unfeeling, bloody, and diabolical transaction.
   You caused your unoffending, unresisting slave to be bound hand and foot, and,
   by a refinement in cruelty, compelled his companion, perhaps the friend of his
   heart, to chop his head with an axe, and to cast his body, yet convulsing with the
   agonies of death, into the water! And this deed you dared to perpetrate in the
   very harbour of Charleston, within a few yards of the shore, unblushingly, in the
   face of open day. Had your murderous arm been raised against your equals, whom
   the laws of self-defence and the more efficacious law of the land unite to protect,
   your crimes would not have been without precedent, and would have seemed less
   horrid. Your personal risk would at least have proved that, though a murderer,
   you were not a coward. But you too well knew that this unfortunate man, whom
   chance had subjected to your caprice, had not, like yourself, chartered to him by
   the laws of the land the sacred rights of nature; and that a stern but necessary
   policy had disarmed him of the rights of self-defence. Too well you knew that to
   you alone he could look for protection; and that your arm alone could shield him
   from oppression, or avenge his wrongs; yet that arm you cruelly stretched out for
   his destruction.
   The counsel who generously volunteered his services in your behalf, shocked
   at the enormity of your offence, endeavoured to find a refuge, as well for his own
   feelings as for those of all who heard your trial, in a derangement of your intel-
   lect. Several witnesses were examined to establish this fact; but the result of
   their testimony, it is apprehended, was as little satisfactory to his mind as to those
   of the jury to whom it was addressed. I sincerely wish this defence had proved
   successful, not from any desire to save you from the punishment which awaits
   you, and which you so richly merit, but from the desire of saving my country from
   the foul reproach of having in its bosom such a monster.
   From the peculiar situation of this country, our fathers felt themselves justified
   in subjecting to a very slight punishment he who murders a slave. Whether the
   present state of society require a continuation of this policy, so opposite to the
   apparent rights of humanity, it remains for a subsequent legislature to decide.
   Their attention would ere this have been directed to this subject, but, for the
   honour of human nature, such hardened sinners as yourself are rarely found to
   disturb the repose of society. The grand jury of this district, deeply impressed
   with your daring outrage against the laws both of God and man, have made a very
   strong expression of their feelings on the subject to the legislature; and, from the
   wisdom and justice of that body, the friends of humanity may confidently hope
   soon to see this blackest in the catalogue of human crimes pursued by appropriate
   punishment.
   In proceeding to pass the sentence which the law provides for your offence, I
   confess I never felt more forcibly the want of power to make respected the laws of
   my country, whose minister I am. You have already violated the majesty of those
   laws. You have profanely pleaded the law under which you stand convicted, as
   a justification of your crime. You have held that law in one hand, and brandished
   your bloody axe in the other, impiously contending that the one gave a license to
   the unrestrained use of the other.
   But, though you will go off unhurt in person, by the present sentence, expect
   not to escape with impunity. Your bloody deed has set a mark upon you, which
   I fear the good actions of your future life will not efface. You will be held in
   abhorrence by an impartial world, and shunned as a monster by every honest man.
   Your unoffending posterity will be visited, for your iniquity, by the stigma of
   deriving their origin from an unfeeling murderer. Your days, which will be but
   few, will be spent in wretchedness; and if your conscience be not steeled against
   every virtuous emotion, if you be not entirely abandoned to hardness of heart, the
   mangled, mutilated corpse of your murdered slave will ever be present in your
   imagination, obtrude itself into all your amusements, and haunt you in the hours
   of silence and repose.
   But, should you disregard the reproaches of an offended world, should you
   hear with callous insensibility the gnawings of a guilty conscience, yet remember,
   I charge you, remember, that an awful period is fast approaching, and with
   you is close at hand, when you must appear before a tribunal whose want of
   power can afford you no prospect of impunity; when you must raise your bloody
   hands at the bar of an impartial omniscient Judge! Remember, I pray you,
   remember, whilst yet you have time, that God is just, and that his vengeance
   will not sleep for ever!
   The penalty that followed this solemn denunciation was a fine
   of seven hundred pounds, current money, or, in default of pay-
   ment, imprisonment for seven years.
   And yet it seems that there have not been wanting those who
   consider the reform of this law “a refinement in humanity of
   doubtful policy!” To this sentiment, so high an authority as that
   of Chancellor Harper is quoted, as the reader will see by referring
   to the speech of Mr. Hunt in the last chapter. And, as is
   very common in such cases, the old law is vindicated as being, on
   the whole, a surer protection to the life of the slave than the
   new one. From the results of the last two trials, there would
   seem to be a fair show of plausibility in the argument; for under
   the old law it seems that Slater had at least to pay seven hun-
   dred pounds, while under the new Eliza Rowand comes off with
   only the penalty of “a most sifting scrutiny.”
