FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   666   667   668   669   670   671   672   673   674   675   676   677   678   679   680   681   682   683   684   685   686   687   688   689   690  
691   692   693   694   695   696   697   698   699   700   701   702   703   704   705   706   707   708   709   710   711   712   713   714   715   >>   >|  
e act a rivet to his hapless fate; every judicial decision a perversion of the human intellect to the justification of _wrong._'--'Its reciprocal operation upon the government of the nation is, to establish an artificial majority in the slave representation over that of the free people, in the American Congress, and thereby to make the PRESERVATION, PROPAGATION, AND PERPETUATION OF SLAVERY THE VITAL AND ANIMATING SPIRIT OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT.'--'The result is seen in the fact that, at this day, the President of the United States, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and five out of nine of the Judges of the Supreme Judicial Courts of the United States, are not only citizens of slaveholding States, but individual slaveholders themselves. So are, and constantly have been, with scarcely an exception, all the members of both Houses of Congress from the slaveholding States; and so are, in immensely disproportionate numbers, the commanding officers of the army and navy; the officers of the customs; the registers and receivers of the land offices, and the post-masters throughout the slaveholding States.--The Biennial Register indicates the birth-place of all the officers employed in the government of the Union. If it were required to designate the owners of this species of property among them, it would be little more than a catalogue of slaveholders.'" It is confessed by Mr. Adams, alluding to the national convention that framed the Constitution, that "the delegation from the free States, in their extreme anxiety to conciliate the ascendency of the Southern slaveholder, did listen to _a compromise between right and wrong--between freedom and slavery_; of the ultimate fruits of which they had no conception, but which already even now is urging the Union to its inevitable ruin and dissolution, by a civil, servile, foreign, and Indian war, all combined in one; a war, the essential issue of which will be between freedom and slavery, and in which the unhallowed standard of slavery will be the desecrated banner of the North American Union--that banner, first unfurled to the breeze, inscribed with the self-evident truths of the Declaration of Independence." Hence to swear to support the Constitution of the United States, _as it is_, is to make "a compromise between right and wrong," and to wage war against human liberty. It is to recognize and honor as republican legislators, _incorrigibl
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   666   667   668   669   670   671   672   673   674   675   676   677   678   679   680   681   682   683   684   685   686   687   688   689   690  
691   692   693   694   695   696   697   698   699   700   701   702   703   704   705   706   707   708   709   710   711   712   713   714   715   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
States
 

officers

 

United

 

slaveholding

 

slavery

 

Constitution

 
compromise
 

President

 

slaveholders

 

freedom


American
 

Congress

 

government

 
banner
 
property
 
catalogue
 

species

 
owners
 

listen

 

Southern


national

 

delegation

 

convention

 

framed

 

ultimate

 
alluding
 

ascendency

 
confessed
 

conciliate

 

extreme


anxiety

 

slaveholder

 

inevitable

 

evident

 
truths
 

Declaration

 
Independence
 

inscribed

 

unfurled

 

breeze


republican

 

legislators

 

incorrigibl

 
recognize
 

liberty

 
support
 
desecrated
 

standard

 
urging
 
designate