We find him constructing an appeal to masters to have their
   slaves orally instructed in religion. In many passages he speaks
   of oral instruction as confessedly an imperfect species of in-
   struction, very much inferior to that which results from personal
   reading and examination of the world of God. He says in one
   place, that in order to do much good it must be begun very
   early in life; and intimates that people in advanced years can
   acquire very little from it; and yet he decidedly expresses his
   opinion that slavery is an institution with which no Christian has
   cause to interfere.
   The slaves, according to his own showing, are cut off from
   the best means for the salvation of their souls, and restricted to
   one of a very inferior nature. They are placed under restriction
   which makes their souls as dependent upon others for spiritual
   food as a man without hands is dependent upon others for bodily
   food. He recognises the fact, which his own experience must
   show him, that the slave is at all times liable to pass into the
   hands of those who will not take the trouble thus to feed his
   soul; nay, if we may judge from his urgent appeals to masters,
   he perceives around him many who, having spiritually cut off the
   slave's hands, refuse to feed him. He sees that, by the operation
   of this law as a matter of fact, thousands are placed in situations
   where the perdition of the soul is almost certain, and yet he
   declares that he does not feel called upon at all to interfere with
   their civil condition!
   But if the soul of every poor African is of that inestimable
   worth which Mr. Jones believes, does it not follow that he ought
   to have the very best means for getting to heaven which it is
   possible to give him? And is not he who can read the Bible
   for himself in a better condition than he who is dependent upon
   the reading of another? If it be said that such teaching cannot
   be afforded, because it makes them unsafe property, ought not
   a clergyman like Mr. Jones to meet this objection in his own
   expressive language?--
   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 feel warranted in cheerfully entering upon our work, with
   all its costs and sacrifices.
   Should not a clergyman like Mr. Jones tell masters that they
   should risk the loss of all things seen and temporal, rather than
   incur the hazard of bringing eternal ruin on these souls? All
   the arguments which Mr. Jones so eloquently used with masters
   to persuade them to give their slaves oral instruction, would
   apply with double force to show their obligation to give the slave
   the power of reading the Bible for himself.
   Again, we come to hear Mr. Jones telling masters of the
   power they have over the souls of their servants, and we hear
   him say--
   We may, according to the power lodged in our hands, forbid religious meetings
   and religious instruction on our own plantations; we may forbid our servants
   going to church at all, or only to such churches as we may select for them. We
   may literally shut up the kingdom of heaven against men, and suffer not them
   that are entering to go in.
   And when we hear Mr. Jones say all this, and then consider
   that he must see and know this awful power is often lodged in
   the hands of wholly irreligious men, in the hands of men of the
   most profligate character, we can account for his thinking such
   a system right only by attributing it to that blinding, deademing
   influence which the public sentiment of slavery exerts even over
   the best-constituted minds.
   Neither Mr. Jones nor any other Christian minister would
   feel it right that the eternal happiness of their own children
   should be thus placed in the power of any man who should have
   money to pay for them. How, then, can they think it right
   that this power be given in the case of their African brother?
   Does this not show that, even in the case of the most humane
   and Christian people, who theoretically believe in the equality of
   all souls before God, a constant familiarity with slavery works a
   practical infidelity on this point; and that they give their
   assent to laws which practically declare that the salvation of
   the servant's soul is of less consequence than the salvation of
   the property relation?
   Let us not be thought invidious or uncharitable in saying, that
   where slavery exists there are so many causes necessarily uniting
   to corrupt public sentiment with regard to the slave, that the
   best-constituted minds cannot trust themselves in it. In the
   Northern and free States public sentiment has been, and is to
   this day, fatally infected by the influence of a past and the
   proximity of a present system of slavery. Hence the injustice
   with which the negro in many of our States is treated. Hence,
   too, those apologies for slavery, and defences of it, which issue
   from Northern presses, and even Northern pulpits. If even at
   the North the remains of slavery can produce such baleful
   effects in corrupting public sentiment, how much more must this
   be the case where this institution is in full force!
   The whole American nation is, in some sense, under a paralysis
   of public sentiment on this subject. It was said by a heathen
   writer, that the gods gave us a fearful power when they gave
   us the faculty of becoming accustomed to things. This power
   has proved a fearful one indeed in America. We have got used
   to things which might stir the dead in their graves.
   When but a small portion of the things daily done in America
   has been told in England, and France, and Italy, and Germany,
   there has been a perfect shriek and outery of horror. America
   alone remains cool, and asks, “What is the matter?”
   Europe answers back, “Why, we have heard that men are
   sold like cattle in your country.”
