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The Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin

Page 37

by Harriet Beecher Stowe


  personal in the hands of their owners and possessors, and their

  executors, administrators, and assigns, to all intents, construc-

  tions, and purposes whatever.

  Lou. Civil Code, art. 35. Stroud's Sketch, p. 22.

  A slave is one who is in the power of a master to whom he

  belongs.

  Judge Ruffin's Decision in the Case of The State v. Mann. Wheeler's Law of Slavery, 246.

  Such obedience is the consequence only of uncontrolled

  authority over the body. There is nothing else which can

  operate to produce the effect. The power of the master must

  be absolute, to render the submission of the slave perfect.

  II. At first, the master possessed the uncontrolled power of life and death.

  Judge Clarke, in case of State of Miss. v. Jones. Wheeler, 252.

  At a very early period in Virginia, the power of life over

  slaves was given by statute.

  III. He might kill, mutilate, or torture his slaves, for any or no offence; he

  might force them to become gladiators or prostitutes.

  The privilege of killing is now somewhat abridged; as to

  mutilation and torture, see the case of Souther v. The Common-

  wealth, 7 Grattan, 673, quoted in Chapter III. above. Also,

  State v. Mann, in the same chapter, from Wheeler, p. 244.

  IV. The temporary unions of male with female slaves were formed and dis-

  solved at his command; families and friends were separated when he pleased.

  See the decision of Judge Mathews, in the case of Girod v.

  Lewis, Wheeler, 199:

  It is clear that slaves have no legal capacity to assent to any contract. With

  the consent of their master, they may marry, and their moral power to agree to

  such a contract or connexion as that of marriage cannot be doubted; but whilst

  in a state of slavery it cannot produce any civil effect, because slaves are deprived

  of all civil rights.

  See also the chapter below on “the Separation of Families,”

  and the files of any Southern newspaper, passim.

  V. The laws recognised no obligation upon the owners of slaves, to furnish them

  with food and clothing, or to take care of them in sickness.

  The extent to which this deficiency in the Roman law has

  been supplied in the American, by “protective Acts,” has been

  exhibited above.*

  VI. Slaves could have no property but by the sufferance of their master, for

  whom they acquired everything, and with whom they could form no engagements

  which could be binding on him.

  The following chapter will show how far American legislation

  is in advance of that of the Romans, in that it makes it

  a penal offence on the part of the master to permit his slave to

  hold property, and a crime on the part of the slave to be so per-

  mitted. For the present purpose, we give an extract from the

  Civil Code of Louisiana, as quoted by Judge Stroud:--

  A slave is one who is in the power of a master to whom he belongs. The master

  Civil Code, Article 35. Stroud, p. 22.

  may sell him, dispose of his person, his industry and his labour;

  he can do nothing, possess nothing, nor acquire anything but

  what must belong to his master.

  According to Judge Ruffin, a slave is “one doomed in his

  Wheeler's Law of Slavery, p. 246. State v. Mann.

  own person, and his posterity, to live without

  knowledge, and without the capacity to make any-

  thing his own, and to toil that another may reap

  the fruits.”

  With reference to the binding power of engagements between

  master and slave, the following decisions from the United States

  Digest are in point (7, p. 449):--

  All the acquisitions of the slave in possession are the property of his master,

  Gist v. Toohey, 2 Rich. 424.

  notwithstanding the promise of his master that the slave shall

  have certain of them.

  A slave paid money which he had earned over and above his wages, for

  Ibid.

  the purchase of his children, into the hands of B, and B purchased

  such children with the money. Held that the master of such slave was entitled

  to recover the money of B.

  VII. The master might transfer his rights by either sale or gift, or might

  bequeath them by will.

  Slaves shall be deemed, sold, taken, reputed, and adjudged in law, to be chattels

  Law of S. Carolina. Cobb's Digest, 971.

  personal in the hands of their owners and possessors, and their

  executors, administrators, and assigns, to all intents, construc-

  tions, and purposes whatsoever.

  VIII. A master selling, giving, or bequeathing a slave, sometimes made it a

  provision that he should never be carried abroad, or that he should be manumitted

  on a fixed day; or that, on the other hand, he should never be emancipated, or

  that he should be kept in chains for life.

  We hardly think that a provision that a slave should never

  Williams v. Ash, 1 How, U. S. Rep. 1. 5 U. S. Dig. 792, s. 5.

  be emancipated, or that he should be kept in

  chains for life, would be sustained. A provision

  that the slave should not be carried out of the

  State, or sold, and that on the happening of

  either event he should be free, has been sustained.

  The remainder of Blair's account of Roman slavery is devoted

  rather to the practices of masters than the state of the law itself.

