E449 .S765 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS DQDDlTHbbbE 4^ "^ '..O' ^U 'A v^^ .0 • « • «i '**^ ^ J 'bV ^ .^'% v^" 'bV .4 •— ^0*^ \/^^*\/' V^'^^'^o'^^ ^V'^^'^^V uth — thus it Is, that they have diiven them from the larger cities of the Sou'li to the country — thus it is, that they feel them- selves, and will torce the Lpcislature to acknow- ledge, that there is a diffoience between free la- bor and slave labor — atid thus it is, and must be, that utiiil E itopia be C)li>inz!d, mm will ever act from the centre of his own ind:viade against it, atid that, in 1850, we cleansed the na- tional Capitol of the poUu ion of that execrable traffic. It is also under the influence of this principle that Abolitioti petitions have come to Congress — that we rejoice when European peo- ple cut the throats of their rulers, and that gen- tie-hea't<'d d*mes and damst-ls, in shedding tears and ink ujion the crimes and horr(>rs of the age, see no single thing so deeply deplorable as the crime and horror of man's dominion over man. But while this Union is a deniociacy, the South is not a democracy. It is so in its ex- ternal character, and so in sentiment perhaps, for there are very matiy of us who yet sympa- thise in the feeling that eqioality is the right of man, but in its social condition the South is not; a democracy. On the contrary, it is perhaps the purest form of aistocracy, the woild has ever seen. Elsewhere, aristocracies have beea forced a id artificial, here it is natural ar,d ne- cessary, and the cases are as tare as comets, thai; individuals of the one clak on such a venture. The North would preserve dominion, but it is imperative upon her to preserve the Union. The madness of the North increases, and the time may come when consid- eraiions ot interest even will not control her ac- tion ; but it has not cotne yet — and now I be- ' lieve that there is not a demand to be made by tiie South, no matter how extiayagant, which, if made as the condition of this Union, would not be acct-pted by the North. But say ihat it is so. Say that thougli we re- pudiate restrictions on the slave trade, and de- nia;:d the repeal of them, the North shall not a.s- sent to it. Then an issue will have been made, and if not conceded, it is possible the South may be forced to the intrepidity of acting tor herself upon the subject . But if not, she will at least have put. heiself right upon the record. Slie will have averted the reproach of being a party to the censure of her own institutions — of con- curring in her own condemnation — of meanly prnciising what she does not dare to preach — of holding to the world a sentiment which iti every action of her life the contradicts — and it is time that she should do so. It is time that we should spfak out like men upon this subject. If we practice slavery, let us avow it — let us own it as a right, rather than allow it to be imputed as a wrong — let us demand of our common Gov- ernment that it will depart from the office of dii- criininatioii, and let us bare our institutions in their pioper aspect and condition to the world, or let us bury them. Is it for the reason that we would shock the moral sentiment of other coun- tries? It is convenient tor the North to execrate our institution, for she finds her profit in keep- ing it at a discount. It is convenient for England to execrate the institution, for she regards it as a principle of strength to the North, and as the prop therefore of her most imperious rival. But it is an error to suppose that any of these States are tender on llie score of human rights. Eng- land crushes India — France, Algeria — Russia, Prussia and Austria have portioned Poland — all march to opportunity; ai.d if forced to look for European morality in the history of European S ates, we will find everywhere an unequivocal assertion of the one great principle that strength is virtue, aid weakness only crime. Nor is it, true that E iropeaii Siates are hostile to the spread of slavery at the South. They are bos- tile to this Union, perhaps; they see in it a threatetiiiig rival in every branch of art, and they see that rival armed with one of the most potent productive agents the world has ever seen. T.'iey would crush India and Algeria to make an equal supply of cotton with the North, and fail- ing in this, they would crush slavery to bring the North to a fooling with them ; but to slavery without the North they have no repugnance. — Oi the contrary, if it were to stand out for it- self, free fiom the control of any other power, and were to offer to all a fair and open trade in its commodities, it would not otily not be warred upon, but the South would be singularly favored ; crowns would bend before her; kingdoms and empires would enter the lists for her approval, and quitting her free estate, it vrould be in her option to become the bride of the world, rather than remain, as now, the miserable mistress of the North, Ti'.e repugnance to Southern slavery therelore, is not due to its nature, but to the re- lations only ill whici), by the accidents of its his- tory, it has been placed ; and if there b • a meas- ure which will teach the North that the South is to be no longer the passive subject of oppres- ,sion — which will tcacli the world that the North is not the Union, and which, therefore, will not; » ^•/ %'^ff^'\<^ V-^^V" "W* *^o v^^j^'V^^ \**^^-'<^^" v^^?^*/ ^' "- /.-^^X c°*/ii2^^% ,**\t^'^*