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Douglass, Frederick. "My Escape from Slavery." The Century Illustrated Magazine 23, n.s. 1 (Nov. 1881): 125-131.
MY ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY
In the first narrative of my experience in slavery, written nearly
forty years ago, and in various writings since, I have given the
public what I considered very good reasons for withholding the manner
of my escape. In substance these reasons were, first, that such
publication at any time during the existence of slavery might be used
by the master against the slave, and prevent the future escape of any
who might adopt the same means that I did. The second reason was, if
possible, still more binding to silence: the publication of details
would certainly have put in peril the persons and property of those
who assisted. Murder itself was not more sternly and certainly
punished in the State of Maryland than that of aiding and abetting the
escape of a slave. Many colored men, for no other crime than that of
giving aid to a fugitive slave, have, like Charles T. Torrey, perished
in prison. The abolition of slavery in my native State and throughout
the country, and the lapse of time, render the caution hitherto
observed no longer necessary. But even since the abolition of slavery,
I have sometimes thought it well enough to baffle curiosity by saying
that while slavery existed there were good reasons for not telling the
manner of my escape, and since slavery had ceased to exist, there was
no reason for telling it. I shall now, however, cease to avail myself
of this formula, and, as far as I can, endeavor to satisfy this very
natural curiosity. I should, perhaps, have yielded to that feeling
sooner, had there been anything very heroic or thrilling in the
incidents connected with my escape, for I am sorry to say I have
nothing of that sort to tell; and yet the courage that could risk
betrayal and the bravery which was ready to encounter death, if need
be, in pursuit of freedom, were essential features in the undertaking.
My success was due to address rather than courage, to good luck rather
than bravery. My means of escape were provided for me by the very men
who were making laws to hold and bind me more securely in slavery.
It was the custom in the State of Maryland to require the free colored
people to have what were called free papers. These instruments they
were required to renew very often, and by charging a fee for this
writing, considerable sums from time to time were collected by the
State. In these papers the name, age, color, height, and form of the
freeman were described, together with any scars or other marks upon
his person which could assist in his identification. This device in
some measure defeated itself--since more than one man could be found
to answer the same general description. Hence many slaves could escape
by personating the owner of one set of papers; and this was often done
as follows: A slave, nearly or sufficiently answering the description
set forth in the papers, would borrow or hire them till by means of
them he could escape to a free State, and then, by mail or otherwise,
would return them to the owner. The operation was a hazardous one for
the lender as well as for the borrower. A failure on the part of the
fugitive to send back the papers would imperil his benefactor, and the
discovery of the papers in possession of the wrong man would imperil
both the fugitive and his friend. It was, therefore, an act of supreme
trust on the part of a freeman of color thus to put in jeopardy his
own liberty that another might be free. It was, however, not
unfrequently bravely done, and was seldom discovered. I was not so
fortunate as to resemble any of my free acquaintances sufficiently to
answer the description of their papers. But I had a friend--a
sailor--who owned a sailor's protection, which answered somewhat the
purpose of free papers--describing his person, and certifying to the
fact that he was a free American sailor. The instrument had at its
head the American eagle, which gave it the appearance at once of an
authorized document. This protection, when in my hands, did not
describe its bearer very accurately. Indeed, it called for a man much
darker than myself, and close examination of it would have caused my
arrest at the start.
In order to avoid this fatal scrutiny on the part of railroad
officials, I arranged with Isaac Rolls, a Baltimore hackman, to bring
my baggage to the Philadelphia train just on the moment of starting,
and jumped upon the car myself when the train was in motion. Had I
gone into the station and offered to purchase a ticket, I should have
been instantly and carefully examined, and undoubtedly arrested. In
choosing this plan I considered the jostle of the train, and the
natural haste of the conductor, in a train crowded with passengers,
and relied upon my skill and address in playing the sailor, as
described in my protection, to do the rest. One element in my favor
was the kind feeling which prevailed in Baltimore and other sea-ports
at the time, toward "those who go down to the sea in ships." "Free
trade and sailors' rights" just then expressed the sentiment of the
country. In my clothing I was rigged out in sailor style. I had on a
red shirt and a tarpaulin hat, and a black cravat tied in sailor
fashion carelessly and loosely about my neck. My knowledge of ships
and sailor's talk came much to my assistance, for I knew a ship from
stem to stern, and from keelson to cross-trees, and could talk sailor
like an "old salt." I was well on the way to Havre de Grace before the
conductor came into the negro car to collect tickets and examine the
papers of his black passengers. This was a critical moment in the
drama. My whole future depended upon the decision of this conductor.
