shaft, to and from the bottom of the same pit, to their
subterranean fields of labor. In the division of labor there,
each has his specific duties, that admit of no variation. Here
they spend their lives, father, mother, sister and brother, toge-
ther, from the cradle to the grave, without once dreaming that
they are capable of a higher and more noble sphere of action.
Indeed is English happiness like Spartan freedom, for ^'the
Helots are overlooked ^^/ We read of slavery in the mines of
ancient Greece, we read of the monuments of Egypt, the
gigantic public works of ancient Rome. We may imagine the
suffering, the toil, sweat and blood of the slaves spent in their
erection ; but it remains to contemplate the horrors of a life in
the coal-mines of Great Britain, to place the crowning scene
upon this chapter of human degradation and misery.
Here the boy was made to strip, and the Commissioner, Mr.
Symonds, found a large cicatrix, likely to have been made by
such an instrument, which must have passed through the glutei
muscles, and have stopped only short of the hip-joint. There
were twenty other wounds, occasioned by hurrying in low
workings, upon and around the spinous processes of the verte-
brae, from the sacrum upwards. The boy continued —
" He used to hit me with the belt and maul or sledge, and
fling coals at me ; he served me so bad that I left him, and
went about to see if I could get a job ; I used to sleep in the
cabins upon the- pit's bank, and in the old pits that had done
working ; I laid upon the shale all night ; I used to get what
I could to eat ; I ate, for a long time, the candles that I found
in the pits, that the colliers left over-night ; I had nothing else
to eat ; I looked about for work, and begged of the people a
bit ; I got to Bradford after awhile, and had a job for three
months while a collier's lad was poorly ; when he came back, I
was obliged to leave."
marks of many old wounds apon it that bad healed up. One
of the bones of one arm was broken below the elbow, and, from
appearances, had been so for some time. The boy, on being
brought before the Commissioners, was unable either to sit or
stand, and was placed on the floor of the office, laid on his side
npon a small cradle-bed. It appeared that the boy's arm had
been broken by a blow from an iron rail, and the fracture had
never been set, and that he had been kept at work for several
weeks with his arm in the condition above described. It fur-
ther appeared in evidence, and was admitted by Brierly himself,
that he had been in the habit of beating the boy with a flat
The girls associate and labor with the men, who are in a
state of nakedness, and they have on no other garment than a
ragged shift, or, in the absence of that, a pair of broken trou«
sers, to cover their persons.
Mary Glover tells a similar tale ; she hurries with a belt and
chain ; wears a shift and trousers ; is thirty-eight years old, &c.
tuore than one man can do to lift the burden on her back. The
tags or straps are placed over the forehead, and the body bent
in a semicircnlar form in order to stiffen the arch. * * Females
snbmit to work where no man, or even lad, coald be got to
labor ; they work in bad places and roads op to their knees in
water, in a posture nearly double, where they continue until
the last hour of pregnancy : they are brought to premature
graves," Ac.
But what relief was this ? The minority of the abased and
saffering that came to the notice of the commissioners were
oyer ten years of age. As to the females, though it prohibited
their working in the mines, yet it furnished them no aid, or
other means of support. They were driven there, in the fint
instance, to escape from starvation. The bill prevented them
even this desperate means of escape, and, soon after its passage,
petitions were sent to Parliament, from the mining districts,
praying for the repeal of the law. There were many proprie-
tors of mines in Parliament, and their influence was sufficient
to nullify the law in practice.
Much that has been said upon British slavery in the mines
will apply with equal force to many other divisions of this sys-
tem of oppression.
England has been called the '' game cock" of Europe, and
her large manufacturing towns the toy-shops of the world.
The English people, alone, supply a large portion of the na-
tions of the earth with the products of their labor. The looms
of Manchester, and the mills and work-shops of Birmingham,
London, and Liverpool, have long been sending their articles
to every nation. Yiewed at a distance, and by first impres-
sions, this gigantic system of productive industry presents
nought but a magnificent aspect to the admiring beholder.
But, upon closer inspection, and a more minute survey of its
elements, one beholds a picture of human wretchedness and
woe that turns his admiration into horror and disgust.
Mr. Baines states that about one and a half millions are em-
ployed in the cotton manufactures alone.^ The whole number
" I have a wife and nine children, and a pretty hard time we
have of it, too, we are so many ; and most of the children are
so small they can do little for the support of the family. I
generally get from two shillings to a crown a day for carrying
luggage ; and some of my children are in the mills ; the rest
are too young to work yet. My wife is never well : it comes
very hard on her to do the work of the family. We often talk
these things over, and feel very sad. We live in a poor
house ; we are not able to clothe our children comfortably ; not
one of them ever went to school ; they could go to Sunday
school, but we can't make them look decent enough to go to
such a place. As for meat, we never taste it ; potatoes and
coarse bread are our principal food. We can't save anything
for a day of want ; almost everything we get for our labor goes
for taxes. I have gone home at night many times and told my
wife that I had eaten a bite at the chop-house on the way, and
was not hungry — she and the children could eat my share.
Life is not worth much to a poor man in England, and some-
times Mary aod I, when we talk about it, pretty mach conclude
that we should be better off if we were dead. I sometimes
wonder that God suffers so many poor people to come into the
world."
throw o£f the iron heel of the aristocracy upon their necks ; and
though they see their families actually starving around them,
yet they delay, and still delay taking that highway to freedom
— manly and united rebellion. According to the report of the
board of Commissioners before referred to, the laborers in the
factories are committed to the charge of oyerseers, who have
the full power of masters, and exercise it with the crael sway
of tyrants. Without distinction of sex, of however tender an
age, they are subjected to the same barbarous and inhuman
treatment. We might quote a volume of the testimony of
witnesses taken by these Commissioners, to prove the truth of
the above assertion ; but a few examples must suffice.
*-* If an operative does not obey an order, he is not merely',
reproved as a freeman, but kicked and beaten as a slave. He '.
has no alternative but submission, for if he resents it he is dis- (
missed and sent forth to starve. A more compulsory system ',
of labor cannot exist, for the only freedom the subject enjoys is /
to choose between submission and endurance on the one hand, '
and a lingering death by starvation on the other. Such being
the system under which he works, the operative has the look
and air of a degraded Helot. Most of them are unhealthy,
destitute of spirit, and enfeebled by toil and privation. The
hand-loom weavers, who are numerous in some districts, are
the most miserable of all laborers, being hardly able, by the
most excessive toil, to earn scant food and filthy shelter. This
death struggle for the bare bread to keep soul and body
together, necessarily forces the parents to send their children
at early and tender ages to the mills, to aid them in procuring
a support ; and there they are often whipped, scourged, and
more cruelly treated than the most abject slaves. When the
father, no longer able to make a support, to avoid certain
death by starvation, goes to the poor-hoase, he has no longer
any control over his children. They are at the mercy of the
parish, and may be separated, apprenticed to all sorts of mas-
ters, and treated, to all intents and purposes, as slaves. The
invention of labor-saving machinery has brought the services
of children into great demand in manufacturing towns. Think
of the vast number of children that may be had among four
millions of paupers I They may be bought at the work-houses
at a cheap rate, and subjected to cruel masters and overseers
who may beat and maltreat them with impunity. ,
'' When she was a child, too yoong to pat on her ain claUhSt
the overlooker nsed to beat her till she screamed again. GFets
many a good beating and swearing. They are all very ill ased ;
the overseer carries a strap. Has been licked with it fonr or
five times. The boys are often severely strapped; the girls
sometimes get a clout. The mothers often complain of this.
. . Has often seen the workers beat crnelly. Has seen the
girls strapped, bat the boys were often beat so that they fell to
the floor, in the coarse of the beating with a rope with foor
tails called a cat. Has seen the boys black and bine crying for
mercy," Ac.
** Do you know how old you are ? Near upon forty according
to my indentures. — Do you know where you were born ? No ;
I only know that I came from St. Pancras parish, London. —
. Do you know the names of your parents ? No. . . — Have
you any children ? Three. — Do you send them to the factories ?
, No ; I would rather have them transported. — What are the
forms of cruelty that you have seen and suffered, practised upon
children in factories f I have seen the time when two hand-
vices of a pound weight each, have been screwed to my ears at
Littleton mills, in Derbyshire ; here are the scars still remaining
behind my ears. Three or four of us have been hung at once
to a cross-beam above the machinery, hanging by our hands,
without shirts or stockings. Mind, we were apprenticed from
different parishes without father or mother to protect us. . .
Then we used to stand up, in a skip, without our shirts, and be
beat with straps or sticks ; the skip was to prevent as from
running away from the strap. . . Then they used to tie on a
00NSI8TSNCT OF THKB LABORS. 26f
" What are the effects of the present system of labor in the
factories ? From my earliest recollections I have found it
awfully detrimental to the health and well-being . . Through
excessive labor there and confinement (in the heat, dust, and
unwholesome atmosphere of the various apartments of the mill),
there is a total loss of appetite— a kind of languor steals over
the whole frame, enters to the very core, saps the foundations
of the best constitutions, and lays our strength prostrate in the
dust. . . By protracted labors there is an sdarming increase of
cripples, in various parts of this town, which has come under
my own observation. "
c'^o bad that they must be panished ; a strap is ased for this
y 'purpose ; beating is necessary, on acconnt of their being idle.
