;[)26 .^■ ^^^ -:■'%■ .>, V 'J?^ '. »^^ » • » * «0^ ^:>, ' , , ' ' v^ •'•^ ..>^ ,■> « * *bv Cr, - V SPEECH MR. DAVIS, OF MISSISSIPPI, ON THE SUBJECT OF , i.\>^ ' J ^ SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES^ ^ '^^J/ V^,^^ DELIVERED IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, FEBRUARY 13 & 14, 1850. The Senate having, as in Committee of the "Whole, proceeded to the consideration of the resolutions submitted by Mr. Clay — Mr. DAVIS, of Mississippi, addressed the Senate as follows : Mr. President : One of the greatest causes of the apprehension which fills my mind under the existing state of things, is the indifference and incredulity of those who represent the majority of the United States. Yet from every quarter of this broad Union come daily evidences of the excitement which is felt, of the gathering storm which threatens to break upon us. That this Senate chamber should be crowded, that the galle- ries should be filled, and admittance be sought upon the floor, when men of high national reputation address the Senate, should not surprise any one. But when it is repeated on an occasion like this, when it must be the cause, and not the advocate, that attracts the multitude, it is time that all should feel there is that within the breasts of the people which ^ claims the attention of the Legislature. When the honorable Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Clay) introduced the resolutions now under discussion, I thought it my duty to present my views of w^hat I considered injustice to those whom I represent, and to offer some opposition to the dangerous doctrines which I believed he then presented. Whether it was impatience at finding any of his opin- ions controverted, or whether it was that he sought an adversary so feeble as to secure an easy victory, I know not, and it matters not to me. He challenged me to this discussion whenever J was ready. I was ready then, and meet him now. It has been postponed at his option, and not mine ; and that, when he prepared and delivered his speech before the Senate, I did not immediately follow him, was because I could not obtain the floor. I now come to lift the glove he then threw down, and trust in the justice of the cause in which I stand. The country has been induced to expect — and notwithstanding all pre- vious evidence against it, even I had cherished the hope — that the great power of that Senator, and his known influence in the country, would have been exerted in a crisis so dangerous as this, \vith the high and holy purpose of preserving the Union. I had hoped from him a compro- TOWERS, PRIST. 2 ,X\,-^^ mise that ^A'ould have contained the spirit of that which, in another dan- gerous period in the history of this country, brought calm and sun- shine, instead of the gh)om which then lowered over us. In this hope I have been disappointed — grievously disappointed by the character of the resolutions which he has introduced, and yet more grievously disap- pointed in the remarks l)y which ihey were prefaced. If that great poM^er and influence to which I have alluded, and that eloquence upon which ninltitudes have hung entranced, and rememl^ered only to admire, had now been exerted in the cause of the weak against the strong, the cause of the Constitution against its aggressors, the evils by which we are surrounded might perhaps have been removed, and the decline of * that Senator's sun been even more bright than its meridian glory. But, instead of this, he has chosen to throw his influence into the scale of the preponderating aggressive majority, and in so doing vehementl}' to assert his undisputed right to express his opinions fearless of all mankind. Why, sir, there was nothing to apprehend, and I presume no one will dispute the right of the Senator to advance his opinions in any decorous language he might choose. Mr. President, my feelings and my duties run in the same channel. My convictions of what is necessary to preserve the Union correspond Avith my opinions in relation to the local and peculiar interests which I particularly represent. I have therefore no sacrifices to make, unless it be that personal sacrifice I make in appearing under circumstances like those which now surround me. The greater part of the Senator's argument has been directed against the right of the Southern States to that equality of enjoyment in the Territories to which they assert they are entitled. He has rebuked the spirit of abolitionism as the evil of the country, but, in doing so, instead of describing it as a factious, disorganizing, revolutionary spirit, he has only spoken of it as the offspring of party, the result of passion. Now, Mr. President, I contend that the reverse is true. I contend that it is the want of party which has built up this faction and rendeied it dangerous ; that so long as party organization preserved its integrity, there was no place for a third party, and no danger from it. If this were merely the result of passion, I should then have hopes which I cannot now cherish. If it were the mere outbreak of violence, I should see some prospect for its subsidence. But considering it, as I do, the cold, calculating purpose of those who seek for sectional dominion, I see nothing short of conquest on the one side, or submission on the other. This is the great danger which hangs over us — not passion — not party ; but the settled, selfish purpose which alone can sustain and probably will not abandon the movement. That upon which it originally rested has long since passed away. It is no longer the clamor of a noisy fanaticism, but the steady advance of a self-sustaining power to the goal of unlimited supremacy. This is the crevasse which the Senator described — a crevasse which he figuratively says is threatening submersion to the whole estate, while the owners are quarrelling about the division of its })ro{its. Yes, sir, a moral crevasse has occurred: fanaticism and