FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1624   1625   1626   1627   1628   1629   1630   1631   1632   1633   1634   1635   1636   1637   1638   1639   1640   1641   1642   1643   1644   1645   1646   1647   1648  
1649   1650   1651   1652   1653   1654   1655   1656   1657   1658   1659   1660   1661   1662   1663   1664   1665   1666   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   >>   >|  
TALITY, BENEVOLENCE, AND GENEROSITY.' Multitudes scout as fictions the cruelties inflicted upon slaves, because slaveholders are famed for their courtesy and hospitality. They tell us that their generous and kind attentions to their guests, and their well-known sympathy for the suffering, sufficiently prove the charges of cruelty brought against them to be calumnies, of which their uniform character is a triumphant refutation. Now that slaveholders are proverbially hospitable to their guests, and spare neither pains nor expense in ministering to their accommodation and pleasure, is freely admitted and easily accounted for. That those who make their inferiors work for them, without pay, should be courteous and hospitable to those of their equals and superiors whose good opinions they desire, is human nature in its every-day dress. The objection consists of a fact and an inference: the fact, that slaveholders have a special care to the accommodation of their _guests;_ the inference, that therefore they must seek the comfort of their _slaves_--that as they are bland and obliging to their equals, they must be mild and condescending to their inferiors--that as the wrongs of their own grade excite their indignation, and their woes move their sympathies, they must be touched by those of their chattels--that as they are full of pains-taking toward those whose good opinions and good offices they seek, they will, of course, show special attention to those to whose good opinions they are indifferent, and whose good offices they can _compel_--that as they honor the literary and scientific, they must treat with high consideration those to whom they deny the alphabet--that as they are courteous to certain _persons_, they must be so to "property"--eager to anticipate the wishes of visitors, they cannot but gratify those of their vassals--jealous for the rights of the Texans, quick to feel at the disfranchisement of Canadians and of Irishmen, alive to the oppressions of the Greeks and the Poles, they must feel keenly for their _negroes!_ Such conclusions from such premises do not call for serious refutation. Even a half-grown boy, who should argue, that because men have certain feelings toward certain persons in certain circumstances, they must have the same feelings toward all persons in all circumstances, or toward persons in opposite circumstances, of totally different grades, habits, and personal peculiarities, might fairly be
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1624   1625   1626   1627   1628   1629   1630   1631   1632   1633   1634   1635   1636   1637   1638   1639   1640   1641   1642   1643   1644   1645   1646   1647   1648  
1649   1650   1651   1652   1653   1654   1655   1656   1657   1658   1659   1660   1661   1662   1663   1664   1665   1666   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

persons

 

guests

 
opinions
 

slaveholders

 

circumstances

 

accommodation

 

refutation

 

feelings

 

hospitable

 

offices


special

 
equals
 
inferiors
 

courteous

 
inference
 
slaves
 

anticipate

 

wishes

 

property

 

Multitudes


visitors

 

Texans

 

GENEROSITY

 

rights

 

jealous

 

gratify

 

vassals

 

alphabet

 

indifferent

 
compel

attention

 

fictions

 
literary
 

consideration

 

scientific

 
disfranchisement
 

BENEVOLENCE

 
TALITY
 

opposite

 
peculiarities

fairly

 

personal

 

habits

 
totally
 

grades

 

keenly

 
negroes
 

Greeks

 

oppressions

 
Canadians