Agitated though I was while this ceremony was proceeding, still,
externally, at least, I was apparently calm and self-possessed. He
went on with his duty--examining several colored passengers before
reaching me. He was somewhat harsh in tome and peremptory in manner
until he reached me, when, strange enough, and to my surprise and
relief, his whole manner changed. Seeing that I did not readily
produce my free papers, as the other colored persons in the car had
done, he said to me, in friendly contrast with his bearing toward the
others:
"I suppose you have your free papers?"
To which I answered:
"No sir; I never carry my free papers to sea with me."
"But you have something to show that you are a freeman, haven't you?"
"Yes, sir," I answered; "I have a paper with the American Eagle on it,
and that will carry me around the world."
With this I drew from my deep sailor's pocket my seaman's protection,
as before described. The merest glance at the paper satisfied him, and
he took my fare and went on about his business. This moment of time
was one of the most anxious I ever experienced. Had the conductor
looked closely at the paper, he could not have failed to discover that
it called for a very different-looking person from myself, and in that
case it would have been his duty to arrest me on the instant, and send
me back to Baltimore from the first station. When he left me with the
assurance that I was all right, though much relieved, I realized that
I was still in great danger: I was still in Maryland, and subject to
arrest at any moment. I saw on the train several persons who would
have known me in any other clothes, and I feared they might recognize
me, even in my sailor "rig," and report me to the conductor, who would
then subject me to a closer examination, which I knew well would be
fatal to me.
Though I was not a murderer fleeing from justice, I felt perhaps quite
as miserable as such a criminal. The train was moving at a very high
rate of speed for that epoch of railroad travel, but to my anxious
mind it was moving far too slowly. Minutes were hours, and hours were
days during this part of my flight. After Maryland, I was to pass
through Delaware--another slave State, where slave-catchers generally
awaited their prey, for it was not in the interior of the State, but
on its borders, that these human hounds were most vigilant and active.
The border lines between slavery and freedom were the dangerous ones
for the fugitives. The heart of no fox or deer, with hungry hounds on
his trail in full chase, could have beaten more anxiously or noisily
than did mine from the time I left Baltimore till I reached
Philadelphia. The passage of the Susquehanna River at Havre de Grace
was at that time made by ferry-boat, on board of which I met a young
colored man by the name of Nichols, who came very near betraying me.
He was a "hand" on the boat, but, instead of minding his business, he
insisted upon knowing me, and asking me dangerous questions as to
where I was going, when I was coming back, etc. I got away from my old
and inconvenient acquaintance as soon as I could decently do so, and
went to another part of the boat. Once across the river, I encountered
a new danger. Only a few days before, I had been at work on a revenue
cutter, in Mr. Price's ship-yard in Baltimore, under the care of
Captain McGowan. On the meeting at this point of the two trains, the
one going south stopped on the track just opposite to the one going
north, and it so happened that this Captain McGowan sat at a window
where he could see me very distinctly, and would certainly have
recognized me had he looked at me but for a second. Fortunately, in
the hurry of the moment, he did not see me; and the trains soon passed
each other on their respective ways. But this was not my only hair-
breadth escape. A German blacksmith whom I knew well was on the train
with me, and looked at me very intently, as if he thought he had seen
me somewhere before in his travels. I really believe he knew me, but
had no heart to betray me. At any rate, he saw me escaping and held
his peace.
The last point of imminent danger, and the one I dreaded most, was
Wilmington. Here we left the train and took the steam-boat for
Philadelphia. In making the change here I again apprehended arrest,
but no one disturbed me, and I was soon on the broad and beautiful
Delaware, speeding away to the Quaker City. On reaching Philadelphia
in the afternoon, I inquired of a colored man how I could get on to
New York. He directed me to the William-street depot, and thither I
went, taking the train that night. I reached New York Tuesday morning,
having completed the journey in less than twenty-four hours.
My free life began on the third of September, 1838. On the morning of
the fourth of that month, after an anxious and most perilous but safe
journey, I found myself in the big city of New York, a FREE MAN-- one
more added to the mighty throng which, like the confused waves of the
troubled sea, surged to and fro between the lofty walls of Broadway.
