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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69367 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69367)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of An apology for abolitionists:
-addressed by the anti-slavery society of Meriden, Conn., to their fellow
-citizens, by Philo Pratt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: An apology for abolitionists: addressed by the anti-slavery
- society of Meriden, Conn., to their fellow citizens
-
-Authors: Philo Pratt
- Walter Webb
- Isaac I. Tibbals
-
-Release Date: November 16, 2022 [eBook #69367]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN APOLOGY FOR ABOLITIONISTS:
-ADDRESSED BY THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY OF MERIDEN, CONN., TO THEIR FELLOW
-CITIZENS ***
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
- Bold text is denoted by =equal signs=.
-
- There is one Footnote in this book. Its anchor is denoted by [1], and
- the Footnote has been placed at the end of the book.
-
- Some minor changes to the text are also noted at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
- AN
-
- APOLOGY
-
- FOR
-
- ABOLITIONISTS:
-
- ADDRESSED
-
- BY THE
-
- ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY
-
- OF
-
- MERIDEN, CONN.,
-
- TO THEIR
-
- FELLOW-CITIZENS.
-
- SECOND EDITION.
-
- MIDDLETOWN:
-
- C. H. PELTON .... PRINT.
-
- 1837.
-
-
-
-
-=Fellow-Citizens=:
-
- A regard for your good opinion, and a wish to promote the cause,
- which, as Abolitionists, lies near our hearts, is our motive for
- addressing you. We think the opposition to our enterprise arises
- either from commercial, political or domestic connections with
- Slavery, or from misapprehensions respecting our principles,
- measures and prospects. We desire no better means of overcoming
- these obstacles than a fair statement of facts; and to this we now
- solicit your attention.
-
-
-DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS.
-
-We believe that all men are born free and equal, and endowed by
-their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among which are life,
-liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
-
-We believe Slavery is an infraction of these rights, a violation of
-the principles of christianity, and under all circumstances sinful.
-
-We believe that Slavery is a great national evil, political as well
-as moral, opposed to the genius of a republican government, highly
-dangerous to the peace and permanency of the Union, and if persisted
-in, destined to bring upon us the severest judgments of Heaven.
-
-We believe the immediate abolition of slavery would be safe and wise,
-and that it is the duty of every friend of humanity to use all fair
-and just means for its accomplishment.
-
-We believe we have a right to express and publish our opinions
-respecting the customs and institutions of the people of this and
-every other country; and if we think them in any degree immoral,
-unequal, or oppressive, we are under the highest obligations, in the
-exercise of all honest and lawful means, to change them.
-
-We believe that Slavery in the several states can be lawfully
-abolished only by the legislatures of the states in which it
-prevails, and that the exercise of any other than moral means to
-induce such abolition, is unconstitutional.
-
-We believe that Congress has a right to abolish Slavery in the
-District of Columbia, and in the Territories, and to prohibit the
-slave trade between the states, and that the exercise of this right
-is required by the divine law, and by the interests of our country.
-
-We believe that no class of men can rightfully be denied, _on account
-of their color_, the enjoyment of equal rights with others, in the
-protection, immunities and administration of the government under
-which they live.
-
-
-UTILITY OF THESE SENTIMENTS.
-
-These are our sentiments. We regret to say they are not collectively
-the sentiments of our countrymen. It is for our zeal in propagating
-them, that we have been assailed with unmeasured abuse and lawless
-violence. We think it of high importance to our country and the world
-that they should be received by all the people. What the effect of
-their general reception in the free states would be, is very apparent.
-
-_We should abolish Slavery in the District of Columbia._ There
-Congress has exclusive jurisdiction on all subjects whatsoever,
-including of course the subject of Slavery.—This is admitted by
-Martin Van Buren, Henry Clay, and an overwhelming majority of
-the present Congress. The Abolitionists are to a man in favor of
-the exercise of this right. If, therefore, the free states were
-_thoroughly_ abolitionized, their Senators and Representatives,
-who yet compose a majority in Congress, would at once bow to the
-supremacy of their constituents, and abolish Slavery.
-
-_We should prohibit the inter state Slave-Trade._ This trade has
-recently been carried on to a greater extent than ever was the
-foreign slave trade; it being estimated that not less than 120,000
-slaves were exported from Virginia alone, within little more than
-a year, and removed for the most part to the southwestern states.
-Four of these states are said by their own papers, to have received
-within the same period, about 250,000 slaves from the old states.
-How many tender ties have in one short year been broken by this
-detestable business! How much bodily suffering has been endured! How
-much guilt has been contracted! This cruel and wicked traffic is
-at the foundation of a system of breeding slaves for market, which
-is prosecuted on a large scale, corrupting all concerned, by its
-licentiousness and barbarity. Congress has a right to prohibit and
-suppress this trade, under that article of the Constitution which
-empowers Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations and
-between the several states. Were a majority of the citizens of the
-free states decided Abolitionists, this right could be exercised. We
-should insist upon it. Why then do not they, who profess to regard
-the _slave trade_ as the worst feature of Slavery, join with us
-against it?
-
-_We should prevent the annexation of Texas to the United States._
-The South has long had her eye on that fine and extensive country,
-intending to get it by purchase or stratagem, for the purpose of
-opening a market for her redundant slave population, and of securing
-the balance of power in the general government to the slave-holding
-interest. Every enemy of Slavery and friend of _free_ labor, ought
-to oppose this design. We apprehend that if the annexation of Texas
-to our country should not involve us in war with Mexico and Great
-Britain, it would either lead to a dissolution of the union, or
-indefinitely prolong the existence of Slavery. The Abolitionists
-are now preparing petitions to Congress, protesting against this
-insane measure; and were the citizens of the free states generally to
-join them, and load the tables of Congress with several millions of
-signatures to these protests, the danger would be averted. But they
-will not do it, _because_ they are not Abolitionists; and we must,
-therefore, in all probability _take_ Texas.
-
-_We should admit no new slave states to the Union._ Had our
-sentiments prevailed when the Missouri question was decided, the
-fine soil of that state would not now be cursed with Slavery. She
-was admitted to the union by northern men. They legalized the sin.
-It is a sad proof of the corruption of _our_ public sentiment that
-several of these traitors to liberty, have, since that disgraceful
-vote was given, been elevated to the first offices in the gift of New
-England; and this without any signs of their repentance. Arkansas has
-also been lately admitted to the Union by northern votes, with the
-singular provision in her constitution, that her legislature shall
-have no power to abolish Slavery; so that the “peculiar institution”
-may last until the greatest knave in the state is heartily weary
-and ashamed of it. Northern men thus voted for _perpetual_ Slavery;
-and this they did in the confident expectation of being re-elected
-to Congress. Had they known a majority of their constituents to be
-Abolitionists, they would have voted differently. Should Florida
-be _next_ admitted to the Union as a _slave_ state, the south will
-have a majority in the Senate. Who can predict the consequences? But
-were the free states thoroughly abolitionized, Florida would never
-come into the Union as a _slave_ State; for Abolitionists are in
-_principle_ opposed to it.
-
-_We should also prohibit the slave trade between the United States
-and Texas._ In the constitution of Texas, whose independence has
-already been acknowledged by our government, Slavery is established
-as a permanent institution of the country, and a monopoly of the
-slave trade granted to the United States. Already thousands of slaves
-have been sent there, and unless something is done to prevent it,
-vessels will soon be fitted out in northern ports, to carry slaves
-from Virginia to Texas, as well as to New Orleans; and this, whether
-Texas is annexed to the United States, or remains independent. Were
-the citizens of the free states generally Abolitionists, they would
-not allow a legal commerce in slaves from our Republic to a foreign
-nation.
-
-_We should save our own youth from the pollution and guilt of
-Slavery._ They would not directly participate in it. When they go
-to the South they would neither buy nor _hire_ slaves. Hitherto
-nothing has been more common than for our best and most intelligent
-young men, the sons of our ministers and church members, to become
-slave-holders. At home they were not taught the inherent and
-necessary sinfulness of Slavery; at the South the practice was
-recommended to them by the example and plausible pretexts of the best
-men. They were accustomed from their childhood to see slave-holders
-treated with respect because they were rich in human chattels,
-without hearing a word respecting the _extortion_ by which their
-wealth comes. Hence many of the merchants, physicians, lawyers,
-planters, teachers and clergymen of the South, though northern
-men by birth, are either slave-holders or abettors of the system.
-This would not be the case, had our declaration of sentiments been
-taught from the first by our parents and teachers, and been made the
-_cherished_ creed of the free states. Then the combined instructions
-of the nursery, of the school, and of the pulpit, together with
-the impressive power of a sound public sentiment, would have
-_established_ our youth in the love and veneration of human rights;
-in sympathy for the colored man; in hatred of oppression. Thus would
-the general reception of our sentiments withdraw from Slavery one of
-its main supports, and at the same time rescue our sons and daughters
-from the unutterable calamity of becoming rich by the spoiling of the
-poor.
-
-_We should establish the liberties of the free states on a firm
-foundation._ We are not so connected with the slave-states that we
-must necessarily perish in their ruin. If the judgments of heaven
-should overtake them, we may be spared; should their liberties
-be prostrated, ours may survive. It depends on our character and
-conduct. A people who respect the rights of others, will have their
-own rights respected. Regarding man, of whatever color and condition,
-as entitled to the sacred rights of liberty, of property, and of
-personal security, they will neither forge chains for others, nor
-suffer chains to be imposed on themselves. Nor will God forsake
-them. Such are the character and security of Abolitionists. Read
-our declaration of sentiments. We go for _human nature_. We protest
-against Slavery, because it is an infraction of the rights of MAN. We
-know that our entire country has forfeited her freedom, by oppressing
-the colored man; still we believe we may, by hearty repentance
-and the adoption of just and humane sentiments, appease the wrath
-of heaven, and should our nation be rent in two, preserve our own
-liberties. But if we continue to connive at this wickedness, nothing
-is more certain than our ruin in the common destruction of the
-country.
-
-_The free people of color would rapidly improve in their moral and
-physical condition._ A load of prejudice now crushes them in the
-dust. They cannot rise because they are deprived of the motives
-and facilities for self-improvement. They are a proscribed people.
-IT IS A CALAMITY IN THIS CHRISTIAN COUNTRY TO BE BORN WITH A
-COLORED SKIN. It shuts out human beings from schools and colleges,
-from the mechanical arts, from the house of God, from a share in
-the government of the nation, from social intercourse with their
-fellow-creatures, from the best incitements to virtue and enterprise.
-We freely confess, that the Abolitionists, if a majority, would
-correct all these evils, and cause men in this so called christian
-and democratic country, to be treated, according to the bible without
-distinction of color.
-
-_We should do much to vindicate the honor and truth of christianity._
-Slavery is the _strongest_ hold of infidelity at the South, and a
-_strong_ hold at the North. It is so because, while natural religion
-declares Slavery to be sinful, the ministers and professors of
-christianity practice it, and defend their conduct from the bible.
-Such a religion, says the infidel cannot be from God. It is thus that
-the church is bringing into contempt and doubt our blessed religion.
-It would greatly counteract this prolific cause of infidelity, were
-all our churches, ministers, and theological professors, to embrace
-and advocate the true doctrine of human rights as it is set forth in
-the word of God. We should then hold up to the world, this internal
-evidence of the divine origin of the bible, that, being written in
-ages of darkness and despotism, it notwithstanding clearly recognizes
-and protects MAN as the possessor of natural, inalienable, sacred
-rights. Instead of doing this, many northern preachers of the gospel,
-are now blaspheming their religion, by saying that both Moses and
-Christ tolerated Slavery.
-
-_We should no longer uphold Slavery by recognizing slave-holders as
-brethren in good and regular standing in the Church._ We now receive
-to the table of the Redeemer, without one word of admonition, men,
-who at the South, make merchandize of the image of God, of their
-fellow-christians. What is still more astonishing if not more wicked,
-we receive slave-holders to our pulpits, to preach to us about loving
-God and MAN! Thus we practically say, that Slavery is consistent both
-with morality and the gospel of Christ. Were we Abolitionists, it
-would be far otherwise; for they do not think it right to lend the
-sanction of the church to such outrageous wickedness.
-
-Such would be _some_ of the happy results of the general adoption of
-our sentiments in the free states, if nothing more could be effected.
-But we doubt not it would issue in THE PEACEABLE ABOLITION OF SLAVERY
-BY THE SEVERAL SLAVE STATES. This is the principal object of our
-enterprise; and on a strong probability of success, we are willing to
-rest its character.
-
-_The constitutional action of Congress in the ways above named, would
-do much to induce the South to abolish Slavery._ Its abolition in
-the District of Columbia by the assembled wisdom of the country,
-would exert a powerful influence on the southern mind. It would be
-the testimony of the nation, corroborating the testimony of every
-truly civilized and christian people, to the impolicy and wickedness
-of Slavery. The prohibition of the inter state slave-trade, and the
-confinement of Slavery to its present local limits would render
-it unprofitable to the old states, which depend on this trade as
-the chief source of profit; and also drive the new states to the
-necessity of introducing free labor; for how could they otherwise
-cultivate their immense tracts of virgin land, or supply the deficit
-occasioned by the rapid consumption of life on their cotton and sugar
-plantations?
-
-We should make a still more _direct appeal to her interests_, by
-saying: _You may keep your cotton, rice, and sugar, until you have
-abolished Slavery. We shall no longer use the products of unrequited
-labor._ It would then be a question of dollars and cents with her,
-whether or not she would give liberty to her captives. We should
-not be obliged to deny ourselves the use of her productions one
-year; for her states would vie with each other to see which could
-obtain a monopoly of northern patronage by first abolishing Slavery.
-Many northern men have been bought by southern patronage to _do
-wrong_; is it not equally possible to buy the south with northern
-patronage to _do right_; Human nature is every where the same. We
-should indeed regret to have Slavery abandoned from an exclusive
-regard to self-interest. We would rather it should be destroyed by
-the spirit of repentance; for then the emancipated slave would still
-be treated with justice and humanity. But no means of bringing the
-South to repentance can be more promising, than the _conscientious_
-refusal, by northern men, of all sects and parties, to sustain
-Slavery, by consuming its produce. At present this cannot be done on
-a scale sufficiently large to secure, certainly and immediately, the
-abolition of Slavery; but were the North completely abolitionized, no
-doubt she would do it with the most triumphant success.
-
-_We should move the South to abandon Slavery, by appealing to her
-love of reputation._ The South shows herself sensitive on this point.
-Said Mr. Calhoun in the United States Senate, “do they, [his southern
-opponents,] expect the Abolitionists will resort to arms, and
-commence a crusade to liberate our slaves by force? Is this what they
-mean when they speak of the attempt to abolish Slavery? If so let me
-tell our friends of the South who differ from us, that the war which
-the Abolitionists wage against us is of a very different character
-and _far more effective_—it is waged not against our _lives_, but our
-_character_.” Had he said _our reputations and consciences_, he would
-have told the truth. We do intend to make Slavery _disgraceful_. Sin
-ought to be esteemed a reproach to any people. Were all northern men
-of our way of thinking, this sin would be as infamous as any other
-kind of fraud and villainy. The _world_ is now pointing the finger
-of scorn at _slave-holding America_. The free states bear a merited
-portion of the shame, because we share largely in the responsibility.
-As we have taken Slavery under our patronage, and consented to stand
-godfather to it, what little respectability we have, is thrown
-around it, to the great relief and joy of its southern parents. Let
-us retire from the relation. Instead of defending Slavery, let us
-reiterate the just and indignant censures of the civilized world,
-until all shall feel, that so great an enormity cannot be practiced
-or connived at, without a forfeiture of character. This would be
-the state of feeling, were the citizens of the north generally
-Abolitionists; and he knows little of human nature, who doubts
-that _such_ a state of feeling, would render the condition of a
-slave-holder, the last to be sought, the first to be abandoned.
-
-In these ways, if in no others, we could reach and influence the
-South. Although she should attempt to shut out the light by a strict
-censorship of the press and post-office; though she should make the
-utterance of our sentiments on southern soil an offence against her
-laws; she could not prevent the constitutional action of the general
-government; she could not compel us to consume her produce; she could
-not escape the withering contempt and indignant frown of our virtuous
-public sentiment. We could reach her heart in these ways, in spite
-of herself, and as we think to the certain overthrow of Slavery. We
-could do more.
