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THE SABLE CLOUD:

A SOUTHERN TALE,

WITH NORTHERN COMMENTS.


BY THE AUTHOR OF
"A SOUTH-SIDE VIEW OF SLAVERY."


"I did not err, there does a sable cloud
Turn forth her silver lining on the night"

MILTON'S COMUS


BOSTON:
TICKNOR AND FIELDS.
MDCCCLXI


Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1861, by

TICKNOR AND FIELDS,

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
Massachusetts


RIVERSIDE, CAMBRIDGE
STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BY H O HOUGHTON




CONTENTS.

                                                             PAGE
CHAPTER I.
DEATH AND BURIAL OF A SLAVE'S INFANT                            1

CHAPTER II.
NORTHERN COMMENTS ON SOUTHERN LIFE                              5

CHAPTER III.
MORBID NORTHERN CONSCIENCE                                     32

CHAPTER IV.
RESOLUTIONS FOR A CONVENTION                                   53

CHAPTER V.
THE GOOD NORTHERN LADY'S LETTER FROM THE SOUTH                 59

CHAPTER VI.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS                                         118

CHAPTER VII.
OWNERSHIP IN MAN.--THE OLD TESTAMENT SLAVERY                  150

CHAPTER VIII.
THE TENURE                                                    177

CHAPTER IX.
DISCUSSION IN PHILEMON'S CHURCH AT THE RETURN OF ONESIMUS     205

CHAPTER X.
THE FUTURE                                                    239




CHAPTER I.

DEATH AND BURIAL OF A SLAVE'S INFANT.

  "The small and great are there, and the servant is free from his
  master."


A Southern gentleman, who was visiting in New York, sent me, with his
reply to my inquiries for the welfare of his family at home, the
following letter which he had just received from one of his married
daughters in the South.

The reader will be so kind as to take the assurance which the writer
hereby gives him, that the letter was received under the circumstances
now stated, and that it is not a fiction. Certain names and the date
only are, for obvious reasons, omitted.

THE LETTER.

MY DEAR FATHER,--

You have so recently heard from and about those of us left here, and
that in a so much more satisfactory way than through letters, that it
scarcely seems worth while to write just yet. But Mary left Kate's poor
little baby in such a pitiable state, that I think it will be a relief
to all to hear that its sufferings are ended. It died about ten o'clock
the night that she left us, very quietly and without a struggle, and at
sunset on Friday we laid it in its last resting-place. My husband and I
went out in the morning to select the spot for its burial, and finding
the state of affairs in the cemetery, we chose a portion of ground and
will have it inclosed with a railing. They have been very careless in
the management of the ground, and have allowed persons to inclose and
bury in any shape or way they chose, so that the whole is cut up in a
way that makes it difficult to find a place where two or three graves
could be put near each other. We did find one at last, however, about
the size of the Hazel Wood lots; and we will inclose it at once, so that
when another, either from our own family or those of the other branches,
wants a resting-place, there shall not be the same trouble. Poor old
Timmy lies there; but it is in a part of the grounds where, the sexton
tells us, the water rises within three feet of the surface; so, of
course, we did not go there for this little grave. His own family
selected his burial-place, and probably did not think of this.

Kate takes her loss very patiently, though she says that she had no idea
how much she would grieve after the child. It had been sick so long that
she said she wanted to have it go; but I knew when she said it that she
did not know what the parting would be. It is not the parting alone, but
it is the horror of the grave,--the tender child alone in the far off
gloomy burial-ground, the heavy earth piled on the tender little breast,
the helplessness that looked to you for protection which you could not
give, and the emptiness of the home to which you return when the child
is gone. He who made a mother's heart and they who have borne it, alone
can tell the unutterable pain of all this. The little child is so
carefully and tenderly watched over and cherished while it is with
you,--and then to leave it alone in the dread grave where the winds and
the rain beat upon it! I know they do not feel it, but since mine has
been there, I have never felt sheltered from the storms when they come.
The rain seems to fall on my bare heart. I have said more than I meant
to have said on this subject, and have left myself little heart to write
of anything else. Tell Mammy that it is a great disappointment to me
that her name is not to have a place in my household. I was always so
pleased with the idea that my Susan and little Cygnet should grow up
together as the others had done; but it seems best that it should not be
so, or it would not have been denied. Tell Mary that Chloe staid that
night with Kate, and has been kind to her. All are well at her house.

       *       *       *       *       *

Of the persons named in this letter,

KATE is a slave-mother, belonging to the lady who writes the letter.

CYGNET was Kate's babe.

MAMMY is a common appellation for a slave-nurse. The Mammy to whom the
message in the letter is sent was nursery-maid when the writer of the
letter and several brothers and sisters were young; and, more than this,
she was maid to their mother in early years. She is still in this
gentleman's family. Her name is Cygnet; Kate's babe was named for her.

MARY is the lady's married sister.

CHLOE is Mary's servant.


The incidental character of this letter and the way in which it came to
me, gave it a special charm. Some recent traveller, describing his
sensations at Heidelberg Castle, speaks of a German song which he heard,
at the moment, from a female at some distance and out of sight. This
letter, like that song, derives much of its effect from the
unconsciousness of the author that it would reach a stranger.

Having read this letter many times, always with the same emotions as at
first, I resolved to try the effect of it upon my friend, A. Freeman
North. He is an upright man, much sought after in the settlement of
estates, especially where there are fiduciary trusts. Placing the letter
in his hands, I asked him, when he should have read it, to put in
writing his impressions and reflections. The result will be found in the
next chapter. Mrs. North, also, will engage the reader's kind attention.




CHAPTER II.

NORTHERN COMMENTS ON SOUTHERN LIFE.

  "As blind men use to bear their noses higher
  Than those that have their eyes and sight entire."

  HUDIBRAS.


  "One woman reads another's character
  Without the tedious trouble of decyphering."

  BEN JONSON. _New Inn_.


So then, this is a Southern heart which prompts these loving, tender
strains. This lady is a slave-holder. It is a slave toward whom this
fellow-feeling, this gentleness of pity, these acts of loving-kindness,
these yearnings of compassion, these respectful words, and all this care
and assiduity, flow forth.

Is she not some singular exception among the people of her country; some
abnormal product, an accidental grace, a growth of luxuriant richness in
a deadly soil, or, at least, is she not like Jenny Lind among singers?
Surely we shall not look upon her like again. It would be difficult to
find even here at the North,--the humane North, nay, even among those
who have solemnly consecrated themselves as "the friends of the slave,"
and who "remember them that are in bonds as bound with them,"--a heart
more loving and good, affections more natural and pure. I am surprised.
This was a slave-babe. Its mother was this lady's slave. I am confused.
This contradicts my previous information; it sets at nought my ideas
upon a subject which I believed I thoroughly understood.

A little negro slave-babe, it seems, is dead, and its owner and mistress
is acting and speaking as Northerners do! Yes, as Northerners do even
when their own daughters' babes lie dead!

The letter must be a forgery. No; here it is before me, in the
handwriting of the lady, post-marked at the place of her residence. But
is it not, after all, a fiction? I can believe almost anything sooner
than that I am mistaken in the opinions and feelings which are
contradicted by this letter. In the spirit of Hume's argument against
the miracles of the Bible, I feel disposed, almost, to urge that it
would be a greater miracle that the course of nature at the South in a
slave-holder's heart should thus be set aside than that there should not
be, in some way, deception about this letter. But still, here is the
letter; and it is written to her father, whom she could not deceive,
whom she had no motive, no wish, to delude. Had it been written to a
Northerner, I could have surmised that she was attempting to make false
impressions about slavery, and its influence on the slave-holder. Why
should she tell her father this simple tale, unless real affection for
the babe and its mother were impelling her? This tries my faith. It is
like an undesigned coincidence in holy writ, which used so to stagger my
unbelief. Possibly, however,--for I must maintain my previous
convictions if I can,--possibly her father is such as our anti-slavery
lecturers and writers declare a slave-holder naturally to be, and his
daughter, herself a mother, is seeking to touch his heart and turn him
from his cruelties as a slave-holder by showing him, in this indirect,
beautiful manner, that slave-mothers have the feelings of human beings.
Perhaps I may therefore compromise this matter by allowing, on one hand,
that the daughter is all that she appears to be, and claiming, on the
other, that the father is all that a slave-holder ought to be to verify
our Northern theories. But she herself is a slave-holder, and therefore
by our theory she ought to be imbruted. I beg her pardon, and that of
her father; but they must consider how hard it is for us at the North to
conquer all our prejudices even under the influence of such a
demonstration as her letter. I ask one simple question: Is not this
slave-babe, (and her mother,) of "the down-trodden," and is not this
lady one of the down-treading? And yet she weeps,--not because, as I
would have supposed, she had lost one hundred and fifty dollars in the
child, but as though she loved it like the sick and dying child of a
fellow-creature, of a mother like herself. Now, who at the North ever
hears of such a thing in slavery? The old New York Tabernacle could have
said, It is not in me;--the modern Boston Music Hall says, It is not in
me. None of the antislavery papers, political or religious, say, We have
heard the fame thereof with our ears. Our Northern instructors on the
subject of slavery, the orators, the Uncle Tom's Cabins, "The Scholar an
Agitator," have never taught us to believe this. The South, we are
instructed to think, is a Golgotha, a valley of Hinnom; compacts with it
are covenants with hell. But here is one holy angel with its music; a
ministering spirit; but is she a Lot in Sodom? Abdiel in the revolted
principality? a desolate, mourning Rizpah on that rock which overlooks
four millions of slaves and their tortures?

In a less instructed state of mind on this subject, I should once have
said, on reading this letter,--This is slavery. Here is a view of life
at the South. As a traveller accidentally catches a sight of a family
around their table, and domestic life gleams upon him for a moment; as
the opening door of a church suffers a few notes of the psalm to reach
the ear of one at a distance, this letter, written evidently amidst
household duties and cares, discloses, in a touching manner, the
domestic relations of Southern families and their servants wherever
Christianity prevails. It is one strain of the ordinary music of life in
ten thousands of those households, falling accidentally upon our ears,
and giving us truthful, artless impressions, such as labored statements
and solemn depositions would not so well convey, and which theories,
counter-statements, arguments, and invectives never can refute. Our
senior pastor would say that the letter is like the Epistles of
John,--not a doctrinal exposition, but a breathing forth of the spirit
which the evangelical history had inspired. I have come to know more,
however, than I did when I could have had such amiable but unenlightened
feelings. I have read the "Key to Uncle Tom" and the "Barbarism of
Slavery."

Still, I am sorely puzzled. "Kate," she says, "wanted to have it go, it
had been sick so long; but I knew, when she said it, she did not know
what the parting would be."

"The parting!" Has she read our Northern abstracts and versions of the
Dred Scott Decision, and are there, in her view, any rights in a negro
which she is bound to respect? Has she not heard that the Supreme Court
of the United States has absolved her from all her feelings of humanity?
"The parting!" Where has she lived not to know how, according to our
lecturers, families are parted at the auction-block in the Southern
States without the least compunction? We are constantly told,--has she
not heard it?--that the slave at the South is a mere "chattel," and that
a slave-child is bought and sold as recklessly as a calf, and that a
parting between a slave-mother and her children, sold and separated for
life, is an occurrence as familiar as the separation of animals and
their young, and no more regarded by slave-holders than divorcements in
the barn-yard. This being so, it must follow that when a slave-babe
dies, the only sorrow in the hearts of the white owners is such as they
feel when a colt is kicked to death or a heifer is choked. This must be
so, if all is true which is meant to be conveyed when we are told so
often at the North that the slave is a mere "chattel." Therefore I am
puzzled by this lady's tears for the mother of this little black babe.
She says of the mother of that poor little negro infant slave, "I knew
she did not dream what the parting would be." I repeat it, my theory of
slavery, that which I hold in common with all enlightened friends of
freedom, requires that this lady should have a debased, imbruted nature,
for she owns human beings, has made property of God's image in man. And
now I feel creeping over me a dreadful temptation to think that one may
hold fellow-creatures in bondage and yet be really humane, gentle, and
as good as a Northerner! What fearful changes in politics would come
about should our people believe this! It cannot be that our great party
of Freedom can ever go to pieces and disappoint the hopes of the world;
yet this would be the case, if the feelings stirred by this letter
should gain a general acceptance. I cannot gainsay the facts. Here is
the letter. May it never see the light; people are much more influenced
by such things than by mere logic, and oh, what would befall the nation
should our Northern excitement against slavery cease, and should we
leave the whole subject to the South and to God! "What if people should
come to believe that the Southerners--fifteen or sixteen States of this
Union--are as humane, Christian, and conscientious as the North!

Who will resolve my painful doubts? I do crave to know what possible
motive this lady could have had in taking so much thought and care about
the last resting-place of this poor little black "chattel." You and your
husband, dear lady, seem to be as kind and painstaking as though you
knew that a fellow-creature of yours was returning, "ashes to ashes,
dust to dust."

One great Northern "friend of the slave" tells us that the slaves at the
South are degraded so to the level of brutes, that baptizing them and
admitting them to Christian ordinances is about the same as though he
should say to his dogs, "I baptize thee, Bose, in," etc. This, he tells
us, he repeated many times here, and in England.[1] Nothing but love of
truth and just hatred of "the sum of all villanies" could, of course,
have made him venture so near the verge of unpardonable blasphemy as to
speak thus. Yet your feelings and behavior toward this babe are in
direct conflict with his theory. Pray whom am I to believe?

   [Footnote 1: See "Sigma's" communications to the _Boston Transcript_,
   August, 1857.]

Perhaps now I have hit upon a solution. Some people, Walter Scott is an
instance, bury their favorite dogs with all the honors of a decorated
sepulture. Rather than believe that your slaves are commonly regarded by
you as your fellow-creatures, having rights which you love to consider,
or, that you do not mercilessly dispose of them to promote your selfish
interests, we, the Northern people, who have had the very best of
teachers on the subject of slavery, learnedly theoretical, reasoning
from the eternal principles of right, would incline to believe that your
interest in the burial of this little slave-babe was merely that which
your own child would feel on seeing her kitten carefully buried at the
foot of the apple-tree.

One thing, however, suggests a difficulty in feeling our way to this
conclusion. I mention it because of the perfect candor which guides the
sentiments and feelings of all Northern people in speaking of slavery
and slave-holders.

The difficulty is this: Who was "poor old Timmy"? Some old slave in your
father's family, I apprehend. You seem sad at finding that his grave is
not in the best place. "The water rises within three feet of the
surface;"--we infer, from the regret which you seem to feel at this,
that you have some care and pity for your old slaves, which extends even
to their graves. But we had well nigh borrowed strength to our
prejudices from this place of old Timmy's grave, and were saying with
ourselves, Thus the slave-holders bury their slaves where the water may
overflow them; but you seem to apologize to your father for Timmy's
having such a poor place for his remains by saying, "His own" (Timmy's)
"family selected his burying-place, and probably did not think of this."
Very kind in you, dear madam, to speak so. "The friends of the slave"
are greatly obliged to you for such consideration. You say, "His own
family selected his burying-place." Do slaves have such a liberty? Can
they go and come in their burying-grounds and choose places for the
graves of their kindred? This is being full as good to your servants, in
this particular, as we are at the North to our domestics. You thought
poor old Timmy's grave was not in a spot sufficiently choice for this
little babe's grave, and, it seems, you inclosed a spot, and inaugurated
it by the burial of this child, for the last resting-place of other
babes, the kindred of this child and of your other servants. This looks
as though there were some domestic permanence in some parts of the South
among the servants of a household; and as though the birth and death of
a child have some other associations with you than those which belong to
the breeding and sale of poultry. We are truly glad to think of all
this. It is exceedingly pleasant to have a good opinion of people, much
more so than to believe evil of them, and to accuse them wrongfully.

In speaking thus to you, I make myself think--and I hope I do not seem
self-complacent in saying it, for you must have learned from the tone of
my remarks, if from no other source, that self-complacency is not a
Northern characteristic, especially in our feelings toward the
South--but I make myself think, by this candid admission of what seems
good in you, of a venturesome remark by Paul the Apostle to your brother
slave-holder Philemon, in that epistle in which he sends back the slave
Onesimus,--a very trying epistle to us at the North, though on the
whole, many of us keep up our confidence in inspiration notwithstanding
this epistle, especially as it is explained to us by some at the North
who know most of Southern slavery, our inbred hatred of which, it is
insisted by some of our best scholars, should control even our
interpretation of the word of God. Paul speaks to this slave-holder,
Philemon, of "the acknowledging of every good thing which is in
you,"--which we think was exceedingly charitable, considering that it
was said to a holder of slaves; and perhaps quite too much so; for the
truth is not to be spoken at all times, and especially not of those who
hold their fellow-men in bondage. I am often constrained to think that
it was an inconsiderate, unwise thing in the Apostle to take this
favorable view of that slave-holder; he may, however, have written by
permission, not by commandment; that would save his inspiration from
reproach; for had he been inspired in writing this epistle, I ask
myself, Would he not have foreseen our great Northern conflict with the
mightiest injustice upon which the sun ever shone? and would he not have
foreseen how much aid and comfort that epistle would give the friends of
oppression on this continent? One first truth in the minds of the most
eminent "friends of freedom" is this: "Slavery is the sum of all
villanies." Other truths follow in their natural order; among them the
question of the inspiration of the Bible has a place; but slavery leads
some of them to think lightly, and to speak disparagingly, of the Bible,
because it comes in conflict with their theories regarding
slave-holding, which is certainly not always referred to in Scripture in
the tone which we prefer. There was the Apostle James, too, writing
about "works" in the same unguarded manner as Paul when speaking of
slaves and slave-holders. Pity that he could not have let "works" alone,
seeing it was so important for the other Apostles to establish the one
idea of justification by faith. He made great trouble for Luther and his
companions in their contest with Popery. Luther had to reject his
epistle; "_straminea epistola_" he called it,--an epistle of
straw,--weak, worthless; and he denied its inspiration, because it
conflicted with his doctrine of "faith alone." So much for trying to be
candid and just, and for presenting the other side of a subject, or of a
man, when the spirit of the age is averse to it, and candor is in
danger of being looked upon as a time-serving thing. Neither Paul nor
James, however, had felt the tonic, bracing effect of good anti-slavery
principles, or they would not have written, the one such a letter to a
slave-holder, and the other such a back-oar argument against "faith
alone." However, I am disposed to think well of Paul and James,
notwithstanding these the great errors of their lives. Indeed I can
almost forgive them, when I am reading other things which they said and
did. You will please acknowledge, therefore, my dear madam, that in
giving you credit for kind feelings toward a poor slave and its mother,
we are disposed to be just; yet I beg of you not to think that I abate
one jot or tittle of my belief that, in theory, slavery is "the sum of
all villanies," "an enormous wrong," "a stupendous injustice."

I have just been reading your letter once more, and the foolish tears
pester me so that I can scarce see out of my eyes. I find, dear madam,
that you have known a bitter sorrow which so many parents are carrying
with them to the grave. Your words make me think so of little graves
elsewhere, that I forget for the time that you are a slave-holder. Nor
can I hardly believe that your touching words are suggested by the death
of a slave's babe, when you speak of "the heavy earth piled on the
tender little breast." O my dear lady! has a slave's babe "a tender
little breast"? Then you really think so! And you a slave-holder!
"Border Ruffianism," perhaps, has not yet reached your heart; and yet I
suppose--forgive me if I do you wrong--that slave-holders' hearts
generally need only to be removed to the "borders," to manifest all
their native "ruffianism." Can you tell me whether there are any mothers
in Missouri (near Kansas) who feel toward their slaves who are mothers,
as you do? There are so many people from the North in Kansas (near
Missouri) who have gone thither to prevent you and your brethren and
sisters from owning a fellow-creature there, that I trust their
influence will in time extend through all Missouri, and that white
mothers in that State will everywhere have such humane feelings toward
the blacks as we and you possess.

All that I ask of you now, is, that you give Kate her liberty at once.
Oh, do not say, as I fancy you will, There is not a happier being than
Kate in all the land of freedom. "Fiat justitia," dear madam, "ruat
coelum." I cannot conceive how being "owned" is anything but a curse.
Really, we forget the miseries of the Five Points, and of the dens in
New York, Boston, Buffalo, and other places at the North, the hordes in
the city and State institutions in New York Harbor, Deer Island, Boston,
and all such things, in our extreme pity for poor slave-mothers, like
Kate, whose children, when they get to be about nine or ten years old,
are liable to be sold. Honest Mrs. Striker came to work in our family,
not long since, leaving her young child at home in the care of a young
woman who watched it for ten cents a day. I said to her, Dear Mrs.
Striker, are you not glad that you live in a free state, and not where,
when you return like a bird to its nest at night, you may find your
little one carried off, you know not where, by some man-stealer, you
know not whom?--We honor your kind feelings, madam, but you are not
aware, probably, what overflowing love and tender pity there is among us
Northerners, toward your slaves and their children. We are
disinterested, too; for we nearly forget our own black people here at
the North, and more especially in Canada, to care for you and your
people. And though hundreds of innocent young people are decoyed into
our Northern cities yearly from the country and are made the victims of
unhallowed passions, yet the thought that some of your young people on
those remote, solitary plantations, can be compelled by their masters to
do wrong on pain of being sold, fills us with such unaffected distress
that we think but little of voluntary or compulsory debauchery in our
own cities; but we think of dissolving the Union to rid ourselves of
seeming complicity with such wickedness as we see to be inherent in the
relation of master and slave. We at the North should all be wicked if we
had such opportunities; we know, therefore, that you must be. Because
you will not let us reprove you for it, we cut off our correspondence
with your Southern ecclesiastical bodies. But I began to speak of little
graves. You will see by my involuntary wandering from them how full our
hearts are of your colored people, and how self-forgetful we are in our
desires and efforts to do them good. And yet some of your Southern
people can find it in their hearts to set at nought these our most
sacred Northern antipathies and commiserations!

But I constantly hear some of your words in your letter striking their
gentle, sad chimes in my ears. "It is not the parting alone, but the
helplessness that looked to you for protection which you could not
give;" "the emptiness of the home to which you return when the child is
gone."

Now, for such words, I solemnly declare that, in my opinion, you, dear
madam, never had a helpless slave look to you for protection which you
could give and which you refused; you, surely, never made a slave's home
desolate by taking her child from her. No, such words as those which I
have just quoted from your letter, are a perfect assurance that neither
you nor your kindred, within your knowledge, are guilty of ruthless
violations of domestic ties among your colored people. Otherwise, you
could not write as you do about "desolate homes" and "the child gone."
While I read your letter and think of you, I am reminded of those words:
"Is not this he whom they seek to kill?" Why, if the insurgents' pikes
were aimed at you and your child, I would almost be willing to rush in
and receive them in my own body. Yet I would not be known at the North
to have spoken so strongly as this. O my dear madam, if there were only
fifty righteous people (counting you) in the South, people who knew what
"desolate homes" and "the child gone" mean, I should almost begin to
hope that our Southern Gomorrah might be spared.

But I fear that I am trespassing too far away from my sworn fealty to
Northern opinions and feelings. I begin to fear that I may be tempted to
be recreant to my inborn, inbred notions of liberty, while holding
converse with you, for there is something extremely seductive to a
Northerner in slavery; it is like the apple and the serpent to the
woman; so that whoever goes to the South, or has anything to do with
slave-holders, is apt to lose his integrity; there is a Circean
influence there for Northern people; thousands of once good,
anti-slavery men now lie dead and buried as to their reputations here at
the North, in consequence of having to do with the seductive
slave-power; they would fill Bonaventura Cemetery, in Savannah; the
Spanish moss, swaying on the limbs of its trees, would be, in number,
fit signals of their subjection to what you call right views on the
subject of slavery.

Though I fear almost to hold converse with you, yet, conscious of my
innate love of liberty, I venture to do so. Bunker Hill is within twenty
miles of my home. When I go to that sacred memorial of liberty, I strive
to fortify my soul afresh against the slave-power. After hearing
favorable things said, in Boston, about the South, I can go to Faneuil
Hall, and there, the doors being carefully shut, walk enthusiastically
about the room, almost shouting, "Sam. Adams!" "James Otis!"
"Seventy-Six!" "Shade of Warren!" "No chains on the Bay State!"
"Massachusetts in the van!" "Give me liberty or give me death!" I can
enjoy the privilege of looking frequently on certain majestic figures in
our American Apocalypse, under the present vial,--but I need not name
them. I meet in our book-stores with "Lays of Freedom," never sung by
such as you. I see in the shop-windows the inspiring faces, in
medallion, of those masterpieces of human nature, "the champions of
freedom," our chief abolitionists;--and shall I, can I, ever succumb to
the slave-power, even though it approach me through the holy,
all-subduing charms of woman's influence? No! dear madam, ten thousand
times, No! "Slave-power!" to borrow Milton's figure when speaking of
Ithuriel and Satan, the word is as the touch of fire to powder, to our
brave anti-slavery souls. You have, perhaps, seen a bull stopping in the
street, pawing the ground, throwing the dust over him and covering
himself with a cloud of it, his nose close to the earth, and a low,
bellowing sound issuing from his nostrils. Your heart has died within
you at the sight. You have been made to feel how slight a defence is
fan, or sunshade, against such an antagonist, though you should make
them to fly suddenly open in his face. No enemy of his was in sight, so
far as you could perceive; you wondered what had excited his belligerent
spirit; but he saw at a very great distance that which you could not
see; he heard a voice you could not hear, giving occasion to this show
of prowess. That fearful combatant on the highway, dear madam, is the
North, and you are the distant foe. You may affect to smile, perhaps, at
the valorous attitudes, the show of mettle in the bull, but you have no
idea, as I had the honor to say before, how sturdy is our hatred of the
slave-power and how ready we are to do battle with it. We paw in the
valley, and are not afraid.

Never think to delude us, my dear lady, with the thought that slavery in
our Territories means such ladies as you owning Kates and their little
babes, and having such hearts toward them as you seem to have; for that
would take away a large part of the evil in slavery. Nor must you expect
us, in thinking of slavery as extending into our Territories, to picture
to ourselves an accomplished gentleman and lady searching a cemetery for
a spot to be the grave of a little slave-babe, and behaving themselves
as though they had feelings toward it and its mother irrespective of the
market-price of slaves. "Border Ruffians" are the archetypes of our
ideas respecting all who wish to extend slavery into our Territories. On
the score of humanity, madam, we have no objection to you and your
husband taking Kate and living in Kansas; how perfectly harmless that
might seem to many! for, no doubt, you and Kate are perfectly happy as
mistress and servant; you would need domestics there, and how could they
and you be better pleased than if they and you were just as Kate and you
now are to each other? but, O dear madam, that would be slavery, and we
are under sworn obligations here at the North to oppose the owning of a
human being with indiscriminate hatred. Say not it seems hard that if
you wish to live in Kansas, for example, you cannot have liberty to go
there with Kate, who is as much attached to you, I make no doubt, as any
Northern or English servant is to a household. Perhaps it does seem
perfectly natural and harmless, and no doubt Kate's relation to you is
as gentle and pleasant, almost, as that of an adopted member of a
family, who is half attendant, and half companion; this we understand.
You see nothing terrible in such a relation. O dear madam, you have the
misfortune to have been born under the blinding, blighting influence of
slavery, and cannot see things in the true, just light in which they
appear to us, whose minds are unprejudiced and clear, and whose moral
sentiments on this great subject are more correct and elevated. What is
making all this trouble in our nation? I will answer you in the burning
words of a Northern clergyman in his speech at a meeting called to
sympathize with the family of John Brown, after his death by martyrdom:
"The Slave-Power itself, standing up there in all its deformity in the
sight of Northern consciences,--that is the cause, [applause] and there
the responsibility belongs."[2] Yes, you are sinning against the
Northern conscience! It is settled forever that you are evil-doers in
holding your present relation to the slave. We are bound to hem you in
as by fire, till, like a scorpion so fenced about, you die by your own
sting. We must proclaim liberty to your captives. Step but one foot with
Kate on free soil, and our watchmen of liberty, set to break every yoke
and help fugitives on their way from the house of bondage, will be
around you in troops, and shout in her ear those electrifying and
beatifying words, "You are a free woman!" There her chains will drop;
she will cease to be a slave, and become a human being.

   [Footnote 2: _Boston Courier_, Nov. 26, 1859.]

Must I refer to your letter once more? I hope to destroy its spell over
me. But I wish at times that I had never seen that letter. "Tell Mammy
that it is a great disappointment to me that her name is not to have a
place in my household." Your little slave-babe, Kate's child, you named
Cygnet, because Mammy's name is Cygnet, and she and your mother grew up
together, and she has been your kind, faithful servant and friend, as
much friend as servant, during all your youth till you were married. And
you seek to perpetuate her name in your own household, and to have a
little Cygnet grow up with your own little Susan. "I was always pleased
with the idea that my Susan and little Cygnet should grow up together;
but it seems best that it should not be so, or it would not be denied."
All this is very sweet and beautiful; but now let me tell you, honestly,
what the spontaneous thought of a Northerner is while meditating on such
an apparently lovely picture. Here it is: Suppose that Susan and little
Cygnet, when both are three years old, are playing in your front-yard
some morning, and a cruel slave-trader should look over the fence, and
say to your husband, "Fine little thing there, sir; take a hunderd and a
ha'f for her?" I ask, Would not your husband (perhaps in need, just
then, of money to pay a note) lay down his newspaper, invite the fellow
in to drink, and go through the opening scene of "Uncle Tom's Cabin,"
coaxing up the fellow's price; and finally, would he not sell little
Cygnet while her mother was out of sight, push poor little Susan into a
room alone to cry her eyes out, and you and your husband pocket the
money? Many of us at the North, dear madam, if you will take my
unworthy self as a specimen, and I am a very moderate anti-slavery man
and no fanatic, are quite as ready to believe such things of you as the
contrary. We have read "Uncle Tom's Cabin."

Nothing could exceed the disgust and ridicule which your letter would
meet with at the hands of some of our best anti-slavery men. I am
thinking of it, just now, as in the hands of Rev. Mr. Blank. The other
day I saw a cambric muslin handkerchief, richly embroidered, blow past
me out of a child's carriage. As I turned to get it, a dog seized it,
shook it, put both his paws on it, rent it, made rags of it, threw it
down, snatched it up, and seemed vexed that there was no more of it to
tear. So will our abolitionists serve your letter, should they ever see
it. And, my dear madam, though I disapprove their temper and language,
yet I must confess that I sympathize with them in their principles, the
only difference between them and me being that of social position and
manners. I must tell you that, after all, you are probably unaware of
the deception which you are practising on yourself, in supposing that
you are really as loving and gentle toward a slave-mother and her child
as some might infer. Let but a good sale tempt you! I wait to know
whether you would then write such a letter. We have a ready answer to
all the kind and good things which are said about you, in this, which
you will see and hear in all our speeches and essays, namely, "Slavery
is the sum of all villanies." That is to all our thoughts and reasonings
about slavery what the longitude of Greenwich is to navigation. All your
clergy, all your physicians, all your judges and lawyers, all your
fathers and mothers, your gentlemen and ladies, all your children, are
heaped together by us in one name, to us an awful name,--"Slave-power."
We think about you as we do of Egypt, with Israel in bondage.

And now that allusion furnishes me with an argument against your letter,
which I must, in conclusion, and sorely against many of my feelings, let
fall, like a stone, upon it, and crush it forever. Pharaoh's daughter
was touched with the cry of the little slave-babe, Moses; but what does
that prove? that Egyptian bondage was not "an enormous wrong," a
"stupendous injustice," "the sum of all villanies"? or that a Red Sea
was not already waiting to swallow up the slave-holders, horse and foot?

You may write a thousand such letters, all over the South; but though
they delude me for a while, it is only until the moisture which they
raise to my eyes from my heart, by the pathos in them, dries up, and
leaves my vision clear of all the blinding though beautiful mists of
that error which has diffused itself over one half of this goodly land,
and, I grieve to add, which has fallen upon many even here in New
England, recreant sons of liberty, traitors to the memories of Faneuil
Hall and Bunker Hill.


LETTER FROM MR. NORTH, INCLOSING THE FOREGOING. INFLUENCE OF THE LETTER
UPON HIS WIFE.

MY DEAR MR. A. BETTERDAY CUMMING:--

I have, as you see, complied with your request, and herewith I send you
my thoughts and feelings in view of the good Southern lady's letter. I
came near, once or twice, abandoning some of my long-cherished
principles, under the influence of the letter and of the reflections to
which it gave rise. But I have been enabled to retain my integrity. I am
sorry to say that the letter has made me some trouble through its effect
on my wife, to whom, incautiously, I read it. Very soon after I began to
read, I perceived that some natural drops were finding their way down
her tear-passage, leading her to a frequent use of the handkerchief. By
this means she interrupted me, I should say, six or eight times, during
the reading, and as soon as I had finished she rose and left the room.

I remained, and wrote a large part of the accompanying reflections, and,
near midnight, on repairing to my room, I found that Mrs. North was
asleep. She waked me in the morning by asking me if I was asleep. I told
her that I would gladly listen to what she had to say. She said, "Will
you not please, my dear, stop the ----, and the ----," (naming two
newspapers,) "and take others?"

"Why," said I, "what is the matter with them?"

She began to weep again. In a few moments she said, "I would give the
world if I could have a conversation with that Southern lady."

"I fear," said I, "that it would have a deleterious effect on your
attachment to the principles of liberty."

"Liberty!" said she. "Oh, how foolish I have been! I see now that there
is another side to that question."

"I hope, my dear," said I, "that you will say and do nothing to occasion
any reproach. Certainly, there are two sides to every question. If you
manifest any surprise at finding that there is another side to the
Liberty question, I fear that some will quote to you the fable of the
mouse who was born in a meal-chest."

"I never heard of it," said she.

"Why," said I, "the mouse one day stole up to the edge of the chest,
when the cover had been left open, and, looking round on the
barn-chamber, she said, 'Dear me, I had no idea that the world was half
so large.'"

"The cover has been down and the meal has been in my eyes long enough,"
said she. "I have been so much accustomed for a long time to read in our
papers about 'enormous wrong,' 'stupendous injustice,' 'the
slave-breeders,' 'sum of all villanies,' that, unconsciously, I have
come to think of the South, indiscriminately, as though they were Robin
Hood's men, or"--

"O my dear," said I, "you must have known that there are many good
people at the South, notwithstanding slavery."

"How can there be one good man or woman there," said she, "if all that
those newspapers say of slave-holding be true? Husband, depend upon it
we have been believing a great lie. Just think of that letter. What a
tale many of those words reveal. When the infants of our former servants
die, do our ladies write such letters about them? I should judge that
owning a fellow-creature softens and refines the heart, if this letter
is any sign, instead of making them all barbarians. All the newspapers
and novels in the world cannot do away the impressions which that
letter has made on my mind. I tell you, husband, having slaves is not
the unmitigated curse to owners nor to slaves that we have been taught
to believe."

"Perhaps," said I, interrupting her, "you would like to live at the
South, and own a few."

"I could not be hired by wealth," said she, "to have them for help, even
here. I never did like them; and when I think that there are good men
and women who do, and who are as kind to the poor creatures as this dear
lady, I think that we should give thanks to God."

"Oh, the Southern people are not all like this good lady, by any means,"
said I.

"'Peradventure,'" said she, "'there be fifty righteous.' There must be
tens of thousands. People like this lady are very apt to make good the
saying of the blackberry pickers when they see a blackberry, 'Where
there's one there's more.' The letter reads as though it were an
every-day thing, a matter of course, for this lady to be kind and loving
to the blacks; and for my part I bless any one who has anything to do
for her or for those like her. Our papers never tell us such stories as
this letter contains. No, they, do not love to hear them, I fear; but if
a slave is beaten or ill-treated, then the chimes begin, 'enormous
wrong,' 'stupendous injustice,' 'sum of all villanies.'"

"Why, my dear," said I, "you are getting to be pro-slavery very fast."

"Never," said she, "if you mean by that, as I suppose you do, approving
all that is involved in slavery and all that is committed under the
system."

"But," said I, "your present feeling toward this Southern lady may
insensibly lead you to believe that it is right to own a
fellow-creature. Does not Cowper say,--

  "'I would not have a slave to till my ground,
  To carry me, to fan me while I sleep
  And startle when I wake, for all the wealth
  That sinews bought and sold have ever earned?'"

"How Kate must 'startle' and go into convulsions with terror every time
this mistress wakes!" she replied. "If Cowper had written in Alabama,
instead of describing a state of slavery such as existed in the British
possessions, and not, as in the South, mixed up with his every-day life;
if the first face with which he had become familiar as a babe had been a
black face, the face of his mother's 'slave' loving him, and nursing
him, and he, in turn, had tended his old 'Mammy' in her decrepitude, his
imagination would have contained some other pictures than those in the
lines which you quote. Had there been a Mrs. Cowper, I fancy she would
have been like this lady; and perhaps we should have seen Mr. Cowper
acting the kind part of this lady's husband toward a slave-mother and
her babe, his 'property,' so called. I lay awake here, last night, while
you were writing, and thought it all over. What were you writing about
so long? I wished that I had a pencil and paper near me. Those English
and French people who got rid of slavery as one gets rid of a bunion,
know nothing about slavery mingled with our very life-blood. How
self-righteous they are! Our people, too, are perpetually quoting what
Thomas Jefferson said about slavery in his day. Pray, has there been no
progress? Why are we not permitted to hear what Southern men, as good as
Jefferson, now say about modern slavery?"

"My dear," said I, "perhaps you are not fully qualified as yet to judge
of this great subject in all its relations. The greatest and wisest men
are divided in opinion about it."

"Great subject!" said she, "please let me interrupt you; there is but
one side to it, I should judge, from reading our papers. What do some of
the 'greatest and wisest men,' on the other side, have to say for
themselves? Are they all 'friends of oppression,' 'enemies of freedom,'
'minions of the slave-power,' 'dough-faces'? Husband, I am thoroughly
disgusted. I have been compelled to have uncharitable feelings toward
thousands of people like this Southern lady; I confess I have really
hated them, as I hate men-stealers and pirates. This letter has
convinced me of my sin. It is like the Gospel in its effect upon me."

"But, my dear," said I, "recollect that good people may be in great
error, and we read, 'Thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbor, and not
suffer sin upon him.' Now, to hold a fellow-being in bondage,--how can
it be otherwise than 'stupendous injustice'?"

"I wonder," said she, "if Kate feels that she is in 'bondage' to this
lady. I wonder if she would not think it cruel, if her mistress should
set her free."

"But it is wrong," said I, "to hold property in a human being, whether
the bondman be in favor of it or not."

"'Property!'" said she. "I should like to be such 'property,' if I were
a black woman. If it were wrong in the abstract," said she, "it might
not be in practice."

"Oh," said I, "what a pro-slavery idea that is! where did you learn it?"

"I learned it," said she, "at our corn-husking, when the Squire read
extracts from John Quincy Adams's speech about China, in which he said
that if China would not open her trade to the world, it would be right
to make war upon her. Now war is wrong, but circumstances sometimes make
it right. So with holding certain men in slavery, under certain
circumstances. I cannot believe that it is right to go and enslave whom
we will; but the blacks being here, I can see that it may be the very
best thing for all concerned that they should be owned. This may be
God's way of having them governed and educated."

I found that I was getting deeper into the subject than I intended, and,
besides, it was time to rise. As I left the room, she said, "You _will_
change those papers, won't you? then we will have some more pleasant
talks about this subject." She called to me from the door, "Please don't
send back the lady's letter; I wish to copy it." This is my reason for
not sending the letter with my reply to it. You will certainly give me
credit for candor in telling you all that my wife said. However, it is
so easily answered that I need not fear to intrust you with it.

Yours, for the slave,
A. FREEMAN NORTH.


P.S. After all, I concluded to retain this, and wait till my wife had
made what use she desired of the letter, that I might be sure and return
it to you safely. In the mean time, I have changed the papers. How
irresistible a pleading woman is, especially a wife. Her very want of
logic makes her more so, when we are good-natured. She came upon me with
just such another supplication a few mornings since. As soon as she
awoke, she said, "Husband, do please have our parlor window-sashes let
down from the top." "For ventilation?" said I. "Yes," said she,
"partly;" but I saw that she smiled. "What has made you think of it so
suddenly?" said I. "Do you not want to catch some more canaries?" said
she. "I suspect," said I, "that you would like to have ours escape."
"Perhaps," said she, "that would be a relief to you from your present
embarrassment." Then I saw that all this was banter. She wished to teaze
me a little. The truth is, I have two fine singing canaries and a
mocking-bird. Some of my pro-slavery friends delight to pester me about
them. They say that they mean to issue a habeas corpus, and take them
before Justice Bird, (who, you know, queerly enough, happens to be
United States Commissioner,) and inquire if they be not restrained of
their freedom. I tell them that man has dominion over all the fowls of
the air. But they say, "Then might makes right! Is it not a fine thing
that such a lover of liberty and friend of freedom and enemy of
oppression should keep those little prisoners for his selfish
gratification. Come, be a practical emancipationist to the extent of
your ability; set the South an example; break every yoke." "They are
better off with me," said I; "the hawks or cats would catch them, or
they would die from exposure." "Expediency!" said one of them; "do
justice, if the heavens fall." "Fye at _justitia_!" said one, who
pretended to take my part. "_Ruat coelum_, Let them rush to heaven,"
replied the other. "Parse _coelum_, please, sir," said my boy in the
Academy. "Yes, past the ceiling," said the lawyer, pretending to
misunderstand him; "that's right, my son;"--and more wretched punning of
the same sort. Hence Mrs. North's pretended supplication about the
window-sashes. She has been in excellent spirits ever since I stopped
the papers. She says that she wonders at herself so calm and happy. I
heard her yesterday calling at the stairs to a little lisping English
waiting-maid, who cannot pronounce _s_: "Judith," said she, "did you not
hear the parlor-bell?" Judith walked up, and said, "Mitthith North,
lately you've rung tho eathy, that motht of the time I thought it mutht
be a acthident, and didn't come up at futht. I thpect the wireth ith got
ruthty." Mrs. North said nothing, but afterward, in relating the affair
to me, she said she truly believed that it was owing to my stopping the
papers. For she could remember how often she went to the bell-rope
saying to herself as she pulled it, "sum of all villanies!" then
"enormous wrong," with another pull, and then "stupendous injustice,"
with another. Several times she says Judith has rushed up to the parlor
with "Ma'am, whath the matter! the bell rung three timth right off." She
thinks that her nervous system will last longer without the papers than
with them. As she told me this, she was shutting down the lid of the
piano for the night. As it fell into its place, the strings set up a
beautiful murmur. "Oh, hear that!" said she; "how solemn it is!" "I
suppose," said I, "you would not have heard it, if those papers had been
in the house." I shall not tell you, a bachelor, what she said and did.
I trust that her views on the great subject of freedom will get adjusted
by and by; and I am debating with myself what papers to take, having
been obliged, for my own edification, to become a subscriber to the
reading-room. There, however, I meet with a good many pro-slavery
prints, and I am tempted to look into them; after which I frequently
feel as though I should pull a bell-rope three times.  A.F.N.




CHAPTER III.

MORBID NORTHERN CONSCIENCE.

                  "Heaven pities ignorance:
  She's still the first that has her pardon sign'd;
  All sins else see their faults; she's, only, blind."

  MIDDLETON: _No Help like a Woman's._


[Accompanying note, from A. BETTERDAY CUMMING to A. FREEMAN NORTH.

MY DEAR MR. NORTH,--

With many thanks for your kindness and frankness, and with my warmest
congratulations to Mrs. North for the pleasant effect which the Southern
lady's letter has had upon her, I send you another document, hoping that
she will read it to you. It will not be worth while for me to say
anything about this production. It purports to be from a young man in
one of our New England literary institutions, whose aunt, with her
husband, was residing at the South for the health of a niece, a sister
to this young man;--they being orphans. The letter is so entirely in the
same key with your feelings that you cannot fail to be interested.
Knowing that you love rare specimens in everything, I send you this as
"the only one of its kind," or as we say, "_sui generis_."--A.B.C.]


---- College, ---- -- ----.

MY DEAR AUNT,--

I have not heard from you but once since your arrival at the South. It
is because sister is more unwell? or because you are very busy with
your arrangements for the winter? or is it because, as I more than half
suspect, you are so much overcome by your first observation and
experience of slavery, that you have but little strength left to write
to me from that "---- post of observation, darker every hour"? Perhaps
you are mustering courage to tell me of the sights which you have seen,
the little while that you have been among the poor, enslaved children of
the sun in our Southern house of bondage. "Afraid to ask, yet much
concerned to know," I wait impatiently for a letter from you. I expect
to make great use of its details among my fellow-students, many of whom,
I mourn to say, have their hearts case-hardened against the story of
oppression. They will show an interest in everybody and everything
sooner than in the slave and his wrongs. They are not only callous on
that subject, but they laugh at your zeal and call it hard names.

No one can tell what I suffer in the cause of freedom, through my
well-meant endeavors to interest and instruct others on the subject
which absorbs my thoughts. I know that I shall have your sympathy; and
when I come to hear from you what your own eyes have seen, ere this, in
slavery, I shall esteem all my sufferings in the cause of the slave as
light as air.

I employ the intervals of study in walking among the beautiful scenery
of the village and its environs, if haply I may meet with some to whom I
may open my mind on this great theme. The last time that I went out for
this purpose, I met with a sad sight. A horse was running away with a
buggy, while between the body of the carriage and the wheel I saw
depending a foot, which I at once inferred was that of a lady. The horse
rushed by, and sure enough, a young lady had fallen on the floor of the
buggy, holding the reins, evidently entangled and embarrassed in her
posture, uttering the most heart-rending cries and shrieks, with
intermingled calls to the horse to stop.

I could not help looking at the horse, as he passed, with feelings of
strong displeasure. To think that anything having an ear to hear and a
sensibility to feel should be so heedless of the cries of distress,
roused up my soul to indignation. As I reflected, however, it occurred
to me that no doubt this horse had been subjected to unkind treatment
from his youth up. I began to blame his owners. Had the law of kindness
been observed in the early management of this horse, doubtless he would
have regarded the first appeal of this young lady to him. May we not
hope, dear Aunt, that a new era is dawning upon us with regard to the
universal triumph of love and kindness over oppression of every kind,
and that the brute creation will partake of its benign influences? The
tone and manner in which horses are spoken to often sends a chill to my
heart.

