secution was Sydney, a slave-boy, twelve years old, who testified that, in the
   night, he and a slave-girl, named Jane, were roused from sleep by the call of
   their master, Smith, who had returned home. They went out, and found Mima
   tied to his horse's neck, with two ropes, one round her neck, the other round her
   hands. Deceased carried her into the house, jerking the rope fastened to her
   neck, and tied her to a post. He called for something to eat, threw her a piece
   of bread, and, after he had done, beat her on her naked back with a large piece of
   light-wood, giving her many hard blows. In a short time, deceased went out of
   the house, for a special purpose, witness accompanying him with a torch-light, and
   hearing him say that he intended “to use the prisoner up.” The light was
   extinguished, and he re-entered the house for the purpose of lighting it. Jane
   was there; but the prisoner had been untied, and was not there. While lighting
   his torch, he heard blows outside, and heard the deceased cry out, two or three
   times, “O Leah! O Leah!” Witness and Jane went out, saw the deceased
   bloody and struggling, were frightened, ran back, and shut themselves up. Leah,
   it seems, was mother of the prisoner, and had run off two years, on account of
   cruel treatment by the deceased.
   Smith was speechless and unconscious till he died, the following morning, of
   the wounds inflicted on him.
   It was proved on the trial that Carroll, a white man, living about a mile from
   the house of the deceased, and whose wife was said to be the illegitimate daughter
   of Smith, had in his possession, the morning of the murder, the receipt given the
   deceased by Sheriff High the day before, for jail fees, and a note for thirty-five
   dollars, due deceased from one Wiley Price, which Carroll collected a short time
   thereafter; also the chest-keys of the deceased; and no proof was offered to show
   how Carroll came into possession of these articles.
   The following portion of the testimony discloses facts so horrible, and so dis-
   graceful to the people who tolerated, in broad daylight, conduct which would have
   shamed the devil, that we copy it just as we find it in the Raleigh paper. The
   scene, remember, is the city of Raleigh.
   “The defence was then opened. James Harris, C. W. D. Hutchings and Hon.
   W. H. Haywood, of Raleigh; John Cooper, of Wake; Joseph Hane and others,
   of Johnston, were examined for the prisoner. The substance of their testimony
   was as follows:--On the forenoon of Friday, 29th of November last, deceased
   took prisoner from Raleigh jail, tied her round the neck and wrist; ropes were
   then latched to the horse's neck; he cursed the prisoner several times, got on his
   horse, and started off. When he got opposite the Telegraph-office, on Fayette-
   ville-street, he pulled her shoes and stockings off, cursed her again, went off in a
   swift trot, the prisoner running after him, doing apparently all she could to keep
   up; passed round by Peck's store; prisoner seemed very humble and submissive;
   took down the street east of the Capitol, going at the rate of five miles an hour;
   continued this gait until he passed O. Rork's corner, about half or three-quarters
   of a mile from the Capitol; that he reached Cooper's (one of the witnesses), thir-
   teen miles from Raleigh, about four o'clock, P.M.; that it was raining very hard;
   deceased got off his horse, turned it loose with prisoner tied to its neck; witness
   went to take deceased's horse to stable; heard great lamentations at the house;
   hurried back; saw his little daughter running through the rain from the house,
   much frightened; got there; deceased was gouging prisoner in the eyes, and she
   making outcries; made him stop; became vexed, and insisted upon leaving; did
   leave in a short time, in the rain, sun about an hour high; when he left prisoner
   was tied as she was before; her arms and fingers were very much swollen; the rope
   around her wrist was small, and had sunk deep into the flesh, almost covered with
   it; that around the neck was large, and tied in a slip-knot; deceased would jerk
   it every now and then; when jerked it would choke prisoner; she was barefoot
   and bleeding; deceased was met some time after dark, in about six miles of home,
   being twenty-four or twenty-five from Raleigh.”
   Why did they not strike the monster to the earth, and punish him for his in-
   fernal brutality?
   The Attorney-general conducted the prosecution with evident loathing. The
   defence argued, first, that the evidence was insufficient to fasten the crime upon
   the prisoner; secondly, that, should the jury be satisfied beyond a rational doubt
   that the prisoner committed the act charged, it would yet be only manslaughter.
   “A single blow between equals would mitigate a killing instanter from murder
   to manslaughter. It could not, in law, be anything more, if done under the furor
   brevis of passion; but the rule was different as between master and slave. It was
   necessary that this should be, to preserve the subordination of the slave. The
   prisoner's counsel then examined the authorities at length, and contended that the
   prisoner's case came within the rule laid down in the State v. Will (1 Dev. and
   Bat. 121). The rule there given by Judge Gaston is this: `If a slave, in defence
   of his life, and under circumstances strongly calculated to excite his passions of
   terror and resentment, kill his overseer or master, the homicide is, by such cir-
   cumstances, mitigated to manslaughter.' The cruelties of the deceased to the
   prisoner were grievous and long-continued; they would have shocked a barbarian.