Though dazzled with the wonders which met me on every hand, my
thoughts could not be much withdrawn from my strange situation. For
the moment, the dreams of my youth and the hopes of my manhood were
completely fulfilled. The bonds that had held me to "old master" were
broken. No man now had a right to call me his slave or assert mastery
over me. I was in the rough and tumble of an outdoor world, to take my
chance with the rest of its busy number. I have often been asked how I
felt when first I found myself on free soil. There is scarcely
anything in my experience about which I could not give a more
satisfactory answer. A new world had opened upon me. If life is more
than breath and the "quick round of blood," I lived more in that one
day than in a year of my slave life. It was a time of joyous
excitement which words can but tamely describe. In a letter written to
a friend soon after reaching New York, I said: "I felt as one might
feel upon escape from a den of hungry lions." Anguish and grief, like
darkness and rain, may be depicted; but gladness and joy, like the
rainbow, defy the skill of pen or pencil. During ten or fifteen years
I had been, as it were, dragging a heavy chain which no strength of
mine could break; I was not only a slave, but a slave for life. I
might become a husband, a father, an aged man, but through all, from
birth to death, from the cradle to the grave, I had felt myself
doomed. All efforts I had previously made to secure my freedom had not
only failed, but had seemed only to rivet my fetters the more firmly,
and to render my escape more difficult. Baffled, entangled, and
discouraged, I had at times asked myself the question, May not my
condition after all be God's work, and ordered for a wise purpose, and
if so, Is not submission my duty? A contest had in fact been going on
in my mind for a long time, between the clear consciousness of right
and the plausible make- shifts of theology and superstition. The one
held me an abject slave--a prisoner for life, punished for some
transgression in which I had no lot nor part; and the other counseled
me to manly endeavor to secure my freedom. This contest was now ended;
my chains were broken, and the victory brought me unspeakable joy.
But my gladness was short-lived, for I was not yet out of the reach
and power of the slave-holders. I soon found that New York was not
quite so free or so safe a refuge as I had supposed, and a sense of
loneliness and insecurity again oppressed me most sadly. I chanced to
meet on the street, a few hours after my landing, a fugitive slave
whom I had once known well in slavery. The information received from
him alarmed me. The fugitive in question was known in Baltimore as
"Allender's Jake," but in New York he wore the more respectable name
of "William Dixon." Jake, in law, was the property of Doctor Allender,
and Tolly Allender, the son of the doctor, had once made an effort to
recapture MR. DIXON, but had failed for want of evidence to support
his claim. Jake told me the circumstances of this attempt, and how
narrowly he escaped being sent back to slavery and torture. He told me
that New York was then full of Southerners returning from the Northern
watering-places; that the colored people of New York were not to be
trusted; that there were hired men of my own color who would betray me
for a few dollars; that there were hired men ever on the lookout for
fugitives; that I must trust no man with my secret; that I must not
think of going either upon the wharves or into any colored
boarding-house, for all such places were closely watched; that he was
himself unable to help me; and, in fact, he seemed while speaking to
me to fear lest I myself might be a spy and a betrayer. Under this
apprehension, as I suppose, he showed signs of wishing to be rid of
me, and with whitewash brush in hand, in search of work, he soon
disappeared.
This picture, given by poor "Jake," of New York, was a damper to my
enthusiasm. My little store of money would soon be exhausted, and
since it would be unsafe for me to go on the wharves for work, and I
had no introductions elsewhere, the prospect for me was far from
cheerful. I saw the wisdom of keeping away from the ship-yards, for,
if pursued, as I felt certain I should be, Mr. Auld, my "master,"
would naturally seek me there among the calkers. Every door seemed
closed against me. I was in the midst of an ocean of my fellow-men,
and yet a perfect stranger to every one. I was without home, without
acquaintance, without money, without credit, without work, and without
any definite knowledge as to what course to take, or where to look for
succor. In such an extremity, a man had something besides his new-born
freedom to think of. While wandering about the streets of New York,
and lodging at least one night among the barrels on one of the
wharves, I was indeed free--from slavery, but free from food and
shelter as well. I kept my secret to myself as long as I could, but I
was compelled at last to seek some one who would befriend me without
taking advantage of my destitution to betray me. Such a person I found
in a sailor named Stuart, a warm-hearted and generous fellow, who,
from his humble home on Centre street, saw me standing on the opposite
sidewalk, near the Tombs prison. As he approached me, I ventured a
remark to him which at once enlisted his interest in me. He took me to
his home to spend the night, and in the morning went with me to Mr.
David Ruggles, the secretary of the New York Vigilance Committee, a
co-worker with Isaac T. Hopper, Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Theodore S.
Wright, Samuel Cornish, Thomas Downing, Philip A. Bell, and other true
men of their time. All these (save Mr. Bell, who still lives, and is
editor and publisher of a paper called the "Elevator," in San
Francisco) have finished their work on earth. Once in the hands of
these brave and wise men, I felt comparatively safe. With Mr. Ruggles,
on the corner of Lispenard and Church streets, I was hidden several
days, during which time my intended wife came on from Baltimore at my
call, to share the burdens of life with me. She was a free woman, and
came at once on getting the good news of my safety. We were married by
Rev. J. W. C. Pennington, then a well-known and respected Presbyterian
minister. I had no money with which to pay the marriage fee, but he
seemed well pleased with our thanks.