This reminds me, if you will excuse longer delay in my narrative, of
some unfavorable impressions which I received lately on my way to
Boston, with regard to the imperious manner in which a traveller is
assailed by advertisements on the fences, as you pass through the
environs of the city. Every few miles, as the cars passed along, I saw,
printed on the rough boards of a fence: "Visit" so and so; "Use" so and
so; "Try" so and so. I would not be willing to say how often my
attention was caught by those mandatory advertisements. At last I became
conscious of some feeling of resistance. Whether it was that I began to
breathe the air of Bunker Hill, and the atmosphere which nourishes our
most eminent friends of freedom, so many of whom, you know, live in
Boston and vicinity, I cannot tell; but I found myself saying, with
quite enough resentment and emphasis, "I will not 'use' so and so; I
will not 'try' so and so; especially, I will not 'visit' so and
so,--First, It will not be convenient. Secondly, I have no occasion to
do so. Thirdly, I do not know the way; but, Finally, I do not like to be
addressed in this manner, as an overseer of a Southern plantation
addresses a slave. I am not a slave. I am a Massachusetts freeman." This
way of speaking to people, dear Aunty, must be discountenanced. It will,
by and by, beget an aptitude for servile obedience; the eye and ear
becoming accustomed to the forms of domination, we shall have yokes and
chains upon us before we are aware. Some one says, "Let me write the
songs for a nation, and I care not who makes her laws." So say I, Let me
write imperative advertisements on fences and buildings, and all
resistance to Southern encroachments and usurpation will soon be in
vain.

But to resume my narrative. I began to look round, as soon as my
excitement about the runaway horse would allow, for some one to whom I
could open my overburdened mind on the subject of freedom. I espied a
man with an immense load of chairs, from a factory in our neighborhood,
as I supposed, on his way to Boston. Four horses drew the load, which I
saw was very heavy; not so heavy, I thought with myself, as that which
four millions of my fellow-men are this moment laboring with, over the
gloomy hills of darkness in our Southern States. I felt impelled to
address the driver on this great theme. So, before he had reached the
top of the hill, I called out,--

"Driver!"

Perhaps there was more suddenness and zeal in my call than was
judicious, but the driver immediately said "Whoa!" to his horses, and he
ran hither and thither for stones to block the wheels to keep his load
from running back, down hill.

I felt encouraged, by this, to think that he was of a kind and pliable
disposition; and seeing the wheels fortified, and the horses at rest, I
felt more disposed to hold conversation with the man. "Who knows," I
said to myself, "but that I may now make one new friend for the slave?"

"A warm day," said I.

"Yes, sir," said he, a little impatiently, I thought, The sun was very
hot, an August morning, no air stirring, well suited to make one think
of toil and woe under our Southern skies.

"Have you ever been at the South?" said I, wiping my forehead.

"No, sir," said he, picking out a knot in the snapper of his whip,
evidently to hide his embarrassment while waiting to know the drift of
my question. The sight of his whip kindled in my soul new zeal for the
poor slaves, knowing as I did how many of them were at that moment
skipping in their tortures and striving to flee from the piercing lash.

"Your toil in the hot sun with your load, my dear sir," said I, "is well
fitted to impress you with the thought of the miseries under which four
millions of your fellow-men are every day groaning in our Southern
country. I make no doubt that you are grateful for the blessings of
freedom which we enjoy here at the North. I wish to ask whether you are
doing anything against oppression; whether you belong to any Association
whose object is"--

"What on airth did you stop me for," said he, quite impatiently, and
yet with a lingering gleam of respect, and with some hesitancy at any
further rudeness of speech.

"My dear sir," said I, "four millions of Southern slaves are this very
hour groaning under sorrows which no tongue"--

"You"--(he hesitated a moment, and surveyed me from head to foot, and
then broke out,)--"putty-headed, white-birch-looking, nateral--stoppin'
a load right near the crown of a hill, no gully in the road, such a day
as this, and--'Ged ehp,'"--said he to his horses, as the stones under
the wheels that moment began to give way; and then he drew his lash
through one hand, with a most angry look. I really thought that I should
have to feel that lash. The thought instantly nerved me:--I'll bear it!
it's for the slave; let me remember them, I might have added, that are
whipped as whipped with them; but at that moment the horses had reached
the hill-top, and the driver was by their side.

He called back, as he passed round the rear of his load to the nigh side
of his team. I caught only a few of his last words;--"take your backbone
for a for'ard X." I snapped my thumb and finger at him, though not
lifting my arm from my side. The human spinal column, with its vertebræ,
for an axle-tree of a wagon! And yet, I immediately thought, the poor
negro's back is truly "the for'ard X" of the great wagon of our American
commerce. But I let him depart.

Salutary impressions, I cannot question, dear Aunty, were made upon his
mind. He had heard some things which would occupy his thoughts in his
solitary trudge on his way to Boston. That thought comforted me as I was
writhing a little on my way home, under his opprobrious epithets; for
you know that I was always sensitive when addressed with reproachful
words.

I could not help recalling and analyzing his scalding words of contempt.
I took a certain pleasure in doing so, because, as I saw and felt the
power of each in succession, I remembered what awful abuses flow from
the tongues of Southern masters and mistresses continually, as they goad
on their slaves to their work, or reproach them for not bringing in the
brick for which they had given them no straw. So it was comparatively a
light affliction for me to remember that I had been called by such hard
names. "Putty-headed!" said he. I infer, dear Aunty, that he must have
worked in the painter's department, and had been familiar with putty;
hence he drew the epithet, into whose signification I did not care to
inquire. "White-birch-looking!" I suppose he referred to the impression
of imbecility which we have in seeing a perfectly white tree in the
woods among the deep green of the sturdier trees. He may have referred
to the effect of sedentary habits on my complexion. However, I soon
forgot the particulars of his insulting address, retaining only the
impression that I had suffered, and that willingly, in the bleeding
cause of freedom.

It was a great relief to me that, just at that moment, a very fine dog
approached me and fawned upon me, then ran ahead, and seemed afraid that
I should send him back. After a while I tried to drive him away, but he
insisted on following me, and I have no doubt that I might have secured
him, had I wished to do so. I was not a little inclined, at one time, to
take him home with me, and to keep him as a companion in my walks. But
he had a collar with his own name, Bruno, upon it, and the name of his
owner. The question of right occurred to me. I debated it. Applying some
of the self-evident truths established by our own Independence, I almost
persuaded myself that I might rightfully take the dog. I reasoned thus:
1. All dogs are born free and equal. 2. They have an inalienable right
to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. 3. All governments
derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. These
principles, breathed in, from childhood, with the atmosphere of our
glorious "Fourth," I did not hesitate to apply in the case of the dog. I
do not know what practical conclusion I might have arrived at, but
suddenly I lost sight of Bruno in consequence of a new adventure, in the
process of which he disappeared.

A matronly looking lady came suddenly out of a gate, with a cup in one
hand containing a teaspoon, and a brown earthen mug in the other hand.
She pushed the gate open before her, easily; but I saw that she was
embarrassed about shutting it. I stepped forward and assisted her.

"Some kind office for the sick, I dare say," said I.

"A woman in that plastered house is very sick," said she; "I have just
fixed some marsh-mallow for her, to see if it will ease her cough. Sorry
to trouble you, sir, but my cup was so full that I could not use my
hands."

"I suppose," said I, "madam, if you will allow me to detain you a
moment,"--

"I am afraid my drink in the cup will get cold, sir, but"--

"Only a moment, madam," said I; (for I did not feel at liberty to walk
with her;) "only a moment; I am led to think, by your kindness to this
poor woman, of the millions of bond-people in our Southern country who
never feel the hand of love ministering to their sick and dying"--

"O you ignorant thing!" said she, pouring the contents of the cup into
the mug, and then setting the cup on the mug, all without looking at me;
"where were you born and bred? You must be an abolitionist. Southern
ladies are the very best of nurses; and as to their slaves when they are
sick,--why their hearts are overflowing--why!" said she, "I could tell
you tales that would make you cry like a baby--the idea! millions of
slaves sick and neglected! Do you belong to ---- College?"

"Yes, madam," said I.

"Sophomore?" said she.

"Yes, madam." But it was a cutting question. She had an arch look as she
asked it.

"Well sir," said she, with a graceful air, in a half averted direction,
"you have some things to learn about your fellow-countrymen which are
not put down in your Moral Philosophies. Please do not betray your
ignorance on subjects about which you are evidently in midnight
darkness." She was some ways from me, but I heard her continue: "Was
there ever anything like this Northern ignorance and prejudice about the
Southern people!"

I had nothing to do but resume my lonely walk. My sense of desolateness
no tongue can tell. I whistled for Bruno, but in vain. She called me "an
ignorant thing," said I. Ignorant on the subject of slavery! How easy it
is to misjudge! Have I steadied free-soil papers all these years only to
be called "an ignorant thing!" I could graduate to-day from this
institution, though only in my second year, if the examination were
confined to the subject of slavery. I have thoroughly understood the
theory; I have learned by heart the codes of the iniquitous system. I
know it root and branch, from pith to bark. All the lecturers on the
subject have not labored in vain, nor spent their strength for nought,
with me. And now to be called "ignorant!" Just as though I could not
reason, that is, draw inferences from premises, make deductions from
facts. There is the great fact of slavery; it is "the sum of all
villanies;" men holding their fellow-men in bondage for the sake of
gain; the heart naturally covetous, oppressive, and cruel, where power
is unlimited. As though the law of kindness could, in such
circumstances, possibly prevail and mitigate the sorrows of the bondman!
The direct influence of slavery is to debase, to make barbarous, to
petrify; I know as well as though I saw it that the South must be full
of neglected, perishing objects, cast out to perish in their sicknesses.
You doubtless are acquainted, dear Aunty, with the great change in the
mode of reasoning introduced by Lord Bacon. We reason now from facts to
conclusion; this is called the inductive method, to collect facts, then
draw inferences. The facts which I have collected on the subject of
slavery, in my reading and hearing, lead me to a perfect theory on the
subject, and my confidence in that theory is all which it could be if,
like you, I were now seeing it verified with my own eyes.

I reason on this subject of slavery, just as our philosophers reason
about the moon. You have learned, dear Aunt, ere this, that there is no
water in the moon. Certain things are observed by our telescopes, in the
moon, from which we are sure that there is no water there. Now there are
certain given facts in slavery. Slavery is Barbarism. It consists in
holding men to compulsory servitude. The human heart is avaricious; it
gets all it can, and keeps all it gets. Give it complete power over a
human being, and there are no limits to its cupidity and wrong-doing,
but the finite nature of the thing itself. Hence, does it not follow
that there can be no disinterestedness, no tender mercies in slavery?
Yes, dear Aunt, as we are perfectly sure that there can be no water in
the moon, so are we sure, by the same unerring rule of reasoning
according to the inductive philosophy, that there is not one drop of
water in slavery for the parched lips of a dying slave. I stated this to
a member of our Junior Class who is a wonderful metaphysician. He was
kind enough to say that he could discover no flaw in the logic. Your
letter, which, I trust, is now on its way to me, I know will fully
confirm my theory and conclusion.

This lady had probably been reading some miserable cant about Southern
humanity, for there are people everywhere who take the wrong side of
every subject, from sheer obstinacy. What can disprove the laws of human
nature? They require that things should be at the South as our theories
lay them down.

In our Institution I mourn to say there is much opposition to the
principles of freedom. Not only so, but the students, many of them, mock
at us who stand up against oppression.

You may not be aware, dear Aunty, that I have a habit, in walking, of
keeping my hands firmly clenched, and my thumbs laid flat and pressed
down over the knuckles of my forefingers. This, I am aware, gives the
thumbs a flattened look. One of our principal pro-slavery students
delights to laugh at me to my face. Perhaps I am wrong in connecting
everything with this all-absorbing theme, but, truly, my thoughts all
run in that direction. Mother and you were accustomed to send me on
errands when I was little, and you placed your money in my right hand
and mother hers in my left, because, on my return to our house, your
room was on the right hand of the entry. So I used to go along, holding
your respective moneys in my palms, with my thumbs stopping the
apertures. And now I am persecuted for the fidelity which led me to
acquire a habit that cleaves to me to this day. But little did I dream,
dear Aunty, when I padded along like a straight footed animal in the
water, instead of having the free use of my open palms to aid me in
walking, that I was acquiring a habit to be to me an inlet of torture in
behalf of our manacled four millions, whose hands feel the galling bonds
of slavery. I take it joyfully, because it is all for the slave.

The day that I came home from my two interviews and efforts just
related, a pro-slavery student, a Senior, invited me into his room. He
is exceedingly kind and generous, though, I am sorry to say it, a friend
of oppression. He gave me a splendid apple, the first which I had seen
for the season. He dusted my coat with his feather-duster, and he even
dusted my boots. He asked me how far I had been walking. I told him all
which I had said and done, thinking that it would profitably remind him
of the great subject. He roared with laughter. "Three cheers for
Gustavus;" "isn't that rich;"--waving, all the while, the
feather-duster, and breaking out with fresh peals, as I related one
thing after another. The noise which he made brought in several of the
students from neighboring rooms, and he related my stories to them as
they stood with their thumbs and fingers holding open their text-books
at the places where they were studying. They were a curious looking set,
in their dressing-gowns, slippers, and smoking-caps; and the most of
them, unfortunately, happened to be pro-slavery, and advocates of
oppression; by which I mean, not in favor of my mode of viewing and
treating the subject of slavery. One of them was so amused and excited
that he lost all self-control. He threw down his book, caught me with
his two hands about the waist, and tickled me so that I fell upon the
floor. Then they raised a shout. We have cool nights here, sometimes, in
the warmest weather, and we keep, on the foot-boards of our beds, cotton
comforters, called _delusions_, because they are so downy and light. Two
of the students took the Senior's comforter and laid it on me; then four
of them sat down, one on each corner, to keep me underneath. I have told
you that it was a sultry August day. I thought that I should smother. I
told them so, as well as my choked voice would allow; but one of them
said, in a soft, meek tone, as I writhed in distress, "Hush, Gustavus,
lie still; you are certainly laboring under a delusion." This was all
the more painful from its being so cruelly true, in a literal sense,
while I knew that they had reference to my views with regard to freedom,
in the word "delusion." What sustained me in those moments, dear Aunty?
It was not that I had myself stood by when this trick was played on
Freshmen, and encouraged it by my actions; no, a higher and holier power
than conscience of wrong-doing wrought upon me in those moments. Oh, I
thought, the very cotton which fills this comforter, was cultivated by
the hand of a slave. And shall I complain at being nearly smothered by
it, when I remember what an incubus slavery is to the poor creature who
gathered this cotton, and what an incubus it is to our unhappy land? I
was delivered at last from my load, because my tormentors were tired of
their sport. Would that there were some prospect that they who load
cruel burdens on the slave were increasingly tired of their work!

They would not, however, let me rise. So, thought I, when we have taken
the burden of slavery off from the poor negro, unholy prejudice against
color keeps him from rising to a level with the rest of the community. I
begged that I might get up. They told me that my morning exertions
required longer rest. I told them that I must get my Greek. Whereupon
one of them stood over me, with his arms raised in a deploring attitude,
and said,--

  "Sternitur infelix!--
  --Et dulces moriens reminiscitur Argos."

This, dear Aunty, is the lamentation of a Latin poet over a Greek
soldier lying prostrate on the battle-field, far from home;--"and dying
he remembers his sweet Greece." So they made game of me with the help of
the Classics, giving poignancy to their jokes by polishing the tips with
classical allusions. While I was under the "delusion," they sung
snatches of Bruce's Address to his army; and when they came to the words

  "Who so base as be a slave?--
  Let him turn and flee,"

one of them ran a cane under the delusion and punched me with it,
keeping stroke to the music. This was little short of profaneness. They
asked me if the chair-maker's harnesses were probably made by free or
slave labor, alluding, unfeelingly, to a mistake which I made in a
recitation one day, when two of those very students had kept me talking
about slavery up to the very moment when the recitation-bell rang, so
that I had not looked at my lesson. There are men in my class, and
these were some of them, who, I am told, are plotting to prevent my
having the first appointment, to which they know that my marks at
recitation entitle me. But may I never be so prejudiced against those
who differ from me on the subject of slavery as to deny them credit for
things which they have fairly earned. I leave this to the avowed enemies
of human rights. For the cause of the slave, I must gain the first
appointment.

I alluded, just now, to my feelings at witnessing tricks played on the
Freshmen. Had the Sophomores asked my advice before they played those
tricks, I should have dissuaded them; but when they played them, with
such courage and enterprise, I stood before them with admiration. But
while I was under that quilt, I found that I did not admire the
Sophomores at all, any more than I did the Seniors who then had me in
their power.

The enemies of freedom, in College, had a great triumph the other
evening. One of them, in one of the Literary Societies, read an Original
Poem, the title of which was, "The Fly-time of Freedom." He spoke of
"our glorious summer of Liberty" being infested and pestered with noisy,
provoking things, which he characterized under the names of dor-bugs,
millers, and all those creatures which fly into the room when the lamp
is lighted; the swarms of black gnats which are about your head in the
woods; horse-flies which stick, and leave blood running; and
devil's-darning-needles. One brave man here, a great "friend of
freedom," who, they falsely say, loves to be persecuted, and longs for
martyrdom, and interprets everything that way, he described as a miller,
who seems to court death in the flame. I think he aimed at me in
speaking of soft, harmless bugs which creep over your newspaper or book.
Many faces were turned to me as he repeated these lines. I am sorry to
say the piece was much applauded. It has put back the cause of
emancipation in College, I fear, a term.

The following introduction to another piece was written, and was read,
at the same meeting, by a member of my own class. I fear that there is a
sly hit intended by the writer, which I do not discern, at somebody, or
something, related to freedom. This I suspected from the applause it
excited on the part of those who I know are the most deadly foes we have
to free institutions. I obtained a copy of this introduction. It will
serve, at least, to show you, dear Aunty, what a variety of topics we
have to excite our minds here in College. You can exercise your
discretion about letting uncle read it, as it is on a subject of some
delicacy. The writer says,--

"I am collecting facts from our daily papers illustrating the Barbarism
of Matrimony. My list of wives poisoned, beaten, maimed for life by
their husbands, and of divorces, cruel desertions, the effects on wives
of intemperance in husbands, is truly fearful. I make no question that
there are some happy marriages. But a relation which affords such
peculiar opportunities for cruelty to women, must sooner or later
disappear. No doubt the time will come when marriage will be deemed a
relic of barbarism, and a bridal veil be exhibited as one of the mock
decorations of the unhappy victims. Human nature in man is not good
enough to be trusted with such a responsibility as the happiness of
woman. Let Bachelors of Arts, on our parchments, suggest to us our duty
to aid, through our example, as well as by words, in breaking this
dreadful yoke, bidding those innocent young women who are now, perhaps,
fearfully looking at us as their future oppressors, to be forever free.
In the language of young Hamlet: 'I say, we will have no more
marriages.'"

       *       *       *       *       *

Just before dark one evening, I was sitting in my room, meditating on
the great theme which absorbs my thoughts. My eye was caught by the
bright bolt of my door-lock, the part of the bolt between the lock and
the catch showing, beyond question, that the door was fastened. Some one
on the outside had turned a key upon me.

I had the self-possession to be quiet, for my mind had been calmed by
reflecting, in that twilight hour, that now one more day of toil for the
poor slaves was over.

But as I looked at the bolt, my attention was diverted by something near
the top of the door, moving with a strange motion. It was black; it
opened and shut. I drew toward it. I found that it was the leg of a
turkey, the largest that I ever saw. It was held or fastened in the
ventilator over the door, while some one on the outside was evidently
pulling the tendons of the claw, making it open and shut.

There it performed its tragi-comic gibes for several minutes.

I resumed my seat, unterrified, of course, and proceeded to turn the
spectre to good account. I addressed it, in a moderate tone; though I
think that I used some gesticulation. Said I: Personation of the
Slave-power! predatory, grasping, black! thinkest thou a panting
fugitive lies hid under my "delusion?" or wouldst thou seize a freeman?
The Ægis of Massachusetts is over me. Gape! Yawn! Thou art powerless;
but thy impudence is sublime.--Ten or fifteen voices then solemnly
chanted these words:--

  "Emblem of Slavery
  Clutching the Free!
  We've digested the turkey
  That gobbled oil thee.
  Sure as THANKSGIVING hastened,
  Cock-turkey! thy hour,
  Thanksgivings shall blazon
  Thy downfall, Slave-power!

  "The Slave-power has talons,
  Like Nebuchadnezzar;
  Slaves are the Lord's flagons
  Our modern Belshazzar
  From the Temple of Nature
  Has stolen away.
  'Mean!' 'Mean!' be writ o'er him!
  Wrath! canst thou de"--

Here screams of laughter, and a scampering in the entry, and the
turkey's leg tumbling into my room, ended the trick and their
cantillation. I was wishing to hear, in the next stanza, the idea that
as the tendons of the claw were worked by a foreign power, so slavery at
the South owes its activity to Northern influence. Perhaps it is due to
myself to say that the word scampering, a few lines above, has no
revengeful reference, in its first syllable, to the author of the trick.
The cause of humanity, I find, has a tendency to make one cautious and
charitable in his use of words.

They have anti-slavery meetings in the village, now and then, which I
attend. All the talent of the place, and the truly good, are there. One
evening, when the excitement rose high, a tall, awkward young man
mounted the stage, and said that he wanted to offer one resolution as a
cap-sheaf. You will infer, dear Aunty, that he was an agriculturist. He
lifted his paper high up in one hand, while his other hand was extended
in the other direction, and so was his foot under that hand. He looked
like Boötes, on the map of the heavens, which we used to take with us,
you know, in studying the comet. "Read it!" "Read it!" said the meeting.
"I will," said he, flinging himself almost round once, in his
excitement, reminding me of a war-dance, and then taking his sublime
attitude again; when he read,--

"Resolved, Mr. Cheerman, fact is, that Abolition is everything, and
nuthin' else is nuthin'."

Some of the younger portion of the audience wished to raise a laugh, but
the reddening, angry faces of the prominent friends of the slave were
turned upon them instantly, and overawed them.

All were silent for a moment, when the Chairman rose to speak. He was a
short man, with reddish hair, and his teeth were almost constantly
visible, his lips not seeming to be an adequate covering for them. He
had, moreover, a habit of snuffing up with his nose,--in doing which his
upper lip, what there was of it, played its part, and made him show his
teeth by frequent spasms. Being a little bow-legged, he made an awkward
effort in coming to the front of the stage; but we all love him, because
he is such a vigorous friend of freedom, looking as though he would
willingly be executioner of all the oppressors in the land. He said that
he "utterly concurred" with the mover in the spirit of his resolution;
it was not, to be sure, in the usual form of resolutions, but that could
easily be fixed; and he would suggest that it be referred to the
Standing Committee of the Freedom League. "I agree to that," said the
pro-slavery Senior who gave me that entertainment in his room, (but who,
by the way, being a friend of oppression, had no right to speak in a
meeting in behalf of freedom;) "I agree to that," said he, "Mr.
Chairman, and I move that the School-master be added to the Committee."
What a cruel laugh went through the meeting! while the most
distinguished friends of the slave had hard work to control their faces.

I could not help going to the mover of the resolution after the meeting;
and, laying two fingers of my right hand on his arm, I said, "Don't be
put down; he tried to reproach you for not being college-bred; he had
better get the slaves well educated before he laughs at a Massachusetts
freeman for not being a scholar."--He tossed his black fur-skin cap
half-way to his head, and he wheeled round as he caught it, saying,
"Don't care, liberty's better'n larnin', 'nuff sight."--"Both are good,"
said I, "my friend, and we must give them both to the slave."--"Give 'em
the larnin' after y'u've sot 'em free!" said he; "I'll fight for 'em;
don't want to hear nuthin' 'bout nuthin' else but liberty to them that's
bound." He stooped and pulled a long whip and a tin pail from under the
seat of the pew where he had been sitting, making considerable noise, so
that the people, as they passed out, turned, and the sight of him and
his accoutrements made great sport for some whose opinions and feelings
were the least to be regarded. I saw in him, dear Aunty, a fair specimen
of native, inbred love of liberty and hatred of oppression,
unsophisticated, to be relied on in our great contest with the
slave-power. I have been told, since the meeting, that his Christian
name is Isaiah.

The meeting that evening appointed me a delegate to an Anti-slavery
Convention which is to be held before long. I am expected to represent
the College on the great arena of freedom. They have done me too much
honor. Since my appointment, the students have sent me, anonymously,
through the post-office, resolutions to be presented by me at the
Convention. I have copied them into a book as they came in, and I will
transcribe them for you and send them herewith. The spirit of liberty
is, on the whole, certainly rising among the students. As the blood of
the martyrs is the seed of the Church, I cannot but hope that my trials
in the cause of freedom have wrought good in the Institution. Some who
send in these resolutions privately, are, no doubt, secret friends,
needing a little more courage to face the pro-slavery feeling and
sentiment which are all about them. Some one who read these resolutions
suggested the idea of their being a burlesque. I repudiated the idea at
once. They will commend themselves to you, dear Aunty, I am sure, as
honest and truthful.

The President called me to his room yesterday, and asked me about the
treatment which I received from those Seniors. While I was telling him
of it, I noticed that he kept his handkerchief close to his face almost
all the time. I thought at first that his nose bled, or that he had a
toothache; but I afterward believed that he was weeping at the story of
my wrongs. A Southerner, in the Junior Class, said he had no doubt that
the President was laughing heartily all the time. None but a minion of
the slave-power could have suggested this idea. The President felt so
much that he merely told me to return to my room.

But I perceive, by the students with letters and papers in their hands,
that the mail is in. I will add a postscript, if I find a letter from
you; and I will send on the resolutions at once. Write soon, dear Aunty,
to your loving nephew, and to

Yours for the slave,
Gustavus.




CHAPTER IV.

RESOLUTIONS FOR A CONVENTION.

  "Nay, and thou'lt mouth,
  I'll rant as well as thou."--HAMLET.


I.

_Resolved_, That the continued practice of wild geese to visit the South
for the winter, flying over free soil--Concord, Lexington, Bunker Hill,
Faneuil Hall,--on their way to the land of despotism, cannot be too
loudly deplored by all the friends of freedom in the North; and that the
laws of nature are evidently imperfect in not yielding to the known
anti-slavery sentiments of this great Northern people so far as to make
the instincts of said geese conform to our most sacred antipathies and
detestations.


II.

_Resolved_, That the abolitionists of Maine, and of the British
Provinces, resident near the summer haunts of said geese, be requested
to consider whether measures may not be adopted whereby anti-slavery
tracts, and card-pictures illustrating the atrocious cruelties of
slavery, and appeals to the consciences of the South, or at least
instructions to the colored people as to their right and duty to assert
their liberty, may not be fastened to these birds of passage, to make
them apostles of liberty; so that while they continue to disregard the
bleeding cause of humanity, their very cackle may be converted into lays
of freedom.


III.

Whereas we read in the Revelation a description of the wall of heaven as
having "on the South three gates," a number equal to that assigned to
the North,

_Resolved_, That this description being in total disregard of the great
modern anti-slavery movement, the book which contains it cannot have
been divinely inspired; and that a true anti-slavery Bible would have
represented those pro-slavery gates as shut, with the inscription over
them: Enter from the North.


IV.

_Resolved_, That the great abolitionist who represents himself in his
speeches as baptizing his dogs, in just ridicule of the baptism of
chattel slaves, is worthy, with his dogs, of a place in the heavens
among the constellations; and that anti-slavery astronomers be requested
to make a Southern constellation for them somewhere near the head of The
Serpent, as rivals to "_Canes Venatici_," which pro-slavery astronomers
no doubt designed, in blasphemous profanation of the heavens, to
represent their bloodhounds hunting fugitive slaves, placing it in
disgusting proximity to our own Northern _Ursa Major_. And the friends
of the slave are hereby invited to make that new constellation their
cynosure, vowing by it, and anti-slavery lovers arranging their
matrimonial engagements, if possible, so as to plight their troth only
when it is in the ascendant.


V.

_Resolved_, That we shall hail it as a sign of progress and an omen for
good, when anti-slavery women, with the sensibility which belongs to
their sex, shall become so interpenetrated with the sentiments of
freedom, that they can distinguish by the sense of taste the oyster
grown in James River, Richmond, Virginia, and handled by the toil-worn
slave, from that which grew on free soil.


VI.

_Resolved_, That our noble anti-slavery poets be requested to compose
sonnets addressed to the whippoorwill, appealing to that sorrowful-tuned
bird by our associations with his name, and by his own historic
relationship to the victims of oppression, to desert the South and to
frequent our woods and pastures in greater numbers, that the
sensibilities of our people may be continually touched by his notes and
his name, so suggestive of the monstrous lash which rules over one half
of this great nation. And the anti-slavery members of the Legislature
are hereby requested to seek legislative enactments whereby the
whippoorwill may be further domiciliated at the North, and be provided
with protection during the winter season.


VII.

_Resolved_, That bobolinks, blue jays, orioles, martins, and swallows,
who visit the rice-fields of the South, and live upon the unrequited
toil of four millions of our fellow-men, should not, upon their return,
be viewed with favor by the friends of equal rights at the North, but
should be destroyed by sportsmen as a sacrifice to outraged humanity.
And no true anti-slavery taxidermist will, in our judgment, be found
willing to stuff the skin of one of those mean and traitorous birds for
any public or private ornithological show-case.


VIII.

_Resolved_, That one subject of great interest, well suited to occupy
the attention of Massachusetts freemen and friends of liberty the
current year, is this: Whether the great whips in Dock Square, Boston,
which stand professedly as signs before the doors of whip-makers' shops,
but are in the very sight of Faneuil Hall, shall be allowed to remain
within that sacred precinct of liberty; and that we tender our thanks to
those who are investigating the question whether the whips were not
originally placed, and are not now maintained, there by the slave-power,
in mockery of our Northern hatred of oppression.


IX.

_Resolved_, That, if it be true that the steel pen which signed the bill
for the removal of a Judge of Probate for doing an accursed duty as U.S.
Commissioner, was taken from the Council Chamber and is now in the
possession of one who has driven it into the edge of his chamber-door
casement, and every night hangs his watch upon it, at the head of his
bed, with the infatuated notion that thereby, through some "most fine
spirit of sense," the tick of a death-watch will disturb the political
dreams of our Massachusetts rulers, we hereby declare that this is most
chimerical and visionary, and that the great party of freedom in
Massachusetts need not feel the slightest apprehension that our rulers
have the least misgivings as to the morality of their conduct in the
removal of said officer, nor that they fear political retribution for
that deed; nor do we believe that the death-watch will ever tick in the
ear of freedom in Massachusetts.


X.

_Resolved_, That in the acquiescence of many at the North in the entire
justice of a universal massacre, by the slaves, of their masters,
including women and children, we recognize a state of preparedness for
the proscription and banishment of all who do not come up to the high
abolition standard; but that in carrying out that project, we ought
first to seek the reclamation of the victims, and therefore that due
inquiry ought to be made concerning the most effective modes of
persuasion, as, for example, thumb-screws, racks, wheels, scorpions,
water-dropping for the head, bags of snakes, tweezers, and steel-pointed
beds, it being apparent that our agony for the slave cannot be satisfied
except by his liberation, or by the forcible subjection to us of all who
oppose it. And we do hereby request all the friends of freedom now
travelling in despotic countries to make inquiry as to the most approved
methods of persuading the mind by appeals to it through the
sensibilities of the flesh, and to be prepared with this information
against the time when the sublime march of abolition philanthropy shall
arrive at the limits of forbearance with all the Northern advocates of
oppression.


XI.

Whereas no one who holds slaves can be a Christian; and whereas Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob were slave-holders, Abraham himself having owned more
slaves than any Southerner; and whereas a synonyme of heaven, in the New
Testament, is "Abraham's bosom;" and whereas no true friend of freedom
can consistently have Christian communion with slave-holders,

_Resolved_, That we look with deep interest to the introduction among us
of the principles of the Hindoo philosophy and religion (including the
transmigration of souls), through tentative articles in our magazines;
by which there is opening to us a way of escape from that heaven one
exponent of which is, to lie in the bosom of a slave-holder.


XII.

And in conclusion,

_Be it Resolved_, That Bunker Hill was since Mount Sinai, that Faneuil
Hall is far in advance of the Tabernacle in the Wilderness; and that our
anti-slavery literature is immeasurably beyond epistles to Philemon and
other inspired pro-slavery tracts.




CHAPTER V.

THE GOOD NORTHERN LADY'S LETTER FROM THE SOUTH.

  "No haughty gesture marks his gait,
  No pompous tone his word;
  No studied attitude is seen,
  No palling nonsense heard;
  He'll suit his bearing to the hour,
  Laugh, listen, learn, or teach.
  With joyous freedom in his mirth,
  And candor in his speech."--ELIZA COOK.


[My friend, A. Freeman North, having read the foregoing, returned it
with a hasty note, in pencil, saying, "Please send me the Aunt's reply,
if you have it, or can procure it." I accordingly sent it, and we have
it here.]

MY DEAR NEPHEW,--

Your letter came while we had gone into the country for a fortnight.
Hattie is much improved, and I trust will soon be well. I gave her your
letter to read. She told me that she could not find it in her heart to
wonder at you for it; for once she should probably have written very
much in the same strain.

It was Easter Monday afternoon when our steamboat reached the wharf. We
took an open carriage and drove toward the hotel. As we reached the
centre of the city, the place seemed to be full of colored people, who
evidently had just come out of their meeting-houses. This was our first
view of the blacks. Our driver had to stop frequently while they were
crossing the streets, and we had full opportunity to enjoy the sight.
Hattie exclaimed, after looking at them a few moments,--

"Why, Uncle, they are human beings!"

"What did you suppose they were?" said he.

"Uncle," said she, "these cannot be slaves. Where do you suppose the
yokes are?"

"Now, Hattie," said he, "you were not so simple as to suppose that they
wore yokes, like wild cows and swine."

"Why," said she, "our papers are always telling about their being
'reduced to a level with brutes,' and every Sabbath since I was a child,
it seems to me, I have heard the prayer, 'Break every yoke!' Last Sabbath
our minister, you remember, said, 'Abraham was a slave-holder, David a
murderer, and Peter lied and swore.' Why, Uncle, these black people look
like gentlemen and ladies! If slave-holders are like murderers and
thieves, these cannot be their slaves!"

"Ask that elderly gentleman," said your Uncle. He was stopping for our
carriage to pass,--a portly man, with a ruffled shirt, and a
rich-looking cane, the end of which he kept on the ground, holding the
top of it at some distance from him.

"Please, sir, will you tell me if these are the slaves?" said Hattie.

He looked round, while he kept his arm and the top of his cane
describing large arcs of a circle.

"They are our colored people, Miss," said he, exchanging a smile with
your Uncle and me.

"Well, sir," said Hattie, more earnestly than before, "are they
slaves?"

He politely nodded assent, but was apparently interested by something
which caught his eye. He then took out a snuff-box, and, looking round
about him while opening it, said,--

"Some of them dress too much, Miss,--too much, altogether."

"Kid gloves of all colors," said Hattie, soliloquizing. "Red morocco
Bibles and hymn-books. What a white cloud of a turban! Part of the
choir, I take it,--those, with their singing-books. Elegant spruce young
fellow, isn't he, Aunt? with the violoncello. Venerable old couple,
there! over eighty, both of them. Well," continued Hattie, "I will give
up, if these are the slaves."

"Don't make up your mind too suddenly," said your Uncle; "you will see
other things."

"Uncle," said she, "what I have seen here in fifteen minutes shows me
that at least one half of that which I have learned at the North about
the slaves is false. Our novels and newspapers are all the time
misleading us."

"And yet," said your Uncle, "perhaps everything they say may be true by
itself; it may have happened."

"Why, Aunt," said she, "such a load is gone from my mind since looking
upon these colored people that I feel almost well. Why, there's a
wedding!" said she. "Driver, do stop! Uncle, please let us go in."

They left me, and went into a meeting-house, where a black bridegroom,
in a blue broadcloth suit, white waistcoat, kid gloves, patent-leather
shoes, and white hose, and an ebony bride, in white muslin caught up
with jessamines, and a myrtle wreath on her head, had gone in, followed
by a train of colored people. The white people, invited guests, it
seems, were already assembled. The sexton told your Uncle that the
parties were servants, each to a respectable family. This was a new
picture to Hattie. She said that in looking back to the steamboat, an
hour ago, the revelations made to her by what she had seen and heard, in
that short time, all new, all surprising and delightful, afforded her
some idea of the sensations of a soul after it has been one hour within
the veil. We sat in the carriage, and saw the procession pass out, when
the choir, who had been in the church before the wedding, practising
tunes, resumed their singing.

"Now the idea," said Hattie, after we had listened awhile, "that they
can forget that they are slaves long enough to meet and practise
psalm-tunes!"

"You evidently think," said your Uncle, "that they would not sing the
Lord's songs, if this were to them a strange land."

"They certainly have not hung their harps upon the willows by these
rivers of Babylon," said Hattie.

"Why, some of our people at the North are to-day writhing in anguish,
because of these slaves, and are imprecating God's vengeance, and
praying that the slaves may get their liberty, even by violence, while
the slaves themselves are practising psalm-tunes!"--

"And getting married," said your Uncle.

"Yes, Sir," said Hattie, "and this week our ---- paper will come to us
from New York loaded with articles about 'bondage' and 'sum of all
villanies,' and 'poor, toil-worn slaves.' Toil-worn! I never saw such a
lively set of people. Do see that little mite of a round black child, in
black jacket and pants; he looks like a drop of ink; Oh, isn't he
cunning! Little boy! what is your"--

"Come, come!" said your Uncle, "you are getting too much excited; you
will pay for all this to-morrow with one of your headaches."

But a new surprise awaited us. The driver stopped opposite a large,
plain-looking building, and told us that we had better step in. On
entering, we involuntarily started back, for I never saw a house more
densely filled; and all were blacks. It was a sable cloud; but the sun
was in it. The choir were singing a select piece. The principal
_soprano_, an elegant-looking black girl, dressed in perfect taste, held
her book from her in her very small hand covered with a straw-colored
glove. The singing was charming. We asked a white-headed negro in the
vestibule what was going on.

"Why, it is Easter Monday, Missis."

"Is this an Episcopal church?"

"No; Baptist."

"What are all these people here for?" said your Uncle.

"Why, to worship, Sir, I hope. It's holiday."

"Do they go to church, holidays?"

"Why," said he, with a smile and bow, "some of the best of 'em, p'raps."

We returned to the carriage.

"Think," said your uncle, "of two thousand people at the North spending
a part of 'Artillery Election Day' in Boston, for example, in going to
church!"

"Well," said Hattie, "if I were not to live another day, I would bless
God for having let me live to see these things. I am so glad to find
people happy who I had supposed were weeping and wailing."

We admonished her that she had not seen the whole of slavery.

A very interesting coincidence happened to us the next day. We took tea
at Rev. Mr. ----'s. A splendid bride-cake adorned the table. As Hattie
was admiring the ornaments on the cake, the lady of the clergyman smiled
and said,--

"This is from a colored wedding."

Sure enough, that black bride whom we saw the day before had sent her
minister's wife this loaf. Said Miss ----, "I was hurrying to get a silk
dress made last week, but my dressmaker put me off, because she was
working for Phillis B.'s wedding."

We both gave a glance at Hattie. She sat gazing at Miss ----, her lips
partly open, her eyes moistened,--a picture in which delight and
incredulity were in pleasant strife.

       *       *       *       *       *

We have been in the interior a fortnight. One thing filled me with
astonishment, soon after I came here, namely, to find widow ladies and
their daughters, all through the interior of Southern States, living
remote from other habitations, surrounded by twenty, fifty, or a hundred
slaves. Hattie and I spent a week with a widow lady, whose head slave
was her overseer. There was not a white man within a mile of the house.
More than twenty black men, slaves, were in the negro quarter. I awoke
the first night, and said to Hattie,--

"Do you know that you are 'sleeping on a volcano'?"

"What do you mean, Aunt? You frighten me."

"Well, it will not make an eruption to-night," said I. "We will examine
into it to-morrow."

At breakfast I asked the lady how she dared to live so. I told her that
we at the North generally fancied Southern people sleeping on their
arms, expecting any night to be murdered by their slaves.

"It ought to be so, ought it not?" said she, "according to your Northern
theory of slavery; and it may get to be so, if your people persist in
some of their ways. My only fear is of some white men who live about two
miles off. I keep two of my men-servants in the house at night as a
protection against white depredators."

"But," said Hattie, "there have been insurrections. Are you not afraid
that your slaves will rise and assert their liberty?"

The lady smiled and was evidently hesitating whether to answer seriously
or not, when Hattie continued,--

"Aunt! now I see what you meant by our sleeping on a volcano."

"Yes," said I, "we at the North often speak of you Southerners as
sleeping on a volcano. Our idea is that the blacks here are prisoners,
stealing about in a sulky mood, vengeance brooding in their hearts, and
that they wait for their time of deliverance, as prisoners in our
state-prison watch their chance to escape."

"Well," said she, "believe I am the only slave on the premises. I am
sure that no one but myself is watching for a chance to escape. I would
run away from these people if I could. But what shall I do with them? I
am not willing to sell them, for when I have hinted at leaving, there is
such entreaty for me to remain, and such demonstrations of affection and
attachment, that I give it up.

"Here," said she, "are seven house-servants, large and small, to do work
which at the North a man and two capable girls would easily do. I have
to devise ways to subdivide work and give each a share. My husband
carried it so far that he had one boy to black boots and another shoes,
and these two 'bureaus' were kept separate."

"Oh," said I, "what a curse slavery is to you!"

"As to that," said she, "it is the negroes who are a curse, not their
slavery. So long as they are on the same soil with us, the subordination
which slavery establishes makes it the least of two evils. If there is
any curse in the case, it is the blacks themselves, not their slavery.
Were it not for their enslavement to us, we should hate them and drive
them away, like Indiana and Illinois and Oregon and Kansas. Now we
cherish them, and their interests are ours.

"Two distinct races," said she, "never have been able to live together
unless one was subordinate and dependent. This, you know, all history
teaches. Your fanatics say it should not be so; they talk about liberty,
equality, and fraternity, and put guns and pikes into the hands of the
inferior race, here, to help them 'rise in the scale of being,' as they
term it. What God means to accomplish in this matter of slavery I do not
see.

"Suppose, merely for illustration," said she, "that cotton should be
superseded. Vast numbers of our slaves might then be useless here. What
would become of them? We should implore the North to relieve us of them,
in part. Then would rise up the Northern antipathy to the negro,
stronger, probably, in the abolitionist than in the pro-slavery man; and
as we sought to remove the negroes northward and westward, the Free
States would invoke the Supreme Court, and the Dred Scott decision, and
then we should see, with a witness, whether the black man has 'any
rights' on free soil 'which the' original settlers 'are bound to
respect.' Think of bleeding Kansas, even, refusing to incorporate
negro-suffrage in her constitution, when left free to follow the
dictates of common sense, and a wise self-interest. I sometimes think
that that one thing, as a philosophical fact, is worth all the trouble
which Kansas has cost. It cannot be 'unholy prejudice against color.' It
is human nature asserting the laws which God has established in it.

"I never," said she, "find abolitionists quoting the whole of the verse
which says: 'and hath made of one blood all the nations of the earth.'"

"What," said I, "do they leave out?"

"'And hath fixed the bounds of their habitations,' are some of the next
words," said she.

But you will tire of this. I will resume my story. I will only say that
I told the lady that some of my gentleman friends would call her a
strong-minded woman.

       *       *       *       *       *

Your letter made me think of something which happened to a lady, a
fellow-traveller of ours, a few weeks, ago. She came here to visit a
lady whose husband owns one hundred and fifty slaves. The morning after
she reached the plantation, as she told me, she was awaked by the
cracking of whips. She listened; human voices, raised above the ordinary
pitch, were mingling with the sounds. She lay till she could endure it
no longer. Coming down to the piazza, she saw a white man mending a
harness on a horse. "Those whips," said she, inquiringly,--"they have
rather interfered with my peace. Any of the colored people been doing
wrong?" He hesitated, and kept on fixing his harness, till, finally, he
turned round,--for he had been standing with his back to her and, as she
supposed, to hide his chagrin at being questioned on so trying a
subject. "Truth is, Madam," said he, taking a large piece of tobacco and
a knife from his pocket, and helping himself slowly,--"truth is, we have
so much of this work to do, we have to begin early. Sorry it disturbed
you;" and he gathered up the reins and drove off.

The whips kept up their racket. "Here," said she to herself, "is the
house of Bondage. How can I spend a month here?" She thought that she
would peep round the house. Yet she feared that she should be considered
as intruding into things which she had better not meddle with. But the
screams became so fearful that she could no longer restrain herself. She
rushed round the corner of the house, and came full against a black
woman rinsing some fustian clothes in a tub near the rain-spout. "Do
dear tell me," said she, "what they are doing to those people. Who is
whipping them? What have they done?" The black woman stopped, and looked
round without taking her hands from her tub, and then said, as she went
on rinsing, "Lorfull help you, Missis, dem's de young uns scaring de
birds out of de grain."

What bliss there was to her in that moment of relief! Six or eight
little negroes were sauntering about at their morning work, each having
a rude whip, with tape for a snapper, interrupting the hungry birds at
their breakfast.

I expected to see a wretched, down-trodden, alms-house looking set of
creatures; for the word _slave_, and all the changes which are rung on
that word, made me think only of people who are convicts, such as you
see in the state-prison yard at Charlestown, Mass. I never expected that
they would look me in the face, but would skulk by me as a spy or enemy.
A Christian heart is overjoyed to find what religion and society have
done for these colored people. If one who had never heard of "slavery"
should be set down here, the Northern idea of "bondage" would not soon
occur to him.