   Thus it appears that the penalty of the law goes with the
   murderer of the slave.
   How is it executed in the cases which concern the life of the
   master? Look at this short notice of a recent trial of this
   kind, which is given in the Alexandria (Virginia) Gazette of
   October 23, 1852, as an extract from the Charleston (Virginia)
   Free Press:--
   [title]TRIAL OF NEGRO HENRY.
   The trial of this slave for an attack, with intent to kill, on the person of Mr.
   Harrison Anderson, was commenced on Monday and concluded on Tuesday
   evening. His Honour, Braxton Davenport, Esq., chief justice of the county, with
   four associate gentlemen justices, composed the Court.
   The commonwealth was represented by its attorney, Charles B. Harding, Esq.,
   and the accused ably and eloquently defended by Wm: C. Worthington, and John
   A. Thompson, Esqrs. The evidence of the prisoner's guilt was conclusive. A
   majority of the Court thought that he ought to suffer the extreme penalty of the
   law; but, as this required a unanimous agreement, he was sentenced to receive
   500 lashes, not more than thirty-nine at one time. The physician of the gaol was
   instructed to see that they should not be administered too frequently, and only
   when, in his opinion, he could bear them.
   In another paper we are told that the Free Press says:--
   A majority of the Court thought that he ought to suffer the extreme penalty
   
					     					 			 of the law; but, as this required a unanimous agreement, he was sentenced to
   receive 500 lashes, not more than thirty-nine at any one time. The physician of
   the gaol was instructed to see that they should not to be administered too
   frequently, and only when, in his opinion, he could bear them. This may seem to be harsh and inhuman punishment; but when we take into consideration that
   it is in accordance with the law of the land, and the further fact that the insub-
   ordination among the slaves of that State has become truly alarming, we cannot
   question the righteousness of the judgment.
   Will anybody say that the master's life is in more danger
   from the slave than the slave's from the master, that this dis-
   proportionate retribution is meted out? Those who coun-
   tenance such legislation will do well to ponder the solemn
   words of an ancient book, inspired by One who is no respecter
   of persons:--
   “If I have refused justice to my man-servant or maid-servant,
   When they had a cause with me,
   What shall I do when God riseth up?
   And when He visiteth, what shall I answer him?
   Did not He that made me in the womb make him?
   Did not the same God fashion us in the womb?”
   CHAPTER IX.
   MODERATE CORRECTION AND ACCIDENTAL DEATH--
   STATE v. CASTLEMAN.
   The author remarks that the record of the following trial
   was read by her a little time before writing the account of the
   death of Uncle Tom. The shocking particulars haunted her
   mind and were in her thoughts when the following sentence was
   written:--
   What man has nerve to do, man has not nerve to hear. What brother man
   and brother Christian must suffer, cannot be told us, even in our secret chamber,
   it so harrows up the soul. And yet, O my country, these things are done under
   the shadow of thy laws! O Christ, thy church sees them almost in silence!
   It is given precisely as prepared by Dr. G. Bailey, the very
   liberal and fair-minded editor of the National Era.
   Some time since, the newspapers of Virginia contained an account of a
   horrible tragedy, enacted in Clarke County, of that State. A slave of Colonel
   James Castleman, it was stated, had been chained by the neck, and whipped
   to death by his master, on the charge of stealing. The whole neighbourhood
   in which the transaction occurred was incensed; the Virginia papers abounded
   in denunciations of the cruel act; and the people of the North were called upon
   to bear witness to the justice which would surely be meted in a slave State to the
   master of a slave. We did not publish the account. The case was horrible; it
   was, we were confident, exceptional; it should not be taken as evidence of the
   general treatment of slaves; we chose to delay any notice of it till the courts
   should pronounce their judgment, and we could announce at once the crime and
   its punishment, so that the State might stand acquitted of the foul deed.
   Those who were so shocked at the transaction will be surprised and mortified to
   hear that the actors in it have been tried and acquitted; and when they read the
   following account of the trial and verdict published at the instance of the friends
   of the accused, their mortification will deepen into bitter indignation.
   “Colonel James Castleman.--The following statement, understood to have
   been drawn up by counsel, since the trial, has been placed by the friends of this
   gentleman in our hands for publication.
   “At the Circuit Superior Court of Clarke County, commencing on the 13th of
   October, Judge Samuels presiding, James Castleman and his son Stephen D. Castle-
   man were indicted jointly for the murder of negro Lewis, property of the latter.
