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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Slavery: What it was, what it has done, what it intends to do, by Cydnor B. Tompkins
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Slavery: What it was, what it has done,
+what it intends to do, by Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Slavery: What it was, what it has done, what it intends to do
+ Speech of Hon. Cydnor B. Tompkins, of Ohio
+
+Author: Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
+
+Release Date: January 10, 2009 [EBook #27767]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SLAVERY: WHAT IT WAS; HAS DONE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h1>SLAVERY: WHAT IT WAS, WHAT IT HAS DONE, WHAT<br />
+IT INTENDS TO DO.</h1>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><span class="sp1">SPEECH</span><br />
+<span class="sp2">OF</span><br />
+HON. CYDNOR B. TOMPKINS, OF OHIO.</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><big>Delivered in the House of Representatives, April 24, 1860.</big></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="bk1">Mr. TOMPKINS said:</p>
+
+<p>Mr. <span class="smcap">Chairman</span>: The charge is frequently made,
+that nothing but slavery occupies the attention
+of the National Legislature. That this charge is
+true to a great extent, that this subject is constantly
+kept before the country, and that there
+is constant excitement about it, is not the fault
+of the Republican party. In the first hour of the
+present session of Congress, it was thrust upon
+the House by a member of the slavery party; for
+two months a discussion was continued upon
+that subject, and almost exclusively by that
+party&mdash;a discussion unparalleled in point of violence
+and virulence in the history of Parliamentary
+debate. Charges the most aggravated were
+unscrupulously and shamelessly made against
+the best and purest men of the country, and honorable
+members on this floor. Calumny and
+vituperation held high carnival in the legislative
+halls of this great nation. The columns of the
+<i>Daily Globe</i> teemed with fierce and fiery denunciations
+of all who would not bow to the behests
+of pro-slavery power. Depraved, corrupt, and
+polluted presses exerted themselves to the utmost
+in the work of slander and detraction; hireling
+scribblers for worse than hireling presses glutted
+themselves and <i>made their meals on good men's
+names</i>. These spacious galleries were filled with
+disloyal men, ready to applaud to the echo every
+threat uttered against the Government, and every
+disloyal sentiment heard from this floor.</p>
+
+<p>If the Republicans here shall feel it to be their
+duty to discuss this subject now; to lay bare its
+weakness and its wickedness; to expose the
+madness and the folly of those who sustain, support,
+and cherish it; if the great interests of the
+country have to be neglected for a time; if ordinary
+legislation must be put aside, no complaint
+can be made against the Republican party. That
+party, its principles, its men, and its measures,
+have been misrepresented, and most unjustly assailed.
+It is our privilege, it is our duty, to repel
+those assaults, that the world may know that
+when the advanced guard of freedom is attacked,
+"our feet shall be always in the arena, and our
+shields shall hang always in the lists."</p>
+
+<p>I intend to review this question for the time
+allowed me. I hope to do so with fairness and
+candor, and not with the passion and excitement
+that have characterized many speeches made
+this session by pro-slavery members. I shall
+endeavor to show that the fathers of this Republic,
+both of the North and South, were more
+thoroughly anti-slavery than any political party
+now in the country; and that, for more than forty
+years after its organization, a large majority of
+our prominent men were strongly opposed to the
+extension of that "<i>patriarchal</i> institution."</p>
+
+<p>The debates in the Federal Convention show
+that the Constitution was framed, adopted, and
+ratified, by anti-slavery men; that they regarded
+it as an evil, yet were ashamed to acknowledge
+its existence in words&mdash;thus virtually refusing to
+recognise property in many Resolutions, addresses,
+and speeches, now to be found, establish
+this very important fact, as I will show by
+quotations from them.</p>
+
+<p>At a general meeting in Prince George county,
+Virginia, it was</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the African slave trade is injurious
+to this colony, obstructs the population
+of it by free men, and prevents manufacturers
+from Europe from settling among us."</p>
+
+<p>At a meeting in Culpeper county, Virginia, it
+was</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the importation of slaves obstructs
+the population with free white men and
+useful manufacturers."</p>
+
+<p>At a meeting in Nansemond county, Virginia,
+it was</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the African slave trade is injurious
+to this colony, obstructs the population
+by free men, and prevents manufacturers from
+settling amongst us."</p>
+
+<p>Resolutions to the same effect were adopted
+in Surrey county, Caroline county; and at a
+meeting in Fairfax county, over which George
+Washington presided, resolutions of like import
+were adopted.</p>
+
+<p>At a very full meeting of delegates from the
+different counties of the Colony and Dominion
+of Virginia, at Williamsburg, on the 1st day of
+August, 1774, it was</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, that the abolition of domestic slavery
+is the greatest object of desire in these
+colonies, where it was improperly introduced
+in their infant state."</p>
+
+<p>This is the language of the good and wise men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+of the Old Dominion in 1774; "the <i>abolition</i> of
+domestic slavery was the greatest object of their
+desire." Not merely to limit it, to prevent its
+extension, but wholly to overthrow it. What
+would be said if a body of men, equally wise,
+good, and patriotic, should <i>now</i> meet in the Old
+Dominion, and attempt to pass such resolutions?
+They would be scourged, driven by violence from
+the State, and might be considered fortunate
+should they escape with their lives. At a meeting
+in New Bern, North Carolina, August, 1774,
+numerously attended by the most distinguished
+men of that region, it was resolved that they
+would not import any slave or slaves, or purchase
+any slave or slaves imported or brought
+into that province by others from any part of
+the world. Such was the sentiment of North
+Carolina in 1774, as to the evil and great wrong
+of slavery.</p>
+
+<p>The Continental Congress, in October, 1774,
+resolved that they would neither import, nor
+purchase any slave imported, after December of
+the same year; they agreed and resolved that
+they would have no trade, commerce, dealings,
+or intercourse whatsoever, with any colony or
+province in North America which should not
+accede to, or should violate, this resolve, but
+would hold them as unworthy the rights of freemen
+and inimical to the liberties of this country.</p>
+
+<p>But what is now the attitude of slaveholders?
+They will hold no intercourse, they will have no
+dealings, with any person or State that does not
+approve of slavery, and yield to its intolerant
+and despotic demands; if any man, not thus approving
+and yielding, chances to travel through
+the slave States, and there to express his sentiments,
+he is subjected to the degradation and
+cruelty of the lash, and is driven from the State.</p>
+
+<p>October 21, 1774, the Continental Congress, in
+an address to the people of Great Britain, said:</p>
+
+<p>"When a nation, led to greatness by the hand
+of liberty, and possessed of all the glory that
+heroism, munificence, and humanity, can bestow,
+descends to the ungrateful task of forging
+chains for her friends and children, and, instead
+of giving support to freedom, turns advocate
+for slavery and oppression, there is reason to
+suspect that she has either ceased to be virtuous,
+or is extremely negligent in the appointment
+of her rulers."</p>
+
+<p>Is not this the situation and condition of this
+country now? Is not a great party now engaged
+in the ungrateful task of forging chains for a large
+portion of the people of this country? Instead
+of supporting freedom, does it not advocate slavery
+and oppression? Have we not reason to
+suspect that too many of our countrymen have
+ceased to be virtuous?</p>
+
+<p>By the Darien committee, Georgia, January,
+1775, it was declared:</p>
+
+<p>"To show the world that we are not influenced
+by any contracted and interested motives, but
+a general philanthropy for all mankind, of whatever
+language or complexion, we hereby declare
+our disapprobation and abhorrence of the unnatural
+practice of slavery in America&mdash;a practice
+founded in injustice and cruelty, and highly
+dangerous to our liberties."</p>
+
+<p>I cannot quote at greater length from the proceedings
+of this committee. Their philanthropy
+was without regard to complexion; they abhorred
+slavery, as based on injustice and cruelty; and
+more, as dangerous to our liberties. If it were
+founded in injustice and cruelty in 1775, it is the
+same in 1860. It was dangerous to liberty <i>then</i>;
+no man <i>now</i> apprehends any danger to liberty,
+unless from the same source. It is daily threatened
+by men who are interested in slavery. Liberty
+cannot be very secure where four million
+human beings are held in hopeless bondage&mdash;where
+human blood, bone, muscle, and, I might
+almost say, immortal souls, are articles of merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>The historical quotations I have made bring me
+to the Revolution. I will cite the opinions of
+some of the great actors in that great drama.
+George Washington said, in his will:</p>
+
+<p>"Upon the decease of my wife, it is my desire
+that the slaves whom I hold <i>in my own right</i>
+should receive their freedom."</p>
+
+<p>Again, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I never mean, unless some particular circumstance
+should compel me, to possess another
+slave by purchase, it being my first wish to see
+some plan adopted by which slavery in this
+country may be abolished by law."</p>
+
+<p>La Fayette, while in the prison of Magdeburg,
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"I know not what disposition has been made
+of my plantation at Cayenne; but I hope Madame
+de La Fayette will take care that the
+negroes who cultivate it shall preserve their
+liberties."</p>
+
+<p>Washington wrote to Robert Morris:</p>
+
+<p>"It will not be conceived, from these observations,
+that it is my wish to hold these unhappy
+people (negroes) in slavery. I can only say
+that there is not a man living who wishes more
+sincerely than I do to see a plan adopted for
+the abolition of it."</p>
+
+<p>Again, he writes to La Fayette:</p>
+
+<p>"The benevolence of your heart, my dear Marquis,
+is so conspicuous on all occasions, that I
+never wonder at any fresh proof of it; but your
+late purchase of an estate in the colony of Cayenne,
+with a view of emancipating the slaves
+on it, is a generous and noble proof of your
+humanity. Would to God a like spirit might
+diffuse itself generally into the people of this
+country!"</p>
+
+<p>Washington hoped for some plan by which
+slavery might be legally abolished. Washington
+lauded the humanity of La Fayette in purchasing
+an estate for the purpose of emancipating the
+negroes. I will leave it to gentlemen on the other
+side to draw the comparison between the chivalry
+of the South <i>then</i> and <i>now</i>; between the
+licentious assumption of thought and utterance
+permitted <i>then</i>, and the course of conviction and
+conversion esteemed necessary and equitable
+<i>now</i>, towards hapless offenders in the footsteps
+of predecessors so illustrious.</p>
+
+<p>Patrick Henry said:</p>
+
+<p>"Slavery is detested; we feel its fatal effects;
+we deplore it with all the pity of humanity. I
+repeat again, that it would rejoice my very soul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+that every one of my fellow beings were emancipated.
