upon marble. Why have you done this? Is
it not mockery? Or is it to remind us continually
of the wickedness and danger of slavery? I never
pass that statue without new and increased veneration
for the man it represents, and increased repugnance
and sorrow that he did not succeed in driving slavery
entirely from the country. Sir, if I am an abolitionist,
Jefferson made me so; and I only regret that the disciple
should be so far behind the master, both in doctrine
and practice. But, sir, other reasons and other
causes have combined to fix and establish my principles
in this matter, never, I trust, to be shaken.
A free State was the place of my birth; a free Territory
the theatre of my juvenile actions. Ohio is my
country, endeared to me by every fond recollection.
She gave me political existence, and taught me in her
political school; and I should be worse than an unnatural
son did I forget or disobey her precepts. In
her Constitution it is declared, “That all men
are born equally free and independent,” and “that
there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude
in the State, otherwise than for the punishment of
crimes.” Shall I stand up for slavery in
any case, condemned as it is by such high authority
as this? No, never! But this is not all,
Indiana, our younger Western sister, endeared to us
by every social and political tie, a State formed
in the same country as Ohio, from whose territory slavery
was forever excluded by the ordinance of July, 1787—she
too, has declared her abhorrence of slavery in more
strong and empathic terms than we have done.
In her constitution, after prohibiting slavery, or
involuntary servitude, being introduced into the State,
she declares, “But as to the holding any part
of the human creation in slavery, or involuntary servitude,
can originate only in tyranny and usurpation,
no alteration of her constitution should ever take
place, so as to introduce slavery or involuntary servitude
into the State, otherwise than for the punishment
of crimes whereof the party had been duly convicted.”
Illinois and Michigan also formed their constitutions
on the same principles. After such a cloud of
witnesses against slavery, and whose testimony is
so clear and explicit, as a citizen of Ohio, I should
be recreant to every principle of honor and of justice,
to be found the apologist or advocate of slavery in
any State, or in any country whatever. No, I
cannot be so inconsistent as to say I am opposed to
slavery in the abstract, in its separation
from a human being, and still lend my aid to build
it up, and make it perpetual in its operation and
effects upon man in this or any other country.
I also, in early life, saw a slave kneel before his
master, and hold up his hands with as much apparent
submission, humility, and adoration, as a man would
have done before his Maker, while his master with
out-stretched rod stood over him. This, I thought,
is slavery; one man subjected to the will and power