Mr. Ruggles was the first officer on the "Underground Railroad" whom I
met after coming North, and was, indeed, the only one with whom I had
anything to do till I became such an officer myself. Learning that my
trade was that of a calker, he promptly decided that the best place
for me was in New Bedford, Mass. He told me that many ships for
whaling voyages were fitted out there, and that I might there find
work at my trade and make a good living. So, on the day of the
marriage ceremony, we took our little luggage to the steamer John W.
Richmond, which, at that time, was one of the line running between New
York and Newport, R. I. Forty-three years ago colored travelers were
not permitted in the cabin, nor allowed abaft the paddle-wheels of a
steam vessel. They were compelled, whatever the weather might
be,--whether cold or hot, wet or dry,-- to spend the night on deck.
Unjust as this regulation was, it did not trouble us much; we had
fared much harder before. We arrived at Newport the next morning, and
soon after an old fashioned stage-coach, with "New Bedford" in large
yellow letters on its sides, came down to the wharf. I had not money
enough to pay our fare, and stood hesitating what to do. Fortunately
for us, there were two Quaker gentlemen who were about to take passage
on the stage,-- Friends William C. Taber and Joseph Ricketson,--who at
once discerned our true situation, and, in a peculiarly quiet way,
addressing me, Mr. Taber said: "Thee get in." I never obeyed an order
with more alacrity, and we were soon on our way to our new home. When
we reached "Stone Bridge" the passengers alighted for breakfast, and
paid their fares to the driver. We took no breakfast, and, when asked
for our fares, I told the driver I would make it right with him when
we reached New Bedford. I expected some objection to this on his part,
but he made none. When, however, we reached New Bedford, he took our
baggage, including three music-books,--two of them collections by
Dyer, and one by Shaw,--and held them until I was able to redeem them
by paying to him the amount due for our rides. This was soon done, for
Mr. Nathan Johnson not only received me kindly and hospitably, but, on
being informed about our baggage, at once loaned me the two dollars
with which to square accounts with the stage-driver. Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Johnson reached a good old age, and now rest from their labors.
I am under many grateful obligations to them. They not only "took me
in when a stranger" and "fed me when hungry," but taught me how to
make an honest living. Thus, in a fortnight after my flight from
Maryland, I was safe in New Bedford, a citizen of the grand old
commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Once initiated into my new life of freedom and assured by Mr. Johnson
that I need not fear recapture in that city, a comparatively
unimportant question arose as to the name by which I should be known
thereafter in my new relation as a free man. The name given me by my
dear mother was no less pretentious and long than Frederick Augustus
Washington Bailey. I had, however, while living in Maryland, dispensed
with the Augustus Washington, and retained only Frederick Bailey.
Between Baltimore and New Bedford, the better to conceal myself from
the slave-hunters, I had parted with Bailey and called myself Johnson;
but in New Bedford I found that the Johnson family was already so
numerous as to cause some confusion in distinguishing them, hence a
change in this name seemed desirable. Nathan Johnson, mine host,
placed great emphasis upon this necessity, and wished me to allow him
to select a name for me. I consented, and he called me by my present
name--the one by which I have been known for three and forty
years--Frederick Douglass. Mr. Johnson had just been reading the "Lady
of the Lake," and so pleased was he with its great character that he
wished me to bear his name. Since reading that charming poem myself, I
have often thought that, considering the noble hospitality and manly
character of Nathan Johnson--black man though he was--he, far more
than I, illustrated the virtues of the Douglas of Scotland. Sure am I
that, if any slave-catcher had entered his domicile with a view to my
recapture, Johnson would have shown himself like him of the "stalwart
hand."
The reader may be surprised at the impressions I had in some way
conceived of the social and material condition of the people at the
North. I had no proper idea of the wealth, refinement, enterprise, and
high civilization of this section of the country. My "Columbian
Orator," almost my only book, had done nothing to enlighten me
concerning Northern society. I had been taught that slavery was the
bottom fact of all wealth. With this foundation idea, I came naturally
to the conclusion that poverty must be the general condition of the
people of the free States. In the country from which I came, a white
man holding no slaves was usually an ignorant and poverty-stricken
man, and men of this class were contemptuously called "poor white
trash." Hence I supposed that, since the non-slave-holders at the
South were ignorant, poor, and degraded as a class, the
non-slave-holders at the North must be in a similar condition. I could
have landed in no part of the United States where I should have found
a more striking and gratifying contrast, not only to life generally in
the South, but in the condition of the colored people there, than in
New Bedford. I was amazed when Mr. Johnson told me that there was
nothing in the laws or constitution of Massachusetts that would
prevent a colored man from being governor of the State, if the people
should see fit to elect him. There, too, the black man's children
attended the public schools with the white man's children, and
apparently without objection from any quarter. To impress me with my
security from recapture and return to slavery, Mr. Johnson assured me
that no slave-holder could take a slave out of New Bedford; that there
were men there who would lay down their lives to save me from such a
fate.
