I wrote the following letter after
reading several leading articles in the Times
newspaper, at the time of the great sensation occasioned
by Mrs. Beecher Stowe’s novel of ‘Uncle
Tom’s Cabin,’ and after the Anti-Slavery
Protest which that book induced the women of England
to address to those of America, on the subject of
the condition of the slaves in the southern states.
My dear E. I
have read the articles in the Times to which
you refer, on the subject of the inaccuracy of Mrs.
Beecher Stowe’s book as a picture of slavery
in America, and have ascertained who they were written
by. Having done so, I do not think it worth while
to send my letter for insertion, because, as that
is the tone deliberately taken upon the subject by
that paper, my counter statement would not, I imagine,
be admitted into its columns. I enclose it to
you, as I should like you to see how far from true,
according to my experience, the statements of the
‘Times’ Correspondent’ are.
It is impossible of course to know why it erects itself
into an advocate for slavery; and the most charitable
conjecture I can form upon the subject is, that the
Stafford House demonstration may have been thought
likely to wound the sensitive national views of America
upon this subject; and the statement put forward by
the Times, contradicting Mrs. Stowe’s
picture, may be intended to soothe their irritation
at the philanthropic zeal of our lady abolitionists.
Believe me, dear E ,
Yours always truly,
F.A.K.
Letter to the Editor of the ‘Times.’
Sir, As it is not to be
supposed that you consciously afford the support of
your great influence to misstatements, I request your
attention to some remarks I wish to make on an article
on a book called ’Uncle Tom’s Cabin as
it is,’ contained in your paper of the 11th.
In treating Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s work
as an exaggerated picture of the evils of slavery,
I beg to assure you that you do her serious injustice: of
the merits of her book as a work of art, I have no
desire to speak, to its power as a most
interesting and pathetic story, all England and America
can bear witness, but of its truth and
moderation as a representation of the slave system
in the United States, I can testify with the experience
of an eye witness, having been a resident in the Southern
States, and had opportunities of observation such
as no one who has not lived on a slave estate can
have. It is very true that in reviving the altogether
exploded fashion of making the hero of her novel ’the
perfect monster that the world ne’er saw,’
Mrs. Stowe has laid herself open to fair criticism,
and must expect to meet with it from the very opposite
taste of the present day; but the ideal excellence
of her principal character is no argument at all against
the general accuracy of her statements with regard
to the evils of slavery; everything else
in her book is not only possible, but probable, and
not only probable, but a very faithful representation
of the existing facts: faithful, and not,
as you accuse it of being, exaggerated; for, with
the exception of the horrible catastrophe, the flogging
to death of poor Tom, she has pourtrayed none of the
most revolting instances of crime produced by the
slave system with which she might have
darkened her picture, without detracting from its perfect
truth. Even with respect to the incident of Tom’s
death, it must not be said that if such an event is
possible, it is hardly probable; for this is unfortunately
not true. It is not true that the value of the
slave as property infallibly protects his life from
the passions of his master. It is no new thing
for a man’s passions to blind him to his most
obvious and immediate temporal interests, as well
as to his higher and everlasting ones, in
various parts of the world and stages of civilisation,
various human passions assume successive prominence,
and become developed, to the partial exclusion or
deadening of others. In savage existence, and
those states of civilisation least removed from it,
the animal passions predominate. In highly cultivated
modern society, where the complicated machinery of
human existence is at once a perpetually renewed cause
and effect of certain legal and moral restraints,
which, in the shape of government and public opinion,
protect the congregated lives and interests of men
from the worst outrages of open violence, the natural
selfishness of mankind assumes a different development;
and the love of power, of pleasure, or of pelf, exhibits
different phenomena from those elicited from a savage
under the influence of the same passions. The
channel in which the energy and activity of modern
society inclines more and more to pour itself, is
the peaceful one of the pursuit of gain. This
is preeminently the case with the two great commercial
nations of the earth, England and America; and
in either England or the Northern States of America,
the prudential and practical views of life prevail
so far, that instances of men sacrificing their money
interests at the instigation of rage, revenge, and
hatred, will certainly not abound. But the Southern
slaveholders are a very different race of men from
either Manchester manufacturers or Massachusetts merchants;
they are a remnant of barbarism and feudalism, maintaining
itself with infinite difficulty and danger by the
side of the latest and most powerful developement of
commercial civilisation.
The inhabitants of Baltimore, Richmond,
Charleston, Savannah, and New Orleans, whose estates
lie like the suburban retreats of our city magnates
in the near neighbourhood of their respective cities,
are not now the people I refer to. They are softened
and enlightened by many influences, the
action of city life itself, where human sympathy, and
human respect, stimulated by neighbourhood, produce
salutary social restraint, as well as less salutary
social cowardice. They travel to the Northern
States, and to Europe; and Europe and the Northern
States travel to them; and in spite of themselves,
their peculiar conditions receive modifications from
foreign intercourse. The influence, too, of commercial
enterprise, which, in these latter days, is becoming
the agent of civilisation all over the earth, affects
even the uncommercial residents of the Southern cities,
and however cordially they may dislike or despise
the mercantile tendencies of Atlantic Americans, or
transatlantic Englishmen, their frequent contact with
them breaks down some of the barriers of difference
between them, and humanises the slaveholder of the
great cities into some relation with the spirit of
his own times and country. But these men are
but a most inconsiderable portion of the slaveholding
population of the South, a nation, for as
such they should be spoken of, of men whose organisation
and temperament is that of the southern European;
living under the influence of a climate at once enervating
and exciting; scattered over trackless wildernesses
of arid sand and pestilential swamp; entrenched within
their own boundaries; surrounded by creatures absolutely
subject to their despotic will; delivered over by
hard necessity to the lowest excitements of drinking,
gambling, and debauchery for sole recreation; independent
of all opinion; ignorant of all progress; isolated
from all society it is impossible to conceive
a more savage existence within the pale of any modern
civilisation.
The South Carolinan gentry have been
fond of styling themselves the chivalry of the South,
and perhaps might not badly represent, in their relations
with their dependents, the nobility of France before
the purifying hurricane of the Revolution swept the
rights of the suzerain and the wrongs of the serf
together into one bloody abyss. The planters of
the interior of the Southern and South-Western States,
with their furious feuds and slaughterous combats,
their stabbings and pistolings, their gross sensuality,
brutal ignorance, and despotic cruelty, resemble the
chivalry of France before the horrors of the Jacquerie
admonished them that there was a limit even to the
endurance of slaves. With such men as these,
human life, even when it can be bought or sold in the
market for so many dollars, is but little protected
by considerations of interest from the effects of
any violent passion. There is yet, however, another
aspect of the question, which is, that it is sometimes
clearly not the interest of the owner to prolong
the life of his slaves; as in the case of inferior
or superannuated labourers, or the very notorious instance
in which some of the owners of sugar plantations stated
that they found it better worth their while to work
off (i.e. kill with labour) a certain proportion,
of their force, and replace them by new hands every
seven years, than work them less severely and maintain
them in diminished efficiency for an indefinite length
of time. Here you will observe a precise estimate
of the planter’s material interest led to a
result which you argue passion itself can never be
so blind as to adopt. This was a deliberate economical
calculation, openly avowed some years ago by a number
of sugar planters in Louisiana. If, instead of
accusing Mrs. Stowe of exaggeration, you had brought
the same charge against the author of the ‘White
Slave,’ I should not have been surprised; for
his book presents some of the most revolting instances
of atrocity and crime that the miserable abuse of irresponsible
power is capable of producing, and it is by no means
written in the spirit of universal humanity which
pervades Mrs. Stowe’s volumes: but it is
not liable to the charge of exaggeration, any more
than her less disgusting delineation. The scenes
described in the ‘White Slave’ do
occur in the slave States of North America; and in
two of the most appalling incidents of the book the
burning alive of the captured runaway, and the hanging
without trial of the Vicksburg gamblers the
author of the ‘White Slave’ has very simply
related positive facts of notorious occurrence.