+We ought to lament and deplore the
+necessity of holding our fellow men in bondage."</p>
+
+<p>Charles Pinckney, Governor of South Carolina,
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"I must say that I lament the decision of your
+Legislature upon the question of the importation
+of slaves after March, 1793. I was in
+hopes that motives of policy, as well as other
+good reasons, supported by the direful effects
+of slavery which at this moment are presented,
+would have operated to produce a total prohibition
+of the importation of slaves, whenever
+the question came to be agitated in any State
+that might be interested in the measure."</p>
+
+<p>Such were the sentiments of the most enlightened,
+the most virtuous men of our country in its
+heroic age. George Mason, of Virginia, stigmatized
+the slave trade as an "infernal traffic!"
+He said that "slavery discouraged manufactures;
+that it produced the most pernicious effect on
+manners." Without intending to be personal
+or offensive, I think I can pause here and properly
+remark, that if the effects of slavery are
+changed in every other respect, the effect on
+manners is the same now that it was in the last
+century. The epithets used by men on this
+floor, their arrogant bearing towards their peers,
+is abundant proof that there is no change in that
+respect. We have frequently heard members,
+this session, speak of a great party in this country
+as the Black Republican party. Legislative
+bodies in the slave States have so far forgotten
+what should be due to the standing and dignity of
+a Legislature, as to call a certain party, in their official
+proceedings, the "Black Republican party."
+Why are men betrayed into such violations of
+the proprieties of life? There can be no other
+reason than the one given by George Mason
+eighty years ago: slavery produces a most pernicious
+effect upon manners. I know it is
+claimed, by men in the slave States, that slavery
+is necessary to the highest development of human
+society; but I think the experience of members
+of Congress is, that slavery does not always
+produce this beneficial result.</p>
+
+<p>I revert to my Southern authorities upon the
+peculiar institution. Mr. Iredell, of North Carolina,
+thus expresses himself:</p>
+
+<p>"When the entire abolition of slavery takes
+place, it will be an event which must be most
+pleasing to every generous mind, and to every
+friend of human nature."</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Jefferson writes:</p>
+
+<p>"The spirit of the master is abating: that of
+the slave rising from the dust; his condition
+mollifying; the way, I hope, preparing, under
+the auspices of Heaven, for a total emancipation."</p>
+
+<p>He continues, in his plan for a Constitution for
+Virginia:</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is more certainly written in the book
+of fate, than that these people are to be free."</p>
+
+<p>In a letter to Dr. Gordon, on Lord Cornwallis's
+invasion of Virginia, Mr. Jefferson says:</p>
+
+<p>"He carried off also about thirty slaves, (Jefferson's.)
+Had this been to give them freedom,
+he would have done right; but it was to consign
+them to inevitable death from small-pox
+and putrid fever then raging in his camp."</p>
+
+<p>I conclude here my citations from the united
+voices of some of the best men of the country,
+before and after the Revolution, against slavery
+as an evil, and a great national sin, not that I
+have exhausted their utterances, but that my
+time admits of no more.</p>
+
+<p>The Republican party proclaims no doctrine
+so <i>ultra</i> as theirs, uses no language so strong as
+that of those Southern statesmen from whom it
+gains so much information, and whose views, to
+a great extent, it conscientiously accepts. We
+desire only to confine it within its present limits;
+we ask that it shall not pollute territory now
+free; we know the utter folly of appealing to
+the morality or humanity of a pro-slavery party,
+where the rights of a black man are involved;
+but when you insist on taking slaves into a free
+Territory, and smiting the land with this blighting,
+withering curse, we plant ourselves on our
+constitutional rights, and say, <i>thus far shall you
+go, and no further</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The learned gentleman from Alabama, [Mr.
+<span class="smcap">Curry</span>,] in alluding to the opinion of the fathers
+of the Republic, said:</p>
+
+<p>"These, however, were but mere speculations."</p>
+
+<p>Was it a mere speculation when Madison said,
+"we have seen a mere distinction of color made
+the ground of the most oppressive dominion of
+man over man?" Was it as a mere speculation
+that Jefferson wrote, that Cornwallis would have
+been right, had he carried away his (Jefferson's)
+slaves to free them? Was it a mere speculation,
+a wild fancy, that the framers of the Constitution
+would not admit that there could be such
+a thing as property in man? A mere speculation,
+was it, of Patrick Henry, when he said "that
+slavery is detested; we feel its fatal effects; we
+deplore it?" when he declared it would "rejoice
+his very soul, were all his fellow beings
+emancipated?" Was it a mere speculation
+when Jefferson wrote, and his colleagues signed,
+"we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
+men are created equal?" No one then doubted
+the truth of this declaration. More than a generation
+passed away before any man dared raise
+his voice against it. No, sir; this was no mere
+speculation, but the acknowledgment of a great
+"humanitarian fact." True then, it is true now;
+and must remain indisputable and eternal&mdash;a
+pillar of fire by night, a cloud by day, to guide
+and guard nations yet unborn in the path of
+honor, of safety, of moral and political grandeur.</p>
+
+<p>But the learned gentleman does not pause
+upon these "speculations." He proceeds to tell
+us that circumstances are changed; that there
+was then little more than half a million slaves,
+and scarce a pound of cotton exported. Does
+the gentleman believe, or does he but attempt
+to lead <i>us</i> to believe, that the ethics of those
+men "without fear and without reproach" had
+no sounder foundation than this: that while
+slaves were few and cotton scarce, slavery might
+be a wrong, but with four million slaves and
+four million two hundred thousand bales of cotton,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+it becomes just, humane, moral?&mdash;that
+while negroes and cotton fill one side of the
+scales, Christian truth must kick the beam on
+the other, and slavery thus becomes a great
+"humanitarian fact?"</p>
+
+<p>The right and wrong of the thing, about which
+there has been so much discussion, is now easily
+solved. The gentleman has found an infallible
+rule; it is simply to make a chemical analysis
+of your soil; if it will produce cotton, you can
+purchase slaves and work them without violating
+the laws of God or man.</p>
+
+<p>We may also infer, or be induced to believe,
+from the honorable gentleman's speech, that if
+nothing is raised but indigo and rice, the propriety
+and morality of holding men in bondage is
+doubtful. Not such, sir, were the "<i>speculations</i>"
+of the fathers of the Republic.</p>
+
+<p>Lucid as is the gentleman's speech in general,
+there is a want of clearness in the last point I
+have cited; but this is owing entirely to the
+materials used in the demonstration&mdash;rice and
+indigo will not do; nothing will serve but cotton;
+cotton ever, cotton only.</p>
+
+<p>If slave labor, then, is profitable, slaveholding
+is equitable. Thus it is decided, that whatever
+is profitable is also equitable: justice and injustice
+are mere matters of profit and loss; the
+morality or immorality of slavery a mere question
+of soil and climate.</p>
+
+<p>The great authorities cited as to the evil effects
+of slavery on the white race, should satisfy the
+most incredulous. But, says the learned gentleman
+from Alabama, there were few slaves at
+that time, and scarce a pound of cotton for exportation.
+Let us, then, pass from that period,
+to one when the few slaves had become millions,
+and the bales of cotton exported were estimated
+in like manner. In 1832, Thomas Marshall, of
+Virginia, said of slavery:</p>
+
+<p>"It is ruinous to the whites; retards improvement;
+roots out an industrious population;
+banishes the yeomanry of the country;
+deprives the spinner, the weaver, the smith, the
+shoemaker, the carpenter, of employment and
+support. Labor of every species is disreputable,
+because performed mostly by slaves; the
+general aspect of the country marks the curse
+of a wasteful, idle, reckless population, who
+have no interest in the soil, and care not how
+much it is impoverished."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Berry, of Virginia, spoke thus:</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that no cancer on the physical body
+was ever more certain, steady, and fatal, in its
+progress, than is the cancer of slavery on the
+political body of the State of Virginia. It is
+eating into her very vitals."</p>
+
+<p>The records of Southern statesmanship, sir,
+abound in such and stronger expressions. Slavery
+had then existed in this country more than
+two hundred years, yet scarce a man could be
+then found so bold and so reckless as to proclaim
+it just and righteous, a humane, a Christian
+institution. Nearly the whole civilized world
+united in its condemnation; the ministers of our
+holy religion in the slave States declaimed
+against it; their solemn petitions ascended to
+the throne of God, that the country might be
+rid of these "bonds." But, slave labor has become
+profitable in some parts of the South; the
+<i>mania</i> for wealth has seized the slaveholder's
+avarice, has dried up the fountain of humanity.
+The lust of power and dominion deadens their
+consciences; a million bales of cotton can blind
+their eyes alike to the flames of perdition and
+the glories of Paradise. They make to themselves
+friends of the Mammon of unrighteousness;
+they become full, and deny their Maker,
+and say, who is the Lord! Concerning oppression,
+they speak loftily. But they are set in slippery
+places; they will be cast down unto destruction.</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman from Mississippi [Mr. <span class="smcap">Lamar</span>]
+said, a few days since:</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, Mr. Chairman, that God's sun
+does not shine upon a nobler, prouder, more
+prosperous, and elevated class of people, than
+the non-slaveholders of the South."</p>
+
+<p>This, I think, will be news to many non-slaveholders
+in the gentleman's district. Thomas Jefferson
+tells us that man is an imitative animal;
+therefore, if the assertion of the gentleman from
+Mississippi be correct, we must wonder why
+slaveholders do not relieve themselves of their
+negroes, that they may become equally noble,
+proud, prosperous, and elevated, with the non-slaveholder.
+Who can compare with them on
+this side of Paradise? With them, the millennium
+can be no object of desire, since</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="i0">"Not a wave of trouble rolls<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Across their peaceful breasts."<br /></span></div>
+
+<p>Still there must be some malice in their hearts,
+for the honorable gentleman states that they
+(the non-slaveholders) hold slavery in the hollow
+of their hands; surely, were they benevolent,
+they would close their hands and crush out
+the "institution," that their slaveholding fellow-citizens
+might become as prosperous and as
+happy as themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The assertion is frequently made, that white
+men cannot work in the hot latitudes of the
+South, and this is offered as a reason why there
+should be black slaves there. The gentleman
+knocks one of the strongest props from under the
+institution. He tells us white men work, and
+raise not only cotton, but corn and potatoes. He
+also informs us that after the cotton, corn, and
+potatoes, are raised, the strong, brave man
+drives the plow through the fallow ground.