^ We find it out in this way : we give them the same nuim>er of
^ bobbins each ; when the number they ought to finish falls off,
^ then they are corrected. . . At the factory of Messrs. Mills &
' Elliot they go on working all night, as well as all day. I be-
'^ lieve them to have done so for the last year and a half. (Ai
^ this moment, says our author, a respectable looking woman
/ entered rvith a petition against negro slavery ; after she was
^, gone, Mr, Fortesque continued.) I think home slavery as
.'^bad as it can be abroad ; worst of anywhere in the factories."
' :.This young lady was doubtless breathless in her zeal, and en-
'' thusiastic in her sympathy for the far-off negro bondmen, in
other parts of the world, while the tears, sorrows and sufferings
of her own kindred blood, groaning in their dying struggles
with starvation, oppression and wretchedness, of an unparalleled
kind, elicits not a single emotion from her tender and sympa-
thetic soul for their condition.
Read the following extracts, and tell me, gentle reader, why
it is that such scenes excite no sympathy for the sufferings of
the Anglo-Saxon race.
"Much has been said of the black slaves and their chains.
No doubt they are entitled to freedom ; but are there no slaves
but those of a sable hue ? has slavery no sort of existence among
the children of the factories ? Yes ; and chains were some-
times introduced, though these chains might not be forged f^om
iron. A child not ten years of age havinpr been late at the fac-
tory one morning, had, as a punishment, a rope put around its
neck, to which was attached a weight of twenty pounds ; and
thus burdened, like a galley-slave, it was compelled to labor
for a length of time, in the midst of an impure air, in a heated
room. The speaker said he heard the mother, with her eyes
filled with tears, relate this shocking tale of infant suffering in
the factories."^
The evidences upon which we rely are all drawn from EnglisK
sources of authority. The Report of this Parliamentary Com- *
mittee, detailed to inquire into the condition and treatment of ^
the operatives in the several departments of labor in Great '
Britain, as well as their own public prints, and the speeches of
their public men, abound with instances of the most brutal and
inhuman treatment to these hapless orphan children, consigned
by the poor-laws and workhouse system to conditions of phy-
sical suffering and mental depravity that shock the most har-
dened sensibilities. In many instances without either father or
mother, or any one to protect them, these helpless, inoffensive
creatures are driven, by the fears of starvation and the lash, to
the most wearisome and exhausting toil, in the most unwhole-
some or dangerous situations, which render them liable to be
crippled for life, or consign them to a premature grave.
FACTORY CHILD.
23*
' Let it be asked of Soathom masters, what woald be the fate of one,
ill any community of the Southern States, who was guilty of such con-
duct to his slaves ? And the uniTersal answer will be, that public indig-
nation would expel him from that community.
^ Home's Evidences, p. 84. No. 128. See, also, White Slaves of Eng-
land, p. 174.
'' Qranting that the negro gangs who are worked on cotton-
gprounds of the Southern States of North America, or in the
sugar-plantations of Brazil, are slaves ; in what way should we
speak of persons who are circumstanced in the manner we are
about to relate ? Let us consider them as the inhabitants of a
distant region — say New Orleans — no matter about the color
of their skins, and then ask ourselves, what should be our opi-
nion of a nation in which such things are tolerated. They are
of a sex and age the least qualified to struggle with their lot, —
young women, for the most part, between sixteen and thirty
years of age. As we would not deal in exaggeration, we would
premise that we take them at their busy season, just as writers
upon American Slavery are careful to select the season of cot-
ton-picking and sugar-rolling, to illustrate their theories. The
young female slaves then are worked in gangs in ill-ventilated
rooms, or rooms that are not ventilated at all ; for it is found
that if the air be admitted it brings with it the ' blacks,' of an
other kind, which damage the work upon which the seamstresses
are employed. This occupation is, to sew from morning till
night and night till morning — stitch, stitch, stitch — without
pause, without speech, without a smile, without a sigh. In
the grey of the morning they must be at their work» say at six
o'clock, having a quarter of an hour allowed them for break-
fast. The food served out to them is scanty and miserable
enough, but still, in all probability, more than their fevered
system can digest. We do not, however, wish to make out a
case of starvation; the sufifering is of another kind, equally
dreadful of endurance. From six o'clock till eleven it is stitch,
Rtitch. At eleven, a small piece of dry bread is served to each
seamstress, but still she must stitch on. At one o'clock, twenty
minutes are allowed for dinner, — a slice of meat and a potato,
with a glass of toast and water to each work-woman. Then
again to work — stitch, stitch, until five o'clock, when fifteen
minutes are again allowed for tea. The needles are then set in
motion once more — stitch, stitch, until nine o'clock, when fif-
teen minutes are allowed for supper — a piece of dry bread and
cheese, and a glass of beer. From nine o'clock at night until
one, two, and three o'clock in the 'morning, stitch, stitch; the
8
274 THE AB0LITI0NI8T8 :
1 American slayes are held to labor and serrice by law, and are pro-
tected by the same from all excess and cruel treatment British slayes
are compelled to serre from fear of starvation, and are without protectioiL
Which is the most abject slavery 7
Now lore of life and love of fine clothes are too very strong
fflotiye springs of human action."^
Beside the female, there are also the male slaves of the needle,
who, in common with all the apprentices of the workshops, are
sabjected to physical suffering by toil, starvation, and bodily
chastisement that finds scarce a parallel in the history of any
other system of slavery in the world. They are sometimes
struck with a red-hot iron. Says one of the witnesses, •* But
a few months ago an adult workman broke a boy's arm by a
blow with a piece of iron.'' . . Another boy, aged sixteen,
Bays, ** His master has cut his head open five or six times —
once with a key, and twice with a lock ; knocked the comer of a
lock into his head twice, and once with an iron bolt, " &c. We
might multiply the instances to a great number, taken from
Horn's Reports, also from Dickens' picture of Smike, in
Nickleby ; there are thousands of Smikes.
Us part. His master once cut his head open with a flat file
with a hammer, and drove the iron head of the hammer into
his side; his master often knocks him down upon the shop
floor. "^
What has been said upon slavery in the workshops will apply
to a great extent to
shipped to the asylam of the free, and throng the cities and
towns of the United States. Each parish has a work-hoose
which is under the control of several guardians, who, again,
are under the control and orders of a Board of Commissioners
sitting at London.
long, and fifteen broad, with a flagged pavement, and high walls
like that of a penitentiary : it is always kept locked. It resembles
in many respects, the Roman Ergastulnm, a place of confine-
ment for runaway slaves.
" People of both sexes, and oXall ages, both married and
unmarried — parents, brothers, sidters, and strangers — sleep
in the same rooms, and often in tlvB same beds. One gentle-
man tells us of six people of different sexes and ages, two of
whom were man and wife, sleeping inUhe same bed. Another,
of the uncle's and nieces in the same bVd together. Many tell
us of adult brothers and sisters sleeping in the same beds
together ; others tell us of rooms so filled with beds that there
is no space between them, but that brothers, sisters, and parents
crawl over each other half naked, in order to get to their
*' If I could fully describe to you the evils and sufferings en-
dured by the Indian emigrants (Coolies) in that horribly-
governed colony, I should rend the heart of the Christian worh
by a recital of enormities unknown in the worst periods of|
Colonial slavery. . . My soul has been deeply afflicted by all
y~'^
But the last, and one of the most repulsive forms of British
oppression which we shall notice, is
Now, let the people of England mark one thing. The cho-
lera originates in the East. It has visited us once, and is on
its march once more towards us.
Has any one yet imagined that this scourge may be possibly
the instrument of Divine retribution for our crimes and
cruelties f Has any one imagined that we have anything to do
with the creation of this terrible pestilence? Yet there is
scarcely a doubt that this awful instrument of death is occa-
sioned by this very monopoly of salt, — that it is the direct
work of the four-and-twenty men in Leadenhall Street. The
* For the horrors of the opium trade, see Medhurst's China, ThelwalPs
laiquities of the Opium Trade, and Montgomery Martin's Opium in Chin*.
It is well known what horrors, crimes, impoverishment and destruction
of families, the rage of opium-smoking introduced among millions of the
Chinese.
/ beneath its yoke, it is no evil in their sight. Their ears are deaf
to all cries ; their souls are impervious to all sense of wrong,
except those of the negroes in America. From the crowd^
Victories and work-shops ; from the pestilential hovel ; from the
dark and slave-filled coal-pits; from populous work-houses;
from the vast army of wandering beggars in England and Scot-
land ; from the perishing peasantry ; from the wretched Hin-
doos upon the Ganges and the Indus ; from the lowest depths
of misery among the betrayed Coolies of the West Indies, may
arise the cry for relief from their plunderers and their oppres-
sors, yet no sound of their supplication ever reaches the ears of
tamong them to deceive the people. '* But this was after twenty-
height innocent persons had been capitally convicted, nineteen
t^^hanged, and one pressed to death for refusing to plead. At the
/trial of one Burroughs, a most respectable clergyman, who had
/publicly tried to convince the people of their delusion, the
( witnesses testified that they saw the devil standing by, to put
Swords into his mouth. This, perhaps, is what is meant by
Li* Spectre Evidence."
inents, as our fathers have taught us," then there mast be snch
an idea as consistency and inconsistency with the laws of his
moral government, or right and wrong in an absolute sense.
