FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189   2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207  
2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   >>   >|  
e slaveholding States, bond and free. You have at least three-fifths of the whole population of the Union. Your influence on the legislation and the administration of the government ought to be in the proportion of three to two--But how stands the fact? Besides the legitimate portion of influence exercised by the slaveholding States by the measure of their numbers, here is an intrusive influence in every department, by a representation nominally of persons, but really of property, ostensibly of slaves, but effectively of their masters, overbalancing your superiority of numbers, adding two-fifths of supplementary power to the two-fifths fairly secured to them by the compact, CONTROLLING AND OVERRULING THE WHOLE ACTION OF YOUR GOVERNMENT AT HOME AND ABROAD, and warping it to the sordid private interest and oppressive policy of 300,000 owners of slaves. From the time of the adoption of the Constitution of the United States, the institution of domestic slavery has been becoming more and more the abhorrence of the civilized world. But in proportion as it has been growing odious to all the rest of mankind, it has been sinking deeper and deeper into the affections of the holders of slaves themselves. The cultivation of cotton and of sugar, unknown in the Union at the establishment of the Constitution, has added largely to the pecuniary value of the slave. Aud the suppression of the African slave-trade as piracy upon pain of death, by securing the benefit of a monopoly to the virtuous slaveholders of the ancient dominion, has turned her heroic tyrannicides into a community of slave-breeders for sale, and converted the land of GEORGE WASHINGTON, PATRICK HENRY, RICHARD HENRY LEE, and THOMAS JEFFERSON, into a great barracoon--a cattle-show of human beings, an emporium, of which the staple articles of merchandise are the flesh and blood, the bones and sinews of immortal man. Of the increasing abomination of slavery in the unbought hearts of men at the time when the Constitution of the United States was formed, what clearer proof could be desired, than that the very same year in which that charter of the land was issued, the Congress of the Confederation, with not a tithe of the powers given by the people to the Congress of the new compact, actually abolished slavery for ever throughout the whole Northwestern territory, without a remonstrance or a murmur. But in the articles of confederation, there was no guaranty for the prope
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2183   2184   2185   2186   2187   2188   2189   2190   2191   2192   2193   2194   2195   2196   2197   2198   2199   2200   2201   2202   2203   2204   2205   2206   2207  
2208   2209   2210   2211   2212   2213   2214   2215   2216   2217   2218   2219   2220   2221   2222   2223   2224   2225   2226   2227   2228   2229   2230   2231   2232   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

States

 

Constitution

 
slavery
 

influence

 

slaves

 

fifths

 

Congress

 

numbers

 

compact

 

slaveholding


United

 

articles

 

proportion

 

deeper

 

beings

 

emporium

 
piracy
 

staple

 

THOMAS

 

JEFFERSON


barracoon

 

cattle

 

RICHARD

 

GEORGE

 
benefit
 

heroic

 

monopoly

 
turned
 

slaveholders

 
ancient

dominion
 
tyrannicides
 

community

 

WASHINGTON

 

PATRICK

 

virtuous

 

securing

 
breeders
 
converted
 

people


abolished

 
powers
 
issued
 

Confederation

 

confederation

 

guaranty

 
murmur
 

Northwestern

 

territory

 

remonstrance