+It will be seen that work during the summer
+has not produced the lassitude and enervation
+that it has been claimed is produced in white
+men by labor. We are still further informed,
+that the fallow ground turned up by the
+strong, brave man, discloses something more
+valuable than the gold of California&mdash;"'Tis the
+sparkles of liberty!" We have heard of the
+sparkles of liberty that are made manifest to the
+non-slaveholders of the South. The poor laboring
+man at Columbia, South Carolina, when
+streams of blood issued from the furrows plowed
+in his naked back by a cow-hide in the hands of
+a negro, saw some of the sparkles of liberty,
+when, bleeding, exhausted, besmeared with tar,
+and covered with feathers, he was thrust into
+the cars, and left to perish in the cold. He had,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+no doubt, a vivid idea of the liberty that is enjoyed
+by non-slaveholders in the South, when
+he remembered that these cruelties and barbarities
+were inflicted on him for expressing a rational
+and honest opinion relative to this "peculiar
+institution."</p>
+
+<p>The statements, and doubtless convictions, of
+the honorable member from Mississippi, differ
+singularly from those of Senator <span class="smcap">Clay</span>, of Alabama,
+who tells us that, in his State, "we may
+behold numerous fine houses, once the abode
+of intelligent freemen, now occupied by slaves,
+or else tenantless and dilapidated; that we
+may see fields, once fertile, covered with foxtail
+and broom-sedge&mdash;moss growing on the
+walls of once thrifty villages, and may find that
+'one only master grasps the whole domain'
+which once furnished homes for a dozen white
+families."</p>
+
+<p>Hear, also, Senator <span class="smcap">Hammond</span>, of South Carolina,
+who says of the non-slaveholders of his
+State:</p>
+
+<p>"They obtain a precarious subsistence by occasional
+jobs, by hunting, by fishing, by plundering
+fields or folds, or, too often, by what is
+far worse in its effects, trading with slaves, and
+leading them to plunder for their benefit."</p>
+
+<p>The opinions already quoted from many of the
+wise men of the South go far to demonstrate
+that the gentleman from Mississippi is entirely
+mistaken. There is, however, another test by
+which we can try the accuracy of what the gentleman
+has said about the non-slaveholders of
+the South. The census report of 1850 shows
+this important fact: that of the white men in
+the slave States over twenty-one years of age,
+there is about one in every twelve that cannot
+read and write; while in the free States there is
+only one out of every forty-five. It must also be
+remembered, that a very large number of those
+in the free States who cannot read, came originally
+from the slave States. Take, for instance,
+Massachusetts, where there are but very few persons
+from the slave States, if any, and there is
+only one in seven hundred and seventy-eight
+that cannot read and write. Take Indiana and
+Illinois&mdash;States that have large populations from
+the slave States&mdash;Indiana, one in every fourteen
+cannot read; in Illinois, one in every twenty-one
+and a half; and if any one will take the
+trouble to examine, it will no doubt be found
+that this ignorance exists almost entirely where
+the population from the slave States largely predominates.
+I will venture the assertion, that
+there can scarcely be a man found in the State
+of Ohio, that was born there, who possesses intellect
+capable of cultivation, that cannot read;
+while a very large portion of those ignorant men
+in the slave States were "to the manor born."</p>
+
+<p>It must also be borne in mind that, in making
+the estimate of the free States, the men that perform
+all the labor are included. In the slave
+States, the men who do nearly all the work are
+not included. I do not know that any great
+good can come of making these comparisons.
+But when the gentleman tells us that the non-slaveholders
+in his State are the most prosperous
+and the most elevated of mankind, the inquiry
+is at once presented to the mind, how elevated
+in the scale of existence can a man be who can
+neither read nor write?</p>
+
+<p>I have shown that slavery was regarded as a
+political, moral, and social evil, by the founders
+of this Republic, and by able Southern statesmen
+within thirty years; that their anxious
+query has been, "what is to be done with it?"
+We are now asked to discredit those men, and
+give ear to a modern creed, that slavery is not
+only necessary, but beneficent&mdash;a divine ordinance&mdash;and
+that Southern non-slaveholders,
+even, are prosperous and elevated just in proportion
+to the number of slaves owned by their
+neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>Not such, sir, were the "speculations" of the
+fathers of the Republic; nor is the world to be
+deceived by such assumptions. Decree and carry
+out what non-intercourse you will; surround
+yourselves with barriers as impassable as the Chinese
+wall, or the great gulf between Dives and
+Lazarus, still the evidences of your condition will
+exist on the imperishable pages of history, in the
+records left by the mighty and venerated dead;
+and the attempt to establish the belief that slavery
+is a universal blessing will be received but
+as an aggression upon the credulity of mankind.</p>
+
+<p>Forty years ago, a slave Territory applied for
+admission to the Union as a State. The friends
+of freedom objected that its reception would be
+contrary to the policy of our Government. "Admit
+it," it was urged, "with its present Constitution,
+and we will consent to a line of demarkation,
+north of which slavery shall never pass."
+This was solemnly agreed to before the whole
+world; and this compact, forced upon the country
+by the slave power, was claimed by it as a
+great triumph of slavery. Men at the North felt
+that this was a great aggression, a great outrage
+upon freedom; yet, to give quiet and restore
+harmony, they submitted, consoled by the national
+pledge that slavery should be extended no
+further, and believing that the nation might joyously
+look forward to long years of happiness
+and repose. But despotism is ever restless and
+grasping; but twenty-five years rolled by&mdash;a very
+short period in the life of a nation&mdash;ere Texas
+was admitted to the Union, that slavery propagandists
+could have a wider field for their operations.
+As everybody foresaw, war ensued;
+and the best blood of the nation fattened the
+soil of Mexico. More than two hundred millions
+of treasure were expended, and many thousand
+valuable lives sacrificed. All over this land, "the
+sky was hung with blackness;" "mourning was
+spread over the mountain tops." Territory enough
+was obtained to make four large States, well
+adapted to the productive labor of human chattels,
+and this territory was blackened over with
+slavery. Such a triumph ought to have satisfied
+the most grasping of the friends of this "peculiar
+institution;" but the world should have
+known that nothing short of universal dominion
+would satisfy the slave owner and slave breeder.
+Less than ten years after the annexation of Texas,
+it was discovered by Southern men that there
+was a Territory west of Missouri, wherein the
+peculiar institution of the South could be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+made profitable; but by a solemn league and
+covenant this land had been, for more than a
+third of a century, consecrated to freedom. This
+bond of national faith, this pledge of national
+honor, stood in the road of their ambition.</p>
+
+<p>But men whose lives are but a series violations
+of the dearest rights that God has bestowed
+on man cannot be expected to be bound by
+pledges of national faith and national honor.
+This time-honored compact was annulled, the
+barrier between freedom and slavery broken
+down. The whole country was astounded at
+the perfidy of the act.</p>
+
+<p>But the climax was not reached. The Territory
+was overrun with desperadoes; ruffians
+from adjoining States usurped the rights of actual
+settlers, stuffed ballot-boxes with illegal
+votes, and elected members of their own lawless
+bands to the Legislature, to enact laws by which
+every friend of freedom might be driven from the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Innocent and unoffending men were murdered
+in cold blood, houses were consumed with fire,
+hamlets laid in smoking ruins, homeless and
+houseless innocents, women and tender children,
+were driven forth, exposed to the winds and
+storms of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>All these wrongs, all these outrages, all these
+crimes of blood and deeds of horror, were committed
+to plant the accursed institution on the
+soil that had been, by a great national act, dedicated
+to freedom. But violence and arson, bloodshed
+and murder, failed. The black banner of
+slavery is trailing in the dust. The stars and
+stripes wave triumphantly over a free and joyous
+people. The heretofore invincible is conquered.
+I have borrowed the word "aggression" to express
+the conduct of the South toward the
+North. I do not intend to make the charge
+without the specifications.</p>
+
+<p>1. I charge upon slavery, that the enforcement
+of the Missouri compromise was an aggression
+upon the North.</p>
+
+<p>2. I charge the annexation of Texas, whereby
+the Mexican war was brought upon the country,
+more than two hundred millions of money were
+spent, and many thousand lives sacrificed, as an
+aggression.</p>
+
+<p>3. I charge that the adoption of the fugitive
+slave law, with many of its odious and obnoxious
+provisions, was an aggression upon the people of
+the North.</p>
+
+<p>4. I charge that the decision of the Supreme
+Court in the Dred Scott case was an aggression
+upon the North. It was a decision made for the
+benefit of slavery, and to deprive the people of
+the free States of their equal rights in the Territories.</p>
+
+<p>5. I charge that the repeal of the Missouri compromise
+line was an outrageous aggression upon
+the rights of the North; disreputable to the nation,
+and dishonorable to the party engaged in
+it; one that has brought in its train innumerable
+woes, and created an excitement that will
+not be allayed during the present generation.</p>
+
+<p>6. I charge that the murders, robberies, and
+arsons, in Kansas, were aggressions of slavery.</p>
+
+<p>All these things I have charged as aggressions
+of slavery are national aggressions, for which
+the slavery party, having control of the administration
+of this Government, are responsible. I
+charge them as direct, positive aggressions, on
+the rights of the free people of the North. In
+addition to these great national aggressions,
+there are numerous similar infringements upon
+the rights of individuals of the North&mdash;of tarring
+and feathering, of whipping&mdash;acts of such barbarity
+and cruelty, that it would chill a man's
+blood to hear them recited.</p>
+
+<p>Recently, a whole community of moral, peaceable
+citizens were driven from their homes, compelled
+to abandon their property, and seek refuge
+in a free State, from the violence of slaveholders.
+There are, no doubt, many good and humane
+men in slave States, who deprecate these
+wrongs; but they dare not utter a word&mdash;every
+mouth must be stopped, every lip must be sealed,
+every voice must be hushed, all must be silent
+as the grave&mdash;the most inexorable despotism
+reigns supreme.</p>
+
+<p>Having endeavored to show what slavery was,
+and what it has done, I now propose to show what
+it intends to do. Its advocates claim that the
+territory now belonging to the Government is
+the common property of all the States, having
+been acquired by the common blood and treasure
+of all; that, therefore, the inhabitants of the
+slave States have a right to emigrate to the Territories,
+and take with them their slaves. I am
+willing to admit that the inhabitants of one section
+of the country have just the same rights in
+the Territories that the inhabitants of another
+section have. I say it would be an act of injustice
+to deny one man any right in the Territory
+that another man has, and would be just cause
+of complaint. But I am not willing to give to a
+man from a slave State any greater rights than
+to a man from a free State. And when I have
+admitted that all have the same constitutional
+rights in the Territories, I have by no means admitted
+that men from the South have a right to
+hold slaves in the Territories. You may go, and
+take your slaves with you, if you have a mind
+to run the risk; I say you shall not take your
+slave laws with you.</p>
+
+<p>I say that slavery is but the creation of some
+local enactment, and that no property can exist
+in a human being, unless it is made so by some
+law. This opinion was entertained by the founders
+of this Republic, and by nearly every statesman
+in this country, until very recently. We
+hear much said about the constitutional rights
+of the South; it is thundered in our ears from
+the beginning to the end of the session of Congress.
