those judgments, which it requires no prophet’s
eye to see, must follow if repentance is not speedily
sought? Is there no Esther among you who will
plead for the poor devoted slave? Read the history
of this Persian queen, it is full of instruction;
she at first refused to plead for the Jews; but, hear
the words of Mordecai, “Think not within thyself,
that
thou shalt escape in the king’s
house more than all the Jews, for
if thou altogether
holdest thy peace at this time, then shall there
enlargement and deliverance arise to the Jews from
another place: but
thou and thy father’s
house shall be destroyed.” Listen, too,
to her magnanimous reply to this powerful appeal;
“
I will go in unto the king, which is
not according to law, and if I perish, I perish.”
Yes! if there were but
one Esther at the South,
she
might save her country from ruin; but let
the Christian women there arise, as the Christian women
of Great Britain did, in the majesty of moral power,
and that salvation is certain. Let them embody
themselves in societies, and send petitions up to
their different legislatures, entreating their husbands,
fathers, brothers and sons, to abolish the institution
of slavery; no longer to subject
woman to the
scourge and the chain, to mental darkness and moral
degradation; no longer to tear husbands from their
wives, and children from their parents; no longer
to make men, women, and children, work
without
wages; no longer to make their lives bitter in
hard bondage; no longer to reduce
American citizens
to the abject condition of
slaves, of “chattels
personal;” no longer to barter the
image of
God in human shambles for corruptible things such
as silver and gold.
The women of the South can overthrow this horrible
system of oppression and cruelty, licentiousness and
wrong. Such appeals to your legislatures would
be irresistible, for there is something in the heart
of man which will bend under moral suasion.
There is a swift witness for truth in his bosom, which
will respond to truth when it is uttered with
calmness and dignity. If you could obtain but
six signatures to such a petition in only one state,
I would say, send up that petition, and be not in
the least discouraged by the scoffs and jeers of the
heartless, or the resolution of the house to lay it
on the table. It will be a great thing if the
subject can be introduced into your legislatures in
any way, even by women, and they will
be the most likely to introduce it there in the best
possible manner, as a matter of morals and
religion, not of expediency or politics.
You may petition, too, the different ecclesiastical
bodies of the slave states. Slavery must be attacked
with the whole power of truth and the sword of the
spirit. You must take it up on Christian
ground, and fight against it with Christian weapons,
whilst your feet are shod with the preparation of
the gospel of peace. And you are now loudly
called upon by the cries of the widow and the orphan,
to arise and gird yourselves for this great moral
conflict “with the whole armour of righteousness
on the right hand and on the left.”