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Transcendentalists
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from: Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, written by himself. 1845
Preface
Wendell Phillips
LETTER
FROM WENDELL PHILLIPS, ESQ.
BOSTON, APRIL 22, 1845.
My Dear Friend:
You remember the old fable of "The Man and the Lion," where the
lion complained that he should not be so misrepresented "when the lions
wrote history."
I am glad the time has come when the "lions write history." We have
been left long enough to gather the character of slavery from the involuntary
evidence of the masters. One might, indeed, rest sufficiently satisfied with
what, it is evident, must be, in general, the results of such a relation,
without seeking farther to find whether they have followed in every instance.
Indeed, those who stare at the half-peck of corn a week, and love to count the
lashes on the slave's back, are seldom the "stuff" out of which
reformers and abolitionists are to be made. I remember that, in 1838, many were
waiting for the results of the West India experiment, before they could come
into our ranks. Those "results" have come long ago; but, alas! few of
that number have come with them, as converts. A man must be disposed to judge of
emancipation by other tests than whether it has increased the produce of
sugar,--and to hate slavery for other reasons than because it starves men and
whips women,--before he is ready to lay the first stone of his anti-slavery
life.
I was glad to learn, in your story, how early the most neglected of God's
children waken to a sense of their rights, and of the injustice done them.
Experience is a keen teacher; and long before you had mastered your A B C, or
knew where the "white sails" of the Chesapeake were bound, you began,
I see, to gauge the wretchedness of the slave, not by his hunger and want, not
by his lashes and toil, but by the cruel and blighting death which gathers over
his soul.
In connection with this, there is one circumstance which makes your
recollections peculiarly valuable, and renders your early insight the more
remarkable. You come from that part of the country where we are told slavery
appears with its fairest features. Let us hear, then, what it is at its best
estate--gaze on its bright side, if it has one; and then imagination may task
her powers to add dark lines to the picture, as she travels southward to that
(for the colored man) Valley of the Shadow of Death, where the Mississippi
sweeps along.
Again, we have known you long, and can put the most entire confidence in your
truth, candor, and sincerity. Every one who has heard you speak has felt, and, I
am confident, every one who reads your book will feel, persuaded that you give
them a fair specimen of the whole truth. No one-sided portrait, --no wholesale
complaints,--but strict justice done, whenever individual kindliness has
neutralized, for a moment, the deadly system with which it was strangely allied.
You have been with us, too, some years, and can fairly compare the twilight of
rights, which your race enjoy at the North, with that "noon of night"
under which they labor south of Mason and Dixon's line. Tell us whether, after
all, the half- free colored man of Massachusetts is worse off than the pampered
slave of the rice swamps!
In reading your life, no one can say that we have unfairly picked out some
rare specimens of cruelty. We know that the bitter drops, which even you have
drained from the cup, are no incidental aggravations, no individual ills, but
such as must mingle always and necessarily in the lot of every slave. They are
the essential ingredients, not the occasional results, of the system.
After all, I shall read your book with trembling for you. Some years ago,
when you were beginning to tell me your real name and birthplace, you may
remember I stopped you, and preferred to remain ignorant of all. With the
exception of a vague description, so I continued, till the other day, when you
read me your memoirs. I hardly knew, at the time, whether to thank you or not
for the sight of them, when I reflected that it was still dangerous, in
Massachusetts, for honest men to tell their names! They say the fathers, in
1776, signed the Declaration of Independence with the halter about their necks.
You, too, publish your declaration of freedom with danger compassing you around.
In all the broad lands which the Constitution of the United States overshadows,
there is no single spot,--however narrow or desolate,--where a fugitive slave
can plant himself and say, "I am safe." The whole armory of Northern
Law has no shield for you. I am free to say that, in your place, I should throw
the MS. into the fire.
You, perhaps, may tell your story in safety, endeared as you are to so many
warm hearts by rare gifts, and a still rarer devotion of them to the service of
others. But it will be owing only to your labors, and the fearless efforts of
those who, trampling the laws and Constitution of the country under their feet,
are determined that they will "hide the outcast," and that their
hearths shall be, spite of the law, an asylum for the oppressed, if, some time
or other, the humblest may stand in our streets, and bear witness in safety
against the cruelties of which he has been the victim.
Yet it is sad to think, that these very throbbing hearts which welcome your
story, and form your best safeguard in telling it, are all beating contrary to
the "statute in such case made and provided." Go on, my dear friend,
till you, and those who, like you, have been saved, so as by fire, from the dark
prison-house, shall stereotype these free, illegal pulses into statutes; and New
England, cutting loose from a blood-stained Union, shall glory in being the
house of refuge for the oppressed,--till we no longer merely "~hide~ the
outcast," or make a merit of standing idly by while he is hunted in our
midst; but, consecrating anew the soil of the Pilgrims as an asylum for the
oppressed, proclaim our WELCOME to the slave so loudly, that the tones shall
reach every hut in the Carolinas, and make the broken-hearted bondman leap up at
the thought of old Massachusetts.
God speed the day!
Till then, and ever,
Yours truly,
WENDELL PHILLIPS
[ Up ] [ Preface - Garrison ] [ Preface - Phillips ] [ Chapter I ] [ Chapter II ] [ Chapter III ] [ Chapter IV ] [ Chapter V ] [ Chapter VI ] [ Chapter VII ] [ Chapter VIII ] [ Chapter IX ] [ Chapter X ] [ Chapter XI ]
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