ESSAY X.
Thus has our, enemy been shorn of his locks ; thus has the
weird monster. Fanaticism, been decapitated ; but he dies not
without a struggle. As it took the Republic of Rome three
hundred years to die, so the Black Republic in America may
for a while struggle in the violent throes and agonies of her
approaching dissolution. But the fiat has gone forth — the
culprit has been sentenced, and his doom is sealed. No effort
was spared to parry the blow about to be dealt upon his guilty
head. He found his sympathizers and abettors of the tribunal
even before which he had been arraigned. These captious
dissenters (caplorea legium) would fain have thwarted the
SLAYEBT IN THE UNITED STATES. 295
1 See collection of these State laws by the Conrt, in Scott ts. Sanford,
19 How. Rep. p. 408-417. Also 2 Kent, p. 258 (n. b.).
« 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 871.
Again, says Mr. Justice Curtis (p. 633) : ** For these reasons,
I am of the opinion thai so much of the several acts of Con-
gress as prohibit slavery, and involuntary servitude within
thai part of the Territory of Wisconsin lying north of thirty^
six degrees thirty minutes, north latitude, and west of the
Mississippi, are constitutional andvalid.^^ That *'the laws
of the United States in operation in the said territory at the
time of the plaintiff^ s residence there, did act directly on the
status of the plaintiff, and change it from a slave, to that of a
free man.^^ (p. 601.)
> Whoever wishea to examine the several laws and decisions upon this
subject more minutely, will find an interesting collection in 2d Kent, p.
258 (n. b), t^o at pago 72 (n. a), see also p. 89.
26
1 Pollard's Lessee vs. Hag:an, 8 How. 212. Parmale vt. First Manici-
pality of Orleans, 3 How. 589. Strader vs. Gealum, 16 How. 82. See aUo
remarks of Mr. Madison on the perfect nullity of this ordinance, Letter to
Robert Walsh, Nov. 27, 1819.
the Northern and Southern States, to show that the Soath was
not so hostile to her own interests as to blindly consent to em-
power Congress to circumscribe and crush her institutions, to
leave the fairest portions of the South in desolation and despair,
and blast all her future prospects for wealth, independence, and
equal power, by excluding her slave property from all the terri-
tories. We shall see by this that the doctrine of probability
also stands on the other side of the question. We commence
with the preamble. By this the first and fundamental object of
the Constitution was, '* to form a more perfect Union." Could
this be effected by excluding slavery and the slave States
entirely from the public domain ? would this naturally tend to
strengthen the bonds, that held the States together ? The sub-
sequent history of the country furnishes a lamentable refutation
of this assertion. Second, to ^^ establish justice''^ between the
States, and thus ^ insure domestic tranquillity, ''^ Would this
admit of destroying their property interests ? Could Congress
in that manner '^provide for the common defence,^^ ** pro-
mote the general welfare P^ &c. In what consists the means
of defence to the States, if it be not in the development of their
resources for wealth, independence and power ? and what else
can promote their general welfare ? In this each State is to
be the judge of what constitutes its general welfare, which it is
the object of the Constitution and the Union to promote. But
here the question again returns with redoubled force, could this
be done by excluding slavery and the slave States from all the
public domains, or by empowering Congress so to do ? Such
could not have been the understanding of the delegates and
citizens of the Southern States. Again, by Art. I. , Sec. 2,
" Eepresentatives and direct ta^es shall he apportioned among
(he several States,^^ &c. No one can fail to see the spirit of
compromise in this basis of representation and taxation between
the North and the South. No so judicious a plan could have
been otherwise devised to equalize the same. The Southern
States, with their sparse population and vast amount of
unsettled and unproductive territory, with great excess in their
number of slaves, were unwilling to confide their interests to
Congress without some assurance of a respectable voice in
making the laws, and some guaranteeing against excessive and
unequal taxation. This they could not obtain without " ex-
cluding Indians not taxed," and ''including three-fifths of all
other persons in the Federal basis of representation.'^
26* U
' Slavery and the slave-trade are uniyersal by the law of nations (the
fus gmlium). This law, by the whole ancient world, doomed the captiye
to the serrice of his captor. Gen. 24 : 85, 86. Ezod. 21 : 20, 21. n yap
%fiYvplo9 atrow cmv; <*/or he it hit money." Sept £z. 27 : 18. Rev. 18 : IS.
Case of The Diana, per Lord Stowell : he says England will not be the
tuiio9 morum of other nations upon slavery. 1 Dod. Ad. Rep. p. 95.
Slave-trade admitted to Africa by law of nations. Wheat p. 195. In
all the European nations governed by the civil law, slavery and the slave-
trade were originally universal by the international code of Europe and
America, the Jut Gentium of Justinian. It has only been abolished by
municipal law. Says Mr. Wheaton: "The African slave-trade, though
prohibited by the municipal law of most nations, and declared to be
piracy by the statutes of Great Britain and the United States, and, since
the treaty of 1841 with Great Britain, by Austria, Prussia, and Russia,
is not such by the law of nations ; and its interdiction cannot be enforced
by the exercise of the ordinary right of visitation and search. That right
does not exist, in time of peace, independent of special compact* * *
** This branch of commerce, once legitimate by all European States,
made the subject of wars, negotiations, and treaties, was first success-
fully prohibited by the municipal laws of Denmark, the United States of
America, and Great Britain, to their own subjects. Its final aboUtion was
stipulated by the treaties of Paris, Kiel, and Ghent, in 1814; confirmed
by the declaration of the Congress of Yienna, of the 8th Feb. 1815;
and reiterated by the additional article annexed to the treaty of peace
concluded at Paris, 20th Nov. 1815. The accession of Spain and Por-
tugal to the principles of abolition, was finally obtained by the treaties
between Great Britain and those powers, of the 23d Sept. 1817, and the
22d Jan. 1815. And by a convocation concluded with Brazil, in 1826,
it was made piratical for the subjects of that country to engage in the
trade after 1830. By the treaties of 30th Nov. 1881, and 22d May,
1833, between France and Great Britain, to which nearly all the mari-
time powers of Europe have subsequently acceded, the mutual right oi
■v
1 This was one of the terrors held up to the Greek slaye, to awe him
into obedience, and submission ; he was constantly reminded of its hor-
rors by a certain custom which prevailed of beating him and driring him
out of doors on a certain day of the year, called the Feast of BouXi^iot, or
starvation personified. See Essay on Greek Slavery, supra, p. 68. This
is very similar to the practice of some masters to drive off their runaway
slaves when they come in, to break them of the habit of running away by
starving them.
1 In eyery Slave State in the Union, slayes are priyileged with a trial
by jury for any indictable offence the same as any other person. They
may also appear in many of the States, if not all, in courts of justicey
and maintain an action for their freedom. *
27
\
SLAVSBT IN THB UNITED STATES. 315
See similar Statutes of Florida, Thompson's Dig., p. 611, Art. 21, also
p. 542. In the trial of any slave in the Circuit Court, the same rules and
proceedings shall be observed as in the trials of white persons.
C. C. La., Art 178. **The slave is entirely subject to the will of his
master, who may correct and chastise him, though not with unusual rigor,
nor so as to maim or mutilate him, or to expose him to the danger of loss
of life, or to cause his death."
Id., Art. 175. **A11 that a slave possesses belongs to his master; he
possesses nothing except his peeulium ; that is to say, the sum of money,
or of moveable estate, which his master chooses he should possess."
Id., Art 194. ** The slave for years cannot be transported out of the
State. He may appear in court to claim the protection of the laws where
there are good reasons to believe that it is intended to carry him out of
the State."
Id., Art 177. *' A slave cannot be a party to any civil action, either as
plaintiff or defendant, except when he has to claim, or prove his free-
dom."
Id., Art. 191. '* Masters may be compelled to manumit their slaves
when they have rendered valuable services to the State, but the master
must be compensated by the State, as in case of punishment of his slave,
for the loss of the services of his slaves."
Id., .Art. 192. ** The slave may be taken from the master, as by a forced
sale, when he is cruelly treated.
'* * If any person or persons whatsoever, shall wilfully kill his slave, or
the slave of any other person, the said person or persons being convicted
thereof, shall be tried and condemned agreeably to the laws.' And it is
provided by the same act, that when any slave shall be beaten, mutilated,
and ill-treated, contrary to the true intent and meaning of this act, and
when, in such case, no one shall be present in consequence of the inad-
missibility of negro testimony, the owner himself shall be deemed respon-
well as any other legal sabject, all laws in pari materia, most
be constraed together.
Bible and guilty of the oflPence, and shall be prosecuted without further
evidence," &c. Reyised Statutes of La.
A certain allowance of food, and a fixed number of hours for labor are
also fixed by statutes, too Toluminous to quote. It is also a graye offence,
under the statute, visited by a heavy penalty, to sell away children from
their mothers before they have arrived at the age of ten years. See Re-
vised Statutes.