   “Of course they are,” says America; “but what then?”
   “We have heard,” says Europe, “that millions of men are
   forbidden to read and write in your country.”
   “We know that,” says America; “but what is this outcry
   about?”
   “We have heard,” says Europe, “that Christian girls are
   sold to shame in your markets!”
   “That isn't quite as it should be,” says America; “but still
   what is this excitement about?”
   “We hear that three millions of your people can have no
   legal marriage-ties,” says Europe.
   “Certainly, that is true,” returns America; “but you made such
   an outcry, we thought you saw some great cruelty going on.”
   “And you profess to be a free country!” says indignant
   Europe.
   “Certainly, we are the freest and most enlightened country in
   the world! What are you talking about?” says America.
   “You send your missionaries to Christianise us,” says T
urkey;
   “and our religion has abolished this horrible system.”
   “You! you are all heathen over there--what business have
   you to talk?” answers America.
   Many people seem really to have thought that nothing but
   horrible exaggerations of the system of slavery could have pro-
   duced the sensation which has recently been felt in all modern
   Europe. They do not know that the thing they have become
   accustomed to, and handled so freely in every discussion, seems
   to all other nations the sum and essence of villany. Modern
   Europe, opening her eyes and looking on the legal theory of the
   slave system, on the laws and interpretations of law which
   define it, says to America, in the language of the indignant
   Othello, If thou wilt justify a thing like this--
   Never pray more; abandon all remorse;
   On Horror's head horrors accumulate;
   Do deeds to make Heaven weep, all earth amazed;
   For nothing canst thou to damnation add
   Greater than this.
   There is an awful state of familiarity with evil which the
   apostle calls being “dead in trespasses and sins,” where truth
   has been resisted, and evil perseveringly defended, and the con-
   victions of conscience stifled, and the voice of God's Holy
   Spirit bidden to depart. There is an awful paralysis of the
   moral sense, when deeds unholiest and crimes most fearful
   cease any longer to affect the nerve. That paralysis, always a
   fearful indication of the death and dissolution of nations, is a
   doubly-dangerous disease in a republic whose only power is in
   intelligence, justice, and virtue.
   CHAPTER II.
   PUBLIC OPINION FORMED BY EDUCATION.
   Rev. Charles C. Jones, in his interesting work on the
   “Religious Instruction of Negroes,” has a passage which so
   peculiarly describes that influence of public opinion which we
   have been endeavouring to illustrate, that we shall copy it:--
   Habits of feeling and prejudices in relation to any subject are wont to take
   their rise out of our education or circumstances. Every man knows their influence
   to be great in shaping opinions and conduct, and oft-times how unwittingly they
   are formed; that while we may be unconscious of their existence, they may grow
   with our growth and strengthen with our strength. Familiarity converts defor-
   mity into comeliness. Hence we are not always the best judges of our condition.
   Another may remark inconveniences, and, indeed, real evils, in it, of which we
   may be said to have been all our lives scarcely conscious. So, also, evils which,
   upon first acquaintance, revolted our whole nature, and appeared intolerable, cus-
   tom almost makes us forget even to see. Men passing out of one state of society
   into another encounter a thousand things to which they feel that they can never
   be reconciled; yet, shortly after, their sensibilities become dulled, a change passes
   over them, they scarcely know how. They have accommodated themselves to
   their new circumstances and relations--they are Romans in Rome.
   Let us now inquire what are the educational influences which
   bear upon the mind educated in constant familiarity with the
   slave system.
   Take any child of ingenuous mind and of generous heart, and
   educate him under the influences of slavery, and what are the
   things which go to form his character? An anecdote which a
   lady related to the writer may be in point in this place. In
   giving an account of some of the things which induced her to
   remove her family from under the influence of slavery, she related
   the following incident:--Looking out of her nursery window one
   day, she saw her daughter, about three years of age, seated in
   her little carriage, with six or eight young negro children
   harnessed into it for horses. Two or three of the older slaves
   were standing around their little mistress, and one of them,
   putting a whip into her hand, said, “There Misse, whip 'em
   well; make 'em go! They're all your niggers.”
   What a moral and religious lesson was this for that young
   soul! The mother was a judicious woman, who never would
   herself have taught such a thing; but the whole influence of
   slave society had burnt it into the soul of every negro, and
   through them it was communicated to the child.