-
-WE COULD CONVERT THE SOUTH TO THE PRACTICAL ADOPTION OF OUR
-SENTIMENTS BY ENLIGHTENING HER CONSCIENCE. This is the principal
-ground of our confidence. If Slavery is sinful, we can prove it to be
-such; and this proof, made plain to the understanding of the South,
-cannot fail to awaken her conscience. Such is human nature. Some
-would have us think that none but christians have consciences, and
-therefore the first step to be taken for the removal of Slavery is
-to send missionaries to convert the masters to christianity, thus
-laying a foundation for successful appeals to the conscience. But it
-seems to us the work of centuries, if not an impracticable work, to
-convert the masters, or a majority of them, to true holiness, while
-Slavery lasts, _especially if they have no consciences_; and we think
-also, if all were converted to such a christianity as consists with a
-hearty belief that _Slavery is not condemned by the Bible_, it would
-not much facilitate our enterprise. Nor have we so much contempt for
-that word, which is mighty through God to the pulling down of strong
-holds, as to doubt that _our doctrines_ will commend themselves
-to the _reason_ of our southern brethren, and receive a fruitful
-response from their _consciences_.
-
-Some would have the world believe, if every person in the free states
-were an Abolitionist, it would not hasten the emancipation of the
-slaves; for, say they, we could not then get a hearing at the south,
-and if we could, she is too much exasperated at our interference
-to do any thing on the subject. In our opinion, they are entirely
-mistaken.
-
-We believe _we can get a hearing at the South, or convey a knowledge
-of our sentiments to the southern mind, and that these sentiments are
-more potent than her prejudices and passions_. In proof of it—
-
-_She is now constantly receiving numerous publications containing
-our views._ There were, the last year, about five hundred regular
-southern subscribers to the publications of the American Anti-Slavery
-Society. The Cincinnati Philanthropist, the Alton Observer, the New
-York Evangelist, and scores of other papers, religious and political,
-have subscribers at the South, with whom from week to week they
-advocate this cause. Many valuable anti-slavery books are also
-doing a good work in the very midst of the evil. Several thousands
-of Miss Grimke’s Appeal, together with the writings of Jay, Child,
-Channing and others, are daily tearing off the mask from Slavery, and
-awakening the slumbering conscience of the South. Not unfrequently
-slave-holders themselves come to the anti-slavery office in New York
-and buy whole sets of our publications. The speeches of her Senators,
-and the messages of her Governors evince a better acquaintance with
-our writings and movements than the great men of the North can boast.
-Her own press is doing much to disseminate our sentiments. The
-United States Telegraph of February 18, 1837, edited by Duff Green,
-Washington, D. C., was nearly half filled with extracts from our
-prints. Her clergy by publishing apologies for slavery in refutation
-of our views, are also making these views known and waking up a
-spirit of inquiry. Indeed, such is human nature, and such is the
-course of the south, that we have come to believe she will not allow
-us at the north to _think aloud on the subject of Slavery without
-knowing what we think and why we think so. She will not allow us
-to form and express opinions on this subject_ WITHOUT KNOWING OUR
-OPINIONS AND THE GROUNDS OF THEM. She is too much interested, and
-knows that we have too much power, to pass our sentiments by in utter
-contempt without even ascertaining them.
-
-But were the free states completely abolitionized, not only the
-presses of the Anti-Slavery Societies, assisted by a few others,
-would carry our doctrines to the South; but _all the religious,
-political and commercial papers of the North, indeed the whole body
-of our literature, would breathe the same spirit, would speak the
-same language_. Were she, therefore, ever so much averse to the
-truth, these numberless publications, aided by the English press and
-by private correspondence, would force upon her a knowledge of our
-faith.
-
-_The social intercourse of the North and South would also afford us
-ample opportunities for publishing our sentiments._ The citizens
-of every state in the Union are daily meeting in the steam-boats,
-coaches, rail-road cars and hotels of our country. We are constantly
-_walking arm in arm_ with the South, so that she cannot fail to learn
-what we think of Slavery, and of the duty and pre-eminent safety of
-immediate emancipation. If we are decided Abolitionists, we shall
-certainly talk enough to let her know _what_ we think and _why_ we
-think so.
-
-_Many of the youth of the South must continue, as in times past, to
-be educated in the free states._ Mr. Calhoun was educated at Yale
-College. Who can doubt that an influence might have been exerted on
-his mind, in relation to Slavery, of the most happy character, if the
-officers of that institution, if the surrounding community, if the
-literature of the day, had all breathed the spirit of Arthur Tappan
-and Gerritt Smith? There are now hundreds of southern youth in our
-schools, and hundreds will succeed them, whose minds would be set in
-deadly and deathless hostility to the robbery of God’s poor, were
-their teachers Abolitionists. Some think that in such an event, they
-would be kept at home. A few might be, but not all. The salubrity
-of our climate, the excellence of our institutions, the comparative
-purity of our morals, give us an advantage, that the more virtuous
-and intelligent of southern parents, would not relinquish, for fear
-that their sons should embrace views, which in their own hearts they
-must approve.
-
-It should also be remembered, that we not only educate the most
-precious youth of the South, but we _supply many of her pulpits,
-professorships, and shops with our own sons_. The great body of
-southern merchants are northern men. Such is the genius of Slavery
-that this will continue to be the case. The result would be, were we
-all Abolitionists, that the adopted sons of the South would soon form
-a strong body of opposition to Slavery, laboring to overthrow it, by
-their votes, their arguments and their example. Some may think that
-lynch law would then drive us all from the South; or that we should
-be received there only on condition of letting Slavery alone. They
-are mistaken. Were we _all_ Abolitionists, we should be defended. The
-national government would protect us. The constitution guarantees the
-rights of a citizen in all the states to the citizens of each state;
-and had the North been thoroughly abolitionized, she would have
-demanded and obtained redress for the blood of her innocent citizens,
-who have been hung without color of law, by southern ruffians. Be
-assured when we all become Abolitionists, an end will be put to the
-reign of terror in every part of the country. Men of all creeds and
-colors, will then go where they please, speak what they please, and
-do what they please, with perfect safety, so long as they commit no
-offence against just and impartial law.
-
-_The interests of a large class at the South must predispose them
-to favor our enterprise._ Probably not more than half of the whites
-are directly interested in the continuance of Slavery. Many hire
-Slaves, who could on equally eligible terms, and with more peace of
-conscience, hire them as _free_ laborers, were they emancipated.
-Some own land without slaves; and it is admitted, that immediately
-on the abolition of Slavery, the soil would rise in value, and
-continue to appreciate with the general improvement of the country. A
-multitude of the whites are too poor to own slaves, and too ignorant
-to obtain a living, except by manual labor, and Slavery makes that
-disreputable, and comparatively unprofitable. All these classes need
-only open their eyes, to see that Slavery is subversive of their
-interests: and we may therefore rationally calculate on having their
-attention and sympathy.
-
-_What we have already effected at the South, is a pledge of entire
-success_, the moment the leading influences at the North shall
-second our efforts instead of counteracting them. Several hundred
-slaves have been set at liberty through the labors of those two
-distinguished Abolitionists, David Nelson and James G. Birney. We
-have heard of various other instances in which our doctrines have
-had such successful access to the southern mind. We will mention
-one. Some time since, in New York, a gentleman rose in a monthly
-concert of prayer for the slaves, and said: “I am a slave-holder from
-Virginia. I came to the North with violent prejudices against the
-Abolitionists, in consequence of what I read in northern papers; but
-I was determined to investigate the matter for myself. Accordingly
-I sought lodgings in the family of an Abolitionist, obtained and
-read your publications, and attended this monthly concert; and I am
-now convinced that not only your doctrines but your measures are
-righteous.” And he added, turning to two gentlemen who sat beside
-him, “these gentlemen are also slave-holders from Virginia, and
-my first converts to abolitionism; and I know a thousand men in
-Virginia, who if they could have the truth stated to them, would
-agree with us.” He then exhorted the Abolitionists present to go on,
-saying “you have only to correct the public sentiment of the North so
-that their papers shall not misrepresent you at the South, and THE
-WORK IS DONE.” Besides many such facts evincive of the power of truth
-over the southern mind, and proving that the leaven is working there,
-we have frequent admissions from the lips and pens of the defenders
-of Slavery at the South, that the Abolitionists are disturbing the
-conscience of her people, that there is more sympathy with them there
-than it would be prudent to acknowledge; that if the fanatics are
-suffered to go on they will succeed; that they _may_ build up a body
-of public sentiment which the South cannot resist. These facts, these
-admissions, and the very nature of man, convince us that we have many
-allies at the South. The violence of the friends of Slavery, has
-forced them to a temporary silence; but no doubt many of them long
-to unburden their hearts, and are only waiting to be sustained by
-a healthy public sentiment among us.—Were we all Abolitionists, it
-would be less odious and less hazardous to avow our sentiments at the
-South; and she would find a body of Abolitionists on her own soil,
-too respectable to be despised—too strong to be resisted.
-
-Our expectations of success in making known our sentiments to our
-southern brethren, are rendered still more sanguine, _by the history
-of emancipation in the West Indies_. It will be impossible for our
-countrymen, to close their eyes against the light, which the working
-of the British abolition act, will constantly throw on the duty and
-safety of immediate emancipation.
-
-We are nevertheless told, with surprising assurance, by men great
-and small, that we have postponed the abolition of Slavery, at least
-half a century; that our ultra doctrines and violent measures have
-so incensed the South, that she has settled down in the inflexible
-determination to keep her slaves. Is this human nature? They who
-think so, seem to imagine that the work of reform must be carried
-on solely by coaxing and flattering the sinner: that a declaration
-of his guilt and of his duty, sufficiently plain and unequivocal to
-excite his displeasure, is the last way to bring him to repentance.
-We think otherwise. We take the anger of the South as a precious
-omen of success. The hit bird flutters. She shows herself conscious
-of the truth of our charges. Accuse a consistent temperance man
-of drunkenness, he will smile in your face; accuse the drunkard
-himself and he will be ready to fight you. The faithful reproof
-of sin always irritates the sinner, and his irritation continues
-until he either repents or forgets the admonition. Had our efforts
-produced no such sensation among slave-holders, we should be far more
-ready to despair. She believes unless this discussion is stopped,
-Slavery must cease, or else she will be disgraced in the eyes of the
-world, and exceedingly embarrassed and trammeled in the possession
-of her slaves. We do not, however, attribute all the wrath of the
-South against us, to awakened conscience, and the anticipation of
-our success. We have been shamefully misrepresented by _northern_
-papers and mobs, which have not hesitated to charge us with the
-worst of motives and the most hostile feelings towards the South;
-as if we would gladly involve her in a servile war. The belief of
-these calumnies has doubtless excited her worst passions; and the
-moment she learns the truth, it will create a re-action in our
-favor. Nor should it be overlooked that many of her own citizens
-have no sympathy for Slavery, and no strong prejudices against us.
-Facts also show that argument can appease this very wrath, to which
-our opponents attribute such indomitable energy. When the students
-of Lane Seminary, under the Presidency of the Rev. Dr. Beecher,
-commenced a discussion of the subject of Slavery, about fifteen
-young men from the South, all of them slave-holders or sons of
-slave-holders, were not a little incensed at the faithful exposure of
-Slavery by their fellow-students; but at the close of the discussion,
-all these young men, save one, were thorough going Abolitionists; and
-several of them are now lecturing in the free states for the purpose
-of correcting our public sentiment, as a necessary and infallible
-means of rectifying that of the South.
-
-We believe, therefore, that if we succeed in abolitionizing the
-North, we shall the South. Were the North already abolitionized,
-we should do all the good specified above. We should preserve our
-own liberties, virtue and religion, and save the South from man’s
-greatest curse, his own voluntary wickedness. Is it not, then,
-desirable that our sentiments should prevail? Do they not carry
-with them the clearest credentials of truth—the very best practical
-tendencies? Is it not the grossest hypocrisy in the North to pretend
-hostility to Slavery, when she refuses to do the good which she
-would rejoice to do, were she a convert to abolitionism? Is it not
-a crime in her to fight against the diffusion of these sentiments?
-In one word—ought not the Abolitionists to do all they can, in a
-constitutional and christian manner, to propagate their views?
-
-Success at the North is certain; for she has an interest in
-destroying Slavery: her political principles are opposed to it; and
-the great mass of her citizens are intelligent and virtuous, unbought
-by southern patronage, and accustomed to abhor cruelty and injustice.
-Our success is also written in the desperate, but ineffectual
-endeavors of the opposition, to prevent the agitation of the subject.
-By their own showing, Slavery cannot endure the light of free
-inquiry. If northern abettors of Slavery were not convinced, that the
-discussion will inevitably abolitionize the mass of the people, they
-would rely on argument rather than on lawless violence. Our progress
-too, has already been astonishing. In the course of three years
-nearly a thousand Anti-Slavery Societies have been organized; many
-enemies have become friends, and many opposers, the able advocates
-of our cause. The prejudices of the people have been softened, and
-thousands are now on the eve of joining us, who lately were our most
-bitter antagonists. We have made all this progress notwithstanding
-the abuse of the political and commercial press has been heaped upon
-us without measure, and no man could join us but at the peril of his
-reputation, if not also his life and property. We are, therefore,
-encouraged to persevere. What have we to accomplish, which we have
-not in part achieved, while our powers and facilities are constantly
-augmenting.
-
-
-VINDICATION OF MEASURES.
-
-We propose to convert the country to our views by measures which some
-of our opponents, (ashamed to deny our doctrines,) allege to be the
-principal ground of their dissent. We think they have failed to make
-a proper distinction between our _measures_ and the _abuse_ of these
-measures. The constitutional action of Congress, the pulpit, the
-press, public debate, private conversation, anti-slavery societies,
-_these_ are our measures. If any of our associates, through human
-infirmity, prosecute any of these measures in ill-temper or with
-indiscretion, we regret and condemn it. The measures themselves,
-and the prosecution of them we approve, and shall now attempt to
-vindicate.
-
-Some object to _our organizing Anti-Slavery Societies_, which in our
-opinion they would not do, if they wished well to our enterprise.
-For it is manifest that union gives us strength, influence,
-courage, money and other facilities for carrying on the work; it
-lays a foundation for concentrated, permanent, economical effort.
-Societies have their stated and occasional meetings, without giving
-offence and provoking popular violence. They animate each other by
-friendly correspondence, and prosecute their work systematically
-and vigorously, by the gratuitous labors of their most enlightened
-members. A general organization will enable us to petition the
-various legislative bodies in behalf of human rights, with unanimity
-and regularity, until our objects are gained. We see other ends to
-be secured by it. There is no disputing our constitutional right to
-adopt this measure; which we believe any men of common sense would
-adopt in our circumstances. Even the wisdom of Christ sanctions the
-measure, for what is his _church_ but a _society_ formed for the
-purpose of converting men to the truth and progressively sanctifying
-them? Nor do we see how we can testify to the South our abhorrence
-of Slavery unless we form societies for the purpose. Had none been
-formed, it might be doubted whether there are a thousand decided
-Abolitionists in the country. It would be said in Congress and
-believed at the South, that we are few in numbers, and constantly
-becoming fewer and more contemptible. The existence and rapidly
-increasing number of our _societies_ precludes the possibility
-of such misrepresentations and mistakes. As soon as our plan is
-completed, in the formation of a flourishing society in each village
-of the free states, embodying a majority of the people, the South
-will know what our public sentiment is. It will be concentrated upon
-her. She will feel it. We learn from intelligent sources, that the
-general opinion at the South now is, that all the citizens of the
-North who are not Abolitionists, sympathize with the slave-holders.
-It is natural they should think so. We must, therefore, rank
-ourselves with the Abolitionists, by joining an Anti-Slavery Society,
-if we would give our decided testimony against the GREAT SOUTHERN
-SIN.
-
-Some object to _our employing itinerant lecturers_. We think they
-would not object, if they had considered the matter with friendly
-feelings. The subject of Slavery has so many relations in this
-country, and involves so many questions in morals, in biblical
-literature, in constitutional law, in political economy, in history,
-and other departments of learning, that our stated clergy, have not
-sufficient time for its thorough investigation, were they disposed
-to make it. We ought not to expect of them more than a faithful
-exposition of the testimony of God against Slavery, and in favor of
-immediate emancipation. As a general rule, they can do no more. We
-need an extensive and thorough discussion of the whole subject. Nor
-are all our clergymen yet Abolitionists. Some are with us; others
-are against us. This was to be expected. The subject has but just
-come before the public mind. It found almost all our ministers
-colonizationists. It would have been surprising, if they had all
-embraced our views at the first blush, without discussion. We don’t
-do things so in Connecticut. Hereafter we doubt not they will all
-join us; but in the interim, we must employ _itinerant_ lecturers, if
-we would disseminate what we believe to be the truth. And who will be
-harmed by it? The truth will hurt no one; and even “error,” we quote
-the words of Jefferson, “may safely be tolerated, so long as reason
-is left free to combat it.” Some think it an interference with the
-rights of the stated ministry to introduce an itinerant lecturer,
-without the advice and consent of the settled pastor. How so? Suppose
-there are several clergymen in the same village. One of them being
-an Abolitionist does all he can, by conversation, the distribution
-of papers, and public lectures, to make the people Abolitionists,
-without distinction of sect or party. Is that an interference with
-the rights of the other pastors? No; such a course has never been
-thought so. Nor is there the least difference in the two cases. The
-several churches introduce these pastors to be their teachers. We,
-the Abolitionists, another body of people, introduce a man to teach
-on a particular subject. We have the right; he has a right to come;
-therefore no right is violated.[1]
-
-_Some object to our employing severe epithets in speaking of
-Slavery and slave-holders._ They say our condemnation is too hard,
-denunciatory and indiscriminate. We wish all who allege this against
-us would illustrate their meaning and sustain their charge by quoting
-the offensive expressions. It would put them to great inconvenience.