To which he might have added, had he seen fit to do
so, the instance of a slave who perished in the sea
swamps, where he was left bound and naked, a prey to
the torture inflicted upon him by the venomous mosquito
swarms. My purpose, however, in addressing you
was not to enter into a disquisition on either of
these publications; but I am not sorry to take this
opportunity of bearing witness to the truth of Mrs.
Stowe’s admirable book, and I have seen what
few Englishmen can see the working of the
system in the midst of it.
In reply to your ‘Dispassionate
Observer,’ who went to the South professedly
with the purpose of seeing and judging of the state
of things for himself, let me tell you that, little
as he may be disposed to believe it, his testimony
is worth less than nothing; for it is morally impossible
for any Englishman going into the Southern States,
except as a resident, to know anything whatever
of the real condition of the slave population.
This was the case some years ago, as I experienced,
and it is now likely to be more the case than ever;
for the institution is not yet approved divine
to the perceptions of Englishmen, and the Southerners
are as anxious to hide its uglier features from any
note-making observer from this side the water, as
to present to his admiration and approval such as
can by any possibility be made to wear the most distant
approach to comeliness.
The gentry of the Southern States
are preeminent in their own country for that species
of manner which, contrasted with the breeding of the
Northerners, would be emphatically pronounced ‘good’
by Englishmen. Born to inhabit landed property,
they are not inevitably made clerks and counting-house
men of, but inherit with their estates some of the
invariable characteristics of an aristocracy.
The shop is not their element; and the eager spirit
of speculation and the sordid spirit of gain do not
infect their whole existence, even to their very demeanour
and appearance, as they too manifestly do those of
a large proportion of the inhabitants of the Northern
States. Good manners have an undue value for
Englishmen, generally speaking; and whatever departs
from their peculiar standard of breeding is apt to
prejudice them, as whatever approaches it prepossesses
them, far more than is reasonable. The Southerners
are infinitely better bred men, according to English
notions, than the men of the Northern States.
The habit of command gives them a certain self-possession,
the enjoyment of leisure a certain ease. Their
temperament is impulsive and enthusiastic, and their
manners have the grace and spirit which seldom belong
to the deportment of a Northern people; but upon more
familiar acquaintance, the vices of the social system
to which they belong will be found to have infected
them with their own peculiar taint; and haughty overbearing
irritability, effeminate indolence, reckless extravagance,
and a union of profligacy and cruelty, which is the
immediate result of their irresponsible power over
their dependents, are some of the less pleasing traits
which acquaintance developes in a Southern character.
In spite of all this, there is no manner of doubt
that the ‘candid English observer’ will,
for the season of his sojourning among them, greatly
prefer their intercourse to that of their Northern
brethren. Moreover, without in the least suspecting
it, he will be bribed insidiously and incessantly by
the extreme desire and endeavour to please and prepossess
him which the whole white population of the slave
States will exhibit as long as he goes
only as a ‘candid observer,’ with a mind
not yet made up upon the subject of slavery,
and open to conviction as to its virtues. Every
conciliating demonstration of courtesy and hospitable
kindness will be extended to him, and, as I said before,
if his observation is permitted (and it may even appear
to be courted), it will be to a fairly bound purified
edition of the black book of slavery, in which, though
the inherent viciousness of the whole story cannot
be suppressed, the coarser and more offensive passages
will be carefully expunged. And now, permit me
to observe, that the remarks of your traveller must
derive much of their value from the scene of his enquiry.
In Maryland, Kentucky, and Virginia, the outward aspect
of slavery has ceased to wear its most deplorable
features. The remaining vitality of the system
no longer resides in the interests, but in the pride
and prejudices of the planters. Their soil and
climate are alike favourable to the labours of a white
peasantry: the slave cultivation has had time
to prove itself there the destructive pest which,
in time, it will prove itself wherever it prevails.
The vast estates and large fortunes that once maintained,
and were maintained by, the serfdom of hundreds of
negroes, have dwindled in size and sunk in value,
till the slaves have become so heavy a burthen on
the resources of the exhausted soil and impoverished
owners of it, that they are made themselves objects
of traffic in order to ward off the ruin that their
increase would otherwise entail. Thus, the plantations
of the Northern slave States now present to the traveller
very few of the darker and more oppressive peculiarities
of the system; and, provided he does not stray too
near the precincts where the negroes are sold, or
come across gangs of them on their way to Georgia,
Louisiana, or Alabama, he may, if he is a very superficial
observer, conclude that the most prosperous slavery
is not much worse than the most miserable freedom.
But of what value will be such conclusions
applied to those numerous plantations where no white
man ever sets foot without the express permission
of the owner? not estates lying close to Baltimore
and Charleston, or even Lesington or Savannah, but
remote and savage wildernesses like Legree’s
estate in ‘Uncle Tom,’ like all the plantations
in the interior of Tennessee and Alabama, like the
cotton-fields and rice-swamps of the great muddy rivers
of Lousiana and Georgia, like the dreary pine barrens
and endless woody wastes of north Carolina. These,
especially the islands, are like so many fortresses,
approachable for ‘observers’ only at the
owners’ will. On most of the rice plantations
in these pestilential regions, no white man can pass
the night at certain seasons of the year without running
the risk of his life; and during the day, the master
and overseer are as much alone and irresponsible in
their dominion over their black cattle, as Robinson
Crusoe was over his small family of animals on his
desert habitation. Who, on such estates as these,
shall witness to any act of tyranny or barbarity, however
atrocious? No black man’s testimony is
allowed against a white, and who on the dismal swampy
rice-grounds of the Savannah, or the sugar-brakes of
the Mississippi and its tributaries, or the up country
cotton lands of the Ocamulgee, shall go to perform
the task of candid observation and benevolent enquiry?
I passed some time on two such estates plantations
where the negroes esteemed themselves well off, and,
compared with the slaves on several of the neighbouring
properties, might very well consider themselves so;
and I will, with your permission, contrast some of
the items of my observation with those of the traveller
whose report you find so satisfactory on the subject
of the ‘consolations’ of slavery.
And first, for the attachment which
he affirms to subsist between the slave and master.
I do not deny that certain manifestations on the part
of the slave may suggest the idea of such a feeling;
but whether upon better examination it will be found
to deserve the name, I very much doubt. In the
first place, on some of the great Southern estates,
the owners are habitual absentees, utterly unknown
to their serfs, and enjoying the proceeds of their
labour in residences as remote as possible from the
sands and swamps where their rice and cotton grow,
and their slaves bow themselves under the eye of the
white overseer, and the lash of the black driver.
Some of these Sybarites prefer living in Paris,
that paradise of American republicans, some in the
capitals of the middle states of the union, Philadelphia
or New York.