In the Presbytery which includes Charleston, S.C., there are two
thousand eight hundred and eighty-nine church-members, and of these one
thousand six hundred-and thirty-seven, more than one half, are colored.
In State Street, Mobile, there is a colored Methodist Church who pay
their minister, from their own money, twelve hundred dollars a year. Not
long since they took up a voluntary contribution for Home Missions,
amounting to one hundred and twenty dollars. Their preacher was sent by
the Conference, according to rotation, into another field, and the
blacks presented him with a valuable suit of clothes.

You see things here, good and evil, side by side, and mixed up together,
one thing counterbalancing another. If you reason theoretically upon
this subject, as you do "about the moon," to quote from your letter, it
is enough to make one almost a lunatic, and I do not wonder that some of
our good people at the North, who pore over this subject in this way,
are on the borders of insanity.

My great mistake at the North with regard to this subject of slavery
was, I reasoned about it in the abstract, instead of considering it in
connection with those who are slaves under our laws, bound up with us in
our civil constitution. Things might be true or false, right or wrong,
in connection with the enslavement of a race who had never been slaves,
which cannot be applied to the colored people of the South. Hence, the
arguments and the appeals founded on the wrongfulness of reducing you or
me to slavery are obviously misapplied when used to urge the
emancipation of these slaves. Moreover, my thoughts about slavery were
governed by my associations with the word _slave_, in its worst sense.
This is wholly wrong, and it is the source of most of our mistakes on
this subject.

Dreadful things happen here to some of the slaves in the hands of
passionate men. One slave who had run away was caught, and was beaten
for a long time, and melted turpentine was then poured upon his wounds.
He lingered for several hours. But the horror and execration which this
deed met with were no greater at the North than at the South. It cannot
be denied that slavery, as well as marriage, affords peculiar
provocations and facilities for cruel deeds,--according to the doctrine
of your friend and fellow-Sophomore. But in which section there is the
more of unpunished wickedness, I am slow to pronounce, for I do not wish
to condemn my own people, nor to justify others in their sins. An
excellent minister in Cincinnati not long since preached a sermon on
murder, in which he stated that "during his residence in that city,
there had been more than one hundred murders, or an average of two a
month, while in no instance had the perpetrator been executed." Reading
lately of a husband at the North throwing oil of vitriol from a bottle,
filled for the purpose, over his wife's face and neck, and of a Northern
clergyman feeding his young wife, as she sat on his knee, with apple on
which he had sprinkled arsenic, I questioned whether human nature were
not about the same everywhere. The theoretical right of a master, in
certain cases, to put his slave to death, without judge or jury, is
controlled by the self-interest of the owner who, of course, does not
recklessly destroy his own property. The slave-codes are no just
exponent of the actual state of things in slavery. For example,--by law
a master may not furnish his slave with less than a peck of corn a week.
This has a barbarous look. But to see the slaves feasting on the fat of
the land you certainly would not be reminded of the "peck of corn,"
except by contrast. There must be some legal standard, below which if
an inhuman master falls in providing for his servant, he can be
prosecuted. Hence the "peck of corn." By the will of an eminent citizen
at the North, establishing courses of lectures for all coming time, the
pay of each lecturer is to be determined by the market value, at the
time, of a bushel of wheat. This is a fair standard for the unit of
measure.

In arguing with one who should insist that the abuses in slavery are a
reason for breaking up the institution in this country, I should feel
justified in maintaining that there are as many instances of a happy
relation between, master and servant in the Southern country as there
are happy marriages in the same number of households anywhere. Let there
be four millions of an inferior, dependent race mixed up with a superior
race, anywhere on earth, and of course, while human nature is what it
is, there will be hardships, wrong-doings, oppressions, and barbarisms.
At the North, we get scraps of anguish in the newspapers relating to
hardships at the South; and many pore upon them till they make
themselves half-crazed. All the circumstances serving to qualify the
narrative are sometimes withheld, and the stories are told with dramatic
art. There is sorrow enough everywhere to furnish material for such kind
of writing, especially to those who make it their calling, or find it
for their interest, to publish it. But the goings-on of life, at the
South, with its alleviations and comforts, the practical mitigations of
an oppressive system, theoretical evils qualified by difference of
color, constitution, and history, and all the goodness and mercy which
Christianity and a well-ordered state of society provide, we at the
North do not see. Nor do our people consider that running away, and the
complaints of the slaves, are partly chargeable to the discontent and
restlessness of human nature; but we seem to take it for granted that
every one who flees from the South is as though he had escaped from a
prison-ship.

While at the North, I remember reading an article, signed with initials,
in a prominent Massachusetts magazine, which contained this sentence:
"Arsenic is universally in possession of the negroes; but it is
considered the part of wisdom, where families are poisoned, that the
fact should be kept as secret as possible." This was brought very
powerfully to my mind one day on passing through King Street, in
Charleston, and seeing for a painted sign over an apothecary's shop, a
tall, benevolent-looking negro, in his shirt sleeves, behind a golden
mortar, with the pestle in his hands, as though at work.

Now, I thought with myself, as I stood and enjoyed the sight, what a
palpable and eloquent, though undesigned and silent, refutation that is,
of all such Northern chimeras. If poisons are mixed with articles of
food or medicine by the negroes with any noticeable frequency, the sign
of a negro compounding medicines for public sale would surely be, to
customers, the most detersive sign which an apothecary could erect over
his premises. That little incident, and things like it, which are
meeting you at every turn, show the state of things here to be in
pleasing contrast to the horrors with which the imaginations of many of
us Northerners are peopled. I find, in the "Charleston Mercury," a good
cut of this "negro and golden mortar," and I send it to you as an
appropriate answer to much of your letter.

Our landlord, driving us about the country the other day, and needing
silver change, came to a gang of slaves in a field, and cried out,
"Boys, got any silver for a five dollar gold piece?" Several hands went
into as many pockets, at once, and a lively fellow among them getting
the start, jumped over the fence, and changed the money. I had been here
a month when I received your letter, and when I read it I at first
laughed as heartily, I suspect, as "the pro-slavery Senior" did. Then I
pitied you, and I pitied myself for my own former ignorance, and I
pitied very many of our Northern people, and, not the least, such
persons as poor "Isaiah," who I know are honest, but are grievously
misled. The word slavery is, to us, an awful word. Very much of our
anti-slavery feeling is a perfectly natural instinct. You cannot see
Java sparrows in a cage, nor even a mother-hen tied to her coop, without
a lurking wish to give them liberty. On thinking of being "a slave," we
immediately make the case our own, and imagine what it would be for us
to be in bondage to the will of another. We cannot easily be convinced
that this is not exactly parallel with being one of the slaves at the
South, nor that to be a slave does not have these things for its
inseparable conditions, which, we imagine, are always obtruding their
direful visages; namely, "auction-block," "overseer," "whip,"
"chattelism," "separations," "down-trodden," "cattle." Hence it is easy
for orators and preachers to work on our sympathies. There are scattered
facts enough to justify any tale which any public speaker chooses to
relate. I confess that my respect for many of our Northern people has
not risen, as I see them from this point of view. They ought not to be
so easily duped, so ready to believe evil, so quickly carried away by
partial representations, and so unwilling to take comprehensive views of
such a subject as this. I condemn myself in speaking thus; I partly
blame the novel-writers, and the editors of party papers, and political
leaders. But we ought at the North to understand this subject better,
to listen willingly to information from great and good men who have
spent their lives among the slaves, and to discriminate between the evil
and the good. The result may be that we shall not change our inbred
views, nor cease to dissent from those who advocate slavery as a
necessary means of civilization in its highest forms; but we shall
certainly differ from those who declare it to be, practically, an
unmitigated curse to all concerned. I am often made to wish that the
Southerners could be relieved of our Northern hostility and its effects
upon them, just to see them laboring, as they then would, to correct
certain evils which ought to be redressed. We are all apt to neglect our
duty, more or less, when we are suffering abuse.

Educate this people, some years longer, in the way in which they are
going on, and they cannot be slaves in any objectionable sense. Tens of
thousands of them, now, are not slaves in any such sense, and they never
can be; they could not be recklessly sold at auction; the owners would
revolt at it, and those in want of servants would meet with great
competition in obtaining such as these. A church-member who should
separate husband and wife for no fault, would be disciplined at the
South as surely as for inhumanity at the North. But oh, we say at the
North, only to think, that all those fine-looking people whom Hattie saw
from the barouche, that Monday afternoon, were liable on Tuesday morning
to have their kid gloves and finery taken from them, and to be marched
off to the auction-block! Hence our commiseration. And it is a most
groundless commiseration.

One thing is especially impressed on my mind. There being sins and evils
in slavery, as all confess, there are men and women here who are
perfectly competent to manage them without our help. There is nothing
that seems to me more offensive than our self-righteousness, as I must
call it, at the North, in exalting ourselves above our fathers and
brethren of all Christian denominations at the South; as though there
were no conscience, no Christian sensibility, no piety here, but it must
all be supplied from the North. When I hear these Southern ministers
preach and pray, and see them laboring for the colored people, and then
think of our designation of ourselves at the North, "friends of the
slave," and remember that all our anti-slavery influence has been
positively injurious to the best interests of the slave at the South, I
have frequently been led to exclaim, What an inestimable blessing it
would be to this colored race, and to our whole land, if anti-slavery,
in the offensive sense of that word, could at once and forever cease!
and I have as often questioned in my own mind whether slavery has not
been, and is not now, the occasion of more sin at the North than at the
South, and whether we at the North are not more displeasing in the sight
of God for the things which are said and done there, in connection with
anti-slavery, than the South with all the sins and evils incident to
slave-holding. I am coming to this belief.

The people who most frequently excite my commiseration are the free
blacks. They are "scattered and peeled." The Free States dread their
coming; they cannot rise in the Slave States. Even the slaves look down
upon them, sometimes. "Who are you?" said a slave to a free black, in my
hearing; "you don't belong to anybody!" Some States have given them
notice to quit, within a specified time, or they must be sold. Some here
insist that slavery is the only proper condition for the blacks, and
they would reduce them back to bondage. Others remonstrate at this as
cruel. Surely it is a choice of evils for them, to be free, or to be
slaves, if they remain here. There is one thought that affords a ray of
consolation,--they are better off, in either condition, than they once
were in Africa. It is unquestionable to my mind that their relation to
the whites, even in bondage, is, as the general rule, mercy to them,
while they are on the same soil with the whites. Allow it to be
theoretically wrong to be a slave,--it is, under existing circumstances,
protection and a blessing, compared with any arrangement which has yet
been proposed. I have not sufficient patience to argue with those, North
or South, who contend for slavery as a normal condition. I should be
called at the North "pro-slavery;" but the North is in a passion on this
subject. I am not, and I never can be, an advocate for this relation, in
itself, but as a present necessity.

I once heard a speaker at an anti-slavery meeting at home say, "They
tell us how elevated the blacks are, how intelligent, how pious; that
shows how fit they are for freedom, how wrong it is to hold such people
in bondage. As much as you raise the slaves in our opinion, you deepen
the guilt of the slave-holder."

This used to dwell much on my mind. I see the thing differently now. You
remember your Uncle Enoch, from Madras, who made your first Malay kite.
I remember a fable which he told you when he was flying the kite for the
first time. "A kite," he said, "high in the air, reasoned thus: If,
notwithstanding this string, I fly so high, what would I not do, if I
could break away! It gave a dash and became free, and was soon in the
woods." I do not mean to strain the comparison; but, certainly, a
_string_ has raised, and now keeps up, the colored race, here. How they
would do, if the string were cut, let wiser heads than mine decide.
They cannot have my scissors, at present.

The way to be friends of the slave, I now see, is to be the real friends
of their masters, and to pray that the influences of truth and love may
fill their hearts. Where this is the case, the slaves, as a laboring
class, are better off than any separate class of laboring people on
earth, both for this world and the next.

As to setting them free at once and indiscriminately, it would be as
unjust to them as it originally was to steal them from Africa. So it
appears to me. What God means to do with them, no one can tell. That He
has been doing a marvellous work of mercy for the poor creatures is
manifest. They were slaves at home; they have changed their situation to
their benefit. I have made up my mind to leave this great problem--the
destiny of the blacks--to my Maker, and, in the mean time, pray in
behalf of the owners, that they may have a heart to act toward them
according to the golden rule. I am glad that I am not oppressed with the
responsibility of ownership. Those who assume it should be encouraged by
us to treat their charge as a trust committed to them for a season. I do
not argue, much less plead, for the continuance of this system; it may
be abolished very soon, but that is with Providence. I have acquired no
feelings toward the institution which would not lead me to rejoice in
emancipation the moment that it would be for the good of the colored
people.

You are looking for my letter to furnish you with details of horrors in
slavery. Wherever poor human nature is, there you will find imperfection
and sin; and of course power over others is always liable to great
abuses. If I were to follow the plan of those who collect the horrors
of slavery and spread them out before our Northern friends, but should
gather merely the beautiful and touching incidents which I meet with,
and which are related to me, I could make people think that slavery is
not an evil. But I have not seen an intelligent Southerner who,
admitting all that we had said about the happiness of the slaves as a
class, did not go far beyond me in declaring that the presence of a
subject, abject race, cannot fail to be an evil. There is not an
ultraist at the North, whom, if he had their confidence, and were not
put in antagonism to him, the Southerners could not make ashamed, and
put to silence, by telling him evil things about slavery, which he had
never contemplated, and by admitting most fully things which he would
expect them to deny. But they are placed in a false position by his
clamor and anger, which set them against him and his doctrines. They
say, "Allowing all that the North asserts, here are the colored people
on our hands; what are we to do with them?" Not one of the Northern
"friends of the slave," nor all of them together, have ever proposed a
feasible plan with regard to the disposal of the slaves, which would be
kind or even humane to the blacks. Moreover, theoretical arguments
against slavery, and representations of it, from many quarters, are so
palpably wrong, that replies to them and refutations are counted by us
at the North as defences of "oppression;" which they were never designed
to be. I am surprised at the extent and depth of real anti-slavery
feeling at the South. Sometimes I question whether Providence is not
permitting the antagonism of the North and South to continue just to
compel the South to hold these colored people in connection with
themselves for their good, until God's purposes of mercy for them are
accomplished, and "the time, times and half a time" of their captivity
is fulfilled. If Northern resistance to slavery had ceased, perhaps the
South would have rid herself of the blacks sooner than would have been
for their good.

I hope that you will not think me "a strong-minded woman" in what I here
repeat to you of the opinions and expressions which I have gathered in
listening to the conversation of intelligent people on this subject. I
write these things for your instruction, and also as memoranda for my
own future use.

It is a cherished idea with many excellent people that the time will
come when there will not be a slave in this land, nor on the earth. If
they mean by this that the time will come when every man in every face
will see a brother and a friend, it is certainly true. But if they mean
by it that ownership in man will come to an end, their opinion and
prophecy are as good as those of men who should undertake to differ from
them, and no better; while both would be entirely presumptuous in being
positive on such a subject. Some people seem to think that, in the good
time coming, it is as though we should dwell out-of-doors, among flowers
and fruits, with few wants, these being supplied by the spontaneous
offerings of nature.

Others, however, suppose that we shall still need some to shovel, take
care of horses, work over the fire the greater part of the day in
preparing food, go of errands, and, in short, be a serving class. They
suppose that the same sovereign God which distributes instincts, and
wisdom, variously, to animals, and gifts of understanding to men, will,
in the same sovereign way, create men and women with such degrees of
capacity and susceptibility as will lead inevitably to their being
superiors and inferiors, and that this will be, as it is now where love
and kindness reign, the source of the greatest happiness to all
concerned.

This being so, none of us will venture to say that no one of the
existing races of men will, to the end of time, be of such gentle,
dependent natures as to find their highest happiness and welfare in
being, generally, in the capacity of servants. Some of all races, we do
not object, may be servants to the end of time. No one will say to his
Maker that it will be unjust for Him to put a whole race of men forever
in that serving condition, making them, according to their capacity,
most happy in being so. For "Who hath been His counsellor?" That the
Africans are under a cloud of God's mysterious providence, no one
denies. I will not dictate to my Maker when He shall remove that cloud,
while I still endeavor to mitigate the effects of it upon my
fellow-creatures, the blacks. I do not know that he may not perpetuate,
to the end of time, a relationship of dependency to other races in this
African race. I know nothing about it. But I always feel impelled to say
these things, when I hear good men confidently predicting that ownership
in man will soon and forever come to an end. I reply, It may be in the
highest measure necessary to the happiness of the human family, at its
best estate, that one race, or that races, should be in the relation of
inferiors, finding their very best advantage in the relative place which
a sovereign God has assigned them in the scale of intelligence, by
holding that relation to the end of time. Of course it would cease to be
a curse; it would become one of those subordinate parts in the great
orchestral music of life which subdue and soften it for the highest
effect. If any one gets angry at such an idea, I leave him to his
folly; for he is angry without a cause at me, who have, in this idea,
expressed no wish that it may be true; and he is angry that his Maker
should do a thing which contradicts his pet notions about "freedom." But
the singular fact of slavery in this land, continued and defended under
all political changes, and now having the prospect of being more firmly
established than ever by means of our great national commotion on this
subject, is enough to make a serious mind reflect whether it be wholly
the work of Satan, or whether the providence of God be not concerned in
this great and difficult problem.

It is certainly remarkable that religion, which once gained such a
footing in Africa, so soon and entirely died out there, but that the
Africans, transported to our land, are of all races the most susceptible
to religious influences. If we should visit a foreign missionary field,
and learn that the mission had been blessed to the extent which has
characterized the labors of Christians at the South for their slaves, of
whom, according to the "Educational Journal," Forsyth, Ga., there are
now four hundred and sixty-five thousand connected with the churches of
all denominations, we should regard it as the chief of all the works of
God in connection with modern missions. It is this providential and
Christian view of slavery which quiets my mind. Now, suppose that,
contemplating a foreign missionary field where such results should be
found, one should object: "But there are evils there; people do not all
treat their dependants as they ought; hardships, cruelties, and some
barbarisms remain;"--we should not, I apprehend, proceed to scuttle such
a ship to drown the vermin. But I can see that Satan must be in great
wrath to find himself spoiled of so many subjects. One stronger than he
has brought here hundreds of thousands, who, in Africa, would have
perished forever, but who are now civilized and Christianized. Satan
would be glad, I think, to see American slavery come to an end. We have
no right to go and steal people in order to convert them; the salvation
of these slaves will not, in one iota, extenuate the guilt and
punishment of those who were engaged in the slave-trade. But "the wrath
of men shall praise Thee." In the writings of anti-slavery men I do not
remember to have met with cordial acknowledgments of what religion has
done for the slaves at the South. They coldly admit the fact, but often
they speak disparagingly of the negro's religion, which is full as good
as that of converts in our foreign missionary fields, as good, judging
from some things in Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians, as that of some
converts to whom he wrote. Our Northern anti-slavery people cannot bear
to have anything good discovered or praised in connection with slavery.

My own hopeful persuasion is, that great and marvellous works of Divine
Providence and grace are in reserve for the African people in their own
land, and that we are to prove to have been their educators. Most
sincerely do I hope, however, that the number of scholars and future
propagators of religion and civilization, imported here from Africa,
will not need to be increased, considering that one hundred and fifty
per cent. of deaths by violence take place in procuring a given number
of slaves. This is but one objection; others are sufficiently obvious.
Both parts of that passage of Scripture are exceedingly interesting:
"Princes shall come out of Egypt; Ethiopia shall stretch out her hands
unto God." Egypt, the basest of kingdoms, shall yet send forth
first-rate men; and Ethiopia, even, shall be the worshipper of God. I
hope that these prophecies, though fulfilled once, are yet to have their
great accomplishment. This is my persuasion, and I trust that every
nation will be independent; but I shall not discard the Bible, if my
interpretation and hope should fail. Ethiopia is certainly stretching
out her hands unto God in our Southern country.

Hattie received some papers for children from a young friend at the
North, last week. After attending the colored Sabbath-school in ----,
and teaching a class of nicely-dressed, bright little "slave" girls, and
hearing the school sing their beautiful songs, with melodious voices,
such as, I can truly say, I never heard surpassed at the North, and
after looking upon the teachers, who represented the very flower of
Southern society, the superintendent being a man who would adorn any
station, you cannot fully conceive with what feelings I read, in one of
Hattie's little papers from the North, these lines, set to music for the
use of Northern children:

  "I dwell where the sun shines gayly and bright,
  Where flowers of rich beauty are ever in sight;
  Here blooms the magnolia, here orange-trees wave;
  But oh, not for _me_,--I'm a poor little slave.

  "They say 'Sunny South' is the name of my home;
  'Tis here that your robins and blue-birds are come,
  While snows cover nests up, and angry winds rave;
  _They_ may rest here,--not _I_; _I'm_ a poor little slave.

  "Here beautiful mothers, 'mid splendors untold.
  Their fairy-like babes to their fond bosoms fold;
  My mammy's worked out, and lies here in the grave;
  There's none to kiss _me_,--I'm a poor little slave.

  "I've heard mistress telling her sweet little son,
  What Jesus, the loving, for children has done;
  Perhaps little black ones he also will save;
  I ask him to take _me_, a poor little slave!"

No wonder, Gustavus, that you write such letters as your last, fed and
nourished as you are on such things as this. I took it with me that
evening to a missionary party at the house of Judge ----. I read the
lines. The ladies said nothing for a time, till at last one said to me,
"Such things have helped us in seceding." The Judge took the lines,
looked them over, and, smiling, handed them back to me, saying, "Madam,
is Massachusetts a dark place?" "Yes," said a young gentleman, "and the
dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty." "Oh,"
said I, "how prejudiced you all are!" Whereupon they all laughed. "Now,"
said I, "you think, no doubt, that the author of such a piece is malign.
I know nothing of its origin, but I venture to say it was written by one
whose heart overflows with love to everybody, but who is 'laboring under
a delusion.'" I did not tell them of the "delusion" which you were
"under," in the Senior's room, but I said, "I have a nephew in a New
England college who has the Northern evil very badly. But he is so very
kind. Set him to write poetry about the South and he would produce just
such lamentable stanzas." Nothing will cure these fancies, about oranges
and magnolias not blooming for the little negroes, so well as to bring
these good people where they can see them pelting one another with
oranges, such as these poets never dreamed of, and making money by
selling magnolias to passengers at the railway stations.

"Here beautiful mothers, 'mid splendors untold," etc. I went with the
wife of a planter to her "Maternal Association" of slave-mothers. She
gathers the fifteen mothers among her servants once a fortnight, and
spends an afternoon talking to them about the education of their
children, and reading to them; and when she knelt with them and prayed,
I cried so all the time that I hardly heard anything. Oh what a tale of
love was that Maternal Association! "Here beautiful mothers 'mid
splendors untold," etc.;--those words kept themselves in my thoughts.
Now tell this to some great "friend of the slave," in Massachusetts, and
what will he say?--"All very good, I dare say; hope she will go a little
further, and give those fifteen their liberty." I sometimes say, "Must I
go back to the North, and hear and read such things?"

Yes, it is such things as these, simple and inconsiderable as you may
deem them, which are dividing us irreconcilably, and breaking up the
Union. It is not Messrs. ----, nor their frenzy, but it is Christian
brethren who allow their Sabbath-school children, for example, to say
and sing, "I've heard mistress telling her sweet little son, what Jesus,
the loving, for children has done," making the impression that such a
Christian mother leaves a colored child in her house, without
instruction, to draw the inference, if it will, that Jesus, perhaps,
will love a "poor little slave!" There are no words to depict the
feeling of injustice and cruelty which this conveys to the hearts of our
Christian friends at the South. "Let us go out of the Union!" they cry,
in their blind grief; but where will they go? for while our Northern
people write and publish and sing and teach their children to sing such
things, we can have nothing but mutual hatred, and perhaps exterminating
wars. We must change. If our Northern people would discriminate, and,
while retaining all their natural feelings against oppression and
man-stealing, would admit that "ownership in man" is not necessarily
oppression nor man-stealing, they would do themselves justice and
contribute to the peace of the country. "But O!" they say, "look at the
iniquitous _system_. If separating families, and destroying marriage,
and liberty to chastise at pleasure, and to kill, are not _sin_, what is
sin?" So they impute the _system_, and everything in it, to the people
who live under it. How a system can be a sin, it would puzzle some of
them, who say that all sin consists in action, to explain. And when they
came to look into the system itself, they would find, that if slavery is
to exist, some laws regulating it are, of necessity, self-protective,
and must be coercive. Even in Illinois, it is enacted that a black man
shall not be a witness against a white man. But if the slaves could
swear in court, every one sees that the whites must be at the mercy of
their servants. The testimony of the honest among them is procured,
though indirectly, and it has weight with juries; but it is a wise
provision to exclude them as sworn witnesses. So of other things, which
theoretically are oppressive, but practically right; while many things
in the system which are rigorous are as little used as the equipments in
an arsenal in times of peace.

When you quote John Wesley's words and apply them to the South: "Slavery
is the sum of all villanies," you unconsciously utter a fearful slander.
Whatever may have been true of British slavery, in foreign plantations,
in Wesley's day, the good man never would utter such words about our
Southern people could he see and enjoy that which gladdens every
Christian heart. If slavery be, necessarily, "the sum of all villanies,"
as you and many use the expression, the relation cannot exist without
making each slave-holder a villain, in all the degrees of villany. You
will do well to look into the cant phrases of "freedom," before you
indulge in the use of them. The bishops and clergy of the noble army of
Methodists in the South would not sustain their great chief in applying
the phrase in question to the actual state of things in the Southern
country. Wesley used those words concerning slavery in foreign colonies;
he had not seen it mixed up with society in England, as it is in the
South.

Taking the blacks as they are, and comparing them also with what they
would be in Africa, or if set free, to remain in connection with the
whites, slavery is not a curse. To be free is, of course, in itself a
blessing. But it depends on many things whether, under existing
circumstances, being a slave here is practically a curse. Our people
generally insist that it must be, and therefore that it is. Here they
are mistaken, as I now view the subject. The British people and the
French, looking at the blacks in a colony, settle the question of
emancipation in their own minds without much difficulty. But it would be
found to be a different thing to emancipate the colored race, to live
side by side with the English people in the mother-country. In that
case, a contest between the two races for the possession of power, and
innumerable offences and practical difficulties, would, in time, lead to
the extermination, or expatriation, of one of the two races, or to their
intermarriage, if the universal history of such conjunction of races is
any guide.

I do not wonder that the good lady with the "marsh-mallow" exclaimed so
at your groundless commiseration of the sick among the slaves. You have
no more idea of the practical relation between the whites and the
blacks, the owners and the slaves, than most of the English people, who
have never been here, have of our Federal and State relations.

I will tell you an incident which I know to be literally true.

A lady from a free state was visiting at the South. Calling upon a
married lady, a near relative of one who has been Vice-President of the
United States, she found her with a little sick black babe at her
breast.

The Northern lady started with astonishment. I am not informed whether
she was what is called among us a "friend of the slave;" the eminent
lady friend whom she visited certainly was such, in the best sense. The
Northern lady's feelings of repugnance would not be found to be peculiar
to her among our Northern people. The little babe died on the lap of the
Southern lady.

So you see that there are more things here than are dreamed of in your
philosophy. When you stigmatize the Southerners as oppressors, my only
consolation for you is that you know not what you do. Imagine, now, the
Rev. Mr. Blank, at the North, relating that little incident: "Behold and
see this monstrous picture of infinite hypocrisy: The Slave-power with a
slave at its breast! Yes, rather than lose one or two hundred dollars'
worth of human "property," a distinguished lady slave-holder will give
her nourishment to a slave-infant. So they fatten the accursed system
out of their own bodies and souls." Such is a fair specimen of this
man's frenzy; and there are multitudes all over the Free States who will
listen to such language and applaud it. But how cruel it is, how low and
wicked! I pray Heaven to deliver you from being an abolitionist in the
cast of your mind, your temper, and spirit. Nothing gives me such an
idea of the world of despair as when I read ultra anti-slavery speeches.
I see how the lost will hate God's mysterious providence, and revile it;
and how they will fight with each other, and pour out their furious
invective and sarcasm and vituperation, and scourge one another with
their fiery tongues, as they now do, when some one of the party appears
to falter. If there were not something truly good in connection with
slavery amid all its evils, I think such men would not oppose it.

Pray, who are these gentlemen, and who are their extremely zealous
anti-slavery friends of more respectable standing, that they should have
such immense instalments of sympathy and pity for the "poor slave"?
Their neighbors are as susceptible as they to every form of human
sorrow; they know as much, their judgments are as sound, their motives
are as good as theirs. Had these zealous people made new discoveries,
or, were the subject of slavery new, we might give them credit for being
on the hill-tops, while we were in the vales. This passionate sympathy,
on the part of some, for "the down-trodden," as they call the negroes,
is not like zeal for a theological, or a political, or a scientific,
doctrine, which would justify its adherents in rebuking the error and
indifference of others; for if slavery be as they represent it, the
proofs of it must be as self-evident as starvation. What if a class of
men among us should rage against those who do not contribute largely to
the Syrian sufferers, as the zealous anti-slavery people reproach and
even revile those who do not see slavery with their eyes? We should then
say, "Friends, who are you, that you should claim to have all the
virtuous sensibility?"

But more than this,--I doubt, I venture to deny, and that on
philosophical grounds, the true philanthropy of these people. For true
love and kindness always create something of their own kind where they
have full power. Are there any words or acts of love, kindness,
gentleness, mercy, toward others, in the speeches and doings of the
zealous anti-slavery people?

I wish that you had been with me, one evening, in a corner of the
Methodist meeting-house, where I sat and enjoyed the slaves'
prayer-meeting. I had been filled with distress that day by reading, in
Northern papers, the doings and speeches at excited meetings called to
sympathize with servile insurrection. In this prayer-meeting the slaves
rose one after another, went in front, and repeated each a hymn, then
resumed their seats, while some one, moved by the sentiments of the
hymn, would lead in prayer. A white gentleman presided, according to
custom, and I was the only other white person present. Going to that
meeting with the impressions upon my heart of the terrible excitements
which you were witnessing at home, and saying to myself, "O my soul,
thou hast heard the sound of the trumpet and the alarm of war!" you
cannot imagine what my feelings were when the largest negro that I ever
saw rose and stood before the desk, and repeated the following hymn by
Rev. Charles Wesley. The first lines, you may well suppose, startled me,
and made me think that the insurrection had reached even here.

  "Equip me for the war,
    And teach my hands to fight;
  My simple, upright heart prepare,
    And guide my words aright.

  "Control my every thought,
    My whole of sin remove;
  Let all my works in thee be wrought,
    Let all be wrought in love.

  "Oh, arm me with the mind,
    Meek Lamb! that was in thee;
  And let my knowing zeal be join'd
    With perfect charity.

  "With calm and temper'd mind
    Let me enforce thy call;
  And vindicate thy gracious will,
    Which offers life to all.

  "Oh, may I love like thee,
    In all thy footsteps tread;
  Thou hatest all iniquity,
    But nothing thou hast made.

  "Oh, may I learn the art,
    With meekness to reprove;
  To hate the sin with all my heart,
    But still the sinner love."

You must read this hymn to "Isaiah," and tell him about the
prayer-meeting. While the "friends of the slave," as you call them, are
holding such humiliating meetings as you describe, in behalf of the
slaves, and are vexing themselves and chafing under the imagination of
their unmitigated sorrows and "oppression," the slaves themselves, all
over the South, are holding prayer-meetings, and are blessing God that
they are "raised 'way up to heaven's gate in privilege." As I sat in
that prayer-meeting I could almost have risen and asked the prayers of
the slaves in behalf of many at the North who are making themselves and
others nearly insane on their behalf. But I thought of my former
ignorance and prejudice, and said, "And such were some of you."

I will tell you some of the little incidents which meet one every day,
and which give you impressions respecting the relations between the
whites and blacks, full as instructive as those received in any other
way.

Crossing a public street, which is steep, in the city of ----, a
truckle-cart came by me at great speed, drawn by a white boy, with
another white boy pushing, and seated in it, erect and laughing, was a
fine-looking black boy of about the same age as his white playmates.
Around the corner of another street there came by me, with a
skip-and-jump step, two white girls, about thirteen years old, and
between them--the arms of the three all intertwined--was another girl of
the same age, as black as ebony. On they went jumping, and keeping step,
and singing.

I had not been accustomed to such sights in Beacon Street, on my visits
to Boston. "Friends of the slave," as we most surely are, and some of us
being decorated with that name by way of distinction, significant of our
all-absorbing business "to raise the black man at the South to the
condition of a human being," when we get them there we are not greeted
in the streets with pictures of white and black children on such terms
as appeared in these two casual incidents. Nothing at first struck me
with greater wonder at the South than to see the most fashionably
dressed ladies in the most public streets stop to help a black woman
with a burden on her head, if she needed assistance, or to hold a gate
open for a man with a wheelbarrow.

One white boy cried to another across a street, "Come along, it's most
time to be in school." The other answered, in a petulant tone, "I a'n't
going to school." A tall, white-headed negro was passing; his black
surtout nearly touched the ground; he had on his arm a very nice
market-basket, covered with a snow-white napkin, and in his right hand a
long cane. Hearing what the last boy said, he came to a full stand, put
down his basket, clasped his long cane with both hands, and brought it
down on the brick sidewalk with three quick raps, and then a rap at each
of these points of admiration: "What! what! what!" said he, drawing
himself up to express surprise, and calling out with magisterial voice;
"Go to school! my son! go to school! and larn! a heap!" the cane making
emphasis at every expression. The white boy retreated under the
impression of a well-deserved, though kind, rebuke. He did not call the
old man "nigger," nor in any way insult him.

But here is an incident of a different kind.

Standing to talk with a man who had charge of my baggage, in the
passage-way between the baggage-room and the colored passengers'
apartment. I saw a white man with a pert, flurried manner and coarse
look ascend the steps of the cars, and behind him a tall graceful black
man, a little older than the other, with signs of gentleness and dignity
in his appearance. As he stooped and turned, his air and carriage would
have commanded attention anywhere. The white man, seeing him enter the
wrong door, cried out to him with an impudent voice, ordered him back,
pointed him to the proper room, and told him to go in there and make
himself "oneasy," with a laugh at his own attempt at inaccurate talk as
he cast a glance at some white men standing by. The black man was his
slave. The natural and proper order of things was reversed in their
relation to each other.

I looked at the black man as he took his seat, and, without being
observed, I kept my eye on his face. He cast his eye out of the window,
as though to relieve a struggle of emotions, but a calm expression
settled down upon his features.

A Southern gentleman, a slave-holder, witnessing the scene with me,
said,--

"Disgusting! There, madam, you have one of the great evils of
slavery,--irresponsible power in the hands of men who are not fit to be
intrusted with authority over others. No man, I sometimes think, ought
to be allowed to hold slaves till he has submitted to examination as to
character, or brings certificates of a good disposition. I know that
man. His father was from ---- [a New England State.] He is what we call
a torn-down character. His neighbors all"--but the signal was given for
starting, and the conversation was broken off.

My first thought was, How glad I would be to set that man free from such
bondage! The next thought was, Where would I send him to be free from
"the power of the dog?" I had been reading, in a Boston paper, a lecture
delivered in Boston, by a distinguished "friend of the slave," against
Mr. Webster and Mr. Choate, before an "immense audience." I thought, How
much better it is to be a Christian slave, even to this master, than to
sit in the seat of the scornful, applauding such a lecture!

The poor slave was having his probation and discipline, as we all have
ours, and he was suffering, as we all do in our turns, from an impudent
tongue. Little did he think that a fellow-creature, looking at him at
that moment, was reminded, by his meekness under insult, of Him, our
example, who, under such provocation, opened not his mouth, and that I
was made to remember, as I stood there and received instruction from
him, that the best alleviation and cure of anguished sensibility under
ill-treatment is in this same silence, and in thoughts of Jesus.

After the cars had started, I took my Bible from my carpet-bag, and read
these passages: "Servants, be subject to your masters with all fear; not
only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward. For this is
thankworthy, if a man for conscience toward God endure grief, suffering
wrongfully." Then this is enforced by the example of our incarnate God
and Saviour, who is held up to Christian slaves as their example; and in
this connection, not only in this passage, but elsewhere in speaking to
slaves, the Apostle brings in the most sublime truths relating to
redemption. You will be struck with this in reading what is said to
slaves, that in several cases, the train of thought proceeds directly
from their condition and its duties, to the most sublime and beautiful
truths of salvation. How divinely wise did these exhortations to slaves
appear to me, that morning, in contrast with the spirit of the Northern
abolitionist, and his talk about "Bunker Hill," "'76," and his
"grandfather's old gun over the mantel-piece," and his injunctions to
slaves as to the duty of stealing, and even murdering, if necessary, to
effect their liberty. This is not the spirit of the New Testament. The
idea of submission on the part of "servants" to "masters," of "pleasing
them well in all things," of "fear and trembling," "not purloining but
showing good fidelity in all things," is not found in the Gospel of the
abolitionist. He complains that we do not send the true Gospel to the
South. There are passages in the Epistles addressed to slaves, which, if
faithfully regarded, would make fugitive slave laws for the most part
needless. No wonder that the New Testament, with its exhortations to
meekness and patience under suffering, and the duty of those who are
"under the yoke," and of masters as being "worthy of honor," and the
caution that the slave do not take undue liberty where his master is a
believer, nor assert the doctrine of equality in Christ as a ground for
undue familiarity, or disobedience, is repudiated by the vengeful spirit
of the abolitionist. How well the Apostle understood him! "If any man
teach otherwise," that is, contrary to these injunctions as to the duty
of slaves who have believing masters, "he is proud, (that is the leading
feature of his error) he is proud, knowing nothing, but doting about
questions and strifes of words, whereof cometh envy, strife, railings,
evil surmisings." What an anomaly it would be to have an abolition
convention opened with reading a collect of Paul's inspired directions
to masters and slaves.

But we never hear anything quoted from the Bible on the subject but
"break every yoke!" "let the oppressed go free!" "undo the heavy
burdens!" I was telling a slave-holder of the frequency with which we
hear these expressions in public prayer. "I could join in every one of
them," said he; "I am for breaking every yoke, South and North,
unbinding every heavy burden, and destroying every form of oppression.
But they must be actual, not theoretical, nor imaginary."

This gentle slave in the cars, we will suppose, refuses opportunities to
escape, but complies with the exhortations of the New Testament,
"enduring grief, suffering wrongfully." His master is at last touched by
his meekness, his "not answering again." I should relate only that which
I know to have happened, should I say, that one day this master is
filled with distress on account of sin. He goes out into the
cotton-field and finds Jacob.

"Jacob," he says, "I am a great sinner. Jacob, I feel that I am sinking
into hell. Jacob, pray for me. I mean to turn about, if I live."

"Dats jest what I've sought de Lord for, massa, dis six months coming
New Year. Let's go up into de loft; it's whar I've wrastled for you in
prayer."

He leads the way. The floor of the loft is covered with cotton-seed. A
wheelbarrow is in the middle of the floor. Jacob takes off his jacket,
and with it brushes the cotton-seed away from one side of the
wheelbarrow, lays the jacket down for his master to kneel upon, and goes
to the other side. Like Jacob at Peniel, he has power over the angel,
and prevails; he weeps and makes supplication unto him. The master
breaks out in prayer. He rises and says,--

"Jacob, forgive me if I've been unkind to you; I've seen that you are a
Christian; now if you want to leave me for anybody else, say so."

"Thank you, massa; only sarve de Lord with gladness for all de good
things he has done for you, and I'll sarve you de same. Please go home
and tell missis; she told me to pray for you; 'twill finish up her joy."

This is better than running away and going to Canada. Those Christians
who send the Gospel to the South by missionaries and religious tracts,
to promote such scenes as this, do a better work than though they
withheld missionaries and tracts from one half of the nation, and called
it "Standing up for Jesus."

I am sometimes inclined to put down all that I see and hear, good and
bad, and publish a book to satisfy my truly candid but mistaken friends
at the North as to the real truth on this subject. But I have in mind
the way in which similar works have already been received and treated by
an unreasoning, passionate North. I have amused myself sometimes in
imagining what certain writers would say to some of the incidents which
I have related in this letter. Let me attempt to show you the spirit and
manner of our Northern reviewers when one ventures to state favorable
things relating to slavery. I will take some of the incidents already
related in this letter and let these men review them. I am perfectly
familiar with their style, from having been employed in helping your
uncle prepare the notices of new publications for the "---- Review."
Here, then, I will give you first a supposed notice of my little book,
should I make one, from a Northern religious newspaper, quoting, in all
cases, the identical expressions from articles which I have read:--

"'The authoress, it seems, is yet in her Paradise of slavery.' Her
'opulent friends' and the slave-holders generally, it would appear, got
up little tableaux for her, to impose on her good-nature. Knowing the
times when she took her daily walks, they put the fattest and sleekest
black boy whom they could find, into a truckle-cart, and made two of the
sons of the 'most opulent' citizens race down hill with him. Slavery,
therefore, is not the bad thing she and we had supposed. The female
teacher of a school in the neighborhood of her daily walk was suborned,
most probably, by the 'opulent' ladies of the place, to practise another
pleasing trick. Two white girls and a black girl were made to practise
running with their arms interlocked, and one day, as our friend came in
sight, they were pushed out to astonish her with one instance of white
girls hugging a negro slave-child. No doubt our friend, on seeing these
three together, soliloquized as follows:--

  "See Truth, Love, and Mercy in triumph descending,
  All nature now glowing in Eden's first bloom."

The old negro, respectable and well off, was one of those rare
exceptions to surrounding degradation which you now and then see in
Southern cities. The poor slave in the cars, gentle, timid, quivering,
was the true exponent of slavery. Had our authoress filled her book with
such illustrations exclusively, she would have written more truthfully,
more for her reputation with the real 'friends of the slave,' and, we
confess, more in accordance with our taste."

A writer in a very respectable publication at the North, already
referred to, gave us several years ago a curious piece of criticism on
some publication which he regarded as too favorable to slavery. His
pages, some of them, were crowded with daggers, in the shape of
exclamation marks,--two, three, four, and, in one instance, five, at the
end of quotations from the book under review. It was he that made the
assertion about the "arsenic," as being "universally in the hands of the
slaves."

I shall now let him review my little stories. I quote many of his
words:--

"'To show the ignorance and simplicity of our travelling' lady, we give
the following,--and what will the North say to this new argument in
favor of slavery? namely, a truckle-cart! a black boy riding!! two white
boys giving him a ride!!! and three girls, one of them black! arm in
arm!! romping. 'It is not the fault of this writer, that she cannot
understand a principle;' 'she is a New England Orthodox,'--'and a fair
specimen of the limitations of that type of mankind.' 'But does not the
lady know,' why negro boys are put in truckle-carts? 'If not, any of her
Southern friends could have told her.' We can tell her; 'we have lived
at the South.' These white boys were sent on an errand with their cart,
and to increase its momentum down hill, and, withal, to tease and worry
a fellow-creature, with a skin not colored like their own, they made
this poor slave-boy get in. She should have seen the poor creature
trudging home, up hill, under a Southern sun, after the little white
tyrants had done with him, unless it was the case, which we more than
half suspect, that the ride was a stratagem to convey the poor child to
the auction-block. 'How the merry dogs,' the white boys, must have
laughed at this Northern lady's complacent looks at them. She had no
tears for the poor old white-headed negro, who, hearing the word
'school' from the lips of his white young masters, had such a rush of
sorrow come over his soul at the thought of the midnight ignorance in
which the slave-driver's whip had kept him, that he actually dropped his
burden in the public street, and uttered incautious words, for which, no
doubt, old as he was, he caught a terrible flogging. "Why, in the name
of humanity, did not the authoress load her pages, as she might so
easily have done, with scenes like that in the cars? There is slavery!
patent! undisguised! In the other cases it is slavery, indeed, but
covered with the pro-slavery lady's snow-white napkin."

Here is a review of me and of my little stories, by a distinguished New
England divine, and author. He has written much on slavery. Having
prepared notices of some of his writings on this subject, I am familiar
with his turns of thought and modes of expression. I have great regard
for him, and always read him with pleasure and profit, not excepting
when he writes as follows, in doing which he has the approbation of
large numbers among the Northern clergy of all denominations, except the
Episcopalians,--who, more than other Northern ministers, are remarkably
free from ultraisms.

"Concerning the truckle-cart, 'we would say this,' that unquestionably
'the moral power' of the incident was all which the writer assumes, but
its 'logical sequences' 'we utterly deny.' Slavery is evil, and only
evil, and that continually; now, to infer that agreeable relations can
subsist between the children of masters and the children of slaves under
the 'immense, malignant, and all-pervading influence of slavery,'
abhorred of Heaven and all good men, does violence to all sound
principles of reasoning, and is at war with 'the manifest rules of
Providence.'

"And as to the three girls 'we are prepared to say' that the author 'did
not look deep enough' into the philosophy of human motives under the
controlling power of slavery. For slavery makes men improvident, and
their children also; (see 'Judge Jay,' 'Weld on Slavery,' etc.) These
white girls, therefore, probably had no money in their pockets; it was
the time of recess; they were hungry; the black child we presume had
money in her pocket, for by the authoress's own showing (in the story of
a slave changing a gold piece for the landlord), slaves may have money
of their own. Had our authoress followed her trio down to the
confectioner's, there she might have seen these white children cajoling
the poor black, and making her treat them; in preparation for which they
affected to put their arms around her; but, in the true diabolical
spirit of slavery, it was only to devour.

"We have no space to enter philosophically into the instruction afforded
us by the old negro and the schoolboys; but there is deep meaning in it,
which the true friends of the slave, who may read it, will do well to
ponder. The old negro is the prophetic representation of his
down-trodden race, crying with bewildered accents, he heeds not where,
'Go to school! boys; go to school!' Let a united North echo back his
words, suiting their political action to them, and saying to the colored
children, with an authority which shall shake the very pillars of the
Union, 'Go to school, boys! go to school!'

"Nor can we, for the tears which dim our sight, speak as we would of
the wretched master and his amiable slave in the cars. The sketch
reminded us of the best in 'Uncle Tom.' We need books filled with such
pictures, to electrify the slumbering sensibilities of the North. Wanton
candor in speaking of slavery, is the most unpardonable of sins. There
is a time to tell the whole truth; but the wise man says. There is 'a
time to keep silence.'"