+What is meant by this stereotyped expression,
+I do not exactly comprehend; and, I
+presume, many who make use of the phrase do not
+understand it. If you mean by this that the Constitution
+of the United States gives you the right
+to go into the Territories belonging to the people
+of this country, and take with you not only your
+human chattels, but also your bloody slave laws,
+I say, you have no such constitutional rights.
+The Constitution of the United States nowhere
+recognises slaves as property. The Supreme
+Court of the United States has decided that slaves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+are not property under the Constitution. The
+Constitution gives you the right to reclaim your
+slaves, if they escape into any other State; this
+is all the right it gives you, and all there is in
+the Constitution that can by any possibility be
+construed to apply to slaves. To contend that
+there is any power given in the Constitution
+which enables the slaveholder to take his slaves
+with him into a Territory, and not only his slaves,
+but his slave laws, and the slave laws of all the
+slave States, is an assumption of power that I
+am not willing to concede to him. It is claimed
+that if persons from the slave States are not permitted
+to go into the Territories, and take with
+them their slaves and slave laws, the rights of
+the slave States are violated. This cannot be.
+If you claim to take into the Territories the laws
+of the slave States, and not only the laws, but
+the Constitution of a slave State, I claim, also,
+that I will take the Constitution of my State,
+which says there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary
+servitude; and if you do not permit
+this, the rights of my State are violated, if your
+doctrine be true.</p>
+
+<p>The emigrants from every State in the Union,
+under the power claimed by the slavery propagandists,
+would have a right to take with them
+all the constitutions and all the laws of all the
+States. The confusion which would follow would
+be worse than at the Tower of Babel. If a citizen
+of any slave State leaves it, and goes into a
+free State or Territory to reside, he takes with
+him none of the rights or powers with which his
+State clothed him while he remained therein.
+He can take with him such articles as, by the
+universal consent of mankind, are considered
+property, and exercise ownership over them.
+When at home, I am a legal voter; I can vote
+for any State or county officer, or President of
+the United States. But if I cross the river, a
+distance of eighty rods, or go out of my election
+district, or in any other direction, I have no such
+privilege. The right of suffrage, which is the
+highest right that ever can be exercised by a
+citizen, is controlled by the laws and Constitution
+of each particular State. In the State of
+Ohio, a man need not be a property holder to
+entitle him to the right of suffrage; if he remove
+into a State where he must have a property
+qualification before he can vote, are the rights of
+the State he left violated? I presume no one
+will contend that they are. A man may have
+some power in the State of Virginia, given by its
+Legislature&mdash;the right to issue paper money, for
+instance; but if he remove to Ohio, he has not
+this right. No man would pretend to claim that
+any of the rights of Virginia are infringed.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the man who would make this claim, would
+be just as reasonable as he who should claim
+that the rights of Virginia are invaded because
+her slaveholders are not permitted to take slaves
+into Kansas or Nebraska.</p>
+
+<p>I understand those Southern men, who talk so
+much about Southern rights, claim not only the
+right to take slaves into the Territories, but they
+claim the right to take slave laws and the habits
+and customs which are practiced in the slave
+States. They claim to take laws by which four
+million negroes are reduced to the condition of
+brutes. Six million white men, women, and
+children, who have to obtain their living by labor,
+are condemned to perpetual degradation and
+ignorance, by which three hundred and fifty
+thousand slaveholders can govern and control
+the destinies of the millions of people in the
+slave States; and not only of those people, but of
+this great country of ours. They not only claim
+the right to take their negroes into the Territories,
+but they claim to take laws there that will
+deny to every man the freedom of speech and
+the liberty of the press. They claim the right to
+seal every man's lips, and stop every man's
+mouth, on questions of great national interest.
+They claim to take with them the right to condemn
+as a felon the man who may utter and
+maintain the Declaration of Independence, or the
+opinions of the conscript fathers of the Republic.
+They claim to take with them the right to condemn
+as a felon the man who dares proclaim the
+precepts of our holy religion. They claim to take
+with them the right to strip naked and cut into
+gashes the back of the man who utters opinions
+that do not exactly "square and corner" with
+the interests of the aristocratic slaveholders.</p>
+
+<p>A negro population is one by no means desirable,
+but a free white man could live where
+there are negroes, and maintain his freedom; but
+no white non-slaveholder can live where slave
+laws, customs, and habits, pertain, and retain the
+rights that belong to free men in free States.</p>
+
+<p>A man may live in the swamps of the torrid
+zone, and escape the crocodiles, alligators, and
+other slimy and creeping things, but he cannot
+escape the miasma and poison of the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>If the slaveholder is permitted to go into the
+Territories, and take his slave laws, habits, and
+customs, the people of the free States are to a
+great extent excluded therefrom, and deprived
+of all rights therein.</p>
+
+<p>But slaveholders say they will go; they will
+take their slaves, and their slave code; they will
+establish there such a despotism as reigns in
+some of the slave States; they will poison the
+air that surrounds the fertile plains of the West,
+until freedom shall sicken and die; and we are
+constantly told, that if we do not yield to their
+unreasonable demands, this Union shall be dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>But these threats do not move or alarm me, and
+for the best of all possible reasons; I do not believe
+that the gentlemen who make these threats
+intend to leave their places on this floor&mdash;nor, if
+they should, would the country suffer any loss.
+The section they represent would still remain
+under the Constitution and laws of the United
+States, and our glorious flag would still wave
+over its fertile plains and lofty mountains, its
+woody dells and shelving rocks, its gurgling
+fountains and rippling rills. Good, loyal, and
+patriotic men would come here to fill the vacant
+places, ready and able to discharge their duty to
+the country, and to the whole country.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding these threats of disunion from
+the Democratic party, we hear much holy horror
+expressed in regard to a sectional party, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+much laudation of a national, conservative party.
+The nationality of the Democratic party consists
+in devoting all the energies and power of the
+Federal Government to advancing the interests,
+aims, and ends, of about one hundred thousand
+men. Its conservatism consists in its avowed
+determination to dissolve the Union, should a
+majority of our people, in the exercise of their
+legal and constitutional rights, elect a President
+not acceptable to that party.</p>
+
+<p>There are, I presume, not more than one hundred
+thousand men in this country who feel any
+desire to extend the boundaries of slavery, or
+who would, had they the power, add one other
+slave State to the Union. Yet the whole power
+of this Government is devoted to that one object;
+its entire strength concentrated in one spasmodic
+effort to extend slavery. The agricultural,
+the manufacturing, the great commercial interests
+of this country, are entirely ignored, neglected,
+and forgotten, that the interests of one
+hundred thousand slaveholders may be advanced.
+The great pursuits by which twenty-five million
+people live, are not considered worthy the attention
+of this Democratic party; while one hundred
+thousand aristocrats require its entire services.
+Yet this is the great national party!
+While so determined upon rule is it, that if a
+majority of the people should decide against it,
+and discharge its members from places of trust
+and honor, they threaten to destroy this Government.
+Such is the conservative party commended
+to our most favorable consideration.</p>
+
+<p>The slavery party is constantly complaining
+that the free States enact personal-liberty laws,
+and that they do not fulfil their constitutional
+obligations. Whatever acts may be passed by
+our Legislatures, so that they do not interfere
+with the Constitution of the United States, you
+have no right to complain. But if you think that
+Constitution violated, you have your remedy.
+Send your attorneys into the free States; commence
+your suits in the Federal courts, and try
+the validity of our statutes. We pledge ourselves
+that your agents shall be kindly treated, and shall
+have a fair hearing. We will not follow your
+example; we will not pass laws in plain and palpable
+violation of your rights, and in palpable
+violation of the Constitution, and then drive out,
+by threats or violence, any man who may come
+into the State to test the validity of such enactments.</p>
+
+<p>Before you complain of us, go home and seize
+and hang the pirates who are hovering around
+your shores, engaged in the slave trade. You
+may say a jury will not convict them. Why not?
+Because the community sustains them in their
+unholy traffic and in their violation of the laws.
+But if you really desired to punish those men,
+you could easily devise the ways and means&mdash;a
+whipping on the bare back with a raw-hide, a
+coat of tar and feathers, or some other corrective
+that you are in the habit of using. I would not
+advise these punishments; in a free State they
+would not be practicable; but in States where
+such things are in constant use, it is rather surprising
+that some person has not thought of thus
+applying them. Men who commit acts declared
+by the whole civilized world to be piracy, you
+permit to escape, while you say you will hang
+the man who circulates Helper's book. Before
+you complain of the free States, arrest and punish
+the scoundrels who so cruelly treated the
+Irishman at Columbia, South Carolina, for no
+offence but saying that slavery was detrimental
+to free labor.</p>
+
+<p>Take from place and power the men whose
+hands and faces are reeking and smoking with
+the blood of our people in Kansas, and put them
+to death. Punish the thousands of others who
+have committed acts of violence against free-State
+men, and are yet unwhipped of justice.
+These things you must do, before you complain
+of us. I take no pleasure in these criminations
+and recriminations. I know that all the States
+are a part of my country; but when I hear of the
+wrongs and outrages perpetrated on men merely
+because they will not subscribe to the doctrines
+you hold, and hear you complain of us for not
+doing our duty as citizens, I will let you know
+that you, too, "are made of penetrable stuff." I
+have</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="width: 21em;">
+<span class="i0">"Learned to deride your fierce decree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And break you on the wheel you meant for me."<br /></span></div>
+
+<p>I do not mean to interfere with any man's legal
+or constitutional rights. The people of the
+slave States have the right to continue slavery
+there if they desire so to do. I have no right to
+interfere with it. But I intend to maintain my
+own rights.</p>
+
+<p>To draw an impassable line around slavery, and
+confine it within its present limits; an absolute
+abolition of the African slave trade; the Territories
+to be kept free for homes for free men&mdash;these
+measures I regard as absolutely essential
+to the perpetuation of this Government, and to
+the highest development of the Anglo-Saxon
+race. I have endeavored to show what slavery
+is, what it has done, and what it intends to do.