The air of New England has a keen
edge of liberty, which suits few Southern constitutions;
and unkindly as abolition has found its native soil
and native skies, that is its birthplace, and there
it flourishes, in spite of all attempts to root it
out and trample it down, and within any atmosphere
poisoned by its influence no slaveholder can willingly
draw breath. Some travel in Europe, and few,
whose means permit the contrary, ever pass the entire
year on their plantations. Great intervals of
many years pass, and no master ever visits some of
these properties: what species of attachment
do you think the slave entertains for him? In
other cases, the visits made will be of a few days
in one of the winter months; the estate and its cultivators
remaining for the rest of the year under the absolute
control of the overseer, who, provided he contrives
to get a good crop of rice or cotton into the market
for his employers, is left to the arbitrary exercise
of a will seldom uninfluenced for evil, by the combined
effects of the grossest ignorance and habitual intemperance.
The temptation to the latter vice is almost irresistible
to a white man in such a climate, and leading an existence
of brutal isolation, among a parcel of human beings
as like brutes as they can be made. But the owner
who at these distant intervals of months or years revisits
his estates, is looked upon as a returning providence
by the poor negroes. They have no experience
of his character to destroy their hopes in his goodness,
and all possible and impossible ameliorations
of their condition are anticipated from his advent,
less work, more food, fewer stripes, and some of that
consideration which the slave hopes may spring from
his positive money value to his owner, a
fallacious dependence, as I have already attempted
to show, but one which, if it has not always predominating
weight with the master, never can have any with the
overseer, who has not even the feeling of regard for
his own property to mitigate his absolutism over the
slaves of another man.
There is a very powerful cause which
makes the prosperity and well-being (as far as life
is concerned) of most masters a subject of solicitude
with their slaves. The only stability of their
condition, such as it is, hangs upon it. If the
owner of a plantation dies, his estates may fall into
the market, and his slaves be sold at public auction
the next day; and whether this promises a better,
or threatens a worse condition, the slaves cannot
know, and no human being cares. One thing it inevitably
brings, the uprooting of all old associations; the
disruption of all the ties of fellowship in misery;
the tearing asunder of all relations of blood and
affection; the sale into separate and far distant districts
of fathers, mothers, husbands, wives, and children.
If the estate does not lie in the extreme south, there
is the vague dread of being driven thither from Virginia
to Georgia, from Carolina to Alabama, or Louisiana,
a change which, for reasons I have shown above, implies
the passing from a higher into a lower circle of the
infernal pit of slavery.
I once heard a slave on the plantation
of an absentee express the most lively distress at
hearing that his master was ill. Before, however,
I had recovered from my surprise at this warm ‘attachment’
to a distant and all but unknown proprietor, the man
added, ’massa die, what become of all him people?’
On my arrival on the plantation where
I resided, I was hailed with the most extravagant
demonstrations of delight, and all but lifted off my
feet in the arms of people who had never seen me before;
but who, knowing me to be connected with their owners,
expected from me some of the multitudinous benefits
which they always hope to derive from masters.
These, until they come to reside among them, are always
believed to be sources of beneficence and fountains
of redress by the poor people, who have known no rule
but the delegated tyranny of the overseer. In
these expectations, however, they very soon find themselves
cruelly mistaken. Of course, if the absentee
planter has received a satisfactory income from his
estate, he is inclined to be satisfied with the manager
of it, and as subordination to the only white man
among hundreds of blacks must be maintained at any
and every cost, the overseer is justified and upheld
in his whole administration. If the wretched
slave ever dared to prefer a complaint of ill-usage
the most atrocious, the law which refuses the testimony
of a black against a white is not only the law of the
land, but of every man’s private dealings; and
lying being one of the natural results of slavery,
and a tendency to shirk compelled and unrequited labour
another, the overseer stands on excellent vantage-ground,
when he refers to these undoubted characteristics
of the system, if called upon to rebut any charge
of cruelty or injustice. But pray consider for
a moment the probability of any such charge being
preferred by a poor creature, who has been for years
left to the absolute disposal of this man, and who
knows very well that in a few days, or months at furthest,
the master will again depart, leaving him again for
months, perhaps for years, utterly at the mercy of
the man against whom he has dared to prefer a complaint.
On the estates which I visited, the owners had been
habitually absent, and the ‘attachment’
of slaves to such masters as these, you will allow,
can hardly come under the denomination of a strong
personal feeling.
Your authority next states that the
infirm and superannuated slaves no longer capable
of ministering to their masters’ luxuries, on
the estate that he visited, were ending their lives
among all the comforts of home, with kindred and friends
around them, in a condition which he contrasts, at
least by implication, very favourably with the workhouse,
the last refuge provided by the social humanity of
England for the pauper labourer when he
has reached that term when ‘unregarded age is
in corners thrown.’ On the plantation where
I lived the infirmary was a large room, the walls
of which were simply mud and lathes the
floor, the soil itself, damp with perpetual drippings
from the holes in the roof, and the open space which
served for a window was protected only by a broken
shutter, which, in order to exclude the cold, was
drawn so near as almost to exclude the light at the
same time. Upon this earthen floor, with nothing
but its hard damp surface beneath him, no covering
but a tattered shirt and trowsers, and a few sticks
under his head for a pillow, lay an old man of upwards
of seventy, dying. When I first looked at him
I thought by the glazed stare of his eyes, and the
flies that had gathered round his half open mouth,
that he was dead: but on stooping nearer, I perceived
that the last faint struggle of life was still going
on, but even while I bent over him it ceased; and
so, like a worn-out hound, with no creature to comfort
or relieve his last agony, with neither Christian solace
or human succour near him, with neither wife, nor
child, nor even friendly fellow being to lift his
head from the knotty sticks on which he had rested
it, or drive away the insects that buzzed round his
lips and nostrils like those of a fallen beast, died
this poor old slave, whose life had been exhausted
in unrequited labour, the fruits of which had gone
to pamper the pride and feed the luxury of those who
knew and cared neither for his life or death, and
to whom, if they had heard of the latter, it would
have been a matter of absolute though small gain,
the saving of a daily pittance of meal, which served
to prolong a life no longer available to them.
I proceed to the next item in your
observer’s record. All children
below the age of twelve were unemployed, he says,
on the estate he visited: this is perhaps a questionable
benefit, when, no process of mental cultivation being
permitted, the only employment for the leisure thus
allowed is that of rolling, like dogs or cats, in
the sand and the sun. On all the plantations
I visited, and on those where I resided, the infants
in arms were committed to the care of these juvenile
slaves, who were denominated nurses, and whose sole
employment was what they call to ‘mind baby.’
The poor little negro sucklings were cared for (I
leave to your own judgement how efficiently or how
tenderly) by these half-savage slips of slavery carried
by them to the fields where their mothers were working
under the lash, to receive their needful nourishment,
and then carried back again to the ‘settlement,’
or collection of negro huts, where they wallowed unheeded
in utter filth and neglect until the time again returned
for their being carried to their mother’s breast.
Such was the employment of the children of eight or
nine years old, and the only supervision exercised
over either babies or ‘baby minders’ was
that of the old woman left in charge of the infirmary,
where she made her abode all day long and bestowed
such samples of her care and skill upon its inmates
as I shall have occasion to mention presently.