We might quote the laws of other slave States to a similar effect, but
it would carry us beyond the limits of this work. We trust we have given
sufficient to show the spirit of the institution.
>
1 See Essay I. p. 16. Also, Numb. 81 : 18-82 ; 85 : 40. Just. tit. iii.
sect 4. Dig. lib. i. t v. Odyss. xr. 483. TimsBOS Apad Ath. tI. p. 264.
Theop. Apad. Ath. p. 265. Xioi wptn^i rwv EXXiyrcay, &0. Plato, De Re-
Snbl. Y. p. 469. Demosth. ad?. Nic. p. 1250. For modem nations, see
[aUam's Mid. Ages, iv. 221. Gibbon, D. & F. R. E. vol. i. p. 68. See
ante, p. 809 (n. 2).
The reason why negro slavery could not exist in England, any
more than in Massachusetts and many of the free States, must be
obvious. Within the limited territory of that country, over-
whelmed with paupers in a perishing condition, there was no
room for negro slaves, no want of their labor. The British
aristocrat found it vastly to his interest to keep a starving white \
population around him, nominally free, and working for nomi- /
nal wages, without incurring the obligation of furnishing them )
a support in times of need. '^
•N
* Madrazo vs. Willis, 8d B. & A. 353. Bacon's Abmt Yol. ix. p. 478.
Chamberton V9. Harvey, 1 Ld. Raym. 146. Smith V9. Gould, 2d Ld.
Raym. 1274.
»^
1 Williams vt. BrowD, 8d Bass. & Pull. Rep. p. 69. A slaye may be
the fiubject of l&roeny at common law. Baol. Abr. 4, p. 178.
28
was taken on that point. We both held that it did not alter
their condition. There were formerly villiens or slaves in
England; and there are no laws that have abrogated this
right. Trover might have been brought for a villien. As to
the merits of this case, a specific delivery of the negroes is
prayed for: that is not necessary — others are as good: the
negroes cannot now be delivered in the plight they were in
when taken, for they wear out by use. *' '
VUiigher law ' ' than the permanent law of the land.
7 and a full compensation for the '* proper ty,^^ &c. of such as
( were lost or killed when in the XJ. S. service in South Carolina
) and Georgia."
1 The case vs. Pearne, 28 Charles II. Ley. Rep. 201, is to the same
point. The Court in that case held that trover would lie in England for
a negro slave ; that they "were originally the property of a heathen prince,
and lawful articles of commerce. The case of Gelly v«. Clive, 6 Wm. &
Mary, 1 Ld. Raym. ; Smith vs. Gould, 6 Anne, 2 Sulk. 666 ; and Smith
vs. Brown, 2d Sulk., all go to establish the indefeasible right of the mas>
tcr to the service of his slave, as well as his right to control his person.
By an Act of 9 & 10 William III. Chap. 26, negroes are spoken of as
merchandize ; and by an Act of 5 Geo. II., slaves in the West Indies are
declared subject to seizure to pay debts.
1 In the cases of Williamson vs. Daniel, 12 Wheat., and Skebbj vs. Grey,
11 Wheat., every member of the bench concarring, slaves were recognized
03 property.
Again, upon the same point, in the case of Dighton vs. Free-
town, the learned Chief- Justice remarked, that **Pomp being
and continuing a slave until 1T79, he was settled in the town
with his master, deriving his settlement from him, as the slave
was the personal property of the master, and could not be
legally separated from him. Pomp was the slave of Eluathan
Walker ; at his death intestate ; he then, as the personal estate
of the deceased, became the property of Peter Walker, the ad-
ministrator, and acquired the settlement through him as his new
master, which was in Taunton,'* &c.*
' Opera cit., see case. But behold what a change in the jurisprudence
of that old and hitherto venerable State! See ''Personal Liberty Bill,'*
nullifying the Fugitive Slave Law, &c. Session Acts of Mass. Legislature,
"^x
Upon what foundation, then, does the right and title of the
Southern master to his slave depend? We answer: it is
founded upon custom, the most potent source of law, as old,
too, AS the records of the human family. It rests also upon
the sanction of the highest legislative and judicial authority in
the world. It rests upon the same foundation that his right
and title does to any other piece of property that he possesses.
How else did the idea of property, and the distinctive rights of
individuals arise ?
28*
thoagh it has been effected by the aid and operation of the sta-
tutes of the United States, or of the individual States. Bat
a moment's reflection will show them that the right to hold
slaves was never legislated, or asked to be legislated, into any
one of the States or Territories ; the absence of all legislation
is the secret of its existence. Upon analogous principles of
comity and constitutional law, this right, when claimed under
the law of a State where it exists, should be recognized by the
courts of every other State except where it may injure their
own citizens, or contravene their own public policy.^
We have seen that negro slavery was forced upon this country
during the colonial existence of the States, by the policy and
power of the mother government; at first much against the
will and wishes of the colonists. They were brought here
principally by a company under the charter of the British Par-
liament, and the patronage of the crown of the United King-
doms. The trade was upheld and defended by the best of men,
and many American merchants engaged in the traffic.^ The
colonists entertained no qualms of conscience upon the subject,
1 It is stated that Newport, R. I., first took its rise from the wealth
acquired by exchanging rum for slayes; as many as forty or fifty Teasels
engaged annually in the traffic. Newport was not alone; other places
followed the example ; many of the wealthy families might trace their
riches to this origin. Peterson's History of Ehode Island.
and the business soon became so Incrative that thej were quite
willing to adopt it as their own. They had so far identified
themselves with it, that at the formation of the Union under the
Confederation, every one of the thirteen was a slave-holding
State, with a greater or less number of slaves.
''It is also agreed, that if any servant ran away from his A
master into any of these confederate jarisdictions, that in such j
case, upon certificate of one magistrate in the jurisdiction out^
of which said servant fled, or apon any other due proof, the \
said servant shall be delivered either to his master, or any other /
person that pursues and brings such certificate or proof. * ' ^
1 Mr. Coffin, in his History of Newbury, mentions one other person who
bore public testimony against the practice : Elihu Coleman, of Nantacket.
Dr. Belknapp's correspondence with Judge Tucker is published in the 4^
vol. of the Col. Mass. Hist. Soc. The ^ye-trade, in both negroes and
Indians, was as common in the Colonies as at present in the Slaye States.
In 1708, Thomas Steel sells to John Famum, of Boston, for thirty-fire
pounds ($176), an Indian boy, called Harry, imported from the prorince'
of South Carolina. In 1725, Theophilus Cotton, of Hampton, deeds to
Jonathan Poor, of Newbury, **all my right to the Indian boy Sappai.
aged 16 years." In 1646, Wm. Hilton, of Newbury, sells to Geo. Carr,
for one quarter of a yessel, ** James, my Indian, with all the interest I
have in him, to be his servant for ever" (Scripture language). Earlier
still, Qovemor Winthrop wills to his son Adam the island called Governor's
Garden, and his Indians there," (* to take for an inheritance for his chil-
dren, and to be his servants for ever.') Read the following list of adver-
tisements, showing the fashions a century and more ago : —
'* This day ran away from John McComb, Jr., an Indian woman, aged
about 17 years, of a middle stature, having on her druget waistcoat, and
kersey petticoats of a light color. If any person shall bring the said girl
to her said master, he shall be rewarded for his trouble to his content." —
American Weekly Mercury ^ May 27 thy 1720.
'* A servant maid, time four years, to be sold by John Copson." — Am.
Weekly Mercury, June 2d, 1724.
*' A very likely negro woman to be sold, aged about 28 years, fit for
country or city business ; she can card, spin, knit, milk, and every other
country work. Whoever has a mind for said negro may repair to Andrew
Bradford, in Philadelphia."— /6m/, June 2rf, 1724.
''To be sold, a very likely negro woman, fit for all manner of house-
** To be sold, a hearty, strong negro wench, fit for all kinds of work.
For particulars inquire,*' &c. — Penn. Journal, Sept. 4tth, 1765.
No wonder slayery died out in New England and the other Free States.
Read the following inyentory of prices. Suppose these slares had been
worth from one thousand to fifteen hundred dollars each, as they now are
in the Slave States. Slayery was neyer abolished in the Free States ; it
died a natural death, and they would now make a yirtue of necessity.
**One negro man named Quash, $8.84; negro woman named Juno,
$2.75; negro woman named Cab, $139.06; negro man named Cezar,
$127.84; negro man named Cipeo, $152.78; negro woman named Hager,
$125; negro woman named Flora, $105.50; negro woman named Sarah,
$188.84; negro woman named Jane, $125; negro woman named Cloe,
$125 ; negro boy named Pharo, $24 ; negro girl named Phillis, $50 ; ser-
vant mulatto boy Harry, $27.79; servant Indian woman Mary, $5.55.''
**Ran away from Jacob Powers, Esq., on the 29th ult, a negro boy,
about 18 years old ; was bom in Hopkinton, and brought up by the Rev.
