When, according to arrangements which had usurped
the sacred name of law, he consented to receive and
use them as property, he forfeited all claims to the
esteem and confidence, not only of the helpless sufferers
themselves, but also of every philanthropist.
In becoming a slaveholder, he became the enemy of
mankind. The very act was a declaration of war
upon human nature. What less can be made of the
process of turning men to cattle? It is rank
absurdity—it is the height of madness, to
propose to employ
him to train, for the places
of freemen, those whom he has wantonly robbed of every
right—whom he has stolen from themselves.
Sooner place Burke, who used to murder for the sake
of selling bodies to the dissector, at the head of
a hospital. Why, what have our slaveholders been
about these two hundred years? Have they not
been constantly and earnestly engaged in the work of
education?—training up their human cattle?
And how? Thomas Jefferson shall answer.
“The whole commerce between master and slave,
is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions;
the most unremitting despotism on the one part, and
degrading submission on the other.” Is
this the way to fit the unprepared for the duties and
privileges of American citizens? Will the evils
of the dreadful process be diminished by adding to
its length? What, in 1818, was the unanimous
testimony of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church? Why, after describing a variety of influences
growing out of slavery, most fatal to mental and moral
improvement, the General Assembly assure us, that
such “consequences are not imaginary, but connect
themselves WITH THE VERY EXISTENCE[15] of slavery.
The evils to which the slave is
always exposed,
often take place in fact, and IN THEIR VERY
WORST DEGREE AND FORM; and where all of them do not
take place,” “still the slave is deprived
of his natural right, degraded as a human being, and
exposed to the danger of passing into the hands of
a master who may inflict upon him all the hardships
and injuries which inhumanity and avarice may suggest.”
Is this the condition in which our ecclesiastics would
keep the slave, at least a little longer, to fit him
to be restored to himself?
[Footnote 15: The words here marked as emphatic,
were so distinguished by ourselves.]
“AND THEY
STOPPED THEIR EARS.”
The methods of discipline under which, as slaveholders;
the Southrons now place their human cattle, they with
one consent and in great wrath, forbid us to examine.
The statesman and the priest unite in the assurance,
that these methods are none of our business. Nay,
they give us distinctly to understand, that if we
come among them to take observations, and make inquiries,
and discuss questions, they will dispose of us as
outlaws. Nothing will avail to protect us from
speedy and deadly violence! What inference does
all this warrant? Surely, not that the methods
which they employ are happy and worthy of universal