+I have also endeavored to show what are the
+aims and objects of the Republican party; and
+if they cannot be tolerated&mdash;if such principles
+cannot be sustained by the people of any section
+of this country&mdash;it is the misfortune of that people.
+They are the principles that ought to be
+sustained by all people that are fitted for civil
+liberty; they are the principles on which this
+Government was founded; they were baptized
+in the best blood of this nation; they were cherished
+by the greatest names that adorn the
+brightest pages of the history of our country
+during its patriotic and virtuous and heroic age.
+They were emblazoned on every banner that
+waved over our army in every battle-field of
+the Revolution; during the storm and darkness,
+they were the bright "signet on the bosom of
+the cloud," the rainbow of promise and of hope.</p>
+
+<div class="bk1"><p class="center"><i>Published by the Republican Congressional Committee.
+Price 50 cents per hundred.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note.
+Variant spellings have been retained. Significant amendments to the original text have been
+listed below:
+
+<ul><li>p. <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, 'Newbern' amended to <i>New Bern</i>;
+<ul><li>'... meeting in New Bern, North Carolina ...'</li></ul></li></ul>
+
+<ul><li>p. <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, 'Scot' amended to <i>Scott</i>;
+<ul><li>'... in the Dred Scott case ...'</li></ul></li></ul></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Slavery: What it was, what it has
+done, what it intends to do, by Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
+
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+</body>
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@@ -0,0 +1,1257 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Slavery: What it was, what it has done,
+what it intends to do, by Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Slavery: What it was, what it has done, what it intends to do
+ Speech of Hon. Cydnor B. Tompkins, of Ohio
+
+Author: Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
+
+Release Date: January 10, 2009 [EBook #27767]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SLAVERY: WHAT IT WAS; HAS DONE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Bryan Ness, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLAVERY: WHAT IT WAS, WHAT IT HAS DONE, WHAT
+ IT INTENDS TO DO.
+
+
+ SPEECH
+ OF
+ HON. CYDNOR B. TOMPKINS, OF OHIO.
+
+
+ Delivered in the House of Representatives, April 24, 1860.
+
+
+
+
+Mr. TOMPKINS said:
+
+Mr. CHAIRMAN: The charge is frequently made, that nothing but slavery
+occupies the attention of the National Legislature. That this charge is
+true to a great extent, that this subject is constantly kept before the
+country, and that there is constant excitement about it, is not the
+fault of the Republican party. In the first hour of the present session
+of Congress, it was thrust upon the House by a member of the slavery
+party; for two months a discussion was continued upon that subject, and
+almost exclusively by that party--a discussion unparalleled in point of
+violence and virulence in the history of Parliamentary debate. Charges
+the most aggravated were unscrupulously and shamelessly made against the
+best and purest men of the country, and honorable members on this floor.
+Calumny and vituperation held high carnival in the legislative halls of
+this great nation. The columns of the _Daily Globe_ teemed with fierce
+and fiery denunciations of all who would not bow to the behests of
+pro-slavery power. Depraved, corrupt, and polluted presses exerted
+themselves to the utmost in the work of slander and detraction; hireling
+scribblers for worse than hireling presses glutted themselves and _made
+their meals on good men's names_. These spacious galleries were filled
+with disloyal men, ready to applaud to the echo every threat uttered
+against the Government, and every disloyal sentiment heard from this
+floor.
+
+If the Republicans here shall feel it to be their duty to discuss this
+subject now; to lay bare its weakness and its wickedness; to expose the
+madness and the folly of those who sustain, support, and cherish it; if
+the great interests of the country have to be neglected for a time; if
+ordinary legislation must be put aside, no complaint can be made against
+the Republican party. That party, its principles, its men, and its
+measures, have been misrepresented, and most unjustly assailed. It is
+our privilege, it is our duty, to repel those assaults, that the world
+may know that when the advanced guard of freedom is attacked, "our feet
+shall be always in the arena, and our shields shall hang always in the
+lists."
+
+I intend to review this question for the time allowed me. I hope to do
+so with fairness and candor, and not with the passion and excitement
+that have characterized many speeches made this session by pro-slavery
+members. I shall endeavor to show that the fathers of this Republic,
+both of the North and South, were more thoroughly anti-slavery than any
+political party now in the country; and that, for more than forty years
+after its organization, a large majority of our prominent men were
+strongly opposed to the extension of that "_patriarchal_ institution."
+
+The debates in the Federal Convention show that the Constitution was
+framed, adopted, and ratified, by anti-slavery men; that they regarded
+it as an evil, yet were ashamed to acknowledge its existence in
+words--thus virtually refusing to recognise property in many
+Resolutions, addresses, and speeches, now to be found, establish this
+very important fact, as I will show by quotations from them.
+
+At a general meeting in Prince George county, Virginia, it was
+
+"_Resolved_, That the African slave trade is injurious to this colony,
+obstructs the population of it by free men, and prevents manufacturers
+from Europe from settling among us."
+
+At a meeting in Culpeper county, Virginia, it was
+
+"_Resolved_, That the importation of slaves obstructs the population
+with free white men and useful manufacturers."
+
+At a meeting in Nansemond county, Virginia, it was
+
+"_Resolved_, That the African slave trade is injurious to this colony,
+obstructs the population by free men, and prevents manufacturers from
+settling amongst us."
+
+Resolutions to the same effect were adopted in Surrey county, Caroline
+county; and at a meeting in Fairfax county, over which George Washington
+presided, resolutions of like import were adopted.
+
+At a very full meeting of delegates from the different counties of the
+Colony and Dominion of Virginia, at Williamsburg, on the 1st day of
+August, 1774, it was
+
+"_Resolved_, that the abolition of domestic slavery is the greatest
+object of desire in these colonies, where it was improperly introduced
+in their infant state."
+
+This is the language of the good and wise men of the Old Dominion in
+1774; "the _abolition_ of domestic slavery was the greatest object of
+their desire." Not merely to limit it, to prevent its extension, but
+wholly to overthrow it. What would be said if a body of men, equally
+wise, good, and patriotic, should _now_ meet in the Old Dominion, and
+attempt to pass such resolutions? They would be scourged, driven by
+violence from the State, and might be considered fortunate should they
+escape with their lives. At a meeting in New Bern, North Carolina,
+August, 1774, numerously attended by the most distinguished men of that
+region, it was resolved that they would not import any slave or slaves,
+or purchase any slave or slaves imported or brought into that province
+by others from any part of the world. Such was the sentiment of North
+Carolina in 1774, as to the evil and great wrong of slavery.
+
+The Continental Congress, in October, 1774, resolved that they would
+neither import, nor purchase any slave imported, after December of the
+same year; they agreed and resolved that they would have no trade,
+commerce, dealings, or intercourse whatsoever, with any colony or
+province in North America which should not accede to, or should violate,
+this resolve, but would hold them as unworthy the rights of freemen and
+inimical to the liberties of this country.
+
+But what is now the attitude of slaveholders? They will hold no
+intercourse, they will have no dealings, with any person or State that
+does not approve of slavery, and yield to its intolerant and despotic
+demands; if any man, not thus approving and yielding, chances to travel
+through the slave States, and there to express his sentiments, he is
+subjected to the degradation and cruelty of the lash, and is driven from
+the State.
+
+October 21, 1774, the Continental Congress, in an address to the people
+of Great Britain, said:
+
+"When a nation, led to greatness by the hand of liberty, and possessed
+of all the glory that heroism, munificence, and humanity, can bestow,
+descends to the ungrateful task of forging chains for her friends and
+children, and, instead of giving support to freedom, turns advocate for
+slavery and oppression, there is reason to suspect that she has either
+ceased to be virtuous, or is extremely negligent in the appointment of
+her rulers."
+
+Is not this the situation and condition of this country now? Is not a
+great party now engaged in the ungrateful task of forging chains for a
+large portion of the people of this country? Instead of supporting
+freedom, does it not advocate slavery and oppression? Have we not reason
+to suspect that too many of our countrymen have ceased to be virtuous?
+
+By the Darien committee, Georgia, January, 1775, it was declared:
+
+"To show the world that we are not influenced by any contracted and
+interested motives, but a general philanthropy for all mankind, of
+whatever language or complexion, we hereby declare our disapprobation
+and abhorrence of the unnatural practice of slavery in America--a
+practice founded in injustice and cruelty, and highly dangerous to our
+liberties."
+
+I cannot quote at greater length from the proceedings of this committee.
+Their philanthropy was without regard to complexion; they abhorred
+slavery, as based on injustice and cruelty; and more, as dangerous to
+our liberties. If it were founded in injustice and cruelty in 1775, it
+is the same in 1860. It was dangerous to liberty _then_; no man _now_
+apprehends any danger to liberty, unless from the same source. It is
+daily threatened by men who are interested in slavery. Liberty cannot be
+very secure where four million human beings are held in hopeless
+bondage--where human blood, bone, muscle, and, I might almost say,
+immortal souls, are articles of merchandise.
+
+The historical quotations I have made bring me to the Revolution. I will
+cite the opinions of some of the great actors in that great drama.
+George Washington said, in his will:
+
+"Upon the decease of my wife, it is my desire that the slaves whom I
+hold _in my own right_ should receive their freedom."
+
+Again, he said:
+
+"I never mean, unless some particular circumstance should compel me, to
+possess another slave by purchase, it being my first wish to see some
+plan adopted by which slavery in this country may be abolished by law."
+
+La Fayette, while in the prison of Magdeburg, said:
+
+"I know not what disposition has been made of my plantation at Cayenne;
+but I hope Madame de La Fayette will take care that the negroes who
+cultivate it shall preserve their liberties."
+
+Washington wrote to Robert Morris:
+
+"It will not be conceived, from these observations, that it is my wish
+to hold these unhappy people (negroes) in slavery. I can only say that
+there is not a man living who wishes more sincerely than I do to see a
+plan adopted for the abolition of it."
+
+Again, he writes to La Fayette:
+
+"The benevolence of your heart, my dear Marquis, is so conspicuous on
+all occasions, that I never wonder at any fresh proof of it; but your
+late purchase of an estate in the colony of Cayenne, with a view of
+emancipating the slaves on it, is a generous and noble proof of your
+humanity. Would to God a like spirit might diffuse itself generally into
+the people of this country!"