Me. Barret ; his name is Ishmael ; he has been a soldier at the lake, is
thick set, has thick lips, and goes limping by reason of a toe of his having
been frosted, and is not yet well. He had on when he went away a shep-
herd jacket, leather breechet, checked woollen shirt, blue under-jacket, light
colored stockings, brass buckles in his shoes, and an old military cap. He
is an artful fellow, and will pass himself for a soldier, as he has carried
off his firelock and blanket. Whoever will take up the said negro and
bring him to his said master, or confine him in any one of his msgesty's
jails, so that his master may get him, shall receive four dollars reward
and aU ehargee paid.^* — Marblehead, Matt., Apr. 2d, 1765.
** Francis Lewis has for sale a choice parcel of Muscovado and pow-
dered sugars, in hogsheads, tierces and barrels, and a negro woman and
boy."— JVw York Gazette, Apr. 26M, 1705.
Seventy Gold Coast slaves, of various ages and both sexes, to be sold
29 w
*«:
Sewell, one of the jadges who occupied the bench daring the
^ y trial of the Salem witches, and with whose concurrence nine-
^ teen innocent persons were hanged, and one, for refasing to
See, also, copy of a deed of sale from Mrs. Elizabeth Treat to Mr.
Samuel Brooks, of Boston, of a negro man named Harry, for the sum of
twenty-five pounds ($125), in 1770. Historical and literary curiosities,
Boston Genealogical Library.
«'
Abolition, then, did not take its rise in the patriotism, learn-
ing or religion of the past. No; it was the offspring of
bigotry and intolerance, and lives and has its being in injustice
and persecution. It is enough that Sewell was the father of the
creed. ^
' But how have they kept the compact in the State of Ohio ? See
speech of Mr. Calhoun on the Oregon bill, 1848.
1 Illinois, in 1818, when admitted into the Union, had 1000 slaTes:
Indiana also had a number. See Census U. S. 1850, p. iz.
' Justice Curtis, in his dissenting opinion in the Drcd Scott case, has
instanced this and similar acts as an indirect interference with slavery in
the territories; but no, they leave it as thej find it. 19 House Rep. p.
619. If Congress, by simply extending the ordinance of 1787 over cer-
344 THE POLITICAL AND JUDICIAL ATTITUDE OF
^ The tempestuous and aogry debate upon this party strife for supre-
macy, was a waste of the public fund. The Supreme Court of the United
States have recently decided in the Dred Scott Case that Congress has no
power to exclude slavery from the territories : hence this Oregon Bill is 8«
far unconstitutionaL
Says Mr. Monroe: "My decided opinion is, that all the
States composing our Union, new as well as old, must have
equal rights, ceding to the General Government an equal share
of power, and retaining to themselves the like, that they cannot
be incorporated into the Union on different principles or con-
ditions. Should a bill pass admitting Missouri, subject to re-
straint, I shall have no difficulty in the course to be pursued ;
nor shall I, in any future case, respecting the admission of any
new State as to its rights as a State." '
No one but a bigot can fail to see the truth of this demon-
stration, no one but a fanatic can fail to acknowledge its
political force.* Says Mr. Pinckney of South Carolina :
* The recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the
Dred Scott case, has affirmed this doctrine to its fullest extent : the Court
held in that case that the Missouri restriction was a yiolation of the Con-
stitution of the United States, and that a negro is not a citizen of the
United States in the meaning of the Constitution ; that ours is a goyem-
ment for the white man ; and that African slayes are property. This
opinion of the Court should be read by erery one.
But why then did President Monroe finally give his assent
to the Missouri restriction ? He was driven to it as a tempo-
rary expedient to save the Union, but such an acquiescence is
no acknowledgment of the right. He says, in the same letter
to Judge Roane :
1 See Speech of Mr. Keitt, of South Carolina, March 80, 1854, in Hoase
of Representatiyes.
that the people of the territories, and of all the States, were to
be allowed to do as they pleased npon the subject of slayerj,
sabject only to the Constitotion and laws of the United States."
But let us inquire what would have been the present condition
of the country had that course of policy been pursued from the
formation of the government, which is contended for by the
free-soil party of the present day. There were at the adoption
of the Constitution, about seven hundred thousand slaves found
in greater or less numbers in every one of the thirteen original
States. At a reasonable estimate this amount of taxable pro-
perty could not have been estimated at less than three hundred
millions of dollars. For the loss of such an amount of private
property, the nation, bankrupt as it was from the heavy debt
of the war, was totally unable to make any compensation, had
it been disposed to do away with the institution. Its existence
must therefore be tolerated, and this vast amount of property
recognized and protected by the Constitution. ' It is a well-
established principle in politics as well as civil jurisprudence,
that the Constitution and law of the land recognize no evasion
of their own provisions ; **the law permits nothing to be done
indirectly that cannot be done directly. ^^ Suppose, then, the
government of the United States had attempted at the outset
to limit the territorial extent of slavery to the thirteen original
States ; that from all new territory that might thereafter be
acquired in any manner by the United States, slavery should
be excluded ; what would have been the effect of such a pro-
hibition upon the increase and future prospects of this vast
The rigor of the climate and the character of the soil in the
Eastern and Middle States could not foster the institution : it
would, as is evident, necessarily die out there, like plants trans-
planted from a warmer to a colder region, uncongenial to their
nature. The constant tendency of the negro race in those
States is to become extinct, as we see by the different censuses
taken of the inhabitants. The six Southern States then would
have been left with the whole burden of the present four millions
of slaves and free black population, instead of being distributed
as they now are over the vast territory of the entire Slave
States. Under this prohibitory policy these old Slave States
would have been overwhelmed with a slave population, with no
outlet, no means of selling or disposing of them, that would
ultimately have destroyed this species of property as such.
Such an undermining course of policy would have cut off all
prospects of the present wealthy and flourishing condition of
the Southern States. It is conceded by all acquainted with the
South, that no system of free labor could, in the same time,
have pushed the conquests of civilization so far through the
then sultry and epidemic regions along upon the Gulf coast and
upon the banks of the Mississippi. No constitution but the
AfricaYi's can endure constant toil beneath the burning sun in
this sultry clime. And but for this system of compulsory labor,
where now smile those beautiful flower-gardens of the South-
West, where now her boundless fields are whitened as the driven
snow, with the great staple of the South, or laden with their
heavy yiftlds of corn and sugar-cane, the Chickasaw, Cherokee^
and Choctaw, might still roam beneath the deep shades of her
lonely forests "with none to molest or make him afiraid.''*
Was SQch the plighted faith when the States united under
the common banner of the Union ? Coald it have entered into
the genius and spirit of the civil compact, at the formation of
the Federal Government, to undermine and overthrow the do-
mestic institutions of the States; to weaken their power;
break down their future prospects for wealth and general
prosperity; to destroy their property, by circumscribing its
limits ; and leave the fairest portion of their country in deso-
lation and waste 1 Was it for this that some of the original
States ceded away the fairest portions of the Union ? Par
fk'om it. They sought refuge from all danger and protection
from all injury under the common flag of their nation ; they
rallied around its standard, streaming over them in the breeze,
with the sacred preamble upon it: "We, the people of these
United States, in order to form a more perfect Union ; to esta-
blish Justice, insure domestic Tranquillity, to provide for
the Common Defence and General Welfare, Ac. * *
Do ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States
of America."
been for years setting westward from the old Slave States, to
seek new fields and a virgin soil in the immense territory even
beyond the Mississippi, and not feel the weight of injustice
and the severe calamity that wonld befall these people, were
they denied this privilege; and not realize the fact that it
would be the death-blow and knell of their fntore prospects J
The soil, from long cultivation, in some of the old Slave
States, is fast becoming exhausted. In the States of North
and South Carolina, Georgia, and even in Alabama and parts
of Mississippi, large tracts of country, for this reason, mast
be annually abandoned, and the inhabitants are compelled to
seek new and fresh lands to reward their labors.^ Millions
and millions of acres of the richest and most productive limds
upon the face of the globe, that have for years, and will for
hundreds of years to come, lay unoccupied in the West, invite
them, by the most tempting rewards, to seek new homes in
these vast realms of the public domain. Whoever has wit^
nessed them moving on, in caravans of hundreds in a company,
with their men-servants and their maid-servants, and their cat^
tie and their horses, and their train of wagons for miles arrayed
in a line of march, like the children of Israel in pursuit of the
promised land, can feel most sensibly the weight of the death-
blow that would be inflicted upon the industry, wealth, tod
enterprise of these States, were their citizens denied this
privilege.
1 It will perhaps be said that this is owing to bad husbandry ; bat such
is not the fact : the soil is of sach a character that, in conseqnence of its
washing, &c. it cannot be reclaimed.
' Dr. Belknapp, in his correspondence'with Judge Tucker, says the win-
ters were unfavorable to the African in Massachusetts ; the price which
they commanded shows that they were comparativdy worthless in the
now free States, from one hundred and fifty to two hundred dollars being
their average price.
But let every true-hearted friend of the South, who feels in-
terested in upholding and defending her institutions, put far
away such a craven and suicidal policy ; the day is fast ap-
proaching when he must record his vote and the weight of his
influence for or against the institution that has made the South
what it is, and the Southern people what they are. Let him
meet the Abolitionists fairly and boldly in the field, with his
bosom bravely brunt to the battle, and hurl at them the death-
shots of truth and facts as detailed in the statistical history of
the country, remembering that truth cannot suffer in the con-
flict, and that victory is never won in dastardly shrinking from
the field of battle.