  Surely the writer is not called upon to exhibit in the society of

  enlightened, republican and Christian America, in the nineteenth

  century, a parallel to the atrocities committed in pagan Rome,

  under the sceptre of the persecuting Cæsars, when the amphi-

  theatre was the favourite resort of the most refined of her

  citizens, as well as the great “school of morals” for the multi-

  tude. A few references only will show, as far as we desire

  to show, how much safer it is now to trust man with absolute

  power over his fellow, than it was then.

  IX. While slaves turned the handmill they were generally chained, and had a

  broad wooden collar, to prevent them from eating the grain. The furca, which

  in later language means a gibbet, was, in older dialect, used to denote a wooden

  fork or collar, which was made to bear upon their shoulders, or around their

  necks, as a mark of disgrace, as much as an uneasy burden.

  The reader has already seen in Chapter V., that this instru-

  ment of degradation has been in use in our own day, in certain

  of the slave States, under the express sanction and protection of

  statute laws; although the material is different, and the con-

  struction doubtless improved by modern ingenuity.

  X. Fetters and chains were much used for punishment or restraint, and were,

  in some instances, worn by slaves during life, through the sole authority of the

  master. Porters at the gates of the rich were generally chained. Field-

  labourers worked for the most part in irons posterior to the first ages of the

  republic.

  The legislature of South Carolina specially sanctions the

  same practices, by excepting them in the “protective enactment,” which inflicts the penalty of one hundred pounds “in case any

  person shall wilfully cut out the tongue,” &c., of a sl
ave, “or

  shall inflict any other cruel punishment other than by whipping

  or beating with a horse-whip, cowskin, switch, or small stick, or

  by putting irons on, or confining or imprisoning such slave.”

  XI. Some persons made it their business to catch runaway slaves.

  That such a profession, constituted by the highest legislative

  authority in the nation, and rendered respectable by the com-

  mendation expressed or implied of statesmen and divines, and

  of newspapers political and religious, exists in our midst, espe-

  cially in the free States, is a fact which is, day by day, making

  itself too apparent to need testimony. The matter seems, how-

  ever, to be managed in a more perfectly open and business-like

  manner in the State of Alabama than elsewhere. Mr. Jay cites

  the following advertisement from the Sumpter County (Ala.)

  Whig:--

  The undersigned having bought the entire pack of Negro Dogs (of the Hay

  and Allen Stock), he now proposes to catch runaway negroes. His charges will

  be Three Dollars per day for hunting, and Fifteen Dollars for catching a runaway.

  He resides three and one-half miles north of Livingston, near the lower Jones

  Bluff-road.

  William Gambel.

  Nov. 6, 1845. 6m.

  The following is copied, verbatin et literatim, from the

  Dadeville (Ala.) Banner, of November, 1852. The Dadeville

  Banner is “devoted to politics, literature, education, agriculture,

  &c.”

  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

  such services:--

  Dollars.

  For each day employed in hunting or trailing 2.50

  For catching each slave 10.00

  For going over ten miles and catching slaves 20.00

  If sent for, the above prices will be exacted in cash. The subscriber resides

  one mile and a half south of Dadeville, Ala.

  B. Black.

  Dadeville, Sept. 1, 1852. 1tf.

  XII. The runaway, when taken, was severely punished by authority of the

  master, or by the judge at his desire; sometimes with crucifixion, amputation of a

  foot, or by being sent to fight as a gladiator with wild beasts; but most frequently

  by being branded on the brow with letters indicative of his crime.

  That severe punishment would be the lot of the recaptured

  runaway, every one would suppose, from the “absolute power” of

  the master to inflict it. That it is inflicted in many cases, it is

  equally easy and needless to prove. The peculiar forms of punish-

  ment mentioned above are now very much out of vogue, but the

  following advertisement by Mr. Micajah Ricks, in the Raleigh (N. C.) Standard of July 18th, 1838, shows that something of

  classic taste in torture still lingers in our degenerate days.

  Run away, a negro woman and two children. A few days before she went

  off, I burnt her with a hot iron, on the left side of her face. I tried to make the

  letter M.

  It is charming to notice the naïf betrayal of literary pride on the

  part of Mr. Ricks. He did not wish that letter M to be taken as

  a specimen of what he could do in the way of writing. The

  creature would not hold still, and he fears the M may be illegible.

  The above is only one of a long list of advertisements of

  maimed, cropped, and branded negroes, in the book of Mr. Weld,

  entitled American Slavery as It is, p. 77.