   The savage loves and thirsts for blood, but the arts of civilized life have not
   afforded him such refinement of torture as was here exhibited.”
   The Attorney-general, after discussing the law, appealed to the jury “not to
   suffer the prejudice which the counsel for the defence had attempted to create
   against the deceased (whose conduct he admitted was disgraceful to human nature)
   to influence their judgments in deciding whether the act of the prisoner was
   criminal or not, and what degree of criminality attached to it. He desired the
   prisoner to have a fair and impartial trial. He wished her to receive the benefit
   of every rational doubt. It was her right, however humble her condition; he
   hoped he had not that heart, as he certainly had not the right, by virtue of his
   office, to ask in her case for anything more than he would ask for the highest and
   proudest of the land on trial, that the jury should decide according to the evidence,
   and vindicate the violated law.”
   These were honourable sentiments.
   After an able charge by Judge Ellis, the jury retired, and after having remained
   out several hours, returned with a verdict of Not Guilty. Of course, we see
   not how they could hesitate to come to this verdict at once.
   The correspondent who furnishes the Register with a report of the case, says,
   “It excited an intense interest in the community in which it occurred, and,
   although it developes a series of cruelties shocking to human nature, the result of
   the trial, nevertheless, vindicates the benignity and justice of our laws towards
   that class of our population whose condition Northern fan 
					     					 			aticism has so carefully
   and grossly misrepresented, for their own purposes of selfishness, agitation, and
   crime.”
   We have no disposition to misrepresent the condition of the slaves, or to dis-
   parage the laws of North Carolina; but we ask, with a sincere desire to know
   the truth, Do the laws of North Carolina allow a master to practise such horrible
   cruelties upon his slaves as Smith was guilty of? and would the public sentiment of the city of Raleigh permit a repetition of such enormities as were perpetrated
   in its streets, in the light of day, by that miscreant?
   In conclusion, as the accounts of these various trials contain so
   many shocking incidents and particulars, the author desires to
   enter a caution against certain mistaken uses which may be made
   of them, by well-intending persons. The crimes themselves,
   which form the foundation of the trials, are not to be considered
   and spoken of as specimens of the common working of the slave
   system. They are, it is true, the logical and legitimate fruits of
   a system which makes every individual owner an irresponsible
   despot. But the actual number of them, compared with the
   whole number of masters, we take pleasure in saying, is small.
   It is an injury to the cause of freedom to ground the argument
   against slavery upon the frequency with which such scenes as these
   occur. It misleads the popular mind as to the real issue of the
   subject. To hear many men talk, one would think that they
   supposed that unless negroes actually were whipped or burned
   alive, at the rate of two or three dozen a week, there was no harm
   in slavery. They seem to see nothing in the system, but its gross
   bodily abuses. If these are absent, they think there is no harm
   in it. They do not consider that the twelve hours' torture of
   some poor victim, bleeding away his life, drop by drop, under
   the hands of a Souther, is only a symbol of that more atrocious
   process by which the divine, immortal soul is mangled, burned,
   lacerated, thrown down, stamped upon, and suffocated, by the
   fiend-like force of the tyrant Slavery. And as, when the torturing
   work was done, and the poor soul flew up to the judgment-seat,
   to stand there in awful witness, there was not a vestige of
   humanity left in that dishonoured body, nor anything by which
   it could be said, “See, this was a man!”--so, when Slavery has
   finished her legitimate work upon the soul, and trodden out every
   spark of manliness, and honour, and self-respect, and natural
   affection, and conscience, and religious sentiment, then there is
   nothing left in the soul, by which to say, “This was a man!”--
   and it becomes necessary for judges to construct grave legal
   arguments to prove that the slave is a human being.
   Such extreme cases of bodily abuse from the despotic power
   of slavery are comparatively rare. Perhaps they may be paral-
   leled by cases brought to light in the criminal jurisprudence of
   other countries. They might, perhaps, have happened any-
   where; at any rate, we will concede that they might. But
   where under the sun did such trials, of such cases, ever take
   place, in any nation professing to be free and Christian? The
   reader of English history will, perhaps, recur to the trials under
   Judge Jeffreys as a parallel. A moment's reflection will convince
   him that there is no parallel between the cases. The decisions
   of Jeffreys were the decisions of a monster, who violently wrested
   law from its legitimate course to gratify his own fiendish nature.
   The decisions of American slave-law have been, for the most part,
   the decisions of honourable and humane men, who have wrested
   from their natural course the most humane feelings, to fulfil the
   mandates of a cruel law.