I did not pretend, Gentlemen Reviewers, that my little, pleasing
incidents were arguments in favor of slavery; you should not have been
so alarmed; you are really rude; I almost feel disposed to say to you,
for each of my tales, as the Rosemary said to the Wild Boar,--

  "Sus, apage! haud tibi spiro;"

which, not having a poetical friend near to translate for me, I venture
to render as follows:--

  "Thus to the Boar replied the Rosemary:
  O swine, depart! I do not breathe for thee."

In noticing the manner in which many Northern writers, some of them
amiable men, receive the candid views and statements of travellers and
visitors at the South, I have been made to think of a company of the
owls, such as you see in Audubon, listening to the reading of David's
one hundred and fourth Psalm, in which he describes nature. Not a smile
of satisfaction; on the contrary, if you

  "Molest the ancient, solitary reign"

of prejudice in their minds against the South, they either mope, or make
a sad noise. With regard to others, are there any limits to their anger
and denunciations? You may, without difficulty, imagine how this
appears to the Southerner, who knows the truthfulness of the
representations which excite this passionate resentment, and how much
the character of the North for ordinary candor falls in his esteem, and
how little disposed he is to heed their admonitions, and how absurd
their demands upon his ecclesiastical bodies to suffer their
remonstrances, appear, together with their subsequent withdrawal of
fellowship for the reason publicly assigned; namely, that the South will
not let them admonish her "in the Lord." Indeed, whatever may be true of
slavery, the South looks on the great body of zealous anti-slavery
people as being in as false and unnatural a state of excitement as the
Massachusetts people were in the times of witchcraft. A great delusion
is over the minds of many at the North, like one of our eastern
sea-fogs. It always makes a Southerner merry, when listening, in New
York or Boston, for example, to a lecture, if the speaker concludes a
sentence with some allusion to "freedom," and the people clap and stamp.
That the blood should tingle in our veins at so slight a cause, makes
him think that we are certainly in need of something worthy of our great
excitability, and that we are thankful for small favors in that way. He
does not think less than we of liberty where an occasion makes that name
and idea appropriate; but that the condition of his slaves should
reconsecrate for us all the old battle-cries of freedom, seems to him
pitiably weak. It shows him how incompetent we are to deal with the
acknowledged evils of slavery; and there are those at the South who are
stirred up by us to take extreme views of an opposite kind, which good
people there very generally deplore.

A Southern lady here tells me that some time since, being on a visit at
the North, she received through the post-office anonymous letters with
extracts from newspapers containing little items of woe, declared to
have been experienced at the South, with here and there delirious abuse
of slave-holders and frenzied words about freedom. She could have
matched every one of them, she said, with wife-murders at the North,
during her visit. In dealing with people like the slaves, of course men
of brutal passions, provoked by their stupidity and negligence, or
exasperated by their crimes, and, in cases of ungovernable anger,
venting their displeasure upon their negroes under slight or merely
imaginary affronts, give occasion to tales of distress which are nowhere
mourned over more deeply than at the South. These cases are the natural
results of a superior and inferior class of society, standing in the
relation, the one to the other, of proprietor and dependant, and such
evils are not peculiar to this institution. Human nature is the same
everywhere. The South is willing to have the abuses of irresponsible
power among them compared with abuses, discomforts, disadvantages
elsewhere. Grant that an owner may abuse his liberty; ownership leads to
more of care and protection than of abuse and cruelty. The slaves are
here; the question is not, What would be the best possible condition for
these people under the sun, but, What is best for them, being on this
soil. "Set them all free," is the answer of some. Half the ministers at
the North every Sabbath pray for the slaves thus: "Break every yoke; let
the oppressed go free." If this means, Give the slaves their liberty,
this would be their most direful calamity; they would be chased away
from every free state, in process of time, and the Dred Scott decision
would be invoked, even in Massachusetts, by its present most bitter
opposers, and in its most misrepresented forms, as a defence of the
American white race against the blacks. "Set them free and hire them!"
is the reply of others. This, among other effects, would make them a far
more degraded people than they now are. Slavery keeps them identified
with the whites; they are more respectable and respected by far, in this
relation, than they can be, in the circumstances of the case, if they
are detached from the whites. There is no expression which conveys a
more absolute error than this, and we often meet with it: "He ceased to
be a slave, and became a man." I read lately the report of a lecture at
the North, by an eminent gentleman, of great moral worth, and highly
respected. He said, "A man cannot be, voluntarily, a slave, without
having his manhood crushed out of him." That might be true in our case;
but having seen manhood forced into benighted natures here, and splendid
specimens of man as the result, I was, by this remark, reminded again of
the delusiveness which there is sometimes in the best of logic. You gave
us a good specimen in your admirable illustration of no water in the
moon. A comparison of the slaves with the free negroes of the North, and
in Canada, and with the free colored population in some of the Slave
States, will satisfy any impartial spectator that manhood is full as
conspicuous in the slaves, as a body, as in the free negroes.

Here are two extracts from Northern papers, which, true or false, awaken
compassion in every human bosom toward the free colored people. Indeed,
allowing these statements, so unfavorable to them, to be mostly false,
it reveals the antipathy of the white to the colored race when the
blacks come to seek equality with the whites. Let these free blacks be
mixed up in large proportions with society in England and Scotland, and
if Canadians feel as they are here represented, we may be sure that the
present tone of the British people with regard to American slavery and
the blacks, would also be modified. But here are the extracts:--

    "Getting Sick of Them.--The colored persons of Toronto, having had a
    meeting to denounce Colonel John Prince, a member of the Canadian
    Parliament, for speaking against them, he publishes a reply, in
    which he says,--

    "'It has been my misfortune, and the misfortune of my family, to
    live among those blacks (and they have lived upon us) for
    twenty-four years. I have employed hundreds of them, and with the
    exception of one, named Richard Hunter, not one of them has done for
    us a week's honest labor. I have taken them into my service, fed and
    clothed them, year after year, on their arrival from the States, and
    in return have generally found them rogues and thieves, and a
    graceless, worthless, thriftless set of vagabonds. This is my very
    plain and simple description of the darkies as a body, and it would
    be indorsed by all the Western white men, with very few
    exceptions.'"

    "Underground R.R. Return Trains.--The 'Cleveland Plaindealer' states
    that every steamboat arriving at that place brings back from Canada
    families of negroes, who have formerly fled to the Provinces from
    the States. They are principally from Canada West. They describe the
    life and condition of the blacks in Canada as miserable in the
    extreme. The West is, therefore, likely to have large accessions to
    its colored population. The Canada folks do not want them, and have
    shown a disposition in their Parliament, and otherwise, to
    discourage their coming to, or remaining in the Provinces. In some
    instances, the question of ejecting those now resident there, has
    been discussed. Our Western States will be likely to experience a
    similar attack of the _black vomito_, when they shall have become
    satisfied with this peculiar Southern luxury. In some localities the
    superabundant free negro population has already become a burden,
    while in others they are under severe restrictions, which amount
    almost to an exclusion from the limits of the state.

    "Should this exodus from Canada continue to any great extent, it
    would throw such a burden upon those states which have adopted the
    most liberal policy towards the negro, that it would occasion a
    reaction in the public sentiment which would compel them to abandon
    their abolition doctrine and practice, for their own
    self-protection. We should then hear of fewer attempts to abduct
    slaves from the slave-holding states; and abolitionists would be
    content to allow slaves to remain under the care and protection of
    their masters. Even though at heart sympathizing with the oppressed
    and task-worn negro, and yearning towards him with all the love of
    the professed philanthropist, he would still be permitted to toil
    and bleed; for now that the route to Canada has been closed, there
    is no alternative but to take them to their own bosoms."

Compare with this the condition of the free blacks in South Carolina.
The amount of property held by them is $1,600,000; their annual taxes,
$27,000; and the free blacks own slaves to the amount of $300,000 in
value.

The above statements teach us that any attempts to force the Southern
slaves away from their present relation, are in violation of the laws of
Providence concerning them. If they become free in a natural way, and
can provide for themselves, or be provided for, it is well; otherwise,
the South, and their present relation to the white race, are the bounds
of their habitation fixed for them by an all-wise God, till his purpose
concerning them as a race shall be made manifest. The people of the Free
States ought to thank God that the South is willing to keep the colored
people. Instead of inflaming our passions against the abstract
wrongfulness of holding fellow-men in bondage, we should consider that
theoretical justice to the slaves as a whole would be practical
inhumanity. The destiny of the colored race here is a dark problem. But
it is not for us to penetrate the future. When God is ready to finish
his purposes with regard to their continuance with us, He will open a
way for their liberation; in the mean time it is our duty to protect
them from their own improvidence and from the neglect and degradation
which they would suffer at the hands of the Free States. Instead of
aiding slaves to escape, or rejoicing when we hear of runaways, I say we
should feel grateful, on our own account, and for the slaves, that the
South is willing to harbor them, and we ought to consider that the very
best thing to be done for them is to encourage the South in treating
them well, mitigating their trials and sorrows, and, in short, complying
with the Apostle's doctrine and exhortations as to the duty of masters.

But we have a way, at the North, of delivering over our Southern
brethren to supposed terrible liabilities in their relation to the
slaves. "They are sleeping on a volcano;" "they keep weapons under their
pillows;" "they are always in fear." And when a servile insurrection
takes place, many close their eyes and lift their hands, and say,
"Perhaps the day of retribution is come! They have been 'sinning against
the Northern conscience;' they have been resisting our well-meant
efforts for their good; we would not stir up the slaves against them,"
(some kindly say,) "but if they rise, did not Jefferson say, 'There is
not an attribute of the Almighty that would take part with the whites?'"
Thus we prefer to take Jefferson's opinion on this subject, though
hundreds as good and wise as he, and quite as decided in their
acceptance of the Christian religion, differ totally from him. In
strictly political matters, many of the same people who love to quote
Jefferson against modern slave-holders, are of opinion that time and
experience give modern statesmen some advantages in their judgments. As
to Jefferson's oft-quoted remark, above cited, it appears to me that if
the Almighty has anywhere set the seal of his divine blessing, clear and
broad, it is on the Christian influence of our Southern friends upon
this colored race.

It is humiliating to me, in looking back to the North, to see how
injudicious and weak we are in pouring out our sympathy upon a fugitive
slave, without discrimination. The lecture before the Boston audience,
already mentioned, contains a perfect illustration of Northern credulity
in the case of fugitive slaves. The lecturer tells us that while reading
the printed report of Mr. Everett's Oration at the inauguration of the
Webster statue, a fugitive slave appeared at his door, and, baring his
breast and back, showed him the marks of the branding-iron, and the
scars from the lash. At the sight, he says, the paper dropped from his
hand. He "thought of Webster and the Fugitive Slave Law."

Now this negro was, just as likely as not, one of those characters whom
we call jail-birds. If so, and he had lived at the North, instead of
branding-iron and stripes, he might have had parti-colored pants, and
manacles, and a record of ten or twenty years in the state's prison. But
because he ran away from the South, he straightway became, as a matter
of course, a martyr and a saint. Perhaps he was, truly, a saint; and
perhaps he was not.

Looking out of the window in a hotel the other day, we saw two white
men leading up a black man with a leather bridle around his neck.

"Here, Hattie," said your Uncle, "here is slavery; now you have it in
full bloom."

The poor fellow was crying and protesting and begging to be released.
Your Uncle stepped out and spoke to a very respectable gentleman whom he
met on the piazza. He could not refrain from expressing some feeling at
the sight of a fellow-creature so literally "reduced to the level of the
brutes." I did not hear the whole of the conversation, for my attention
was diverted by two roosters who just then flew at each other and were
assailed by a troop of black urchins who tried to scare them apart,
pulling their tail-feathers and uttering ludicrous cries.

"You are from the North, sir, I take it," said the gentleman, in reply
to your Uncle.

"I am, sir," said your Uncle. "Do you often bridle your slaves in this
way, in these parts? I am seeking for information on the subject of
slavery."

"I shall be happy to give you any," said the gentleman. "I am here as a
magistrate."

"I am one at home," said my husband.

"One of these white men who led the negro," said the gentleman, "was
riding on horseback, and was attracted to a by-place by the screams of a
child, and found this black man attempting violence upon a black girl
ten years old. He knocked the fellow down and held him, and called for
help. A white man who came up took the bridle from the horse, to secure
the villain with it. They have with difficulty kept the negroes from
putting him to death."

"We are all ready, sir," said a sheriff to the gentleman.

"Will you walk into the hall?" said the magistrate to your Uncle.

But the stage-coach was waiting for him, and we were soon on our way.
Your Uncle was silent for nearly fifteen minutes, when he said,--

"What is that passage, Hattie, about answering a matter before you
understand it?"

I gave Hattie my Bible, and, after a while, she read:

"He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame
unto him. The spirit of a man"--

"That will do, child," said your Uncle, "I wanted only that one verse."

       *       *       *       *       *

I should be glad to transfer some of this Southern ease and beauty of
manners to the North. I wish that we could see more of these Southern
ladies and gentlemen there. They stay away very much, because they
cannot bring servants with them. Whole families would rejoice to visit
our Northern shores and mountains for summer residences, were it not for
this. When our passions subside, and we can look at this subject fairly,
we shall repeal the statutes which prevent a Southerner from residing in
a free state for a season, with his or her servant. The people of
Massachusetts, for example, can easily appreciate the hardship of being
kept away from a clime which they would visit for health or recreation,
by the fear of being set upon by a mob of whites and blacks seeking to
drag a wet-nurse, for example, before a court to be interrogated whether
she does not wish to leave us. How long will our warm-hearted,
hospitable people allow such things? The answer, from ten thousand
tongues, will be, So long as Southern people imprison colored seamen
from the North!--If Southern slaves should come here and make trouble
between our domestics and us, and we should forbid their coming, the
cases would be more nearly parallel.--Moreover, it will be said that the
manner in which people from the North have in many instances of late
been treated at the South, does not encourage the hope and prospect of
amicable intercourse. This is certainly so; and therefore what have we
to look for but everlasting hatred and strife? and that whether we be
one nation or two confederacies.

A distinguished Southern gentleman came home from his visit to the
North, where he had received great attentions, and he filled his hearers
with his enthusiastic admiration of us for our wonderful ingenuity in
all the arts of life.

"It is astonishing," said he, "how they work everything into shape, and
create instruments for their purposes. But," said he, "there is one
thing in which they are deficient. They are omnipotent with matter, but
they do not know how to govern men. If they did," said he, "there would
be no chance for us in any form of contest with them."

I was much entertained, and I said to him that I supposed his remarks
would need qualification on both sides; but I was greatly impressed, as
I often am here, with the secret, strong attachment which there is in
Southern hearts to the North as a part of the country, irrespective of
its anti-slavery views and feelings. Its climate and institutions and
arts and scenery are adapted to their diversified wants. "The North and
the South, Thou hast created them." God made the North for the South,
and the South for the North, and our acts of non-intercourse are in
violation of his will. We are in a war of "conscience," inflamed by
doctrinal error on our part. It allows no "conscience" to the other
side. The state of our "consciences" at the North is jury, judge, and
executioner. There is no "conscience," we think, in Southern churches,
ministers, judges, citizens, except that which is defiled. Probably
there is not on earth this day a greater despot, or one more prepared
for inquisitorial proceedings, than "Northern Conscience."

No doubt I should be contented and happy to be a slave-holder, had I
been born and bred here, but I rejoice that I belong to a free state. I
love to think of my capable girls, my "help." at home, who make the
household go like clock-work, instead of having a swarm of servants who
do only half as much, and only half as well. I am glad, too, that my
children live in a climate favorable to labor, and are not born to be
waited upon. But I am ashamed of those who erect these things into an
invidious comparison, and with a supercilious, reproachful spirit. God,
who made us of one blood, has fixed the bounds of our habitations. I
love these Southerners as I never loved new acquaintances before. But I
prefer a state of society free from slavery: yet this makes me love
those to whom God has given a South country, and imposed upon it a
necessity, at present at least, to employ the African race as
cultivators of the soil. It has often disturbed my feelings to hear some
people inveigh reproachfully against the Southern country, as comparing
unfavorably with neighboring free states. Going up the Ohio River one
day, a Northern gentleman pointed to some poor-looking lands in Kentucky
on the one hand, and some flourishing fields of Ohio on the other.
"There, ladies and gentlemen," said he, "is slavery," pointing to
Kentucky, "and there," turning to the other side, "is freedom."

"Now," said an intelligent Ohioan, "if you will excuse me for saying
it, I regard that as clear humbug. What is cultivated on either side?
The products of Kentucky, if raised in Ohio, would give the same look to
her lands. It is not slavery and freedom that make the difference; it is
the difference between large staples sown over large territories, and
smaller staples raised on smaller fields. Kentucky's soil would be
exhausted just as fast under free labor, so long as she cultivated her
present crops."

I long to see some clear running water. Our streams and brooks in New
England are not appreciated till one comes to this part of the land. I
long to see some good grass. I yearn for some hills. I would sail again
along our rock-bound coast; Oh for a walk on its beaches, to see the
tunnellings of the sea in the rocks, and the spouting-horns. But what a
relief it is to be in a section where the Christian religion is so
generally accepted, and the swarms of errorists and sectarians which
abound elsewhere are comparatively unknown. Here, the lowest class, in
which error would be prolific, is under instruction, to a great degree.
I see now why it is that false views about slavery are a great stimulant
to heretical views and feelings;--they are a convenient substitute for
the love and zeal which true Christianity supplies. The human mind,
where it is accustomed to act freely, must be impelled by some
master-passion; and when true religion does not supply it, error stands
ready to satisfy the demand.

On the whole, I am persuaded that our Northern people behave full as
well under the anti-slavery excitement as Southerners would if their
consciences were perverted like ours, and we were the objects of their
opposition. I think that a change will come over us. At the North, you
have heard the wind, at midnight, after a warm rain, in winter, haul out
to the north-west, and you know what a piping time we then have of it,
and how the clear cold air, the next morning, and the bright sun, excite
and cheer us. There has been with us for a long time at the North, in
our political and religious atmosphere, a warm, foggy, unwholesome
drizzle of weak, fanatical feeling, with now and then gusts of wind and
scud,--a kind of weather most abhorred by mariners. But we hope that the
wind is changing, and that "fair weather cometh out of the North." God
will not suffer us to live long, we earnestly hope, in this condition of
misunderstanding and hatred, for it would be contrary to his established
laws that we should long continue to be one nation with such feelings
toward each other. The change will be in the North. Slavery will come to
be regarded as not in itself a sin, and the evils incident to it will be
left for those immediately concerned to bear them or seek their removal.
Or, if we become divided, the Southern section may extend its conquests
into the whole southern part of the American continent, and spread the
institution of slavery over that vast domain. God may have purposed that
the good which has flowed to the African race in this land by its
connection with us, shall be extended to millions more, not by
importation, we may suppose, but by propagation here. I say this to show
that fanatical opposers of slavery may be employed under God as the
instruments of extending slavery to the very limits of habitable land in
the southern parts of our continent. We have tried in vain at the North,
for thirty years, to abolish slavery. It is time either to cease, or to
try some entirely different influences.

But I must close my long letter. When you write again, I have no doubt
that you will have seen some things in a new light. Tell me more about
your studies. I was interested in your way of describing things. I only
wondered that, with your occasional sense of the ludicrous, you should
not have been aware of the impression which you yourself must have made
on others. Burns's "giftie," "to see oursel's," etc., we all, more or
less, need. I told Hattie the other day that I thought some parts of
your letter did you very great credit, but that the monomania of the
North has fallen upon you, and that you have it, as it seemed to me, in
one of its worst forms. Some it makes fierce, others, flat, according as
the victim is, naturally, more or less amiable.

Your mother gave you in charge to me in her last sickness, and I must do
all in my power for your best good. I have, therefore, told you some
things which I have seen and considered. These you must now add to the
facts of your "inductive philosophy." Your definition of "pro-slavery,"
and "friends of oppression," is a fair illustration of a prevailing
state of mind at the North:--"Pro-slavery--_i.e._, do not agree with me
in my manner of viewing and treating the subject." This you will
correct. Excuse my freedom, but you have no father nor mother now, to
advise and guide you, and you must let me be your Mentor in some things.
I shall keep your letter and let you see it perhaps ten years hence. Be
careful what newspapers you read. Those which abound with low,
opprobrious language about the South and Southerners, avoid. There are
some low Southerners about here who go around buying up refractory and
vicious negroes; they are the dregs of society; but I have listened,
with others, at the North, to men, on the subject of "freedom," who, I
think, would take kindly to this business, and they would be as hearty
in it as they are now in vilifying it. The "Legrees" are not confined to
the South. Do not incline your ear to those who systematically inveigh
against slavery, making it their principal business. You will invariably
find that there is something false and wrong in their principles as well
as spirit. Be careful to what influences you commit your thoughts and
your taste.

You need not become a friend of oppression; you need not approve of
"auction-blocks," and "separation of families;" slavery can exist when
these are done away. Until you are appointed and commissioned as a
minister of righteousness to Southern Christians and ministers, I advise
you to blot slavery out of the list of topics about which you are called
to express the least concern. The South will work out the problem for
herself, with the help of that God who has evidently appointed her to do
a great work for the African race, and all the more perfectly and
speedily as our Northern people let her entirely alone as to the moral
relations of the subject.

You subscribe yourself, "Yours for the slave;" I shall subscribe myself,
"Yours for preaching the Gospel to every creature."

With the strongest love,
Your affectionate Aunt.




CHAPTER VI.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.

  "The sages say dame Truth delights to dwell,
  Strange mansion! in the bottom of a well.
  Questions are, then, the windlass and the rope
  That pull the grave old gentlewoman up."

  PETER PINDAR.


My friend, Mr. North, having read the foregoing letters, wrote me a note
requesting me to come and spend an evening with him and his wife, and
answer some questions occasioned by these letters. The lady was earnest
that I should do so.

After being seated before a cheerful fire in my friend's house, while it
was raining violently, so that we felt defended from all interruption,
my friend said,--

"Here, first of all, is the Southern lady's letter to her father, which,
I suppose, belongs to him, and which you may wish to send back."

"I do," said I.

"But, please," said Mrs. North, "let it be published. Add to it the
incident of the Southern lady nursing the sick babe of a slave."

"O my dear," said her husband, "that would create a false impression. It
would be a pro-slavery tract. It would abate Northern zeal against the
'sum of all villanies.' Something should go forth with such
representations to correct their influence in the Free States. What
would become of the cause of freedom should such stories make their
impression upon the minds of our people?"

"You might," said I, "make a heading of an auction-block, or
slave-coffle; add the last pattern of a slave-driver's whip; picture a
panting fugitive on his way to the North; give us a ship's hold, with a
black boy just detected among the stowage. You would thus, perhaps, keep
these beautiful, touching illustrations of loving-kindness in
slave-holders from having the least effect."

"It is very important," said he, seriously, "to keep up a just
abhorrence of slavery here at the North, because"--

"Excuse me," said I, "but what do you mean by an abhorrence of slavery?"

"Why," said he, "is not the Christian world agreed that 'slavery is the
sum of all villanies'?"

"By no means, in the United States," said I; "you might with as real
truth say that here slavery is the sum of all the loving-kindnesses."

"Is not that letter of the Southern lady to her father," said he, "as
rare a thing almost as a white crow?"

"O husband," said Mrs. North, "what an opinion you must have of Southern
society!"

"Is not Gustavus," said I, "a perfect representative of the North, on
the subject of slavery? Does not ultra anti-slavery find or make
everybody, as the Aunt says, either fierce or flat?"

"You do not believe so," said he.

"Neither do you believe," said I, "that where Christianity has exerted
the same influence on the hearts of men and women as on yours, and all
the humanizing and elevating influences of society prevail, that letter
is a rare product."

"I cannot believe," said he, "that one can own a fellow-creature, hold
God's image as property, and be a true Christian. This lady is an
exception which does not destroy the general rule."

"My dear sir," said I, "you are an abstractionist. You make the best
possible condition under the sun your standard, to which you would make
all men and things conform, instead of allowing for the vast
inequalities, the necessities, the mutual dependence, the long
historical conditions of men, as individuals and races. A race or class
of human beings may be in such a condition, that being 'owned' by a
superior race will be, in their circumstances, a real mercy and a great
blessing."

"O my dear sir," said he, "I weep over the degradation of your moral
sense. 'Owning a fellow-creature!' I would not hold property in a human
being 'for all the wealth that sinews bought and sold have ever
earned.'"

"Thousands of men and women," I replied, "as good in the sight of God as
you or I, think otherwise. There is nothing in the relation of ownership
to a human being which in itself is sinful, or wrong."

"If it is your purpose," said he, "to argue in favor of oppression,
perhaps we had better not pursue the conversation."

"Uncharitableness, false judgments, self-righteousness," said I,
"condemning a whole people for the sins of a few, are as truly
'oppression' as anything can be. I plead for no wrongs; I justify no
selfishness in the relation of master and servant; I regard the golden
rule of Christ as the law by which slave-holding should be regulated in
every instance."

"I never expected," said he, "to live long enough to hear of the golden
rule being applied to slavery! It would be like applying light to
darkness, truth to falsehood, holiness to sin."

"By what rule," I inquired, "do you think the lady is habitually
governed who wrote the letter which has interested you so much?"

"Why," said he, "there are good people under every iniquitous system.
These exceptional cases are not the rule of judgment with regard to the
nature and effect of a system."

"Can you not imagine one man owning another," said I, "under
circumstances, and with motives, and in a temper and spirit which will
make the relation most desirable?"

"I go further back," said he, "and I deny that it is right for one human
being to own another."

"Has not God a right," said I, "to place one human being over another as
his owner?"

"Has God a right," said he, "to countenance theft and oppression?"

I said to him: "I might follow your example, and answer you by asking,
Has God a right to countenance war? But I will relieve all your
disagreeable apprehensions as to our conversation at once, by saying
that I am not to argue in favor of oppression. If holding a slave is
oppression, it is a sin. And if it be inconsistent with the golden rule,
it is a sin."

"If that be your doctrine," said he, "we shall soon agree. Now apply the
golden rule to slavery. Are there any circumstances in which you would
yourself be willing to be 'owned'?"

"Certainly," I replied.

He rose, and put some lumps of coal upon the fire with the tongs, and
said, "I presume you mean what you say, and that you do not wish to
trifle with the subject."

"Mr. North," said I, "would you be willing that any one should make you
head-cook in a hotel, engineer in a steamboat, or keeper of a floating
light?"

"No, Sir," said he.

"You would, Mr. North," said I, "under given circumstances. You would
petition for such places, get recommendations for them, and count
yourself perfectly happy, if you succeeded in obtaining them.

"Now look at the slaves. They are a foreign race, we are their civil
superiors, and unless we amalgamate, we intend to remain so. While we
are in this relation, it is a privilege to the blacks to have owners,
but they must use their ownership according to the golden rule. When
this is done, the condition of the blacks, in their present relation to
us, is happy."

"How often," said he, "do you suppose that it is done?"

"That," said I, "is another and a very interesting question, which we
will consider soon. You took the ground, as I understood you, that the
law of love would prevent any one from holding a fellow-creature as a
slave. I reply that it would be in perfect accordance with it, as the
blacks at the South are now situated, for the whites to be their humane
owners. But pray what do you mean by 'owning' a human being?"

"I mean," said he, "having the right to abuse them, domineer over them,
work them as cattle, sell them, and--"

"Did this Southern lady," said I, while he paused for more words, "ever
acquire a right with her ownership to treat Kate so?"

"Her laws," said he, "give her a right to punish her; and such
irresponsible power is fearful. She could whip her to death and"--

"And be punished for it," said I, "as surely as you would be for
whipping a servant to death."

"She is at liberty to punish more severely than the case warrants," said
he, "and then she can shield herself under the laws."

"I presume," said I, "a Northern parent never gives a hasty box on the
ear, never strikes one passionate blow in the chastisement, never shakes
a child a single trill beyond the due harmony of parental affection,
never scourges it with the tongue to momentary madness! What a dreadful
thing parental authority is! Would it not be well to abolish the
authority of parents over children! Indeed, would it not be well to go
further, and interdict the public lands of the United States from being
settled; for as surely as men live there, every form of wickedness will,
in its turn, be perpetrated. How much better the calm and holy silence
of the woods and fields, than if the tumultuous passions of men should
roll over them!"

"But, my dear sir," said he, "I maintain that oppression is inseparable
from the holding of a slave. I insist that this Southern lady, if all
her feelings and conduct toward her servants are like her letter, is an
exception among her people."

"No, Sir," said I, "she is the general rule among all decent people, and
there is as much sense of decency and propriety there as with us, as
many good people, kind, humane, generous, and it is as rare a thing for
a servant to be ill-used there, as for our apprentices, and servants,
and even our children. How kind and good you would be, Sir, if
Providence should place a human being under you as his owner, for the
mutual good of both of you."

"Dear me," said he, "I should try to feel and act just as I suppose
those Southerners do who, you say, are fairly represented by this lady's
letter about the slave-babe."

"Mr. North," said I, "suppose that the State should make you the
absolute owner of some of those boys who set fire to the Westboro' and
Deer Island institutions. In consideration of your personal
responsibility for them, there is ceded to you all right and title to
their services, and absolute control over them, subject, of course, to
the laws against misdemeanors and crimes against the person. My only
point is this: Where would be the sinfulness of that relation? All that
would be sinful about it would be in your neglect or violation of your
duty as a master."

"How glad all this makes me feel," said he, "that I am not troubled with
slaves. If we do not like our servants or apprentices, we can get rid of
them."

"Then," said I, "you surely ought to pity those who are bound to their
slaves and have to put up with a thousand things which you say we can
escape by changing our help."

"But," said he, "can they not sell off their slaves when they please?"

"Suppose, however," said I, "that they happen to be humane, as Mr. North
is, and as we all are in the Free States! and that they are unwilling to
turn off a poor helpless creature for her faults, to be sold, and to go
they know not where!"

"Slavery," said Mr. North, "is surely a great curse. I am so glad that I
live under free institutions."

"Who made us to differ from the South in this respect? How came those
blacks there? Whose ships, whose money, imported them? You remember that
it was by the votes of Free States, that the importation of slaves was
continued for eight years beyond the time when the Southern States had
voted in the Convention that it should cease. And now what would you
have the South do with the slaves, to-day?"

"Set them all free," said he, "'break every yoke; proclaim liberty to
the captives, the opening of the prison-doors to them that are bound.'"

"Allow me," said I, "to smile at your simplicity, for you are very
child-like, not to say childish, in your feelings. You would have the
colored people universally go free. Do you really think that Kate is
worse off in being what you call a slave, than that young, free black
woman who keeps a stall and sells verses and knives near our Park?"

"O dear sir," said he, "liberty is a priceless boon; liberty"--

"Liberty to what?" said I.

"Why," said he, "liberty not to be sold, nor to be beaten, nor to be
subject to the wicked passions of a master."

"Would you rather," said I, "have your daughter a servant in a Southern
family, brought up as a playmate with the children, a sharer in many of
their gifts, a partner with their parents, as the children grew up, in
the pride and joy of the parents, an honored member of the wedding party
when a daughter is married, one of the principal mourners when the bride
departs, identified with the history of the family, provided for in the
will, a support guaranteed to her by law in sickness and old age, and
that, too, not in a pauper establishment, but in her owner's home, and
when the parents die, if she survives, taken by some branch of the
family or neighbor from regard to her and to them; her moral and
religious character improved under their training, a respectable
standing in society conferred upon her by her connection with them, her
religious privileges sacredly secured to her, any insult redressed as
though it were the family's personal affair; she a partaker of their
food and of all their comforts, and followed to her grave with respect
and love; or, for the sake of 'priceless liberty,' 'heaven's best gift
to man,' would you prefer to see her seated under the iron fence of a
park, an old umbrella tied to the pickets for her shelter, and she, in
rain and sunshine, selling 'Old Dan Tucker,' 'Jim Crow, Illustrated,'
and pea-nuts, and sleeping you know not where? Which lot would you
choose for a child? Which is best for this world and the next? In one
case, she is 'owned,' she is 'a slave;' and in the other, she is a free
woman."

"You have no right," said he, with some warmth, "to take the best
condition in slavery, and the very worst in freedom, and compel me to
choose."

"'Best condition in slavery!'" said I; "is there any 'best' in being a
slave, in not being free? Does it admit of degrees? Is not being 'owned'
such a curse, such an unmixed iniquity in its essence, that to compare
its best estate with the worst in freedom, is like comparing the best
devil with the most inferior saint? Is not a devil's nature incapable of
comparison as good, better, best, with anything which is not, in its
nature, devilish? According to your conversation just now, it seemed as
though being 'owned' always implied an unmitigated transgression; and
now when I inquire whether you would prefer degradation to the iniquity
of being 'owned' in comfort and usefulness, respectability and
happiness, you shrink from the question. If freedom in the abstract is
the best thing under the sun, of course you will prefer it to everything
else. No happy condition, no happy prospect for this life, and the life
to come can, in your view, make being 'a slave,' as you call it, capable
of being compared with this abstract privilege of being free. In this
you and your friends labor under a huge mistake, and it poisons all your
views and feelings about slavery. When you denounce slave-holders and
slavery, and depict the condition of the slave in your awful colors,
they at the South know that in hundreds of thousands of instances, as it
regards masters and slaves, all that you say is practically false; you
are carried away by your zeal against a theoretical wrong.

"Now suppose that instead of starting with the theoretical wrong and
getting only such facts as illustrate it, you should travel through the
South to pick up such letters as you consider this, respecting Kate, to
be;--what a pleasing view might be presented of the slaves' condition in
cases without number!"

"But," said he, "there are terrible evils underlying these fair features
of slavery."

"True," said I, "but why, in the name of truth and love do you never
hear such a letter as this read on the platforms of Northern abolition
societies? What mingled groans and hisses and shrieks for freedom, and
then what an emptying of the demoniacal epithets there would be, if such
a letter should be offered. One case of whipping would have more effect
than a thousand such letters, in your assemblies and newspapers. No one
from the continent of Europe would infer from those meetings that such
beings as Kate and her little babe, and this lady and her husband and
father, existed even in fiction, but that slave-holders are Legrees, and
the slaves their victims. What a beautiful effect it would have on us
and on the South, if touching tales of loving-kindness between masters
and slaves, instances of perfect happiness in that relation, should be
cited, and then you should enter your candid, but decided opposition to
the system, to its extension, to its evils where it exists. How soon we
should all be found working together, so far as we might, for the
amelioration of the colored race here, with a view to the extinction of
slavery in every form of it in which it is an evil, or a greater evil
than anything which might properly be substituted."

"Well," said Mrs. North, "husband, what do you say to that?"

"I like it," said he.

"But now," said I, "the language of the place of despair is exhausted in
describing and denouncing the South. If a man among us lifts up his
voice to say good things about Southerners, one universal hiss goes up
from all your conventions and anti-slavery prints. He may be seeking the
same end with you, namely, the peaceful removal of slavery, with due
regard to the highest good of all concerned; but let him utter a word in
arrest of your unqualified condemnation of slavery as it actually is,
and there are no persecutors, nor scourges, nor intolerance on the
earth, more fierce and cruel than you and your denunciations."

"Take it patiently, husband," said Mrs. North, "you know that you
deserve it."

"I know from this," said I, "if from nothing else, that your theory is
wrong. The truth does not excite such passions in those who love and
seek to promote it. We see that, in cases without number, the present
condition of the slaves is a blessing for both worlds, and that if all
who possess slaves were, as many are, slavery would cease to be any more
of a curse than any dependent condition in this world. There must always
be those who will do every sort of menial work. The great Father of all,
who himself says that he has 'deprived' the ostrich 'of wisdom, neither
hath he imparted to her understanding,' so arranges the capacities of
some that their happiness consists in leaning upon superior intelligence
and capability.

"The serving people, in some districts of country, are volunteers from
all races; at the South, they consist of one inferior, dependent race,
who for ages have been slaves in their own country, and would be such
even now, if they were there. We will not shut the door of hope forever
upon any part of the human family, as to their elevation among the
tribes of men, but this race has, for a long period of its history,
evidently been undergoing a tutelage and discipline at the hand of
Providence. There is some marvellous arrangement of Providence, it seems
to me, designing that this black race shall lean upon us. Let the same
number of any other immigrant race have gone from us to Canada as of
this colored race, and the world would have heard a better report from
them ere this. They thrive best in connection with us as their masters,
whether it be right or wrong for us to be in such relation to them."

"But now," said he,--in a persuasive tone, and evidently wishing to turn
the drift of the remarks,--"just set them free, and hire them; we shall
agree then. The slaves will be as well off, and so will their masters."

"Mr. North," said I, "being owned is, in itself, irrespective of the
character of the master, a means of protection to the negro. Somebody
then is responsible for him as his guardian and provider, and is
amenable to the State for his sustenance. You can easily see that, let
the colored people come to be a hireling class, and their interests and
those of their masters are disjoined. There would be conflicts and
oppressions among themselves; they would fall into a degraded, serf-like
condition; but now each of them partakes of his master's interests, and
rises with him. I am not here pleading for slavery in the abstract, but,
the blacks being on the soil, it is far better for them to be owned than
to be free. Why are the Southwestern States, one after another, passing
laws, or framing their constitutions, to shut out from their borders
free negroes,--people in the very condition into which you would reduce
by wholesale all the blacks in the South? I pray you look and see that
you are an abstractionist, setting what you deem a theoretical wrong
against a practical good, and under the circumstances, a real mercy."

"But," said Mr. North, "slavery impoverishes the soil, makes the whites
shun labor, feeling it to be degrading, and it keeps the white children
from industrial pursuits, and"--

"Please stop," said I, "my dear Sir, and think of what you are saying,
and be not carried away by that popular flood of cant phrases. Now you
know that God has given our Southern friends a south country, nearer
than ours to the tropics. Out-of-door labor there is injurious to the
white people, as you know. They are not to be blamed for this. God has
not given them strength to endure exposure to the sun. Had they a
northern climate, in which the labor required by the mechanic arts could
be performed with safety and comfort, do you not suppose that they
would have the same aptitude and relish as we for handicraft? Their
children cannot be brought up to manual labor to the extent that ours
are, because the God of heaven has ordained their lot in a land less
favorable than ours to toil. His providence, making use of the sins of
men, has placed the blacks here; you and the rest of the world, who
depend upon their cotton, are willing enough to use it in its countless
forms, while you reproach your Maker, as I think, for having caused it
to be raised as he has seen fit to do."

"But Oh," said Mr. North, "free labor is more profitable than slave
labor. You well know how it affects the soil, and that the great price
of slaves will in time make the system oppressive to the masters,
especially if they are all as considerate as you say they are about
selling."

"The good Aunt has replied to you as to the soil, and we need not
distress ourselves about the price of slaves; that will regulate itself.
You well understand," said I, "that I am not arguing in favor of slavery
_per se_, nor for the slave-trade, nor for the extension of slavery; but
I contend that where slavery now exists, no one has yet proposed a
scheme which is better than the continuance of ownership, the blacks
remaining on the same soil with their present masters. Nor do I mean to
say that the present system must inevitably continue forever. We must
leave future developments in other hands. Of course there are difficult
problems on such a subject as this. Intelligent Christian gentlemen at
the South say that the best schemes which have been proposed by
Europeans for the substitution of apprenticed negroes for slaves would
make the condition of the negro as far worse than our slavery as the
condition of a degraded negro here is below that of his master. Who will
care for him when he is old, or sick? Granting this apprentice scheme
to be arranged without oppression or sin of any kind, I hold that the
condition of our slaves owned by masters and mistresses, is better than
such a hireling condition, though it have the appearance of liberty."

"Why so?" inquired Mr. North.

"The slaves are not treated as hired horses are liable to be treated," I
replied. "We know how a man is likely to treat his own horse, compared
with the horse which he hires. Men nurse their slaves when they are
sick; they provide for them when they are old. By their care and
responsibility for them, and in relieving them from responsibility, they
pay them wages whose market-value, if it could be reckoned in dollars,
would be higher wages than are paid to the same class of laborers in the
land. There are not four millions of the lower class of the laboring
people in any one district of the earth whose condition is to be
compared with that of the Southern slaves for comfort and happiness."

"I presume," said Mrs. North, "that you would not regard exemption from
responsibility as in itself a blessing. You know how it educates us, how
it sharpens the faculties, how it makes a man more of a man; therefore
is it, after all, any kindness to the slaves, that they are relieved
from responsibility?"

"I thank you," said I, "for that question. Does it concern us that our
domestic servants are relieved, for the time, of all responsibility for
house-rent, taxes, political duties?

"Every condition of poverty and toil has its peculiar hardships and
sorrows. But putting together, respectively, all the advantages and the
disadvantages of our slaves, he who looks upon a population with
enlarged views of liabilities and of the inevitable results in the
working of different schemes of labor, and is not so weak or morbid as
to dwell inordinately on real and imaginary wrongs and miseries, which,
after all, if real, are compensated for by advantages or surpassed by
aggregated smaller evils in other conditions, must admit that, the
colored people being here, their being owned is the very best possible
thing for their protection, and the surest guarantee against all their
liabilities to want in hard times, sickness, and old age.

"Speaking of hard times leads me to say, that if you could put four
millions of laboring people in the Free States, for a winter or during
commercial distresses and the stagnation of every kind of business, in a
position where, while they were still active and useful, a single
thought or care about their sustenance would not visit them, you would
be deemed a philanthropist and public benefactor. There will not be the
same number of people in the laboring class throughout our land next
winter, in any one section, whose comfort and happiness will exceed that
of our slaves."

"Oh, well," said Mr. North, "all this may be true, but this does not
reconcile me to slavery. Our horses here at the North will all be
comfortably provided for, notwithstanding any money pressure. But I
would rather be a human being and fail, every winter, than be a horse."

"Husband," said Mrs. North, "do you consider that a parallel case? Mr.
C. is not arguing, as I understand him, that slavery is better than
freedom. He is not persuading us to be slaves rather than free. He takes
these four millions of blacks as he finds them, in bondage, and he asks,
What shall we do with them? You say, Set them free. He says, They are
better off, as a race, in their present bondage, than they would be if
made free, to remain here. Not that they are better off than four
millions of colored people, who had never been slaves, would be in a
commonwealth by themselves."

"I thank you, Mrs. North," said I, "for your clear and correct statement
of my position. And now I will take up Mr. North's parable about the
horses, and apply it justly. Let hay and grass be exceedingly scarce,
and I had rather take my chance with an owner and be a horse, in a
stable, and at work, than a horse roaming in search of food, chased away
everywhere. The comparison is between horse and horse, and man and man."

"You make me think," said Mrs. North, "of an interesting passage in a
late magazine, written by a lady. She was on a voyage to Cuba. She
arrived at Nassau. She says, 'There were many negroes, together with
whites of every grade; and some of our number, leaning over the side,
saw for the first time the raw material out of which Northern
Humanitarians have spun so fine a skein of compassion and sympathy. You
must allow me one heretical whisper,--very small and low. Nassau, and
all we saw of it, suggested to us the unwelcome question whether
compulsory labor be not better than none.'"[3]

   [Footnote 3: _Atlantic Monthly_, May, 1859, p. 604.]

"There is," said I, "this great question of right, with some, as to
slavery: As the State has a right to interpose and send vagrant children
to school, has the world a right to interpose, in certain cases, and
send certain races to labor for the good of mankind? This was the
question which broke upon the lady's mind. It is very interesting to see
the question thus stated, and to notice the graceful touch of apology,
and of playfulness, in the manner of stating it. There was risk, and
even peril, in making the suggestion, but, withal, some moral courage.
Still a lady may sometimes venture where it might not be safe for a
gentleman to go.

"But the question between us is not, 'Freedom or slavery,' in the
abstract, nor, Whether it is right, in any case, to reduce a people to
slavery; but, What is best for our slaves? All your proofs that freedom
is better than slavery in the abstract, are nothing to the point."

"It is the foulest blot on our nation in the eyes of the world," said
Mr. North, "that we have four millions of human beings in bondage."

"Have you read 'Uncle Tom's Cabin?'" I inquired.

"Ask me," said he, pleasantly, "if I know how to read. Every lover of
liberty and hater of oppression has read 'Uncle Tom.'"

"That is very far from being true," said I; "but still, you like Uncle
Tom as a character, do you?"

"You astonish me," said he, "by making a question about it. He is the
most perfect specimen of Christianity that I ever heard of."

"Among the martyrs," said I, "have you ever found his superior?"

"No, Sir!" was his energetic answer.

"Now," said I, "what made Uncle Tom the paragon of perfection?"

"What made him?" said he.

"Yes," said I, "what made him the model Christian? You do not reply, and
I will tell you. SLAVERY MADE UNCLE TOM. Had it not been for slavery, he
would have been a savage in Africa, a brutish slave to his fetishes,
living in a jungle, perhaps; and had you stumbled upon him he would very
likely have roasted you and picked your bones. A system which makes
Uncle Toms out of African savages is not an unmixed evil."

"But," said he, "it makes Legrees also."

"I beg your pardon, Sir," said I, "it does not make Legrees. There are
as many Legrees at the North as at the South, especially if we include
all the very particular 'friends of the slave.' Legree would be Legree
in Wall Street, or Fifth Avenue; Uncle Tom would not be Uncle Tom in the
wilds of Africa."

"And so," said he, "it is right to fit out ships, burn villages in
Africa, steal the flying people, bestow them in slave-ships, and sell
them into hopeless bondage!"

"So you all love to reason," said I, "or seek to force that conclusion
upon us. No such thing. If God overrules the evil doings of men, this is
no reason for repeating the wrong. I am insisting that slavery as it
exists in the South has been a blessing to the African. This does not
warrant you in perpetrating outrages on those who are still in Africa.

"But the result has been, through the mercy of God as though we had
taken millions of degraded savages out of Africa, and had made them
contribute greatly to the industrial interests of mankind.