The practice of thus driving the mothers a-field,
even while their infants were still dependent upon
them for their daily nourishment, is one of which
the evil as well as the cruelty is abundantly apparent
without comment. The next note of admiration
elicited from your ‘impartial observer’
is bestowed upon the fact that the domestic servants
(i.e. house slaves) on the plantation he visited were
allowed to live away from the owner’s
residence, and to marry. But I never was on a
southern plantation, and I never heard of one, where
any of the slaves were allowed to sleep under the same
roof with their owner. With the exception of
the women to whose care the children of the planter,
if he had any, might be confided, and perhaps a little
boy or girl slave, kept as a sort of pet animal and
allowed to pass the night on the floor of the sleeping
apartment of some member of the family, the residence
of any slaves belonging to a plantation night
and day in their master’s house, like Northern
or European servants, is a thing I believe unknown
throughout the Southern States. Of course I except
the cities, and speak only of the estates, where the
house servants are neither better housed or accommodated
than the field-hands. Their intolerably dirty
habits and offensive persons would indeed render it
a severe trial to any family accustomed to habits
of decent cleanliness; and, moreover, considerations
of safety, and that cautious vigilance which is a hard
necessity of the planter’s existence, in spite
of the supposed attachment of his slaves, would never
permit the near proximity, during the unprotected
hours of the night, of those whose intimacy with the
daily habits and knowledge of the nightly securities
resorted to might prove terrible auxiliaries to any
attack from without. The city guards, patrols,
and night-watches, together with their stringent rules
about negroes being abroad after night, and their
well fortified lock-up houses for all detected without
a pass, afford some security against these attached
dependents; but on remote plantations, where the owner
and his family and perhaps a white overseer are alone,
surrounded by slaves and separated from all succour
against them, they do not sleep under the white man’s
roof, and, for politic reasons, pass the night away
from their master’s abode. The house servants
have no other or better allowance of food than the
field labourers, but have the advantage of eking it
out by what is left from the master’s table, if
possible, with even less comfort in one respect, inasmuch
as no time whatever is set apart for their meals, which
they snatch at any hour and in any way that they can generally,
however, standing or squatting on their hams round
the kitchen fire; the kitchen being a mere outhouse
or barn with a fire in it. On the estate where
I lived, as I have mentioned, they had no sleeping-rooms
in the house; but when their work was over, they retired
like the rest to their hovels, the discomfort of which
had to them all the additional disadvantage of comparison
with their owner’s mode of living. In all
establishments whatever, of course some disparity
exists between the accommodation of the drawing-rooms
and best bed-rooms and the servants’ kitchen
and attics; but on a plantation it is no longer a
matter of degree. The young women who performed
the offices of waiting and housemaids, and the lads
who attended upon the service of their master’s
table where I lived, had neither table to feed at
nor chair to sit down upon themselves; the ‘boys’
lay all night on the hearth by the kitchen fire, and
the women upon the usual slave’s bed a
frame of rough boards, strewed with a little moss off
the trees, with the addition perhaps of a tattered
and filthy blanket. As for the so-called privilege
of marrying surely it is gross mockery to
apply such a word to a bond which may be holy in God’s
sight, but which did not prevent the owner of a plantation
where my observations were made from selling and buying
men and their so-called wives and children into divided
bondage, nor the white overseer from compelling the
wife of one of the most excellent and exemplary of
his master’s slaves to live with him nor
the white wife of another overseer, in her husband’s
temporary absence from the estate, from barbarously
flogging three married slaves within a month
of their confinement, their condition being the result
of the profligacy of the said overseer, and probably
compelled by the very same lash by which it was punished.
This is a very disgusting picture of married life
on slave estates: but I have undertaken to reply
to the statements of your informant, and I regret
to be obliged to record the facts by which alone I
can do so. ‘Work,’ continues your
authority, ’began at six in the morning, at
nine an hour’s rest was allowed for breakfast,
and by two or three o’clock the day’s work
was done.’ Certainly this was a pattern
plantation, and I can only lament that my experience
lay amid such far less favourable circumstances.
The negroes among whom I lived went to the fields
at daybreak, carrying with them their allowance of
food, which toward noon, and not till then, they ate,
cooking it over a fire which they kindled as best
they could where they were working; their second
meal in the day was at night after their labour was
over, having worked at the very least six hours
without rest or refreshment, since their noon-day
meal properly so called, indeed, for it
was meal and nothing else, or a preparation something
thicker than porridge, which they call hominy.
Perhaps the candid observer, whose report of the estate
he visited appeared to you so consolatory, would think
that this diet contrasted favourably with that of
potato and butter-milk fed Irish labourers. But
a more just comparison surely would be with the mode
of living of the labouring population of the United
States, the peasantry of Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts,
or indeed with the condition of those very potato
and butter-milk fed Irishmen when they have exchanged
their native soil for the fields of the Northern and
North-Western States, and when, as one of them once
was heard to say, it was no use writing home that
he got meat three times a-day, for nobody in Ireland
would believe it. The next item in the list of
commendation is the hospital, which your informant
also visited, and of which he gives the following account ’It
consisted of three separate wards, all clean and well
ventilated: one was for lying-in women, who were
invariably allowed a month’s rest after their
confinement.’ Permit me to place beside
this picture that of a Southern infirmary, such as
I saw it, and taken on the spot. In the first
room that I entered I found only half of the windows,
of which there were six, glazed; these were almost
as much obscured with dirt as the other windowless
ones were darkened by the dingy shutters which the
shivering inmates had closed in order to protect themselves
from the cold. In the enormous chimney glimmered
the powerless embers of a few chips of wood, round
which as many of the sick women as had strength to
approach were cowering, some on wooden settles (there
was not such a thing as a chair with a back in the
whole establishment), most of them on the ground,
excluding those who were too ill to rise and
these poor wretches lay prostrate on the earth, without
bedstead, bed, mattress, or pillow, with no covering
but the clothes they had on and some filthy rags of
blanket in which they endeavoured to wrap themselves
as they lay literally strewing the floor, so that
there was hardly room to pass between them. Here
in their hour of sickness and suffering lay those
whose health and strength had given way under unrequited
labour some of them, no later than the
previous day, had been urged with the lash to their
accustomed tasks and their husbands, fathers,
brothers, and sons were even at that hour sweating
over the earth whose increase was to procure for others
all the luxuries which health can enjoy, all the comforts
which can alleviate sickness. Here lay women
expecting every hour the terror and agonies of child-birth,
others who had just brought their doomed offspring
into the world, others who were groaning over the
anguish and bitter disappointment of miscarriages here
lay some burning with fever, others chilled with cold
and aching with rheumatism, upon the hard cold ground,
the draughts and damp of the atmosphere increasing
their sufferings, and dirt, noise, stench, and every
aggravation of which sickness is capable combined in
their condition. There had been among them one
or two cases of prolonged and terribly hard labour;
and the method adopted by the ignorant old negress,
who was the sole matron, midwife, nurse, physician,
surgeon, and servant of the infirmary, to assist them
in their extremity, was to tie a cloth tight round
the throats of the agonised women, and by drawing it
till she almost suffocated them she produced violent
and spasmodic struggles, which she assured me she
thought materially assisted the progress of the labour.
This was one of the Southern infirmaries with which
I was acquainted; and I beg to conclude this chapter
of contrasts to your informant’s consolatory
views of slavery, by assuring you once more very emphatically
that they have been one and all drawn from estates
where the slaves esteemed themselves well treated,
were reputed generally to be so, and undoubtedly,
as far as my observation went, were so, compared with
those on several of the adjoining plantations.