+
+Washington hoped for some plan by which slavery might be legally
+abolished. Washington lauded the humanity of La Fayette in purchasing an
+estate for the purpose of emancipating the negroes. I will leave it to
+gentlemen on the other side to draw the comparison between the chivalry
+of the South _then_ and _now_; between the licentious assumption of
+thought and utterance permitted _then_, and the course of conviction and
+conversion esteemed necessary and equitable _now_, towards hapless
+offenders in the footsteps of predecessors so illustrious.
+
+Patrick Henry said:
+
+"Slavery is detested; we feel its fatal effects; we deplore it with all
+the pity of humanity. I repeat again, that it would rejoice my very
+soul that every one of my fellow beings were emancipated. We ought to
+lament and deplore the necessity of holding our fellow men in bondage."
+
+Charles Pinckney, Governor of South Carolina, said:
+
+"I must say that I lament the decision of your Legislature upon the
+question of the importation of slaves after March, 1793. I was in hopes
+that motives of policy, as well as other good reasons, supported by the
+direful effects of slavery which at this moment are presented, would
+have operated to produce a total prohibition of the importation of
+slaves, whenever the question came to be agitated in any State that
+might be interested in the measure."
+
+Such were the sentiments of the most enlightened, the most virtuous men
+of our country in its heroic age. George Mason, of Virginia, stigmatized
+the slave trade as an "infernal traffic!" He said that "slavery
+discouraged manufactures; that it produced the most pernicious effect on
+manners." Without intending to be personal or offensive, I think I can
+pause here and properly remark, that if the effects of slavery are
+changed in every other respect, the effect on manners is the same now
+that it was in the last century. The epithets used by men on this floor,
+their arrogant bearing towards their peers, is abundant proof that there
+is no change in that respect. We have frequently heard members, this
+session, speak of a great party in this country as the Black Republican
+party. Legislative bodies in the slave States have so far forgotten what
+should be due to the standing and dignity of a Legislature, as to call a
+certain party, in their official proceedings, the "Black Republican
+party." Why are men betrayed into such violations of the proprieties of
+life? There can be no other reason than the one given by George Mason
+eighty years ago: slavery produces a most pernicious effect upon
+manners. I know it is claimed, by men in the slave States, that slavery
+is necessary to the highest development of human society; but I think
+the experience of members of Congress is, that slavery does not always
+produce this beneficial result.
+
+I revert to my Southern authorities upon the peculiar institution. Mr.
+Iredell, of North Carolina, thus expresses himself:
+
+"When the entire abolition of slavery takes place, it will be an event
+which must be most pleasing to every generous mind, and to every friend
+of human nature."
+
+Thomas Jefferson writes:
+
+"The spirit of the master is abating: that of the slave rising from the
+dust; his condition mollifying; the way, I hope, preparing, under the
+auspices of Heaven, for a total emancipation."
+
+He continues, in his plan for a Constitution for Virginia:
+
+"Nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate, than that these
+people are to be free."
+
+In a letter to Dr. Gordon, on Lord Cornwallis's invasion of Virginia,
+Mr. Jefferson says:
+
+"He carried off also about thirty slaves, (Jefferson's.) Had this been
+to give them freedom, he would have done right; but it was to consign
+them to inevitable death from small-pox and putrid fever then raging in
+his camp."
+
+I conclude here my citations from the united voices of some of the best
+men of the country, before and after the Revolution, against slavery as
+an evil, and a great national sin, not that I have exhausted their
+utterances, but that my time admits of no more.
+
+The Republican party proclaims no doctrine so _ultra_ as theirs, uses no
+language so strong as that of those Southern statesmen from whom it
+gains so much information, and whose views, to a great extent, it
+conscientiously accepts. We desire only to confine it within its present
+limits; we ask that it shall not pollute territory now free; we know the
+utter folly of appealing to the morality or humanity of a pro-slavery
+party, where the rights of a black man are involved; but when you insist
+on taking slaves into a free Territory, and smiting the land with this
+blighting, withering curse, we plant ourselves on our constitutional
+rights, and say, _thus far shall you go, and no further_.
+
+The learned gentleman from Alabama, [Mr. CURRY,] in alluding to the
+opinion of the fathers of the Republic, said:
+
+"These, however, were but mere speculations."
+
+Was it a mere speculation when Madison said, "we have seen a mere
+distinction of color made the ground of the most oppressive dominion of
+man over man?" Was it as a mere speculation that Jefferson wrote, that
+Cornwallis would have been right, had he carried away his (Jefferson's)
+slaves to free them? Was it a mere speculation, a wild fancy, that the
+framers of the Constitution would not admit that there could be such a
+thing as property in man? A mere speculation, was it, of Patrick Henry,
+when he said "that slavery is detested; we feel its fatal effects; we
+deplore it?" when he declared it would "rejoice his very soul, were all
+his fellow beings emancipated?" Was it a mere speculation when Jefferson
+wrote, and his colleagues signed, "we hold these truths to be
+self-evident, that all men are created equal?" No one then doubted the
+truth of this declaration. More than a generation passed away before any
+man dared raise his voice against it. No, sir; this was no mere
+speculation, but the acknowledgment of a great "humanitarian fact." True
+then, it is true now; and must remain indisputable and eternal--a pillar
+of fire by night, a cloud by day, to guide and guard nations yet unborn
+in the path of honor, of safety, of moral and political grandeur.
+
+But the learned gentleman does not pause upon these "speculations." He
+proceeds to tell us that circumstances are changed; that there was then
+little more than half a million slaves, and scarce a pound of cotton
+exported. Does the gentleman believe, or does he but attempt to lead
+_us_ to believe, that the ethics of those men "without fear and without
+reproach" had no sounder foundation than this: that while slaves were
+few and cotton scarce, slavery might be a wrong, but with four million
+slaves and four million two hundred thousand bales of cotton, it
+becomes just, humane, moral?--that while negroes and cotton fill one
+side of the scales, Christian truth must kick the beam on the other, and
+slavery thus becomes a great "humanitarian fact?"
+
+The right and wrong of the thing, about which there has been so much
+discussion, is now easily solved. The gentleman has found an infallible
+rule; it is simply to make a chemical analysis of your soil; if it will
+produce cotton, you can purchase slaves and work them without violating
+the laws of God or man.
+
+We may also infer, or be induced to believe, from the honorable
+gentleman's speech, that if nothing is raised but indigo and rice, the
+propriety and morality of holding men in bondage is doubtful. Not such,
+sir, were the "_speculations_" of the fathers of the Republic.
+
+Lucid as is the gentleman's speech in general, there is a want of
+clearness in the last point I have cited; but this is owing entirely to
+the materials used in the demonstration--rice and indigo will not do;
+nothing will serve but cotton; cotton ever, cotton only.
+
+If slave labor, then, is profitable, slaveholding is equitable. Thus it
+is decided, that whatever is profitable is also equitable: justice and
+injustice are mere matters of profit and loss; the morality or
+immorality of slavery a mere question of soil and climate.
+
+The great authorities cited as to the evil effects of slavery on the
+white race, should satisfy the most incredulous. But, says the learned
+gentleman from Alabama, there were few slaves at that time, and scarce a
+pound of cotton for exportation. Let us, then, pass from that period, to
+one when the few slaves had become millions, and the bales of cotton
+exported were estimated in like manner. In 1832, Thomas Marshall, of
+Virginia, said of slavery:
+
+"It is ruinous to the whites; retards improvement; roots out an
+industrious population; banishes the yeomanry of the country; deprives
+the spinner, the weaver, the smith, the shoemaker, the carpenter, of
+employment and support. Labor of every species is disreputable, because
+performed mostly by slaves; the general aspect of the country marks the
+curse of a wasteful, idle, reckless population, who have no interest in
+the soil, and care not how much it is impoverished."
+
+Mr. Berry, of Virginia, spoke thus:
+
+"I believe that no cancer on the physical body was ever more certain,
+steady, and fatal, in its progress, than is the cancer of slavery on the
+political body of the State of Virginia. It is eating into her very
+vitals."
+
+The records of Southern statesmanship, sir, abound in such and stronger
+expressions. Slavery had then existed in this country more than two
+hundred years, yet scarce a man could be then found so bold and so
+reckless as to proclaim it just and righteous, a humane, a Christian
+institution. Nearly the whole civilized world united in its
+condemnation; the ministers of our holy religion in the slave States
+declaimed against it; their solemn petitions ascended to the throne of
+God, that the country might be rid of these "bonds." But, slave labor
+has become profitable in some parts of the South; the _mania_ for wealth
+has seized the slaveholder's avarice, has dried up the fountain of
+humanity. The lust of power and dominion deadens their consciences; a
+million bales of cotton can blind their eyes alike to the flames of
+perdition and the glories of Paradise. They make to themselves friends
+of the Mammon of unrighteousness; they become full, and deny their
+Maker, and say, who is the Lord! Concerning oppression, they speak
+loftily. But they are set in slippery places; they will be cast down
+unto destruction.
+
+The gentleman from Mississippi [Mr. LAMAR] said, a few days since:
+
+"I tell you, Mr. Chairman, that God's sun does not shine upon a nobler,
+prouder, more prosperous, and elevated class of people, than the
+non-slaveholders of the South."
+
+This, I think, will be news to many non-slaveholders in the gentleman's
+district. Thomas Jefferson tells us that man is an imitative animal;
+therefore, if the assertion of the gentleman from Mississippi be
+correct, we must wonder why slaveholders do not relieve themselves of
+their negroes, that they may become equally noble, proud, prosperous,
+and elevated, with the non-slaveholder. Who can compare with them on
+this side of Paradise? With them, the millennium can be no object of
+desire, since
+
+ "Not a wave of trouble rolls
+ Across their peaceful breasts."
+
+Still there must be some malice in their hearts, for the honorable
+gentleman states that they (the non-slaveholders) hold slavery in the
+hollow of their hands; surely, were they benevolent, they would close
+their hands and crush out the "institution," that their slaveholding
+fellow-citizens might become as prosperous and as happy as themselves.
