as 135 of them really are; but the other 88, equally
representing the persons of their constituents,
by whom they are elected, also represent, under the
name of other persons, upwards of two and a
half millions of slaves, held as the property
of less than half a million of the white constituents,
and valued at twelve hundred millions of dollars.
Each of these 88 members represents in fact the whole
of that mass of associated wealth, and the persons
and exclusive interests of its owners; all thus knit
together, like the members of a moneyed corporation,
with a capital not of thirty-five or forty or fifty,
but of twelve hundred millions of dollars, exhibiting
the most extraordinary exemplification of the anti-republican
tendencies of associated wealth that the world ever
saw,’—’Here is one class of
men, consisting of not more than one fortieth part
of the whole people, not more than one-thirtieth part
of the free population, exclusively devoted to their
personal interests identified with their own as slaveholders
of the same associated wealth, and wielding by their
votes, upon every question of government or of public
policy, two-fifths of the whole power of the House.
In the Senate of the Union, the proportion of the
slaveholding power is yet greater. By the influence
of slavery, in the States where the institution is
tolerated, over their elections, no other than a slaveholder
can rise to the distinction of obtaining a seat in
the Senate; and thus, of the 52 members of the federal
Senate, 26 are owners of slaves, and as effectively
representatives of that interest as the 88 members
elected by them to the House.’—’By
this process it is that all political power in the
States is absorbed and engrossed by the owners of
slaves, and the overruling policy of the States
is shaped to strengthen and consolidate their domination.
The legislative, executive, and judicial authorities
are all in their hands—the preservation,
propagation, and perpetuation of the black code of
slavery—every law of the legislature becomes
a link in the chain of the slave; every executive
act a rivet to his hapless fate; every judicial decision
a perversion of the human intellect to the justification
of wrong.—Its reciprocal operation
upon the government of the nation is, to establish
an artificial majority in the slave representation
over that of the free people, in the American Congress,
and thereby to make the PRESERVATION, PROPAGATION,
AND PERPETUATION OF SLAVERY THE VITAL AND ANIMATING
SPIRIT OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT.—The result
is seen in the fact that, at this day, the President
of the United States, the President of the Senate,
the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and five
out of nine of the Judges of the Supreme Judicial
Courts of the United States, are not only citizens
of slaveholding States, but individual slaveholders
themselves. So are, and constantly have been,
with scarcely an exception, all the members of both