The fifth day after my arrival, I put on the clothes of a common
laborer, and went upon the wharves in search of work. On my way down
Union street I saw a large pile of coal in front of the house of Rev.
Ephraim Peabody, the Unitarian minister. I went to the kitchen door
and asked the privilege of bringing in and putting away this coal.
"What will you charge?" said the lady. "I will leave that to you,
madam." "You may put it away," she said. I was not long in
accomplishing the job, when the dear lady put into my hand TWO SILVER
HALF-DOLLARS. To understand the emotion which swelled my heart as I
clasped this money, realizing that I had no master who could take it
from me,--THAT IT WAS MINE--THAT MY HANDS WERE MY OWN, and could earn
more of the precious coin,--one must have been in some sense himself a
slave. My next job was stowing a sloop at Uncle Gid. Howland's wharf
with a cargo of oil for New York. I was not only a freeman, but a free
working-man, and no "master" stood ready at the end of the week to
seize my hard earnings.
The season was growing late and work was plenty. Ships were being
fitted out for whaling, and much wood was used in storing them. The
sawing this wood was considered a good job. With the help of old
Friend Johnson (blessings on his memory) I got a saw and "buck," and
went at it. When I went into a store to buy a cord with which to brace
up my saw in the frame, I asked for a "fip's" worth of cord. The man
behind the counter looked rather sharply at me, and said with equal
sharpness, "You don't belong about here." I was alarmed, and thought I
had betrayed myself. A fip in Maryland was six and a quarter cents,
called fourpence in Massachusetts. But no harm came from the
"fi'penny-bit" blunder, and I confidently and cheerfully went to work
with my saw and buck. It was new business to me, but I never did
better work, or more of it, in the same space of time on the
plantation for Covey, the negro-breaker, than I did for myself in
these earliest years of my freedom.
Notwithstanding the just and humane sentiment of New Bedford three and
forty years ago, the place was not entirely free from race and color
prejudice. The good influence of the Roaches, Rodmans, Arnolds,
Grinnells, and Robesons did not pervade all classes of its people. The
test of the real civilization of the community came when I applied for
work at my trade, and then my repulse was emphatic and decisive. It so
happened that Mr. Rodney French, a wealthy and enterprising citizen,
distinguished as an anti-slavery man, was fitting out a vessel for a
whaling voyage, upon which there was a heavy job of calking and
coppering to be done. I had some skill in both branches, and applied
to Mr. French for work. He, generous man that he was, told me he would
employ me, and I might go at once to the vessel. I obeyed him, but
upon reaching the float-stage, where others [sic] calkers were at
work, I was told that every white man would leave the ship, in her
unfinished condition, if I struck a blow at my trade upon her. This
uncivil, inhuman, and selfish treatment was not so shocking and
scandalous in my eyes at the time as it now appears to me. Slavery had
inured me to hardships that made ordinary trouble sit lightly upon me.
Could I have worked at my trade I could have earned two dollars a day,
but as a common laborer I received but one dollar. The difference was
of great importance to me, but if I could not get two dollars, I was
glad to get one; and so I went to work for Mr. French as a common
laborer. The consciousness that I was free--no longer a slave--kept me
cheerful under this, and many similar proscriptions, which I was
destined to meet in New Bedford and elsewhere on the free soil of
Massachusetts. For instance, though colored children attended the
schools, and were treated kindly by their teachers, the New Bedford
Lyceum refused, till several years after my residence in that city, to
allow any colored person to attend the lectures delivered in its hall.
Not until such men as Charles Sumner, Theodore Parker, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, and Horace Mann refused to lecture in their course while
there was such a restriction, was it abandoned.
Becoming satisfied that I could not rely on my trade in New Bedford to
give me a living, I prepared myself to do any kind of work that came
to hand. I sawed wood, shoveled coal, dug cellars, moved rubbish from
back yards, worked on the wharves, loaded and unloaded vessels, and
scoured their cabins.
I afterward got steady work at the brass-foundry owned by Mr.
