登陆注册
19902800000175

第175章 CHAPTER III.(6)

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
  • 霍渭厓家训

    霍渭厓家训

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六部成语

    六部成语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阴持入经注

    阴持入经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说内藏百宝经

    佛说内藏百宝经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 眼科奇书

    眼科奇书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 谁揭开了我的面纱

    谁揭开了我的面纱

    在神秘的太阳墓葬中获得永生的楼兰女王在沉睡,千年之后复活,被一个一出生就要注定当做祭品的贵族男孩子给挖掘出来,并揭开了她的面纱,于是,女王变成了男孩的新娘。但是,男孩最后还是逃脱不了成为祭品的悲剧。于是,女王又回到了她的墓中开始沉睡,一千多年后,她被中国考古队再次挖掘出来,邪恶就此发芽...
  • 凉城暖夏

    凉城暖夏

    她,本是天之骄女,奈何身边之人皆是待她心。一场蓄谋已久的车祸夺去了她年轻的生命。灵魂堕入异时空。凤眸微睁,她将要创造属于她的奇迹!
  • 花季里跳荡的思想脉律

    花季里跳荡的思想脉律

    这套丛书由8本书构成,是国内文学和语文教学论方面的知名学者优势互补,为中学生提供的“青春读书课”。它克服了文学专家文选式读物可能缺乏教育学阐释的弊病,也克服了教学论专家所编读物可能选文与解读不当的弊病。编撰的目的是:选择课本之外的、古今中外经典的文学作品进行教育学的加工,提高中学生的人文素养。每本书都以“忧患意识”、“生命礼赞”、“大自然:温情澎湃的歌”之类的闪耀着人文精神光辉的语句把几十篇佳作组织成若干单元。单元内部由以下板块构成:单元人文内容概述、作家作品简介、作品、解读、话题、相关资料索引。这套丛书体现了《语文课程标准》开发语文学习资源、培养探究能力的教学观念,有助于中学生积累人文知识、品味人文精神、抒发人文感悟。这套丛书竭诚为中学生的成长加油!
  • 任正非管理日志

    任正非管理日志

    作为中国最有思想,最有号召力、领导力和影响力的CEO之一,华为总裁任正非已经成为中国本土企业家竞相学习的标杆。任正非的经营管理思想已经为华为20年来的经营管理实践所证明。本书第一次以“管理日志”的形式,全面梳理、总结了任正非的经营管理思想,以国际视野对任正非的经营实践进行分析、评述,回顾了任正非在华为发展的每个关键时期所发表的观点及背景,探索了任正非管理思想的演变过程,并针对其他企业给出了具有实战意义的“行动指南”。
  • 末世之天继

    末世之天继

    承继于虚幻的洪荒,所衍生出接近现实却又近乎荒诞的真实。末日之时,群魔降世。吸食鲜血的同时,还要吸食灵魂的巨大蝙蝠怪,嗜血残暴,却又尚存着些许理智的行尸走肉,巨大恐怖,却智商低劣以至被它物所奴役的多足怪物。还有无数前所未见的奇异生态,千奇百怪的妖魔鬼怪。濒临危困的人族,是否继续苟延残喘?传承已久的华夏汉族,能否最终力挽狂澜?蝙蝠妖,丧尸,异能,失德,国战,群殴,灭倭,苍天,胖子,三国,这些,本书都有。萝莉,美女,美少女,熟女,少妇,女学生,女老师,女博士,这些,嗯,本书都可以有。
  • 仙武纪

    仙武纪

    一个个巅峰的修炼纪年,为何悄然寂灭,消失在时间长河中。林鼎一个平凡的少年,获得了一个寒武纪的巅峰强者的记忆,也因为这个巅峰强者的记忆,踏进了修炼的世界。在修炼和生存中,他不断的接触着一个个灭亡的纪年,走上了揭开纪年灭亡的路途。===========================================================各位读者大大,看的舒服了,能否给个推荐票或是收藏下,我在这拜谢了!!!!有兴趣的加QQ群46685254
  • 已为人妻

    已为人妻

    顾君临,EC集团的总裁,欧洲黑道势力暗门的首领。当时的年少轻狂让他失去了深爱的她……7年后,逃离的沐柠改名穆晴语带着丈夫孩子回国。顾君临于是开始不择手段的掠夺。“顾君临,我求求你,你不要杀他,不要……我什么都答应……答应你。”穆晴语对拿枪指着萧以哲头的顾君临苦苦哀求。“砰”一声,跪着的萧以哲倒了下去。穆晴语看到萧以哲惨死,眼前一黑,晕了过去。“从现在开始,无论上天入地,你都只能是我的……”"
  • 坏蛋混三国

    坏蛋混三国

    叶发达从来不觉得自己是个坏蛋,顶多是个有情有义有帅气,没车没房没节操的古惑仔。作为一个二十好几的人没女朋友也没什么,没看见一堆大学生都是单身狗嘛,这肯定是因为身边的朋友影响到了他的桃花气场而已。作为孤儿他人生中只看过三本书《三国演义》《十万个为什么》《五年高考三年模拟》……
  • 大道玄黄

    大道玄黄

    混沌之始也,天玄而地黄,世间仙凡共生。夫仙人者,掌御万物,可踏闲云而游四海,驾白鹤而越昆仑,扶羊角而凌霄汉,不亡不灭,万世长存。夫凡人者,神衰体弱,辛勉一世,不过衣食,趋名竞利,百岁而终,腐蚀成泥,轮回无尽。历经沧桑万代,天升地覆,天气浓郁,地气稀薄,自此仙凡永隔。这是一个俗世少年以武入道、逆命求仙的故事。
  • 第二次世界大战实录:战史篇(二)

    第二次世界大战实录:战史篇(二)

    本书内容包括:第二次世界大战的起源背景、序幕爆发、全面展开、相持转折、最后结局等。