Judge Loring for a faithful and conscientious discharge of his duty in the
Bums' Case. The murder of Bachelor, for the same reason. Look
also at the persecutions of the immortal Webster ! An editor, or quon-
dam editor of Proyidence, Rhode Island, stated to the author, in the
month of August, 1854, that if he could haye had his way he would have
hung Daniel Webster on the first tree, on his return from Congress after
making his great speech in 1850: doubtless, thousands entertained the
same feeling.
The humble piety, the strict morality claimed for the people
of New England is attributed to their having freed themselves
from the curse of negro slavery, to the blighting effects of which,
charity charges the alleged moral and religious degradation of
the slave-holder. These vain-boasting and sweeping denuncia-
tions being uncontradicted by the South, have long passed for
current truths. But, ' ' there is a point beyond which forbear-
ance ceases to be a virtue." The evidence is now made pub-
lic in the statistics of the country, and wo purpose to present
the comparative condition of these two sections.
2,198 greater than the six New England States, have nearly
Familtet. DweUIng*.
y«liie of Property
tt «
The poor worn-out Slave States that have ceded away terri-
tory equal to twice the size of the original States, and have
divided their wealth and population over nine new States, have
still $417,523,392 more left than New England, with all iU
boasted prosperity I This result is the more extraordinary
because it reverses again all our experience. Since the days
of Tyre and Sidon, commerce and manufactures have been
regarded as the greatest sources of wealth, and agriculture the
less. In Europe tariffs are made to protect the farmer, com-
merce and manufactures protect themselves. But in Southern
States agriculture not only protects itself, but it carries on its
shoulders commerce and manufactures.
Ratio of property.
Pennsylvania 214.00 *•
Ohio 219.00 •«
Louisiana 806.00 «*
Ohio $219.00
Indiana 164.00
nUnois 184.00
Kentucky 877.00
Missouri 166.00
Annual Deaths.
Births. Deatha.
New England 1 to 44 1 to 64
Southern Slaves 1 to 89 1 to 66
Free 1 to 86 1 to 86
1 This exhibit shows the people of the Southern States to be the most
prolific, and less liable to die than any people in the world. In New
England, the ratio of deaths is 1 to 64 ; in England, it is 1 to every 44 ;
and no country will compare with the South in that respect, it being 1
to 65 ; of all, as 1 to 85 of the free inhabitants.
81*
But even this excuse will not avail ; for the census has dis-
tinguished the foreign from the native pauper, and still the
comparison is in favor of the South :
Natire Panpen.
^ For excess of crime and criminals in the Free States, see Appendix,
Table IV.
We thns see that the negro, when free, is far more subject
to blindness, insanity, and idiocy, than the white. Yet we find
that the ne«rro, when a slave, is almost exempt from them all —
not only is he far less afflicted than the free negro, bnt even less
than his master.
Insane.
Yet we are told that "sterility tracks the slave," &c. ; that
slavery corrupts public morals, degrades both master and slave,
paralyzes industrial pursuits, the progress of wealth, enterprise,
and population; and its extension should be prohibited by
Congress, Ac. from the territories and new States.
But this, after the exhibits which we have made from the sta-
tistics of the country, may be justly pronounced a false accusa-
tion, a hypocritical pretence for agitation, unwarranted by
facts, unfounded in truth. We have shown from the Census of
1850 superiority of the population of the Slave States in reli-
gion, morals, wealth, comfort, health, and happiness. We
have also shown by our tables that they employ more persons,
including their slaves, in industrial pursuits than those of the
Free States, giving the latter the advantage of all their great
cities and legions of foreigners, that swarm upon their lands
like the locusts upon the plains of Egypt.*
2 See Table I, Appendix. We have not separated the native and foreign
laborers.
ral kinds of employment at the North and at the South ; we may safely
assert that they will be found nearly double in every instance in favor of
the South ; and the thousands of mechanics, artisans, school-teachers, and
laborers of various description that annually emigrate from the Free to
the Slave States, will bear testimony to the truth of this assertion. li.)e
expenses of the laborer depend altogether upon his habits : they need
scarcely exceed those of the Free States.
Have the Slave or the Free States ceded most of the public
lands to the United States 7 Which have paid, and are still
paying, the greatest tribute to the nation for the privilege of
settling those lands by entering and purchasing the same ? *
For some years, this ratio was much larger in favor of the
numbers $262,000,000
1 From the official Tables, it appears that the North have, in shipping, ;
1,201,930 registered tonnage, and 1,456,814 enrolled tonnage. Deduct- \
ing the whaling and fishing tonnage, leaves 1,009,750 registered, and 1
1,822,475 coasting tonnage applicable to the transporting of merchandize. )
More than three-fonrths of this entire tonnage (it was asserted by a ;
leading Review) is employed in the transportation of the produce of the j
Sonth. ^
A rough estimate of the profits of the North, derived Arom the South, .
may be summed up thus : —
Total ^ $110,000,W0
\
\
her shipping rotting in her harbors, her desolate towns and tiI*'
/ lages, with their millions of operatives wandering like foreign
mendicants throngh the land, bankraptcy and rnin wonid stalk
upon the heels of her palsied energies and withered enterprise.
• Break down our property interests, destroy our productions,
and who can calculate the injury that would be inflicted upon
the present and future generations I Of the three millions of
bales of cotton annually produced by the Slave States, the
shipping, fabrication, sale of the goods, &c., &c., directly and
indirectly supports, at home and abroad, a population which it
is impossible accurately to estimate. The production, and
number of persons engaged in its fabrication, &c., &c., and
supported by it, as well as the amount of capital so engaged in
the great staple of the South, are annually increasing at a rapid
rate ; but the supply in no measure keeps pace with the demand.
So great is this excess, that the agricultural resources of all re-
gions adapted to the growth of cotton, are likely to prove inade-
quate to overcome it. It is a fixed fact in human experience, that
cotton cannot be extensively and successfully cultivated except
by slave labor. And whence is this labor to be eventually de-
rived ? Any great convulsion that should destroy slave labor,
and swallow up this single article of Southern production,
would shake to their downfall the most powerful governments
on earth.
slaughter " against the Soath, like the food of Milton's devils,
would tarn to coals of fire upon their own lips ** If the Soath
were base enough, if she were craven enough to submit to the
overthrow of her honor, peace, and political existence, the
triumph of the North would be that of the gladiator who died
receiving the submission of his foe.''*
1 Mr. Charles Sumner asserted, in the Senate of the United States, tha^
** sterility tracks the slave as it tracked Attila's horse.*' Bat apon what)
authority did this red constitutionalist make this assertion ? Let the fore-
going facts and remarks answer. But says Mr. Keitt: **I appeal from
the Mosaic Whig of to-day to the genuine Whig of 1776. I appeal to
John Adams, still revered in Boston. He said in 1776, *That as to this
matter (the wealth of the State), it was of no consequence by what name
you called your people -^ whether by that of freemen or slaves. That in
some countries the laboring poor were called freemen, in others slaves ;
but that the difference, as to the State, was imaginary only. What mat-
ters it whether a landlord, employing ten laborers on his farm, gives them
annually as much money as they can use for the necessaries of life, or
gives them those necessaries at short hand? The ten laborers add as
much wealth annually to the State, increase its exports as much, in the
one case as the other. Certainly, five hundred freemen produce no more
profit, no greater surplus for the payment of taxes, than so many slaves.
The condition of the laboring poor in most countries, that of the fishermen
of the Northern States in particular, is as abject as that of slaves.' " ,
Madison State Papers, vol L p. 29.
32
874 THE POLITICAL AND JUDICIAL ATTITUDE OF
tagonistic, like that of the vendor and the veadee-— for the gain
of the one is the loss of the other. As a nation increases in
population, wealth, and power, the breach is widened, these
interests conflict the more, wealth becomes more absorbed in
the hands of the few, the demand for labor less, the supply
greater, till at last these starving millions become vicious and
desperate ] and crime, misery and wretchedness is the conse-
quence. But not so where capital is labor, and the interest of
both is the same ; not so where color alone gives rank, and
where every white man is proud of his position and zealous of
his rights. Dastardly crime is unknown to his high and chi-
valrous character. There is a high standard of honor, an ex-
cessive pride of character, that taints even the kindred blood
of the culprit, and few are willing to hazard the fiery ordeal of
public opinion. This results, also, in part, from a more liberal
education. Though education is not so generally diffused at
the South, it being impossible to support schools, in conse-
quence of the sparseness of the population, and the new settlers
not being able to send their children away, yet, in the older
and more wealthy States and neighborhoods the advantages are
greatly superior, and the general standard of education and
intelligence among business men, who form public opinion and
mould public character, is higher than is general in the Free
States. This results from the fact that the pupils of both sexes
are kept constantly at school from the time of the commence-
ment to that of the completion of their education ; and, in most
cases, they enjoy the best advantages which the country affords.
