the great controversy for liberty of conscience?
   Do foreign governments exclude their population from the
   reading of the Bible? The slave of America is excluded by
   the most effectual means possible. Do we say, “Ah! but we
   read the Bible to our slaves, and present the gospel orally?”
   This is precisely what religious despotism in Italy says. Do
   we say that we have no objection to our slaves reading the
   Bible, if they will stop there; but that with this there will
   come in a flood of general intelligence, which will upset the
   existing state of things? This is precisely what is said in
   Italy.
   Do we say we should be willing that the slave should read
   his Bible, but that he, in his ignorance, will draw false and
   erroneous conclusions from it, and for that reason we prefer to
   impart its truths to him orally? This, also, is precisely what
   the religious despotism of Europe says.
   Do we say in our vainglory that despotic government dreads
   the coming in of anything calculated to elevate and educate the
   people? And is there not the same dread through all the
   despotic slave governments of America?
   On which side, then, does the American nation stand, in
   the great, last question of the age?
   PART III.
   CHAPTER I.
   DOES PUBLIC OPINON PROTECT THE SLAVE?
   The utter inefficiency of the law to protect the slave in any
   respect has been shown.
   But it is claimed that, precisely because the law affords the
   slave no protection, therefore public opinion is the more strenuous
   in his behalf.
   Nothing more frequently strikes the eye, in running over
   judicial proceedings in the Courts of slave States, than announce-
   ments of the utter inutility of the law to rectify some glaring
   injustice towards this unhappy race, coupled with congratulatory
   remarks on that beneficent state of public sentiment which is to
   supply entirely this acknowledged deficiency of the law.
   On this point it may, perhaps, be sufficient to ask the reader,
   whether North or South, to review in his own mind the judicial
   documents which we have presented, and ask himself what in-
   ference is to be drawn, as to the state of public sentiment, from
   the cases there presented--from the pleas of lawyers, the deci-
   sions of judges, the facts sworn to by witnesses, and the general
   style and spirit of the whole proceedings.
   In order to appreciate this more fully, let us compare a trial
   in a free State with a trial in a slave State.
   In the free State of Massachusetts, a man of standing, learning,
   and high connexions, murdered another man. He did not
   torture him, but with one blow sent him in a moment from life.
   The murderer had every advantage of position, of friends; it
   may be said, indeed, that he had the sympathy of the whole
   United States; yet how calmly, with what unmoved and awful
   composure, did the judicial examination proceed! The mur-
   derer was condemned to die. What a sensation shook the
   country! Even sovereign States assumed the attitude of peti-
   tioners for him.
   There was a voice of entreaty, from Maine to New Orleans.
   There were remonstrances, and there were threats; but still,
   with what passionless calmness retributive justice held on her
   way! Though the men who were her instruments were men of
   merciful and bleeding hearts, yet they bowed in silence to her
   sublime will. In spite of all that influence, and wealth, and
   power could do, a cultivated and intelligent man, from the first
   rank of society, suffered the same penalty that would fall on any
   other man who violated the sanctity of human life.
   Now, compare this with a trial in a slave State. In Virginia,
   Souther also murdered a man; but he did not murder him by
   one merciful blow, but by twelve hours of torture so horrible
   that few readers could bear even the description of it. It was
   a mode of death which, to use the language that Cicero in his
   day applied to crucifixion, “ought to be for ever removed from
   the sight, hearing, and from the very thoughts of mankind.”
   And to this horrible scene two white men were witnesses!
   Observe the mode in which these two cases were tried, and
   the general sensation they produced. Hear the lawyers, in this
   case of Souther, coolly debating whether it can be considered any
   crime at all. Hear the decision of the inferior Court, that it is
   murder in the second degree, and apportioning as its reward five
   years of imprisonment. See the horrible butcher coming up to
   the superior Court in the attitude of an injured man! See the
   case recorded as that of Souther versus The Commonwealth, and
   let us ask any intelligent man, North or South, what sort of
   public sentiment does this show?
   Does it show a belief that the negro is a man? Does it not
   show decidedly that he is not considered as a man? Consider
   further the horrible principle which, re-affirmed in the case, is
   the law of the land in Virginia. It is the policy of the law, in
   respect to the relation of master and slave, and for the sake of
   securing proper subordination on the part of the slave, to protect
   the master from prosecution in all such cases, even if the whipping
   and punishment be malicious, cruel, and excessive!