"We have raised them from heathenish ignorance and barbarism to the
condition of intelligent beings. Look at them in their churches and
Sabbath-schools. Slavery has done this. See the colored population of
Charleston, S.C., voluntarily contributing, as they do, on an average,
three dollars apiece, annually, for the propagation of the Gospel at
home and abroad. See the meeting-house of the African Church at
Richmond, Va., a place selected for public speakers from the North to
deliver their addresses in it to the citizens of Richmond, because it is
more commodious than any other public building in the city. Think of the
membership of slaves in Christian Churches; of the multitudes of them
who have died in the faith and hope of the Gospel. Slavery has done
this. The question is whether slavery has been, or is, such a curse, on
the whole, to the African race, that we must now set free the whole
colored population? Please let us keep to the point. The reopening of
the slave-trade is a question by itself.

"It seems that God had chosen to redeem and save large numbers of the
African race by having them transported to this Christian land.
Philanthropists would not be at the cost and trouble of all this. God
has, therefore, used the cupidity of men to accomplish his purposes, and
he punishes the wicked agents of his own benevolent schemes. His curse
has for ages rested on the African race, and the laws of nature have, to
a great degree, interposed to prevent Christian efforts in their behalf.
God saw fit to change the prison-house, and prison yards and shops of
this race from one continent to another, and New England merchantmen, in
part, have been allowed to be the conveyers. In the process of
transferring these future subjects of civilization and Christianity,
vast misery is endured, as in opening a way by the sword for the
execution of his decrees, great slaughter is the inevitable attendant. I
look at the whole subject of slavery in the light of God's providence.
And I do not see that his providence yet indicates any way for its
termination consistent with the interests of the colored people.

"As to the extension of slavery, in this land, if the Most High has any
further purposes of mercy for the African race in connection with us, he
will not consult you nor me. He will open districts of our country for
them; if my political party refuses to be the instrument in doing this,
from benevolent motives, or from any other cause, He will make that
party to be defeated, it may be by a party below us in moral principle,
as we view it. This question of slavery, its extension and continuance,
is therefore among the great problems of God's providence. I shall do
all that I properly can to prevent it, and to encourage, and, if called
upon, to aid my brethren now in immediate charge of the slaves, to
fulfil their solemn trust; but anything like impatience and passion at
the existence of slavery, I hold to be a sin against God. I pity those
good men whose minds are so inflamed by the consideration of individual
cases of suffering as not to perceive the great and steadfast march of
the divine administration. Politicians and others who get their places,
or their bread, by easy appeals to sympathy for individual cases of
suffering, are the causes of much misplaced commiseration and of a low,
uninstructed view of the great interests involved in slavery. Yet these
very men who, for selfish purposes, stir up the passions of our people,
by dwelling on cases of hardship in slavery, are greatly disappointed
when Napoleon III., at Villafranca, prematurely terminates a war of
unparalleled slaughter. They would have preferred, for the cause of
constitutional liberty and for its possible influence against the Pope,
that the fighting had continued a month longer; we hear no pathetic
remonstrances from them on the score of the killed and maimed, the
widows and orphans and the childless, of homes made desolate, by this
additional month of battle. Such is man, so inconsistent, so blinded by
party prejudice, so ready to maintain that which, in a change of persons
and places, he will denounce. He will be wholly blinded by individual
acts of suffering to all that is good in a system; and again, the good
to be effected by a war will blind him to the hundreds of thousands of
dead or mutilated soldiers, with five times that number of bleeding
hearts, rifled by the sword of their precious treasures."

I saw that I had prolonged my remarks to an undue length. We sat in
silence for a little while, looking into the fire, and listening to the
rain against the windows, when Judith called Mrs. North to the door;
and, after some whispering between them, Mrs. North said to her,

"Oh, bring them in; our company will excuse it."

The cranberries, it seems, were not doing well over the fire in Judith's
department, and she had hesitatingly proposed that they should be
promoted to the parlor grate, where, after due apologies, they were
placed. They soon began to simmer; then one would burst, and then
another, we pausing unconsciously to hear them surrendering themselves
to their fate, while one mouth, at least, watered at the thought of the
delicious dish which they were to furnish; the rich, ruby color of their
juice in the best cut-glass tureen, and the added spoonful, as a reward
for not spilling a drop on the table-cloth the last time they were
served, coming to mind, with thoughts of early days. And here I was
discussing slavery. Now, while the cranberries were over the fire,
making one feel domestic and also bringing back young days, it was
impossible to be disputatious, had we been so inclined. The Northern
cranberry-meadow and the Southern sugar-plantation seemed mixed up in my
feelings on this subject, qualifying and rectifying each other. Perhaps
the soothing presence of the cranberry saucepan was timely; for, without
any design, a phase of our subject next presented itself which was not
the most agreeable. I broke the silence, and said,--

"Mr. North, what do you think is the mission of the abolitionists as a
party, and of all who sympathize with them?"

"Why," said he, "to abolish slavery, to be sure. What else can it be?"

"You are mistaken," said I. "The real mission of the abolitionists, thus
far, is, To perpetuate slavery till Providence has accomplished its
plan. You know what Southern synods, and general assemblies, and many of
the ablest men at the South have said about slavery; how they deplored
it, and called upon Christians to seek its extinction. The South would
probably have tried to abolish slavery ere this, if left to themselves.
But they would have failed; and Providence prevented the useless effort.
The influence of those sentiments which prevailed in the General
Assembly of 1818 would have been to remove all the objectionable
features of slavery, at least, preparatory to its final extinction, if
that could be reached. It looked as though Churches generally would, in
obedience to the General Assembly, have made it, in certain cases, the
subject of discipline. Abolitionism, however, began about that time. It
had the effect to make the South defend themselves and slavery too.
Providence saw that the South was weary of the system, and wished to
throw it off. But the years of the captivity appointed of God had not
come to an end. Purposes of mercy for the African race had not been
accomplished; the South must be made willing to hold these poor people
for the 'time, times, and half a time,' ordained of God. To encourage
them, the God of Nature makes the great Southern staple, cotton, to be
in greater demand for the supply of the world; the cotton-gin is
invented, and immediately the slaves are thereby assisted to retain that
hold upon the South which was about to be broken off. All this seems to
me designed, as it certainly has the effect, to perpetuate slavery until
Providence shall indicate measures for the removal of the colored people
among us. This may be delayed for centuries to come. In the mean time,
we at the North, by keeping up our agitation of the subject, have
impressed the South with the importance of being united against us; but
if any of our schemes of emancipation had divided them, it would not
have been for the good of the slaves. So the abolitionists have been
fulfilling their destiny by fighting against Providence to help
perpetuate slavery till the Most High shall disclose his will concerning
it."

"And helped the South," said Mr. North, "perpetuate violations of the
marriage relation, and to separate families, and to countenance all the
sins in slavery!"

"Yes, to some degree," said I; "for should we treat them with common
candor and truthfulness, make them feel that we appreciate the
perplexities of the subject, admit for once, and act upon it, that they
are better and more competent 'friends of the slave' than we, it would
be the surest way to put a stop to every evil in slavery. Now they have
little power over a certain class of men among them, who, when measures
are proposed for the relief of the slaves, raise the cry that they are
abolitionists, and excite an odium which deters them from doing many
things which would otherwise be attempted."

"They might all certainly join," said Mr. North, "one would think, to
prevent the violation of the marriage contract by the slaves, and the
sundering of the marriage tie by the auctioneer."

"Now," said I, "there are two allegations, and I will answer them. As to
the violation of the marriage covenant by the slaves, are you aware how
many divorces for the same cause are granted in your own state yearly?
You will find, on inquiry, that 'freedom' has nothing to boast of in
this respect. As to the auctioneer, and the separation of the marriage
tie by him, how often do you think that an honest black man, for no
crime, is taken from his wife and sold, or she from him? How often, do
you suppose, are families divided and scattered at the auction-block? If
you will inquire, you will find that the cases are extremely rare; that
in some large districts it has not occurred for several years; and that
in other cases, where it has occurred, regard has been had to the
neighborhood of the purchasers, so that members of the same families
have been within reach of one another. You seem to think that a great
feature, and the most common effect, of slavery is to separate families.
Such is the general belief at the North. Let me remind you that there is
no form or condition of service in the world which has more effect than
slavery to keep families together."

"Well," said Mrs. North, dropping her work in her lap, "I never thought
of that before."

"Why," said I, "where will you find in the Free States husband and wife
and children living together as servants in the same family?"

Said Mrs. North, "It is rather uncommon with us to find two sisters
living together as help in a family. At least, it is always spoken of
and noted as pleasant and desirable."

"What would Northerners think," said I, "of gathering the old parents
and all the brothers and sisters of their domestics together, in small
tenements near their own dwellings? He who should do this would be
regarded as a very great saint. So that you may as well say that slavery
is a system by which a serving class is kept together in families, as to
say that its purpose and effect is to break up families."

"Just think," said Mrs. North, "of the serving class in our families
here at the North,--how they are separated by states, by oceans, from
one another!"

"Be careful, Mrs. North," said I, "how you even hint at such mitigations
in slavery, for you will be denounced as a 'friend of oppression' if you
discern anything in the system but 'villanies.' You never hear such a
feature of slavery, as that of which we have just spoken, recognized
here at the North by our zealous anti-slavery people."

"Do you not think," said she, "that if we were candid and less
passionate, and viewed the subject as anti-slavery men at the South do,
we should exert far more influence against slavery?"

"If we exerted any," I replied, "it would be 'far more' than we do now.
If we would only cease to 'exert influence' in that direction, and begin
to learn that the people of the South are as Christian, benevolent, and
good in every respect as we, this first, great lesson, which we all need
to learn, would do us all great good. Self-righteousness is the great
characteristic of the Northern people with regard to the South. Fifteen
States declare that they are justified before God in continuing the
system of slavery. The other States would be ashamed to condemn those
fifteen States for immorality in the discussion of any other subject;
but here they assume that one half of the American nation is convicted
of crime. I take the ground that, if the Churches and the ministry of
those fifteen States say, With all the evils of slavery, it is right and
best that we should maintain it, I will so far yield my convictions as
not to feel that they are less righteous than I."

"Oh," said Mr. North, "but they have been born and educated under the
system. Of course they must be blinded by it, and their moral sense
perverted."

"There," said I, "Mr. North, is the 'Northern Evil' again. Oh, what a
shame it is for intelligent people to decry Southern Christians in this
way, and to erect their own moral sense into such self-complacent
superiority!

"You will see in your church one excellent brother, whose heart is
filled with anguish at the thought of the 'poor slave.' One sits by him
who knows full as much on this and on all subjects as he, who feels that
the people at the South are perfectly qualified to manage this subject,
and that we have no need to interpose. He thinks that if one wishes to
be excited with compassion at the sorrows and woes of men, a short walk
will bring him to certain abodes such as no Southern slave would be
allowed by any human master to inhabit. If he would benefit men as a
class, our own sailors need all his philanthropy. But the good
anti-slavery brother is possessed with the idea that the Southern slave
is the impersonation of injustice and misery, and that those who stand
in the relation of masters are guilty of crimes, daily, which ought to
shut them out of the Church.

"I have often thought that the most appropriate prayers in our public
assemblies, with regard to slavery, would be petitions against Northern
ignorance and passion with respect to Southern Christians. It is we who
most need to be prayed for. When I think of those assemblies of
Christians of all denominations in the South, with a clergy at their
head who have no superiors in the world, and then hear a Northern
preacher indicting them before God in his prayers, what shall I say? The
verdict of a coroner's inquest, if it were held over some of his hearers
at such a time, might almost be, Died of disgust."

"Now I desire to know," said Mr. North, "if we are never to pray in
public about slavery? Is it not the great subject before the country,
and are not all our interests in Church and State deeply involved in
it?"

"While we believe," said I, "that holding slaves is a sin, I take the
ground that praying for the Southerners is a false impeachment. When we
are rid of this error, we do not feel their need of being prayed for any
more than 'all men,' for whom Paul says, 'I will that men pray
everywhere,'--'lifting up holy hands without wrath or doubting.' Our
'hands' must be 'holy' when we lift them up for 'all men,' including
Southerners; there must be no 'wrath' in our prayers,--which I am sorry
to say is too easily discerned in prayers against the South; and there
must be no 'doubting' in the petitioners whether their feelings and
motives are right before God. There is as much in the relation of
officers and crews in our merchant vessels, to say the least, to enlist
the prayers of ministers, as in slavery. But this relates to ourselves,
and has not the enchantment of a distant sin.

"You must bring yourself to believe, Mr. North, that Southern hearts are
in general as humane and cultivated as ours. This, it is true, is a
great demand upon a Northerner."

"But oh," said he, (we happening to be alone just then,) "the cruelty of
compelling virtuous people, members of Churches, to commit sin, under
pain of being sold."

"Mr. North," said I, "how do you dare to open your lips on that
subject,--you, with myself, a member of a denomination in which men,
eminent in our pulpits, have--so many of them of late years--fallen. One
would think that we would never cast a stone at the South on that
subject.

"Some among us seem to think that the power and the opportunity to
commit sin must necessarily be followed by criminal indulgence. They do
themselves no credit in this supposition. They also leave out of view a
natural antipathy which must be overcome, sense of degradation,
probability of detection, loss of character, conscience, and all the
moral restraints which are common to men everywhere; and they only judge
that all who exercise authority over an abject race must, as a general
thing, be polluted.

"As to opportunities for evil-doing at the South compared with the
North, no one who walks the streets of a Northern city, by day or night,
with the ordinary discernment of one who sets himself to examine the
moral condition of a place, will fail to see that we need not go to the
South to find humiliating proofs of baseness and shame. There is less
solicitation at the South; here it is a nightly trade, without disguise.
At the South the young must go in search of opportunity; here it
confronts them. The small number of yellow children in the interior of
the Cotton States, on 'lone plantations,' is positive proof against the
ready suspicions and accusations of Northern people. Let all be true
which is said of 'yellow women,' 'slave-breeders,' and every form of
lechery, he is simple who does not believe that the statistics of a
certain wickedness at the North would, if made as public as difference
of color makes the same statistics at the South, leave no room for us to
arraign and condemn the South in this particular. Their clergy, their
husbands, their young men, if they are no better, are no worse than we.
But there is nothing in which the self-righteousness created by
anti-slavery views and feelings is more conspicuous than in the way in
which the South is judged and condemned by us with regard to this one
sin. Had the pulpits of the South afforded such dreadful instances of
frailty, for the last ten or fifteen years, as we have had at the North,
what confirmation would we have found for our invectives against the
corrupting and 'barbarous' influence of slavery!

"How the morbid fancy of a Northerner loves to gloat over occasional
instances of violence at the South, and is never employed in depicting
scenes of betrayal and cruelty which our policemen in large cities could
recount by scores."

"I saw," said Mr. North, "in a recent paper, that a slave in Washington
County, N.C., was hanged by the sheriff in the presence of three
thousand spectators, for the murder of a white man, whom he shot with a
pistol because he suspected him of undue familiarity with the wife of
the black man. Poor fellow! no doubt he swung for it because he was a
slave. He must let his marriage rights be invaded by the whites, and
bear it in silence, or die."

Said I, "What a perfect specimen of Northern anti-slavery feeling and
logic have we in what you now say. If a man, on suspicion of you, takes
the law into his hands and shoots you with a pistol, does he not deserve
to die? He does, if he is a white man; perhaps, if he be a slave, that
excuses him! Even where a man is known to be guilty of the crime
referred to, and the husband shoots him, he is apt to have a narrow
escape from being punished. As to bearing such violations of one's
rights in silence under intimidation, there is no more power in
intimidation to save a villain at the South from disgrace and abhorrence
in his community, than at the North."

"But he can evade prosecution under the statute," said Mr. North, "more
easily at the South than here."

"When you have served on the grand jury a few terms," said I, "you will
be more charitable toward Southerners. Human nature is the same
everywhere. It makes, where it does not find, occasion for sin.

"Now you will not understand, in all that I have said, that I am
pleading for slavery, that I desire to have this abject race among us,
that Southerners are purer and better than we. We are both under sin. We
all have our temptations and trials; each form of society has its own
kind of facilities for evil; but the grace of God and all the influences
which bear on the formation and the preservation of character, are the
same wherever Christianity prevails."

"Well, after all," said he, "it must be a semi-barbarous state of
society, where such a system is maintained."

"I shall have to send you," said I, "to the 'Hotel des Incurables.' I
think that your judgments are more than semi-barbarous. If you please to
term even the Southern negroes 'semi-barbarous,' you may do so; but you
are bearing false witness against your neighbor.

"My dear friend," said I, "sum up all the evils of the laboring classes,
of foreigners and the lower orders of society. Take their miseries,
vices, crimes, with all the blessings of freedom and everything else.
Get the proportion of evil to the good. Remember that these classes will
continue to exist among us. Then take the slaves, the lower order at the
South, as foreigners are with us, and say if, on the whole, the
proportion of evil among the slaves is any greater than among the
corresponding classes elsewhere. Do not be an optimist. Acknowledge that
society, in this fallen world, must have elements of evil, by reason at
least of imbecility, want of thrift, misfortune, and other things. You
will not fail to see that slavery with all its evils is, under the
circumstances, by no means, the worst possible condition for the colored
people."

"Well," said he, "I will think of all you have said. I do not wish to be
an ultraist, nor to shut my eyes against truth. You will wish to go to
bed; there are some further points on which I would know your views, and
we will, if you please, resume the subject to-morrow."




CHAPTER VII.

OWNERSHIP IN MAN.--THE OLD TESTAMENT SLAVERY.

  "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do
  ye even so to them; FOR THIS IS THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS."

  HOLY WRIT.


The rain still poured down in the morning, making it agreeable to us
that we had the prospect of an uninterrupted forenoon for our
conversation.

So when we found ourselves together again in the course of the forenoon,
by the fire, we opened the discussion.

Mr. North inquired what I understood by the term "owning a
fellow-creature."

"I understand by it," I replied, "a right to use, and to dispose of, the
services of another, wholly at my will. That will must be subject to the
whole law of God, which includes the golden rule. I do not mean by it
that a man owns the body of a man in such a sense that he can maim it at
will, or in any way abuse it. Ownership in men is power to use their
services and to dispose of them, at will."

"Now," said he, "who gives you a right to go to Africa or to a slave
auction and to say to a human being, 'I propose to own you.' How would
you like to have a black man come to you in a solitary place and say,
'My dear Sir, I propose to own you. Henceforth your services are
subject to my will.'?"

"As to Africa," said I, "and making slaves of those who are now free, we
cannot differ. As to the other part of your question, I will carry the
illustration a little further, and in doing so, will answer you in part.
How would you like to have some Michael O'Connor come to you and say,
'Mr. North, I propose to hire you and pay you wages as my body-servant,
or my ostler.' Why should you not consent? If you do not, why should you
hire Mike himself to serve you in either of those capacities? What has
become of the golden rule, if you hire a man to do work for you which
you would not be hired to do?

"You are feasting with a company of friends; and your domestics, below,
hear your cheerful talk, and feel the wide difference between your state
and theirs. Why do you not go down and say, 'Dear fellow-creatures, go
up and take our places at table, and let us be servants'? Does the
golden rule require that? Inequalities in human conditions are a wise
and benevolent provision for human happiness, so long as men are
dependent on one another, as they are and ever must be. Some are so
constituted by an all-wise God that they are happier to be in
subordinate situations. Mind is lord; and they, seeing and feeling the
superiority of others, gladly attach themselves to them as helpers, to
be thought for and protected, and to enjoy their approbation. There is
nothing cruel in this, unless it be cruel not to have made all men
equal. There are important influences growing out of these relationships
of superiors and inferiors,--gentleness, kindness, benevolence, in all
its forms, on the one hand, and on the other, respect, deference, love,
strong attachments and identification of interests.

"As to the remaining part of your question, let me ask, What nation or
tribes are capable of such bondage as the Africans at home inflict and
bear? We never had a right to go and steal them, nor to encourage their
captors in their pillage and violent seizure of the defenceless
creatures; nor do I think that all the blessings which multitudes of
them have received, for both worlds, in consequence of their
transportation from Africa, lessens the guilt of slave-traders; nor are
these benefits any justification of the trade, nor do they afford ground
for its continuance. Nothing can justify it. Such is the voice of the
human conscience everywhere except where covetousness or controversy
prevail.

"But finding these colored people here, the question upon which you and
I differ, is, What is our duty with regard to them?

"You say, Set them all free. I reply, The relation of ownership on our
part toward them is best for all concerned. You say, It is wrong in
itself. To say this, I think, is to be more righteous than God."

"Then you maintain," said he, "that the Most High, in the Bible,
countenances all the atrocities of American slavery."

"What a strange way," said I, "of arguing, do we very generally find
among anti-slavery men, when their feelings are enlisted, as they are so
apt to be. They take unwarrantable, extreme inferences from what we say,
and oppose these as logical answers to a statement or argument. 'Auction
block' and 'Bunker Hill,' are sufficient answers with them to most of
our reasoning on this subject. But let us look at this point in a
dispassionate manner.

"But," said I, "before I begin I wish to be distinctly understood as
holding this doctrine; namely, The Bible does not justify us in reducing
men to bondage at our will. God might appoint that certain tribes should
be slaves to others; but before we proceed to reduce men to slavery, our
warrant for it must be clear.

"If, however, slavery is found by a certain generation among them, and
it is not right and just nor expedient to abolish it, may we not safely
ask, How did the Most High legislate concerning slavery among the people
to whom he gave a code of laws from his own lips?

"Learning this, we must then consider whether circumstances in our day
warrant, or require, different rules and regulations.

"But our inquiry into the divine legislation respecting slavery, will
disclose some things which draw largely upon one's implicit faith in the
divine goodness; and if a man is disposed to be a sceptic and his
anti-slavery feelings are strong, here is a stone on which, if that
anti-slavery man falls, he shall be broken, but if it falls on him, it
shall grind him to powder.

"You will acknowledge this, if you will allow me to speak further on
this subject.

"Did you ever notice," said I, "with what words Christ concludes his
enunciation of the golden rule? They are a remarkable answer to our
modern infidels, who impugn the Old Testament as far behind the New in
its moral standard. After declaring that the rule by which we should
treat others is self-love, the Saviour says,--'for this is the Law and
the Prophets.' So there was nothing in the Law and Prophets inconsistent
with the golden rule. The golden rule therefore marks the history of
divine legislation from the beginning; and if God appointed slavery, he
ordained nothing in connection with it which was inconsistent with
equal love to one's self and to a neighbor.

"This deserves to be considered by those who, finding slavery in the Old
Testament appointed by God, begin, as it were, to exculpate their Maker
by saying that the Hebrews were a rude, semi-barbarous people, and that
divine legislation was wisely accommodated to their moral capacity. Now
it is singular, if this be so, that the Mosaic code should be the basis,
as it is, of all good legislation everywhere. The effort to make the
Hebrew people and their code appear inferior, in order to excuse
slavery, is one illustration of the direful effect which anti-slavery
principles have had in lowering the respect of many for the Bible, and
loosening its hold upon their consciences. Now it is to me a perfect
relief on this subject of slavery in the Old Testament, to know that God
appointed nothing in the relation of his people to men of any class or
condition which his people in a change of circumstances, might not be
willing should be administered to them. If slavery was ordained of God
to the Hebrews, it must, therefore, have been benevolent. If we start
with the doctrine that 'Slavery is the sum of all villanies,' no wonder
that we find it necessary to use extenuating words and a sort of
apologetic, protecting manner of treating the divine oracles. After all
it is evidently hard work, with many anti-slavery men to maintain that
reverence for the Old Testament and that confidence in God which they
feel are required of them. So they lay all the responsibility of
imperfection in the divine conduct, to the 'semi-barbarous Hebrews!'--a
people by the way, whose first leader combined in himself a greater
variety, and a higher order, of talent, than any other man in history.
As military commander, poet, historian, judge, legislator, who is to be
named in comparison with the man Moses?

"We must come to the conclusion," said I, "that the relation of
ownership is not only not sinful, but that it is in itself benevolent,
that it had a benevolent object; for its origin was certainly
benevolent."

"What was its origin?" said Mrs. North; "I always had a desire to know
how slavery first came into existence."

"Blackstone tells us," I replied, "that its origin was in the right of a
captor to commute the death of his captives with bondage. The laws of
war give the conqueror a right to destroy his enemies; if he sees fit to
spare their lives in consideration of their serving him, this is also
his right. Thus, we suppose, slavery gained its existence.

"True, its very nature partakes of our fallen condition; it is not a
paradisiacal institution; it is not good in itself; it is an
accompaniment of the loss which we have incurred by sin. In that light
it is proper to speak of the Most High as adapting his legislation to
the depraved condition of man; but that is no more true of slavery than
of redemption; everything in the treatment of us by the Almighty is an
exponent of our departure from our first estate."

"Now," said Mrs. North, "all this is a relief to me; for I have always
been sorely tried by remarks seemingly impugning the divine wisdom and
goodness, whenever slavery in the Bible has been under discussion."

"Please give us an outline," said Mr. North, "of the Hebrew legislation
on this subject." He handed me a Bible.

"I will try and not be tedious," said I, "and will repeat to you in few
words the principal points of the Hebrew Code, with regard to
involuntary servitude.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Slavery is the first thing named in the law given at Sinai, after the
moral law and a few simple directions as to altars. This is noticeable.
In the twenty-first chapter of Exodus, and in the twenty-fifth chapter
of Leviticus, we find the Hebrew slave-code. The following is a summary
of it:--

"1. Hebrews themselves might be bought and sold by Hebrews; but for six
years only, at farthest. If the jubilee year occurred at any time during
these six years, it cut short the term of service.

"2. Hebrew paupers were an exception to this rule. They could be
retained till the year of jubilee next ensuing.

"3. Hebrew servants, married in servitude, if they went out free in the
seventh, or in the jubilee year, must go out alone, leaving their wives
which their masters had given them, and their children by these wives,
(if any,) behind them, as their masters' possession. If, however, they
chose to remain with their wives and children, the ear of the servant
was bored with an awl to the door-post, and his servitude became
perpetual.

"4. Hebrew servants might also, from love to their masters, in like
manner and by the same ceremony, become servants forever.

"5. Strangers and sojourners among the Hebrews, 'waxing rich,' were
allowed to buy Hebrews who were 'waxen poor,' and who were at liberty to
sell themselves to these sojourners or to the family of these strangers.
The jubilee year, however, terminated this servitude. The price of sale
was graduated according to the number of years previous to the jubilee
year. The kindred of the servant had the right of redeeming him, the
price being regulated in the same way.

"6. In all these cases in which Hebrews were bought and sold, there were
special injunctions that they should not be treated 'with rigor,' the
reason assigned by the Most High being substantially the same in all
cases, namely, 'For unto me the children of Israel are servants; they
are my servants whom I brought forth out of the land of Egypt: I am the
Lord your God.'

"7. Liberal provision was to be made for the Hebrew servant at the
termination of his servitude. During his term of service, he was to be
regarded and treated 'as an hired servant and a sojourner.'

"8. Bondmen and bondmaids, as property, without limitation of time, and
transmissible as inheritance to children, might be bought of surrounding
nations. The children of sojourners also could be thus acquired. To
these the seventh year's and the fiftieth year's release did not apply.

"Now, Mr. North," said I, "let me proceed to try your faith somewhat. I
will see whether your confidence in divine revelation is sound, for
nothing at the present day has overthrown the faith of many like the
manifest teachings of the Bible with regard to slavery. You have felt
that the Hebrew code is better than ours, so far as it relates to slaves
who were Hebrews. As to the slaves from the heathen, we infer that they
met 'with rigor,' or at least were liable to it; for God continually
enjoins it upon the Hebrews that they shall not use rigor with their
brethren.

"Now let me mention some things which will try your faith in revelation,
if you are an abolitionist.

"The Hebrews were allowed to sell their servants to other people.

"Thus they traded in flesh and blood. This was prohibited in the case of
a Hebrew maid-servant, whom a man had bought and had made her his
concubine. If she did not please him, it was said that--'to sell her
unto a strange nation he shall have no power.' The inference is that
they sold their Gentile slaves, if they pleased, 'to a strange nation.'
Again. When a father or mother became poor, their creditor could take
their children for servants. Thus you read: 'Now there cried a certain
woman of the wives of the sons of the prophets unto Elisha saying, Thy
servant my husband is dead, and thou knowest that thy servant did fear
the Lord; and the creditor is come to take unto him my two sons to be
bondmen.' This was according to the law of Moses, in the twenty-fifth of
Leviticus; 'bondmen,' however, meaning here a servant for a term of
years. See also the New Testament parable of the unforgiving servant.

"This was hard, it will seem to you and to all of us, that if one became
poor in Israel, his children could be attached. Thus the idea of
involuntary servitude, where no crime was, prevailed in the Theocracy.

"But we come now to something which draws harder upon our faith.

"We find the Most High prescribing, Exodus xxi. 20, 21, that a master
who kills his servant under chastisement shall be punished (but not put
to death); and if the servant survives a day or two, the master shall
not even be 'punished' for the death of his slave!

"The reason which the Most High gives is this: '_For he is his money_'!

"A human being, 'money'! An immortal soul, 'money'! God's image,
'money'! And this the reasoning, these the very words of my Maker! Is it
not astonishing, if your principles are correct, that there has been no
controversy for ages against this? and that the Bible, with such
passages in it should have retained its hold on the human mind? 'He is
his money'! It would have been no different had it read: 'He is his
cotton.' You see that the Most High recognized 'ownership,' 'property in
man.' Why is it said, 'He is his money'? Poole (Synopsis) says,--'that
is, his possession bought with money; and therefore 1. Had a power to
chastise him according to his merit, which might be very great. 2. Is
sufficiently punished with his own loss. 3. May be presumed not to have
done this purposely or maliciously.'

"Either and all of which explanations, or any other which can be given,
only bring more clearly to view the idea of 'money' as a reason why the
master is not to be punished, for causing the death of a slave by
whipping, if the slave happens to continue a day or two, no matter under
what mutilations and sufferings.

"Furthermore. We find the Most High decreeing perpetual bondage in
certain cases, and more than all, as we have seen, _the forcible
separation of husband and wife_ among slaves. Let me turn to Exodus xxi.
and read:--

    "'1. Now these are the judgments which thou shalt set before them.

    "'2. If thou buy an Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and in
    the seventh he shall go out free for nothing.

    "'3. If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he
    were married, then his wife shall go out with him.

    "'4. If his master have given him a wife and she have borne him
    sons or daughters, _the wife and her children shall be her
    master's_, and he shall go out by himself.'

"I have not finished my reading," said I; "but what do you say to that,
Mr. North?"

"Read on," said he.

    "'5. And if the servant shall plainly say, I love my master, my
    wife, and my children, I will not go out free:

    "'6. Then his master shall bring him unto the judges, he shall also
    bring him to the door, or unto the door-post, and his master shall
    bore his ear through with an awl, and he shall serve him forever.'

"God decreed, therefore, that the marriage of a slave in bondage, in
those days, was dissoluble, as no other marriage was. Divorces among the
Hebrews, allowed for the hardness of their hearts, were not parallel to
the forcible separation of a slave from his wife under the hard
necessity of choice between perpetual bondage with a wife, or freedom
without her. The merciful God who kindly enacted, 'No man shall take the
nether nor the upper millstone to pledge: for he taketh a man's life to
pledge,' and that a garment pawned should be restored before sundown,
that wages should not be withheld over night, yes, the God who
legislated about bird's-nests ordained the dissolution of the marriage
tie between slaves in certain cases, unless the slave husband was
willing for his wife's sake, to be a slave forever!

"What do you say to this, Mr. North?" I asked again.

Said Mrs. North, "I begin to see the origin and cause of infidelity
among the abolitionists."

"Tell me," said Mr. North, "how you view it."

"On stating this, once," said I, "in a public meeting, I raised a
clamor. Three or four men sprung to their feet, and one of them, who
first caught the chairman's eye, cried out, his face turning red, his
eyes starting from their sockets, his fist clenched, 'I demand of the
gentleman whether he means to approve of all the abominations of
American slavery! Is he in favor of separating husbands and wives,
parents and children? Let us know it, Sir, if it be so. No wonder that
strong anti-slavery men turn infidels when they hear Christian men
defending American slavery from the Bible. No wonder that they say, "The
times demand, and we must have, an anti-slavery constitution, an
anti-slavery Bible, and an anti-slavery God." Mr. Moderator, will the
gentleman answer my question,--Do you mean to approve all the atrocities
of American slavery, on the ground that the Bible countenances them?'

"I was never more calm in my life. I replied, 'Mr. Chairman, taking for
my warrant an inspired piece of advice as to the best way of answering a
man according to his folly, it would be just, should I reply to the
gentleman's question, Yes, I do. But the gentleman, I perceive, is too
much excited to hear me.'

"He had flung himself round in his seat, put his elbow on the back of
it, and his hand through his hair; he then flung himself round in the
opposite direction, and put his arm and hand as before, and he blew his
nose with a sound like a trombone.

"I then said, 'Mr. Chairman, if all that the gentleman meant to ask was,
Do you find any countenance under any circumstances, for the relation of
master and slave in the divine legation of Moses,--and this was all
which, as a fair man, not carried away by a gust of passion, he should
have asked me,--my answer was correct and proper. If he wished to know
my views of what is right and proper as to the marriage relation of our
slaves, he should have put the question in a different shape. But first,
Sir,' said I, 'if he dislikes the twenty-first chapter of Exodus, his
controversy must be with his God, not with me. Sinai was, let me remind
him, more of a place than Bunker Hill. I am not a friend of "oppression"
any more than the gentleman; but I trust that had I lived in Israel, I
should never have thought of being more humane than my Maker.'

"I then proceeded to say that (as before remarked to you) we are not
warranted by the Bible to make men slaves when we please; nor, if
slavery exists, are we commanded to adopt the rules and regulations of
Hebrew slavery.

"But we do learn from the Bible that property in man is not in itself
sinful,--not even to say of a man, 'He is my money.'

"Were it intrinsically wrong, God would not have legislated about it in
such ways; for granting, if you please, the untenable distinction about
his 'not appointing' slavery, but 'finding it in existence' and
legislating for it, what necessity could there have been for making such
a law as that relating to the boring of the ear, rather than giving the
slave his wife and children and suffering them all to go free?

"No, Mr. North," said I, continuing our conversation, "I cannot oppose
the relation of master and slave as in itself sinful; for then I become
more righteous than God. But I must inquire whether it is right, in each
given case, to reduce men to bondage: shall that be, for example, the
mode in which prisoners of war shall be disposed of? or a subjugated
people? or criminals? or, in certain cases, debtors? In doing so, there
is no intrinsic sin; the act itself, under the circumstances, may be
exceedingly sinful; but the relation of ownership is not necessarily a
sin. This, I hold, is all that can be deduced from the Bible in favor of
slavery: The relation is not in itself sinful."

"But," said Mr. North, "we sinned in stealing these people from Africa;
all sin should be immediately forsaken; therefore, set the slaves free
at once."

I replied, "Let us apply that principle. You and I, and a large company
of passengers, are in a British ship, approaching our coast. We find
out, all at once, that the crew and half of the passengers stole the
ship. We gain the ascendency; we can do as we please. Now, as all sin
must be repented of at once, it is the duty of the passengers and crew
to put the ship about, and deliver it to the owners in Glasgow! Perhaps
we should not think it best to put in force the '_ruat coelum_'
doctrine, especially if we had had some '_ruat coelum_' storms, and it
was late in the season. But then we should actually be enjoying the
stolen property--the ship and its comforts--for several days, with the
belief that benevolence and justice to all concerned required us to
reach the end of the voyage before we took measures to perform that
justice, which, before, would have been practical folly.

"Now, please, do not require this illustration to go on all fours. All
that I mean is this: A right thing may be wrong, if done unseasonably,
or in disregard of circumstances which have supervened.

"But to go a little further, and beyond mere expediency: Can you see no
difference between buying slaves, and making men slaves? While it would
be wicked for you to reduce people to slavery, is that the same as
becoming owners to those who are already in slavery? In one case, you
could not apply the golden rule; in the other, the golden rule would
absolutely compel you, in many instances, to buy slaves. Go to almost
any place where slaves are sold, and they will come to you, if they like
your looks, and, by all the arts of persuasion, entreat you to become
their master. Having succeeded, step behind the scenes, if you can, and
hear them exulting that they 'fetched more' than this or that man. Is
there no difference between this and reducing free people to slavery?"

"Say yes, husband," said Mrs. North, "or I must say it for you."

"So that, let me add," said I, "in opposing slavery, I am necessarily
confined to the evils and abuses committed in the relationship of
master. But, even in doing this, why should I be meddlesome? We have a
most offensive air and manner in our behavior towards Southerners, in
connection with their duties as masters. It is perfectly disgusting. I
may oppose slavery, on the grounds of political economy or for national
reasons. But if I mix up with it wrathful opposition to the sin, so
called, or the unrighteousness of holding property in man, it has no
countenance in the Bible. If I speak of it publicly, as a system fraught
with evil, I must discriminate; or they whom I would influence, knowing
that I am mistaken, will regard me as an infatuated enemy, who will
effect more injury than I can repair. As to Mr. Jefferson's testimony,
there are as good and conscientious men at the South in our day as
Thomas Jefferson. Mr. Calhoun was as worthy a witness in all respects."

"Now tell us," said Mrs. North, "your sober convictions, apart from this
Northern controversy, about that twenty-first chapter of Exodus, where
God directs that slaves, in certain cases, shall be slaves forever; and,
moreover, in certain cases, that slave husbands may have their wives and
children withheld from them, and the husbands leave them forever. How do
you reconcile this with the justice and goodness of God?"

I said to her, "To make the case fully appear, before we converse upon
it, hear this passage, Leviticus XXV. 44-46:--'Both thy bondmen, and thy
bondmaids, which thou shalt have, shall be of the heathen that are round
about you; of them shall ye buy bondmen and bondmaids.' So, in the next
verses, 'The children of the strangers that do sojourn among you, of
them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with you, which they
begat in your land; and they shall be your possession: And ye shall take
them as an inheritance for your children after you, to inherit them for
a possession; they shall be your bondmen forever; but over your
brethren, the children of Israel, ye shall not rule one over another
with rigor.'

"Here, and in all the divine legislation on this subject, a distinction
is made between Hebrews who became slaves, and slaves who were
foreigners, or of foreign extraction, though resident in Israel. Slaves
of Hebrew extraction might go free after six years, and upon the death
of the owner; and in every jubilee year they must all return to freedom,
and be free from every disability by reason of bondage, except where the
ear was bored.

"Not so with the slaves of foreign extraction; nor even with the Hebrew
whose ear was bored, provided his wife was given him in slavery, and he
had elected to live with her rather than be free. Not even upon the
death of the owner could such slaves be manumitted, as was the case
ordinarily with regard to Hebrew slaves; but property in these Gentile
slaves, and in Hebrew slaves reduced to the same condition, God ordained
should be an 'inheritance,' passing down forever from father to child.

"No jubilee trumpet was to cheer their hearts. Think what the jubilee
morning must have been to those slaves in hopeless bondage, if bondage
were necessarily such as many fancy. Our abolitionists represent the
bells and guns of our Fourth of July to be a hideous mockery in the ears
of the slaves; and multitudes of our good people ludicrously fancy them
as most miserable on that day, by the contrast of their enslaved
condition with our boasted Independence. Let us borrow this fancy, and
apply it to the Hebrew slave.

"The jubilee trumpets, and all the joyous scenes of the fiftieth year in
Israel, caused multitudes of slaves in Israel, we will suppose, to
reflect, This Jehovah, God of Israel, has doomed us to hopeless bondage.
We are guilty of having been born so many degrees south or north, east
or west, of these Hebrews. We, by God's providence, are Gentiles. Our
chiefs sold us, and these Hebrews bought us. We were betrayed; we were
driven out of our homes; unjust wars were made upon us, to make us
captives, that we might be sold. And 'the Lord's people' bought us, by
his special edict (Lev. xxv. 44). Our brother-servants, unfortunate
Hebrews, get released in the jubilee year, except these poor creatures
who were so unfortunate as to be married in slavery, and, not being
willing to be divorced, had their ears fastened, with the ignominious
'awl,' to their master's door-post. God could have ordained that they,
with their wives and children, and we, with ours, should have release in
the fiftieth year. But, no! our bondage is forever, and so is theirs;
and our children and their children are to be servants forever. But we
hold it to be a self-evident truth that all men are born free and equal,
and have an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. Slavery is the sum of all villanies. Our master's will is our
law; we are subject to his passions; we are chattels; we 'are his
money.' This is the language of your God,--the God whom you worship; and
not only so, but you circumcise us to worship Him!

"Some benevolent Levite, jealous for the character of his Maker,
replies, 'But God did not institute slavery; He found it in existence,
and he only legislates about it, and regulates it.'

"A thousand groans are the prelude to the withering answer which the
slaves make to this apology for oppression.

"'He broke your bonds, it seems,' they cry, 'in Egypt, and in the Red
Sea. Did He "find slavery" on the opposite shore of the Red Sea? Why did
he not merely "legislate for it, and regulate it?" No, He enacted it.
How dare you apologize for your God with such a miserable pretext? He
made the ordinance separating a husband from wife and children, unless
the husband would submit to the indignity of having his ear bored and to
the doom of perpetual bondage, in case his wife was a Gentile. If he
goes away, he must leave his wife and children. Great indulgence have
you in multiplying wives; that is winked at "for the hardness of your
hearts;" but the poor Hebrew must abandon his wife and family if he
chooses freedom! They are his master's "property," "his money," and God
gave the servant these children, knowing that they would be the
"property" of another, and that he would have no unencumbered right to
them; and down through all ages they and their descendants must be
servants. And now you tell us, "God did not institute" this! He only
"found it!" He "regulated it!" Come, blow up your trumpet, reverend
Levite! Go, worship the God of whom you feel half ashamed. Do not ask us
to worship and love a Being who is bound by the laws of fate so that he
cannot do otherwise, if he would, than make one of us a slave forever,
while the man who grinds with me at the same mill, goes with his wife
and children, forever free!'"

"Those remarks have the true Boston tone," said Mrs. North.

"Yes," said I, "there were brave men before Agamemnon, Horace tells us.
There is slavery forever," said I, "or the separation of husband and
wife, father and children, unless the man would be a slave forever. What
'partings' there must have been! What struggles in those who concluded
to take the fatal 'awl' through their ears, before they could make up
their minds to be slaves forever. See the hardship of the case. If the
man 'loves his wife and children,' he may be a slave; that love would
make him spend and be spent for them in freedom, in his humble home,
amid the sweets of liberty; but no; if he loves his wife he must take
the bitter draught of slavery with his love. But if he hates her and his
children, he may be free! What a bounty on conjugal fickleness, on
unnatural treatment of offspring!"

"Was there no Canada?" said Mrs. North, biting off her thread. "O, I
recollect; Hagar went there. I wonder if the angel who remanded her was
removed from office, on his return to heaven."

"Come, wife," said Mr. North, "there is such a thing as being converted
too much. Please, Sir, will you answer the question as to the
consistency of all this with the divine wisdom and goodness?"

"That," said I, "is not the question which you wish to ask."

"I do not understand you," said he; "please to explain."

"You wish to ask," said I, "how I reconcile these things with your
notions of wisdom and benevolence."

"Why," said he, "I have my ideas of divine wisdom and goodness, and I
wish to make these things square with them."

"And that," said I, "is just the rock on which you all split. Your ideas
of the divine goodness must be based on a complete view of the revealed
character and conduct of God. But you and your friends say, 'this and
that ought to be, or ought not to be,' and you try your Maker by that
measure. Now I say, 'he that reproveth God, let him answer it.' Are not
the things which I have quoted, parts of divine revelation, as much as
the flood and the passover?"

"I see that they are," said Mr. North.

"Do you believe that God is a spirit infinite, eternal, unchangeable, in
his being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness, and truth?"

"I do," said he.

"You believe this notwithstanding the apostasy, the destruction of Sodom
and Gomorrah, the flood, and the extirpation of the Canaanites."

"I do," said he, "so long as I receive the Bible as the Word of God."

"I think," said Mrs. North, "that the loss of the 'Central America' with
her four hundred passengers, tries my faith in God full as much as a
heathen's having his ear bored to spend his days with his wife and
children among God's covenant people."

"Then you do not worship the Goddess of Liberty, Mrs. North," said
I.--"'Art thou called being a servant? Care not for it. But if thou
mayest be made free, use it rather.'"

"That," said she, "seems to express my idea about bondage and freedom.
Of course it is not, theoretically, a blessing to be a slave. It may be,
practically, to some. But what strikes me oftentimes is the utter
inability of an abolitionist to say to a slave, under any circumstances,
'Care not for it.' His doctrine, rather, is, 'Art thou called being a
servant? If thou hast a Sharpe's rifle, or a John Brown's pike, use it
rather.' Or, 'Art thou called being a servant? If thou canst run for
Canada, use it rather.' Paul had not an abolitionist mind, that is very
clear. But," she continued, "do relieve my husband and enlighten me
also, by giving us your views about the Old Testament slavery, which I
presume you can do without seeming to arraign the character of God."

I replied, "This is a sinful race, and we are treated as such. Slavery
is one of God's chastisements. Instead of destroying every wicked nation
by war, pestilence, or famine, he grants some of them a reprieve, and
commutes their punishment from death to bondage. Those whom he allowed
to be slaves to his people Israel were highly favored; they enjoyed a
blessing which came to them disguised by the sable cloud of servitude;
but in their endless happiness many of them will bless God for the
bondage which joined them to the nation of Israel.

"I look upon our slaves as being here by a special design of
Providence, for some great purpose, to be disclosed at the right time.
Unless I take this view of it, I am embarrassed and greatly troubled;
'perplexed, but not in despair.' The great design of Providence in no
wise abates the sin of those who brought the slaves here, nor does it
warrant us in getting more of them. While this is true, I cannot resist
the thought that God has a controversy with this black race which is not
yet finished. I believe that God withholds from them a spirit and temper
suited for freedom till he shall have finished his marvellous designs.
His destiny with the Jew, as a nation, to the present day, is another
illustration of his mysterious providence with regard to a people.

"As to the enactment which made the Hebrew servant a slave for life,
thus dooming even one of the covenant people to perpetual bondage, if he
had married in slavery, I see in it several things most clearly.

"You will have noticed that in every case in which a Hebrew was made a
servant, poverty was the ground of it. 'If thy brother be waxen poor,'
he could sell himself, either to a Hebrew or to a resident alien. He and
his children could also be taken for debt. This seems to us oppressive.

