will. If a man’s will be resisted by
one far below him, the provocation is vastly
greater, than when it is resisted by an acknowledged
superior. In the former case, it inflames strong
passions, which in the latter lie dormant. The
rage of proud Haman knew no bounds against the poor
Jew who would not do as he wished, and so he built
a gallows for him. If the person opposing the
will of another, be so far below him as to be on a
level with chattels, and be actually held and used
as an article of property; pride, scorn, lust of power,
rage and revenge explode together upon the hapless
victim. The idea of property having a
will, and that too in opposition to the will of its
owner, and counteracting it, is a stimulant
of terrible power to the most relentless human passions
and from the nature of slavery, and the constitution
of the human mind, this fierce stimulant must, with
various degrees of strength, act upon slaveholders
almost without ceasing. The slave, however abject
and crushed, is an intelligent being: he has
a will, and that will cannot be annihilated,
it will show itself; if for a moment it is
smothered, like pent up fires when vent is found,
it flames the fiercer. Make intelligence property,
and its manager will have his match; he is met at every
turn by an opposing will, not in the form of
down-right rebellion and defiance, but yet, visibly,
an ever-opposing will. He sees it in the
dissatisfied look, and reluctant air and unwilling
movement; the constrained strokes of labor, the drawling
tones, the slow hearing, the feigned stupidity, the
sham pains and sickness, the short memory; and he
feels it every hour, in innumerable forms, frustrating
his designs by a ceaseless though perhaps invisible
countermining. This unceasing opposition to the
will of its ‘owner,’ on the part of his
rational ‘property,’ is to the slaveholder
as the hot iron to the nerve. He raves under
it, and storms, and gnashes, and smites; but the more
he smites, the hotter it gets, and the more it burns
him. Further, this opposition of the slave’s
will to his owner’s, not only excites him to
severity, that he may gratify his rage, but makes it
necessary for him to use violence in breaking down
this resistance—thus subjecting the slave
to additional tortures. There is another inducement
to cruel inflictions upon the slave, and a necessity
for it, which does not exist in the case of brutes.
Offenders must be made an example to others, to strike
them with terror. If a slave runs away and is
caught, his master flogs him with terrible severity,
not merely to gratify his resentment, and to keep
him from running away again, but as a warning to others.
So in every case of disobedience, neglect, stubbornness,
unfaithfulness, indolence, insolence, theft, feigned
sickness, when his directions are forgotten, or slighted,
or supposed to be, or his wishes crossed, or his property
injured, or left exposed, or his work ill-executed,
the master is tempted to inflict cruelties, not merely
to wreak his own vengeance upon him, and to make the
slave more circumspect in future, but to sustain his
authority over the other slaves, to restrain them
from like practices, and to preserve his own property.