   When the most cultivated and intelligent men in the State
   formally, calmly, and without any apparent perception of saying
   anything inhuman, utter such an astounding decision as this,
   what can be thought of it? If they do not consider this cruel,
   what is cruel? And, if their feelings are so blunted as to see no
   cruelty in such a decision, what hope is there of any protection
   to the slave?
   This law is a plain and distinct permission to such wretches
   as Souther to inflict upon the helpless slave any torture they may
   choose, without any accusation or impeachment of crime. It
   distinctly tells Souther, and the white witnesses who saw his
   deed, and every other low, unprincipled man in the Court, that
   it is the policy of the law to protect him in malicious, cruel, and
   excessive punishments.
   What sort of an education is this for the intelligent and
   cultivated men of a State to communicate to the lower and less-
   educated class? Suppose it to be solemnly announced in
   Massachusetts, with respect to free labourers or apprentices, that
   it is the policy of the law, for the sake of producing subordina-
   tion, to protect the master in inflicting any punishment, however
   cruel, malicious, and excessive, short of death. We cannot
   imagine such a principle declared, without a rebellion and a
   storm of popular excitement to which that of Bunker Hill was
   calmness itself; but, supposing the State of Massachusetts were
   so “twice dead and plucked up by the roots” as to allow such a
   decision to pass without comment concerning her working classes
   --suppose it did pass, and become an active, operative reality,
   what kind of an educational influence would it exert upon the
					     					 			br />
   commonwealth? What kind of an estimate of the working
   classes would it show in the minds of those who make and
   execute the law?
   What an immediate development of villany and brutality
   would be brought out by such a law, avowedly made to protect
   men in cruelty! Cannot men be cruel enough, without all the
   majesty of law being brought into operation to sanction it, and
   make it reputable?
   And suppose it were said, in vindication of such a law, “Oh,
   of course, no respectable, humane man would ever think of taking
   advantage of it!” Should we not think the old State of Massa-
   chusetts sunk very low, to have on her legal records direct
   assurances of protection to deeds which no decent man would
   ever do?
   And, when this shocking permission is brought in review at
   the judgment-seat of Christ, and the awful Judge shall say to its
   makers, aiders, and abettors, Where is thy brother?--when all the
   souls that have called from under the alter, “How long, O Lord,
   dost thou not judge and avenge our blood,” shall arise around
   the judgment-seat as a great cloud of witnesses, and the judg-
   ment is set and the books are opened--what answer will be made
   for such laws and decisions as these?
   Will they tell the great Judge that it was necessary to preserve
   the slave system--that it could not be preserved without them?
   Will they dare look upon those eyes, which are as a flame of
   fire, with any such avowal?
   Will he not answer, as with a voice of thunder, “Ye have
   killed the poor and needy, and ye have forgotten that the Lord
   was his helper?”
   The deadly sin of slavery is its denial of humanity to man.
   This has been the sin of oppression, in every age. To tread
   down, to vilify and crush the image of God, in the person of the
   poor and lowly, has been the great sin of man since the creation
   of the world. Against this sin all the prophets of ancient times
   poured forth their thunders. A still stronger witness was borne
   against this sin, when God in Jesus Christ took human nature,
   and made each human being a brother of the Lord. But the
   last and most sublime witness shall be borne when a Man shall
   judge the whole earth--a Man who shall acknowledge for His
   brother the meanest slave, equally with the proudest master.
   In most singular and affecting terms it is asserted in the Bible
   that the Father hath committed all judgment to the Son, because
   he is the Son of Man. That human nature, which, in the
   person of the poor slave, has been despised and rejected, scoffed
   and scorned, scourged and tortured, shall in that day be glorified;
   and it shall appear the most fearful of sins to have made light
   of the sacredness of humanity, as these laws and institutions of
   slavery have done. The fact is, that the whole system of slave-
   law, and the whole practice of the slave-system, and the public
   sentiment that is formed by it, are alike based on the greatest of
   all heresies, a denial of equal human brotherhood. A whole race
   has been thrown out of the range of human existence, their im-
   mortality disregarded, their dignity as children of God scoffed
   at, their brotherhood with Christ treated as a fable, and all the
   law and public sentiment and practice with regard to them such
   as could be justified only on supposition that they were a race of
   inferior animals.
   It is because the negro is considered an inferior animal, and
   not worthy of any better treatment, that the system which relates
   to him and the treatment which falls to him are considered
   humane
   Take any class of white men, however uneducated, and place
   them under the same system of laws, and make their civil con-
   dition in all respects like that of the negro, and would it not be
   considered the most outrageous cruelty?