"Let a family among us be reduced, from any cause, to a condition in
which they cannot maintain themselves, and what follows? The children
find employment, some of them in families, in various kinds of domestic
service. Indented apprenticeships in this commonwealth are within the
memory of all who are forty or fifty years of age. We remember the very
frequent advertisements: 'One cent reward. Ran away from the subscriber,
an indented apprentice,' etc. The descriptions of such fugitives, all
for the sake of absolving the master from liability for the absconding
boy, and sometimes the hunt that was made, with dogs to scent his
tracks, when his return was desired, are far within the memory of the
oldest inhabitant.

"In Israel, this descent of a family from a prosperous to a decayed
state, and the consequent servitude, were used by the Most High to
cultivate some of the best feelings of our nature. It touched the finest
sensibilities of the soul. Let me read from the fifteenth of
Deuteronomy:--

    "'And if thy brother, an Hebrew man or an Hebrew woman, be sold unto
    thee, and serve thee six years, then in the seventh year thou shalt
    let him go free from thee.

    "'And when thou sendest him out free from thee, thou shalt not let
    him go away empty.

    "'Thou shalt furnish him liberally out of thy flock, and out of thy
    floor, and out of thy wine-press: of that wherewith the Lord thy God
    hath blessed thee thou shalt give unto him. And thou shalt remember
    that thou wast a bondman in the land of Egypt, and the Lord thy God
    redeemed thee: therefore I command thee this thing to-day.

    "'And if it shall be, if he say unto thee, I will not go away from
    thee; because he loveth thee and thine house, because he is well
    with thee,

    "'Then thou shalt take an awl and thrust it through his ear unto the
    door, and he shall be thy servant forever. And also with thy
    maid-servant thou shalt do likewise.

    "'It shall not seem hard unto thee when thou sendest him away free
    from thee: for he hath been worth a doubled hired servant to thee,
    in serving thee six years; and the Lord thy God shall bless thee in
    all that thou doest.'

"Is not this very beautiful and touching, Mrs. North?"

She said nothing, but hid her face in her little babe's neck,
pretending to kiss it. But Mr. North wiped his eyes. "There is not much
barbarism in that," said he.

"The golden rule," said I; "for this is the law and the prophets.

"The people to whom these touching precepts were given by the Most High,
and who were susceptible to these finest appeals, are, as we have said,
sometimes represented as a semi-barbarous people, so gross that God was
obliged to let them hold slaves! Now, could anything be more civilizing,
refining, elevating, than such relationships as this limited servitude
of poor Hebrews created? What scenes there must have been oftentimes,
when the six years were out, and the servant was about to depart, laden
with gifts! And what a scene when, with strong attachment to the family,
the servant declined to be free, and went to the door-post to have his
ear pierced with the awl, to be a servant, and not only so, but to be an
inheritance forever!

"Is this 'the sum of all villanies,' Mr. North?" said I. "Yet it is
'slavery.' 'Auction-blocks,' 'whippings,' 'roastings,' 'separations of
families,' are not 'slavery.' They are its abuses; slavery can exist
when they cease. I pray you, is such slavery as the God of the Hebrews
appointed, in such cases as these, 'forever,' an unmitigated curse?

"Now," said I, "go through our Southern country, and you will find in
every city, town, and village just such relationships between the whites
and the blacks as must have existed where these Hebrew laws had effect.
Think of the little slave-babe, and the Southern lady's letter, which
have given occasion to all our conversation. The Gospel, as it subdues
and softens the human heart, will make the relationship of involuntary
servitude everywhere to be after this pattern. Instead of exciting
hatred and jealousy, and provoking war between the whites and blacks, I
am for bringing all the influences of the Gospel to bear upon the hearts
of the white population, to convert them into such masters as God
enjoined the Hebrews to be, and such as the Apostle to the Gentiles
enjoined upon Gentile slave-holders as their models. And I am filled
with sorrow and astonishment as I see some of the very best and most
beloved men among us at the North withholding missionaries and tracts
from the Southern country, and--as Gustavus's aunt said some of these
do--calling it 'standing up for Jesus!'

"Now," said I, "if such were the injunctions of the Most High as to the
manner in which the Hebrews should treat their Hebrew slaves, it is easy
to see that such a habit with regard to them would serve greatly to
mitigate the sorrows of bondage on the part of Gentile slaves. And thus
the curse of slavery, like sin, and even death, is made, under the
influences of religion, a means of improvement, a source of blessing.
Let but the sun shine on a pile of cloud, and what folds of beauty and
deep banks of snowy whiteness does it set forth, and, at the close of
day, all the exquisite tints which make the artist despair are flung
profusely upon that mass of vapor which but for the sun were a heap of
sable cloud.

"The minister," said I, "who, Hattie tells us, classed 'Abraham the
slave-holder' with the 'murderer,' and the 'liar and swearer,' knew not
what he did. People who laugh and titter at the 'patriarchal
institution,' need to peruse the laws of Moses again, with a spirit akin
to their beautiful tone; and those who say that to hold a fellow-man as
property is 'sin,' are not 'wiser than Daniel,' but they make themselves
wiser than God.

"All who sustain the relationship of owner to a human being," said I,
"do well to read these injunctions of the Most High, as very many of
them do, applying them to themselves. And it is also profitable to read
how that a violation of these very slave-laws was, in after years, one
great cause of the divine wrath upon the Hebrews. You will find, in the
thirty-fourth of Jeremiah, that, not content with having Gentile slaves,
the Hebrews violated the law requiring them to release each his Hebrew
slaves once in seven years.

"'I made a covenant with your fathers,' God says, 'in the day that I
brought them forth out of the land of Egypt, saying, At the end of seven
years let ye go every man his brother an Hebrew which hath been sold
unto thee. But ye turned and polluted my name, and caused every man his
servant to return, and brought them unto subjection. Ye have not
hearkened unto me in proclaiming a liberty every one to his
brother;--behold, I proclaim a liberty for you, saith the Lord, to the
sword, to the pestilence, and to the famine.'

"Thus it is evident that the relation of master and servant was
originally ordained and instituted by God as a benevolent arrangement to
all concerned,--not 'winked at,' or 'suffered,' like polygamy, but
ordained,--that it was full of blessings to all who fulfilled the duties
of the relation in the true spirit of the institution; and, moreover, it
is true that there are few curses which will be more intolerable than
they will suffer who make use of their fellow-men, in the image of God,
for the purposes of selfishness and sin; while those who feel their
accountableness in this relation, and discharge it in the spirit of the
Bible, will find their hearts refined and ennobled, and the relationship
will be, to all concerned, a source of blessings whose influences will
bring peace to their souls when the grave of the slave and that of his
owner are looking up into the same heavens from the common earth."




CHAPTER VIII.

THE TENURE.

  "One part, one little part, we dimly scan
  Through the dark medium of life's fevering dream;
  Yet dare arraign the whole stupendous plan
  If but that little part incongruous seem;
  Nor is that part, perhaps, what mortals deem;
  Oft from apparent ill our blessings rise."--BEATTIE, _Minstrel_.


Mr. North then said, "Let us change the subject a little. Please to tell
us why, in your view, any slave who is so disposed may not run away.
Would you not do so, if you were a slave, and were oppressed, or thought
that you could mend your condition? Where did my master get his right
and title to me? God did not institute American slavery as he did
slavery among the Hebrews. If I were a slave to certain masters, South
or North, I should probably run away at all hazards. I should not stop
to debate the morality of the act. No human being would, in his heart
blame me. It would be human nature, resisting under the infliction of
pain. We catch hold of a dentist's hand when he is drawing a tooth.
Perhaps there may be found some moral law against doing so!"

"But we are apt," said I, "to take these exceptional cases, and make a
rule that includes them and all others. I have been present when
intelligent gentlemen, Northerners and Southerners, have discussed this
subject in the most friendly manner, though with great earnestness. Once
I remember we spent an evening discussing the subject. I will, if you
please, tell you about the conversation.

"I must take you, then, to an old mansion at the South, around which,
and at such a distance from each other as to reveal a fine prospect,
stood a growth of noble elms, a lawn spreading itself out before the
house, and the large hall, or entry, serving for a tea-room, where seven
or eight gentlemen, and as many ladies were assembled.

"A Southern physician, who had no slaves, took the ground that all the
slaves had a right to walk off whenever they pleased. He did not see why
we should hold them in bondage rather than they us, so far as right and
justice were concerned. Some of the slave-holders were evidently much
troubled in their thoughts, and did not speak strongly. My own feelings
at first went with the physician and with his arguments; but I saw that
he was not very clear, nor deep, and his friends who partly yielded to
him, seemed to do so rather under the influence of conscientious
feelings, than from any very well defined principles. This is the case
with not a few at the South, and it was very common in Thomas
Jefferson's days. But the large majority, who were of the contrary
opinion, got the advantage in the argument, and it seemed to me went far
toward convincing the physician, as they did me, that he was wrong.

"The company all seemed to look toward a judge who was present, to open
the discussion with a statement of his views. He did so by saying, for
substance, as follows:--

"'I will take it for granted,' said he, 'that we are agreed as to the
unlawfulness of the slave-trade, past and present. We find the blacks
here, as we come upon the stage. We are born into this relationship. It
is an existing form of government in the Slave States.

"'Ownership in man is not contrary to the will of God. I also find it
written that "Canaan shall be a servant." Hear these words of
inspiration: "Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto
his brethren. And he said, Blessed be the Lord God of Shem; and Canaan
shall be his servant. God shall enlarge Japheth, and he shall dwell in
the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant." As the Japhetic
race is to dwell in the tents of Shem, for example, England occupying
India, so I believe the black race is under the divine sentence of
servitude. Moreover, being perfectly convinced of the wrongfulness and
the infinite mischief to all concerned of the forcible liberation of our
slaves, I am assisted in settling, in my own mind, the question as to me
right of individual slaves to escape from service, and our right to
continue in this relationship, conforming ourselves in it always to the
golden rule.

"'If it be the right of one, under ordinary circumstances, to depart, it
is the right of all. But the government under which they live, in this
commonwealth, recognizes slavery. The constitution and the general
government protect us in maintaining it. The right of our servants to
leave us at pleasure, which could not of course be done without
violence, on both sides, implies the right of insurrection. It is
impossible to define the cases in which insurrection is justifiable, but
the general rule is that it is wrong. Government is a divine ordinance;
men cannot capriciously overthrow or change it, at every turn of affairs
which proves burdensome or even oppressive. God is jealous to maintain
human government as an important element in his own administration. Men
justly in authority, or established in it by time, or by consent, or by
necessity, or by expediency, may properly feel that they are God's
vicegerents. He is on their side; a parent, a teacher, a commander,--in
short, he who rules, is, as it were, dispensing a law of the divine
government, as truly as though he directed a force in nature. Hence, to
disturb existing government is, in the sight of God, a heinous offence,
unless circumstances plainly justify a revolution; otherwise, one might
as well think to interfere with impunity and change the equinoxes, or
the laws of refraction. It is well to consider what forms of government,
and what forms of oppression under them, existed, when that divine word
was written: "Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For
there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God.
Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God;
and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation." This was
written in view of the throne of the Caesars.

"'But it is very clear that when a people are in a condition to
establish and maintain another form of government, there is no sin in
their turning themselves into a new condition. In doing so, government,
God's ordinance, evolves itself under a new form, and provided it is,
really, government, and not anarchy, no sin may have been committed by
the insurrection, or revolution, as an act. The result proved that
government still existed, potentially, and was only changing its shape
and adapting itself to the circumstances of the people. If a man or body
of men assert that things among them are ready for such new evolutions,
and so undertake to bring them about, they do it at their peril, and
failing, they are indictable for treason; they may be true patriots,
they may be conscientious men; the sympathies of many good people may be
with them, but they have sinned against the great law which protects
mankind from anarchy.

"'To apply this,' said the Judge, 'to our subject,--When the time comes
that the blacks can truly say, "We are now your equals in all that is
necessary to constitute a civil state, and we propose to take the
government of this part of the country into our hands," we should still
make several objections, which would be valid. The Constitutions of the
States and of the United States must be changed before that can be done,
and we will presume that this would involve a revolution. Moreover, this
country belongs to the Anglo-Saxon race, with which foreigners of
kindred stocks have intermingled, and they and we object to the presence
of a black race as possessors of some of the states of the Union, even
if it were constitutional. We do not propose to abandon our right and
title to the soil, without a civil war, which would probably result in
the extermination of one or the other party. If you are able to leave us
at pleasure, the proper way will be to do it peaceably, and on just
principles, to be agreed upon between us.

"'No such exigency as this,' said the Judge, 'is possible. It would be
prevented or anticipated, and relief would be obtained while the
necessity was on the increase and before it reached a solemn crisis.

"'One of three ways will, in my opinion,' said he, 'bring a solution to
this problem of slavery.

"'One is, the insurrection of the slaves, the massacre of the whites,
and the forcible seizure and possession of power by the blacks
throughout the South. This would be a scene such as the earth has never
witnessed. I have no fear that it can ever happen. But,' said he,
addressing me, 'I presume that I know, Sir, how your people in the Free
States, to a very considerable extent, think on this point. I will
speak, by-and-by, of the other two ways in which slavery may find its
great result. One, I say, is, by insurrection and then the extermination
of the black race; for that would surely follow their temporary success
if I can trust my apprehensions of the subject.'

"'Please, sir,' said I, 'let me hear what you think is 'very
considerably' the sentiment at the North on this subject of
insurrection.'

"'I presume sir,' said he, 'if the slaves should, some night, take
possession of us, and demand a universal manumission, and we should
refuse, and fire and sword and pillage and all manner of violence should
ensue, and our persons and property should be at their will, vast
multitudes of your people, including clergymen, would exclaim that the
day of God's righteous vengeance had come, and they would say, Amen.'

"'So we interpret Thomas Jefferson's idea,' said I.

"'I think, Sir,' said he, 'that very many reasonable people of the North
are of opinion that all the attributes of God are against any such
procedure.

"'In the large sense in which nations speak to each other when they are
asserting their rights, there is no objection to the first clause in the
Declaration of Independence; but when you come to the people of a state,
and one portion of that people rise and assert their right to break up
the constitution of things under which they live, there is no more
pertinency in that clause in the Declaration than there would be in
giving us the reason for a revolution that all men are not far from five
or six feet high. What they say may be true in the abstract, but it
does not prove that men, having come into a state of society,
involuntarily, if you please, have all the freedom and equality which
they would have, if they were each an independent savage in the
wilderness. Society is God's ordinance, not a compact. We have, all of
us, lost some of our freedom and equality in the social state; now how
far is it right that the blacks, being here, no matter how or why,
should lose some of theirs? and how far is it right that we should take
and keep some of it from them, whether for the good of all concerned, or
for the good of ourselves, their civil superiors?--whose welfare, it may
be observed, will continually affect theirs.'

"The Judge said that he believed that God had, in his mysterious
providence, and of his sovereign pleasure, making use of the cupidity of
white men, placed these blacks here in connection with us for their good
as a race, and for the welfare of the world. He said that his mind could
feel no peace on the subject of slavery, unless he viewed it in this
light. In connection with the great industrial and commercial interests
of our globe, and as an indispensable element in the supply of human
wants, this abject race had been transported from their savage life in
Africa, and had been made immensely useful to the whole civilized world.
'We agree, as I have said,' he continued, 'as to the immorality of those
who brought them here; but he is not fit to reason on this subject,
being destitute of all proper notions with regard to divine providence,
who does not see in the results of slavery, both as to the civilized
world and to negroes themselves, a wise, benevolent, and an Almighty
Hand. Here my mind gets relief in contemplating this subject, not in
abstract reasoning, not in logical premises and deductions, but by
resting in Providence. There are mysteries in it,--as truly so as in the
human apostasy, origin of evil, permission of sin, which confound my
reasonings as to the benevolence of God; in which, however, I,
nevertheless, maintain my firm belief. Here was the great defect in Mr.
Jefferson's views of slavery. In the highest Christian sense, he was not
qualified to understand this subject; he reasoned like one who did not
take into view the providence and the purposes of God, even while he was
saying what he did of there being "no attribute in the Almighty that
would take part with us" in favor of slavery. Standing as I do by this
providential view of the great subject, the assailants of slavery at the
North seem to me, some of them, almost insane, and others, even
ministers of the Gospel, shall I say it? more than unchristian;--there
is a sort of blind, wild, French Jacobinical atheism in their feeling
and behavior; while as to the rest, good people, they are misled by what
Mr. Webster, in one of his speeches in the Senate, called "the constant
rub-a-dub of the press,"--"no drum-head," he says, "in the longest day's
march, having been more incessantly beaten than the feeling of the
public in certain parts of the North." I cannot reason with these men,'
continued the Judge, 'for I confess, at once, that I cannot demonstrate,
either by logic or by mathematics, a modern quitclaim or warranty in
holding slaves. In combating their illogical and unscriptural positions,
I seem to them to be an advocate of the divine right of
oppression,--which I am not. That it is best, however, and that it is
right, for this relation to continue until God shall manifest some
purpose to terminate it consistently with the good of all concerned, I
am perfectly convinced and satisfied. I believe that it has reference
to the great plan of mercy toward our world, and that when the object is
accomplished, the providence of God will, in some way, make it known. It
may be the case, no candid man and believer in revelation and divine
providence will deny it to be possible, that this dispensation with
regard to this colored race will continue for long ages to come, in the
form of bondage. That they are now under a curse, and have been so for
centuries, is apparent. When the curse is to be repealed, God only
knows. I like to cherish the idea that some development is to be made of
immense sources of wealth in Africa, that we have an embryo nation in
the midst of us, whom God has been educating for a great enterprise on
that continent, and when, like California and Australia, the voice of
the Lord shall shake the wilderness of Africa, and open its doors, it
may appear that American slavery has been the school in which God has
been preparing a people to take it into their possession.

"'EMIGRATION, then,' said he, 'is the second of the three ways in which
this problem of slavery may have its solution.

"'In preparation for this, I say, God may keep these Africans here much
longer. He may need more territory on which to educate still larger
numbers; and we may see Him extending slavery still further in our land
and on our continent. So that there may be one other way in which the
purposes of God will manifest themselves with regard to the colored race
here, and that is by EXTENSION.

"'It may be that still greater portions of this land and continent are
to be used, for ages to come, in the multiplication of the black race. I
feel entirely calm with regard to the subject, believing that God has a
plan in all this, and that it is wise and benevolent toward all who fear
Him. While our relation to this people remains, the law of love, the
golden rule, must preside over it. That does not require us to place the
blacks on a level with us in our parlors, nor in our halls of
legislation; and there may be disabilities properly attaching to them
which, though they seem hard, are the inevitable consequence of a
dependent, inferior condition. All this, however, has a benign effect
upon us, if we will but act in a Christian manner, to make us gentle,
kind, generous; and when this is the case, no state of society is
happier than ours. Let Jacobinical principles, such as some of our
Northern brethren inculcate, prevail here, and they at once destroy this
benevolent relation. This relation will improve under the influence of
the Gospel; it has wonderfully improved since Jefferson's day; and
though the time may be long deferred, we shall no doubt see this colored
race fulfilling some great purpose in the earth. I trust that our
Northern friends will not precipitate things and destroy both whites and
blacks; for a servile war would be one of extermination. Many of the
Northern people I fear would acquiesce in it, provided especially, that
we should be the exterminated party. This is clear, if words and actions
are to be fairly interpreted.'

"'The colored people here, as a race,' said a planter, 'are under
obligations to us as partakers in our civilization. No matter, for the
present, how their ancestors came here;--that does not at all affect
their present obligations to us for benefits received. Now it is not a
matter of course that, having been thus benefited by us, they are at
liberty to go away when they please. This we assert respecting them as a
whole. Are not the blacks, as a race, so indebted to us that we ought
to be consulted as to the time and manner of their departure? We say
that they are. They do not morally possess the right, we think, to sever
the relation when they please.'

"Said an elderly, venerable man, 'A white woman in the cars, in
Pennsylvania, begged me to hold her infant child for her, while she
fetched something for it. She ran off, leaving the child to me. My wife
and I took the child home, and have been at pains and expense with it. I
question the child's right to say, whenever it pleases, Sir, I propose
to leave you. I have invested a good deal in him, have increased his
value by his being with me, and he has no right to run off with it.'

"'But,' said the physician, 'how long should you feel that you have a
right to his services?'

"'I will answer that,' said the gentleman, 'if you will say whether my
general principle be correct. Have I, or have I not acquired just what
all intelligent slave-holders call "property" in that youth, that is, a
right to his services,--not dominion over his soul, nor a right to abuse
him, nor in any way to injure him, but to use his services. Have I not
acquired that right?'

"'I think you have,' said the physician, 'but with certain limitations.'

"'The limitations,' said Mr. W., 'certainly are not the wishes, nor
caprices, nor the inclinations, of the boy;--do you think so?'

"'I agree with you,' said he.

"'That is all I contend for,' said Mr. W.

"'But,' said the physician, 'where is your title-deed from your Maker to
own these fellow-creatures? Trace their history back, and they are here
by fraud and violence.'

"'Thank you, Sir,' said Mr. W., 'that is just the case with my Penn. I
came into possession of him through fraud and violence! I did not sin
when he was thrown upon my hands; though I confess I said, he was--what
we call slavery--an incubus. My right and title to the boy I have never
been able to discover in any handwriting; the mother, surely, had no
right to impose the child upon me; Providence, however, placed it in my
hand. I might have given it immediate emancipation through the window,
or at the next stopping place; or, I might have left the child on its
mother's vacant seat, declining the trust; but I felt disposed to do as
I have done.'

"'Now,' said the physician, 'will you please tell me, Sir, how long you
feel at liberty to possess this boy as a satisfaction to you for your
pains and expense?'

"'In the first place,' said Mr. W., 'I have a right to transfer my
guardianship over him to another, if circumstances make it necessary. In
doing so, I must be governed not by selfish motives, but by a benevolent
regard to his welfare, allowing that he is not unreasonable and wicked.
If when he comes of lawful age, he is judged to be still in need of
guardianship, or it is expedient for the good of all concerned that he
should be my ward indefinitely, the law makes me, if I choose, his
guardian, with certain rights and obligations. Even if he could legally
claim his freedom at his majority, circumstances might be such that all
would say he was under moral obligations to remain with me. If I abuse
him, he must consider before God how far it is his duty to bear
affliction, and submit to oppression. There are cases in which none
would condemn him, should he escape. But the rule is to "abide." He has
not, under all the circumstances of our relation to each other, a right
to walk off at pleasure.'

"The company agreed in this, though the physician made no remark. We
conversed further on the antipathy of the Free States to a large
increase among them of the colored population, ungrateful and perfidious
Kansas, even, withholding civil and political equality from them; their
condition in Canada; their relation to the whites in every state where
they have gone to reside; and we concluded that the South was the best
home for the black man,--that home to become better and better in
proportion as the law of Christian benevolence prevailed. We agreed that
if the South could be relieved of Northern interference, the condition
of the colored people would be greatly improved, in many respects;
especially, we regretted that now we did not have an enlightened public
sentiment at the North to help the best part of the Southern people in
effecting reformations and improving the laws and regulations. Now, the
Northern influence is wholly nugatory, or positively adverse. The
opinions and feelings of calm and candid neighbors and friends have
great influence. This the South does not enjoy. The North is her
passionate reprover; she is held to be, by many, her avowed enemy. In
resistance, and in retaliation, compromises are broken, and every
political advantage is grasped at in self-defence, by the South.
Recrimination ensues, and civil war is threatened. The only remedy is
the entire abandonment by the North of interference with this subject;
but this cannot take place so long as the Northern people labor under
their doctrinal error that it is a sin to hold property in man. Here is
the root of the difficulty. We agreed that if reflecting people at the
North would adopt Scriptural views on that point, peace would soon
ensue; for all the discussions of the supposed or real evils in
slavery, which would then be the sole objects of animadversion, would
elicit truth, and tend to good. If the South felt that the North were
truly her friend, they would both be found cooperating for the
improvement and elevation of the colored race. Every form of oppression
and selfishness would feel the withering rebuke of a just and
enlightened universal public sentiment. But now that the quarrel runs
high as to the sinfulness and wrongfulness of the relation itself, there
is nothing for the South to do but to stand by their arms.

"One gentleman made some remarks which interested and instructed me more
than anything that was said. He confessed that the whole subject of the
relation of master and servant,--in a word, slavery, was, for a long
time, a sore trouble to him, because he constantly found himself
searching for his right, his warrant to hold his slaves. At last he
resolved to study the Bible on the subject. He naturally turned to the
last instructions of the Word of God with regard to it, and in Paul's
injunctions to masters and servants, he found relief. There he perceived
that God recognized the relationships of slavery, that the golden rule
was enjoined, not to dissolve the relation, but to make it benevolent to
all concerned. He found the Almighty establishing the relation of master
and servant among his own chosen people, and decreeing that certain
persons might be servants forever, being, as he himself terms them 'an
inheritance forever.'

"Hereupon, he said, his troubles ceased. He gave up his speculations and
casuistry, and concluded to take things as he found them and to make
them better. He became more than ever the friend and patron of his
servants, rendered to them, to the best of his ability that which was
just and equal, felt in buying servants and in having them born in his
household, somewhat as pastors of churches, he supposed, feel in
receiving new members to be trained up for usefulness, here, and for
heaven. He said that he had a hundred and seventy-five servants, and
that he doubted whether there was a happier, or more virtuous, or more
religious community anywhere.

"'But,' said the young Northern lady, who had recently come to be a
teacher in the family where we visited, 'what will become of them when
you die?'

"'Why, Miss,' said he, 'what will become of any household when the
parents die? The truth is,' said he, 'I believe in a covenant-keeping
God. I make a practice of praying for my servants, by name. I keep a
list of them, and I read it, sometimes, when I read my Bible, and on the
Sabbath, and on days set apart for religious services. I have asked God
to be the God of my servants forever. I shall meet them at the bar of
God, and I trust with a good conscience. Many of them have become
Christians.'

"'Do you ever sell them?' said she.

"'I have parted with some of my servants to families,' he replied,
'where I knew that they would fare as well as with me. This was always
with their consent, except in two or three cases of inveterate
wickedness, when, instead of sending the fellows to the state-prison for
life, as you would do at the North, I sold them to go to Red River, and
was as willing to see them marched off, handcuffed, as you ever were to
see villains in the custody of the officers. But had any of your good
people from the North met them, an article would have appeared, perhaps,
in all your papers, telling of the heart-rending spectacle,--three human
beings, in a slave-coffle! going, they knew not where, into hopeless
bondage! And had they escaped and fled to Boston, the tide of
philanthropy there, in many benevolent bosoms, would have received new
strength in the grateful accession of these worshipful fugitives from
Southern cruelty. Whereas, all which love and kindness, and every form
of indulgence, instruction, and discipline, tempered with mercy, could
do, had been used with them in vain. One was a thief, the pest of the
county, and had earned long years in a penitentiary; but slavery, you
see, kept him at liberty! Another was brutally cruel to animals; another
was the impersonation of laziness. Two of them would have helped John
Brown, no doubt, had he come here, and they might have gained a Bunker
Hill name, at the North, in an insurrection here, as champions of
liberty.'

"This led to some remarks about the great economy which there is in the
Southern mode of administering discipline and correction on the spot,
and at once, instead of filling jails and houses of correction with
felons. But to dwell on this would lead me too far into a new branch of
our subject.

"This planter asked the young lady, the school-teacher, if tare and tret
were in her arithmetic? Upon her saying 'yes, in the older books,' he
told her that there was, seemingly, a good deal of tare and tret in
God's providence, when accomplishing his great purposes; and that to fix
the mind inordinately on evils and miseries incident to a great system
and forgetting the main design, was like a man of business being so
absorbed by the deductions and waste in a great staple as to forego the
trade. He said that he thought the Northern mind ciphered too much in
that part of moral arithmetic as to slavery.

"A very excellent gentleman from the District of Columbia who had held
an important office under government, gave us some valuable information.
He said that the extinction of slavery in New England was not because
the institution was deemed to be immoral or sinful, but from other
considerations and circumstances. It was abolished in Massachusetts,
without doubt, by a clause, in the bill of rights, copied from the
Declaration of Independence. In Berkshire, one township, he believed,
sued another for the support and maintenance of a pauper slave, and the
Supreme Court decided that the bill of rights abolished slavery. The
question was as incidental, he said, as was the question in the Dred
Scott case which the United States Supreme Court decided. This
Massachusetts case was previous to any reports of decisions, and he had
some doubt as to the form in which the suit was brought, but was sure as
to the decision. The question as to abolishing slavery was not submitted
to the people, nor to a Convention, nor to the Legislature.

"I was specially interested in his account of the way in which the
slave-trade was prohibited by our excellent sister, Connecticut. It was
done by a section prohibiting the importation of slaves by sea or land,
preceded by the following preamble:--'And whereas the increase of slaves
in this state is injurious to the poor, and inconvenient, Be it
therefore enacted.' Another section of the same statute, he said, was
preceded by the following words:--'And whereas sound policy requires
that the abolition of slavery should be effected, as soon as may be
consistent with the rights of individuals, and the public safety and
welfare, Be it enacted,' etc. Then follows the provision that all black
and mulatto children, born in slavery, in that state, after the first of
March, 1784, shall be free at twenty-five years of age. Selling slaves,
to be carried out of the state, was not prohibited before May, 1792;
thus allowing more than eight years to the owners of slaves in
Connecticut to sell their slaves to Southern purchasers! 'There seems to
me,' he said, 'no evidence of superior humanity in this; nor was it
repentance for slavery as a sin.' He thought that if we feel compelled,
by our superior conscientiousness, to require any duty of the South, all
that decency will allow us to demand is, that she tread in our steps.

"'I think,' said a planter, 'that if pity is due from one to the other,
the South owes the larger debt to the North. There needs to be a great
reformation, namely, The Gradual Emancipation of the Northern Mind from
"Anti-slavery" Error.'

"'Our English friends, in their zeal against American slavery,' said a
young lawyer, 'seem to forget that the English government, at the Peace
of Utrecht, agreed to furnish Spain with four thousand negroes annually
for thirty years.'

"'Poor human nature!' said the Judge. 'What should we all do, if we had
not the sins of others to repent of and bewail?'

"There was a strong friend of temperance in the company from a
north-western state. Travelling in the South for pleasure, some time
ago, he was immediately struck with the comparative absence of
intemperance among the slaves. On learning that the laws forbid the sale
of intoxicating drink to them, and thinking of four millions of people
in this land as delivered, in a great degree, from the curse of
drunkenness, he says that he exclaimed: 'Pretty well for the "sum of all
villanies." The class of people in the United States best defended
against drunkenness are the slaves!' Some admonished him that the
slaves did get liquor, and that white men ventured to tempt them. 'I
don't care for that,' said he; 'of course, there are exceptions; the
"sum of all villanies" is a Temperance Society!'

"A Northern gentleman, travelling through the South, said, 'As to the
feelings of the North respecting a possible insurrection, I am
satisfied, since visiting in different parts of the South, that a very
common apprehension with us, respecting your liability to trouble from
this source, is exaggerated by fancy.

"'We have a theoretical idea that you must be dwelling, as we commonly
hear it said, with a volcano under your feet. Very many regard your
slaves as a race of noble spirits, conscious of wrong, and burning with
suppressed indignation, which is ready to break out at every chance.
They think of you at the North as having guns and pistols and spears all
about you, ready for use at any moment. But when I spend a night at your
plantations, the owner and I the only white males, the wife and seven or
eight young children having us for their only defenders against the
seventy or hundred blacks, who are all about us in the quarters, the
idea of danger has really never occurred to me; because my knowledge of
the people has previously disarmed me of fear.'

"'Emissaries, white and black,' said a planter, 'can, make us trouble;
but my belief is that we could live here to the end of time with these
colored people, and be subject to fewer cases of insubordination by far
than your corporations at the North suffer from in strikes. Your people,
generally, have no proper idea of the black man's nature. God seems to
have given him docility and gentleness, that he may be a slave till the
time comes for him to be something else. So He has given the Jews their
peculiarities, fitting them for His purposes with regard to them; and to
the Irish laborer He has given his willingness and strength to dig,
making him the builder of your railways. If we fulfil our trust, with
regard to the blacks, according to the spirit and rules of the New
Testament, I believe God will be our defender, and that all his
attributes will be employed to maintain our authority over this people
for his own great purposes. We have nothing to fear except from white
fanatics, North and South.'

"'I have no idea,' said the Judge, 'of dooming every individual of this
colored race to unalterable servitude. I am in favor of putting them in
the way of developing any talent which any of them, from time to time,
may exhibit. More of this, I am sure, would be done by us, if we were
freed from the necessity of defending ourselves against Northern
assaults upon our social system, involving, as these assaults do, peril
to life, and to things dearer than life. But I see tenfold greater evils
in all the plans of emancipation which have ever been proposed than in
the present state of things.'

"The pastor of the place, who was present, had not taken much part in
the discussion, though he had not purposely kept aloof from it. He was
Southern born, inherited slaves, had given them their liberty one by
one, and had recently returned from the North, where he had been to see
two of them--the last of his household--embark as hired servants with
families who were to travel in Europe.

"Some of us asked him about his visit to the North. Said he, 'I went to
church one day, and was enjoying the devotional services, when all at
once the minister broke out in prayer for the abolition of slavery. He
presented the South before God as "oppressors," and prayed that they
might at once repent, and "break every yoke," and "let the oppressed go
free." I took him to be an immediate emancipationist, perhaps peculiar
in his views. But in the afternoon I went into another church, and in
prayer the minister began to pray "for all classes and conditions of men
among us." I was glad to see, as I thought, charity beginning at home.
But the next sentence took in our whole land; and the next was a
downright swoop upon slavery; so that I regarded his previous petitions
merely as spiral movements toward the South. If the good man's petitions
had been heard, woe to him and to the North, and to the slaves, to say
nothing of ourselves.

"'I stopped after service, and, without at first introducing myself, I
asked him if he was in the habit of praying, as he had done to-day, for
slave-holders. He said yes. I asked him if it was a general practice at
the North. He thought it was. I inquired if he would have every slave
liberated to-morrow, if he could effect it. "By all means," said
he.--"Would they be better off?" said I.--"Undoubtedly they would," said
he. "But that is not the question. Do right, if the heavens
fall."--"What would become of them?" said I.--"Hire them," said he; "pay
them wages; let husbands and wives live together; abolish
auction-blocks, and"--"But," said I, "some of the very best of men in
the world, at the South, are decidedly of the opinion that such
emancipation would be the most barbarous thing that could be devised for
the slaves."--"Are you a slave-holder?" said he.--"I was," said I; "but
I have liberated my slaves, and I am in your city to see the last two of
my servants sail with your fellow-citizens ---- and ----" (naming
them).--"You don't say so!" said he. "What did you liberate them
for?"--"I could not take proper care of them," said I, "situated as I
am."--"But," said he, "did you do right in letting them go to sea as you
did? One of them will get no good with that man for a master. I would
rather be your dog than his child."--"Then," said I, "you have
'oppressors' at the North, it seems."--"Well," said he, "some of our
people are not as good as they ought to be."--"It is so with us at the
South," said I.--"Preach for me next Sabbath, Sir," said he.--"Are you
going to stay over?"--"Why," said I, "my dear Sir, would you and your
people like to hear a man preach for you whom you, if you made the
prayer, would first pray for as an 'oppressor?'"--"But you are not an
oppressor," said he.--"But I am in favor of what you call 'oppression,'"
said I.--"One thing I could pray for with you," said I.--"What is that?"
said he.--"Break every yoke," said I. "This I pray for always. But how
many 'yokes,'" said I, "do you suppose there are at the South?"--"I
forget the exact number of the slaves," said he, in the most artless
manner.'

"Hereupon the company broke out into great merriment. After they had
enjoyed their laughter awhile, my Northern lady-friend said, 'Did you
preach for him?'

"'Yes,' said the pastor; 'and prayed for him too.

"'Walking through the streets of that place in the evening, I saw
evidence that no minister nor citizen there was justified in casting the
first stone at the South for immorality. I lifted up my heart in thanks
to God that my sons were not exposed to the temptations of a Northern
city. Being in the United States District Court there, several times, I
had some revelations also with regard to the treatment and the condition
of seamen in some Northern ships, which led me to the conclusion which
I have often drawn,--that poor human nature is about the same, North and
South.

"'So, when I conducted the services of public worship, I prayed for that
city and for the young people, and alluded to the temptations which I
had witnessed; and I referred also to mariners, and prayed for masters
and officers of vessels who had such authority over the welfare and the
lives of seamen; and I prayed that Christians in both sections of our
land might pray for each other, considering each themselves, lest they
also be tempted, and that they might not be self-righteous and
accusatory; and that our eye might not be so filled with the evils of
other sections of the land as not to see those which were at home.

"'After service the good brother said, "I suppose you referred in your
prayer to my praying against the South, as you call it. Well," said he,
confidentially, "the truth is, some of our people make this thing their
religion, and they will not abide a man who does not pray against
slavery." Some gentlemen, with their ladies, stopped to speak with me.
One shook me by the hand most cordially. "We are glad to see our good
Southern brethren," said he; "thankful to hear you preach so, and pray
so, too," said he, with an additional shake and a significant look,
while the rest were equally cordial with their assent. One of the
gentlemen took me home with him. "This is most of it politics," said he,
"and newspaper trade, this anti-slavery feeling. The people generally
are not fanatics; they are kind and humane, and their sensibilities are
touched by tales of distress."--"Especially Southern," said I. "Last eve
I read in your papers four outrages which happened within fifteen miles
of this city, and two in your city, which equalled, to say the least,
in barbarity anything that ever comes to my knowledge among our people."

"'The next Sabbath, as I have since learned, my good brother was very
comprehensive, discriminating, and impartial in his supplications. He
really distinguished between those at the South who "oppress" their
fellow-men, and those who "remember them that are in bonds as bound with
them." But,' said the pastor, 'the most of those who use that latter
expression at the North really think the Apostle had slaves, as a class,
in mind. I have no such belief. I suppose that he referred to persecuted
Christians, suffering imprisonment for their religion, and to all
afflicted persons.

"'My landlord said to me,' he continued, '"They tell us you are afraid
of free discussion at the South, that you are afraid to have your slaves
hear some things, lest it should excite them to insurrection. How is
this?"

"'I told him that the slaves, being the lower order of society with us,
were not capable of so discriminating in that which promiscuous
strangers should see fit to say to them as to make it safe to have them
listen to every harangue or to every one who should set himself up to
teach. "Of course," said I, "there are liabilities and dangers in our
state of society. We must use prudence and caution. We have some loose
powder in our magazine. No one denies this. What if one who was rebuked
for carrying an open lamp into the magazine of a ship, should reproach
the captain with being 'an enemy to the light,' and as 'loving darkness
rather than light'?"

"'While at the North,' said he, 'I read Mr. Buckle on civilization, and
I reflected upon the subject. Being in a great assembly, once or twice,
listening to abolitionist orators, lay and clerical, and hearing their
vile assaults on personal character, their vulgar and reckless ridicule
of fifteen States of our Union, their affected, oracular way of saying
the most trite things as though they were aphorisms, but reminding me of
the piles of short stuff which you see round a saw-mill, and hearing the
great throng applaud and shout, I asked myself whether we have really
made any decided advances in civilization since the Hebrew Commonwealth.
I really doubted whether those orators could have collected an audience
of Hebrews even in the wilderness. Under the "Judges," the people were,
at times, low enough to enjoy such drivelling. The willingness at the
North to hear these men, and to applaud them, gave me a low idea of the
state of society.'

"'But,' said I, 'confess now that you found specimens of cultivated life
there such as you never saw surpassed.'

"'I did,' said he, 'many times. And I must tell you,' he added, 'of my
enjoyment in looking on your pastures in autumn,--the sun shining aslant
upon them of an afternoon,--and in noticing what shades of scarlet and
crimson were given to the picture by the whortleberry leaves, which, I
found, contributed most to the coloring of the landscape. I also saw a
peculiarity of the whortleberry's flower, which, when stung by an insect
sometimes swells to twenty-five times its natural size, and becomes a
fungus.'

"'Now,' said I, 'why not apply this,--perhaps you were intending to do
so,--and say that society at the North is generally like our
whortleberry pastures in autumn, which pleased you so much, with here
and there a fungus, made by the sting of radicalism.'

"A planter's Northern wife said, 'I should like to move the adoption of
that simile.'

"'We will have it so,' said the Judge to me, 'if the lady and you tell
us that we must.'

"'A fungus,' said I, 'gets more attention from one half of the people
who go into the woods, than all the pure and beautiful garniture of the
pastures.'

"The ladies of our company having been rallied for not having done their
part in the conversation, and also, of course, having been complimented
for keeping silence so long, the wife of one of the planters, a Northern
lady, made this remark that considering how God, in his providence, had
made such provision for the welfare of the human family through slavery
in our land, and, in doing it, had shown mercy and salvation to so many
hundreds of thousands of Africans, she thought it both ungrateful and
narrow-minded in people anywhere to confine all their thoughts to the
incidental evils of the slaves. She said that in the North she was not
an abolitionist, but on coming to the South and finding things so
different from that which her fancy had pictured, she had concluded to
be very charitable toward the most of her Northern friends who she said
were no more in the dark than she herself had been all her days, from
reading newspapers and tales which had concealed one whole side of
slavery from the view of Northern people. She added that she preferred
life at the North without the blacks, but had found more disinterested
benevolence toward them in one year at the South than she had charity to
believe existed in the hearts of all the good people at the North toward
them, counting in even the professional benevolence of the 'friends of
the slave.'

"After refreshments, the pastor was called upon to read the Scriptures,
and to offer prayer. He read the fifteenth chapter of Revelation. Never
can I forget the impression which one of the verses in that chapter made
upon me, in connection with some of the thoughts awakened by our
conversation about the sovereignty of God as displayed in his dark and
awful dispensations towards races, nations, and men: 'And the seven
angels came out of the temple, having the seven plagues, clothed in pure
and white linen, and having their breasts girded with golden girdles.'
'Those who are in any way associated with the administration of God's
great judgments towards their fellow-men,' said he, 'have need of
special purity; and their honor should be like the untarnished gold.'

"This pastor told me, during the repast, that one day, returning
suddenly from his study in the church just after breakfast, to the house
of one of the gentlemen present, with whom he lived, and who was one of
the wealthiest men in the South, and passing through the parlor to get a
book, he found the room darkened, and the lady of the house kneeling in
prayer with her servants. He of course withdrew at once, but he learned
afterward from one of the 'slaves,' that it was the lady's daily custom.
He often thought of that incident when reading Northern religious
newspapers and noticing their lamentations over 'slave-holding
professors.'"

       *       *       *       *       *

So much for my Southern visit.

Mrs. North said that in our next conversation she would suggest that we
consider the relation of Christianity to Slavery. I told her that I had
some night thoughts on that subject, which I would with pleasure
submit, at another time.

As the rain continued, Mr. North and I resorted to the wood-pile in the
shed for exercise, till dinner-time, Mrs. North following us to the
door, and charging us not to converse upon this subject till she should
be present.




CHAPTER IX.

DISCUSSION IN PHILEMON'S CHURCH AT THE RETURN OF ONESIMUS.

  "My equal will he be again
    Down in that cold, oblivious gloom,
  Where all the prostrate ranks of men
    Crowd without fellowship,--the tomb."

  JAMES MONTGOMERY.


"I will now relate to you," said I, as we resumed our conversation, "the
thoughts which came to me one night as I lay awake meditating on this
subject. I wrote them down the next day.

"The subject in our conversation which suggested them was, The relation
of Christianity to slavery.

       *       *       *       *       *

"About the year A.D. 64, two men, travellers from Rome, entered the city
of Colosse, in Phrygia. Asia Minor, both of them the bearers of letters
from the Apostle Paul, then a prisoner at Rome.

"A Christian Church had been gathered at Colosse. Its pastor was
probably Archippus. Some think that Epaphras was his colleague. This
church, according to Dr. Lardner and others, was most probably gathered
by the Apostle Paul himself. Mount Cadmus rose behind the city, with its
almost perpendicular side, and a huge chasm in the mountain was the
outlet of a torrent which flowed into the river Lycus, on which the city
was built, standing not far from the junction of this river with the
Moeander.

"One of the two men who bore these letters was a slave. His name was
Onesimus. He robbed his master, Philemon, of Colosse, fled to Rome,
heard Paul preach, was converted, and now by the Apostle is sent back to
his master with a letter, in charge of Tychicus, who, with this
Onesimus, was the bearer of a letter to the Colossian Church.

"Let us attend the church-meeting. The pastor, Archippus, presides.
Epaphras is at Rome.

"What an interesting company do we behold as we sit near the pastor's
table, in full view of the audience! The inhabitants of this place were
noted for the worship of Bacchus, and Cybele, mother of the gods; hence
her name, _Phrygia Mater_. Every kind of licentious language and actions
was practised in the worship of these deities, accompanied with a
frantic rage called orgies, from the Greek word for _rage_. This was a
part of their religious worship. From among such people, converts had
been made to Christianity, together with some who had been turned from
Judaism.

"The letter from the Apostle Paul is brought in and is laid on the
pastor's table, and some account is given of the manner in which it was
received. The letter is read. It refers the Colossians, at the close, to
the bearers, for further information and instructions. 'All my state
shall Tychicus declare unto you, who is a beloved brother and a faithful
minister and fellow-servant in the Lord. Whom I have sent unto you for
the same purpose, that he might know your estate, and comfort your
hearts. With Onesimus, a faithful and beloved brother, who is one of
you. They shall make known unto you all things which are done here.'

"Tychicus relates his story, and, when he has finished, Philemon, a
member of the Church, addresses the meeting. He was evidently a man of
distinction in that community, as we infer from the large number of
persons in his household, (ver. 2,) his liberality to poor Christians,
(ver. 5, 7,) and from the marked respect and deference paid to him by
the Apostle. He also had received a letter from the Apostle, and he asks
leave to read it.

"He then tells them that Onesimus is present; that he has been sent back
by the Apostle Paul, and with the full, cordial consent of Onesimus
himself. He would ask permission for Onesimus to say a few words.