ignorance — political rivalry — sectional hate — strife for sectional dominion, have accumulated into a mighty flood, and pour their turgid waters through the broken constitu- tion, threatening not total submersion, but only the destruction of a part of the estate — that part in which my constituency, as well as that of the Senator, is found. What, then, under such circumstances as these, does the Senator pro- pose as a remedy ? Does he call all the parties to check the breach which threatens danger to one? Does he lend his own hand to arrest the progress of the flood 1 No. He comes here, representing those Southern interests which are at stake, surrenders the whole claim of the South, and gives a support to abolitionism which no Northern man — no, nor every Northern man in the Senate — could have afforded. However much we may regret, our surprise must be limited by the recollection that we had some cause to anticipate this. The public press had given us last summer a letter from him, addressed to the abolitionists of Ohio — a man most notorious among them being upon the committee — in which that very ordinance of 1787 was treated as a great blessing and slavery as a curse. The representatives of the South have never sought to violate that compromise or concession, whatever it maybe called, that was made in 1787. The representatives of the South have not entered into arguments upon the blessings and evils of slavery. They have said, from time to time, that it was a domestic institution ; that it was under their own control ; and that they claimed for it only the protection which the Constitution accords to every other species of property. Less than that they can never take, unless they are willing to become an inferior class, a degraded caste in the Union. A large part of the non-slaveholding States have declared war against the institution of slavery. They have announced that it shall not be ex- tended, and with that annunciation have coupled the declaration that it is a stain upon the Republic — that it is a moral blot which should be obliterated. Now, sir, can any one believe, does any one hope, that the Southern States in this confederacy will continue, as in times gone by, to support the Union, to bear its burdens, in peace and in war, in a de- gree disproportioned to their numbers, if that very Government is to be arrayed in hostility against an institution so interwoven with its inte- r^ts, its domestic peace, and all its social relations, that it cannot be disturbed without causing their overthrow ? This Government is the agent of all of the States ; can it be expected of any of them that they will consent to be bound by its acts, v/hen that agent announces the set- tled purpose in the exercise of its power to overthrow that which it was its duty to uphold? That obligation ceases whenever such a construc- tion shall be placed upon its power by the Federal Government. The essential purpose for which the grant was made being disregarded, the means given for defence being perverted to assault. State allegiance thenceforward resumes its right to demand the service, the whole service, of all its citizens. The claim is set up for the Federal Government not only to restrict slavery jrom entering the Territories, but to abolish slavery in the Dis- trict of Columbia, to abolish it in the arsenals and dock-yards, to with- draw from it the protection of the American flag wherever it is found upon the high seas — in fact, to strip it of every protection it derives from Government. All this under the pretext that propert)' in slaves is local in its nature, and derives its existence from municipal law. Slavery existed before the formation of this Union. It derived from the Consti- tution that recognition which it would not have enjoyed without the confederation. If the Slates had not united together, there would have been no obligation on adjoining States to regard any species of property unknown to themselves. But it was one of the compromises of the Con- stitution that the slave property in the Southern States should be recog- nized as property throughout the United States. It was so recognized in the obligation to restore fugitives — recognized in the power to tax them as persons — recognized in their representation in the halls of Con- gress. As a property recognized by the Constitution, and held in a portion of the States, the Federal Government is bound to admit it into all the Ter- ritories, and to give it such protection as other private property receives. I do not propose to follow the argument of the Senator from Georgia, (Mr. Berrien.) I will not mar its beauty or weaken its force by any thing which I can say. I believe that his argument upon that point was so conclusive as to require no addition, if I had the power to make it. It becomes us, it becomes you — all who seek to preserve this Union, and to render it perpetual — to ask, why is this power claimed ? Why is its exercise sought ? Why is this resolution to obstruct the extension of slavery into the Territories introduced? It must be for the purpose of political power ; it can have no other rational object. Every one must understand that, whatever be the evil of slavery, it is not increased by its diffusion. Every one familiar with it knows that it is in proportion to its sparseness that it becomes less objectionable. Wherever there is an immediate connexion between the master and slave, whatever there is of harshness in the system is diminished. Then it preserves the do- mestic character, and strictly patriarchal relation. It is only when the slaves are assembled in large numbers, on plantations, and are removed from the interested, the kind, the aifectionate care of the master, that it ever can partake of that cruelty which is made the great charge aga,inst it by those who know nothing of it, and which, I will passingly say, probably exists to a smaller extent than in any other relation of