-They may think the language “hard” and “too hard,” when it barely
-expresses what ought to be said, and cannot be better said. We do
-indeed tell slave-holders their sins plainly, calling things by their
-right names; but it is only in the conclusion of an argument to
-prove the charge, that we justify making it. Nor is our language any
-harder than the sober language of moral philosophers, and of the most
-eminent fathers of the church. Wesley says: “You, [the slave-holder,]
-first acted the villain in making them slaves, whether you stole
-them or bought them.” “This equally concerns all slave-holders, of
-whatever rank and degree: seeing _men-buyers are exactly on a level
-with men-stealers_.” The younger President Edwards says: “To hold
-a man in a state of Slavery is to be every day guilty of _robbing_
-him of his liberty, or of _man-stealing_.” Grotius says: “Those are
-men-stealers, who abduct, _keep_, sell or buy _slaves_ or freemen. To
-steal a man is the highest kind of theft.” Adam Clarke says: “Among
-the heathen Slavery was in some sort excusable; among _christians_
-it is AN ENORMITY AND A CRIME FOR WHICH PERDITION HAS SCARCELY AN
-ADEQUATE STATE OF PUNISHMENT.” We use no language more hard, more
-true, or more indiscriminate. We think these great men understood
-how to do good, at least as well as our critics. We are also fully
-persuaded, that the South is far less incensed at our _language_
-than at our _sentiments_. She is indignant at what we say, not the
-manner of saying it. Dr. Channing had this vulgar prejudice, that we
-were injuring our cause by using abusive language. And Mr. Leigh of
-Virginia, took the very book, in which he reproves us, and quoted
-passages which he declared in the United States Senate, rivalled the
-most insulting language of Garrison. So difficult is it to tell the
-truth about Slavery in palatable terms.
-
-We are also censured for _sending pictures to the South illustrative
-of the horrors of Slavery_. We do indeed employ the art of painting,
-as well as the arts of printing and speaking, to awaken sympathy
-for the Slave; but our pictures are designed for the North, not
-the South. Though some of them may find their way there, they are
-_never sent_ to the slaves, are not apt to fall into their hands,
-and not adapted to make them uneasy and turbulent. Were they painted
-as large as life, and set up at the corner of every street and on
-every plantation, the sole effect would be to awe the slaves into
-subjection, by reminding them of the consequences of disobedience.
-
-We are accused of _sending papers to the slaves_. The charge is
-false. Our publications are sent exclusively to the free white
-population. Were it in our power to send to the slaves, we should
-indeed rejoice at it. If they could read and the mails would carry
-them papers, we would prepare tracts on purpose for them, explaining
-the doctrines and duties of christianity, inculcating the forgiveness
-of injuries, the patient endurance of wrong, the faithful service of
-their masters, until such time as they _can be made free_. We would
-even send them the Bible, which says: “Woe unto him that buildeth his
-house by unrighteousness and his chambers by wrong; _that useth his
-neighbor’s service without wages and giveth him not for his work_.”
-Jer. xxii, 13.
-
-The foregoing are current objections to _specific_ measures of the
-Abolitionists. There are other objections of a more general and
-sweeping character, which go to condemn _all_ our measures, calling
-upon us to disband our societies, to dismiss our agents, to break up
-our printing presses, and interfere in no way with Southern Slavery.
-We can give these only a brief notice.
-
-It is a current objection to our enterprise, that _Slavery is
-no concern of ours_: that the South alone is interested in the
-subject, and we have no right to _interfere_. Interference is a very
-indefinite term. We acknowledge we have no right to interfere by
-force of arms; and have ever disclaimed the intention of interfering,
-except by the constitutional and peaceable action of Congress,
-and the application of truth to the hearts and consciences of our
-southern brethren. As to our having no right to interfere in _this
-manner_, because Slavery is no concern of ours, it is a strange
-doctrine to be promulgated in the nineteenth century by republicans
-and christians. What interest had we in the struggle of Greece and
-Poland with Turkish and Russian despotism? What concern have we in
-the moral and political degradation of the Hindoo, Hottentot and
-Chinese? We have the answer in the motto of the christian church:
-OUR COUNTRY IS THE WORLD, OUR COUNTRYMEN MANKIND. As christians
-we are concerned for the spiritual welfare of all classes at the
-South; the great mass of whom are now sunk in infidelity and vice.
-Their alarming destitution of the means of religion, and the general
-corruption of their morals, are justly attributed to Slavery. What
-would become of the virtue, intelligence and religious institutions
-of Meriden, if all the real estate and all the inhabitants of the
-town, were held as property by one man? He might be an infidel;
-and if he were a christian, what dependence could be placed on
-him to support the gospel, or what confidence would the oppressed
-people have in his religion? Such is the state of things at the
-South. Slavery not only creates a distaste for true religion, but
-withdraws from its support the laboring class, which in every free
-country, embodies a great proportion of the most devoted and liberal
-christians. There is also much in the habits which Slavery fosters,
-to indispose pious youth to enter the ministry and to disqualify them
-for its laborious duties; while many who enter upon the work, abandon
-it for secular pursuits, or remove to the free states, where they
-can preach the _whole_ gospel with more security and success. Not
-only must a slave-holding community be destitute of men and means to
-make known the way of salvation, but the preaching of the gospel will
-generally be inefficacious with all classes; with the _masters_, for
-Slavery fosters in them the worst passions of human nature, affords
-them facilities for the unbounded indulgence of their appetites,
-and relieves them from the necessity of personal exertion for a
-livelihood; with the _poor white population_, for Slavery accumulates
-the wealth of the community in a few hands, renders free labor
-disreputable, and multiplies temptations to low and degrading vices;
-with the _free people of color_, for Slavery holds most of them in a
-state of abject poverty, ignorance and sin; with the _slaves_, for
-Slavery robs them of the bible, of self-control, of hope, of parent,
-wife and child, of the best motives to be virtuous, and of the best
-evidences of christianity; it makes them vicious; it makes them
-sceptics. We are concerned for these perishing millions.
-
-Slavery is a concern of ours for it involves our personal interests.
-It throws back upon us a moral pestilence; it scatters the seeds
-of intemperance, licentiousness, and infidelity; it popularizes
-gambling, Sabbath breaking, profaneness and lawless violence; it
-casts an undeserved stigma on manual labor, it encourages idleness
-and prodigality. It disgraces us in the eyes of the whole world;
-it impairs our national strength; it encroaches on the spirit of
-liberty; it is constantly undermining our free institutions. The
-northern states have no greater enemy. Were Slavery abolished, her
-religion, her morals, her liberties, her general prosperity would be
-far more secure. The chief source of danger to the integrity of our
-union, and to our domestic tranquility would be removed; a greater
-market would be opened for our manufactures, and a wider field for
-our industry and enterprise; the emancipated slaves would purchase
-our goods, and our youth could enter into competition with the sons
-of the South in raising cotton, &c. without becoming slave-holders.
-Labor would soon cease to be disgraceful; property would accumulate
-in every part of the land; education would flourish; religion would
-revive; the entire country would rejoice in peace and plenty under
-the smiles of an approving providence. Tell us not, that we have no
-concern in removing the greatest sin, curse and shame of the nation,
-and in securing for ourselves and our posterity, a truly free and
-virtuous government.
-
-It is said that _Slavery is an agitating subject, which cannot be
-discussed without disturbing the peace and harmony of our churches_.
-Why so? This subject can be discussed in the churches in Great
-Britain without discord and division. We think it could be here,
-were it not for the corruption of our public sentiment, which can
-be corrected only by free discussion. It is where the truth needs
-most to be heard, that it creates most opposition and variance.
-Primitive christianity was accused of turning the world upside down.
-The temperance cause has occasioned strife, and separated “very
-friends.” We hold to the Apostolic injunction: “_first_ pure, _then_
-peaceable.” We love a virtuous peace. A truce with sin we abhor. If
-we must surrender our liberties, and connive at iniquity, to avoid
-a war, we say with Patrick Henry, “The war is inevitable, and let
-it come; I repeat it, sir, let it come.” Who does not see that if
-polygamy were common in our churches, it would create a terrible
-excitement to preach against it, and lead to the dismission of
-pastors? Yet any one would acknowledge, that religion could never
-prosper, while the church was so corrupt; and that she had better be
-torn into ten thousand fragments, than that polygamy should continue
-in vogue; for she would soon be re-organized in greater purity and
-strength. So it is with a _slave-holding_ Church; and with a Church
-in which the _spirit_ of Slavery is so rife, that she will not live
-in peace with her Anti-Slavery members, nor tolerate the exercise
-of their Constitutional rights. But we do not believe this of our
-Churches. We think the more this “delicate and agitating” subject is
-discussed among us, the less unpleasant excitement will prevail.
-
-It is said _that our measures to overthrow Slavery are
-unconstitutional_. Our opponents may easily test this question
-by bringing it before the U. S. Court. We claim to be acting
-constitutionally. Our plan of operations is essentially the same as
-that pursued by the early Anti-Slavery Societies, of which such men
-as John Jay, Benj. Franklin, Benj. Rush, and Jonathan Edwards, were
-active members; some of whom were engaged in forming our federal
-Constitution. Did they not understand that instrument? Did their
-contemporaries ever dispute their right to discuss the merits of
-Slavery? Have not our citizens, from time immemorial and without
-restriction, exercised this right? Does not the Constitution, instead
-of guaranteeing Slavery against this moral influence, guarantee to
-us the right of employing it, by forbidding Congress to pass any law
-abridging the freedom of speech and of the press?
-
-We are told our measures are an _invasion of the rights of
-property_. This objection assumes, what nature denies, that _man_
-may be _rightfully_ held as property. Blackstone maintains in his
-Commentaries, that man cannot be reduced by any just process to a
-state of absolute Slavery; that he cannot be born in that state, nor
-sell himself into it, nor be placed there when taken captive in war,
-without flagrant injustice. We also hold it to be _self-evident_,
-that all men are _born free and equal_, and entitled to certain
-_inalienable_ rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit
-of happiness. The Slave owns himself by grant of his Creator.
-_Slavery_ is, therefore, an invasion of his rights of property. It is
-the slave-master who makes an aggression on the property of others,
-not we, who exhort him to relinquish that property. The Slaves
-being the rightful owners of themselves, the abolition of Slavery
-is merely an act declarative of this indisputable title. Nor do we
-seek the destruction of Slavery, except through the constitutional
-authorities. Even were the slaves the _property_ of their masters, it
-would be lawful for us to _persuade_ them to part with it. Would it
-not? The Legislatures of the several states have a right to abolish
-Slavery. Have they not? It has hitherto been conceded, that the law
-making power of every slave-holding country has this right. May
-we not then persuade the states to exercise it, by convincing them
-of the moral wrong and frightful impolicy of Slavery? Should it be
-said that the government encouraged its citizens to invest property
-under the protection of the slave code, and therefore ought not
-to abolish Slavery without indemnifying them, our answer is, that
-mankind are under a paramount obligation not to invest property under
-the protection of _immoral_ laws; that all such laws are in their
-nature null and void from the beginning; that governments have always
-exercised the power of correcting abuses; and there is no greater
-abuse than Slavery; none more unjust and oppressive; none more
-pernicious and perilous to our national interests.
-
-Some object, that the abolition of Slavery _on our plan_, without
-compensation to the masters, _would be taking away the bread of poor
-widows and orphans_. We have no plan. We say only, that Slavery is
-wrong, and ought forthwith to be abandoned. The South will adopt
-and prosecute her own plan. When her Legislatures abolish Slavery,
-they can, if they will, provide for widows and children, who are
-left destitute by that act. If they will not do it, we will raise
-contributions for their relief; for we deem the claims of _charity_,
-nearly as imperative as the claims of justice. But we can never
-sanction the _principle_ of Slavery, by saying, that slave-holders
-have a _right_ to compensation for restoring to the slaves their
-stolen rights. We must always consider it a greater hardship to be
-unjustly held as a slave, than to be made poor by freeing such slave.
-It is a sad blunder in morals, that this man may make that man,
-perhaps fifty other men, poor for life, lest he himself should be a
-pauper; that this man may make that man poor by _dishonesty_, lest he
-himself should become poor by _being honest_.
-
-No objection to our measures is more senseless, or more common,
-than an _alleged tendency to dissolve the Union_. Which had we
-better surrender, the Union or our liberties? The Union is a curse
-instead of a blessing, if we must surrender for it, _freedom of
-speech and personal protection in any part of the country_. And
-if Slavery continues to be protected by public sentiment, and by
-popular violence, how long could the Union last, even were _all_ the
-abolitionists this day laid in their graves? Slavery endangers the
-integrity of the Union, more than all other enemies; and unless soon
-destroyed, will be the destroyer both of it and us. If we love the
-Union, we should labor to overthrow Slavery. Wesley somewhere defines
-fanaticism, to be the expectation of accomplishing ends without
-the use of means. Let us not hope for the peaceable destruction of
-Slavery, by such a fanatical course. Let us do _something_; and if
-we do any thing, what can be done which the abolitionists are not
-attempting? In doing this we shall not peril the Union, but preserve
-it. The South will never venture on the mad experiment of secession,
-_because_ the North is opposed to Slavery. Such an act would be
-suicidal. It would encourage the slaves to revolt. It would leave her
-defenceless against the invasion of a foreign foe. It would release
-us from the constitutional obligation to suppress domestic violence,
-and to restore fugitives from service. It would open several thousand
-miles of frontier, over which her slaves would escape into a land
-of liberty. It would make the south “a good country to emigrate
-from,” and she would find herself losing her best citizens, and her
-condition becoming more and more exposed and perilous. She would be
-ruined. She knows it. Were our legislators in Congress to retort her
-stereotyped threat to dissolve the Union, with a challenge to do it,
-if she dares, we should hear no more of this empty bravado.
-
-It is said, if our measures should be successful, _the slaves would
-resort to the North_, and coming up upon our farms, and into our
-shops, like the frogs of Egypt, reduce the wages of our laborers.
-No apprehension is more groundless. The free colored people of the
-South are quite numerous, and very much oppressed; yet few of them
-leave that part of the country; though the whites would be very glad
-to have them do so, because they render the slaves uneasy, and come
-into competition with slave labor. But were slavery abolished, the
-whites would desire to retain all the colored people, in order to
-employ them in cultivating the soil; precisely as is now the case in
-the West Indies. Nor would the slaves be willing to leave the land of
-their nativity, and of their kindred, to reside in the cold regions
-of the north, to the business and climate of which they are uninured,
-and where they must labor more severely to obtain a comfortable
-living. But should they come, what then? Do you prefer perpetual
-slavery?
-
-It is also objected to our enterprise, that _the immediate abolition
-of slavery, would be “letting the slaves loose” to be idlers,
-vagabonds, thieves, and cut-throats_. This objection is more forcible
-against _gradual_ emancipation, which would throw upon society
-a multitude of freedmen, while the rest of their brethren still
-remained in bondage. The holders of slaves would not encourage the
-free by giving them labor; who would, therefore, be more apt to be
-idle and vicious; while their release would excite uneasiness in the
-minds of the unemancipated. The objection is also equally strong
-against _prospective_ emancipation, according to which the slaves
-would all be set free at once; but not until some time after the
-passage of the act. Experience and human nature both teach us, that
-slaves under such circumstances are more apt to be overworked, than
-to be better prepared for the enjoyment of freedom. The objection
-is, therefore, good for _perpetual_ slavery, or good for nothing.