Richmond. My duty here was to blow the bellows, swing the crane, and
empty the flasks in which castings were made; and at times this was
hot and heavy work. The articles produced here were mostly for ship
work, and in the busy season the foundry was in operation night and
day. I have often worked two nights and every working day of the week.
My foreman, Mr. Cobb, was a good man, and more than once protected me
from abuse that one or more of the hands was disposed to throw upon
me. While in this situation I had little time for mental improvement.
Hard work, night and day, over a furnace hot enough to keep the metal
running like water, was more favorable to action than thought; yet
here I often nailed a newspaper to the post near my bellows, and read
while I was performing the up and down motion of the heavy beam by
which the bellows was inflated and discharged. It was the pursuit of
knowledge under difficulties, and I look back to it now, after so many
years, with some complacency and a little wonder that I could have
been so earnest and persevering in any pursuit other than for my daily
bread. I certainly saw nothing in the conduct of those around to
inspire me with such interest: they were all devoted exclusively to
what their hands found to do. I am glad to be able to say that, during
my engagement in this foundry, no complaint was ever made against me
that I did not do my work, and do it well. The bellows which I worked
by main strength was, after I left, moved by a steam-engine.
Douglass, Frederick. "Reconstruction." Atlantic Monthly 18 (1866): 761-765.
RECONSTRUCTION
The assembling of the Second Session of the Thirty-ninth Congress may
very properly be made the occasion of a few earnest words on the
already much-worn topic of reconstruction.
Seldom has any legislative body been the subject of a solicitude more
intense, or of aspirations more sincere and ardent. There are the best
of reasons for this profound interest. Questions of vast moment, left
undecided by the last session of Congress, must be manfully grappled
with by this. No political skirmishing will avail. The occasion
demands statesmanship.
Whether the tremendous war so heroically fought and so victoriously
ended shall pass into history a miserable failure, barren of permanent
results,-- a scandalous and shocking waste of blood and treasure,--a
strife for empire, as Earl Russell characterized it, of no value to
liberty or civilization, --an attempt to re-establish a Union by
force, which must be the merest mockery of a Union,--an effort to
bring under Federal authority States into which no loyal man from the
North may safely enter, and to bring men into the national councils
who deliberate with daggers and vote with revolvers, and who do not
even conceal their deadly hate of the country that conquered them; or
whether, on the other hand, we shall, as the rightful reward of
victory over treason, have a solid nation, entirely delivered from all
contradictions and social antagonisms, based upon loyalty, liberty,
and equality, must be determined one way or the other by the present
session of Congress. The last session really did nothing which can be
considered final as to these questions. The Civil Rights Bill and the
Freedmen's Bureau Bill and the proposed constitutional amendments,
with the amendment already adopted and recognized as the law of the
land, do not reach the difficulty, and cannot, unless the whole
structure of the government is changed from a government by States to
something like a despotic central government, with power to control
even the municipal regulations of States, and to make them conform to
its own despotic will. While there remains such an idea as the right
of each State to control its own local affairs,-- an idea, by the way,
more deeply rooted in the minds of men of all sections of the country
than perhaps any one other political idea,--no general assertion of
human rights can be of any practical value. To change the character of
the government at this point is neither possible nor desirable. All
that is necessary to be done is to make the government consistent with
itself, and render the rights of the States compatible with the sacred
rights of human nature.
The arm of the Federal government is long, but it is far too short to
protect the rights of individuals in the interior of distant States.
They must have the power to protect themselves, or they will go
unprotected, spite of all the laws the Federal government can put upon
the national statute-book.
Slavery, like all other great systems of wrong, founded in the depths
of human selfishness, and existing for ages, has not neglected its own
conservation. It has steadily exerted an influence upon all around it
favorable to its own continuance. And to-day it is so strong that it
could exist, not only without law, but even against law. Custom,
manners, morals, religion, are all on its side everywhere in the
South; and when you add the ignorance and servility of the ex-slave to
the intelligence and accustomed authority of the master, you have the
conditions, not out of which slavery will again grow, but under which
it is impossible for the Federal government to wholly destroy it,
unless the Federal government be armed with despotic power, to blot
out State authority, and to station a Federal officer at every
cross-road. This, of course, cannot be done, and ought not even if it
could. The true way and the easiest way is to make our government
entirely consistent with itself, and give to every loyal citizen the
elective franchise, --a right and power which will be ever present,
and will form a wall of fire for his protection.
One of the invaluable compensations of the late Rebellion is the
highly instructive disclosure it made of the true source of danger to
republican government. Whatever may be tolerated in monarchical and
despotic governments, no republic is safe that tolerates a privileged
class, or denies to any of its citizens equal rights and equal means
to maintain them. What was theory before the war has been made fact by
the war.