   In the case of Jeffreys, the sacred forms of the administration
   of justice were violated. In the case of the American decisions,
   every form has been maintained. Revolting to humanity as
   these decisions appear, they are strictly logical and legal.
   Therefore, again, we say, Where, ever, in any nation pro-
   fessing to be civilised and Christian, did such trials of such
   cases take place? When were ever such legal arguments made?
   When, ever, such legal principles judicially affirmed? Was ever
   such a trial held in England as that in Virginia, of Souther v. The Commonwealth? Was it ever necessary in England for
   a judge to declare on the bench, contrary to the opinion of a
   lower Court, that the death of an apprentice, by twelve hours'
   torture from his master, did amount to murder in the first
   degree? Was such a decision, if given, accompanied by the
   affirmation of the principle, that any amount of torture inflicted
   by the master, short of the point of death, was not indictable?
   Not being read in English law, the writer cannot say; but there
   is strong impression from within that such a decision as this
   would have shaken the whole island of Great Britain; and that
   such a case as Souther v. The Commonwealth would never have
   been forgotten under the sun. Yet it is probable that very few
   persons in the United States ever heard of the case, or ever
   would have heard of it, had it not been quoted by the New
   York Courier and Enquirer as an overwhelming example of
   legal humanity.
   The horror of the whole matter is, that more than one such
   case should ever need to happen in a country, in order to make
   the whole community feel, as one man, that such power ought
   not to be left in the hands of a master. How many such cases
   do people wish to have happen?--how many must happen,
   before they will learn that utter despotic power is not to be
   trusted in any hands? If one white man's son or brother had
   been treated in this way, under the law of apprenticeship, the
   whole country would have trembled, from Louisiana to Maine,
   till that law had been altered. They forget that the black man
   has also a Father. It is “He that sitteth upon the circle of the
   heavens, who bringeth the princes to nothing, and maketh the
   judges of the earth as vanity.” He hath said that, “When he
   maketh inquisition for blood, he forgetteth not the cry of
   the humble.” That blood which has fallen so despised to the
   earth--that blood which lawyers have quibbled over, in the
   quiet of legal nonchalance, discussing in great ease whether it
   fell by murder in the first or second degree--HE will one day
   reckon for as the blood of his own child. He “is not slack
   concerning his promises, as some men count slackness, but is
   long-suffering to usward;” but the day of vengeance is surely
   coming, and the year of his redeemed is in his heart.
   Another Court will sit upon these trials, when the Son of
   Man shall come in his glory. It will be not alone Souther,
   and such as he, that will be arraigned there; but all those
   in this nation, North and South, who have abetted the system,
   and made the laws which made Souther what he was. In
   that Court negro testimony will be received, if never before;
   and the judges, and the counsellors, a 
					     					 			nd the chief men, and
   the mighty men, marshalled to that awful bar, will say to the
   mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the
   face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of
   the Lamb.”
   The wrath of the Lamb! Think of it! Think that Jesus
   Christ has been present, a witness--a silent witness through
   every such scene of torture and anguish--a silent witness in
   every such Court, calmly hearing the evidence given in the
   lawyers pleading, the bills filed, and cases appealed! And
   think what a heart Jesus Christ has, and with what age-long
   patience he has suffered! What awful depths are there in that
   word long-suffering! and what must be that wrath, when,
   after ages of endurance, this dread accumulation of wrong and
   anguish comes up at last to judgment!
   CHAPTER XII.
   A COMPARISON OF THE ROMAN LAW OF SLAVERY WITH THE
   AMERICAN.
   The writer has expressed the opinion that the American law
   of slavery, taken throughout, is a more severe one than that of
   any other civilised nation, ancient or modern, if we except, per-
   haps, that of the Spartans. She has not at hand the means of
   comparing French and Spanish slave-codes; but, as it is a
   common remark that Roman slavery was much more severe than
   any that has ever existed in America, it will be well to compare
   the Roman with the American law. We therefore present a
   description of the Roman slave-law, as quoted by William Jay,
   Esq., from Blair's “Inquiry into the State of Slavery among the
   Romans,” giving such references to American authorities as
   will enable the reader to make his own comparison, and to
   draw his own inferences.
   I. The slave had no protection against the avarice, rage, or lust of the master,
   whose authority was founded in absolute property; and the bondman was viewed
   less as a human being subject to arbitrary dominion, than as an inferior animal
   dependent wholly on the will of his owner.
   See law of South Carolina, in Stroud's “Sketch of the Laws
   of Slavery,” p. 23.
   Slaves shall be deemed, sold, taken, reputed and adjudged in law to be chattels
   2 Brev. Dig. 219. Prince's Dig. 446. Cobb's Dig. 971.