-It is good for nothing. Immediate emancipation would indeed deliver
-the slave and his family at once from the hands of an irresponsible
-master, and empower him to go where he pleases and do what he
-pleases, so long as he breaks none of the laws which restrain
-other men. And why not? He could not otherwise rejoin his wife and
-children, whom the slave trade has torn from him, nor secure fair
-wages, nor be safe from oppression. But this is not letting him
-loose _to do evil_. THE LAWS OF SLAVERY LET THE MASTERS LOOSE UPON
-THE SLAVES, _instead of the abolition of slavery letting the slaves
-loose upon the masters_. Were there a law authorizing the inhabitants
-of Meriden to seize the inhabitants of Berlin, to confine them to
-jail limits, and work them without wages, to separate husbands and
-wives, parents and children, and even to kill them by that very
-indefinite thing, called “moderate correction;” this law would let
-the inhabitants of Meriden loose upon the inhabitants of Berlin;
-for it would protect the former in the grossest outrages upon the
-latter. But the repeal of this law would not let the inhabitants of
-Berlin loose upon us. Extending them protection would not be letting
-them loose upon us. Had we the power of repealing the law; or if
-not, possessing the power of _not enforcing_ it, we should find
-our security in doing so. The very way to make them respect _our_
-rights, would be to respect _theirs_. Immediate emancipation places
-the slaves under the _control_ as well as protection of the laws of
-the State against idleness, vagrancy, theft, murder, and all other
-aggressions on the rights of men.
-
-We are told that the _Slaves are not fit to be free_; and therefore
-our scheme of immediate emancipation, if adopted, would prove a
-curse to them and the country. Nothing is more false. The Slaves are
-_men_; and therefore they are more fit for freedom than for slavery;
-more fit to be treated as persons than as things; to be governed by
-appeals to the reason and conscience than by brute force. God made
-man to be free and adapted him to that condition. A state of Slavery
-is unnatural to him. Nor can his nature so change, that he shall
-be more fit to be treated as a brute, than as a free moral agent.
-Slaves have often been set at liberty, and have _always_ proved
-their capacity for freedom, by their industry, frugality and ready
-obedience to the laws.
-
-And why, we would ask, should they be thought unfit to be put under
-the control and protection of the same laws, which govern freemen? Do
-their vices or their ignorance, disqualify them? While Slavery lasts,
-they will remain equally degraded.
-
-Are they _Sabbath breakers_? Slavery has taught them to desecrate
-the day of rest, by making it to them almost the only day of
-recreation, the only day for visiting, for trading and for tilling
-their gardens. Are they _thieves_? They consider stealing from their
-masters to be only making _reprisals_ for the robbery of their just
-wages; while many of them are strongly tempted to steal by the
-desire of more or better food. Are they _liars_? They will continue
-such, while they are slaves. They will pretend sickness, to avoid
-labor; they will say they do not wish to be free, lest their masters
-should sell them into distant banishment; they will lie to conceal
-the unavoidable delinquences, for which slaves are daily upbraided
-and beaten. Are they _idle_? As slaves they have no hope of reward
-to stimulate their exertions. They will work much better, as one
-facetiously expresses it, for Mr. CASH than for Mr. LASH. Let their
-wives and children be dependent on their industry for support, a
-far more noble and efficient motive than the fear of violence, to
-call forth the energies of man. Are they _improvident_? They cannot
-learn to save property, until they are allowed to hold it in their
-own right. Make them free, and then that faculty of their nature,
-which the phrenologists call “acquisitiveness” will prompt them to
-save their earnings. Are they _licentious_? Then give them their
-liberty, that the husband and father may be the legal protector of
-his wife and daughters. Are they _revengeful_? Redress their wrongs,
-and they will forgive their oppressors. Are they _heathen_? Take
-your foot from their necks, before you disgrace christianity, by
-attempting to convert them. Are they _ignorant of letters_? So are a
-majority of the freemen of the world; nor is it to be expected that
-slave-holders will teach their slaves to read and write, until they
-repent of Slavery itself. The vices of the Slaves are inseparable
-from their condition. If they are not now fit for freedom, Slavery,
-which unfitted them, will perpetuate their unfitness. Nor is their
-degradation of mind and morals a disqualification for freedom. You
-may find its counterpart in the characters of a large class of
-citizens in every country.
-
-While Slavery continues, what is the prospect of their becoming
-_better_ fitted for freedom? Where are the men and the means? Who
-will teach them? Who will support the teachers? The south cannot
-supply her _free_ population with instruction. Even with the aid
-of the north, she is very destitute of the means of religion. Nor
-would she be willing to adopt a general system of education for the
-improvement of the Slaves. Instead of giving her money to fit them
-for freedom, she would hunt from society any persons, who should
-seriously propose the measure. They know little of the spirit of
-Slavery, who imagine, that the south was disposed to prepare her
-Slaves for freedom, until the abolitionists roused her to resistance.
-Had she really wished to free her Slaves, she would have welcomed
-us as coadjutors, at least she would not have abandoned her own
-plan, because ours was offensive to her. She never intended to fit
-her Slaves for freedom. She does not intend it now. Her laws, in
-most of the States, are against it. The mass of her Slaves will, no
-doubt, be as unfit for freedom fifty years hence, if Slavery should
-continue so long, as they are to day. The British abolitionists were
-once deceived by this syren song of preparation, but now in allusion
-to the words of Paul; “the _glorious_ gospel of the blessed God;”
-they exclaim, THE GLORIOUS DOCTRINE OF IMMEDIATE EMANCIPATION! They
-found it the POWER OF GOD, to awaken the slumbering conscience of the
-nation; and the WISDOM OF GOD as a measure of relief to their Slaves.
-We shall find it so.
-
-Our opponents also object to _emancipation upon the soil_. Not all,
-but some of them, are in favor of Colonization as a remedy for
-Slavery, and others execrate us for our opposition to it as a scheme
-for benefiting Africa. We are especially averse to the former class.
-When men say, that the Slaves ought not to be freed, until they
-can be colonized, we _ought to make resistance_, for the following
-reasons:
-
-1. We ought to _resist every wicked prejudice_; and they who object
-to emancipation on the soil, do so, in obedience to such a prejudice.
-They say the colored people can never rise in this country. They
-maintain that our aversion to the race is instinctive and natural;
-though we find no one averse to associating with them as _slaves_.
-The two races are certainly on very _intimate_ terms at the South.
-It is only when they come as _freemen_ between the wind and our
-nobility, that they taint the air. We, therefore, say, this prejudice
-is unnatural and sinful; and instead of fostering it, we ought to
-rebuke, and check it in ourselves and others. Some of us recollect
-the time, when as Colonizationists we wished to get rid of the
-colored people, and were indignant at them for being unwilling to
-leave the country. May we not repent of such a feeling and condemn in
-it others, without being hunted from society?
-
-2. _By retaining the emancipated slaves on the soil, we can at less
-expense of men and means educate and christianize them._ Were we
-to send them beyond the Mississippi or to Africa, it would take
-ten times the number of Missionaries and Teachers, that we are
-now supporting among the heathen, to save them from sinking into
-barbarism. But if they should be retained as free laborers in the
-service of their present masters, those masters would provide for
-their instruction, and without diverting means from other objects,
-the delightful spectacle would soon be witnessed of Schools and
-Churches springing up among them, through the voluntary efforts of
-the ministers and christians of the South.
-
-3. _The labor of the Slaves is wanted on the plantations at the
-South._ To withdraw such an amount of labor would bankrupt the
-entire country. Nor could their places be supplied, except by the
-worst population of the old world; by men, whose religion, whose
-morals, whose politics are all, in the highest degree, hostile to our
-national interests. The emancipated Slaves, on the contrary, would be
-prejudiced in favor of the protestant faith, and prove the staunchest
-friends of our free institutions.
-
-4. The _South will not consent to the colonization of the Slaves_.
-She is willing we should contribute to carry off the free people of
-color, “the nuisances,” “the disturbing force,” as she terms them;
-and also those Slaves, whom the more conscientious of her citizens,
-who dare not die Slave-holders, may emancipate for the purpose. But
-she is unwilling we should go a step further. She does not believe we
-can get the means of doing more. We think, if a place were provided
-in Africa, and we had the means necessary to transport every Slave
-there, and were to go and tell the south, about the sinfulness of
-holding Slaves, when they _can_ be colonized, and call upon her in
-_good earnest_, to give them up, she would denounce us as fanatics,
-and pass no more resolutions in favor of colonization. She is now at
-peace with it, because she does not fear it, and hopes to find it of
-use in repelling the abolitionists, in _letting off_, as by a safety
-valve, the pious feeling of her own citizens, and in expelling the
-free people of color.
-
-5. The Slaves _are unwilling to leave the country_; and will never
-consent to do it, but on such a dread alternative as no christian
-people should impose. _First_ give them their liberty, put them under
-the protection of impartial law, and treat them with kindness, and
-then if they _ask_ our aid to remove their families to Africa, their
-determination to leave this country will evidently be spontaneous.
-
-6. _It is better for them to remain in the employment of southern
-capitalists, who are able to pay them wages for their labor than to
-go out into the wilderness as paupers, where there is no capital, and
-the very necessaries of life, are to be created._
-
-7. _They cannot be colonized without an appalling expense of money,
-life and comfort._
-
-8. To colonize the Slaves of this country _on account of their color,
-would be in the highest degree dishonorable to christianity_. Were
-Christ on earth, he would associate with the despised colored man in
-preference to many who think themselves the best society. Can we act,
-as he would not and yet exemplify his religion? What, too, would
-be the effect on the minds of the heathen, nearly all of whom are
-_colored_ men, were they to learn, that that nation, which makes the
-loudest professions of attachment to christianity, had banished more
-than two millions of her citizens to a land of pagan darkness, being
-offended at the _color of their skin_?
-
-9. To _send all the slaves to Africa would be fatal to the natives of
-that Continent_. Said Mr. Pinney, agent of the Colonization Society,
-and once Gov. of Liberia, ‘the colony must be kept pure, or it will
-either enslave or exterminate the African tribes.’ Send 2,500,000 of
-people to Africa, four-fifths of whom are in heathenish darkness,
-and all of whom have been taught, by the example of their masters,
-that slavery is morally right, and labor disgraceful, would they
-hesitate to buy Slaves of the native Princes, or to reduce their
-captives to a state of servitude? It is said, there is as strong a
-line of demarkation between the colonists, and the heathen, though
-of the same color, as there is between the white and colored people
-in this country. But if they should not become slave-holders, would
-they not gradually exterminate the native tribes for the sake of
-revenging injuries, and possessing themselves of their lands? Said
-Mr. Pinney, the colony must be kept pure, or such a result is
-inevitable; and it cannot be kept pure, unless it is conducted on a
-very small scale. We doubt whether a commercial and military colony
-can be so far controlled by _moral principle_, as to avoid these
-results. For if the emigrants were all pious persons, and few in
-number, their posterity might become both vicious and powerful. We
-are not, therefore, without our objections to African colonization,
-even if it should be distinctly abandoned as a remedy for slavery,
-and conducted with caution, and on a small scale. We know not to what
-it may grow. We like better, the good, old, apostolic plan of sending
-_missionaries_ to the heathen—men, who have no commercial and selfish
-interests to subserve, and who bear no hostile weapons. There is
-danger that a colony, however carefully guarded, will _misrepresent
-christianity_ and fatally prejudice the native mind against it. The
-fact, that not a native has yet been converted to christianity, in
-connection with the colony of Liberia, justifies the inquiry, whether
-the _scheme_ is a good one for Africa. The transportation of all our
-Slaves would confessedly form a colony too large and corrupt for the
-safety of the native tribes; and we tremble for the result of the
-present _experiment_.
-
-In this argument we have not denied the practicability of colonizing
-two millions and a half of people, at an expense of $125,000,000. We
-think it enough to show the thing ought not to be done.
-
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-With this view of our sentiments, of their practical value, and of
-the propriety and wisdom of our measures, we leave you to judge
-whether abolitionists deserve to be out-lawed in their own country;
-to be loaded with abuse and contumely; to be denied a right, conceded
-to all other decent men, of advocating their cause in our public
-halls and churches; and to be left, unprotected, to the violence of
-ill-minded men? We beg you also to consider, how terrific would be
-the prospects of our country, were we in obedience to popular clamor,
-to disband our societies, and retire from the field. Who would ever
-again venture to raise his voice in behalf of the down-trodden
-slave? Should any one have the temerity to do it, how soon would he
-be overwhelmed by the violence of the pro-slavery party, encouraged
-by past success, and maddened by the remembrance of the formidable
-array of talent, wealth, and piety, which they once encountered. We
-verily believe, that the peaceable abolition of Slavery depends,
-under God, on our perseverance. Moral means must continue to be used
-by us until they issue in success, or slavery will terminate in a
-bloody revolution. We anticipate such an event, as a possibility,
-with painful emotions; and feel disposed to look, in the use of all
-lawful means, to that God, who has promised to do for us, exceeding
-abundantly above all that we can ask or think, that so dire a
-catastrophe may be averted. We earnestly solicit your co-operation.
-
-We might have said much more to correct misapprehensions, refute
-calumnies, and fortify our positions; but our limits forbid it. We
-may have said some things, which you will disapprove; for we have
-ingenuously confessed our most obnoxious sentiments; but if you will
-give us credit for sincerity and weigh our arguments, we shall expect
-to stand better in your opinion, than our calumniators would have us.
-
- With much respect,
- } PHILO PRATT,
- In behalf of the Meriden } WALTER WEBB,
- Anti-Slavery Society, } ISAAC I. TIBBALS.
-
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] As our enterprise is not sectarian but national and catholic,
-it is the highest pitch of arrogance for any sect to denounce this
-measure as a violation of ecclesiastical order. Religious freedom
-demands that all such claims should be at once and steadfastly
-resisted.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
- corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
- the text and consultation of external sources.
-
- Some hyphens in words have been silently removed, some added,
- when a predominant preference was found in the original book.
-
- Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
- and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.
-
- Pg 9: ‘fraud and villany’ replaced by ‘fraud and villainy’.
- Pg 11: ‘the emancipatton of’ replaced by ‘the emancipation of’.
- Pg 11: ‘they abvocate this’ replaced by ‘they advocate this’.
- Pg 17: ‘until onr objects’ replaced by ‘until our objects’.
- Pg 17: ‘is his _chnrch_’ replaced by ‘is his _church_’.
- Pg 18: ‘_intinerant_ lecturers’ replaced by ‘_itinerant_ lecturers’.
- Pg 21: ‘Their is also’ replaced by ‘There is also’.
- Pg 22: ‘and enterprize; the’ replaced by ‘and enterprise; the’.
- Pg 25: ‘the constistutional’ replaced by ‘the constitutional’.
- Pg 26: ‘not lettting him’ replaced by ‘not letting him’.
- Pg 27: ‘for while slaves’ replaced by ‘for which slaves’.
