登陆注册
20292700000175

第175章

The question of slavery in America cannot be handled fully and fairly by any one who is afraid to go back upon the subject, and take its whole history since one man first claimed and exercised the right of forcing labor from another man. I certainly am afraid of any such task; but I believe that there has been no period yet, since the world's work began, when such a practice has not prevailed in a large portion, probably in the largest portion, of the world's work fields. As civilization has made its progress, it has been the duty and delight, as it has also been the interest of the men at the top of affairs, not to lighten the work of the men below, but so to teach them that they should recognize the necessity of working without coercion. Emancipation of serfs and thrals, of bondsmen and slaves, has always meant this--that men having been so taught, should then work without coercion.

In talking or writing of slaves, we always now think of the negro slave. Of us Englishmen it must at any rate be acknowledged that we have done what in us lay to induce him to recognize this necessity for labor. At any rate we acted on the presumption that he would do so, and gave him his liberty throughout all our lands at a cost which has never yet been reckoned up in pounds, shillings, and pence. The cost never can be reckoned up, nor can the gain which we achieved in purging ourselves from the degradation and demoralization of such employment. We come into court with clean hands, having done all that lay with us to do to put down slavery both at home and abroad. But when we enfranchised the negroes, we did so with the intention, at least, that they should work as free men. Their share of the bargain in that respect they have declined to keep, wherever starvation has not been the result of such resolve on their part; and from the date of our emancipation, seeing the position which the negroes now hold with us, the Southern States of America have learned to regard slavery as a permanent institution, and have taught themselves to regard it as a blessing, and not as a curse.

Negroes were first taken over to America because the white man could not work under the tropical heats, and because the native Indian would not work. The latter people has been, or soon will be, exterminated--polished off the face of creation, as the Americans say--which fate must, I should say, in the long run attend all non-working people. As the soil of the world is required for increasing population, the non-working people must go. And so the Indians have gone. The negroes, under compulsion, did work, and work well; and under their hands vast regions of the western tropics became fertile gardens. The fact that they were carried up into northern regions which from their nature did not require such aid, that slavery prevailed in New York and Massachusetts, does not militate against my argument. The exact limits of any great movement will not be bounded by its purpose. The heated wax which you drop on your letter spreads itself beyond the necessities of your seal. That these negroes would not have come to the Western World without compulsion, or having come, would not have worked without compulsion, is, I imagine, acknowledged by all. That they have multiplied in the Western World and have there become a race happier, at any rate in all the circumstances of their life, than their still untamed kinsmen in Africa, must also be acknowledged.

Who, then, can dare to wish that all that has been done by the negro immigration should have remained undone?

The name of slave is odious to me. If I know myself I would not own a negro though he could sweat gold on my behoof. I glory in that bold leap in the dark which England took with regard to her own West Indian slaves. But I do not see the less clearly the difficulty of that position in which the Southern States have been placed; and Iwill not call them wicked, impious, and abominable, because they now hold by slavery, as other nations have held by it at some period of their career. It is their misfortune that they must do so now--now, when so large a portion of the world has thrown off the system, spurning as base and profitless all labor that is not free. It is their misfortune, for henceforth they must stand alone, with small rank among the nations, whereas their brethren of the North will still "flame in the forehead of the morning sky."When the present Constitution of the United States was written--the merit of which must probably be given mainly to Madison and Hamilton, Madison finding the French democratic element, and Hamilton the English conservative element--this question of slavery was doubtless a great trouble. The word itself is not mentioned in the Constitution. It speaks not of a slave, but of a "person held to service or labor." It neither sanctions nor forbids slavery. It assumes no power in the matter of slavery; and under it, at the present moment, all Congress voting together, with the full consent of the legislatures of thirty-three States, could not constitutionally put down slavery in the remaining thirty-fourth State. In fact the Constitution ignored the subject.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 无限之黑暗法则

    无限之黑暗法则

    罗纪世界里的恐龙灾难席卷全球,捉妖记里的妖魔横行祸乱天下,中土世界,引领饱受苦难的半兽人建立王朝,谱写一曲屠龙者的赞歌。我呼吸着无主之地的晨风,站在埃及金字塔之巅,眺望天使与恶魔的战争……潘多拉丛林是我的猎场,铁血战士的头颅是我收藏的酒杯,火烧连营…
  • 弃民之子