There is cause to be thankful even for rebellion. It is an impressive
teacher, though a stern and terrible one. In both characters it has
come to us, and it was perhaps needed in both. It is an instructor
never a day before its time, for it comes only when all other means of
progress and enlightenment have failed. Whether the oppressed and
despairing bondman, no longer able to repress his deep yearnings for
manhood, or the tyrant, in his pride and impatience, takes the
initiative, and strikes the blow for a firmer hold and a longer lease
of oppression, the result is the same,--society is instructed, or may
be.
Such are the limitations of the common mind, and so thoroughly
engrossing are the cares of common life, that only the few among men
can discern through the glitter and dazzle of present prosperity the
dark outlines of approaching disasters, even though they may have come
up to our very gates, and are already within striking distance. The
yawning seam and corroded bolt conceal their defects from the mariner
until the storm calls all hands to the pumps. Prophets, indeed, were
abundant before the war; but who cares for prophets while their
predictions remain unfulfilled, and the calamities of which they tell
are masked behind a blinding blaze of national prosperity?
It is asked, said Henry Clay, on a memorable occasion, Will slavery
never come to an end? That question, said he, was asked fifty years
ago, and it has been answered by fifty years of unprecedented
prosperity. Spite of the eloquence of the earnest
Abolitionists,--poured out against slavery during thirty years,-- even
they must confess, that, in all the probabilities of the case, that
system of barbarism would have continued its horrors far beyond the
limits of the nineteenth century but for the Rebellion, and perhaps
only have disappeared at last in a fiery conflict, even more fierce
and bloody than that which has now been suppressed.
It is no disparagement to truth, that it can only prevail where reason
prevails. War begins where reason ends. The thing worse than rebellion
is the thing that causes rebellion. What that thing is, we have been
taught to our cost. It remains now to be seen whether we have the
needed courage to have that cause entirely removed from the Republic.
At any rate, to this grand work of national regeneration and entire
purification Congress must now address Itself, with full purpose that
the work shall this time be thoroughly done. The deadly upas, root and
branch, leaf and fibre, body and sap, must be utterly destroyed. The
country is evidently not in a condition to listen patiently to pleas
for postponement, however plausible, nor will it permit the
responsibility to be shifted to other shoulders. Authority and power
are here commensurate with the duty imposed. There are no cloud-flung
shadows to obscure the way. Truth shines with brighter light and
intenser heat at every moment, and a country torn and rent and
bleeding implores relief from its distress and agony.
If time was at first needed, Congress has now had time. All the
requisite materials from which to form an intelligent judgment are now
before it. Whether its members look at the origin, the progress, the
termination of the war, or at the mockery of a peace now existing,
they will find only one unbroken chain of argument in favor of a
radical policy of reconstruction. For the omissions of the last
session, some excuses may be allowed. A treacherous President stood in
the way; and it can be easily seen how reluctant good men might be to
admit an apostasy which involved so much of baseness and ingratitude.
It was natural that they should seek to save him by bending to him
even when he leaned to the side of error. But all is changed now.
Congress knows now that it must go on without his aid, and even
against his machinations. The advantage of the present session over
the last is immense. Where that investigated, this has the facts.
Where that walked by faith, this may walk by sight. Where that halted,
this must go forward, and where that failed, this must succeed, giving
the country whole measures where that gave us half-measures, merely as
a means of saving the elections in a few doubtful districts. That
Congress saw what was right, but distrusted the enlightenment of the
loyal masses; but what was forborne in distrust of the people must now
be done with a full knowledge that the people expect and require it.
The members go to Washington fresh from the inspiring presence of the
people. In every considerable public meeting, and in almost every
conceivable way, whether at court-house, school-house, or cross-roads,
in doors and out, the subject has been discussed, and the people have
emphatically pronounced in favor of a radical policy. Listening to the
doctrines of expediency and compromise with pity, impatience, and
disgust, they have everywhere broken into demonstrations of the
wildest enthusiasm when a brave word has been spoken in favor of equal
rights and impartial suffrage. Radicalism, so far from being odious,
is not the popular passport to power. The men most bitterly charged
with it go to Congress with the largest majorities, while the timid
and doubtful are sent by lean majorities, or else left at home. The
strange controversy between the President and the Congress, at one
time so threatening, is disposed of by the people. The high
reconstructive powers which he so confidently, ostentatiously, and
haughtily claimed, have been disallowed, denounced, and utterly
repudiated; while those claimed by Congress have been confirmed.
Of the spirit and magnitude of the canvass nothing need be said. The
appeal was to the people, and the verdict was worthy of the tribunal.