- Pg 30: ‘the best soeiety’ replaced by ‘the best society’.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN APOLOGY FOR ABOLITIONISTS:
-ADDRESSED BY THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY OF MERIDEN, CONN., TO THEIR FELLOW
-CITIZENS ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of An apology for abolitionists: addressed by the anti-slavery society of Meriden, Conn., to their fellow citizens, by Philo Pratt</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: An apology for abolitionists: addressed by the anti-slavery society of Meriden, Conn., to their fellow citizens</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Authors: Philo Pratt</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Walter Webb</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Isaac I. Tibbals</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 16, 2022 [eBook #69367]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN APOLOGY FOR ABOLITIONISTS: ADDRESSED BY THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY OF MERIDEN, CONN., TO THEIR FELLOW CITIZENS ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>There is one Footnote in this book. Its anchor is denoted by <span class="fnanchor">[1]</span>, and
-the Footnote has been placed at the end of the book.</p>
-
-<p>Some minor changes to the text are also noted at the <a href="#TN">end of the book.</a>
-<span class="screenonly">These are indicated by a <ins class="corr">dashed blue</ins> underline.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h1>
-<span class="fs70">AN</span><br />
-<span class="bold fs180 ">APOLOGY</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">FOR</span><br />
-<span class="fs150 lsp2">ABOLITIONISTS:</span><br />
-<span class="fs90">ADDRESSED</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">BY THE</span><br />
-<span class="fs120 lsp2">ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">OF</span><br />
-<span class="fs100 lsp2">MERIDEN, CONN.,</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">TO THEIR</span><br />
-<span class="fs135 lsp">FELLOW-CITIZENS.</span><br />
-</h1>
-
-<div class="p1 center">
-<span class="fs135 lsp">SECOND EDITION.</span><br />
-<hr class="r10" />
-<span class="fs120 lsp2">MIDDLETOWN:</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="fs50">C. H. PELTON .... PRINT.</span><br />
-<hr class="r10" />
-<span class="fs120">1837.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="p2 noindent"><b>Fellow-Citizens</b>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A regard for your good opinion, and a wish to promote
-the cause, which, as Abolitionists, lies near our hearts, is our
-motive for addressing you. We think the opposition to our
-enterprise arises either from commercial, political or domestic
-connections with Slavery, or from misapprehensions
-respecting our principles, measures and prospects. We desire
-no better means of overcoming these obstacles than a
-fair statement of facts; and to this we now solicit your attention.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS.</h2>
-
-<p>We believe that all men are born free and equal, and endowed
-by their Creator with certain inalienable rights,
-among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.</p>
-
-<p>We believe Slavery is an infraction of these rights, a
-violation of the principles of christianity, and under all
-circumstances sinful.</p>
-
-<p>We believe that Slavery is a great national evil, political as
-well as moral, opposed to the genius of a republican government,
-highly dangerous to the peace and permanency of the
-Union, and if persisted in, destined to bring upon us the
-severest judgments of Heaven.</p>
-
-<p>We believe the immediate abolition of slavery would be
-safe and wise, and that it is the duty of every friend of humanity
-to use all fair and just means for its accomplishment.</p>
-
-<p>We believe we have a right to express and publish our
-opinions respecting the customs and institutions of the people
-of this and every other country; and if we think them in
-any degree immoral, unequal, or oppressive, we are under
-the highest obligations, in the exercise of all honest and
-lawful means, to change them.</p>
-
-<p>We believe that Slavery in the several states can be lawfully
-abolished only by the legislatures of the states in which
-it prevails, and that the exercise of any other than moral
-means to induce such abolition, is unconstitutional.</p>
-
-<p>We believe that Congress has a right to abolish Slavery
-in the District of Columbia, and in the Territories, and to
-prohibit the slave trade between the states, and that the exercise
-of this right is required by the divine law, and by the
-interests of our country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<p>We believe that no class of men can rightfully be denied,
-<em>on account of their color</em>, the enjoyment of equal rights with
-others, in the protection, immunities and administration of
-the government under which they live.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">UTILITY OF THESE SENTIMENTS.</h2>
-
-<p>These are our sentiments. We regret to say they are not
-collectively the sentiments of our countrymen. It is for our
-zeal in propagating them, that we have been assailed with
-unmeasured abuse and lawless violence. We think it of
-high importance to our country and the world that they
-should be received by all the people. What the effect of
-their general reception in the free states would be, is very
-apparent.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should abolish Slavery in the District of Columbia.</em>
-There Congress has exclusive jurisdiction on all subjects
-whatsoever, including of course the subject of Slavery.—This
-is admitted by Martin Van Buren, Henry Clay, and
-an overwhelming majority of the present Congress. The
-Abolitionists are to a man in favor of the exercise of this
-right. If, therefore, the free states were <em>thoroughly</em> abolitionized,
-their Senators and Representatives, who yet compose
-a majority in Congress, would at once bow to the
-supremacy of their constituents, and abolish Slavery.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should prohibit the inter state Slave-Trade.</em> This
-trade has recently been carried on to a greater extent than
-ever was the foreign slave trade; it being estimated that not
-less than 120,000 slaves were exported from Virginia alone,
-within little more than a year, and removed for the most
-part to the southwestern states. Four of these states are said
-by their own papers, to have received within the same period,
-about 250,000 slaves from the old states. How many
-tender ties have in one short year been broken by this detestable
-business! How much bodily suffering has been
-endured! How much guilt has been contracted! This
-cruel and wicked traffic is at the foundation of a system of
-breeding slaves for market, which is prosecuted on a large
-scale, corrupting all concerned, by its licentiousness and barbarity.
-Congress has a right to prohibit and suppress this
-trade, under that article of the Constitution which empowers
-Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations and
-between the several states. Were a majority of the citizens
-of the free states decided Abolitionists, this right could be
-exercised. We should insist upon it. Why then do not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-they, who profess to regard the <em>slave trade</em> as the worst
-feature of Slavery, join with us against it?</p>
-
-<p><em>We should prevent the annexation of Texas to the United
-States.</em> The South has long had her eye on that fine and
-extensive country, intending to get it by purchase or stratagem,
-for the purpose of opening a market for her redundant
-slave population, and of securing the balance of power in
-the general government to the slave-holding interest. Every
-enemy of Slavery and friend of <em>free</em> labor, ought to oppose
-this design. We apprehend that if the annexation of Texas
-to our country should not involve us in war with Mexico and
-Great Britain, it would either lead to a dissolution of the
-union, or indefinitely prolong the existence of Slavery. The
-Abolitionists are now preparing petitions to Congress, protesting
-against this insane measure; and were the citizens of
-the free states generally to join them, and load the tables of
-Congress with several millions of signatures to these protests,
-the danger would be averted. But they will not do it, <em>because</em>
-they are not Abolitionists; and we must, therefore, in
-all probability <em>take</em> Texas.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should admit no new slave states to the Union.</em> Had
-our sentiments prevailed when the Missouri question was
-decided, the fine soil of that state would not now be cursed
-with Slavery. She was admitted to the union by northern
-men. They legalized the sin. It is a sad proof of the corruption
-of <em>our</em> public sentiment that several of these traitors
-to liberty, have, since that disgraceful vote was given, been
-elevated to the first offices in the gift of New England; and
-this without any signs of their repentance. Arkansas has
-also been lately admitted to the Union by northern votes,
-with the singular provision in her constitution, that her
-legislature shall have no power to abolish Slavery; so that
-the “peculiar institution” may last until the greatest knave
-in the state is heartily weary and ashamed of it. Northern
-men thus voted for <em>perpetual</em> Slavery; and this they did in
-the confident expectation of being re-elected to Congress.
-Had they known a majority of their constituents to be Abolitionists,
-they would have voted differently. Should Florida
-be <em>next</em> admitted to the Union as a <em>slave</em> state, the south
-will have a majority in the Senate. Who can predict the
-consequences? But were the free states thoroughly abolitionized,
-Florida would never come into the Union as a <em>slave</em>
-State; for Abolitionists are in <em>principle</em> opposed to it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<p><em>We should also prohibit the slave trade between the United
-States and Texas.</em> In the constitution of Texas, whose
-independence has already been acknowledged by our government,
-Slavery is established as a permanent institution
-of the country, and a monopoly of the slave trade
-granted to the United States. Already thousands of slaves
-have been sent there, and unless something is done to prevent
-it, vessels will soon be fitted out in northern ports, to carry
-slaves from Virginia to Texas, as well as to New Orleans;
-and this, whether Texas is annexed to the United States, or
-remains independent. Were the citizens of the free states
-generally Abolitionists, they would not allow a legal commerce
-in slaves from our Republic to a foreign nation.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should save our own youth from the pollution and
-guilt of Slavery.</em> They would not directly participate in it.
-When they go to the South they would neither buy nor
-<em>hire</em> slaves. Hitherto nothing has been more common than
-for our best and most intelligent young men, the sons of our
-ministers and church members, to become slave-holders.
-At home they were not taught the inherent and necessary
-sinfulness of Slavery; at the South the practice was recommended
-to them by the example and plausible pretexts of the
-best men. They were accustomed from their childhood to
-see slave-holders treated with respect because they were rich
-in human chattels, without hearing a word respecting the
-<em>extortion</em> by which their wealth comes. Hence many of
-the merchants, physicians, lawyers, planters, teachers and
-clergymen of the South, though northern men by birth, are
-either slave-holders or abettors of the system. This would
-not be the case, had our declaration of sentiments been taught
-from the first by our parents and teachers, and been made the
-<em>cherished</em> creed of the free states. Then the combined instructions
-of the nursery, of the school, and of the pulpit,
-together with the impressive power of a sound public sentiment,
-would have <em>established</em> our youth in the love and
-veneration of human rights; in sympathy for the colored
-man; in hatred of oppression. Thus would the general
-reception of our sentiments withdraw from Slavery one of its
-main supports, and at the same time rescue our sons and
-daughters from the unutterable calamity of becoming rich
-by the spoiling of the poor.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should establish the liberties of the free states on a
-firm foundation.</em> We are not so connected with the slave-states
-that we must necessarily perish in their ruin. If the
-judgments of heaven should overtake them, we may be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-spared; should their liberties be prostrated, ours may survive.
-It depends on our character and conduct. A people
-who respect the rights of others, will have their own rights
-respected. Regarding man, of whatever color and condition,
-as entitled to the sacred rights of liberty, of property,
-and of personal security, they will neither forge chains for
-others, nor suffer chains to be imposed on themselves. Nor
-will God forsake them. Such are the character and security
-of Abolitionists. Read our declaration of sentiments. We
-go for <em>human nature</em>. We protest against Slavery, because
-it is an infraction of the rights of <span class="allsmcap">MAN</span>. We know that our
-entire country has forfeited her freedom, by oppressing the
-colored man; still we believe we may, by hearty repentance
-and the adoption of just and humane sentiments, appease the
-wrath of heaven, and should our nation be rent in two, preserve
-our own liberties. But if we continue to connive at
-this wickedness, nothing is more certain than our ruin in the
-common destruction of the country.</p>
-
-<p><em>The free people of color would rapidly improve in their
-moral and physical condition.</em> A load of prejudice now
-crushes them in the dust. They cannot rise because they
-are deprived of the motives and facilities for self-improvement.
-They are a proscribed people. <span class="smcap">It is a calamity
-in this Christian country to be born with a
-colored skin.</span> It shuts out human beings from schools
-and colleges, from the mechanical arts, from the house of
-God, from a share in the government of the nation, from
-social intercourse with their fellow-creatures, from the best
-incitements to virtue and enterprise. We freely confess,
-that the Abolitionists, if a majority, would correct all these
-evils, and cause men in this so called christian and democratic
-country, to be treated, according to the bible without
-distinction of color.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should do much to vindicate the honor and truth of
-christianity.</em> Slavery is the <em>strongest</em> hold of infidelity at
-the South, and a <em>strong</em> hold at the North. It is so because,
-while natural religion declares Slavery to be sinful, the ministers
-and professors of christianity practice it, and defend
-their conduct from the bible. Such a religion, says the infidel
-cannot be from God. It is thus that the church is bringing
-into contempt and doubt our blessed religion. It would
-greatly counteract this prolific cause of infidelity, were all
-our churches, ministers, and theological professors, to embrace
-and advocate the true doctrine of human rights as it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-is set forth in the word of God. We should then hold up
-to the world, this internal evidence of the divine origin of the
-bible, that, being written in ages of darkness and despotism,
-it notwithstanding clearly recognizes and protects <span class="allsmcap">MAN</span> as
-the possessor of natural, inalienable, sacred rights. Instead
-of doing this, many northern preachers of the gospel, are
-now blaspheming their religion, by saying that both Moses
-and Christ tolerated Slavery.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should no longer uphold Slavery by recognizing
-slave-holders as brethren in good and regular standing in
-the Church.</em> We now receive to the table of the Redeemer,
-without one word of admonition, men, who at the South,
-make merchandize of the image of God, of their fellow-christians.
-What is still more astonishing if not more
-wicked, we receive slave-holders to our pulpits, to preach to
-us about loving God and <span class="smcap">Man</span>! Thus we practically say,
-that Slavery is consistent both with morality and the gospel
-of Christ. Were we Abolitionists, it would be far otherwise;
-for they do not think it right to lend the sanction of
-the church to such outrageous wickedness.</p>
-
-<p>Such would be <em>some</em> of the happy results of the general
-adoption of our sentiments in the free states, if nothing more
-could be effected. But we doubt not it would issue in <span class="smcap">the
-peaceable abolition of Slavery by the several
-slave states</span>. This is the principal object of our enterprise;
-and on a strong probability of success, we are willing
-to rest its character.</p>
-
-<p><em>The constitutional action of Congress in the ways above
-named, would do much to induce the South to abolish Slavery.</em>
-Its abolition in the District of Columbia by the
-assembled wisdom of the country, would exert a powerful
-influence on the southern mind. It would be the testimony
-of the nation, corroborating the testimony of every truly
-civilized and christian people, to the impolicy and wickedness
-of Slavery. The prohibition of the inter state slave-trade,
-and the confinement of Slavery to its present local
-limits would render it unprofitable to the old states, which
-depend on this trade as the chief source of profit; and also
-drive the new states to the necessity of introducing free labor;
-for how could they otherwise cultivate their immense tracts
-of virgin land, or supply the deficit occasioned by the rapid
-consumption of life on their cotton and sugar plantations?</p>
-
-<p>We should make a still more <em>direct appeal to her interests</em>,
-by saying: <em>You may keep your cotton, rice, and sugar,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-until you have abolished Slavery. We shall no longer use
-the products of unrequited labor.</em> It would then be a question
-of dollars and cents with her, whether or not she would
-give liberty to her captives. We should not be obliged to
-deny ourselves the use of her productions one year; for her
-states would vie with each other to see which could obtain a
-monopoly of northern patronage by first abolishing Slavery.
-Many northern men have been bought by southern patronage
-to <em>do wrong</em>; is it not equally possible to buy the south
-with northern patronage to <em>do right</em>; Human nature is
-every where the same. We should indeed regret to have
-Slavery abandoned from an exclusive regard to self-interest.
-We would rather it should be destroyed by the spirit of repentance;
-for then the emancipated slave would still be
-treated with justice and humanity. But no means of bringing
-the South to repentance can be more promising, than the
-<em>conscientious</em> refusal, by northern men, of all sects and parties,
-to sustain Slavery, by consuming its produce. At present
-this cannot be done on a scale sufficiently large to
-secure, certainly and immediately, the abolition of Slavery;
-but were the North completely abolitionized, no doubt she
-would do it with the most triumphant success.</p>
-
-<p><em>We should move the South to abandon Slavery, by appealing
-to her love of reputation.</em> The South shows herself
-sensitive on this point. Said Mr. Calhoun in the United
-States Senate, “do they, [his southern opponents,] expect the
-Abolitionists will resort to arms, and commence a crusade
-to liberate our slaves by force? Is this what they mean
-when they speak of the attempt to abolish Slavery? If so
-let me tell our friends of the South who differ from us, that
-the war which the Abolitionists wage against us is of a very
-different character and <em>far more effective</em>—it is waged not
-against our <em>lives</em>, but our <em>character</em>.” Had he said <em>our
-reputations and consciences</em>, he would have told the truth.
-We do intend to make Slavery <em>disgraceful</em>. Sin ought to
-be esteemed a reproach to any people. Were all northern
-men of our way of thinking, this sin would be as infamous as
-any other kind of <ins class="corr" id="tn-9" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'fraud and villany'">
-fraud and villainy</ins>. The <em>world</em> is now
-pointing the finger of scorn at <em>slave-holding America</em>. The
-free states bear a merited portion of the shame, because we
-share largely in the responsibility. As we have taken
-Slavery under our patronage, and consented to stand godfather
-to it, what little respectability we have, is thrown
-around it, to the great relief and joy of its southern parents.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-Let us retire from the relation. Instead of defending Slavery,
-let us reiterate the just and indignant censures of the civilized
-world, until all shall feel, that so great an enormity
-cannot be practiced or connived at, without a forfeiture of
-character. This would be the state of feeling, were the citizens
-of the north generally Abolitionists; and he knows little
-of human nature, who doubts that <em>such</em> a state of feeling,
-would render the condition of a slave-holder, the last to be
-sought, the first to be abandoned.</p>
-
-<p>In these ways, if in no others, we could reach and influence
-the South. Although she should attempt to shut out
-the light by a strict censorship of the press and post-office;
-though she should make the utterance of our sentiments on
-southern soil an offence against her laws; she could not
-prevent the constitutional action of the general government;
-she could not compel us to consume her produce; she could
-not escape the withering contempt and indignant frown of
-our virtuous public sentiment. We could reach her heart
-in these ways, in spite of herself, and as we think to the certain
-overthrow of Slavery. We could do more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We could convert the South to the practical
-adoption of our sentiments by enlightening her
-conscience.</span> This is the principal ground of our confidence.
-If Slavery is sinful, we can prove it to be such; and
-this proof, made plain to the understanding of the South, cannot
-fail to awaken her conscience. Such is human nature.
-Some would have us think that none but christians have
-consciences, and therefore the first step to be taken for the
-removal of Slavery is to send missionaries to convert the
-masters to christianity, thus laying a foundation for successful
-appeals to the conscience. But it seems to us the work
-of centuries, if not an impracticable work, to convert the
-masters, or a majority of them, to true holiness, while Slavery
-lasts, <em>especially if they have no consciences</em>; and we think
-also, if all were converted to such a christianity as consists
-with a hearty belief that <em>Slavery is not condemned by the
-Bible</em>, it would not much facilitate our enterprise. Nor
-have we so much contempt for that word, which is mighty
-through God to the pulling down of strong holds, as to doubt
-that <em>our doctrines</em> will commend themselves to the <em>reason</em> of
-our southern brethren, and receive a fruitful response from
-their <em>consciences</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Some would have the world believe, if every person in
-the free states were an Abolitionist, it would not hasten<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-11" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the emancipatton of'">
-the emancipation of</ins> the slaves; for, say they, we could not then
-get a hearing at the south, and if we could, she is too much
-exasperated at our interference to do any thing on the subject.