  XIII. Cruel masters sometimes hired torturers by profession, or had such persons

  in their establishments, to assist them in punishing their slaves. The noses and

  ears, and teeth of slaves, were often in danger from an enraged owner; and some-

  times the eyes of a great offender were put out. Crucifixion was very frequently

  made the fate of a wretched slave for a trifling misconduct, or from mere caprice.

  For justification of such practices as these, we refer again to

  that horrible list of maimed and mutilated men, advertised by

  slaveholders themselves, in Weld's American Slavery as It is, p. 77. We recal the reader's attention to the evidence of the

  monster Kephart, given in Part I. As to crucifixion, we pre-

  sume that there are wretches whose religious scruples would

  deter them from this particular form of torture, who would not

  hesitate to inflict equal cruelties by other means; as the Greek

  pirate, during a massacre in the season of Lent, was conscience-

  striken at having tasted a drop of blood. We presume?--Let

  any one but read again, if he can, the sickening details of that

  twelve hours' torture of Souther's slave, and say how much more

  merciful is American slavery than Roman.

  The last item in Blair's description of Roman slavery is the

  following:--

  By a decree passed by the Senate, if a master was murdered when his slaves

  might possibly have aided him, all his household within reach were held as impli-

  cated, and deserving of death; and Tacitus relates an instance in which a family

  of four hundred were all executed.

  To this alone, of all the atrocities of the slavery of old heathen

  Rome, do we fail to find a parallel in the slavery of the United

  States of America.

  There are other respects, in which American legislation has

  reached a refinement in tyranny of which the despots of those

  early days never conceived. The following is the language of

  Gibbon:--

  Hope, the best comfort of our imperfect condition, was not denied to the Roman

  slave; and if he had any opportunity of rendering himself either useful or agree-

  able, he might very naturally expect that the diligence and fidelity of a few years

  would be rewarded with the inestimable gift of freedom. * * * Without

  destroying the distinction of ranks, a distant prospect of freedom and honours was

  presented even to those whom pride and prejudice almost disdained to number

  among the human species.*

  The youths of promising genius were instructed in the arts and sciences, and

  their price was ascertained by the degree of their skill and talents. Almost every

  profession, either liberal or mechanical, might be found in the household of an

  opulent senator.†

  The following chapter will show how “the best comfort”

  which Gibbon knew for human adversity is taken away from the

  American slave; how he is denied the commonest privileges of

  education and mental improvement, and how the whole tendency

  of the unhappy system, under which he is in bondage, is to take

  from him the consolations of religion itself, and to degrade him

  from our common humanity, and common brotherhood with the

  Son of God.

  * See also the case of State v. Abram, 10 Ala. 928, 7 U. S. Dig. p. 449.

  “The master or overseer, and not the slave, is the proper judge whether the slave

  is too sick to be able to labour. The latter cannot, therefore, resist the order of

  the former to go to work.”

  * Gibbon's “Decline and F all,” Chap. II.

  † Ibid.

  CHAPTER XIII.

  THE MEN BETTER THAN THEIR LAWS.

  Judgment is turned away backward,

  And Justice standeth afar off
;

  For Truth is fallen in the street,

  And Equity cannot enter.

  Yea, Truth faileth;

  And he that departeth from evil maketh himself a prey.

  There is one very remarkable class of laws yet to be con-

  sidered.

  So full of cruelty and of unmerciful severity is the slave-code--

  such an atrocity is the institution of which it is the legal defini-

  tion--that there are multitudes of individuals too generous and

  too just to be willing to go to the full extent of its restrictions

  and deprivations.

  A generous man, instead of regarding the poor slave as a piece

  of property, dead, and void of rights, is tempted to regard him

  rather as a helpless younger brother, or as a defenceless child,

  and to extend to him, by his own good right arm, that protec-

  tion and those rights which the law denies him. A religious

  man, who, by the theory of his belief, regards all men as

  brothers, and considers his Christian slave, with himself, as a

  member of Jesus Christ--as of one body, one spirit, and called

  in one hope of his calling--cannot willingly see him “doomed

  to live without knowledge,” without the power of reading the

  written Word, and to raise up his children after him in the same

  darkness.

  Hence, if left to itself, individual humanity would, in many

  cases, practically abrogate the slave-code. Individual humanity

  would teach the slave to read and write, would build school-

  houses for his children, and would, in very, very many cases,

  enfranchise him.

  The result of all this has been foreseen. It has been foreseen

  that the result of education would be general intelligence; that

  the result of intelligence would be a knowledge of personal

  rights; and that an inquiry into the doctrine of personal rights

  would be fatal to the system. It has been foreseen, also, that

  the example of disinterestedness and generosity, in emancipation,

  might carry with it a generous contagion, until it should

  become universal; that the example of educated and emancipated

 

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