labor to capital. It is, then, for the purpose of political power ; and can those who, in violation of constitutional rights, seek and acquire political power, which, in progress of time, will give them the ability to change the Constitution of the United States, be supposed just then to be seized with a feeling of magnanimity and justice, which will prevent them from using the power which they thus corruptly sought and obtained ? Man, Mr. President, may become corrupted by the possession of power ; he may seek it for pure motives, and be corrupted by its exercise. The reverse of this all history and all reason deny. Warned by the delusive compromises of the ])ast, we are stimulated by the dangers which surround us to look forward to the issue that has been suggested as the ultimate end — to the day when the power to remodel the Constitution, being possessed, wall be exercised ; and therefore the men of the present generation are called upon to meet it ; they have no right to postpone to posterity the danger which is laid at their own doors ; ours is the responsibility, and upon us devolves theduty of decid- ing the issue. If, sir, I represented a Northern State, however much it might be opposed to the institution of slavery, I feel that I should say to my constituents, without a balance of power such as will enable every interest to protect itself — without such checks and such restraints as can never exist where any one section is paramount to all others — that the great purposes of this Union could never be preserved, the confederacy must be short-lived, and perish by the destruction of the principles upon which it was founded. That, for such reasons, under the case sup- posed, I would as now, oppose a policy which, if it confer a temporary benefit on one, must end in the permament injury of all. I believe, Mr. President, it is essential that neither section should have such power in Congress as would render them able to trample upon the rights of the other section of this Union, It would be a blessing, an es- sential means to preserve the confederacy, that in one branch of Con- gress the North and in the other the South should have a majority of re- presentation. Ours is but a limited agency. We have but few powers, and those are of a general nature ; and, if legislation was restricted and balanced in the mode I have suggested. Congress would never be able to encroach upon the r'ghts and institutions of any portion of the Union, nor could its acts ever meet with resistance from any part of it. The reverse being the case, who knows how soon the time may come when men will rise in arms to oppose the laws of Congress ? Whenever you take from the people of this country the confidence that this is their Government, that it reflects their will, that it looks to their interests, the foundation upon which it was laid is destroyed, and the fabric falls to the ground. More emphaticall}' in this than in any other, though it was said by the great Emperor of Europe to be true of all, does this Govern- ment depend upon the consent of the people. So emphatically is it true, that the laws of Congress could not be executed in any one State of this Union if that State was resolved to resist it. So entirely is this the case, that, whatever law may be passed at this session — and I perceive a dispo- sition on all sides to pass one for the recovery of fugitive slaves — I feel that that law will be a dead letter in any State where the popular opin- ion is opposed to such rendition. I would sooner trust it to-day to the sense of constitutional obligations of the States than to the enforcement of any law which Congress can enact against the popular opinion of those among whom it is executed. I have never expected any benefit to result to us from this species of legislation. I believe upon this, as upon every other subject, that we must rely more on the patriotism, the good sense, and morality of the people, than upon any tribunal, to preserve the rights of the Southern States. I have said elsewhere, and where there was none to represent them, that I believed, if the wrongs and injuries heaped upon the South were understood by the great body of the people at the North, the whole conduct of their politicians would be rebuked, and peace and harmony would be restored. But, sir, it is the evil of the time in which we live, that the responsibilities which rest upon us — the responsibilities of our day — are sought to be transferred to another. It is the misfortune of the country that men, instead of meeting issues, shrink from them, and, instead of relying upon the sober second thought of the people, are v^^aving to and fro, like reeds before the wind, to the pressure of every popular impulse. We have high and holy duties to perform — duties of which we are wholly unworth}', unless every man here is ready to hazard his political life for the maintenance of those principles which he has sworn to uphold and to preserve. But, Mr. President, it is my purpose, and I am sorry, even for one moment, to have diverged from it, calmly and briefly to direct my at- tention to the main argument of the Senator from Kentuck3\ I claim, sir, that slavery being property in the United States, and so recognised by the Constitution, a slaveholder has the right to go with that property into any part of the United States where some sovereign power has not forbidden it. I deny, sir, that this Government has the sovereign power to prohibit it from the Territories. I deny that any territorial communi- ty, being a dependance of the United States, has that power, or can pro- 6 hihit it, and therefore my claim presented is this, that the slaveholder has a right to go with his slave into an}' portion of these United States, ex- cept in a State where the fundamental law has forbidden it. I know, sir, that the popular doctrine obtains, that ever}^ community has that power; and I was sorry to hear the Senator