+
+The assertion is frequently made, that white men cannot work in the hot
+latitudes of the South, and this is offered as a reason why there should
+be black slaves there. The gentleman knocks one of the strongest props
+from under the institution. He tells us white men work, and raise not
+only cotton, but corn and potatoes. He also informs us that after the
+cotton, corn, and potatoes, are raised, the strong, brave man drives the
+plow through the fallow ground. It will be seen that work during the
+summer has not produced the lassitude and enervation that it has been
+claimed is produced in white men by labor. We are still further
+informed, that the fallow ground turned up by the strong, brave man,
+discloses something more valuable than the gold of California--"'Tis the
+sparkles of liberty!" We have heard of the sparkles of liberty that are
+made manifest to the non-slaveholders of the South. The poor laboring
+man at Columbia, South Carolina, when streams of blood issued from the
+furrows plowed in his naked back by a cow-hide in the hands of a negro,
+saw some of the sparkles of liberty, when, bleeding, exhausted,
+besmeared with tar, and covered with feathers, he was thrust into the
+cars, and left to perish in the cold. He had, no doubt, a vivid idea of
+the liberty that is enjoyed by non-slaveholders in the South, when he
+remembered that these cruelties and barbarities were inflicted on him
+for expressing a rational and honest opinion relative to this "peculiar
+institution."
+
+The statements, and doubtless convictions, of the honorable member from
+Mississippi, differ singularly from those of Senator CLAY, of Alabama,
+who tells us that, in his State, "we may behold numerous fine houses,
+once the abode of intelligent freemen, now occupied by slaves, or else
+tenantless and dilapidated; that we may see fields, once fertile,
+covered with foxtail and broom-sedge--moss growing on the walls of once
+thrifty villages, and may find that 'one only master grasps the whole
+domain' which once furnished homes for a dozen white families."
+
+Hear, also, Senator HAMMOND, of South Carolina, who says of the
+non-slaveholders of his State:
+
+"They obtain a precarious subsistence by occasional jobs, by hunting, by
+fishing, by plundering fields or folds, or, too often, by what is far
+worse in its effects, trading with slaves, and leading them to plunder
+for their benefit."
+
+The opinions already quoted from many of the wise men of the South go
+far to demonstrate that the gentleman from Mississippi is entirely
+mistaken. There is, however, another test by which we can try the
+accuracy of what the gentleman has said about the non-slaveholders of
+the South. The census report of 1850 shows this important fact: that of
+the white men in the slave States over twenty-one years of age, there is
+about one in every twelve that cannot read and write; while in the free
+States there is only one out of every forty-five. It must also be
+remembered, that a very large number of those in the free States who
+cannot read, came originally from the slave States. Take, for instance,
+Massachusetts, where there are but very few persons from the slave
+States, if any, and there is only one in seven hundred and seventy-eight
+that cannot read and write. Take Indiana and Illinois--States that have
+large populations from the slave States--Indiana, one in every fourteen
+cannot read; in Illinois, one in every twenty-one and a half; and if any
+one will take the trouble to examine, it will no doubt be found that
+this ignorance exists almost entirely where the population from the
+slave States largely predominates. I will venture the assertion, that
+there can scarcely be a man found in the State of Ohio, that was born
+there, who possesses intellect capable of cultivation, that cannot read;
+while a very large portion of those ignorant men in the slave States
+were "to the manor born."
+
+It must also be borne in mind that, in making the estimate of the free
+States, the men that perform all the labor are included. In the slave
+States, the men who do nearly all the work are not included. I do not
+know that any great good can come of making these comparisons. But when
+the gentleman tells us that the non-slaveholders in his State are the
+most prosperous and the most elevated of mankind, the inquiry is at
+once presented to the mind, how elevated in the scale of existence can a
+man be who can neither read nor write?
+
+I have shown that slavery was regarded as a political, moral, and social
+evil, by the founders of this Republic, and by able Southern statesmen
+within thirty years; that their anxious query has been, "what is to be
+done with it?" We are now asked to discredit those men, and give ear to
+a modern creed, that slavery is not only necessary, but beneficent--a
+divine ordinance--and that Southern non-slaveholders, even, are
+prosperous and elevated just in proportion to the number of slaves owned
+by their neighbors.
+
+Not such, sir, were the "speculations" of the fathers of the Republic;
+nor is the world to be deceived by such assumptions. Decree and carry
+out what non-intercourse you will; surround yourselves with barriers as
+impassable as the Chinese wall, or the great gulf between Dives and
+Lazarus, still the evidences of your condition will exist on the
+imperishable pages of history, in the records left by the mighty and
+venerated dead; and the attempt to establish the belief that slavery is
+a universal blessing will be received but as an aggression upon the
+credulity of mankind.
+
+Forty years ago, a slave Territory applied for admission to the Union as
+a State. The friends of freedom objected that its reception would be
+contrary to the policy of our Government. "Admit it," it was urged,
+"with its present Constitution, and we will consent to a line of
+demarkation, north of which slavery shall never pass." This was solemnly
+agreed to before the whole world; and this compact, forced upon the
+country by the slave power, was claimed by it as a great triumph of
+slavery. Men at the North felt that this was a great aggression, a great
+outrage upon freedom; yet, to give quiet and restore harmony, they
+submitted, consoled by the national pledge that slavery should be
+extended no further, and believing that the nation might joyously look
+forward to long years of happiness and repose. But despotism is ever
+restless and grasping; but twenty-five years rolled by--a very short
+period in the life of a nation--ere Texas was admitted to the Union,
+that slavery propagandists could have a wider field for their
+operations. As everybody foresaw, war ensued; and the best blood of the
+nation fattened the soil of Mexico. More than two hundred millions of
+treasure were expended, and many thousand valuable lives sacrificed. All
+over this land, "the sky was hung with blackness;" "mourning was spread
+over the mountain tops." Territory enough was obtained to make four
+large States, well adapted to the productive labor of human chattels,
+and this territory was blackened over with slavery. Such a triumph ought
+to have satisfied the most grasping of the friends of this "peculiar
+institution;" but the world should have known that nothing short of
+universal dominion would satisfy the slave owner and slave breeder. Less
+than ten years after the annexation of Texas, it was discovered by
+Southern men that there was a Territory west of Missouri, wherein the
+peculiar institution of the South could be made profitable; but by a
+solemn league and covenant this land had been, for more than a third of
+a century, consecrated to freedom. This bond of national faith, this
+pledge of national honor, stood in the road of their ambition.
+
+But men whose lives are but a series violations of the dearest rights
+that God has bestowed on man cannot be expected to be bound by pledges
+of national faith and national honor. This time-honored compact was
+annulled, the barrier between freedom and slavery broken down. The whole
+country was astounded at the perfidy of the act.
+
+But the climax was not reached. The Territory was overrun with
+desperadoes; ruffians from adjoining States usurped the rights of actual
+settlers, stuffed ballot-boxes with illegal votes, and elected members
+of their own lawless bands to the Legislature, to enact laws by which
+every friend of freedom might be driven from the country.
+
+Innocent and unoffending men were murdered in cold blood, houses were
+consumed with fire, hamlets laid in smoking ruins, homeless and
+houseless innocents, women and tender children, were driven forth,
+exposed to the winds and storms of heaven.
+
+All these wrongs, all these outrages, all these crimes of blood and
+deeds of horror, were committed to plant the accursed institution on the
+soil that had been, by a great national act, dedicated to freedom. But
+violence and arson, bloodshed and murder, failed. The black banner of
+slavery is trailing in the dust. The stars and stripes wave triumphantly
+over a free and joyous people. The heretofore invincible is conquered. I
+have borrowed the word "aggression" to express the conduct of the South
+toward the North. I do not intend to make the charge without the
+specifications.
+
+1. I charge upon slavery, that the enforcement of the Missouri
+compromise was an aggression upon the North.
+
+2. I charge the annexation of Texas, whereby the Mexican war was brought
+upon the country, more than two hundred millions of money were spent,
+and many thousand lives sacrificed, as an aggression.
+
+3. I charge that the adoption of the fugitive slave law, with many of
+its odious and obnoxious provisions, was an aggression upon the people
+of the North.
+
+4. I charge that the decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott
+case was an aggression upon the North. It was a decision made for the
+benefit of slavery, and to deprive the people of the free States of
+their equal rights in the Territories.
+
+5. I charge that the repeal of the Missouri compromise line was an
+outrageous aggression upon the rights of the North; disreputable to the
+nation, and dishonorable to the party engaged in it; one that has
+brought in its train innumerable woes, and created an excitement that
+will not be allayed during the present generation.
+
+6. I charge that the murders, robberies, and arsons, in Kansas, were
+aggressions of slavery.
+
+All these things I have charged as aggressions of slavery are national
+aggressions, for which the slavery party, having control of the
+administration of this Government, are responsible. I charge them as
+direct, positive aggressions, on the rights of the free people of the
+North. In addition to these great national aggressions, there are
+numerous similar infringements upon the rights of individuals of the
+North--of tarring and feathering, of whipping--acts of such barbarity
+and cruelty, that it would chill a man's blood to hear them recited.
+
+Recently, a whole community of moral, peaceable citizens were driven
+from their homes, compelled to abandon their property, and seek refuge
+in a free State, from the violence of slaveholders. There are, no doubt,
+many good and humane men in slave States, who deprecate these wrongs;
+but they dare not utter a word--every mouth must be stopped, every lip
+must be sealed, every voice must be hushed, all must be silent as the
+grave--the most inexorable despotism reigns supreme.
+
+Having endeavored to show what slavery was, and what it has done, I now
+propose to show what it intends to do. Its advocates claim that the
+territory now belonging to the Government is the common property of all
+the States, having been acquired by the common blood and treasure of
+all; that, therefore, the inhabitants of the slave States have a right
+to emigrate to the Territories, and take with them their slaves. I am
+willing to admit that the inhabitants of one section of the country have
+just the same rights in the Territories that the inhabitants of another
+section have. I say it would be an act of injustice to deny one man any
+right in the Territory that another man has, and would be just cause of
+complaint. But I am not willing to give to a man from a slave State any
+greater rights than to a man from a free State. And when I have admitted
+that all have the same constitutional rights in the Territories, I have
+by no means admitted that men from the South have a right to hold slaves
+in the Territories. You may go, and take your slaves with you, if you
+have a mind to run the risk; I say you shall not take your slave laws
+with you.
+
+I say that slavery is but the creation of some local enactment, and that
+no property can exist in a human being, unless it is made so by some
+law. This opinion was entertained by the founders of this Republic, and
+by nearly every statesman in this country, until very recently. We hear
+much said about the constitutional rights of the South; it is thundered
+in our ears from the beginning to the end of the session of Congress.