-In our opinion, they are entirely mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>We believe <em>we can get a hearing at the South, or convey
-a knowledge of our sentiments to the southern mind, and that
-these sentiments are more potent than her prejudices and
-passions</em>. In proof of it—</p>
-
-<p><em>She is now constantly receiving numerous publications
-containing our views.</em> There were, the last year, about
-five hundred regular southern subscribers to the publications
-of the American Anti-Slavery Society. The Cincinnati
-Philanthropist, the Alton Observer, the New York Evangelist,
-and scores of other papers, religious and political,
-have subscribers at the South, with whom from week to
-week <ins class="corr" id="tn-11a" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'they abvocate this'">
-they advocate this</ins> cause. Many valuable anti-slavery
-books are also doing a good work in the very midst of the
-evil. Several thousands of Miss Grimke’s Appeal, together
-with the writings of Jay, Child, Channing and others, are
-daily tearing off the mask from Slavery, and awakening the
-slumbering conscience of the South. Not unfrequently
-slave-holders themselves come to the anti-slavery office in
-New York and buy whole sets of our publications. The
-speeches of her Senators, and the messages of her Governors
-evince a better acquaintance with our writings and movements
-than the great men of the North can boast. Her own
-press is doing much to disseminate our sentiments. The
-United States Telegraph of February 18, 1837, edited by
-Duff Green, Washington, D. C., was nearly half filled with
-extracts from our prints. Her clergy by publishing apologies
-for slavery in refutation of our views, are also making
-these views known and waking up a spirit of inquiry. Indeed,
-such is human nature, and such is the course of the
-south, that we have come to believe she will not allow us at
-the north to <em>think aloud on the subject of Slavery without
-knowing what we think and why we think so. She will not
-allow us to form and express opinions on this subject</em> <span class="allsmcap">WITHOUT
-KNOWING OUR OPINIONS AND THE GROUNDS OF
-THEM</span>. She is too much interested, and knows that we have
-too much power, to pass our sentiments by in utter contempt
-without even ascertaining them.</p>
-
-<p>But were the free states completely abolitionized, not only
-the presses of the Anti-Slavery Societies, assisted by a few
-others, would carry our doctrines to the South; but <em>all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-religious, political and commercial papers of the North, indeed
-the whole body of our literature, would breathe the
-same spirit, would speak the same language</em>. Were she,
-therefore, ever so much averse to the truth, these numberless
-publications, aided by the English press and by private correspondence,
-would force upon her a knowledge of our faith.</p>
-
-<p><em>The social intercourse of the North and South would also
-afford us ample opportunities for publishing our sentiments.</em>
-The citizens of every state in the Union are daily meeting
-in the steam-boats, coaches, rail-road cars and hotels of our
-country. We are constantly <em>walking arm in arm</em> with the
-South, so that she cannot fail to learn what we think of Slavery,
-and of the duty and pre-eminent safety of immediate
-emancipation. If we are decided Abolitionists, we shall certainly
-talk enough to let her know <em>what</em> we think and <em>why</em>
-we think so.</p>
-
-<p><em>Many of the youth of the South must continue, as in times
-past, to be educated in the free states.</em> Mr. Calhoun was
-educated at Yale College. Who can doubt that an influence
-might have been exerted on his mind, in relation to Slavery,
-of the most happy character, if the officers of that institution,
-if the surrounding community, if the literature of the day,
-had all breathed the spirit of Arthur Tappan and Gerritt
-Smith? There are now hundreds of southern youth in our
-schools, and hundreds will succeed them, whose minds would
-be set in deadly and deathless hostility to the robbery of
-God’s poor, were their teachers Abolitionists. Some think
-that in such an event, they would be kept at home. A few
-might be, but not all. The salubrity of our climate, the excellence
-of our institutions, the comparative purity of our morals,
-give us an advantage, that the more virtuous and intelligent
-of southern parents, would not relinquish, for fear that
-their sons should embrace views, which in their own hearts
-they must approve.</p>
-
-<p>It should also be remembered, that we not only educate
-the most precious youth of the South, but we <em>supply many
-of her pulpits, professorships, and shops with our own sons</em>.
-The great body of southern merchants are northern men.
-Such is the genius of Slavery that this will continue to be
-the case. The result would be, were we all Abolitionists,
-that the adopted sons of the South would soon form a strong
-body of opposition to Slavery, laboring to overthrow it, by
-their votes, their arguments and their example. Some may
-think that lynch law would then drive us all from the South;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-or that we should be received there only on condition of letting
-Slavery alone. They are mistaken. Were we <em>all</em>
-Abolitionists, we should be defended. The national government
-would protect us. The constitution guarantees the
-rights of a citizen in all the states to the citizens of each state;
-and had the North been thoroughly abolitionized, she would
-have demanded and obtained redress for the blood of her
-innocent citizens, who have been hung without color of law,
-by southern ruffians. Be assured when we all become Abolitionists,
-an end will be put to the reign of terror in every
-part of the country. Men of all creeds and colors, will then
-go where they please, speak what they please, and do what
-they please, with perfect safety, so long as they commit no
-offence against just and impartial law.</p>
-
-<p><em>The interests of a large class at the South must predispose
-them to favor our enterprise.</em> Probably not more than
-half of the whites are directly interested in the continuance
-of Slavery. Many hire Slaves, who could on equally eligible
-terms, and with more peace of conscience, hire them as
-<em>free</em> laborers, were they emancipated. Some own land without
-slaves; and it is admitted, that immediately on the abolition
-of Slavery, the soil would rise in value, and continue
-to appreciate with the general improvement of the country.
-A multitude of the whites are too poor to own slaves, and
-too ignorant to obtain a living, except by manual labor, and
-Slavery makes that disreputable, and comparatively unprofitable.
-All these classes need only open their eyes, to
-see that Slavery is subversive of their interests: and we may
-therefore rationally calculate on having their attention and
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p><em>What we have already effected at the South, is a pledge
-of entire success</em>, the moment the leading influences at the
-North shall second our efforts instead of counteracting
-them. Several hundred slaves have been set at liberty
-through the labors of those two distinguished Abolitionists,
-David Nelson and James G. Birney. We have heard of
-various other instances in which our doctrines have had
-such successful access to the southern mind. We will mention
-one. Some time since, in New York, a gentleman rose
-in a monthly concert of prayer for the slaves, and said: “I
-am a slave-holder from Virginia. I came to the North with
-violent prejudices against the Abolitionists, in consequence
-of what I read in northern papers; but I was determined
-to investigate the matter for myself. Accordingly I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-sought lodgings in the family of an Abolitionist, obtained and
-read your publications, and attended this monthly concert;
-and I am now convinced that not only your doctrines but
-your measures are righteous.” And he added, turning to
-two gentlemen who sat beside him, “these gentlemen are
-also slave-holders from Virginia, and my first converts to
-abolitionism; and I know a thousand men in Virginia, who
-if they could have the truth stated to them, would agree with
-us.” He then exhorted the Abolitionists present to go on,
-saying “you have only to correct the public sentiment of the
-North so that their papers shall not misrepresent you at the
-South, and <span class="allsmcap">THE WORK IS DONE</span>.” Besides many such
-facts evincive of the power of truth over the southern mind,
-and proving that the leaven is working there, we have frequent
-admissions from the lips and pens of the defenders of
-Slavery at the South, that the Abolitionists are disturbing the
-conscience of her people, that there is more sympathy with
-them there than it would be prudent to acknowledge; that if
-the fanatics are suffered to go on they will succeed; that
-they <em>may</em> build up a body of public sentiment which the
-South cannot resist. These facts, these admissions, and the
-very nature of man, convince us that we have many allies at
-the South. The violence of the friends of Slavery, has
-forced them to a temporary silence; but no doubt many of
-them long to unburden their hearts, and are only waiting to
-be sustained by a healthy public sentiment among us.—Were
-we all Abolitionists, it would be less odious and less
-hazardous to avow our sentiments at the South; and she
-would find a body of Abolitionists on her own soil, too
-respectable to be despised—too strong to be resisted.</p>
-
-<p>Our expectations of success in making known our sentiments
-to our southern brethren, are rendered still more sanguine,
-<em>by the history of emancipation in the West Indies</em>.
-It will be impossible for our countrymen, to close their
-eyes against the light, which the working of the British
-abolition act, will constantly throw on the duty and safety
-of immediate emancipation.</p>
-
-<p>We are nevertheless told, with surprising assurance, by
-men great and small, that we have postponed the abolition
-of Slavery, at least half a century; that our ultra doctrines
-and violent measures have so incensed the South, that she
-has settled down in the inflexible determination to keep her
-slaves. Is this human nature? They who think so, seem
-to imagine that the work of reform must be carried on solely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-by coaxing and flattering the sinner: that a declaration of
-his guilt and of his duty, sufficiently plain and unequivocal
-to excite his displeasure, is the last way to bring him to repentance.
-We think otherwise. We take the anger of the
-South as a precious omen of success. The hit bird flutters.
-She shows herself conscious of the truth of our charges.
-Accuse a consistent temperance man of drunkenness, he will
-smile in your face; accuse the drunkard himself and he will
-be ready to fight you. The faithful reproof of sin always
-irritates the sinner, and his irritation continues until he
-either repents or forgets the admonition. Had our efforts
-produced no such sensation among slave-holders, we should
-be far more ready to despair. She believes unless this
-discussion is stopped, Slavery must cease, or else she will
-be disgraced in the eyes of the world, and exceedingly embarrassed
-and trammeled in the possession of her slaves.
-We do not, however, attribute all the wrath of the South
-against us, to awakened conscience, and the anticipation of
-our success. We have been shamefully misrepresented by
-<em>northern</em> papers and mobs, which have not hesitated to
-charge us with the worst of motives and the most hostile feelings
-towards the South; as if we would gladly involve her in
-a servile war. The belief of these calumnies has doubtless
-excited her worst passions; and the moment she learns the
-truth, it will create a re-action in our favor. Nor should it
-be overlooked that many of her own citizens have no sympathy
-for Slavery, and no strong prejudices against us. Facts
-also show that argument can appease this very wrath, to
-which our opponents attribute such indomitable energy.
-When the students of Lane Seminary, under the Presidency
-of the Rev. Dr. Beecher, commenced a discussion of the
-subject of Slavery, about fifteen young men from the South,
-all of them slave-holders or sons of slave-holders, were not a
-little incensed at the faithful exposure of Slavery by their
-fellow-students; but at the close of the discussion, all these
-young men, save one, were thorough going Abolitionists;
-and several of them are now lecturing in the free states for
-the purpose of correcting our public sentiment, as a necessary
-and infallible means of rectifying that of the South.</p>
-
-<p>We believe, therefore, that if we succeed in abolitionizing
-the North, we shall the South. Were the North already
-abolitionized, we should do all the good specified above.
-We should preserve our own liberties, virtue and religion,
-and save the South from man’s greatest curse, his own voluntary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-wickedness. Is it not, then, desirable that our sentiments
-should prevail? Do they not carry with them the
-clearest credentials of truth—the very best practical tendencies?
-Is it not the grossest hypocrisy in the North to pretend
-hostility to Slavery, when she refuses to do the good
-which she would rejoice to do, were she a convert to abolitionism?
-Is it not a crime in her to fight against the diffusion
-of these sentiments? In one word—ought not the Abolitionists
-to do all they can, in a constitutional and christian
-manner, to propagate their views?</p>
-
-<p>Success at the North is certain; for she has an interest in
-destroying Slavery: her political principles are opposed to
-it; and the great mass of her citizens are intelligent and virtuous,
-unbought by southern patronage, and accustomed to
-abhor cruelty and injustice. Our success is also written in
-the desperate, but ineffectual endeavors of the opposition, to
-prevent the agitation of the subject. By their own showing,
-Slavery cannot endure the light of free inquiry. If northern
-abettors of Slavery were not convinced, that the discussion
-will inevitably abolitionize the mass of the people, they
-would rely on argument rather than on lawless violence.
-Our progress too, has already been astonishing. In the
-course of three years nearly a thousand Anti-Slavery Societies
-have been organized; many enemies have become
-friends, and many opposers, the able advocates of our cause.
-The prejudices of the people have been softened, and thousands
-are now on the eve of joining us, who lately were our
-most bitter antagonists. We have made all this progress
-notwithstanding the abuse of the political and commercial
-press has been heaped upon us without measure, and no man
-could join us but at the peril of his reputation, if not also his
-life and property. We are, therefore, encouraged to persevere.
-What have we to accomplish, which we have not in
-part achieved, while our powers and facilities are constantly
-augmenting.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 class="nobreak">VINDICATION OF MEASURES.</h2>
-
-<p>We propose to convert the country to our views by measures
-which some of our opponents, (ashamed to deny our
-doctrines,) allege to be the principal ground of their dissent.
-We think they have failed to make a proper distinction between
-our <em>measures</em> and the <em>abuse</em> of these measures. The
-constitutional action of Congress, the pulpit, the press, public
-debate, private conversation, anti-slavery societies, <em>these</em> are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-our measures. If any of our associates, through human infirmity,
-prosecute any of these measures in ill-temper or with
-indiscretion, we regret and condemn it. The measures
-themselves, and the prosecution of them we approve, and
-shall now attempt to vindicate.</p>
-
-<p>Some object to <em>our organizing Anti-Slavery Societies</em>,
-which in our opinion they would not do, if they wished well
-to our enterprise. For it is manifest that union gives us
-strength, influence, courage, money and other facilities for
-carrying on the work; it lays a foundation for concentrated,
-permanent, economical effort. Societies have their stated
-and occasional meetings, without giving offence and provoking
-popular violence. They animate each other by
-friendly correspondence, and prosecute their work systematically
-and vigorously, by the gratuitous labors of their
-most enlightened members. A general organization will
-enable us to petition the various legislative bodies in behalf
-of human rights, with unanimity and regularity, <ins class="corr" id="tn-17" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'until onr objects'">
-until our objects</ins> are gained. We see other ends to be secured by it.
-There is no disputing our constitutional right to adopt this
-measure; which we believe any men of common sense
-would adopt in our circumstances. Even the wisdom of
-Christ sanctions the measure, for what <ins class="corr" id="tn-17a" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'is his chnrch'">
-is his <em>church</em></ins> but a
-<em>society</em> formed for the purpose of converting men to the
-truth and progressively sanctifying them? Nor do we see
-how we can testify to the South our abhorrence of Slavery
-unless we form societies for the purpose. Had none been
-formed, it might be doubted whether there are a thousand
-decided Abolitionists in the country. It would be said in
-Congress and believed at the South, that we are few in numbers,
-and constantly becoming fewer and more contemptible.
-The existence and rapidly increasing number of our <em>societies</em>
-precludes the possibility of such misrepresentations and
-mistakes. As soon as our plan is completed, in the formation
-of a flourishing society in each village of the free states,
-embodying a majority of the people, the South will know
-what our public sentiment is. It will be concentrated upon
-her. She will feel it. We learn from intelligent sources,
-that the general opinion at the South now is, that all the citizens
-of the North who are not Abolitionists, sympathize
-with the slave-holders. It is natural they should think so.
-We must, therefore, rank ourselves with the Abolitionists,
-by joining an Anti-Slavery Society, if we would give our
-decided testimony against the <span class="allsmcap">GREAT SOUTHERN SIN</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some object to <em>our employing itinerant lecturers</em>. We
-think they would not object, if they had considered the matter
-with friendly feelings. The subject of Slavery has so
-many relations in this country, and involves so many questions
-in morals, in biblical literature, in constitutional law,
-in political economy, in history, and other departments of
-learning, that our stated clergy, have not sufficient time for
-its thorough investigation, were they disposed to make it.
-We ought not to expect of them more than a faithful exposition
-of the testimony of God against Slavery, and in favor of
-immediate emancipation. As a general rule, they can do
-no more. We need an extensive and thorough discussion of
-the whole subject. Nor are all our clergymen yet Abolitionists.
-Some are with us; others are against us. This
-was to be expected. The subject has but just come before
-the public mind. It found almost all our ministers colonizationists.
-It would have been surprising, if they had all embraced
-our views at the first blush, without discussion. We
-don’t do things so in Connecticut. Hereafter we doubt not
-they will all join us; but in the interim, we must employ
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-18" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'intinerant lecturers'">
-<em>itinerant</em> lecturers</ins>, if we would disseminate what we believe
-to be the truth. And who will be harmed by it? The
-truth will hurt no one; and even “error,” we quote the
-words of Jefferson, “may safely be tolerated, so long as reason
-is left free to combat it.” Some think it an interference
-with the rights of the stated ministry to introduce an itinerant
-lecturer, without the advice and consent of the settled
-pastor. How so? Suppose there are several clergymen in
-the same village. One of them being an Abolitionist does
-all he can, by conversation, the distribution of papers, and
-public lectures, to make the people Abolitionists, without distinction
-of sect or party. Is that an interference with the
-rights of the other pastors? No; such a course has never
-been thought so. Nor is there the least difference in the
-two cases. The several churches introduce these pastors to
-be their teachers. We, the Abolitionists, another body of
-people, introduce a man to teach on a particular subject.