    弃民之子

    他来到这世上,用鲜血击碎虚假,千百年来一族人的血脉只是为了祭奠他。现在,他来了。背着使命和鲜血。其实,善良的孩子不该背负那么多。
  • 神本嚣张

    神本嚣张

    在林霸天的世界里,只有他最大,只有他最强……因为我变态,所以我存在。
  • 传奇:星传纪元

    传奇:星传纪元

    一起看17k《外星传奇录》(你懂的)满腹文藻偏爱幻想独行的他撂下课本狂迷写作,数日后被连滨文艺大学关注。被破录后他常与林妹妹共戏海滩,恰在独行那日连滨暴发了罕见的超级海啸,奔逃中,他救下一名迟慢小年轻。后来闻龙不可思议撼知那人是一名执勤外星兵!故事至此跳折行进——跳入图斯坦布尔保卫战后,他不甘以往的战地游戏经验白费,就幸然介入解救任务当上晋勋小兵,经一连串由超能科技拼接的即时对战后,他荣耀上位!突降的贝尔却使他此时愈加纠结……此桃运曲折的长路俨显构成一段,本世纪大中兴时代的传奇纪元,风流潇洒中的热血清朗证明,传奇可由平凡开创,纪元始由卑微开启!
  • 绝世杀手:神秘相公莫惹我

    绝世杀手:神秘相公莫惹我

    轩辕晨曦,她外表冷酷,享有冰美人之称,但是这个只针对敌人和陌生人;对于那些真心为她付出的人她愿意倾尽所有。曾经她也是温室里的小公主,却因为一场阴谋成了孤儿,从此踏上杀手这条不归路。她觉得她的人生可能就这样在黑暗中度过了,也许连上天都不愿她就此离开。再次睁眼,她发现自己到了一个不熟悉的国度,家仇已报,这一世她决定为自己而活。。。。。。希望大家多多支持,多提建议!
  • 丧尸的世纪

    丧尸的世纪

    在丧尸的世界中一个15岁的孩子是否能生存下来?原来平平凡凡的他,因为丧尸的出现他的人生将受到巨大的改变!是成为人类的救世主?还是成为杀人如麻的恶魔?
  • 我们那下落不明的青春

    我们那下落不明的青春

    爱情,是我们成长必不可少的精神养料,更是文学的一种极致体现,更是我们曾下落不明的青春。更多美文请关注作者微信:liuliguyun也可以添加作者QQ:734030986看优美原创语录哦。
  • 校园邪少纵横

    校园邪少纵横

    “峰儿,我们穷人家,惹不起别人,要是有人骂你你别还口。”“好的,妈妈,我不还口,只动手……”李晓峰在心里默默想。修真者渡劫失败,附身在一个弱少年身上,原本被人欺负的少年性情大变……软弱的他变得强硬,害羞的他主动调戏美女老师、清纯同桌,他一步一个脚印,纵横校园,纵横清江,纵横黑道……原本不敢想的一切力量、权势、美女、金钱,他一一收取。
  • 神武灵植师

    神武灵植师

    规则破碎,武技衍生;神印降临,天赋显现。这是一个破碎的世界,生灵濒临死亡;这是一个新生的世界,一切皆有可能。武者,弹指间,遮天碎地,一子落星辰,一阵化沧海;灵植师,一瞬间,铺天盖地,一草化日月,一木斩苍穹。秦泽,一个得到上古灵植师传承的武者,当武者的道路之上,出现了灵植师之后,将会出现什么样的变化?神武世界,九大神帝,威慑万古,从天之间掠夺能量,当世界寿命走到尽头,天地规则破碎,破碎的规则演化成为万千武技,修炼越高,领悟越高,成为天地修补正规则之上的补品。
  • 双生少女

    双生少女

    女主琉淑梦,年龄16,性格却与淑女的温柔无缘。是个孤儿,从小被收养。在学校的图书馆遇到一个女生,芙珈,17岁。很快相处起来的她们却在准备离开时遇到一个婆婆,从此,属于她们的历险就此展开。老婆婆的话不能全部相信?!那真相又是……