"'Come hither,' says the pastor, 'and tell us what the Lord hath done
for thee, and how he hath had mercy on thee.'

"'Let me wash the saints' feet,' says Onesimus, 'but I am not worthy to
teach in the church.'

"He proceeds to tell them, in full, of his escape from his master, after
robbing him; of his meeting the Apostle at Rome; of his conversion; of
his voluntary return to spend his days, if such be the will of God, as
the servant of Philemon.

"The account of these proceedings reaches Laodicea, not far distant, to
which place Paul had also sent a letter, and the Colossians, agreeably
to the Apostle's charge, exchange letters, and no doubt the letter to
Philemon is also read to the Church which is at Laodicea.

"Whereupon, we will suppose, a controversy at once springs up. There had
already appeared in this region of Phrygia, as we infer from the Epistle
to the Colossians, serious errors, among them a kind of angel worship
and asceticism, or abstinence from things lawful, and a state of things
called Gnosis, (Eng. knowledge,) or Gnosticism, a pervading spirit of
worldly wisdom, science, philosophy, which treated the simplicity which
was in Christ as too rudimental and plain for the human mind, and
therefore sought to furnish it with speculations and mysticism, to
gratify its desires for a more extensive spiritual knowledge than it
seemed to many of them was provided for by Christianity.

"Among the speculations and theories of those days, we will suppose that
the idea began to prevail that Christianity was inconsistent with
holding a fellow-being in bondage. A motion is made in the Laodicean
Church that a committee be appointed to confer with the Colossian Church
on the return of Onesimus into slavery. Such a motion would have found
ready advocates in the Church at Laodicea, if, as at a later day, they
were 'neither cold nor hot' in religion; in which case any collateral
subjects wholly or partly secular, would have a charm for them. These
supplied that lack of warmth which they were conscious of as to
religion; their church-meeting, no doubt, seemed to them dull, unless a
subject was introduced which gave opportunity for discussion, and for
things which gendered debate, whereof cometh envy, strife, railings,
evil surmisings.

"The result of the conference on the part of the Laodicean Committee
with the Colossian Church was, that a general meeting was appointed to
discuss the subject of the return of Onesimus into slavery. It was a
private session of members of the two churches. They claimed the
privilege as Christians of discussing any question relating to the
government and the laws, taking care that no spies were present; still,
with all their precautions, false brethren made trouble for them by
giving private information to the civil authorities against some of
their number, whom they disliked; and this led to some oppression and
persecution.

"But the meeting was fully attended. Two members of the church who were
faithful servants to slave-holding brethren were set to guard the doors.
The slaves were allowed to be present and listen to the discussion. This
was carried after much debate, some contending that it would expose the
Christians to just reprehension from the civil authorities; and others
maintaining that it would do the slaves good to hear such doctrines
advanced and enforced as would be quoted from the Apostle relating to
masters and servants.

"The discussion was opened by a brother from Laodicea, an office-bearer
in the church, a private citizen, devoted to study, and an author of
some repute. He was formerly odist at the festivals of Cybele. His
pieces were collected and published under the title of 'Phrygian
Canticles.' His name was Olamus.

"He took the ground that Christianity abrogated slavery. He quoted the
well known words of Paul, so familiar to all who had heard him preach:
'In Christ Jesus there is neither Jew nor Greek, barbarian, Scythian,
bond nor free; but all are one in Christ.' 'The Spirit of the Lord is
upon me because he hath sent me to preach deliverance to the captives,
the opening of the prison doors to them that are bound.' 'Whatsoever ye
would that men should do unto you, do you even so to them.'

"He maintained that to own a fellow-creature was inconsistent with this
law of equal love; that it was giving sanction to a feature of
barbarism; that, practically, slavery was the sum of all villanies; an
enormous wrong; a stupendous injustice.

"If any one should reply that the Mosaic institutions recognized
slavery, he had one brief answer:--'which things are done away in
Christ.' Moses permitted this and some other things for the hardness of
their hearts. Polygamy was allowed by Moses, not by Christianity; its
spirit is against it; the bishop of a church must be 'the husband of one
wife;' slavery is certainly none the less contrary to the spirit of the
gospel.

"But inasmuch as it is inexpedient to dissolve at once, and in all
cases, the relation of master and slave, he contended that while the
relation continued, it should be regulated by the laws which God himself
once prescribed. Every seventh year should be a year of release; every
fiftieth, year should be a jubilee. And as to fugitives, he would refer
his brethren to that Divine injunction: 'Thou shalt not deliver unto his
master the servant which is escaped from his master unto thee; he shall
dwell with thee, even among you, in that place which he shall choose, in
one of thy gates, where it liketh him best; thou shalt not oppress him.'

"That a slave having escaped from his master could not rightfully be
sent back into bondage, was evident from these considerations:

"All men are born free and equal, and have an inalienable right to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. If a slave sees fit to walk off,
or run off, or ride off on his master's beast, or sail off in his
master's boat, he has a perfect right to do so. Slavery is violence;
every man may resist violence offered to his person, except under
process of law; the person cannot be taken except for crime, or debt, or
in war; every man owns his body and soul; the person cannot become
merchandise, except for the three causes above named, which he
acknowledged were justifiable causes of involuntary servitude at
present. But to forcibly seize a weaker man, or race, and hold them in
bondage he declared to be in violation of the laws of nature, and
contrary to the Christian religion.

"If it should be replied that Paul the Apostle countenanced slavery by
sending back Onesimus, he would answer, that Paul was a Jew, and was not
yet freed wholly from Jewish practices and associations of ideas.
Gnosticism has supervened upon the rudimental childhood of spiritual
truth. He believed in progress. It was contrary to the instinct of human
nature to send back a poor fugitive into bondage, and he was glad for
one that he lived in an age when the innate moral sentiments, under the
lucid teachings of our more transcendental scholars were becoming more
and more the all-sufficient guide in the affairs of life. He would,
therefore, publicly disclaim his allegiance to the teachings of the
Apostle Paul, if, upon reflection, Paul should insist that he was right
in remanding Onesimus to be Philemon's property 'forever;' it was well
enough that he should be sent back to restore what he had taken by
theft, provided Philemon would immediately release him; otherwise, to
steal from Philemon was doing no more than Philemon had done to him, in
taking away that liberty which is the birthright of every human being;
and Onesimus probably stole merely to assist his escape. He was
justifiable in doing so.

"If one should insist that there can be no intrinsic wrong in holding a
fellow-being as property because God allowed Hebrews to sell themselves,
and in certain cases to be servants forever, and directed the Israelites
to buy servants of the heathen round about them, who should be an
inheritance to the children of the Israelites, he would simply say
either that the whole pentateuch which contained such a libel on the
divine character, is thereby proved to be a forgery, or, that if the
pentateuch is to be received, it only proves that in condescension to a
race of freebooters who were employed, as the Israelites were, in bloody
wars of extermination, slavery was allowed them, to prevent, perhaps,
worse evils, and in consistency with their dark-minded, semi-barbarous
condition. In this enlightened age when Greece and Rome had shed
superior light on human relationships and obligations, and especially
since Christ had promulgated the golden rule, the idea that man could
own a fellow-creature was so preposterous that he would be an infidel,
nay, he would go farther, he would be an atheist, rather than believe
it. Our moral instincts are our guide. They are the highest source of
evidence that there is a God, and they are a perfect indication as to
what God and his requirements should be. He was for passing a vote of
disapprobation at the act of Paul the Apostle in sending back Onesimus
into bondage. Tell me not, said he, that the Apostle calls him 'a
brother beloved,' and 'one of you;' these honeyed phrases are but
coatings to a deadly poison. Slavery is evil, and only evil and that
continually. Disguise it as you will, Philemon holds property in
Onesimus. By the laws of Phrygia, he could put Onesimus to death for
running away. He deplored the act as a heavy blow at Christianity. It
would countervail the teachings of the Apostle. He sincerely hoped that
the Epistle to Philemon would not be preserved; for should it be
collected hereafter, as possibly it may, among Paul's letters, unborn
ages might make it an apology for slavery, it would abate the hatred of
the world against the sum of all villanies. He would even be in favor
of a vote requesting Philemon to give Onesimus his liberty at once, even
without his consent, sending him back, with this most unwise and unblest
epistle to Philemon, to Paul, who says that he 'would have retained
him,' but would not without Philemon's consent. He did hope that the
brethren would speak their minds, be open-mouthed, and not be like dumb
dogs. For his part he wanted an anti-slavery religion. He acknowledged
that the truths of the Gospel needed the stimulant of freedom to give
them life and power.

"His remarks evidently produced a great sensation, for a variety of
reasons, as we may well suppose.

"A man took the floor in opposition to this Laodicean brother. He was a
Jewish convert, a member of the Colossian Church. His name was
Theodotus. Born a Jew, he had renounced his religion and became a Greek
Sophist, practised law at Scio, and heard Paul at Mars Hill, where, with
Dionysius the Areopagite, with whom he was visiting, he was converted.
He had established himself at Colosse, in the practice of law. He was
unusually tall for a man of his descent, had beautifully regular Jewish
features, and was a captivating speaker.

"He said that they had 'heard strange things to-day. If they are true,
we have no foundation underneath our feet. Every man's moral sentiments,
it seems, are to be his guide. Where, then, is our common appeal? For
his part he believed that if God be our heavenly Father, he has given
his children an authentic book, a writing, for their guide, unless he
prefers to speak personally with them, or with their representatives.
When he ceased to speak by the prophets, he spoke to us by his Son; and
now that his Son is ascended, I believe,' said he, 'that inspired men
are appointed to guide us, and seeing that they cannot reach all by
their living voice, I believe that the evangelists and apostles are to
furnish us with writings which shall be inspired disclosures of God's
will and our duty. The Old Testament is as truly God's word as ever;
Christ declared that not one jot or tittle should pass from it, till all
be fulfilled. Some of it is fulfilled, in him, the end of the types;
parts of it refer to local and temporary things; all which is not local
and temporary is still binding upon us. At least, the spirit of its laws
is benevolent and wise. Damascus and its scenes are too fresh in the
memories of the brethren to need that I should argue the inspiration of
the Apostle to the Gentiles. His miracles are known to us. Nay, what
miracles are we ourselves, reclaimed from the service of the devil, once
the worshippers of Bacchus and of our Phrygian mother; now, clothed, and
in our right minds. The Apostle claims to speak and act by divine
authority. We must question everything, if we set aside this claim.

"'I maintain,' said he, 'that the Apostle Paul regards the holding a
fellow-creature as property to be consistent with Christianity. To
prevent all misunderstanding, however, let me declare that he insists on
the golden rule as the law of slave-holding, as of everything else; that
he discountenances oppression, that he warns and threatens us with
regard to it; and that he considers slave-holding as consistent with the
Christian character and happiness of master and slave.

"'In the very Epistle just received by our Church, and by the hands of
Tychicus and Onesinius himself, from the Apostle, we find these words:
"Servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not
with eye-service, as men-pleasers, but in singleness of heart, fearing
God; and whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as unto the Lord, and not
unto men, knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the
inheritance: for ye serve the Lord Christ. But he that doeth wrong shall
receive for the wrong which he hath done; and there is no respect of
persons. Masters, give unto your servants that which is just and equal;
knowing that ye also have a Master in heaven."

"'Where, in this, is there a word that countenances the wrongfulness of
being a slave, or of holding men as slaves? He directs all his
exhortations to the duties which are to be performed in the relation,
and he leaves the relation as he finds it. He does not enjoin slavery;
he treats it as something which belongs to society, to government, and
he leaves Christianity to regulate it as circumstances shall make it
proper. If any one says that the Apostle was afraid to meddle with it, I
reply, that there was never anything yet that Paul was afraid to meddle
with, if it was right to do so. He "meddled" with Diana of the Ephesians
and her craftsmen; he "meddled" with the "beasts" there; he "meddled"
with idolatry on Mars Hill at Athens, I being witness; he has been
beaten, stoned, imprisoned, and is now the second time before Nero for
his life. Afraid to "meddle" with slavery! I am ashamed of the man who
makes the suggestion. He who thinks it, has never yet understood him.

"'Now, where in all his teachings has he ever intimated that it is wrong
to hold property in man? Nowhere; I repeat it, nowhere. But is he
ignorant of the nature of slavery? We all know what has lately happened
at Rome, in connection with slavery. The very year that Paul arrives at
Rome, the prefect of the city, Pedanius Secundus, was murdered by his
slave; and agreeably to the laws of slavery all the slaves belonging to
the prefect, a great number, women and children among them, were put to
death indiscriminately, though innocent of the crime.[A] Such is slavery
under the Apostle's eye; and yet'--

   [Footnote A: Tacitus, _Annals_, xiv. 42.--A thrilling tale. See
   Bohn's Classical Library, 53.]

"'And, therefore,' interrupted the Laodicean brother, 'the Apostle
approves of murdering innocent slaves for the sin of one. That is the
conclusion to which your reasoning will bring us.'

"'Excusing the brother for interrupting me, I ask, Is that agreeable to
the plain facts in the case?' said the speaker. 'Are the abuses of
parentage chargeable upon the relationship of parent and child?
Moreover, does not the Apostle expressly teach us, in this Epistle, that
such things are wrong? but still, does he condemn the relation of master
and slave?

"'The tale of that horrid butchery was present to the mind of the
Apostle when he sends Onesimus back into slavery. Moreover, he knew that
by our laws Philemon could put Onesimus to death; yet he sends him back.

"'It is said by my brother that Paul enunciated principles which in time
would kill slavery, and therefore he did not care to denounce it, but
prudently let it alone. What else, I inquire, did Paul fail to denounce?
and why is this "enormous wrong," this "stupendous injustice," alone,
left to die, without being attacked? No, Paul treated slavery as he did
all other forms of government; he did not denounce government, not even
its despotic forms; for he knew that a despotism may be the best form of
government in some circumstances. But he spoke against the abuse of
power by rulers, and in the same way he speaks against the abuse of
power by the master.

"'My brother tells us that slavery is "the sum of all villanies." A
comprehensive term, truly. Let us admit the correctness of the phrase.
"All villanies" includes all "the works of the flesh," and the Apostle
enumerates the principal of them, where he says, "Now the works of the
flesh are these;"--concluding his account with the expression, "and such
like." With unsparing denunciation, he portrays each and every
"villany," and shows how the wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against it.

"'But while he is thus bold and faithful with regard to "all villanies"
in particular, we cannot but think it strange that a thing which is said
to be the "sum" of them all, is nowhere spoken against by the Apostle!
On the contrary, he recognizes the duties which grow out of
slave-holding.

"'Let us suppose him to do the same with regard to each villany which he
does to that which my brother calls the "sum" of them all. Then we
should hear him say! Murderers, do so and so; thieves, do so and so; and
ye that are mutilated, do so and so; and ye that are pillaged, do so and
so. I am curious to know how my brother will answer this. What are the
religious "duties" of murderers and thieves, but to repent, to forsake
their evil ways at once, and to make lawful reparation? And what are the
"duties" of those whom murderers and thieves assault, but to resist, and
to seek the conviction of the evil-doer? Oh how strange it seems for the
Apostle to counsel masters and slaves to imitate their "Master which is
in heaven," in their relation to each other, if holding men in bondage
be "the sum of all villanies," and how strange for him to send Onesimus
back to the system to behave in it as Christ would act in his place!

"'Onesimus escapes, we will say, from a gang of murderers, or from a
company of thieves, and the Apostle's preaching is the means of his
becoming a good man. Paul writes a letter to the chief murderer of the
gang, or to the captain of the robbers, sends Onesimus back, and
"beseeches" the brigand for "his son Onesimus," telling him that now he
receives him "forever," and then calls the desperado "our dearly beloved
fellow-laborer"! Why not, with equal propriety, if slavery be,
necessarily, as our brother describes it? There is some mistake in our
brother's theory.

"'I venture to state the distinction which I think he overlooks, and
which, if observed, will relieve his difficulty. Paul never denounces
government; "the powers that be are ordained of God." He appeals to
"Caesar"; he goes before "Nero"; he never counsels insurrection, nor
denounces government, in whatever hands or under whatever forms it may
be; but he enjoins principles and duties which, if observed, would make
"Caesars," even though they be "Neros," blessings, and their despotisms
even would cease to be a curse. So with slave-holding. It is
incorporated into the state of society; it is, moreover, a relation
which can exist and no sin be committed under the relation; hence, it is
not sin in itself, any more than the throne of Nero is sin in itself;
and the Apostle speaks to the slave-holding Philemon as he would to a
father receiving back a wayward son.

"'The claim of Philemon to Onesimus rests only on his having purchased
him. Who had a right to sell him? Trace the thing back, and you come to
fraud or violence, or some form of injustice to Onesimus in making him
a slave. Paul knew that this is the case with regard to every slave; yet
he does not "break every yoke," even when, as in this case, he had one
so completely in his hands, and could have broken it in pieces.

"'But we will suppose, with my brother, that the laws which God ordained
for slavery should prevail under Christianity, if slavery is to exist.
Let every Phrygian, then, a fellow-countryman who has lost his liberty,
go free at the end of six years; and at every fiftieth year, whether six
years be completed or not, since the last seventh year of release, let
all such go free. This, for argument's sake, we approve. But we must
take the whole code. Every foreigner who becomes a slave, and the child
of every such slave, was to be an "inheritance forever." Husbands, who
are Phrygians, must choose, in certain cases, whether to go out free by
themselves, or remain in perpetual bondage with their wives and their
offspring. Paul knew the Jewish laws with regard to slavery; he knew how
favorably they compared with our code; but he says not a word on that
score, and simply sends Onesimus back to his bondage.

"'Yet see how beautifully the spirit of Christ works itself into the
relation of master and slave, and into Paul's views and feelings with
regard to it. In his letter to our Church, he expressly names Onesimus
as one of the bearers of the epistle. He speaks of him as "one of you,"
a resident with us; and he calls this slave "a faithful and beloved
brother." He speaks to Philemon about him as "my son Onesimus whom I
have begotten in my bonds;" "thou therefore receive him, that is, mine
own bowels." "Not now as a servant, but above a servant, a brother
beloved, specially to me, but how much more unto thee, both in the
flesh and in the Lord." "If thou count me, therefore, a partner, receive
him as myself."

"'What a comment is this on the words: "In Christ Jesus there is neither
bond nor free." Not that there shall be "no bond," according to the
brother's interpretation; for then it would be equally right to
interpret the other part of the passage literally,--there is no Jew, no
Greek, and none free! How perfectly does the relation become absorbed by
that state of heart which makes it proper for Paul to say: "Art thou
called being a servant, care not for it; but if thou mayest be made
free, use it rather." Notwithstanding this advice, he sends back this
man-servant.

"'Paul might have manumitted Onesimus by his authority as an apostle;
this, however, would have been rebellion against government, for our
laws recognize slavery.

"'My brother says that the Hebrew law forbade the surrender of a
fugitive slave. Yes, if the slave fled into Israel from a heathen
master, he must not be sent back to heathenism; but'--

"'But,' said the brother from Laodicea, 'there is no limitation of that
kind. I insist that it was of universal application to slaves of all
kinds.'

"'Find the passage, if you please (in Deut. xxiii.),' said the Colossian
speaker.

"The passage was found by the pastor, and was read, as already quoted:
'Thou shalt not deliver unto his master the servant that is escaped from
his master unto thee. He shall dwell with thee even among you, in that
place which he shall choose in one of thy gates where it liketh him
best; thou shalt not oppress him.' Deut. xxiii. 10, 15.

"'Now,' said Theodotus, 'it is absurd to say that God proclaimed to all
the servants throughout Israel, If any of you are dissatisfied, for any
cause, and wish to run away, you may do so; and wherever you wish to
live, the people-of that place shall provide a residence for you. After
being there for ever so short a time, if you do not like it, you may
flee again; and so keep moving all your lifetime, the people everywhere
being obliged to allow you a place of abode. Did the Most High mean to
encourage such vagabondism?

"'No; He merely provided that a fugitive from a heathen master should
not be sent away from the worship of Jehovah into heathenism.'

"'That is undoubtedly the true meaning,' said the pastor, 'if Theodotus
will allow me to put in a word. "Thee," in that passage, means Israel as
a nation, not each man.'

"'I thank you, Sir,' said Theodotus; 'and now I maintain that the
injunction not to give up a fugitive to his heathen master, but to keep
him in Israel, is a powerful argument in favor of retaining slaves where
they will be most benefited in their spiritual concerns. God thus makes
the soul of man and its eternal welfare paramount to all external
relations, including slavery.'

"'May I inquire, then,' said the Laodicean: 'Suppose that Philemon had
been a cruel heathen master, and Onesimus had fled for his life, would
Paul have sent him back?'

"'If the case were clear and beyond doubt, I am not sure that he would,'
said Theodotus. 'While he would not counsel Onesimus to run away, yet I
can only say, that, fleeing from certain cruelty and death, I doubt if
he would have been remanded. But Paul told servants to be "subject to
their masters," "not only to the good and gentle, but also to the
froward." He speaks to them of "suffering wrongfully;" of "doing well,
and suffering for it;" and he refers the suffering slave to Christ,
"who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered,
threatened not." Moreover, he says: "For even hereunto were ye called;
because Christ also _suffered for us_, leaving us an example that ye
should _follow his steps_." That is certainly death.'

"'If Paul did not send Onesimus back to Philemon, however, it would not
be because it was wrong, in his view, for Philemon to hold him in
bondage; please observe this distinction; but, judging the case by
itself, he would decide whether the slave ought not, under the
circumstances, to have the right of asylum,--Paul himself having once
been "let down by a basket," to escape from the Damascenes. Paul and any
other man would, in certain cases, protect even a fugitive son or
daughter from a father; and this consistently with his recognition of
the parental and filial relation.

"'Let me remind my brother, and you, my pastor, and my brethren, of one
fact which occurs to me at the moment. Manslayers, in cities of refuge,
were to go free at the death of the High Priest then in office; no such
release, however, was granted to the Gentile slaves, showing that
slavery was not a crime in the estimation of the Most High. Otherwise,
He would have legislated for the departure of slaves from their Hebrew
masters, as He did for manslayers fleeing from the avenger of blood.
Excuse the digression. The thought struck me at the moment.'

"'I put it to the brother,' said the Laodicean, 'whether he himself would
not flee to Rome, were he a single man, if he should be made a slave to
that monster in human shape, Osander of Hieropolis?'

"'I cannot say,' replied the Colossian, 'what my temptations might be,
nor how well I should resist them; but slavery being incorporated into
the government, and I being, in the providence of God, sold into bondage
to Osander,--I being either the child of a slave, or one of those who
are called "lawful captives,"--my race, or my capture in war, or my
indebtedness, or my crimes, subjecting me to bondage according to the
constitution of government, I ought to consider my slavery as the mode
which God had chosen for me to glorify him,--by my spirit and temper, by
my words and conduct, by my Christian example in everything, for the
good of Osander's soul, and the honor of religion. I believe that I
should please God more by staying to suffer, and even to die, than to
run away. I doubt even the expediency of running away, as a general
rule. It implies a want of faith. He is the Christian hero who stays
where God has manifestly placed him.

"'I know,' continued he, 'how easy it is to make this appear ridiculous;
and also how often cases occur in which flight, and even the taking of
life, are proper, under extreme hardships. It is frequently the case
that a servant sees and feels his mental superiority to the man who owns
him. Now one may be so disgusted, and be so constantly vexed and chafed
at this, as to make out a strong case for escaping; another, in the same
circumstances, will feel that God has placed him in charge of his
master's soul, to please him well in all things though he be "froward."
Whether is better, to run off or to "abide"? There can be no doubt how
the Apostle would answer the question. Exceptional cases of extreme
distress do not make a rule; the rule is for each one to "abide" in the
calling in which he is called of God. See what perfect insubordination
would everywhere follow if every one who is oppressed, or believes
himself to be oppressed, should flee: children would desert their
parents; husbands and wives would flee from each other, at any supposed
or real grievance. This is not the Christian rule. Patience and all
long-suffering, obedience, endurance, committing one's self to him that
judgeth righteously, is the temper and spirit of the Gospel. This is the
tone-note of the Sermon on the Mount. At the same time, who blames or
judges harshly a man in peril of his life if, in self-defence, he flees?
I say that Paul would probably judge every fugitive slave case by
itself. One thing is clear: It is not his rule to help a fugitive from
slavery in his flight, as a matter of course. His rule is evidently the
reverse of this. I cannot argue with regard to the exceptions. They
generally provide each for itself. The New Testament rule is for slaves
not to run away; and for us, and for all men, not to encourage them to
do so; but to encourage them to return, and to deal with the masters on
such principles, and in such a fraternal, affectionate way, that the
appeals to their Christian sensibilities may permanently affect their
consciences and hearts.

"'I stand by the record. Let me forsake it, and I am like Paul's ship
when it was driving up and down in Adria, and neither sun nor stars
appeared. My impulses were not given me as my guide. They are to be
compared with the divine will. Many questions may be asked which I
cannot answer, and many difficulties encompass this subject of
slave-holding which I cannot solve. I abide by the example and teachings
of inspired men, and am safe in following them, even if I cannot
explain everything connected with their principles and conduct to the
satisfaction of others. I only know that if our masters and servants
would take the Apostle Paul's Epistle to Philemon as the rule of their
spirit and life, there would be no such thing as oppression, nor
fugitive servants. Now, as to revolutionizing society to eradicate
slavery, I would no more attempt it than I would try to dig down Cadmus
to dislodge yonder snow and ice upon his top. The sun will in due time
melt them and pour them into the Lycus and the Moeander. So the Gospel,
when it has free course, will dissolve every chain, break every yoke,
and sorrow and sighing shall flee away.'

       *       *       *       *       *

"Philemon was now the first to rise.

"'I am the master to whom Paul the Apostle sends back my fugitive
servant. This man, Onesimus, is my brother in Christ; in heaven, it may
be, I shall see him far above me as a faithful servant of our common
Lord. He has given a proof of obedience to the Gospel, of submission, of
patience and long suffering, of implicit compliance with the rules of
Christ, which excite my Christian emulation. My endeavor shall be to
imitate Onesimus as he has imitated Christ, and to surpass him in
likeness to that Lord who is meek and lowly in heart. The bonds which
hold Onesimus to me are no stronger than those which bind me to him.
(Great sensation and much emotion.) Can I ever treat this servant in an
unfeeling manner? Can I recklessly sell him? Can I deprive him of
comforts? Can I fail to provide for his highest happiness? God do so to
me and more also, if I prove deficient in these particulars.

"'Let me ask, What would be the state of things among us if the benign
influences of Christian love pervaded every case of slave-holding as, by
the grace of God, I hope it will in my case? We must have a serving
class; our customs and laws ordain the relationship of involuntary
servitude, property in the services of others, by purchase of their
persons. While this is so, suppose that every servant is an Onesimus and
every master such as I ought to be, under the influence of the Apostle
Paul's directions! It is plain that in no way can we better promote the
spiritual and eternal good of certain men, as the times are, than by
standing in the relation of Christian masters to them. This is the great
thing with Paul. We can mitigate the sorrows of their bondage; we can
compensate for the appointments of providence reducing them to slavery,
by making them the freemen of Christ. While this state of things
continues, it may be a blessing to both parties. God will open a way for
any change which he decrees in our social relation, in his own time and
manner.

"'Now, let us suppose what would happen if, departing from the rule and
example of Paul, we follow the counsels of our good brother from
Laodicea. The community would be in constant excitement by the departure
of servants asserting each his natural liberty; laws would become rigid;
hardships would be multiplied; cruelties would be perpetuated;
insurrections would become frequent; sacrifices of servants, the
innocent with the guilty, would be made to deter from insubordination.
Instead of the spirit of the Gospel in our dwellings, alienations,
suspicion, jealousy, wrangling, strife, and every form of evil would
prevail. He is no real friend of servant or master who would enforce the
principles of our Laodicean brother. I adhere to the Apostle. If
questioned as to my right to hold Onesimus in bondage, the answer
immediately suggested is that an inspired Apostle sanctions it in my
case. If right in my case, it is right in principle; for if
slave-holding be a violation of rights, I am guilty of that violation,
however humane a master I may be. The Apostle does not reprove me, nor
require me to manumit Onesimus, but tells me that I now receive him
"forever," and he teaches me how to treat him. I could occupy your time
by arguing the abstract question relating to property in the services of
men,--but I rest my case for the present on the letter of Paul the
Apostle, brought to me by the hand of my fugitive servant, returning to
what the laws call his bonds.

"'Let me add a few words, however, on the general subject, to the
argument of Theodotus.

"'Our good brother from Laodicea tells us that slavery and polygamy are
"twin barbarisms." He argues that slavery was winked at, like polygamy;
was "suffered," by the Most High. But I propose to refute this, and I
will throw myself on your candor to judge if I succeed.

"'God, in Eden, appointed the marriage of one man and one woman to be
the law of matrimony. "And wherefore one?" says the prophet. "He had the
residue of the spirit," and could have ordained otherwise. "Wherefore
one?" The answer is, "that he might seek a godly seed." The arrangement
was for the highest elevation of the race.

"'Polygamy is in direct conflict with the ordinance of God. Of course
God never ordained it. On the contrary, the appointment in Eden was
equivalent to a prohibitory act, which Jesus Christ revived, forbidding
polygamy, and the Apostles have enjoined upon us that we observe the law
of marriage as given in paradise.

"'So much for polygamy. God never recognized it. The edict requiring
the marriage of a childless widow to the brother of her husband, takes
it for granted that a man would leave but one widow.

"'But how is it with slavery? God never forbade it; he recognized it;
when He framed the Jewish code it was perfectly easy to exclude slavery;
but hardly are the Ten Commandments out of his lips when He ordains
slave-holding, gives particular directions about it, decrees that
certain persons shall be an inheritance forever. Jesus Christ never
uttered one word against slavery, though he did against polygamy; the
Apostles have never written nor preached to us against slavery, but on
the contrary here is the Apostle to the Gentiles sending back a servant
escaped from his master; and in that letter on the pastor's table he
enjoins duties on masters and slaves. I have confidence that my brother
will not again class slavery with polygamy, for it would be a reflection
upon divine wisdom and justice.

"'One thing more. My brother says slavery is the sum of all villanies.

"'But did not the Most High God place his people in slavery for seventy
years, in Babylon? This does not prove that slavery is a good thing, in
itself; for by the same proof heathenism might be shown to be a
blessing. Slavery was a curse, a punishment; but still, God would not
have made use of slavery to punish his people, if, theoretically and
practically, it is by necessity all which my brother alleges. It surely
did not, in that case, prove a "villany" to Babylon. They were the best
seventy years of their probationary state, when that people held the
Jews in captivity. Now I beg not to be misunderstood nor to have my
meaning perverted. I am not pleading for slavery. I simply say that God
would not have put his people, whom He had not cast off forever, into
slavery, if slavery, _per se_, were the sum of all villanies, or, if the
practical effect of it on them would be, necessarily, destruction, or
inconsistent with his purposes of benevolence. I will add, that every
people and every man, who hold others in bondage, should be admonished
that when God puts his captives, his bondmen, into their hands, He is
most jealous of the manner in which the trust is discharged. I do think,
I say it here with all possible emphasis, it is the most delicate, the
most solemn, the most awful responsibility, to stand in the relation of
master to a bondman.

       *       *       *       *       *

"No further discussion was had at that time, the hour being late, and so
the meeting was closed with prayer and singing. Masters and servants
joined to chant a hymn, of which the following, written many years after
by Gregory of Nazianzum, might almost seem to be the expansion:--

  "'Christ, my Lord, I come to bless Thee,
    Now when day is veiled in night,
  Thou who knowest no beginning,
    Light of the eternal light.

  "'Thou hast set the radiant heavens,
    With thy many lamps of brightness,
  Filling all the vaults above;
    Day and night in turn subjecting
    To a brotherhood of service,
  And a mutual law of love.

  "'Own me, then, at last, thy servant,
    When thou com'st in majesty;
  Be to me a pitying Father,
    Let me find thy grace and mercy;
    And to Thee all praise and glory
  Through the endless ages be.'

"Leaning on the arm of Onesimus, Philemon returned to bless his
household.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Thus far," said I, "you have my Night Thoughts." I asked Mr. North if
he accepted the present New Testament Canon as correct? He said that he
did. I then inquired if he regarded the Scriptures as the only and
sufficient rule of faith and practice.

To this he also agreed. I then asked him if he did not think that, in
making up the canon, that is, in directing what books and epistles
should go into it, God had reference to the wants of all coming times?
He signified his assent. I then asked his attention to a few thoughts
connected with that point.

"Here is the Epistle to Philemon, placed by the hand of the Holy Spirit
himself in the Sacred Canon. It is on a small piece of parchment, easily
lost; the wind might have blown it from Philemon's table out of the
window, beyond recovery; it was not addressed to a Church, to be kept in
its archives; it is a private letter, subject to every change in the
condition of a private citizen. Yet, while the epistle to Laodicea, sent
about the same time, is irrecoverably lost, this little writing,
addressed to a private man, goes into the Bible, by direction of God!

"Do you not suppose," said I, "that God had a meaning in this beyond
merely informing us how a master received a servant back to bondage?"

"What further purpose do you think there was in it?" said he.

"I only know," said I, "that slave-holding was to be a subject, as has
proved to be the case, which would involve the interests of at least
two of the continents of the earth, one of them being then unknown. Here
the Church of God was to have large increase. Here, too, slavery was to
exist, and to thrill the hearts of millions of citizens from generation
to generation. It is very remarkable that one book of the Bible, which
was to be made known to all nations by the commandment of the
everlasting God, for the obedience of faith, should be exclusively on
the subject of slavery, and that the whole burden of the Epistle should
be, The Rendition of a Fugitive Slave!"

"This never occurred to me before," said Mr. North.

"Suppose," said I, "that instead of sending back Onesimus, the epistle
had been a private letter from Archippus at Colosse to Paul at Rome,
clandestinely aiding Onesimus to escape from Philemon, and that Paul had
received Onesimus and had harbored him, and had sent him forth as a
missionary, and that not one word of comment had appeared in the Bible
discountenancing the act. What would have happened then?"

"Then," said Mrs. North, "one thing is certain; the business of running
off slaves to Canada would now have been more brisk even than it is at
present."

"Why?" said I.

"Simply because," said she, "the New Testament would have sanctioned the
practice of running off slaves."

"Why, then," said I, "does it not now equally countenance the 'running'
of slaves back to their masters?"

"Please answer that for me, husband," said Mrs. North.

He smiled, and rose to put some coal on the fire. We waited for his
words.

"Well," said he, "I do not know but it is all right, provided the master
be in each case a Philemon."

"That is a good word," said I. "You show that the Bible has an
ascendency in your mind. You will be safe in following the Bible
wherever it leads you, even into slave-holding, if it goes so far. But I
must now question you a little. You may answer me or not, as you please.

"One day a black man appears at your door, and says, 'I have just
escaped from the South. I was owned by Rev. Professor A.B. of New
Orleans. I preferred liberty to slavery, and here I am.' Would you
shelter him, and encourage his remaining here, and, if necessary, send
him to Canada?"

"What would you have me do?" said he.

"Take him in," said I, "if you please, and give him some breakfast. You
would not object to this. After breakfast you have family prayers. 'Can
you read, Nesimus?' you inquire. 'O yes, master; missis and the young
missises taught us all to read.' Your little boy hands him, with the
rest, a Testament, and names the place of reading. Strange to say,
yesterday you finished 'Titus,' and the portion to be read in course is
'Philemon!'"

"Almost a providence," said Mrs. North.

"How would you feel, Mr. North?" said I.

"Why, feel? How should I feel?" said he. "You will answer for me,
perhaps, and say, 'Read Philemon; pray; and then say, Come, Nesimus, I
am going to send you back to Professor A.B. I will write a letter to
him, and pay your passage.'"

"What objection would you make to this?" said I.

He thought a moment, and in the meanwhile his shrewd wife said,--

"Why, husband, do you hesitate? Say this: 'What! I? and Bunker Hill
within a day's march of my house, and grandfather's old sword over my
library door?'"

"I am sick of hearing about Bunker Hill in this connection," said he.
"Any one would think that it is one of the 'sacred mountains' in Holy
Writ."

"But," said his wife, "If some of Paul's ancestors had had Bunker Hill
privileges and influences, do you think Paul would have written the
Epistle to Philemon? Unfortunate Apostle! Say," said his wife again,
before he spoke, "that you believe in progress, that that epistle might
have been right enough in its day, but that now 'we need an anti-slavery
Bible and an anti-slavery God.'"

She made up a very expressive smile as she said it and stretched her
work across her knee.

"Yes," said I, "the Bible is antiquated! God never gave a written
revelation to be a perpetual guide to the end of time! I can supersede
the Epistle to Philemon: Mrs. North, Hebrews; you, James; and another
the whole of the Old Testament."

"Now," said Mr. North, "I will tell you what I have been thinking of all
this time.

"I will put you into bondage in Algiers or Tunis. Somebody has bought
you or captured you. But by some means you escape to me at Gibraltar.
Now I will read 'Philemon' to you, and send you back to your Algerine
master. What objection can you make to this, as a believer in
inspiration?"

I answered, "If I were a slave in my own country, and slavery existed in
Algiers, you would need to consider the relation which existed between
this country and Algiers. If the governments had treaties with each
other, the surrender of persons held to service in either of the
countries would probably be provided for, and then you would have to
consider whether you would obey what is called the 'higher law,' or
yield me to the requisition of the proper authorities. This brings up
the question of the rendition of fugitive slaves, which we have just
considered.

"But being free in my own country, and having been, therefore,
unlawfully sold into Algerine Slavery, or having been captured, or
stolen, you would, I trust, make proper resistance in my behalf."

"But," said Mr. North, "The ancestors of my fugitive friend Nesimus,
were taken from freedom in their own land and were reduced to slavery.
Must he and his descendants be slaves forever for the sin of the
original captors, or for the misfortune of his ancestors?"

"Birth in slavery long established makes all the difference in the
world, Mr. North," said I. "If I am born in slavery, under a government
ordaining slavery, that is a different case from that of one taken out
of a passenger ship and sold as a slave."

"Then if you and your wife," said he, "were taken out of a passenger
ship, and you should happen to have a child born in slavery, that child
must remain a slave, even if you go free?"

"No, Sir," said I; "the child born under such circumstances is as
rightfully free as its parents. But take this case: I, being captured
and held as a slave, my master gives me a wife, lawfully a slave. Then,
the child born of her is lawfully a slave. You see the distinction. God
recognized it. The condition of both is a limitation and qualification
of natural rights. So the lapse of time qualifies the right to collect
debts, bring suits for libel, or slander, and for the right of way, or
for the possession of land. Will we live under law? or shall each man
or any set of men set up laws for their own conscience?"

"Then," said he, "If a slave-trader lands a cargo of slaves from Africa,
at Florida, I have no right to buy them; they are not lawfully slaves.
Is that your belief?"

"Assuredly," said I; "and if the fugitive whom I have supposed you to be
sending back to the gentleman at New Orleans, were a fugitive from the
cargo just imported from Africa, you would be sustained by the law of
the land in delivering him from bondage; he was piratically taken; the
laws would make him free, and punish his captors, if the laws were
faithfully executed."

"But a poor fellow born in slavery must remain a slave!" he replied.

"He is not lawfully a slave," I said, "if his parents were both of that
cargo. But if his father had received a wife from his master, then the
child is lawfully a slave."

"How do you establish that distinction?" said he.

"The child is born of one known to be, herself, lawfully a slave. It is
born under a constitution of government which recognizes slavery; while
that government provides for slavery, the child must submit or violate
an ordinance of God, unless freedom can be had by law, or by justifiable
revolution."

"I feel constrained," said Mr. North "to hold that liberty is the
inalienable right of every human being, except in cases of crime."

"You mean," said I, "that every human being is entitled to all the civil
rights and immunities which others enjoy."

"Yes," said he, "in proportion to his age, and his capacity. Minors, and
the imbecile, are entitled to protection, but may not be oppressed."

"Ah," said I, "how soon you find your general rules intercepted and
qualified by circumstances. Minors, and the imbecile, then, may not be
admitted to equal privileges with us. But are not all men born free and
equal?"

"Now let me add to 'minors' and 'the imbecile' one more class. There are
two races existing together in a certain country. One has always been,
there, a servile race. The other are the lords of the soil; the
institutions of the country are by their creation; they have acquired a
perfect right and title to the government.

"You know, from all history, that two races never could, and never did
live together on the same soil, unless they intermarried, or one was
subject to the other. You admit this historical fact.

"It is proposed, now, by some, to give the subject race a right to vote
and to hold office, so that their equality in all things shall be
acknowledged."

"Pray," said Mr. North, "will you object to this? Has not God 'made of
one blood all nations of men'?"

"Yes," I replied, "but read on, in that same verse:--'and hath
determined the bounds of their habitation.' There is a law of races;
races must have antipathies, unless they intermarry; he who seeks to
confound them may as well labor for the conjugation of all the tribes of
animals. He and his results would prove to be monsters.

"The Anglo Saxon race on this continent properly say to the Negro, 'If
by conquest you get possession of the land, we must, of course, succumb
to you. We are now in possession, and mean so to continue. Hard,
therefore, as it seems not to let you vote in parts of the country where
your numbers are such as to endanger our majority, or afford temptation
to demagogues to inflame your prejudices and passions by historical
appeals to them, and severe as it may seem not to let you form military
companies, (which would also be mischievous in the same way) we
nevertheless propose to exclude you from this right of suffrage, and
from separate organizations, for our own defence, and that we may
preserve our institutions for our proper descendants. We are very sorry
that our English ancestors began to impose you upon us, and that Newport
and Salem vessels brought so many of you here into slavery; but we
cannot think of requiting you for this by jeoparding our own peace; nor
would it be kind to you, as things are, to be made prominent in any way
as a class. When the Northern people are, generally, your true friends,
and cease to use you in an offensive manner, to excite civil war, we
shall join to elevate you in every way consistent with your true
interests.'

"There will be cases of extreme hardship," said I, "if a slave, fleeing
from the South, however unjustifiably, nevertheless becomes surrounded
here with a family, and the owner comes and claims him. There are
principles of natural humanity which come into force at such a time to
modify or set aside a claim. I know, indeed, that to build a valuable
house on land not mine, does not vacate the land-owner's title; and,
moreover, I know what may be alleged on the principle illustrated by
Paley, who speaks of a man finding a stick and bestowing labor on it
which is more in value than the stick itself. These cases of slaves who
have gained a settlement here, call for the utmost kindness and
forbearance between the sectional parties in controversy; clamor will
never settle them, nor the sword; but the reign of good feeling will
cause justice to flow down our streets like a river, and righteousness
like an overflowing stream."

"As we have conversed a good deal upon this subject," said Mr. North,
"perhaps we may bring our conversation to a close as profitably as in
any other way by your telling us, summarily, what you think of this
whole perplexing subject; what would you have me believe; how ought a
Christian man, who desires to know and do the will of God, to feel and
to act with regard to it? Good men, I see, are divided about it; I
respect your motives, I approve many of your principles, I cannot object
to your conclusions, in the main. Let us know what you consider to be,
probably, the ultimate issue of the whole subject."

"I will do so with pleasure," said I.

"But," said Mrs. North, "let us wait till after dinner."

"As the storm is over," I said to her, "I must go home, but we will have
one more council fire, if you please, and end the subject."

So in the afternoon, my kind friends gave me their attention while I
made my summing up in the next and concluding chapter.




CHAPTER X.

THE FUTURE.

  "It is heaven upon earth to have a man's mind rest in providence, move in
  charity, and turn upon the poles of truth."

  LORD BACON.


"Slavery, as human nature now is, cannot be otherwise than one of the
Almighty's curses upon any race which is subject to bondage.

"True, it may nevertheless, be an amelioration of their original state;
they may fall into the hands of a Christian people, and hundreds of
thousands of them be civilized, and be converted to Christianity;
redeemed from a barbarous condition they may contribute immensely to the
general good of the race both as producers and consumers. Wherever
commerce needs them, unquestionably they will do more good to the world
by being compelled to work than by wearing out their miserable and
useless existence in Africa.

"All this may be true; still, is it not a curse to be hewers of wood and
drawers of water? Does not God say to Israel that if they sin, they
'shall be the tail and not the head?' National degradation, exposing a
people to be the prey and the captives of a superior race, is, of
course, a curse, though, like death itself, and even sin, it may, by the
grace of God, turn to good. Still, it is a curse.

"But in governing a fallen world like ours, God now and then ordains
the subjection of one race to another; and he makes bondage one of his
ordinances as truly as war. The extermination of the Canaanites by the
sword, was an ordinance of Heaven. War is a part of God's method in
governing the world; as well as sickness and death.

"I never had any sympathy for that amiable but weak concern for the
character of God which represents him as finding slavery in existence
and merely legislating about it, and doing the best he can with an
inevitable evil. This view belongs to a system which makes God, as it
seems to me, the most unhappy Being, continually striving to destroy
that which sprung up contrary to his plan. To dwell on this, however,
would lead us too far into theological questions.

"I tremble to think of our responsibility as a nation in being put in
charge of a people with whom God has some terrible controversy for their
own sins and those of their ancestors.

"Through our abuse of power, God may say to us, 'I was a little angry,
and ye helped on the affliction.' God's purposes in having the chastised
nation afflicted, will be accomplished, but He will punish every one who
inflicts the chastisement with a selfish, unchristian spirit.

"Our people generally take it for granted that slavery is like one of
the self-limiting diseases of childhood, to be outgrown, and to cease
forever, in process of time, and before many years have passed away.

"The ground of this conclusion is a doctrinal error, namely, that
slave-holding, the relation of master and servant, ownership, property
in man, or by whatever name slavery may be designated, is in itself
wrong, and that as soon as practicable it will be abjured and no man
will stand to another in the relation of master, or owner. But whether
for good or for ill, slavery will be in existence at the last day. We
read that 'every bondman and every freeman' will see the sign of the Son
of Man.

