The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,269 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,269 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4.

Let us examine the use or the benefit of the resolutions contained in the report.  I call upon gentlemen to give me one single instance in which they can be of service.  They are of no use to Congress.  The powers of that body are already defined, and those powers cannot be amended, confirmed or diminished by ten thousand resolutions.  Is not the first proposition of the report fully contained in the Constitution?  Is not that the guide and rule of this legislature.  A multiplicity of laws is reprobated in any society, and tend but to confound and perplex.  How strange would a law appear which was to confirm a law; and how much more strange must it appear for this body to pass resolutions to confirm the Constitution under which they sit!  This is the case with others of the resolutions.

A gentleman from Maryland (Mr. STONE,) very properly observed, that the Union had received the different States with all their ill habits about them.  This was one of these habits established long before the Constitution, and could not now be remedied.  He begged Congress to reflect on the number on the continent who were opposed to this Constitution, and on the number which yet remained in the Southern States.  The violation of this compact they would seize on with avidity; they would make a handle of it to cover their designs against the government, and many good federalists, who would be injured by the measure, would be induced to join them:  his heart was truly federal, and it always had been so, and he wished those designs frustrated.  He begged Congress to beware before they went too far:  he called on them to attend to the interests of two whole States, as well as to the memorials of a society of Quakers, who came forward to blow the trumpet of sedition, and to destroy that Constitution which they had not in the least contributed by personal service or supply to establish.

He seconded Mr. TUCKER’S motion.

Mr. SMITH (of S.C.) said, the gentlemen from Massachusetts, (Mr. GERRY,) had declared that it was the opinion of the select committee, of which he was a member, that the memorial of the Pennsylvania society, required Congress to violate the Constitution.  It was not less astonishing to see Dr. FRANKLIN taking the lead in a business which looks so much like a persecution of the Southern inhabitants, when he recollected the parable he had written some time ago, with a view of showing the impropriety of one set of men persecuting others for a difference of opinion.  The parable was to this effect:  an old traveller, hungry and weary, applied to the patriarch Abraham for a night’s lodging.  In conversation, Abraham discovered that the stranger differed with him on religious points, and turned him out of doors.  In the night God appeared unto Abraham, and said, where is the stranger?  Abraham answered, I found that he did not worship the true God, and so I turned him out of doors.  The Almighty thus rebuked the patriarch:  Have I borne with him three-score

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.