The custom has hitherto prevailed of sending them to the insti-
tutions of the Free States. A collegiate education, and a
diploma in some one of the learned professions, becomes a fash-
ionable accomplishment, even to the planter and business man.-
The nature of the Souuern planter's business necessarily re-
quires, and naturally produces, a higher degree of general
intelligence than that of the farmer of the Free States. All
the great commercial and financial questions of the day are his
study, for th& reason that they relate immediately to his inte-
rests ; whatever deranges commerce, or effects any change in
the operations of financial circles, is first indicated by the ad-
vance or decline in the price of cotton, as regularly as any
change of temperature is evinced by the rise or fall of the mer-
cury. Such topics, therefore, become his study ; he becomes a
man of observation, and leads, to a great extent, the life of a
^ See Table No. I. for the comparative number of tftudents ia the Slave
and the Free States. Bee Table No. V. fur criminal statistics.
Not only does negro slavery thus elevate the character of the
white man, it ennobles woman. Relieved by the slave of the
abject toils, the servile condition to which the white woman is
so often subjected by necessity where negro slavery does not
exist, and which take from her woman's greatest charms —
modesty, virtue, and the like, which make of her the rude,
drudging, despised servant of a hard master ; the white woman
becomes, as she' is fitted to be, not the slave but the queen of
her household, fit mate for a sovereign. Virtuous, modest,
retiring, sensitive, her only ambition to merit the love of hex
husband, her only pride to point to her children and say,
** these are my jewels;" worshipped in her sphere, her genUe
sway undisputed, the white woman in the slave-holding States
needs no convention to secure her rights ; whether she be the
mistress of a mansion or the humble tenant of a cabin, to her
the seat of honor is ever accorded at home, and abroad every
true son of the South deems himself her champion.
The rank and position of woman has ever been the true
criterion of civilization and refinement in all ages and nations.
To the barbarian she is not an equal but a slave, she relieves
her lord of his labor, bows her head in his presence. Thus the
Southern parents, of all professions, zealous of the rights and
privileges of their sons as freemen, proud of the rank and posi-
tion of their daughters, bestow more care and attention upon
their education, where they are able, and thus render a collegiate
and liberal education a fashionable accomplishment to all.
as they are capable, mast share the burdens and labors of the
household affairs ; hence neatness in cooking, washing, ironing,
chamber- work, Ac, is, by the force of necessity, held up as a
very requisite and fashionable accomplishment for a young lady.
His sons, from the age of fifteen to twenty-one, are thoroughly
drilled in the exercise of the crow-bar, the hoe, axe, spade,
&c., to fit them for the duties of citizens, and their sphere of
usefulness in after life. From two to three months' cessation
from labor during the inclemency of winter, affords them an
opportunity to attend a common country school. Here, by
improving their opportunities, they may learn to read and write,
something of Geography, of English Grammar, and of Arith-
metic as far as Interest or the Rule of Three. At the age of
twenty-one, they have read their Bible, some religious family
newspaper (the Liberator, Emancipator, et genus omne)^ and
have been to mill and to meeting. And this they call educa-
tion. At majority, the all-important crisis of life for which
they are always eagerly looking forward, they are allowed to
start in the world for themselves, though many become so im-
patient and discontented with their lot at home, that they
surreptitiously quit the parental domicil while they have yet
many years to serve, and take the chances of fortune before
them. Some one is selected to remain with the father and
mother and settle on the homestead, to take care of them in
their declining years ; the others are all started out into the
world to shift for themselves. The age of majority, the culmi-
nating point of all their infant anxieties, deprives them of their
right to a home under the domestic roof where they were born,
and they must now seek some employment to make a living for
themselves. The girls, if they have not yet been suited with an
offer for a husband, usually find their way to some neighboring
town or city to bind themselves out to some craft of the needle,
or to become the slavish inmates of those extensive cotton aud
woollen factories. The boys all set out in the same beaten
track, on foot upon the highway, with a little bundle containing
a clean shirt, and a go-to-meeting suit, tied up in a flag silk
handkerchief, and swung with a stick over their shoulders, to
look for work. If the adventure is successful, he may "set in"
by the year, for from ten to fifteen dollars per month : for this
pitiful sum he toils on from year to year to get something
*'aforeliaud. " If he is economical he may perhaps save one
hundred dollars per year from his wages, and this gives him
32*
With these reasons for onr faith, with these claims to our
rights, we conclude with a few remarks upon the future pros-
pects of the Union, and the duty and destiny of the South.
* Lovejoy was killed at Alton gill, by a mob, some twenty years ago,
for publishing an abolition paper. The rebellion at Lane Seminary, by
the students who were denied Uie privilege of discussing the subject of
slavery, is well known. Lyman Beecher, the father of Edward and Har-
riet, was then president of that theological school.
flames and stain her with blood. ^ The fanatical element which is
leavening the North, with nnrebuked andacity, avows this ter-
rible purpose. The vindictive leader of this relentless crusade,
when told that Abolition would blast the South and the South-
WeBt ; would involve the whites in indiscriminate butchery, or
drive them from their homes in despair and beggary, unshel-
tered from the pitiless blast, said : '' Let those horrors come,
though five hundred thousand lives should perish." This is a
fiercer curse against the South than some Marat or Robespierre
uttered against their opponents in the frenzied excesses of the
French Revolution, when they declared that '' a hundred thou-
sand lives was a cheap sacrifice to establish a principle. " It is
more blood than the crown of the most inhuman tyrant has
ever cost the world. This blood-hound instinct of fanaticism
would proscribe the South and girdle her with a belt of fire,
that the master and the slave might perish together of despair,
blood, and conflagration. It cherishes nothing in its bosom
but the most uncompromising and destructive elements of revo-
lution. Self-preservation requires more watchfulness and strin-
gent laws for the protection of the free ; and the universal cry
of the slave is, "Deliver us from our friends!'' "because ye
have made us to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh and in the
eyes of his servants, to put a sword into their hands to
slay us."
The higher the excitement runs, the more the combat deepens ;
defeats, legislative and judicial rebukes, seem only to provoke
bitter acrimony and a more frenzied zeal; again have their
camp-fires been lighted upon a thousand hills ; again are we
threiatened with a Black Republican flag in place of the star-
spangled banner, with an Abolition President for our standard-
bearer; again, and still are the Constitution and the laws
threatened to be trampled in the dust ; still are the wheels of
Government threatened to be stopped, and Congress converted
into a turbid pool where the highest interests of the nation may
lie rotting in its stagnant waters. The storm is gathering thick
and heavy upon our borders ; we hear the low rumblings of the
distant thunder ; we see occasional flashes of its forked light-
nings ; and unless some intervening circumstance shall happily
avert the impending calamity — the day, though distant it may
83 z
b^, is yet certain, that will provoke a retribation with its terri-
ble revelations of fire and blood.
Is it to such that the South can safely look for the successful
defence of her institutions? Can such "grapple" Southern
interests "to their hearts with hooks of steel?" Will they
ever be found in the front ranks of the battle, with all their
prejudices, on the great day of trial ? It is only the self-con-
sciousness of rights to be defended, and of wrongs to be avenged,
that nerves the arm of the injured and oppressed in the death-
conflict of principles. It is this alone that inspires them with
that breathless frenzy and indomitable zeal that ever urge on
to certain victory. But consciousness of wrong gives a faint
heart and a craven resolve to the bravest soldier. Guilt makes
cowards of the boldest heroes. Hence the coward and traitor
are always those who have nothing at issue in the conflict or
are forcibly enlisted in a bad cause. The day is coming when
every man must record his vote and man his post. " He that
is not for us is against us : He that gathereth not with us,
scattereth abroad."
and driven ns to arms, then let the call go forth for a new De-
claration of Independence, a new Bill of Rights, and a new
Constitution. If, then, as the last alternative, we must fight,
"let it come," and let every sword leap from its scabbard,
" resolved to maintain it, or to perish npon the field of honor. "
Will Southern gentlemen then stand, like hunted victims, while
prairie flames are closing around them in narrowing and still
narrowing circles, motionless and helpless, crying Union and
Peace I No : *' light but the torch, and every true son of the
South will burst through the wall of fire, though the flames
should shrivel their sinews and blast their eyeball, resolved to
fall, if fall they must, struggling, blindly It may be, but strug-
gling like men. " Not that we love the Union less, but liberty
and equal rights the more. The Union, so long as it can be
maintained upon the high principles of the Constitution, is
justly held sacred in the bosom of every true American patriot ;
in the language of the immortal Webster, " Liberty and Union
forever one and inseparable." But we must add, Union and
Despotism forever twain and incoherent.
APPENDIX.
TABLE I.
Names of Staten.
Rhode Island
Arkansas, k....
New Jersey
Alabama. ....
Connccticat.....
Mississippi
Massachnsetts..
Virginia
Maine
North Carolina.
Wisconsin .
Louisiana..
Iowa
Texas.....
