Aunt Phillis's Cabin eBook

Seth and Mary Eastman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Aunt Phillis's Cabin.

Aunt Phillis's Cabin eBook

Seth and Mary Eastman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Aunt Phillis's Cabin.

It is well known and often quoted that the holy apostle did all he could to restore a slave to his master—­one whom he had been the means of making free in a spiritual sense.  Yet he knew that God had made Onesimus a slave, and, when he had fled from his master, Paul persuaded him to return and to do his duty toward him.  Open your Bible, Christian, and carefully read the letter of Paul to Philemon, and contrast its spirit with the incendiary publications of the Abolitionists of the present day.  St. Paul was not a fanatic, and therefore could not be an Abolitionist.  The Christian age advanced and slavery continued, and we approach the time when our fathers fled from persecution to the soil we now call our own, when they fought for the liberty to which they felt they had a right.  Our fathers fought for it, and our mothers did more when they urged forth their husbands and sons, not knowing whether the life-blood that was glowing with religion and patriotism would not soon be dyeing the land that had been their refuge, and where they fondly hoped they should find a happy home.  Oh, glorious parentage!  Children of America, trace no farther back—­say not the crest of nobility once adorned thy father’s breast, the gemmed coronet thy mother’s brow—­stop here! it is enough that they earned for thee a home—­a free, a happy home.  And what did they say to the slavery that existed then and had been entailed upon them by the English government?  Their opinions are preserved among us—­they were dictated by their position and necessities—­and they were wisely formed.  In the North, slavery was useless; nay, more, it was a drawback to the prosperity of that section of the Union—­it was dispensed with.  In other sections, gradually, our people have seen their condition would be more prosperous without slaves—­they have emancipated them.  In the South, they are necessary:  though an evil, it is one that cannot be dispensed with; and here they have been retained, and will be retained, unless God should manifest his will (which never yet has been done) to the contrary.  Knowing that the people of the South still have the views of their revolutionary forefathers, we see plainly that many of the North have rejected the opinions of theirs.  Slaves were at the North and South considered and recognized as property, (as they are in Scripture.) The whole nation sanctioned slavery by adopting the Constitution which provides for them, and for their restoration (when fugitive) to their owners.  Our country was then like one family—­their souls had been tried and made pure by a united struggle—­they loved as brothers who had suffered together.  Would it were so at the present day!

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Aunt Phillis's Cabin from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.