With regard to the statement respecting
the sums of money earned by industrious negroes, there
is no doubt that it is perfectly correct. I knew
of some slaves on a plantation in the extreme South
who had received, at various times, large sums of
money from a shopkeeper in the small town near their
estate, for the grey moss or lichen collected from
the evergreen oaks of Carolina and Georgia, upon which
it hangs in vast masses, and after some cleaning process
becomes an excellent substitute for horse-hair, for
bed, chair, and sofa-stuffing. On another estate,
some of the slaves were expert boat makers, and had
been allowed by their masters to retain the price
(no inconsiderable one) for some that they had found
time to manufacture after their day’s labour
was accomplished. These were undoubtedly privileges,
but I confess it appears to me that the juster view
of the matter would be this if these men
were industrious enough out of their scanty leisure
to earn these sums of money, which a mere exercise
of arbitrary will on the part of the master allowed
them to keep, how much more of remuneration, of comfort,
of improvement, physical and mental, might they not
have achieved, had the due price of their daily labour
merely been paid to them? It seems to me that
this is the mode of putting the case to Englishmen,
and all who have not agreed to consider uncertain
favour an equivalent for common justice in the dealings
of man with man. As the slaves are well known
to toil for years sometimes to amass the means of
rescuing themselves from bondage, the fact of their
being able and sometimes allowed to earn considerable
sums of money is notorious. But now that I have
answered one by one the instances you have produced,
with others I am sure as accurate and I
believe as common of an entirely opposite
description, permit me to ask you what this sort of
testimony amounts to. I allow you full credit
for yours, allow me full credit for mine, and the
result is very simply a nullification of the one by
the other statement, and a proof that there is as much
good as evil in the details of slavery; but now, be
pleased to throw into the scale this consideration,
that the principle of the whole is unmitigated abominable
evil, as by your own acknowledgement you hold it to
be, and add, moreover, that the principle being invariably
bad beyond the power of the best man acting under
it to alter its execrable injustice, the goodness of
the detail is a matter absolutely dependent upon the
will of each individual slaveholder, so that though
the best cannot make the system in the smallest particular
better, the bad can make every practical detail of
it as atrocious as the principle itself; and then
tell me upon what ground you palliate a monstrous
iniquity, which is the rule, because of the accidental
exceptions which go to prove it. Moreover, if,
as you have asserted, good preponderates over evil
in the practice, though not in the theory of slavery,
or it would not maintain its existence, why do you
uphold to us, with so much complacency, the hope that
it is surely if not rapidly approaching its abolishment?
Why is the preponderating good, which has, as you
say, proved sufficient to uphold the institution hitherto,
to become (in spite of the spread of civilisation
and national progress, and the gradual improvement
of the slaves themselves) inadequate to its perpetuation
henceforward? Or why, if good really has prevailed
in it, do you rejoice that it is speedily to pass
away? You say the emancipation of the slaves
is inevitable, and that through progressive culture
the negro of the Southern States daily approaches
more nearly to the recovery of the rights of which
he has been robbed. But whence do you draw this
happy augury, except from the hope, which all Christian
souls must cherish, that God will not permit much
longer so great a wickedness to darken the face of
the earth? Surely the increased stringency of
the Southern slave-laws, the more than ever vigilant
precautions against all attempts to enlighten or educate
the negroes, the severer restrictions on manumission,
the thrusting forth out of certain States of all free
persons of colour, the atrocious Fugitive Slave Bill,
one of the latest achievements of Congress, and the
piratical attempts upon Cuba, avowedly on the part
of all Southerners, abetting or justifying it because
it will add slave-territory and 600,000 slaves to
their possessions; surely these do not
seem indications of the better state of things you
anticipate, except, indeed, as the straining of the
chain beyond all endurable tightness significantly
suggests the probability of its giving way.
I do not believe the planters have
any disposition to put an end to slavery, nor is it
perhaps much to be wondered at that they have not.
To do so is, in the opinion of the majority of them,
to run the risk of losing their property, perhaps
their lives, for a benefit which they profess to think
doubtful to the slaves themselves. How far they
are right in anticipating ruin from the manumission
of their slaves I think questionable, but that they
do so is certain, and self-impoverishment for the
sake of abstract principle is not a thing to be reasonably
expected from any large mass of men. But, besides
the natural fact that the slaveholders wish to retain
their property, emancipation is, in their view of
it, not only a risk of enormous pecuniary loss, and
of their entire social status, but involves elements
of personal danger, and above all, disgust to inveterate
prejudices, which they will assuredly never encounter.
The question is not alone one of foregoing great wealth,
or the mere means of subsistence (in either case almost
equally hard); it is not alone the unbinding the hands
of those who have many a bloody debt of hatred and
revenge to settle; it is not alone the consenting suddenly
to see by their side, upon a footing of free social
equality, creatures towards whom their predominant
feeling is one of mingled terror and abhorrence, and
who, during the whole of their national existence,
have been, as the earth, trampled beneath their feet,
yet ever threatening to gape and swallow them alive.
It is not all this alone which makes it unlikely that
the Southern planter should desire to free his slaves:
freedom in America is not merely a personal right,
it involves a political privilege. Freemen there
are legislators. The rulers of the land are the
majority of the people, and in many parts of the Southern
States the black free citizens would become, if not
at once, yet in process of time, inevitably voters,
landholders, delegates to state legislatures, members
of assembly who knows? senators,
judges, aspirants to the presidency of the United
States. You must be an American, or have lived
long among them, to conceive the shout of derisive
execration with which such an idea would be hailed
from one end of the land to the other.
That the emancipation of the negroes
need not necessarily put them in possession of the
franchise is of course obvious, but as a general consequence
the one would follow from the other; and at present
certainly the slaveholders are no more ready to grant
the political privilege than the natural right of
freedom. Under these circumstances, though the
utmost commiseration is naturally excited by the slaves,
I agree with you that some forbearance is due to the
masters. It is difficult to conceive a more awful
position than theirs: fettered by laws which impede
every movement towards right and justice, and utterly
without the desire to repeal them dogged
by the apprehension of nameless retributions bound
beneath a burthen of responsibility for which, whether
they acknowledge it or not, they are held accountable
by God and men goaded by the keen consciousness
of the growing reprobation of all civilised Christian
communities, their existence presents the miserable
moral counterpart of the physical condition of their
slaves; and it is one compared with which that of the
wretchedest slave is, in my judgement, worthy of envy.
Letter to C.G., Esq.
Before entering upon my answer to
your questions, let me state that I have no claim
to be ranked as an abolitionist in the American acceptation
of the word, for I have hitherto held the emancipation
of the slaves to be exclusively the business and duty
of their owners, whose highest moral interest I thought
it was to rid themselves of such a responsibility,
in spite of the manifold worldly interests almost
inextricably bound up with it.
This has been my feeling hitherto
with regard to the views of the abolitionists, which
I now, however, heartily embrace, inasmuch as I think
that from the moment the United States Government assumed
an attitude of coercion and supremacy towards the
Southern States, it was bound with its fleets and
armies to introduce its polity with respect to slavery,
and wherever it planted the standard of the Union
to proclaim the universal freedom which is the recognised
law of the Northern United States. That they
have not done so has been partly owing to a superstitious,
but honourable veneration for the letter of their
great charter, the constitution, and still more to
the hope they have never ceased to entertain of bringing
back the South to its allegiance under the former
conditions of the Union, an event which will be rendered
impossible by any attempt to interfere with the existence
of slavery.
The North, with the exception of an
inconsiderable minority of its inhabitants, has never
been at all desirous of the emancipation of the slaves.
