They Might
Hesitate As To Going Willingly With The North, While Possessing
Slaves, As To Sitting Themselves Peaceably Down As A Small Slave
Adjunct To A Vast Free-Soil Nation, Seeing That Their Property Would
Always Be In Peril.
Under such circumstances a slave adjunct to the
free-soil nation would not long be possible.
But if it could be
shown to them that in the event of their adhering to the North
compensation would be forthcoming, then, indeed, the difficulty in
arranging an advantageous line between the two future nations might
be considerably modified. This message of the President's was
intended to signify that secession on favorable terms might be
regarded by the North as not undesirable. Moderate men were
beginning to whisper that, after all, the Gulf States were no source
either of national wealth or of national honor. Had there not been
enough at Washington of cotton lords and cotton laws? When I have
suggested that no Senator from Georgia would ever again sit in the
United States Senate, American gentlemen have received my remark
with a slight demur, and have then proceeded to argue the case. Six
months before they would have declared against me and not have
argued.
I will leave it to Americans themselves to say whether that
disintegration of the States will, should it ever be realized, imply
that they have failed in their political undertaking. If they do
not protest that it argues failure, I do not think that their
feelings will be hurt by such protestations on the part of others.
I have said that the blunder made by the founders of the nation with
regard to slavery has brought with it this secession as its
punishment. But such punishments come generally upon nations as
great mercies. Ireland's famine was the punishment of her
imprudence and idleness, but it has given to her prosperity and
progress. And indeed, to speak with more logical correctness, the
famine was no punishment to Ireland, nor will secession be a
punishment to the Northern States. In the long result, step will
have gone on after step, and effect will have followed cause, till
the American people will at last acknowledge that all these matters
have been arranged for their advantage and promotion. It may be
that a nation now and then goes to the wall, and that things go from
bad to worse with a large people. It has been so with various
nations, and with many people since history was first written. But
when it has been so, the people thus punished have been idle and
bad. They have not only done evil in their generation, but have
done more evil than good, and have contributed their power to the
injury rather than to the improvement of mankind. It may be that
this or that national fault may produce or seem to produce some
consequent calamity. But the balance of good or evil things which
fall to a people's share will indicate with certainty their average
conduct as a nation. The one will be the certain sequence of the
other. If it be that the Americans of the Northern States have done
well in their time, that they have assisted in the progress of the
world, and made things better for mankind rather than worse, then
they will come out of this trouble without eventual injury. That
which came in the guise of punishment for a special fault, will be a
part of the reward resulting from good conduct in the general. And
as to this matter of slavery, in which I think that they have
blundered both politically and morally, has it not been found
impossible hitherto for them to cleanse their hands of that taint?
But that which they could not do for themselves the course of events
is doing for them. If secession establish herself, though it be
only secession of the Gulf States, the people of the United States
will soon be free from slavery.
In judging of the success or want of success of any political
institutions or of any form of government, we should be guided, I
think, by the general results, and not by any abstract rules as to
the right or wrong of those institutions or of that form. It might
be easy for a German lawyer to show that our system of trial by jury
is open to the gravest objections, and that it sins against common
sense. But if that system gives us substantial justice, and
protects us from the tyranny of men in office, the German will not
succeed in making us believe that it is a bad system. When looking
into the matter of the schools at Boston, I observed to one of the
committee of management that the statements with which I was
supplied, though they told me how many of the children went to
school, did not tell me how long they remained at school. The
gentleman replied that that information was to be obtained from the
result of the schooling of the population generally. Every boy and
girl around him could read and write, and could enjoy reading and
writing. There was therefore evidence to show that they remained at
school sufficiently long for the required purposes. It was fair
that I should judge of the system from the results. Here, in
England, we generally object to much that the Americans have adopted
into their form of government, and think that many of their
political theories are wrong. We do not like universal suffrage.
We do not like a periodical change in the first magistrate; and we
like quite as little a periodical permanence in the political
officers immediately under the chief magistrate; we are, in short,
wedded to our own forms, and therefore opposed by judgment to forms
differing from our own. But I think we all acknowledge that the
United States, burdened as they are with these political evils - as
we think them - have grown in strength and material prosperity with a
celerity of growth hitherto unknown among nations.
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