Upon an occasion of his own selection, with the advice and approval of
his astute Secretary, soon after the members of the Congress had
returned to their constituents, the President quitted the executive
mansion, sandwiched himself between two recognized heroes,--men whom
the whole country delighted to honor,--and, with all the advantage
which such company could give him, stumped the country from the
Atlantic to the Mississippi, advocating everywhere his policy as
against that of Congress. It was a strange sight, and perhaps the most
disgraceful exhibition ever made by any President; but, as no evil is
entirely unmixed, good has come of this, as from many others.
Ambitious, unscrupulous, energetic, indefatigable, voluble, and
plausible,--a political gladiator, ready for a "set-to" in any
crowd,--he is beaten in his own chosen field, and stands to-day before
the country as a convicted usurper, a political criminal, guilty of a
bold and persistent attempt to possess himself of the legislative
powers solemnly secured to Congress by the Constitution. No
vindication could be more complete, no condemnation could be more
absolute and humiliating. Unless reopened by the sword, as recklessly
threatened in some circles, this question is now closed for all time.
Without attempting to settle here the metaphysical and somewhat
theological question (about which so much has already been said and
written), whether once in the Union means always in the
Union,--agreeably to the formula, Once in grace always in grace,-- it
is obvious to common sense that the rebellious States stand to- day,
in point of law, precisely where they stood when, exhausted, beaten,
conquered, they fell powerless at the feet of Federal authority. Their
State governments were overthrown, and the lives and property of the
leaders of the Rebellion were forfeited. In reconstructing the
institutions of these shattered and overthrown States, Congress should
begin with a clean slate, and make clean work of it. Let there be no
hesitation. It would be a cowardly deference to a defeated and
treacherous President, if any account were made of the illegitimate,
one-sided, sham governments hurried into existence for a malign
purpose in the absence of Congress. These pretended governments, which
were never submitted to the people, and from participation in which
four millions of the loyal people were excluded by Presidential order,
should now be treated according to their true character, as shams and
impositions, and supplanted by true and legitimate governments, in the
formation of which loyal men, black and white, shall participate.
It is not, however, within the scope of this paper to point out the
precise steps to be taken, and the means to be employed. The people
are less concerned about these than the grand end to be attained. They
demand such a reconstruction as shall put an end to the present
anarchical state of things in the late rebellious States,--where
frightful murders and wholesale massacres are perpetrated in the very
presence of Federal soldiers. This horrible business they require
shall cease. They want a reconstruction such as will protect loyal
men, black and white, in their persons and property; such a one as
will cause Northern industry, Northern capital, and Northern
civilization to flow into the South, and make a man from New England
as much at home in Carolina as elsewhere in the Republic. No Chinese
wall can now be tolerated. The South must be opened to the light of
law and liberty, and this session of Congress is relied upon to
accomplish this important work.
The plain, common-sense way of doing this work, as intimated at the
beginning, is simply to establish in the South one law, one
government, one administration of justice, one condition to the
exercise of the elective franchise, for men of all races and colors
alike. This great measure is sought as earnestly by loyal white men as
by loyal blacks, and is needed alike by both. Let sound political
prescience but take the place of an unreasoning prejudice, and this
will be done.
Men denounce the negro for his prominence in this discussion; but it
is no fault of his that in peace as in war, that in conquering Rebel
armies as in reconstructing the rebellious States, the right of the
negro is the true solution of our national troubles. The stern logic
of events, which goes directly to the point, disdaining all concern
for the color or features of men, has determined the interests of the
country as identical with and inseparable from those of the negro.
The policy that emancipated and armed the negro--now seen to have been
wise and proper by the dullest--was not certainly more sternly
demanded than is now the policy of enfranchisement. If with the negro
was success in war, and without him failure, so in peace it will be
found that the nation must fall or flourish with the negro.
Fortunately, the Constitution of the United States knows no
distinction between citizens on account of color. Neither does it know
any difference between a citizen of a State and a citizen of the
United States. Citizenship evidently includes all the rights of
citizens, whether State or national. If the Constitution knows none,
it is clearly no part of the duty of a Republican Congress now to
institute one. The mistake of the last session was the attempt to do
this very thing, by a renunciation of its power to secure political
rights to any class of citizens, with the obvious purpose to allow the
rebellious States to disfranchise, if they should see fit, their
colored citizens. This unfortunate blunder must now be retrieved, and
the emasculated citizenship given to the negro supplanted by that
contemplated in the Constitution of the United States, which declares
that the citizens of each State shall enjoy all the rights and
immunities of citizens of the several States,--so that a legal voter
in any State shall be a legal voter in all the States.
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