The Democratic party which has ruled the United States
for many years past has always been friendly to the
slaveholders, who have, with few exceptions, been
all members of it (for by a strange perversion both
of words and ideas, some of the most Democratic States
in the Union are Southern slave States, and in the
part of Georgia where the slave population is denser
than in any other part of the South, a county exists
bearing the satirical title of Liberty County).
And the support of the South has been given to the
Northern Democratic politicians, upon the distinct
understanding that their ‘domestic institution’
was to be guaranteed to them.
The condition of the free blacks in
the Northern States has of course been affected most
unfavourably by the slavery of their race throughout
the other half of the Union, and indeed it would have
been a difficult matter for Northern citizens to maintain
towards the blacks an attitude of social and political
equality as far as the borders of Delaware, while
immediately beyond they were pledged to consider them
as the ‘chattels’ of their owners, animals
no more noble or human than the cattle in their masters’
fields.
How could peace have been maintained
if the Southern slaveholders had been compelled to
endure the sight of negroes rising to wealth and eminence
in the Northern cities, or entering as fellow-members
with themselves the halls of that legislature to which
all free-born citizens are eligible? they would very
certainly have declined with fierce scorn, not the
fellowship of the blacks alone, but of those white
men who admitted the despised race of their serfs
to a footing of such impartial equality. It therefore
was the instinctive, and became the deliberate policy
of the Northern people, once pledged to maintain slavery
in the South, to make their task easy by degrading
the blacks in the Northern States to a condition contrasting
as little as possible with that of the Southern slaves.
The Northern politicians struck hands with the Southern
slaveholders, and the great majority of the most enlightened
citizens of the Northern States, absorbed in the pursuit
of wealth and the extension and consolidation of their
admirable and wonderful national prosperity, abandoned
the government of their noble country and the preservation
of its nobler institutions to the slaveholding aristocracy
of the South to a mob of politicians by
trade, the vilest and most venal class of men that
ever disgraced and endangered a country to
foreign emigrants, whose brutish ignorance did not
prevent the Democratic party from seizing upon them
as voters, and bestowing on the Irish and German boors
just landed on their shores the same political privileges
as those possessed and intelligently exercised by
the farmers and mechanics of New England, the most
enlightened men of their class to be found in the world.
The gradual encroachment of the Southern
politicians upon the liberties of the North, by their
unrelaxing influence in Congress and over successive
cabinets and presidents, was not without its effect
in stimulating some resistance on the part of Northern
statesmen of sufficient intelligence to perceive the
inevitable results towards which this preponderance
in the national counsels was steadily tending; and
I need not remind you of the rapidity and force with
which General Jackson quelled an incipient rebellion
in South Carolina, when Mr. Calhoun made the tariff
question the pretext for a threatened secession in
1832, of the life-long opposition to Southern pretensions
by John Quincy Adams, of the endeavour of Mr. Clay
to stem the growing evil by the conditions of the
Missouri compromise, and all the occasional attempts
of individuals of more conscientious convictions than
their fellow-citizens on the subject of the sin of
slavery, from Dr. Channing’s eloquent protest
on the annexation of Texas, to Mr. Charles Sumner’s
philippic against Mr. Brooks of South Carolina.
The disorganisation of the Democratic
party, after a cohesion of so many years, at length
changed the aspect of affairs; and the North appeared
to be about to arouse itself from its apathetic consent
to Southern domination. The Republican party,
headed by Colonel Fremont, who was known to be an
anti-slavery man, nearly carried the presidential election
six years ago, and then every preparation had been
made in the South for the process of secession, which
was only averted by the election of Mr. Buchanan,
a pro-slavery Southern sympathiser, though born in
Pennsylvania. Under his presidency, the Southern
statesmen, resuming their attitude of apparent friendliness
with the North, kept in abeyance, maturing and perfecting
by every treasonable practice, for which their preponderating
share in the cabinet afforded them fatal facilities,
the plan of the violent disruption of the Union, upon
which they had determined whenever the Republican
party should have acquired sufficient strength, to
elect a president with Northern views. Before,
however, this event occurred, the war in Kansas rang
a prophetic peal of warning through the land; and the
struggle there begun between New England emigrants
bent on founding a free state, and Missouri border
ruffians determined to make the new territory a slaveholding
addition to the South, might have roused the whole
North and West to the imminence of the peril, by which
the safety of the Union was threatened.
But neither the struggle in Kansas,
nor the strange and piteous episode which grew out
of it, of John Brown’s attempt to excite an insurrection
in Virginia, and his execution by the government of
that State, did more than startle the North with a
nine days’ wonder out of its apathetic indifference.
The Republican party, it is true, gained adherents,
and acquired strength by degrees; and Mr. Buchanan’s
term of office approaching its expiration, it became
apparent that the Democratic party was about to lose
its supremacy, and the slaveholders their dominion;
and no sooner was this evident than the latter threw
off the mask, and renounced their allegiance to the
Union. In a day in an hour almost those
stood face to face as mortal enemies who were citizens
of the same country, subjects of the same government,
children of the same soil; and the North, incredulous
and amazed, found itself suddenly summoned to retrieve
its lost power and influence, and assert the dignity
of the insulted Union against the rebellious attempt
of the South to overthrow it.
But it was late for them to take that
task in hand. For years the conduct of the government
of the United States had been becoming a more desperate
and degraded jobbery, one from which day by
day the Northern gentlemen of intelligence, influence,
and education withdrew themselves in greater disgust,
devoting their energies to schemes of mere personal
advantage, and leaving the commonweal with selfish
and contemptuous indifference to the guidance of any
hands less nice and less busy than their own.
Nor would the Southern planters a
prouder and more aristocratic race than the Northern
merchants have relished the companionship
of their fellow-politicians more than the latter,
but their personal interests were at stake,
and immediately concerned in their maintaining their
predominant influence over the government; and while
the Boston men wrote and talked transcendentalism,
and became the most accomplished of aestetische
cotton spinners and railroad speculators, and made
the shoes and cow-hides of the Southerners, the latter
made their laws; (I believe New Jersey is really the
great cow-hide factory); and the New York men, owners
of the fastest horses and finest houses in the land,
having made a sort of Brummagem Paris of their city,
were the bankers and brokers of the Southerners, while
the latter were their legislators.
The grip the slaveholders had fastened
on the helm of the State had been tightening for nearly
half a century, till the government of the nation
had become literally theirs, and the idea of their
relinquishing it was one which the North did not contemplate,
and they would not tolerate.
If I have said nothing of the grievances
which the South has alleged against the North its
tariff, made chiefly in the interest of the north-eastern
manufacturing States, or its inconsiderable but enthusiastic
Massachusetts and Pennsylvania Abolition party it
is because I do not believe these causes of complaint
would have had the same effect upon any but a community
of slaveholders, men made impatient (by the life-long
habit of despotism), not only of all control, but of
any opposition. Thirty years ago Andrew Jackson a
man of keen sagacity as well as determined energy wrote
of them that they were bent upon destroying the Union,
and that, whatever was the pretext of their discontent,
that was their aim and purpose. ‘To-day,’
he wrote, ’it is the tariff, by and by it will
be slavery.’ The event has proved how true
a prophet he was. My own conviction is that the
national character produced and fostered by slaveholding
is incompatible with free institutions, and that the
Southern aristocracy, thanks to the pernicious influences
by which they are surrounded, are unfit to be members
of a Christian republic. It is slavery that has
made the Southerners rebels to their government, traitors
to their country, and the originators of the bloodiest
civil war that ever disgraced humanity and civilisation.