from Kentucky, in some portion of his speech, assent to it, though in olhers he did oppose it. Who constitute the communities which are to exercise sovereign rights over the Territo- ries? Those who, in the race for newly ac^ar received the announcement that the House of Representatives had passed that odious measure, the Wilmot proviso; and that he, ahhough then periling his life, abandoning all the comforts of home, and sacrificing his interests, was, by the Legislature of his country, marked as coming from a portion of the Union which was not entitled to the equal benefits of v.'hatever might result from the service to which he was contributing v/hatever pov/er he possessed. Nor will it be difficult to conceive, of the many sons of the South whose blood has stained those battle-fields, ^vhose ashes now mingle with Mex- ican earth, that some, when they last looked on the flag of their country, may have felt their dying moments embittered by the recollection that that flag cast not an equal shadow of protection over the land of their birth, the graves of their parents, and the homes of their children so soon to be orphans. Sir, I asJc Northern Senators to make the case their own — to carry to their own fireside the idea of such intrusion and offen- sive discrimination as is offered to us — realize these irritations, so galling to the humble, so intolerable to the haughty, and wake before it is too jate, from the drea,m that the South will tamely submit. Measure the consequences to us of your assumption, and ask yourselves whether, as a free, honorable, and brave people, you would submit to it 1 It is essentially the charactei-istic of the chivalrous, that they never specula'C upon the fears of any man, and I trust that no such specula- tions will be made upon the idea that may be entertained in any quarter that the South, from fear of her slaves, is necessarily opposed to a dis- solution of this Union. She has no such fear ; her slaves would be to her now as they were in the revolution, an element of military strength. I trust that no speculations will be made upon either the condition or the supposed weakness of the South. They will bring sad disappointments to those Avho indulge them. Rely upon her devotion to the Union, rely upon the feeling of fraternity she inherited and has never failed to man- ifest ; rely upon the nationality and freedom from sedition which has in all ages characterized an agricultural people ; give her justice, sheer justice, and the reliance will never fail you. Then, Mr. President, I ask that some substantial proposition may be made by the majority in regard to this question. It is for those who have the power to pass it to propose one. It is for those who are threat- ening us with the loss of that which we are entitled to enjoy to state, if there be any compromise, what that compromise is. We are unable to pass any measure, if we propose it ; therefore I have none to suggest. We are unable to bend you to any terms which we may offer ; we are under the ban of your purpose; therefore from you, if from anywhere, the proposition must come. I trust that we shall meet it and bear the responsibility as becomes us ; that we shall not seek to escape from it ; that we shall not seek to transfer to other places, or other times, or other persons, that responsibility which devolves upon us; and I hope the earnestness which the occasion justifies will not be mistaken for the ebulition of passion, nor the language of warning be construed as a threat. We cannot without the most humiliating confession of the su- premacy of faction evade our constitutional obligations, and our obliga- tions under the treaty Vv'ith Mexico, to organize governments in the Ter- ritories of California and New Mexico. I trust that we will not seek to escape from the responsibility, and leave the country unprovided for un- less by an irregular admission of new States ; that we will act upon the 32 good example of Washington in the case of Tennessee, and of Jefferson in the case of Louisiana ; that we Avill not, if we abandon those hiijh standards, do more than come down to modern examples — that we will not go further than to permit those who have the forms of government under the Constitution, to assume sovereignty over territory of the United States ; that we may at least, I say, assert the right to know who they are, how many they are — where they voted, how they voted — and whose certificate is presented to us of the fact before it is conceded to them ro determine the fundamental law of the country, and to prescribe the con- ditions on which other citizens of the United States may enter it. To reach all this knowledge, we must go through the intermediate stage of Territorial Government. How will you determine what is the seal, and who are the officers of a community uidvuown as an organized body to the Congress of the Uni- ted States. Can the right be admitted in that community to usurp the sovereignty over territory which belongs to the States of the Union ? All these questions must be answered, before I can consent to any such irregular proceeding as that which is now presented in the case of Cali- fornia. Mr. President, thanking the Senate for the patience they have shown towards me, I again express the hope that those who have the power to settle this distracting question — those who have the ability to restore peace, concord, and lasting harmony to the United States — will give us some substantial proposition, such as magnanimity can offer, and such as we can honorabl}- accept. I, being one of the minority in the Senate and the Union, have nothing to offer, except an assurance of co-opera- tion in any thing which my principles will allow me to adopt, and wh'-'h promises permanent, substantial security. W46 '^' ■"^J. ,0^ v:5 t> N C ^- '^^ A ' -^-^M^ «}> * O M O " %A^ :m^^ X^' oV 'p. 71 » ^^ 0^ ^dK t.0^^ =-^^^- %v*^ ;^-. Vo^' ■■^^■- \/ :? -iN *jr//Zc^\ '-y