+What is meant by this stereotyped expression, I do not exactly
+comprehend; and, I presume, many who make use of the phrase do not
+understand it. If you mean by this that the Constitution of the United
+States gives you the right to go into the Territories belonging to the
+people of this country, and take with you not only your human chattels,
+but also your bloody slave laws, I say, you have no such constitutional
+rights. The Constitution of the United States nowhere recognises slaves
+as property. The Supreme Court of the United States has decided that
+slaves are not property under the Constitution. The Constitution gives
+you the right to reclaim your slaves, if they escape into any other
+State; this is all the right it gives you, and all there is in the
+Constitution that can by any possibility be construed to apply to
+slaves. To contend that there is any power given in the Constitution
+which enables the slaveholder to take his slaves with him into a
+Territory, and not only his slaves, but his slave laws, and the slave
+laws of all the slave States, is an assumption of power that I am not
+willing to concede to him. It is claimed that if persons from the slave
+States are not permitted to go into the Territories, and take with them
+their slaves and slave laws, the rights of the slave States are
+violated. This cannot be. If you claim to take into the Territories the
+laws of the slave States, and not only the laws, but the Constitution of
+a slave State, I claim, also, that I will take the Constitution of my
+State, which says there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary
+servitude; and if you do not permit this, the rights of my State are
+violated, if your doctrine be true.
+
+The emigrants from every State in the Union, under the power claimed by
+the slavery propagandists, would have a right to take with them all the
+constitutions and all the laws of all the States. The confusion which
+would follow would be worse than at the Tower of Babel. If a citizen of
+any slave State leaves it, and goes into a free State or Territory to
+reside, he takes with him none of the rights or powers with which his
+State clothed him while he remained therein. He can take with him such
+articles as, by the universal consent of mankind, are considered
+property, and exercise ownership over them. When at home, I am a legal
+voter; I can vote for any State or county officer, or President of the
+United States. But if I cross the river, a distance of eighty rods, or
+go out of my election district, or in any other direction, I have no
+such privilege. The right of suffrage, which is the highest right that
+ever can be exercised by a citizen, is controlled by the laws and
+Constitution of each particular State. In the State of Ohio, a man need
+not be a property holder to entitle him to the right of suffrage; if he
+remove into a State where he must have a property qualification before
+he can vote, are the rights of the State he left violated? I presume no
+one will contend that they are. A man may have some power in the State
+of Virginia, given by its Legislature--the right to issue paper money,
+for instance; but if he remove to Ohio, he has not this right. No man
+would pretend to claim that any of the rights of Virginia are infringed.
+
+Yet the man who would make this claim, would be just as reasonable as he
+who should claim that the rights of Virginia are invaded because her
+slaveholders are not permitted to take slaves into Kansas or Nebraska.
+
+I understand those Southern men, who talk so much about Southern rights,
+claim not only the right to take slaves into the Territories, but they
+claim the right to take slave laws and the habits and customs which are
+practiced in the slave States. They claim to take laws by which four
+million negroes are reduced to the condition of brutes. Six million
+white men, women, and children, who have to obtain their living by
+labor, are condemned to perpetual degradation and ignorance, by which
+three hundred and fifty thousand slaveholders can govern and control the
+destinies of the millions of people in the slave States; and not only of
+those people, but of this great country of ours. They not only claim the
+right to take their negroes into the Territories, but they claim to take
+laws there that will deny to every man the freedom of speech and the
+liberty of the press. They claim the right to seal every man's lips, and
+stop every man's mouth, on questions of great national interest. They
+claim to take with them the right to condemn as a felon the man who may
+utter and maintain the Declaration of Independence, or the opinions of
+the conscript fathers of the Republic. They claim to take with them the
+right to condemn as a felon the man who dares proclaim the precepts of
+our holy religion. They claim to take with them the right to strip naked
+and cut into gashes the back of the man who utters opinions that do not
+exactly "square and corner" with the interests of the aristocratic
+slaveholders.
+
+A negro population is one by no means desirable, but a free white man
+could live where there are negroes, and maintain his freedom; but no
+white non-slaveholder can live where slave laws, customs, and habits,
+pertain, and retain the rights that belong to free men in free States.
+
+A man may live in the swamps of the torrid zone, and escape the
+crocodiles, alligators, and other slimy and creeping things, but he
+cannot escape the miasma and poison of the atmosphere.
+
+If the slaveholder is permitted to go into the Territories, and take his
+slave laws, habits, and customs, the people of the free States are to a
+great extent excluded therefrom, and deprived of all rights therein.
+
+But slaveholders say they will go; they will take their slaves, and
+their slave code; they will establish there such a despotism as reigns
+in some of the slave States; they will poison the air that surrounds the
+fertile plains of the West, until freedom shall sicken and die; and we
+are constantly told, that if we do not yield to their unreasonable
+demands, this Union shall be dissolved.
+
+But these threats do not move or alarm me, and for the best of all
+possible reasons; I do not believe that the gentlemen who make these
+threats intend to leave their places on this floor--nor, if they should,
+would the country suffer any loss. The section they represent would
+still remain under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and
+our glorious flag would still wave over its fertile plains and lofty
+mountains, its woody dells and shelving rocks, its gurgling fountains
+and rippling rills. Good, loyal, and patriotic men would come here to
+fill the vacant places, ready and able to discharge their duty to the
+country, and to the whole country.
+
+Notwithstanding these threats of disunion from the Democratic party, we
+hear much holy horror expressed in regard to a sectional party, and
+much laudation of a national, conservative party. The nationality of the
+Democratic party consists in devoting all the energies and power of the
+Federal Government to advancing the interests, aims, and ends, of about
+one hundred thousand men. Its conservatism consists in its avowed
+determination to dissolve the Union, should a majority of our people, in
+the exercise of their legal and constitutional rights, elect a President
+not acceptable to that party.
+
+There are, I presume, not more than one hundred thousand men in this
+country who feel any desire to extend the boundaries of slavery, or who
+would, had they the power, add one other slave State to the Union. Yet
+the whole power of this Government is devoted to that one object; its
+entire strength concentrated in one spasmodic effort to extend slavery.
+The agricultural, the manufacturing, the great commercial interests of
+this country, are entirely ignored, neglected, and forgotten, that the
+interests of one hundred thousand slaveholders may be advanced. The
+great pursuits by which twenty-five million people live, are not
+considered worthy the attention of this Democratic party; while one
+hundred thousand aristocrats require its entire services. Yet this is
+the great national party! While so determined upon rule is it, that if a
+majority of the people should decide against it, and discharge its
+members from places of trust and honor, they threaten to destroy this
+Government. Such is the conservative party commended to our most
+favorable consideration.
+
+The slavery party is constantly complaining that the free States enact
+personal-liberty laws, and that they do not fulfil their constitutional
+obligations. Whatever acts may be passed by our Legislatures, so that
+they do not interfere with the Constitution of the United States, you
+have no right to complain. But if you think that Constitution violated,
+you have your remedy. Send your attorneys into the free States; commence
+your suits in the Federal courts, and try the validity of our statutes.
+We pledge ourselves that your agents shall be kindly treated, and shall
+have a fair hearing. We will not follow your example; we will not pass
+laws in plain and palpable violation of your rights, and in palpable
+violation of the Constitution, and then drive out, by threats or
+violence, any man who may come into the State to test the validity of
+such enactments.
+
+Before you complain of us, go home and seize and hang the pirates who
+are hovering around your shores, engaged in the slave trade. You may say
+a jury will not convict them. Why not? Because the community sustains
+them in their unholy traffic and in their violation of the laws. But if
+you really desired to punish those men, you could easily devise the ways
+and means--a whipping on the bare back with a raw-hide, a coat of tar
+and feathers, or some other corrective that you are in the habit of
+using. I would not advise these punishments; in a free State they would
+not be practicable; but in States where such things are in constant use,
+it is rather surprising that some person has not thought of thus
+applying them. Men who commit acts declared by the whole civilized world
+to be piracy, you permit to escape, while you say you will hang the man
+who circulates Helper's book. Before you complain of the free States,
+arrest and punish the scoundrels who so cruelly treated the Irishman at
+Columbia, South Carolina, for no offence but saying that slavery was
+detrimental to free labor.
+
+Take from place and power the men whose hands and faces are reeking and
+smoking with the blood of our people in Kansas, and put them to death.
+Punish the thousands of others who have committed acts of violence
+against free-State men, and are yet unwhipped of justice. These things
+you must do, before you complain of us. I take no pleasure in these
+criminations and recriminations. I know that all the States are a part
+of my country; but when I hear of the wrongs and outrages perpetrated on
+men merely because they will not subscribe to the doctrines you hold,
+and hear you complain of us for not doing our duty as citizens, I will
+let you know that you, too, "are made of penetrable stuff." I have
+
+ "Learned to deride your fierce decree,
+ And break you on the wheel you meant for me."
+
+I do not mean to interfere with any man's legal or constitutional
+rights. The people of the slave States have the right to continue
+slavery there if they desire so to do. I have no right to interfere with
+it. But I intend to maintain my own rights.
+
+To draw an impassable line around slavery, and confine it within its
+present limits; an absolute abolition of the African slave trade; the
+Territories to be kept free for homes for free men--these measures I
+regard as absolutely essential to the perpetuation of this Government,
+and to the highest development of the Anglo-Saxon race. I have
+endeavored to show what slavery is, what it has done, and what it
+intends to do. I have also endeavored to show what are the aims and
+objects of the Republican party; and if they cannot be tolerated--if
+such principles cannot be sustained by the people of any section of this
+country--it is the misfortune of that people. They are the principles
+that ought to be sustained by all people that are fitted for civil
+liberty; they are the principles on which this Government was founded;
+they were baptized in the best blood of this nation; they were cherished
+by the greatest names that adorn the brightest pages of the history of
+our country during its patriotic and virtuous and heroic age. They were
+emblazoned on every banner that waved over our army in every
+battle-field of the Revolution; during the storm and darkness, they were
+the bright "signet on the bosom of the cloud," the rainbow of promise
+and of hope.
+
+
+ _Published by the Republican Congressional Committee.
+ Price 50 cents per hundred._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. Variant
+ spellings have been retained. Significant amendments to the original
+ text have been listed below:
+
+ p. 2, 'Newbern' amended to _New Bern_;
+ '... meeting in New Bern, North Carolina ...'
+
+ p. 6, 'Scot' amended to _Scott_;
+ '... in the Dred Scott case ...'
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Slavery: What it was, what it has
+done, what it intends to do, by Cydnor Bailey Tompkins
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