-We have the right; he has a right to come; therefore no
-right is violated.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p><em>Some object to our employing severe epithets in speaking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-of Slavery and slave-holders.</em> They say our condemnation
-is too hard, denunciatory and indiscriminate. We wish all
-who allege this against us would illustrate their meaning
-and sustain their charge by quoting the offensive expressions.
-It would put them to great inconvenience. They
-may think the language “hard” and “too hard,” when it
-barely expresses what ought to be said, and cannot be better
-said. We do indeed tell slave-holders their sins plainly,
-calling things by their right names; but it is only in the
-conclusion of an argument to prove the charge, that we
-justify making it. Nor is our language any harder than
-the sober language of moral philosophers, and of the most
-eminent fathers of the church. Wesley says: “You, [the
-slave-holder,] first acted the villain in making them slaves,
-whether you stole them or bought them.” “This equally
-concerns all slave-holders, of whatever rank and degree:
-seeing <em>men-buyers are exactly on a level with men-stealers</em>.”
-The younger President Edwards says: “To hold a man in
-a state of Slavery is to be every day guilty of <em>robbing</em> him
-of his liberty, or of <em>man-stealing</em>.” Grotius says: “Those
-are men-stealers, who abduct, <em>keep</em>, sell or buy <em>slaves</em> or freemen.
-To steal a man is the highest kind of theft.” Adam
-Clarke says: “Among the heathen Slavery was in some
-sort excusable; among <em>christians</em> it is <span class="allsmcap">AN ENORMITY AND
-A CRIME FOR WHICH PERDITION HAS SCARCELY AN ADEQUATE
-STATE OF PUNISHMENT</span>.” We use no language
-more hard, more true, or more indiscriminate. We think
-these great men understood how to do good, at least as well
-as our critics. We are also fully persuaded, that the South
-is far less incensed at our <em>language</em> than at our <em>sentiments</em>.
-She is indignant at what we say, not the manner of saying it.
-Dr. Channing had this vulgar prejudice, that we were injuring
-our cause by using abusive language. And Mr. Leigh
-of Virginia, took the very book, in which he reproves us,
-and quoted passages which he declared in the United States
-Senate, rivalled the most insulting language of Garrison. So
-difficult is it to tell the truth about Slavery in palatable
-terms.</p>
-
-<p>We are also censured for <em>sending pictures to the South
-illustrative of the horrors of Slavery</em>. We do indeed employ
-the art of painting, as well as the arts of printing and
-speaking, to awaken sympathy for the Slave; but our pictures
-are designed for the North, not the South. Though
-some of them may find their way there, they are <em>never sent</em><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-to the slaves, are not apt to fall into their hands, and not
-adapted to make them uneasy and turbulent. Were they
-painted as large as life, and set up at the corner of every
-street and on every plantation, the sole effect would be to
-awe the slaves into subjection, by reminding them of the
-consequences of disobedience.</p>
-
-<p>We are accused of <em>sending papers to the slaves</em>. The
-charge is false. Our publications are sent exclusively to
-the free white population. Were it in our power to send to
-the slaves, we should indeed rejoice at it. If they could read
-and the mails would carry them papers, we would prepare
-tracts on purpose for them, explaining the doctrines and duties
-of christianity, inculcating the forgiveness of injuries,
-the patient endurance of wrong, the faithful service of their
-masters, until such time as they <em>can be made free</em>. We
-would even send them the Bible, which says: “Woe unto
-him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness and his
-chambers by wrong; <em>that useth his neighbor’s service without
-wages and giveth him not for his work</em>.” Jer. xxii, 13.</p>
-
-<p>The foregoing are current objections to <em>specific</em> measures
-of the Abolitionists. There are other objections of a more
-general and sweeping character, which go to condemn <em>all</em>
-our measures, calling upon us to disband our societies, to dismiss
-our agents, to break up our printing presses, and interfere
-in no way with Southern Slavery. We can give these
-only a brief notice.</p>
-
-<p>It is a current objection to our enterprise, that <em>Slavery is
-no concern of ours</em>: that the South alone is interested in the
-subject, and we have no right to <em>interfere</em>. Interference is a
-very indefinite term. We acknowledge we have no right
-to interfere by force of arms; and have ever disclaimed the
-intention of interfering, except by the constitutional and
-peaceable action of Congress, and the application of truth to
-the hearts and consciences of our southern brethren. As to
-our having no right to interfere in <em>this manner</em>, because
-Slavery is no concern of ours, it is a strange doctrine to be
-promulgated in the nineteenth century by republicans and
-christians. What interest had we in the struggle of Greece
-and Poland with Turkish and Russian despotism? What concern
-have we in the moral and political degradation of the
-Hindoo, Hottentot and Chinese? We have the answer in
-the motto of the christian church: <span class="smcap">Our country is the
-world, our countrymen mankind</span>. As christians we
-are concerned for the spiritual welfare of all classes at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-South; the great mass of whom are now sunk in infidelity
-and vice. Their alarming destitution of the means of religion,
-and the general corruption of their morals, are justly
-attributed to Slavery. What would become of the virtue, intelligence
-and religious institutions of Meriden, if all the real
-estate and all the inhabitants of the town, were held as property
-by one man? He might be an infidel; and if he were
-a christian, what dependence could be placed on him to
-support the gospel, or what confidence would the oppressed
-people have in his religion? Such is the state of things at
-the South. Slavery not only creates a distaste for true religion,
-but withdraws from its support the laboring class,
-which in every free country, embodies a great proportion of
-the most devoted and liberal christians. <ins class="corr" id="tn-21" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Their is also'">
-There is also</ins> much in the habits which Slavery fosters, to indispose pious youth
-to enter the ministry and to disqualify them for its laborious
-duties; while many who enter upon the work, abandon it for
-secular pursuits, or remove to the free states, where they can
-preach the <em>whole</em> gospel with more security and success.
-Not only must a slave-holding community be destitute of men
-and means to make known the way of salvation, but the
-preaching of the gospel will generally be inefficacious with
-all classes; with the <em>masters</em>, for Slavery fosters in them the
-worst passions of human nature, affords them facilities for
-the unbounded indulgence of their appetites, and relieves
-them from the necessity of personal exertion for a livelihood;
-with the <em>poor white population</em>, for Slavery accumulates the
-wealth of the community in a few hands, renders free labor
-disreputable, and multiplies temptations to low and degrading
-vices; with the <em>free people of color</em>, for Slavery holds
-most of them in a state of abject poverty, ignorance and sin;
-with the <em>slaves</em>, for Slavery robs them of the bible, of self-control,
-of hope, of parent, wife and child, of the best motives
-to be virtuous, and of the best evidences of christianity;
-it makes them vicious; it makes them sceptics. We are
-concerned for these perishing millions.</p>
-
-<p>Slavery is a concern of ours for it involves our personal
-interests. It throws back upon us a moral pestilence; it scatters
-the seeds of intemperance, licentiousness, and infidelity;
-it popularizes gambling, Sabbath breaking, profaneness and
-lawless violence; it casts an undeserved stigma on manual
-labor, it encourages idleness and prodigality. It disgraces us
-in the eyes of the whole world; it impairs our national
-strength; it encroaches on the spirit of liberty; it is constantly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-undermining our free institutions. The northern
-states have no greater enemy. Were Slavery abolished, her
-religion, her morals, her liberties, her general prosperity
-would be far more secure. The chief source of danger
-to the integrity of our union, and to our domestic tranquility
-would be removed; a greater market would be opened for
-our manufactures, and a wider field for our industry <ins class="corr" id="tn-22" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'and enterprize; the'">
-and enterprise; the</ins> emancipated slaves would purchase our goods,
-and our youth could enter into competition with the sons of
-the South in raising cotton, &amp;c. without becoming slave-holders.
-Labor would soon cease to be disgraceful; property
-would accumulate in every part of the land; education would
-flourish; religion would revive; the entire country would
-rejoice in peace and plenty under the smiles of an approving
-providence. Tell us not, that we have no concern in
-removing the greatest sin, curse and shame of the nation, and
-in securing for ourselves and our posterity, a truly free and
-virtuous government.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that <em>Slavery is an agitating subject, which cannot
-be discussed without disturbing the peace and harmony
-of our churches</em>. Why so? This subject can be discussed
-in the churches in Great Britain without discord and
-division. We think it could be here, were it not for the
-corruption of our public sentiment, which can be corrected
-only by free discussion. It is where the truth needs most to be
-heard, that it creates most opposition and variance. Primitive
-christianity was accused of turning the world upside down.
-The temperance cause has occasioned strife, and separated
-“very friends.” We hold to the Apostolic injunction:
-“<em>first</em> pure, <em>then</em> peaceable.” We love a virtuous peace. A
-truce with sin we abhor. If we must surrender our liberties,
-and connive at iniquity, to avoid a war, we say with
-Patrick Henry, “The war is inevitable, and let it come; I
-repeat it, sir, let it come.” Who does not see that if polygamy
-were common in our churches, it would create a terrible
-excitement to preach against it, and lead to the dismission
-of pastors? Yet any one would acknowledge, that
-religion could never prosper, while the church was so
-corrupt; and that she had better be torn into ten thousand
-fragments, than that polygamy should continue in vogue;
-for she would soon be re-organized in greater purity
-and strength. So it is with a <em>slave-holding</em> Church; and
-with a Church in which the <em>spirit</em> of Slavery is so rife, that
-she will not live in peace with her Anti-Slavery members,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-nor tolerate the exercise of their Constitutional rights. But
-we do not believe this of our Churches. We think the
-more this “delicate and agitating” subject is discussed
-among us, the less unpleasant excitement will prevail.</p>
-
-<p>It is said <em>that our measures to overthrow Slavery are unconstitutional</em>.
-Our opponents may easily test this question
-by bringing it before the U. S. Court. We claim to be acting
-constitutionally. Our plan of operations is essentially the
-same as that pursued by the early Anti-Slavery Societies,
-of which such men as John Jay, Benj. Franklin, Benj.
-Rush, and Jonathan Edwards, were active members; some
-of whom were engaged in forming our federal Constitution.
-Did they not understand that instrument? Did their contemporaries
-ever dispute their right to discuss the merits
-of Slavery? Have not our citizens, from time immemorial
-and without restriction, exercised this right? Does not the
-Constitution, instead of guaranteeing Slavery against this
-moral influence, guarantee to us the right of employing it,
-by forbidding Congress to pass any law abridging the freedom
-of speech and of the press?</p>
-
-<p>We are told our measures are an <em>invasion of the rights
-of property</em>. This objection assumes, what nature denies,
-that <em>man</em> may be <em>rightfully</em> held as property. Blackstone
-maintains in his Commentaries, that man cannot be reduced
-by any just process to a state of absolute Slavery; that he
-cannot be born in that state, nor sell himself into it, nor be
-placed there when taken captive in war, without flagrant
-injustice. We also hold it to be <em>self-evident</em>, that all men are
-<em>born free and equal</em>, and entitled to certain <em>inalienable</em> rights,
-among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
-The Slave owns himself by grant of his Creator. <em>Slavery</em>
-is, therefore, an invasion of his rights of property. It is
-the slave-master who makes an aggression on the property
-of others, not we, who exhort him to relinquish that
-property. The Slaves being the rightful owners of themselves,
-the abolition of Slavery is merely an act declarative
-of this indisputable title. Nor do we seek the destruction
-of Slavery, except through the constitutional authorities.
-Even were the slaves the <em>property</em> of their masters,
-it would be lawful for us to <em>persuade</em> them to part with it.
-Would it not? The Legislatures of the several states have
-a right to abolish Slavery. Have they not? It has hitherto
-been conceded, that the law making power of every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-slave-holding country has this right. May we not then
-persuade the states to exercise it, by convincing them of
-the moral wrong and frightful impolicy of Slavery? Should
-it be said that the government encouraged its citizens to
-invest property under the protection of the slave code, and
-therefore ought not to abolish Slavery without indemnifying
-them, our answer is, that mankind are under a paramount
-obligation not to invest property under the protection
-of <em>immoral</em> laws; that all such laws are in their nature null
-and void from the beginning; that governments have always
-exercised the power of correcting abuses; and
-there is no greater abuse than Slavery; none more unjust
-and oppressive; none more pernicious and perilous to our
-national interests.</p>
-
-<p>Some object, that the abolition of Slavery <em>on our plan</em>,
-without compensation to the masters, <em>would be taking away
-the bread of poor widows and orphans</em>. We have no plan.
-We say only, that Slavery is wrong, and ought forthwith to
-be abandoned. The South will adopt and prosecute her
-own plan. When her Legislatures abolish Slavery, they
-can, if they will, provide for widows and children, who are
-left destitute by that act. If they will not do it, we will
-raise contributions for their relief; for we deem the claims
-of <em>charity</em>, nearly as imperative as the claims of justice.
-But we can never sanction the <em>principle</em> of Slavery, by
-saying, that slave-holders have a <em>right</em> to compensation for
-restoring to the slaves their stolen rights. We must always
-consider it a greater hardship to be unjustly held as a slave,
-than to be made poor by freeing such slave. It is a sad
-blunder in morals, that this man may make that man, perhaps
-fifty other men, poor for life, lest he himself should
-be a pauper; that this man may make that man poor by
-<em>dishonesty</em>, lest he himself should become poor by <em>being
-honest</em>.</p>
-
-<p>No objection to our measures is more senseless, or more
-common, than an <em>alleged tendency to dissolve the Union</em>.
-Which had we better surrender, the Union or our liberties?
-The Union is a curse instead of a blessing, if we must
-surrender for it, <em>freedom of speech and personal protection
-in any part of the country</em>. And if Slavery continues to be
-protected by public sentiment, and by popular violence,
-how long could the Union last, even were <em>all</em> the abolitionists
-this day laid in their graves? Slavery endangers the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-integrity of the Union, more than all other enemies; and
-unless soon destroyed, will be the destroyer both of it and
-us. If we love the Union, we should labor to overthrow
-Slavery. Wesley somewhere defines fanaticism, to be the
-expectation of accomplishing ends without the use of
-means. Let us not hope for the peaceable destruction of
-Slavery, by such a fanatical course. Let us do <em>something</em>;
-and if we do any thing, what can be done which the abolitionists
-are not attempting? In doing this we shall not
-peril the Union, but preserve it. The South will never
-venture on the mad experiment of secession, <em>because</em> the
-North is opposed to Slavery. Such an act would be suicidal.
-It would encourage the slaves to revolt. It would
-leave her defenceless against the invasion of a foreign foe.
-It would release us from <ins class="corr" id="tn-25" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the constistutional'">
-the constitutional</ins> obligation to
-suppress domestic violence, and to restore fugitives from
-service. It would open several thousand miles of frontier,
-over which her slaves would escape into a land of liberty.
-It would make the south “a good country to emigrate
-from,” and she would find herself losing her best citizens,
-and her condition becoming more and more exposed and
-perilous. She would be ruined. She knows it. Were our
-legislators in Congress to retort her stereotyped threat to
-dissolve the Union, with a challenge to do it, if she dares,
-we should hear no more of this empty bravado.</p>
-
-<p>It is said, if our measures should be successful, <em>the
-slaves would resort to the North</em>, and coming up upon our
-farms, and into our shops, like the frogs of Egypt, reduce
-the wages of our laborers. No apprehension is more
-groundless. The free colored people of the South are
-quite numerous, and very much oppressed; yet few of
-them leave that part of the country; though the whites
-would be very glad to have them do so, because they render
-the slaves uneasy, and come into competition with slave
-labor. But were slavery abolished, the whites would desire
-to retain all the colored people, in order to employ
-them in cultivating the soil; precisely as is now the case
-in the West Indies. Nor would the slaves be willing to
-leave the land of their nativity, and of their kindred, to reside
-in the cold regions of the north, to the business and
-climate of which they are uninured, and where they must
-labor more severely to obtain a comfortable living. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-should they come, what then? Do you prefer perpetual
-slavery?</p>
-
-<p>It is also objected to our enterprise, that <em>the immediate
-abolition of slavery, would be “letting the slaves loose” to
-be idlers, vagabonds, thieves, and cut-throats</em>. This objection
-is more forcible against <em>gradual</em> emancipation, which
-would throw upon society a multitude of freedmen, while
-the rest of their brethren still remained in bondage. The
-holders of slaves would not encourage the free by giving
-them labor; who would, therefore, be more apt to be idle
-and vicious; while their release would excite uneasiness
-in the minds of the unemancipated. The objection is also
-equally strong against <em>prospective</em> emancipation, according
-to which the slaves would all be set free at once; but not
-until some time after the passage of the act. Experience
-and human nature both teach us, that slaves under such
-circumstances are more apt to be overworked, than to be
-better prepared for the enjoyment of freedom. The objection
-is, therefore, good for <em>perpetual</em> slavery, or good for
-nothing. It is good for nothing. Immediate emancipation
-would indeed deliver the slave and his family at once from
-the hands of an irresponsible master, and empower him to
-go where he pleases and do what he pleases, so long as he
-breaks none of the laws which restrain other men. And
-why not? He could not otherwise rejoin his wife and
-children, whom the slave trade has torn from him, nor
-secure fair wages, nor be safe from oppression. But this
-is <ins class="corr" id="tn-26" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'not lettting him'">
-not letting him</ins> loose <em>to do evil</em>. <span class="smcap">The laws of slavery
-let the masters loose upon the slaves</span>, <em>instead of the
-abolition of slavery letting the slaves loose upon the masters</em>.