   Suppose the slave-law were enacted with regard to all the
   Irish in our country, and they were parcelled off as the property
   of any man who had money enough to buy them. Suppose
   their right to vote, their right to bring suit in any case, their
   right to bear testimony in courts of justice, their right to con-
   tract a legal marriage, their right to hold property or to make
   contracts of any sort, were all by one stroke of law blotted out.
   Furthermore, suppose it was forbidden to teach them to read
   and write, and that their children to all ages were “doomed to
   live without knowledge.” Suppose that, in judicial proceedings,
   it were solemnly declared, with regard to them, that the mere
   heating of an Irishman, “apart from any circumstances of cruelty,
   or any attempt to kill,” was no offence against the peace of the
   State. Suppose that it were declared that, for the better preser-
   vation of subjection among them, the law would protect the
   master in any kind of punishment inflicted, even if it should
   appear to be malicious, cruel, and excessive; and suppose that
   monsters like Souther, in availing themselves of this permission,
   should occasionally torture Irishmen to death, but still this cir-
   cumstance should not be deemed of sufficient importance to call
   for any restriction on the part of the master. Suppose it should
   be coolly said, “Oh, yes, Irishmen are occasionally tortured to
   death, we know; but it is not by any means a general occur-
   rence; in fact, no men of position in society would do it; and
   when cases of the kind do occur, they are indignantly frowned
   upon.”
   Suppose it should be stated that the reason that the law re-
   straining the power of the master cannot be made any more
   stringent is, that the general system cannot be maintained with-
   out allowing this extent of power to the master.
   Suppose that, having got all the Irishmen in the country down
   into this condition, they should maintain that such was the
   public sentiment of humanity with regard to them as abundantly
   to supply the want of all legal rights, and to make their condi-
   tion, on the whole, happier than if they were free. Should we
   not say that a public sentiment which saw no cruelty in thus
   depriving a whole race of every right dear to manhood could see
   no cruelty in anything, and had proved itself wholly unfit to
   judge upon the subject? What man would not rather see his
   children in the grave than see them slaves? What man, who,
   should he wake to-morrow morning in the condition of an
   American slave, would not wish himself in the grave? And
   yet all the defenders of slavery start from the point that this
   legal condition is not of itself a cruelty! They would hold it
   the last excess of cruelty with regard to themselves, or any white
   man; why do they call it no cruelty at all with regard to the
   negro?
   The writer in defence of slavery in Fraser's Magazine justifies
   this depriving of a whole class of any legal rights, by urging that
   “the good there is in human nature will supply the deficiencies
   of human legislation.” This remark is one most significant,
  
					     					 			  powerful index of the state of public sentiment, produced even in
   a generous mind, by the slave-system. This writer thinks the
   good there is in human nature will supply the absence of all legal
   rights to thousands and millions of human beings. He thinks
   it right to risk their bodies and their souls on the good there is
   in human nature; yet this very man would not send a fifty-dollar
   bill through the post-office, in an unsealed letter, trusting to
   “the good there is in human nature.”
   Would this man dare to place his children in the position of
   slaves, and trust them to “the good in human nature?”
   Would he buy an estate from the most honourable man of his
   acquaintance, and have no legal record of the deed, trusting to
   “the good in human nature?” And if “the good in human
   nature” will not suffice for him and his children, how will it
   suffice for his brother and his brother's children? Is his happi-
   ness of any more importance in God's sight than his brother's
   happiness, that his must be secured by legal bolts, and bonds,
   and bars, and his brother's left to “the good there is in human
   nature?” Never are we so impressed with the utter deadness of
   public sentiment to protect the slave, as when we see such
   opinions as these uttered by men of a naturally generous and
   noble character.
   The most striking and the most painful examples of the per-
   version of public sentiment, with regard to the negro race, are
   often given in the writings of men of humanity, amiableness,
   and piety.
   That devoted labourer for the slave, the Rev. Charles C. Jones,
   thus expresses his sense of the importance of one African soul:--
   Were it now revealed to us that the most extensive system of instruction which
   we could devise, requiring a vast amount of labour and protracted through ages,
   would result in the tender mercy of our God in the salvation of the soul of one
   poor African, we should eel warranted in cheerfully entering upon our work, with
   all its costs and sacrifices.
   What a noble, what a sublime spirit, is here breathed! Does
   it not show a mind capable of the very highest impulses?
   And yet, if we look over his whole writings, we shall see
   painfully how the moral sense of the finest mind may be per-
   verted by constant familiarity with such a system.