   As soon as a child is old enough to read the newspapers, he
   sees in every column such notices as the following from a late
   Richmond Whig, and other papers:--
   The subscriber, under a decree of the Circuit Superior Court for Fluvanna
   County, will proceed to sell, by public auction, at the late residence of William
   Galt, deceased, on Tuesday, the 30th day of November, and Wednesday, the
   1st day of December next, beginning at eleven o'clock, the negroes, stock, &c., of
   all kinds, belonging to the estate, consisting of 175 negroes, amongst whom are
   some Carpenters and Blacksmiths--10 horses, 33 mules, 100 head of cattle,
   100 sheep, 200 hogs, 1500 barrels corn, oats, fodder, &c., the plantation and shop
   tools of all kinds.
   The Negroes will be sold for cash; the other property on a credit of nine
   months, the purchaser giving bond, with approved security.
   James Galt, Administrator of
   William Galt, deceased.
   Oct. 19.
   From the “Nashville Gazette,” November 23, 1852:--
   On Tuesday, the 21st day of December next, at the Plantation of the late
   N. A. McNairy, on the Franklin Turnpike, on account of Mrs. C. B. McNairy,
   Executrix, we will offer at Public Sale
   fifty valuable negroes.
   These Negroes are good Plantation Negroes, and will be sold in families.
   Those wishing to purchase will do well to see them before the day of sale.
   Also Ten Fine Work Mules, two Jacks and one Jennet, Milch Cows,
   and Calves, Cattle, Stock Hogs, 1200 barrels Corn, Oats, Hay, Fodder, &c.
   Two Wagons, one Cart, Farming Utensils, &c.
   From the Newberry Sentinel:--
   The subscriber will sell at Auction, on the 15th of this month, at the Planta-
   tion on which he resides, distant eleven miles from the Town of Newberry, and
   near the Laurens Railroad,
   twenty-two young and likely negroes;
   comprising able-bodied field hands, good cooks, house servants, and an excellent
   blacksmith. About 1500 bushels of corn, a quantity of fodder, hogs, mules,
   sheep, neat cattle, household and kitchen furniture, and other property. Terms
   made public on day of sale.
   Dec. 1. M. C. Gary.
   *“Laurensville Herald” copy till day of sale.
   From the South Carolinian, October 21, 1852:--
   The undersigned, as Administrator of the Estate of Col. T. Randell, deceased,
   will sell, on Monday, the 20th December next, all the personal property belong-
   ing to said estate, consisting of 56 Negroes, Stock, Corn, Fodder, &c. &c. The
   sale will take place at the residence of the deceased, on Sandy River, 10 miles
   west of Chesterville.
   Terms of sale: The negroes on a credit of 12 months, with interest from day of
   sale, and two good sureties. The other property will be sold for cash.
   Sept. 2. Samuel J. Randell.
 &n
bsp; See also New Orleans Bee, October 28. After advertising the
   landed estate of Madeline Lanoux, deceased, comes the follow-
   ing enumeration of chattels:--
   Twelve siaves, men and women; a small, quite new schooner; a ferrying flat
   boat; some cows, calves, heifers, and sheep; a lot of household furniture; the
   contents of a store, consisting of hard-ware, crockery-ware, groceries, dry
   goods, &c.
   Now, suppose all parents to be as pious and bencvolent as
   Mr. Jones--a thing not at all to be hoped for, as things
   are--and suppose them to try their very best to impress on the
   child a conviction that all souls are of equal value in the sight of
   God; that the negro soul is as truly beloved of Christ, and ran-
   somed with his blood, as the master's; and is there any such
   thing as making him believe or realise it? Will he believe that
   that which he sees every week advertised with hogs, and horses,
   and fodder, and cotton-seed, and refuse furniture--bedsteads,
   tables, and chairs--is indeed so divine a thing? We will suppose
   that the little child knows some pious slave; that he sees him at
   the communion-table, partaking, in a far-off, solitary manner, of
   the sacramental bread and wine. He sees his pious father and
   mother recognise the slave as a Christian brother; they tell him
   that he is an “heir of God, a joint heir with Jesus Christ;” and
   the next week he sees him advertised in the paper, in company
   with a lot of hogs, stock, and fodder. Can the child possibly
   believe in what his Christian parents have told him when he sees
   this? We have spoken now of only the common advertisements
   of the paper; but suppose the child to live in some districts of
   the country, and advertisements of a still more degrading character
   meet his eye. In the State of Alabama, a newspaper devoted to
   politics, literature, and EDUCATION, has a standing weekly ad-
   vertisement, of which this is a copy:--
   [title]NOTICE.
   The undersigned having an excellent pack of Hounds, for trailing and catching
   runaway slaves, informs the public that his prices in future will be as follows for
   
 
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