“
one shirt and
one pair of pantaloons!"[D]_two
hours and a half_ only, for rest and refreshment in
the twenty-four![E]—their dwellings,
hovels,
unfit for human residence, with but one apartment,
where both sexes and all ages herd promiscuously at
night, like the beasts of the field.[F] Add to this,
the ignorance, and degradation;[G] the daily sunderings
of kindred, the revelries of lust, the lacerations
and baptisms of blood, sanctioned by law, and patronized
by public sentiment. What was the bondage of Egypt
when compared with this? And yet for her oppression
of the poor, God smote her with plagues, and trampled
her as the mire, till she passed away in his wrath,
and the place that knew her in her pride, knew her
no more. Ah! “I have seen the afflictions
of my people, and I have heard their groanings, and
am come down to deliver them.” HE DID COME,
and Egypt sank a ruinous heap, and her blood closed
over her. If such was God’s retribution
for the oppression of heathen Egypt, of how much sorer
punishment shall a Christian people be thought worthy,
who cloak with religion a system, in comparison with
which the bondage of Egypt dwindles to nothing?
Let those believe who can, that God commissioned his
people to rob others of
all their rights, while
he denounced against them wrath to the uttermost,
if they practised the
far lighter oppression
of Egypt—which robbed its victims of only
the least and cheapest of their rights, and left the
females unplundered even of these. What!
Is God divided against himself? When He had just
turned Egypt into a funeral pile; while his curse
yet blazed upon her unburied dead, and his bolts still
hissed amidst her slaughter, and the smoke of her
torment went upwards because she had “ROBBED
THE POOR,” did He license the VICTIMS of robbery
to rob the poor of ALL? As
Lawgiver, did
he
create a system tenfold more grinding than
that for which he had just hurled Pharaoh headlong,
and overwhelmed his princes and his hosts, till “hell
was moved to meet them at their coming?”
[Footnote C: See law of North Carolina, Haywood’s
Manual 524-5. To show that slaveholders are not
better than their laws. We give a few testimonies.
Rev. Thomas Clay, of Georgia, (a slaveholder,) in an
address before the Georgia presbytery, in 1834, speaking
of the slave’s allowance of food, says:—“The
quantity allowed by custom is a peck of corn a
week.” The Maryland Journal and Baltimore
Advertiser of May 30, 1788, says, “a single
peck of corn a week, or the like measure of rice,
is the ordinary quantity of provision for a hard-working
slave; to which a small quantity of meat is occasionally,
though rarely, added.”
The Gradual Emancipation Society of North Carolina,
in their Report for 1836, signed Moses Swaim, President,
and William Swaim, Secretary, says, in describing
the condition of slaves in the Eastern part of that
State, “The master puts the unfortunate wretches
upon short allowances, scarcely sufficient for their
sustenance, so that a great part of them go
half naked and half starved much of the
time.” See Minutes of the American Convention,
convened in Baltimore, Oct. 25, 1826.