"But should slavery be at any time, or in any country, or part of a
country, utterly extinguished, it will ever remain true that ownership,
or property in man is not in itself wrong, and that it may be benevolent
to all concerned. It is interesting to recollect that in proportion as
human relations are cardinal, or vital, they approach most nearly to
ownership, as in the case of parent and child. The highest relation of
all, that between man and God, finds its most perfect expression in
terms conveying the idea of ownership on the part of God. 'For ye are
not your own;--therefore glorify God in your body and spirit which are
God's.' If God should send one of us to a distant part of the universe,
under the charge of an angel, where superior intelligence and wisdom
were needful for our safety in temptation and amid the bewildering
excitements of new scenes, ownership for the time being, absolute
dominion over us, on the part of the angel, would be in the highest
measure benevolent. In those days when universal love reigns, it is just
as likely as not that there will be more 'ownership' in man than ever
before. By ownership I mean such relationships as we see in the
households of those who are represented in the letter of the Southern
lady to her father. There we see the weak, the unfortunate, the
dependent nature clinging to the stronger, and receiving support and
comfort, and even honor, from those who in rendering kindness and in
receiving service have their whole being refined and cultivated to the
highest degree. There are no rigors in those relationships; everything
which contributes to the welfare and happiness of a serving class is
enjoyed, and all its liabilities to care and sorrow are removed, to as
great a degree as ever happens in this world.

"Allowing that there are always to be inequalities of mind and
condition, and that what we call menial services will need to be
performed; that there must be those who will have a disposition and
taste to work over a fire all day and prepare food; and that men of
business or study will not all be able to groom their own horses and
wash their vehicles; and that possibly the Coleridges and Southeys, and
their friends the Joseph Cottles, may, from being absorbed in their
ideal pursuits, still be ignorant of the way to get off a collar from a
horse's neck, and must call upon a servant-girl to help them, we shall
need those who will be glad to be servants forever, and who will require
for their own security that their employers shall 'own' them, and thus
be made responsible for their support and protection. This may always be
necessary for the highest welfare of all concerned. But the history of
this relationship in connection with our human nature has been such, to
a great extent, that we associate with it only the idea of pillage,
oppression, cruelty. Already there are cases without number in which no
such idea would ever be suggested to a spectator, and they will increase
in proportion as Christianity prevails. There is more real 'freedom' in
thousands of these cases of nominal slavery than in thousands who are
nominally free. How did it happen that the Hebrew servant, who chose to
stay with his master rather than leave his wife and children, was not
made nominally free, and apprenticed or hired? Why was his ear bored,
and perpetual relations secured between him and his master?"

"For the master's security, I presume," said Mr. North.

"I should say," said I, "for the mutual benefit of both. The master then
became responsible for him; his support was a lien on his estate, the
children must always be responsible for his maintenance. The awl made its
record in the master's door-post, as well as in the servant's ear.

"Now, suppose," said I, "that God chooses to supply this nation with
menial servants to the end of time. Suppose that he has designed that
one race, the African, shall be the source from which he will draw this
supply, and that down through long generations he proposes to make this
black race our servants, seeking at the same time, by means of this,
their elevation, by connecting them with us, and keeping up the
relation; and that for the permanence of the relation, and for the
security of all concerned, there should be 'ownership,' such as he
himself ordained when he prescribed the boring of the ear? For my part,
I cannot see in this 'the sum of all villanies,' 'an enormous wrong,' 'a
stupendous injustice.' Yet this would be slavery. I am not arguing for
such a constitution of things. As was before observed, the whole black
race may, in a few years, be swept off from the country; but who will
undertake to say that, as the people of other nations have been employed
by Providence to make our railroads and canals, the black race may not
be employed for a much longer term to be our servants, both North and
South, both East and West? And who will say that the tenure of
'ownership' may not be the wisest and most benevolent arrangement for
all concerned? I repeat it, I am not arguing for this; I am only trying
to show you that the present abuses in slavery are no valid argument
against the relation itself; that this may remain when the abuses cease,
and therefore that at the present time we ought to discriminate in our
arguments against slavery, and direct our assaults, if we continue to be
assailers, against its abuses."

"On one disagreeable subject," I said to him aside, "I will make this
general remark: The Southern slaves are, as a whole, a religious people;
their religion, indeed, is of a type corresponding to their condition.
But still, if the South were one festering pool of iniquity, as many at
the North fancy, would the colored people show such evidences as they do
of moral and spiritual improvement? Look at Hayti. A very large majority
of the children are not born in wedlock. Slavery is a moral restraint
upon the Southern colored people. Evil as slavery is, it is, in many
things, taking the slaves as they are, a comparative blessing."

"But," said Mr. North, "our people generally insist that abuses,
oppression, cruelty, are so inherent in slavery that they cannot be
removed without destroying the relation itself."

"Here," said I, "is the mistake under which Southerners perceive that we
labor, and which prevents us from having the least influence with them.

"This, however, is unquestionably true: as human nature is, we would not
choose to give men unlimited power over their fellow-men who are slaves.
If, in the course of events, it is found by good men that the abuses
flowing from such power are inevitable, that legislative enactments and
public opinion cannot control the relation, their consciences will not
be quiet till it is abolished. I am willing to confide this to men as
good as we, acting as they will on their responsibility to God. It may
be, that the system, stripped of everything which can be taken away,
will be perpetuated, for the best good of the slave and his master.

"But," said I, "while this perpetual relation of the black race to us is
possible, and may be the design of a benevolent God for our happiness
and that of the Africans, and while I love to use it in replying to
those who, with short-sighted and somewhat passionate reasoning, as I
think, contend that slavery must utterly be rooted out of the land, I
confess that my own thoughts turn to the Continent of Africa as the
great object for which an all-wise God has permitted slavery to exist on
our shores.

"I love to look at American slavery in connection with the future
history of that great African continent, containing one hundred and
fifty millions of people. History and discovered relics make the
Ethiopian race to be older even than Egypt. The once powerful nations of
Northern Africa, Numidia, Mauratania, as well as the Egyptian builders
of pyramids, have disappeared, or they exist only in a few Coptic
tribes; and even they are of doubtful origin. But the Ethiopian people,
notwithstanding the slave-trade which has extended its degrading
influence far and wide among them, and though civilization long since
departed from their tribes, have continued to increase till now they are
the most numerous of the human families except the Chinese. The
slave-holding nations which have pillaged them forages, have not been
able to destroy them. Ethiopia may well say, stretching out her hands to
God, 'Thy wrath lieth hard upon me, and thou hast afflicted me with all
thy waves.' It is sublime to think what triumphs of redemption there are
yet to be on that African continent. But how little, apparently, from
all that they ever say, do some of our abolitionist friends seem to
think about Africa as a future jewel in Immanuel's diadem! Utterly
foreign from all their thoughts appears to be the great plan of
Providence which by means even of slavery in this land, has done so much
to extend the work of human salvation among the African race. And there
are some ministers of the Gospel and professed Christians, I regret to
observe, who reply to all that you say about the vast proportion, to
white converts, of converts among the colored people, in a manner which
would awaken great fears in the most charitable breast with regard to
their own personal interest in the salvation by Christ, did we not all
know how far we may be blinded by passion. If you visit in the South,
you will find that African missions take the deepest hold on the hearts
of Southern Christians. The time will come, God hasten it! when they and
we will be united in plans and efforts for the good of the African race.

"But I am not in favor of stealing Africans from their native land to
bring them here, even though it were certain that the majority of them
would be converted to God. We are not to do evil that good may come. If
Providence makes it plain that tribes of them shall be removed to new
districts of our country, suitable measures can and will be devised for
that purpose. That they are better off here, even in slavery, than in
their own land, under present circumstances, I do not see how any one
can question; but that does not justify man-stealing. I remember to have
seen a letter from a Missionary in Africa, in which he says, speaking of
the slaves and of the South, 'Would that all Africa were there; would
that tribes of this unhappy people could be transferred to the
privileges which the slaves at the South enjoy. I would rather take my
chance of a good or bad master, and be a slave at the South, than be as
one of these heathen people. In saying this, I refer both to this world
and the next'. I need not say, he is an enemy to the slave-trade.

"A missionary who had spent much time among the Zulu people, was
appealed to by a zealous anti-slavery person to commiserate our slaves
as being so much worse off than the Zulus. 'Madam,' said he, 'if our
Zulus were in the condition of your slaves, eternity would not be long
enough to give thanks.'

"Mrs. North," said I, "you will not impute it to mere gallantry when I
appeal to you if we may not generally measure the refinement and
elevation of society by the position of woman, and by the sentiments and
manners of the other sex with regard to yours. The deference, the
delicate attentions, the gentleness, the refinement of behavior, in word
and act, which you inspire, are both the means and the evidence of the
highest cultivation. In public and in private life, in assemblies,
public conveyances, at table, around the evening lamp, in all the
intercourse of the family, the susceptibility of impression, the
restraints and the chastised utterances, in word and action, of
husbands, fathers, brothers and friends, which are due to the presence
of woman, are a correct gauge of civilization and refinement."

"All right," said Mr. North, bowing very politely to his wife.

"Nowhere," said I, "do we see this more conspicuously than in Southern
society. Chivalry there seems to blend with the genial influences of
Christianity, and together they give a tone and manner to Southern life
which is peculiar.

"I am often struck with a Southern gentleman's reverence, here at the
North, for the female sex. He is displeased at seeing daughters serving
at table in boarding-houses kept by their worthy parents or widowed
mothers. We, indeed, respect a young woman who serves us in this manner,
(if we reflect at all,) and we resent rudeness or an unfeeling mode of
addressing those who are in such situations. But the Southern gentleman
goes further. He has, perhaps, not been accustomed to see the daughter
of a white family serve. When a respectable young woman, therefore, at a
boarding-house, brings him his tea, he feels impelled to rise and ask
her to be seated, and to wait upon her. I have been an eye-witness to
scenes of this kind, and have been much pleased and not a little amused
at some exhibitions of the feeling. If our sentiments toward the sex,
and their position in social life, mark the degree of civilization and
cultivation in a community, I am compelled to accord a high degree of it
to Southern society, in its best estate.

"This is one effect of slavery. It takes mothers, wives, daughters, away
from occupations which, though honorable, do not always elevate them in
the eyes of the other sex. Perhaps there is no value (and some will say
it) in all this; that every labor and service is right and good for
woman; and that we are to prefer a state of society where woman does
these things with her own hands, instead of having them done for her,
and that this is our only safeguard against luxury and degeneracy. I
will not debate it. I am only showing that, tried by an ordinary
test,--the position of woman,--Southerners are really not barbarians."

"I verily believe," said Mrs. North, "that if you take the Southern
constitution and give it a Northern training, the result is as perfect a
specimen of man or woman as is to be found on earth."

"People at the North," said I, "may, in their zeal against slavery, make
light of the abounding sustenance which the slaves enjoy, and call it a
low and gross thing in comparison with 'freedom;' but, in the view of
all political economists and publicists, how to feed the lower classes
is a great problem. It is solved in slavery.

"There is another topic," I added, "which is interesting and important.

"Here," said I, taking a newspaper-slip from my wallet, "is something
which fairly made me weep. It is a picture of one of our poor, virtuous,
honest New England homes, in which I would rather dwell and suffer, than
be an 'oppressor' with my hundreds of slaves, and wealth counted by
hundreds of thousands. A slave-holder, blessed be God, is not a synonyme
of 'oppressor;' nor are the slaves as a matter of course 'oppressed.'
Our people to a great extent think otherwise, and it is useful to see
how we appear to others when this error leads us into folly. This little
picture in the newspaper-slip gives us a transient look into an abode
whose honest poverty and want are made more painful by evil-doing under
the influence of fanaticism."

I then read to my friends the following from a Southern paper;--I here
omit the names which are given in full:--

"The touching letter which was found on the body of ---- ----, one of
the insurgents, from his sister in ----, ----, has been published. The
following paragraph in that letter is a suggestive one:

"'Would you come home if you had the money to come with? Tell me what
it would cost. Oh! I would be unspeakably happy if it were in my power
to send you money, but we have been very poor this winter. I have not
earned a half-dollar this winter. Mattie has had a very good place,
where she has had seventy-five cents a week; she has not spent any of it
in the family, only a very little for mother. Father has had very small
pay, but I think he has more now; he is a watchman on the ---- ----,
that runs from here to ----.'

"Here, says the Southern editor, is a family, one of thousands of
families in New England in similar circumstances, where one daughter
thinks it a 'very good place' where she can get seventy-five cents a
week; another has not earned a half-dollar during the winter, and all
are 'very poor;' yet the son and brother goes off and deserts a mother
and sisters thus situated,--a mother and sisters who, though poor, have
evidently the most affectionate feelings and tender sensibilities,--for
the purpose of liberating a class of people, not one of whom knows
anything of the want or privation from which his own family is
suffering, or who would not look without contempt upon such remuneration
as seemed the height of good fortune to the destitute sisters and mother
of this abolitionist. When we bear in mind the intelligence and
sensibilities which characterize the wives and daughters of the poorest
classes equally with the richest in New England, it is most amazing that
men should overlook such misery at their own doors--nay, should forsake
their own kith and kin who are suffering under it--the mother who bore
them, the sisters who love them with all a sister's tender and
solicitous love, and run off to emancipate the fattest, sleekest, most
contented and unambitious race under heaven."

"This shows," said I, "how God has set one thing over against another,
in this world. You and Mrs. Worth and myself would rather be the poor
honest 'watchman,' or earn our 'seventy-five cents a week,' with
'Mattie,' or even, with the loving sister who writes this letter, 'not'
have 'earned a half-dollar this winter,' than be the 'sleekest' of
well-fed slaves.

"Yet, when we are summing up the evils of slavery in the form of
indictments, we must honestly confess that it is no small thing to feed
a whole laboring class in one half of a great country with bread enough
and to spare."

Mrs. North asked if I had ever seen a slave-mart, or if I knew much by
observation of the domestic slave-trade.

"Yes," said I, "and it is in connection with this feature of slavery
that we at the North are most easily and most painfully affected. Some
of the most agonizing scenes are enacted at these auctions. They are a
part of slavery; so is the domestic slave-trade, which is the necessary
removal of the slaves from places where they cannot have employment, to
regions where their labor is in demand. In no other way can they be
disposed of, unless they are at once freed; and with many the evils of
the domestic slave-trade are the most powerful argument in favor of
emancipation. That there are grievous trials and sorrows, as well as
wrongs and violence, in the disposal of slaves, is known to all. As to
those who are to remain within the State, we are told to go, if we will,
and inquire into the history of slaves who are to be publicly sold, and
take the number of cases in which a wanton disregard of a slave's
feelings can be detected. An owner is compelled to part with his
property in his slave; or, the slave is taken for debt; estates are to
be divided; an owner dies intestate; titles are to be settled,
mortgages foreclosed, the number of the household is to be reduced; and
for these and numerous other reasons new owners are to be sought for the
slaves. Here is a man and his wife and children to be sold. There is a
general interest felt in arranging the sale so that the family may be in
the same neighborhood. This is for the interest of the owners; it
promotes contentment and cheerfulness in the servants. Cases of hardship
are the exceptions to the general rule in disposing of servants.
Admitting all that can properly be said of such cases, and of the
various other evils connected with it, the question recurs, What is to
be done but increasingly to mitigate the sorrows of the bondmen, to
cultivate a kind and generous disposition toward them, and to prepare
them, as far and as fast as the good of all concerned will warrant, for
any other condition which Providence may in time point out? My belief
is, that if you take four millions of laboring people anywhere under the
sun, and put down in separate columns the good and the evil in their
conditions, the balance of welfare and happiness, from the supply of
their wants, will be found to be greater among our Southern slaves than
elsewhere. But, still, this leaves them slaves. My reply to myself, when
I say this, is, They were so in their own land; or, they were in a
condition of fearful degradation and misery. Their God is their judge;
we have not increased their degradation; woe to us if we add needless
sorrows to their lot. But as for thrusting them up to an ideal state of
elevation, before their time and ours has come, I am not disposed to aid
in it. Moreover, Southern Christians are doing all that we would do if
in their place; I will not affect to be more humane or just than they;
this is our great error.

"Here," said I, "is another view of the subject":

    "In the sale of slaves (in America) nothing but labor is
    transferred. It passes from master to master, as it passes, in
    countries of hired labor, from employer to employer. The mode in
    which the transfer is made differs in the two systems of labor. The
    slave-laborer is never compelled to hunt for work and starve till he
    finds it. Is this an evil to the laborer? Would it be thought an
    evil, by the hired man in Europe, that his employer should be
    obliged, by-law, to find him another employer before dismissing him
    from service?

    "But, it is said, the slave is too much exposed to the master's
    abuse of power; he is liable to wrongs without a remedy; and, so
    far, his condition is below that of the hired laborer.

    "If this be true at all, it is true as regards the able-bodied hired
    man only. But take into the account children and women, those, for
    example, that work naked in coal-mines, or wives whose sufferings
    from the brutal treatment of husbands daily fill the reports of
    police courts; take these into the reckoning, and the difference in
    the consequences of abused power will be very small. The negro-slave
    is as thoroughly protected as any laborer in Europe. He is protected
    from every other man's wrong-doing by the ready interference of his
    master; he is guarded from the master's abuse by the laws of the
    land, and a vigilant, earnest public opinion. Let all cruelty be
    punished; let all abuse of power be restrained; but to abolish the
    relation of master and slave, because there are bad masters and
    ill-treated slaves, would not be a whit wiser than to abolish
    marriage, because there are brutal husbands and murdered wives.

    "Yet, surely, it will be said, it must be admitted, after all, that
    slavery is an evil. Yes, certainly, it is an evil; but in the same
    sense only in which servitude or hired labor is an evil. To gain
    one's bread by the sweat of one's brow, is a curse. But it is a
    curse attended with a blessing. It is an evil that shuts out a
    greater evil. Labor for wages, labor for subsistence, and
    subjection to the authority of employer or master, are the
    conditions on which alone the laboring masses, white or black, can
    live with advantage to themselves and to society."--_De Bow's
    Review_, _Jan_. 1860, pp. 56, 57.

Mr. North asked if I did not think that the colored people should be
assisted in their efforts to get an education.

"There are collegiate institutions," I told him, "for colored people, in
Oxford, Pa., and in Xenia, O. With great sorrow have I observed, that
applications to aid these institutions and to endow others for similar
purposes have been received with coldness and distrust by many who could
have made liberal contributions, for no other reason than the suspicion
that they were designed by Abolitionists to thrust forward the colored
man in an offensive manner. I have known the name of a leading
Abolitionist to be the death of a subscription-paper for such an
institution. This was a bitter prejudice. When philanthropy with regard
to the colored race among us falls into its natural channel, we shall
see the South and the North opening wide the doors of usefulness in
every department for which the colored people shall, any of them,
manifest an aptitude. The idea that this race is to be debarred from any
and every development of which it is capable, is not entertained by any
respectable people at the South. The negro at the South is not doomed,
by the Christian people, to an inexorable fate. They will help him rise
as fast and as far as God, in his providence, shows it to be his will to
employ any or all of that race in other ways than those of servitude.

"'If American slavery,' says one, 'be the horrid system of cruelty,
ignorance, and wickedness represented by some writers of fiction and
paid defamers of our institutions, how happens it that those who have
been reared in the midst of it, when freed and planted in Africa at
once exhibit such capacity for self-government and self-education, and
set such examples of good morals?

"'Have the negroes under British care at Sierra Leone made similar
progress in improvement? Do the free colored subjects of Britain in the
West Indies show the capacity, industry, and intelligence manifested by
the Liberians, whose training was in the school of American servitude?
Nor have the best specimens of this tutelage been sent out. Thousands
and tens of thousands of colored servants in the Southern States are
church-members, instructed in their duties by faithful Christian
teachers, and the children are trained in the fear and love of God.'--I
then observed,

"I have come to this conclusion: if Southern Christians say to us, as
they do, Auction-blocks, separation of families, and similar features of
slavery, in the limited and decreasing extent to which they prevail, are
as odious to us as to you;--we tolerate these things as parts of a
system which we all feel to be an evil, and which we are constantly
striving to ameliorate;--I will leave the whole subject in their hands;
I will trust them in this as I would in anything and everything; I feel
absolved from all responsibility to God or to them with regard to the
matter."

"Pray tell me," said Mrs. North, "what is all this discussion about 'the
territories,' and keeping slavery out of them?"

"I told her that slavery, which fifteen States of the Union maintain as
a part of their domestic life, is, by many of the people in the Free
States, regarded as they regard the plague and death; they prescribe
certain degrees of latitude as barriers to it, as though they enacted
thus: 'North of 36° 30' whooping-cough is prohibited, measles are
forbidden, cholera-morbus is forever interdicted.' They regard
slave-holders as living in a moral pestilence, and seeking to carry it
with them into new districts.

"But, practically," I said, "the thing will now regulate itself, and
both sides are contending very much for an abstract right. It is a war
of feeling, and no one knows where it will end. If the North would say,
'Free labor, which cannot thrive where slavery exists, requires an
amicable division and allotment of the territorial regions; let us agree
where our respective systems shall prevail,'--there would be no
difficulty. But the effort has been to shut out slavery, as men use
sanitary legislation and quarantine to keep out a pestilence. This is
treating fifteen States of the Union as polluted and polluting. Hence
they say, We cannot live together as one people, and we will not."

       *       *       *       *       *

"What do you honestly think," said Mr. North, "is the true cause of our
present national calamities?"

"They are owing," said I, "originally, to the peculiar state of feeling
on the part of the North toward the South. This was not in consequence
of injury experienced; for slavery had not inflicted injury upon the
North; but, right or wrong, Northern disapprobation of slavery, and the
ways of manifesting it, are the fountain-head of our present national
trouble. Let great numbers in one section of such a nation as this
conscientiously disapprove of their brethren in another section, and not
only so, but hold them guilty of an immoral and an inhuman system, and
deal with them in such ways as Conscience, that most merciless of
inquisitors and persecutors, alone employs, and if the indicted section
be not exasperated, it will be because the accusation is true,--that
their system has destroyed their manhood."

"But my hope and belief," said he, "are, that all these changes are to
result in the overthrow of slavery."

"I can only say," said I, in answer to such a remark, "that he who
expects relief from our trouble through the eradication of slavery, and
urges on secession and division as the means to effect it, is in danger
of having his enthusiasm counted as fanaticism, if not madness."

"How I wish," said he, "that we could join and buy up these slaves and
set them free."

"Kind and well meant as this proposal is," said I, "nothing is really
more offensive to the South. It implies that her conscience is debauched
by self-interest, and that by offering to remunerate her if she will
part with what we call her ill-gotten booty we shall assist her to
become virtuous. Such a proposal makes her feel that fanaticism has
assumed the calmness which is its most hopeless symptom."

"Then," said he, "is the North to change all its opinions?"

I said, "If this implies the abandonment of moral or religious principle
in the least degree, Never. Our only hope lies in our possibly being in
the wrong, and in magnanimously changing our views and feelings, and our
behavior. This, upon conviction, it will be most noble to do for its own
sake, leaving the effect of it to Him by whom actions are weighed, and
to those who, we shall have concluded, are naturally as magnanimous and
just as we, and who, if guilty of oppression, were liable to the very
same accusation when we first confederated with them, and when Northern
slave-importers put their hands with Southern slave-holders to the
Declaration of Independence, both averring that all men are created free
and equal.

"We seem now to have concluded that we have put ourselves entirely
right, and that our Southern brethren are entirely wrong."

"I cannot feel," said Mr. North, "that we are to blame for having our
opinions, and for expressing them honestly and fearlessly. What more
have we done?"

I replied, "They say that we have held them up to universal execration;
that we have quoted, with readiness, the testimony of foreign nations
against them,--of nations who know nothing of domestic slavery like
ours, mixed up with the qualifying influences of our own civilization;
that our imaginative literature has made them odious, associating
cruelty and vulgarity with the relation of slave-holding; that we have
labored to cripple their Institution, hoping to destroy it; that we have
striven to save the District of Columbia from their system as from
corruption; that a thousand millions of dollars of their property we
have treated as contraband, and have made it perilous for them to
recover it; that we have lain in wait and molested them in their transit
through our borders, with their servants, to embark for sea. We dispute
their right to go with their servants into territories jointly acquired,
and belonging by constitutional right equally to them as to ourselves.
This, they say, has not been a just and sincere demand for an equitable
division of territory in view of the naturally conflicting interests of
slave labor and free, but rather a vindictive determination to hem in
the slave-holder, to force the scorpion into fires where he shall die of
his own sting, or,--to borrow the metaphor, with the language, of a
present Senator from Massachusetts,--where the 'poisoned rat shall die
in his own hole.'

"Two confederacies or one, our prospect is fearful if we continue to
feel and act toward each other after this temper, and to cherish our
respective grievances."

"There is another side to all this," said Mr. North. "I ascribe the
excitement at the South to the loss on their part of political power, or
to a grasping spirit which breaks compromises, and which requires that
the national legislation be always shaped in its favor."

"But," said I, "if we can trust the convictions of just men, in private
life, at the South,--men removed from all suspicion as to the purity of
their motives,--it is certain that our Northern feelings toward
slave-holders, and the expressions of those feelings in ways which have
been applauded among us for many years, are the real causes of the
irritation and exasperation which have brought us to the present brink.

"Now, as these two sections must continue to exist, side by side, they
will go on to repel each other until either slavery ceases, or a change
of feeling takes place in the non-slaveholding section. Secession and
permanent division will not cure the trouble, but will increase it.
Moreover, the contrariety of feeling between people in the
non-slaveholding States, made intense by the departure of the Southern
section, may inaugurate hostilities among ourselves more fearful than
those which drive away the Southern people.

"Perhaps we are to be two nations. I cannot but regard this as the
greatest calamity which will have happened to the cause of human
improvement. Nor do I see how it will help Northern philanthropy, nor
the negro; but it may be greatly for his injury. The truth is, we must
live together for self-defence against each other, if from no other
consideration. Israel began its downfall in secession, which was
compelled by Rehoboam.

"But," said I, "let us contemplate a different issue. Let us think what
a result it will be if such a government as ours, whose speedy ruin has
been so often predicted and is still confidently looked for, shall pass
through these trials and dangers without bloodshed, and we become again
a united people. Self-government will then have vindicated itself;
constitutional liberty will have triumphed; arms and coercion will lose
their old authority and power; for there will be an example of a
republican people recovering from convulsions which would have
demolished any throne or power which trusted in the sword. The
serf-boats in ports of the Bay of Bengal, which ride the swift, enormous
surges, are not nailed, but their parts are lashed one to another, and
thus the boats yield easily to the force of the water. Our government
has been likened to them; and now, by yielding, one part to another,
where a theoretically stronger government would have used coercion, we
shall, if it please God, pass safely through these fearful hazards,
furnishing a demonstration, which God may have been preparing by us for
the instruction of mankind, that fraternal blood is not the best
nourishment of the tree of liberty, and that 'wisdom,' resulting in the
victories of peace, 'is better than weapons of war.'

"I look, therefore, toward some change in Northern feelings with regard
to the South. A change in this respect will end our troubles. Opinions
may not be wholly reversed; people born and bred under totally different
institutions may not, for they cannot wholly, yield their convictions on
controverted sectional topics, even when they cherish mutual respect and
deference; but, the belief that the North will change its feelings
toward the South and its institutions, under a modification of views
entirely consistent with independence of judgment and self-respect, and
that the South will not be wanting in a corresponding temper, rests on
the same conviction as that God does not intend to destroy us by each
other's hands, nor to make the life of the two sections weary with
perpetual hatred and strife."

       *       *       *       *       *

"Our form of government, Mr. North," said I, "is the very best on earth
if it goes well, and the worst if it goes ill. We have no standing army
to fight for an administration as for a throne or dynasty; so that if a
State secedes, the question is how to coerce that people, if it be best
to attempt it. Citizens do not like to march against their brethren.
Think of our taking up arms against our correspondents; against people
that have gone from our churches and settled in that State; against
cousins, and brothers-in-law, and people who lived or did business under
the same roofs with us."

"It is awkward, indeed," said Mr. North, "especially if they simply
withdraw and hold the fortifications of the general government, in their
own territory, to keep the government from destroying their lives."

"Why, yes," said Mrs. North, "it would be simple in them, after
seceding, to suffer themselves to be bombarded. But have they any right
to secede?"

"As to that," said Mr. North, "my mind has been much exercised of late
with this thought: I have always advocated the right of the negroes to
make insurrection, or to flee from oppression. But now their masters
complain of being oppressed by the North. Why have not the masters the
same right to secede from their government as the negro from his?"

"Well, husband," said his wife, "I think that you are getting on fast."

"Why," said I, "Mr. North, is not slavery 'the sum of all villanies?'
Did the negro ever consent to his form of government?"

"Well," said he, "I never consented to be born; I find myself in
existence; I have no more consented to the government of the United
States than I suppose the negroes, generally, have submitted to their
civil condition. My question is, Who shall decide when the Southern
masters say, We are intolerably oppressed; we are under a yoke; 'break
every yoke!' 'let the oppressed go free!' If I interpose and say, 'You
are not oppressed; you are better off as you now are,' is not this the
reply of the masters when we seek to free their slaves? Do we not say
that the oppressed must be the judges of their necessity? And why may I
coerce the master, if it be wrong for him to coerce the negro?"

"I must let you, work out that question at your leisure, and on your own
principles," said I.--"We were speaking of seizing and holding the forts
and arsenals. The French proverb says, 'It is the first step that
costs.' Seceding involves the necessity of seizing the forts. If they
who do this embarrass other persons in their lawful rights, they must
risk the consequences; but if they secede from the government, the
question is, Do circumstances justify a revolution? for secession is
revolution. Is revolution justifiable in the present case?

"But not to discuss that question," said I, "all that I wished to say
was this, that our government seems admirably suited for a people who
will behave well under it. We can take care of isolated cases of
rebellion. But if any important part of the country rises up and
departs, it is exceedingly difficult to know what to do. Prevention is
excellent; but cure is next to impossible. So long as there is a general
acquiescence in the exercise of executive power against
insurrectionists, one or more, we have a general government; but when
States depart, we are a house divided against itself. We find that we
have been living, as it were, not so much under paternal authority, as
under fraternal rule. If broken irretrievably, the alternative is to be
divided, or for one part of the country to coerce its neighbors and
brethren. This we find to be extremely inconvenient and really
impracticable without civil war; and after the war,--whose horrors, in
our case, can never be pictured,--we would either find ourselves in the
same divided state as before, or if politically united, it will have
been effected at a cost which it is fearful to contemplate.

"So that we are illustrating the question, whether such a government as
ours is really practicable,--whether a people can govern themselves.
Already we hear it said, 'We have no government.' The explanation is, We
are not disposed to destroy each other's lives to preserve the
confederation. We can have a monarchy, with its 'divine right,' and with
its standing army, if we choose; or, if we remain as a republic, we must
be liable to just our present exigency. Our only defence, then,
consists in mutual conciliation and agreement.

"What a land this is," said I, "with its diversified interests and its
unparalleled variety of products,--its agriculture, mechanic arts,
science, and literature. Separation will embarrass every form of
intercourse, and make us hostile."

"Jews and Samaritans," said Mrs. North. "And all for an idea!"

"Yes," said I, "and for an idea which to one whole section, and to a
very large part of the people in the other section, is false.--Four
millions of negroes are destroying us. As a foreign writer said, 'In
trying to give liberty to the negro, we are losing our own.'"

Said Mrs. North, "Can nothing be done to save us?"

"Bishop Butler tells us, Mrs. North," said I, "that a nation may be
insane as well as an individual. But reason seems to be returning in
some quarters. Secession and its consequences are having a wonderful
effect to open the eyes of people. John Brown's foray and its end were a
providential demonstration of certain errors, which we may conclude will
not soon be revived. Secession is now leading the world to look more
narrowly into the subject of negro slavery. Let me read to you these
extracts from a recent number of 'Le Pays,' Paris. The writer is arguing
that Europe must recognize the Southern confederacy:

    'But in awaiting these results which would flow from the cordial
    welcome given by Europe to the new confederation, let true
    philanthropists be assured that they are wonderfully mistaken in
    regard to the real condition of the blacks of the South. We
    willingly admit that their error is pardonable, for they have
    learned the relations of master and slave only from "Uncle Tom's
    Cabin." Shall we look for that condition in the lucubrations of that
    romance, raised to the importance of a philosophic dissertation, but
    leading public opinion astray, provoking revolution, and
    necessitating incendiarism and revolution? A romance is a work of
    fancy, which one cannot refute, and which cannot serve as a basis to
    any argument. In our discussion, we must seek elsewhere for
    authorities and material. Facts are eloquent, and statistics teach
    us that, under the superintendence of those masters,--so cruel and
    so terrible, if we are to believe "Uncle Tom,"--the black population
    of the South increases regularly in a greater proportion than the
    white; while in the Antilles, in Africa, and especially in the so
    very philanthropic States of the North, the black race decreases in
    a deplorable proportion.

    'The condition of those blacks is assuredly better than that of the
    agricultural laborers in many parts of Europe. Their morality is far
    superior to that of the free negroes of the North; the planters
    encourage marriage, and thus endeavor to develop among them a sense
    of the family relation, with a view of attaching them to the
    domestic hearth, consequently to the family of the master. It will
    be then observed that in such a state of things the interests of the
    planter, in default of any other motive, promotes the advancement
    and well-being of the slave. Certainly, we believe it possible still
    to ameliorate their condition. It is with that view, even, that the
    South has labored for so long a time to prepare them for a higher
    civilization.

    'In no part, perhaps, of the continent, regard being had to the
    population, do there exist men more eminent and gifted, with nobler
    or more generous sentiments, than in the Southern States. No country
    possesses lovelier, kinder hearted, and more distinguished women. To
    commence with the immortal Washington, the list of statesmen who
    have taken part in the government of the United States shows that
    all those who have shed a lustre on the country, and won the
    admiration of Europe, owed their being to that much abused South.

    'Is it true that so much distinction, talent, and grandeur of soul
    could have sprung from all the vices, from the cruelty and
    corruption which one would fain attribute now to the Southern
    people? The laws of inflexible logic refute these false imputations.
    And--strange coincidence--while Southern men presided over the
    destinies of the Union, its gigantic prosperity was the astonishment
    of the world. In the hands of Northern men, that edifice, raised
    with so much care and labor by their predecessors, comes crashing
    down, threatening to carry with it in its fall the industrial future
    of every other nation. For long years the constant efforts of the
    North, and a certain foreign country, to spread among the blacks
    incendiary pamphlets and tracts have powerfully contributed to
    suspend every Southern movement towards emancipation. Its people
    have been compelled to close their ears to ideas which threatened
    their very existence.'"

"But," said Mr. North, "here we have been, for thirty years or more,
living on an anti-slavery excitement. Grant that it is all wrong; will
you ask or expect that we shall change all at once? in a week? or in a
month? or in a year? We will not kneel to anybody; if we change, it must
be upon conviction."

"I strike hands with you there," said I, "most heartily. Our Southern
friends must understand this; they must now approach us once more with
reason and persuasion. The people at large are in a frame to be reasoned
with and persuaded; for if we can do anything within the bounds of
reason to retain the South in the Union, it will be done. We will say of
concession as the antithesis of secession, as was said of two other
things: 'Millions for defence, but not a cent for tribute.' I think that
both sections need forgiveness of God, and of each other."

"Well," said Mr. North, "after all we shall get along and get through,
even if there should be a separation."

"Mr. Worth," said I, "when you were studying Cicero, could you
understand--for I could not--how he and other patriots could feel so
strongly about the fortunes of their country as to declare--which they
frequently do--that they would rather die than survive their country's
honor? It has come to me vividly of late. I see it and feel it. The
sunshine will seem to have gone out of our life when we become two
unfriendly nations.

"It is easy," said I, "for it gratifies some of the lower passions, to
ridicule a whole section of the country for their act of secession or a
disposition towards it; to boast that the South cannot do without us; to
prophesy that they will get sick of it, and wish to return; to express
wonder that they should feel so much hurt; to remind them that, if they
will do as we have always counselled them, there would be no trouble;
and there is a temptation to say, as friends in a quarrel will hastily
say, Let them go. But when they are irrecoverably gone, justifiably or
not, I tell you, Mr. North, there will be mourning in our streets. I
know, indeed, that there are some among us to whom it will be a
carnival; but--"

"They will have a long Lent after it," said Mrs. North; "pray excuse
me."

"Ties of kindred," said I, "patriotism, Christian friendships, will not
go down to hopeless graves without leaving behind them sorrows ending
only with life.

"It appears to me," said I, "that our ship is where nothing but an
immediate calm and then a change of the wind, can save us. If we become
two nations, it may be for judgment and destruction; and it may be for
some great, ultimate good. But it will be hard parting. To think of
having no South! and of their having no North! We shall each become
provincial. We are wonderfully fitted to qualify and improve each the
other. How strange it would be to have these two sections love each
other! No one among us under twenty-five years of age, has probably ever
thought of us but as in controversy."

"Speaking of Southern life," said Mrs. North, "I have not seen our
friend Grant since he came back from the South."

"I have seen him," said I, "and have heard his story. He made his home
with an old friend, a clergyman. It was known that he was a stranger,
and at once he was made to feel at home by many of the citizens. The
morning after he arrived, Jack, a servant of a neighboring family, came
into the breakfast-room, with a waiter filled with dishes, which he
deposited on the side-board. 'Master and Missis send their compliments,
and want to know how the family is, and how Mr. Grant is this morning.'
Now they had never seen Mr. Grant; but they knew that he had arrived the
night before. 'Well, Jack,' says Mrs. ----, 'I see you have got some
good things for us.' 'O, not much, Missis; but they thought you and Mr.
Grant would excuse 'em for sending it.' So there were deposited on the
breakfast-table, 'big hominy' in one or two shapes, rare fish,
puff-muffins, and several dishes which called for Jack's
interpretations. 'And Master says, shall he send the carriage round for
you this forenoon? and he will call himself.' The evening talk was
interrupted by a black woman, all smiles, bearing a waiter of ice-cream
and other refreshments, from another house; and so the visit was a
succession of surprises from families who, at the South, count each
other's guests their own. Mr. Grant was a strong anti-secessionist, and
he spent much breath in arguing with the people in private. On his
return to his room, one day, he found a glass dish on the table, filled
with japonicas, camellias, roses, and other early flowers, with the card
of a married lady,--with whom he had had a debate,--inscribed, 'From the
hottest of the Secessionists.' He seems modified in his views a little
about 'the sum of all villanies,' since his return."

"Yes," said Mrs. North, "and the people here explain it by saying, 'O,
he was fêted, and flattered.'

"Yes," she continued, "some of our people will sacrifice their
confidence in man or angel, rather than believe anything good about
slavery."

I said to her, "Add the Bible to those witnesses, Mrs. North."

"Husband," said she, "please reach me that long, thin, brown-covered
book on the what-not." She then read an extract from the sixty-third
page; it was a book by one now deceased, called, "Experience as a
Minister":

"I had not been long a minister, before I found this worship of the
Bible as a fetish hindering me at every step. If I declared the
Constancy of Nature's Laws, and sought therein great argument for the
Constancy of God, all the miracles came and held their mythologic finger
up. Even Slavery was 'of God,' for the divine statutes in the Old
Testament admitted the principle that man might own a man, as well as a
garden or an ox, and provided for the measure. Moses and the Prophets
were on its side; and neither Paul of Tarsus, nor Jesus of Nazareth,
uttered a direct word against it."

       *       *       *       *       *

"But here is the sun!" said I.

"We are all more cheerful," said Mrs. North, "than we were when he left
us; for we have been able to converse on a trying and perplexing
subject with good feelings."

"Now," said I, "here is the Southern lady's letter, which has given
occasion to all our conversation."

"It has also introduced us," said Mr. North, "to that goose, Gustavus,
and to his good aunt."

"What shall I say to the Southern lady," said I, "if I write to her
father?"

"Tell her," said Mrs. North, "that if she comes to the North she must
come directly to our house and make it her home. If you will allow me, I
will put a note into your envelope to that effect. I shall beg her to
bring Kate with her. Wouldn't I love to see Kate!"

"My dear," said Mr. North, "do you know what a time there would be if
the lady should bring Kate with her?"

"The good time coming! I think it would be," said his wife, "to see the
Southern lady and her Kate under our roof."

"Why," Paid he, "we should all have to go to court?"

"Well, that would be interesting," said she; "but for what?"

"Why," said he, "you know that this is free soil: Kate is a slave; she
can have her freedom for nothing if she comes here. Some of our
Massachusetts gentlemen are as chivalrous and attentive to Southern
colored people, as our good friend tells us Southern gentlemen are to a
white woman: a committee would wait on Kate, with an officer of the
peace, and invite her to visit the court-house with them, to be
presented with 'freedom'; and Kate's mistress must go with her, to show
that she is not restraining Kate of her liberty."

"Why," said Mrs. North, "if I could not be allowed, in visiting Sharon
Springs, to take Judith with me to give me my baths, because she is
free, I should call it barbarism. Who was that gentleman that broke his
collar-bone and seat to you, husband, to get him a nurse?"

Mr. North said it was a student in a medical school, from the South.

"Did you find him a nurse?" said she.

"Yes," he replied; "but he groaned and said, 'Mother wanted to send on
my mammy that nursed me, but your laws will not allow her to come. Now,'
said he, 'mammy will not tamper with your servants here, and entice them
away, as free colored men might do to our slaves if they landed at the
South from your vessels. O, mammy,' said he, 'if I had your 'arbs and
your nursing, what a pleasure it would be to be sick.'"

"Poor fellow!" said Mrs. North. "What did you say to him?"

"O," said he, "I told him that we lived under different institutions;
and that when we are among the Romans we must do as the Romans do."

"Well," said Mrs. North, "if all such prohibitions are not downright
impertinence, then I will give up."

"It's the law of the land, here," said her husband.

"Is there no 'Higher Law' in such a case?" said she. "'Higher Law,' I
believe, is sometimes the rule in Massachusetts."

"Some of our most estimable colored fellow-citizens would attend her,"
said I, "and tempt her by their own prosperity and happiness in freedom,
at the North, to cast in her lot with them and abandon her Southern
home, her mistress, and her little charge, Susan; and her own little
Cygnet's grave. They would send her, if she wished, free of charge, to
Canada, and leave her there. She could be perfectly free."

"Now, what is all this for?" said Mrs. North. "Do the people here really
believe that Kate is 'oppressed?' that her mistress is a tyrant? that
Kate is a victim to the 'sum of all villanies?' that she buffers an
'enormous wrong?' that her mistress does her a 'stupendous injustice?'
If they wish for objects of charity, and will go with me, I will engage
to supply them with 'the oppressed' in any quantity, with some of 'the
down-trodden' also."

"But, my dear Mrs. North," said I, "''tis distance lends enchantment to
the view.' Besides, to get a slave away from a Southerner is worth
unspeakably more to the cause of human happiness than to help scores of
Northern people."

"But to be serious," said Mr. North, "we are afraid that slave-holding
may get a foothold in Massachusetts; so we have to challenge every one
who comes here with a slave, to show proof that he or she is not holding
the servant to involuntary servitude among us."

"But," said Mrs. North, "are the people so conscientiously fearful lest
bondage should get established here in Massachusetts? Is that the true
reason for hurrying every colored servant, who travels here with his or
her invalid master or mistress, before a court to know if he or she
would not prefer to quit the family and the South? It seems to me we are
sadly wanting in good manners."

"Now, please do not smile at your good wife for her simplicity, Mr.
North," said I, "for I suppose that you are thinking, What have 'good
manners' to do with the 'cause of freedom'? She is right in her
impressions; a lady's sense of propriety against all the world."

"Do publish the Southern lady's letter by all means," said Mrs. North.

"How surprised she would be," said I, "to see it in print, or to know
that it had wandered here, and was taking part in the discussions about
slavery."

"The letter," said Mrs. North, "would, just now, seem like Noah's poor
little dove, wandering over wrecks and desolations."

"True," said I, "and to finish the illusion, it might come back to her
after many days, and lo! in its mouth an olive-leaf plucked off!"

"Give my love to her," said Mrs. North; "her letter has made me a better
and happier woman. Now I love my whole country. I do justice in my
feelings to hundreds of thousands whom I have hitherto regarded as
perverse. I now see God's wonder-working providence in connection with
the slave. It seems plain to me in what way the Union can be saved, and
that is, by the general prevalence at the North of such views about
slavery as the very best people at the South declare to be just and
right."

"You would be deemed simple for saying that, Mrs. North," said I. "But
you are right."

"Three things," she continued, after a moment's pause, "are more
strongly impressed on my mind; please see if I am right:--That the
relation of master and slave is not in itself sinful; That good people
at the South feel toward injustice and cruelty precisely like us; and,
That Southern Christians can correct all the evils in slavery, or
abolish it, if necessary, better without our aid than with it."

"Mrs. North," said I, "unless we accept those propositions, the North
and South never can live together in peace; and if we separate, the
Northern conscience will be in a worse condition than ever, and we shall
have long wars."

"It is a marvellous thing to me," said she, "as I now view it, that our
good Christian people here are not willing to confide in that which good
Southern Christian people say about slavery. We should trust their
judgments, their moral sentiments, their consciences, on any other
subject. How is it that when men and women, who are the excellent of the
earth, tell us the results of their observation, experience, and
reflections, with regard to slavery, we treat them as we do? When
ill-mannered people, who must be vituperative and saucy to every body
and in every thing, behave thus, it is not surprising; but I cannot
explain why truly good men should not either adopt the deliberate
sentiments of good people at the South, or at least consent to leave the
subject, if beyond their faith or discernment, to the responsibility of
Southern Christians. I condemn myself in saying this. But having myself
been converted, I have hope for everybody."

During this talk, Mr. North was affected somewhat as he said his wife
was when he first read the Southern lady's letter to her. He was a
little incoherent by reason of his emotions; but he made out to say
something about the sweetness and the strength of reconciled affections,
and of the happiness which there would be when it should be proclaimed
that the North and the South are once more friends.

"What is your whole name, Mrs. North?" said I; "for I shall wish to
speak of you to the Southern lady, if I write to her father."

"My Christian name," said she, "is Patience."

"PATIENCE NORTH!" I said to myself, once or twice, as I stood at the
parlor door. I was musing upon the name perhaps ten or fifteen seconds,
and when I looked up, they were each both smiling at me and crying.

We shook hands, and I went my way.


THE END.