It is for their sinful complicity in slavery, and
their shameful abandonment of all their duties as citizens,
that the Northerners are paying in the blood of their
men, the tears of their women, and the treasure which
they have till now held more precious than their birthright.
They must now not merely impose a wise restriction
upon slavery, they must be prepared to extinguish it.
They neglected and despised the task of moderating
its conditions and checking its growth; they must
now suddenly, in the midst of unparalleled difficulties
and dangers, be ready to deal summarily with its entire
existence. They have loved the pursuit of personal
prosperity and pleasure more than their country; and
now they must spend life and living to reconquer their
great inheritance, and win back at the sword’s
point what Heaven had forbidden them to lose.
Nor are we, here in England, without part in this tremendous
sin and sorrow; we have persisted in feeding our looms,
and the huge wealth they coin, with the produce of
slavery. In vain our vast Indian territory has
solicited the advantage of becoming our free cotton
plantation; neither our manufacturers nor our government
would venture, would wait, would spend or lose, for
that purpose; the slave-grown harvest was ready, was
abundant, was cheap and now the thousand
arms of our great national industry are folded in
deplorable inactivity; the countless hands that wrought
from morn till night the wealth that was a world’s
wonder are stretched unwillingly to beg their bread;
and England has never seen a sadder sight than the
enforced idleness of her poor operatives, or a nobler
one than their patient and heroic endurance.
And now you ask me what plan, what
scheme, what project the government of the United
States has formed for the safe and successful emancipation
of four millions of slaves, in the midst of a country
distracted with all the horrors of war, and the male
population of which is engaged in military service
at a distance from their homes? Most assuredly
none. Precipitated headlong from a state of apparent
profound security and prosperity into a series of
calamitous events which have brought the country to
the verge of ruin, neither the nation or its governors
have had leisure to prepare themselves for any of
the disastrous circumstances they have had to encounter,
least of all for the momentous change which the President’s
proclamation announces as imminent: a measure
of supreme importance, not deliberately adopted as
the result of philanthropic conviction or far-sighted
policy, but (if not a mere feint of party politics)
the last effort of the incensed spirit of endurance
in the North a punishment threatened against
rebels, whom they cannot otherwise subdue, and which
a year ago half the Northern population would have
condemned upon principle, and more than half revolted
from on instinct.
The country being in a state of war
necessarily complicates everything, and renders the
most plausible suggestions for the settlement of the
question of emancipation futile: because from
first to last now it will be one tremendous chapter
of accidents, instead of a carefully considered and
wisely prepared measure of government. But supposing
the war to have ceased, either by the success of the
Northern arms or by the consent of both belligerents,
the question of manumission in the Southern States
when reduced to the condition of territories or restored
to the sway of their own elected governors and legislatures,
though difficult, is by no means one of insuperable
difficulty; and I do not believe that a great nation
of Englishmen, having once the will to rid itself
of a danger and a disgrace, will fail to find a way.
The thing, therefore, most to be desired now is, that
Americans may unanimously embrace the purpose of emancipation,
and, though they have been reluctantly driven by the
irresistible force of circumstances to contemplate
the measure, may henceforward never avert their eyes
from it till it is accomplished.
When I was in the South many years
ago I conversed frequently with two highly intelligent
men, both of whom agreed in saying that the immense
value of the slaves as property was the only real obstacle
to their manumission, and that whenever the Southerners
became convinced that it was their interest to free
them they would very soon find the means to do it.
In some respects the conditions are more favourable
than those we had to encounter in freeing our West
India slaves. Though the soil and climate of
the Southern States are fertile and favourable, they
are not tropical, and there is no profuse natural
growth of fruits or vegetables to render subsistence
possible without labour; the winter temperature is
like that of the Roman States; and even as far south
as Georgia and the borders of Florida, frosts severe
enough to kill the orange trees are sometimes experienced.
The inhabitants of the Southern States, throughout
by far the largest portion of their extent, must labour
to live, and will undoubtedly obey the beneficent
law of necessity whenever they are made to feel that
their existence depends upon their own exertions.
The plan of a gradual emancipation, preceded by a
limited apprenticeship of the negroes to white masters,
is of course often suggested as less dangerous than
their entire and immediate enfranchisement. But
when years ago I lived on a Southern plantation, and
had opportunities of observing the miserable results
of the system on everything connected with it the
souls, minds, bodies, and estates of both races of
men, and the very soil on which they existed together I
came to the conclusion that immediate and entire emancipation
was not only an act of imperative right, but would
be the safest and most profitable course for the interests
of both parties. The gradual and inevitable process
of ruin which exhibits itself in the long run on every
property involving slavery, naturally suggests some
element of decay inherent in the system; the reckless
habits of extravagance and prodigality in the masters,
the ruinous wastefulness and ignorant incapacity of
the slaves, the deterioration of the land under the
exhausting and thriftless cultivation to which it is
subjected, made it evident to me that there were but
two means of maintaining a prosperous ownership in
Southern plantations: either the possession of
considerable capital wherewith to recruit the gradual
waste of the energies of the soil, and supply by all
the improved and costly methods of modern agriculture
the means of profitable cultivation (a process demanding,
as English farmers know, an enormous and incessant
outlay of both money and skill), or an unlimited command
of fresh soil, to which the slaves might be transferred
as soon as that already under culture exhibited signs
of exhaustion. Now the Southerners are for the
most part men whose only wealth is in their land and
labourers a large force of slaves is their
most profitable investment. The great capitalists
and monied men of the country are Northern men; the
planters are men of large estates but restricted means many
of them are deeply involved in debt, and there are
very few who do not depend from year to year for their
subsistence on the harvest of their fields and the
chances of the cotton and rice crops of each season.
This makes it of vital importance
to them to command an unrestricted extent of territory.
The man who can move a ‘gang’ of able-bodied
negroes to a tract of virgin soil is sure of an immense
return of wealth; as sure as that he who is circumscribed
in this respect, and limited to the cultivation of
certain lands with cotton or tobacco by slaves, will
in the course of a few years see his estate gradually
exhausted and unproductive, refusing its increase,
while its black population propagating and multiplying
will compel him eventually, under penalty of starvation,
to make them his crop, and substitute, as the
Virginians have been constrained to do, a traffic
in human cattle for the cultivation of vegetable harvests.
The steady decrease of the value of
the cotton crop, even on the famous sea island plantations
of Georgia, often suggested to me the inevitable ruin
of the owners within a certain calculable space of
time, as the land became worn out, and the negroes
continued to increase in number; and had the estate
on which I lived been mine, and the laws of Georgia
not made such an experiment impossible, I would have
emancipated the slaves on it immediately, and turned
them into a free tenantry, as the first means of saving
my property from impending destruction. I would
have paid them wages, and they should have paid me
rent. I would have relinquished the charge of
feeding and clothing them, and the burthen of their
old, young, and infirm; in short, I would have put
them at once upon the footing of free hired labourers.
Of course such a process would have involved temporary
loss, and for a year or two the income of the estate
would, I dare say, have suffered considerably; but,
in all such diversions of labour or capital from old
into new channels and modes of operation, there must
be an immediate sacrifice of present to future profit,
and I do not doubt that the estate would have recovered
from the momentary necessary interruption of its productiveness,
to resume it with an upward instead of a downward
tendency, and a vigorous impulse towards progress and
improvement substituted for the present slow but sure
drifting to stagnation and decay.