   By advice of their counsel, the parties elected to be tried separately, and the
   attorney for the commonwealth directed that James Castleman should be tried
   first.
   “It was proved on this trial, that for many months previous to the occurrence
   the money drawer of the tavern kept by Stephen D. Castleman, and the liquors
   kept in large quantities in his cellar, had been pillaged from time to time, until
   the thefts had attained to a considerable amount. Suspicion had, from various
   causes, been directed to Lewis, and another negro, named Reuben (a blacksmith),
   the property of James Castleman; but by the aid of two of the house-servants they
   had eluded the most vigilant watch.
   “On the 20th of August last, in the afternoon, S. D. Castleman accidentally dis-
   covered a clue, by means of which, and through one of the house-servants impli-
   cated, he was enabled fully to detect the depredators, and to ascertain the manner
   in which the theft had been committed. He immediately sent for his father, living
   near him, and after communicating what he had discovered, it was determined that
   the offenders should be punished at once, and before they should know of the dis-
   covery that had been made.
   “Lewis was punished first; and in a manner, as was fully shown, to preclude
   all risk of injury to his person, by stripes with a broad leathern strap. He was
   punished severely, but to an extent by no means disproportionate to his offence;
   nor was it pretended in any quarter that this punishment implicated either his life
   or health. He confessed the offence, and admitted that it had been effected by
   false keys furnished by the blacksmith Reuben.
   “The latter servant was punished immediately afterwards. It was believed
   that he was the principal offender, and he was found to be more obdurate and
   contumacious than Lewis had been in reference to the offence. Thus it was
   proved, both by the prosecution and the defence, that he was punished with
   greater severity than his accomplice. It resulted in a like confession on his part,
   and he produced the false key, one fashioned by himself, by which the theft had
   been effected.
   “It was further shown, on the trial, that Lewis was whipped in the upper
   room of a warehouse, connected with Stephen Castleman's store, and near the
   public road, where he was at work at the time; that after he had been flogged,
   to secure his person, whilst they went after Reuben, he was confined by a chain
   around his neck, which was attached to a joist above his head. The length of
   this chain, the breadth and thickness of the joist, its height from the floor, and
   the circlet of chain on the neck, were accurately measured; and it was thus
   shown that the chain unoccupied by the circlet and the joist was a foot and a half
   longer than the space between the shoulders of the man and the joist above, or to
   that extent the chain hung loose above him; that the circlet (which was fastened
   so as to prevent its contraction) rested on the shoulders and breast, the chain being
   sufficiently drawn only to prevent being slipped over his head, and that there was
   no other place in the room to which he could be fastened, except to one of the
   joists above. His hands were tied in front; a white man who had been at work
   with Lewis during the day was left with him by the Messrs. Castleman, the better
   to insure his detention, whilst they were absent after Reuben. It was proved by
   this man (who was a witness for the prosecution) that Lewis asked for a box to 
					     					 			
   stand on, or for something that he could jump off from; that after the Castle-
   mans had left him he expressed a fear that when they came back he would be
   whipped again; and said, if he had a knife, and could get one hand loose, he
   would cut his throat. The witness stated that the negro `stood firm on his feet,'
   that he could turn freely in whatever direction he wished, and that he made no
   complaint of the mode of his confinement. This man stated that he remained
   with Lewis about half an hour, and then left there to go home.
   “After punishing Reuben, the Castlemans returned to the warehouse, bringing
   him with them; their object being to confront the two men, in the hope that by
   further examination of them jointly, all their accomplices might be detected.
   “They were not absent more than half an hour. When they entered the
   room above, Lewis was found hanging by the neck, his feet thrown behind him,
   his knees a few inches from the floor, and his head thrown forward--the body
   warm and supple (or relaxed), but life was extinct.
   “It was proved by the surgeons who made a post-mortem examination before the
   coroner's inquest, that the death was caused by strangulation by hanging; and
   other eminent surgeons were examined to show, from the appearance of the brain
   and its blood-vessels after death (as exhibited at the post-mortem examination),
   that the subject could not have fainted before strangulation.
   “After the evidence was finished on both sides, the jury from their box and of
   their own motion, without a word from counsel on either side, informed the
   Court that they had agreed upon their verdict. The counsel assented to its being
   thus received, and a verdict of “Not Guilty” was immediately rendered. The
   attorney for the commonwealth then informed the Court that all the evidence for
   the prosecution had been laid before the jury; and as no new evidence could be
   offered on the trial of Stephen D. Castleman, he submitted to the Court the pro-
   priety of entering a nolle prosequi. The judge replied that the case had been
   fully and fairly laid before the jury upon the evidence; that the Court was not only
   satisfied with the verdict, but, if any other had been rendered, it must have been