New York
Illinois
Virginia
Ala., Tenn., Ky
Ohio
it
148,875
162,189
8,398
28,838
466,607
426,614
82,892
66,610
863,099
296,718
81,766
44,873
986,460
894,800
65,082
106,807
681,813
558,028
77,016
81,808
804,736
256,491
40,865
11,697
191,881
164,034
32,716
26,051
3,480,084
8,134,621
311,691
421,827
846,034
894,800
140,894
106,807
2,044,763
1,965,660
380,266
269,690
2,243,963
2,268,160
302,932»
206,347
St
2,287
686
6,422
1,976
2,756
1,438
15,836
8,038
5,038
2,476
3,689
4,676
1,871
1,361
34,781
19,707
6,623
8,038
10,861
21,909
• • ••••••
©a
IS
878
663
2,616
2,468
2,046
1,606
5,338
4,621
2,066
1,931
1,231
3,958
835
985
18,031
12,614
2,568
4,621
8.032
8,012
418
307
942
2269
1269
2284
2622
8125
692
2095
207
698
68
847
2572
9000
708
8125
6213
8659
* But thifl estimate gives the population of the Free States the adyantase of all
their
great cities and hordes of foreigners, and at the same time excludes all ^e slares
em
ployed in the SlaTe States.
33 * (889)
890
APPENDIX.
TABLE II.
ArkftDBu ......
Bhode iBlftnd.
Oonneetient...
MiMiBdppi
Haasachnsetti...
Virginia
Maine
North Carolina .
Wifoonsin
Louisiana.
niinoiB.
Texas...
New York
niinoifl ...
Virginia.
Pennsylvania
Qa., N. C, S. C, Va..
18»282
67,881
00,650
88,785
50,245
47,847
34,663
48,761
80,713
4,197
Alabama ,. I ....
a
1
is
1^
• •
6 Bk.
40,786
43,478
07,010
75,082
205,800
23^875
162,711
139,387
78,189
n,168
49,816
42,856
388.294
208.431
215,389
226,875
459,782
530,792
680,644
578,054
128,740
2,686
21,028
68,108
'472^28
!:»8',584
'244,809
781,530
856,487
1.768,178
3,445,558
2,183,436
10,300,135
2,030,596
5,453,975
1,045,499
1,590,025
824,682
643,976
12,408,964
27,882,075
6,039.545
10,360,135
15,619,067
9,851,498
8,628,619
26,266,259
1,767,911
4,435,614
68,426
23,324
971
6,459
58,161
179,863
1,304,650
47^528
793,284
ll,'8i6
71.010
102,590
28,213
1,527,742
! 100,467
342^844
8,891,039
530,201
1,935,043
22,446,562
2,346,400
35,254,318
1,750,056
27,941,061
1,988.979
10,266,373
8,656.799
6,028,876
6,^7,000
1,532,000
7,417,000
0.617.000 1
33,666,000
0,706,000 !
17,717.000
4,RO7.O0O
11,152,000
3,6?9,GO0i
10,412,000,
17.858.400 73,57a000
177,000,000 130,500,000;
51,646,894
35,256,319
89,000,000
59,000,000
19,000,000
120,000.000
24,207,000
33,656.000
80,500.000
44,120,000
41,500.000
02,500,000
8.759.704 10,672,291
28,754,0481 21,691,112
* The results of these tables gire ns some idea of that " sterility** that <'
tracks the foot-
prints of the slaro hr it did those of Attlla's home." This assertion is no less
false and
unfounded in fact than a thousand others that obtain a ft«e circulation as current
truths
among the ignorant and misinformed upon thL«i sul^ect Look at the comparatlre
number
of acres of land improved by equal numbers of slave and ft'ee population, the
number of
bushels of com rai.wd. and the amount in value of live stock I bread and meat —
then say
if sterility tracks the slave. Verily, '* He that is despised and hath a servant is
better
than he that honoreth himself and lacketh bread." — Prov. Where can be found in the
statistics of the Free States such evidence of national progress as is fbmished by
the
history of the 81ave States. Look at the amount of lands taken np, rapid increaae
of
products, amount of exports, Ac, compared with the Free States.
^«
■I" II
IW ^^
^-'^J^w^p^
W^'
APPENDIX.
391
TABLE III.
StotM. UnimproTed.
Alabama 11,596,289
Arkansas 2,595,281
Florida 1,695,287
Mississippi lt),840,319
Louisiana 6,787,410
Texas 11,496,839
Tennessee ^ 18,784,082
Kentucky 16,752,448
msBOQri 9,782,670
Total 89,219,841
New Free
Staiei.
ImproTed and
UnimproTed.
Ohio 17,997,473
Michigan 4,373,890
Wisconsin 2,976,638
Iowa 2,736.064
Illinois 12,035,439
CaUfornia 4,189,985
Indiana 12,796,922
Total 67,106,911
Excess in faTor of the new Slaye States 82,113,430 acres.^
TABLE IV.
Names of Stated.
Maine
Massachusetts . ..
New Hampshire.
Vermont
Connecticut
Rhode Island
New York ,
New Jersey
PennsyWania.....
Delaware
Totals
Population.
No. of
Churches.
688,169
946
994,514
1,476
817,976
626
814,120
599
870,792
730
147,645
228
8,097,894
4,134
489,656
813
2,811,786
8,566
91,682
180
8,718,383
13,300
NailTes una-
ble to read
Criminals.
and write.
2,134
62
1,861
801
946
77
616
89
1,293
146
1,248
24
30,670
1080
12,787
135
51,283
802
9,777
112,614
2171
* The Talne of the ootton in the Plare Statm increased from 1791 to 1851, sixty
years,
from $52,000 to $112,315,317 ; and the total amount of their exports in the name
time,
from about $60,000,000 to $130,000,000, while the total exports of the Free SUtes
at that
date, was only about $66,000,000. Thus have the Slare States nearly doubled the
Free
States in the inereased amount of their exports, in the pnbUe lands that they ImTO
taken
up and improred, in the amount of eotton and oom, and in the ralue of their lire
stoek.
And yet we are told by Charles Sumner, of Massa ch usetts, that ** Sterility tracks
the
slare.^ (See sup. n. 373.) Wo will next present some thcts. showing the
slavery upon public morals.
inlluenes of
Nusn or BUli
— ■
Cbuti^a.
ble u T«d
UKl ■lito.
Cr[mln.l>.
Virginia...-
583,034
1.42t,6fll
869.039
«G8,S07
906,185
771,823
606.52fl
617,762
1,012,717
982.407
009
l',706
1,182
1,862
1.373
1,016
80C
2.014
1.845
38.426
87,883
80.083
10,460
41,261
33,863
18,447
18,339
76,114
67,359
200
188
14
19
85
23
81
160
Georgift
AUlMim.
£Sr:::::-:::;::;::
^^^7
Totals
141
H,S'J!t,-tf-',t
14,(;s.>
171.;-',
1W3
Though the teo Southern St&tos have nearl; half a tnillioa less popula-
lion, they hnTB over 1000 more churcbes tbnn tlie Northern Stales;
though among the latter are included that portion of the UnioD most fumetl
for reUgioD and morality. The ten Northern States baye tirice as manj
oriminaU aa the ten Slave States, thongh the latter hnTe four times as
man; persons unable to read and write.
It may be said that the above table includes Ihose Northern Slates
having tbe largest senporta in the Union, where an undue portion of vice
and crime abound in consequence of the foreign populnlion. But we majr
strike out New York and Massachuaetts. and the result is not changed.
Nun« of State,
PopulaUon.
No. of
ChurchM.
mil "rile.
New Hampshire
Vermont
817,976
314,120
370,792
147,546
625
500
734
228
045
616
1,293
1,248
39
145
24
Rhode Island
Totals
1.150,433
869.039
668,607
906,185
771,623
2187
1785
1182
1802
1373
4,102
80.083
16.460
41,211
33,853
285
Georgia
Alabama
85
3.215,354
G212
171,067
APPENDIX.
393
Here the number of crimiuals is twice as great in the four New England
States, containing no great cities, as in the four Southern Atlantic States
with a population three times that of the said Free States, and with the
number who cannot read and write, fifty times as great. Vary the esti-
mation as you will, the result is the same.
NamM of States.
Population.
No. of
Charches.
Natives una-
ble to read
and write.
Criminala.
New Hampshire.. •••••.•«•
817,976
370.792
026
734
045
1,293
77
145
Connecticut
Totals
688,768
606,626
682,044
1360
1016
880
2,238
13,447
34,917
222
81
108
Mississippi
Missouri
Totals
1,288,670
870,792
1,421,661
994,614
1,002,717
1896
48,864
1,298
87,388
1,861
78,114
189
146
188
801
187
Connecticut
Yirg^a
Massachusetts .••••..•
Tennessee *««.•
These facts, unless they can be controTerted, must forever put to silence
the eternal uproar, din, and commotion of the Abolitionbts about the
baneful influence of shivery upon the public morals; and no traveller
who has become at all acquainted with the general characteristics of the
people at the North and at the South will be surprised at these results.
That there should be a greater proportion of persons unable to read and
write in these comparatively newly-settled States, where the population is
yet too sparse to support schools, would be naturally expected. But that
there should be a purer cast, a higher standard of public morals, and
such a disproportion of crime, can be accounted for upon no other prin-
ciples than the purifying influences of the manners and customs that
prevail
The foregoing tables hare all been eareftilly prepared from the Census Bo(^ of
1860, and
from extracts from De Bow's Review (June, 1&&4).
THE END.
^