As I have told you, the land affords
no spontaneous produce which will sustain life without
labour. The negroes therefore must work to eat;
they are used to the soil and climate, and accustomed
to the agriculture, and there is no reason at all
to apprehend as has been suggested that
a race of people singularly attached to the place
of their birth and residence would abandon in any
large numbers their own country, just as the conditions
of their existence in it were made more favourable,
to try the unknown and (to absolute ignorance) forbidding
risks of emigration to the sterner climate and harder
soil of the Northern States.
Of course, in freeing the slaves,
it would be necessary to contemplate the possibility
of their becoming eventual proprietors of the soil
to some extent themselves. There is as little
doubt that many of them would soon acquire the means
of doing so (men who amass, during hours of daily extra
labour, through years of unpaid toil, the means of
buying themselves from their masters, would soon justify
their freedom by the intelligent improvement of their
condition), as that many of the present landholders
would be ready and glad to alienate their impoverished
estates by parcels, and sell the land which has become
comparatively unprofitable to them, to its enfranchised
cultivators. This, the future ownership of land
by negroes, as well as their admission to those rights
of citizenship which everywhere in America such ownership
involves, would necessarily be future subjects of
legislation; and either or both privileges might be
withheld temporarily, indefinitely, or permanently,
as might seem expedient, and the progress in civilisation
which might justify such an extension of rights.
These, and any other modifications of the state of
the black population in the South, would require great
wisdom to deal with, but their immediate transformation
from bondsmen to free might, I think, be accomplished
with little danger or difficulty, and with certain
increase of prosperity to the Southern States.
On the other hand, it is not impossible
that, left to the unimpeded action of the natural
laws that govern the existence of various races, the
black population, no longer directly preserved and
propagated for the purposes of slavery, might gradually
decrease and dwindle, as it does at the North where,
besides the unfavourable influence of a cold climate
on a race originally African, it suffers from its
admixture with the whites, and the amalgamation of
the two races, as far as it goes, tends evidently
to the destruction of the weaker. The Northern
mulattoes are an unhealthy feeble population, and
it might yet appear that even under the more favourable
influence of a Southern climate, whenever the direct
stimulus afforded by slavery to the increase of the
negroes was removed, their gradual extinction or absorption
by the predominant white race would follow in the
course of time.
But the daily course of events appears
to be rendering more and more unlikely the immediate
effectual enfranchisement of the slaves: the
President’s proclamation will reach with but
little efficacy beyond the mere borders of the Southern
States. The war is assuming an aspect of indefinite
duration; and it is difficult to conceive what will
be the condition of the blacks, freed de jure
but by no means de facto, in the vast interior
regions of the Southern States, as long as the struggle
raging all round their confines does not penetrate
within them. Each of the combatants is far too
busily absorbed in the furious strife to afford thought,
leisure, or means, either effectually to free the slaves
or effectually to replace them in bondage; and in
the meantime their condition is the worst possible
for the future success of either operation. If
the North succeeds in subjugating the South, its earliest
business will be to make the freedom of the slaves
real as well as nominal, and as little injurious to
themselves as possible. If, on the other hand,
the South makes good its pretensions to a separate
national existence, no sooner will the disseverment
of the Union be an established fact than the slaveholders
will have to consolidate once more the system of their
‘peculiar institution,’ to reconstruct
the prison which has half crumbled to the ground,
and rivet afresh the chains which have been all but
struck off. This will be difficult: the determination
of the North to restrict the area of slavery by forbidding
its ingress into future territories and States has
been considered by the slaveholders a wrong, and a
danger justifying a bloody civil war; inasmuch as,
if under those circumstances they did not abolish
slavery themselves in a given number of years, it
would infallibly abolish them by the increase of the
negro population, hemmed with them into a restricted
space by this cordon sanitaire drawn round
them. But, bad as this prospect has seemed to
slaveholders (determined to continue such), and justifying as
it may be conceded that it does from their point of
view not a ferocious civil war, but a peaceable
separation from States whose interests were declared
absolutely irreconcileable with theirs, the position
in which they will find themselves if the contest
terminates in favour of Secession will be undoubtedly
more difficult and terrible than the one the mere anticipation
of which has driven them to the dire resort of civil
war. All round the Southern coast, and all along
the course of the great Mississippi, and all across
the northern frontier of the Slave States, the negroes
have already thrown off the trammels of slavery.
Whatever their condition may be and doubtless
in many respects it is miserable enough they
are to all intents and purposes free. Vast numbers
of them have joined the Northern invading armies,
and considerable bodies of them have become organised
as soldiers and labourers, under the supervision of
Northern officers and employers; most of them have
learned the use of arms, and possess them; all of them
have exchanged the insufficient slave diet of grits
and rice for the abundant supplies of animal food,
which the poorest labourer in that favoured land of
cheap provisions and high wages indulges in to an extent
unknown in any other country. None of these slaves
of yesterday will be the same slaves to-morrow.
Little essential difference as may yet have been effected
by the President’s proclamation in the interior
of the South in the condition of the blacks, it is
undoubtedly known to them, and they are waiting in
ominous suspense its accomplishment or defeat by the
fortune of the war; they are watching the issue of
the contest of which they well know themselves to
be the theme, and at its conclusion, end how it will,
they must be emancipated or exterminated. With
the North not only not friendly to slavery, but henceforward
bitterly hostile to slaveholders, and no more to be
reckoned upon as heretofore, it might have been infallibly
by the Southern white population in any difficulty
with the blacks (a fact of which the negroes will
be as well aware as their former masters) with
an invisible boundary stretching from ocean to ocean,
over which they may fly without fear of a master’s
claim following them a single inch with
the hope and expectation of liberty suddenly snatched
from them at the moment it seemed within their grasp with
the door of their dungeon once more barred between
them and the light into which they were in the act
of emerging is it to be conceived, that
these four millions of people, many thousands of whom
are already free and armed, will submit without a
struggle to be again thrust down into the hell of
slavery? Hitherto there has been no insurrection
among the negroes, and observers friendly and inimical
to them have alike drawn from that fact conclusions
unfavourable to their appreciation of the freedom
apparently within their grasp; but they are waiting
to see what the North will really achieve for them.
The liberty offered them is hitherto anomalous, and
uncertain enough in its conditions; they probably trust
it as little as they know it: but slavery they
do know and when once they find
themselves again delivered over to that experience,
there will not be ONE insurrection in the South; there
will be an insurrection in every State, in every county,
on every plantation a struggle as fierce
as it will be futile a hopeless effort
of hopeless men, which will baptise in blood the new
American nation, and inaugurate its birth among the
civilised societies of the earth, not by the manumission
but the massacre of every slave within its borders.
Perhaps, however, Mr. Jefferson Davis
means to free the negroes. Whenever that consummation
is attained, the root of bitterness will have perished
from the land; and when a few years shall have passed
blunting the hatred which has been excited by this
fratricidal strife, the Americans of both the Northern
and Southern States will perceive that the selfish
policy of other nations would not have so rejoiced
over their division, had it not seemed, to those who
loved them not, the proof of past failure and the
prophecy of future weakness.
Admonished by its terrible experiences,
I believe the nation will reunite itself under one
government, remodel its constitution, and again address
itself to fulfill its glorious destiny. I believe
that the country sprung from ours of all
our just subjects of national pride the greatest will
resume its career of prosperity and power, and become
the noblest as well as the mightiest that has existed
among the nations of the earth.