-Were there a law authorizing the inhabitants of Meriden
-to seize the inhabitants of Berlin, to confine them to jail
-limits, and work them without wages, to separate husbands
-and wives, parents and children, and even to kill
-them by that very indefinite thing, called “moderate correction;”
-this law would let the inhabitants of Meriden
-loose upon the inhabitants of Berlin; for it would protect
-the former in the grossest outrages upon the latter. But
-the repeal of this law would not let the inhabitants of Berlin
-loose upon us. Extending them protection would not
-be letting them loose upon us. Had we the power of
-repealing the law; or if not, possessing the power of <em>not
-enforcing</em> it, we should find our security in doing so. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-very way to make them respect <em>our</em> rights, would be to respect
-<em>theirs</em>. Immediate emancipation places the slaves
-under the <em>control</em> as well as protection of the laws of the
-State against idleness, vagrancy, theft, murder, and all
-other aggressions on the rights of men.</p>
-
-<p>We are told that the <em>Slaves are not fit to be free</em>; and
-therefore our scheme of immediate emancipation, if adopted,
-would prove a curse to them and the country. Nothing
-is more false. The Slaves are <em>men</em>; and therefore they
-are more fit for freedom than for slavery; more fit to be
-treated as persons than as things; to be governed by appeals
-to the reason and conscience than by brute force.
-God made man to be free and adapted him to that condition.
-A state of Slavery is unnatural to him. Nor can his nature
-so change, that he shall be more fit to be treated as a brute,
-than as a free moral agent. Slaves have often been set at
-liberty, and have <em>always</em> proved their capacity for freedom,
-by their industry, frugality and ready obedience to the laws.</p>
-
-<p>And why, we would ask, should they be thought unfit to
-be put under the control and protection of the same laws,
-which govern freemen? Do their vices or their ignorance,
-disqualify them? While Slavery lasts, they will remain
-equally degraded.</p>
-
-<p>Are they <em>Sabbath breakers</em>? Slavery has taught them
-to desecrate the day of rest, by making it to them almost the
-only day of recreation, the only day for visiting, for trading
-and for tilling their gardens. Are they <em>thieves</em>? They
-consider stealing from their masters to be only making <em>reprisals</em>
-for the robbery of their just wages; while many of
-them are strongly tempted to steal by the desire of more or
-better food. Are they <em>liars</em>? They will continue such,
-while they are slaves. They will pretend sickness, to
-avoid labor; they will say they do not wish to be free, lest
-their masters should sell them into distant banishment; they
-will lie to conceal the unavoidable delinquences, <ins class="corr" id="tn-27" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'for while slaves'">
-for which slaves</ins> are daily upbraided and beaten. Are they <em>idle</em>? As
-slaves they have no hope of reward to stimulate their exertions.
-They will work much better, as one facetiously
-expresses it, for Mr. <span class="smcap">Cash</span> than for Mr. <span class="smcap">Lash</span>. Let their
-wives and children be dependent on their industry for support,
-a far more noble and efficient motive than the fear of
-violence, to call forth the energies of man. Are they <em>improvident</em>?
-They cannot learn to save property, until they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-are allowed to hold it in their own right. Make them free,
-and then that faculty of their nature, which the phrenologists
-call “acquisitiveness” will prompt them to save their
-earnings. Are they <em>licentious</em>? Then give them their
-liberty, that the husband and father may be the legal
-protector of his wife and daughters. Are they <em>revengeful</em>?
-Redress their wrongs, and they will forgive their oppressors.
-Are they <em>heathen</em>? Take your foot from their necks,
-before you disgrace christianity, by attempting to convert
-them. Are they <em>ignorant of letters</em>? So are a majority of
-the freemen of the world; nor is it to be expected that
-slave-holders will teach their slaves to read and write, until
-they repent of Slavery itself. The vices of the Slaves are
-inseparable from their condition. If they are not now fit
-for freedom, Slavery, which unfitted them, will perpetuate
-their unfitness. Nor is their degradation of mind and morals
-a disqualification for freedom. You may find its counterpart
-in the characters of a large class of citizens in every
-country.</p>
-
-<p>While Slavery continues, what is the prospect of their
-becoming <em>better</em> fitted for freedom? Where are the men
-and the means? Who will teach them? Who will support
-the teachers? The south cannot supply her <em>free</em> population
-with instruction. Even with the aid of the north,
-she is very destitute of the means of religion. Nor would
-she be willing to adopt a general system of education for the
-improvement of the Slaves. Instead of giving her money
-to fit them for freedom, she would hunt from society
-any persons, who should seriously propose the measure.
-They know little of the spirit of Slavery, who imagine, that
-the south was disposed to prepare her Slaves for freedom,
-until the abolitionists roused her to resistance. Had she
-really wished to free her Slaves, she would have welcomed
-us as coadjutors, at least she would not have abandoned
-her own plan, because ours was offensive to her. She never
-intended to fit her Slaves for freedom. She does not intend
-it now. Her laws, in most of the States, are against
-it. The mass of her Slaves will, no doubt, be as unfit for
-freedom fifty years hence, if Slavery should continue so
-long, as they are to day. The British abolitionists were
-once deceived by this syren song of preparation, but now
-in allusion to the words of Paul; “the <em>glorious</em> gospel of the
-blessed God;” they exclaim, <span class="allsmcap">THE GLORIOUS DOCTRINE OF<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-IMMEDIATE EMANCIPATION</span>! They found it the <span class="smcap">power of
-God</span>, to awaken the slumbering conscience of the nation;
-and the <span class="smcap">wisdom of God</span> as a measure of relief to their
-Slaves. We shall find it so.</p>
-
-<p>Our opponents also object to <em>emancipation upon the soil</em>.
-Not all, but some of them, are in favor of Colonization as
-a remedy for Slavery, and others execrate us for our opposition
-to it as a scheme for benefiting Africa. We are
-especially averse to the former class. When men say,
-that the Slaves ought not to be freed, until they can be colonized,
-we <em>ought to make resistance</em>, for the following reasons:</p>
-
-<p>1. We ought to <em>resist every wicked prejudice</em>; and they
-who object to emancipation on the soil, do so, in obedience
-to such a prejudice. They say the colored people can
-never rise in this country. They maintain that our aversion
-to the race is instinctive and natural; though we find no
-one averse to associating with them as <em>slaves</em>. The two
-races are certainly on very <em>intimate</em> terms at the South.
-It is only when they come as <em>freemen</em> between the wind
-and our nobility, that they taint the air. We, therefore,
-say, this prejudice is unnatural and sinful; and instead of
-fostering it, we ought to rebuke, and check it in ourselves
-and others. Some of us recollect the time, when as Colonizationists
-we wished to get rid of the colored people, and
-were indignant at them for being unwilling to leave the
-country. May we not repent of such a feeling and condemn
-in it others, without being hunted from society?</p>
-
-<p>2. <em>By retaining the emancipated slaves on the soil, we can
-at less expense of men and means educate and christianize
-them.</em> Were we to send them beyond the Mississippi or to
-Africa, it would take ten times the number of Missionaries
-and Teachers, that we are now supporting among the
-heathen, to save them from sinking into barbarism. But
-if they should be retained as free laborers in the service of
-their present masters, those masters would provide for their
-instruction, and without diverting means from other objects,
-the delightful spectacle would soon be witnessed of Schools
-and Churches springing up among them, through the voluntary
-efforts of the ministers and christians of the South.</p>
-
-<p>3. <em>The labor of the Slaves is wanted on the plantations at
-the South.</em> To withdraw such an amount of labor would
-bankrupt the entire country. Nor could their places be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-supplied, except by the worst population of the old world;
-by men, whose religion, whose morals, whose politics are
-all, in the highest degree, hostile to our national interests.
-The emancipated Slaves, on the contrary, would be prejudiced
-in favor of the protestant faith, and prove the
-staunchest friends of our free institutions.</p>
-
-<p>4. The <em>South will not consent to the colonization of the
-Slaves</em>. She is willing we should contribute to carry off
-the free people of color, “the nuisances,” “the disturbing
-force,” as she terms them; and also those Slaves, whom
-the more conscientious of her citizens, who dare not die
-Slave-holders, may emancipate for the purpose. But she
-is unwilling we should go a step further. She does not believe
-we can get the means of doing more. We think, if a
-place were provided in Africa, and we had the means necessary
-to transport every Slave there, and were to go and
-tell the south, about the sinfulness of holding Slaves, when
-they <em>can</em> be colonized, and call upon her in <em>good earnest</em>, to
-give them up, she would denounce us as fanatics, and pass
-no more resolutions in favor of colonization. She is now
-at peace with it, because she does not fear it, and hopes to
-find it of use in repelling the abolitionists, in <em>letting off</em>, as
-by a safety valve, the pious feeling of her own citizens,
-and in expelling the free people of color.</p>
-
-<p>5. The Slaves <em>are unwilling to leave the country</em>; and
-will never consent to do it, but on such a dread alternative
-as no christian people should impose. <em>First</em> give them
-their liberty, put them under the protection of impartial
-law, and treat them with kindness, and then if they <em>ask</em> our
-aid to remove their families to Africa, their determination
-to leave this country will evidently be spontaneous.</p>
-
-<p>6. <em>It is better for them to remain in the employment of
-southern capitalists, who are able to pay them wages for their
-labor than to go out into the wilderness as paupers, where
-there is no capital, and the very necessaries of life, are to be
-created.</em></p>
-
-<p>7. <em>They cannot be colonized without an appalling expense
-of money, life and comfort.</em></p>
-
-<p>8. To colonize the Slaves of this country <em>on account of
-their color, would be in the highest degree dishonorable to
-christianity</em>. Were Christ on earth, he would associate
-with the despised colored man in preference to many who
-think themselves <ins class="corr" id="tn-30" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the best soeiety'">
-the best society</ins>. Can we act, as he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-would not and yet exemplify his religion? What, too, would
-be the effect on the minds of the heathen, nearly all of whom
-are <em>colored</em> men, were they to learn, that that nation, which
-makes the loudest professions of attachment to christianity,
-had banished more than two millions of her citizens to a
-land of pagan darkness, being offended at the <em>color of their
-skin</em>?</p>
-
-<p>9. To <em>send all the slaves to Africa would be fatal to the
-natives of that Continent</em>. Said Mr. Pinney, agent of the
-Colonization Society, and once Gov. of Liberia, ‘the colony
-must be kept pure, or it will either enslave or exterminate
-the African tribes.’ Send 2,500,000 of people to Africa,
-four-fifths of whom are in heathenish darkness, and
-all of whom have been taught, by the example of their masters,
-that slavery is morally right, and labor disgraceful,
-would they hesitate to buy Slaves of the native Princes, or
-to reduce their captives to a state of servitude? It is said,
-there is as strong a line of demarkation between the colonists,
-and the heathen, though of the same color, as there
-is between the white and colored people in this country.
-But if they should not become slave-holders, would they not
-gradually exterminate the native tribes for the sake of revenging
-injuries, and possessing themselves of their lands?
-Said Mr. Pinney, the colony must be kept pure, or such a
-result is inevitable; and it cannot be kept pure, unless it is
-conducted on a very small scale. We doubt whether a
-commercial and military colony can be so far controlled
-by <em>moral principle</em>, as to avoid these results. For if the
-emigrants were all pious persons, and few in number, their
-posterity might become both vicious and powerful. We
-are not, therefore, without our objections to African colonization,
-even if it should be distinctly abandoned as a
-remedy for slavery, and conducted with caution, and
-on a small scale. We know not to what it may grow.
-We like better, the good, old, apostolic plan of sending <em>missionaries</em>
-to the heathen—men, who have no commercial
-and selfish interests to subserve, and who bear no hostile
-weapons. There is danger that a colony, however carefully
-guarded, will <em>misrepresent christianity</em> and fatally
-prejudice the native mind against it. The fact, that not a
-native has yet been converted to christianity, in connection
-with the colony of Liberia, justifies the inquiry, whether the
-<em>scheme</em> is a good one for Africa. The transportation of all
-our Slaves would confessedly form a colony too large and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-corrupt for the safety of the native tribes; and we tremble
-for the result of the present <em>experiment</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In this argument we have not denied the practicability of
-colonizing two millions and a half of people, at an expense
-of $125,000,000. We think it enough to show the thing
-ought not to be done.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONCLUSION.</h2>
-
-<p>With this view of our sentiments, of their practical value,
-and of the propriety and wisdom of our measures, we leave
-you to judge whether abolitionists deserve to be out-lawed in
-their own country; to be loaded with abuse and contumely;
-to be denied a right, conceded to all other decent men, of
-advocating their cause in our public halls and churches;
-and to be left, unprotected, to the violence of ill-minded
-men? We beg you also to consider, how terrific would be
-the prospects of our country, were we in obedience to popular
-clamor, to disband our societies, and retire from the
-field. Who would ever again venture to raise his voice in
-behalf of the down-trodden slave? Should any one have
-the temerity to do it, how soon would he be overwhelmed
-by the violence of the pro-slavery party, encouraged by
-past success, and maddened by the remembrance of the
-formidable array of talent, wealth, and piety, which they
-once encountered. We verily believe, that the peaceable
-abolition of Slavery depends, under God, on our perseverance.
-Moral means must continue to be used by us until
-they issue in success, or slavery will terminate in a bloody
-revolution. We anticipate such an event, as a possibility,
-with painful emotions; and feel disposed to look, in the use
-of all lawful means, to that God, who has promised to do
-for us, exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or
-think, that so dire a catastrophe may be averted. We
-earnestly solicit your co-operation.</p>
-
-<p>We might have said much more to correct misapprehensions,
-refute calumnies, and fortify our positions; but our
-limits forbid it. We may have said some things, which you
-will disapprove; for we have ingenuously confessed our
-most obnoxious sentiments; but if you will give us credit
-for sincerity and weigh our arguments, we shall expect to
-stand better in your opinion, than our calumniators would
-have us.</p>
-
-<p class="pad30pc">With much respect,</p>
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" rowspan="3">In behalf of the Meriden<br />Anti-Slavery Society,</td>
-<td class="tdl">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">PHILO PRATT,</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">WALTER WEBB,</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">ISAAC I. TIBBALS.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTE:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> As our enterprise is not sectarian but national and catholic, it
-is the highest pitch of arrogance for any sect to denounce this
-measure as a violation of ecclesiastical order. Religious freedom
-demands that all such claims should be at once and steadfastly
-resisted.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="p4 transnote">
-<a id="TN"></a>
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
-corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
-the text and consultation of external sources.</p>
-
-<p>Some hyphens in words have been silently removed, some added,
-when a predominant preference was found in the original book.</p>
-
-<p>Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
-and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#tn-9">Pg 9</a>: ‘fraud and villany’ replaced by ‘fraud and villainy’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-11">Pg 11</a>: ‘the emancipatton of’ replaced by ‘the emancipation of’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-11a">Pg 11</a>: ‘they abvocate this’ replaced by ‘they advocate this’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-17">Pg 17</a>: ‘until onr objects’ replaced by ‘until our objects’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-17a">Pg 17</a>: ‘is his <em>chnrch</em>’ replaced by ‘is his <em>church</em>’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-18">Pg 18</a>: ‘<em>intinerant</em> lecturers’ replaced by ‘<em>itinerant</em> lecturers’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-21">Pg 21</a>: ‘Their is also’ replaced by ‘There is also’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-22">Pg 22</a>: ‘and enterprize; the’ replaced by ‘and enterprise; the’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-25">Pg 25</a>: ‘the constistutional’ replaced by ‘the constitutional’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-26">Pg 26</a>: ‘not lettting him’ replaced by ‘not letting him’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-27">Pg 27</a>: ‘for while slaves’ replaced by ‘for which slaves’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-30">Pg 30</a>: ‘the best soeiety’ replaced by ‘the best society’.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN APOLOGY FOR ABOLITIONISTS: ADDRESSED BY THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY OF MERIDEN, CONN., TO THEIR FELLOW CITIZENS ***</div>
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