violence, yet
even he was accused of “endeavoring
to excite the slaves to insurrection and of teaching
the negroes to cut their master’s throats.”
And these two men who had their feet shod with the
preparation of the Gospel of Peace, were actually
compelled to draw up a formal declaration that
they
were not trying to raise a rebellion in Barbadoes.
It is also worthy of remark that these Reformers did
not at this time see the necessity of emancipation
under seven years, and their principal efforts were
exerted to persuade the planters of the necessity
of instructing their slaves; but the slaveholder saw
then, just what the slaveholder sees now, that an
enlightened population
never can be a
slave population, and therefore they passed
a law, that negroes should not even attend the meetings
of Friends. Abolitionists know that the life
of Clarkson was sought by slavetraders; and that even
Wilberforce was denounced on the floor of Parliament
as a fanatic and a hypocrite by the present King of
England, the very man who, in 1834, set his seal to
that instrument which burst the fetters of eight hundred
thousand slaves in his West India colonies. They
know that the first Quaker who bore a
faithful
testimony against the sin of slavery was cut off from
religious fellowship with that society. That Quaker
was a
woman. On her deathbed she sent
for the committee who dealt with her—she
told them, the near approach of death had not altered
her sentiments on the subject of slavery and waving
her hand towards a very fertile and beautiful portion
of country which lay stretched before her window, she
said with great solemnity, “Friends, the time
will come when there will not be friends enough in
all this district to hold one meeting for worship,
and this garden will be turned into a wilderness.”
The aged friend, who with tears in his eyes, related
this interesting circumstance to me, remarked, that
at that time there were seven meetings of friends
in that part of Virginia, but that when he was there
ten years ago, not a single meeting was held, and the
country was literally a desolation. Soon after
her decease, John Woolman began his labors in our
society, and instead of disowning a member for testifying
against slavery, they have for fifty-two years
positively forbidden their members to hold slaves.
Abolitionists understand the slaveholding spirit too
well to be surprised at any thing that has yet happened
at the South or the North; they know that the greater
the sin is, which is exposed, the more violent will
be the efforts to blacken the character and impugn
the motives of those who are engaged in bringing to
light the hidden things of darkness. They understand
the work of Reform too well to be driven back by the
furious waves of opposition, which are only foaming
out their own shame. They have stood “the
world’s dread laugh,” when only twelve
men formed the first Anti-Slavery Society in Boston