登陆注册
15397100000019

第19章 THE VINDICATION OF LIBERTY(4)

This, he maintained, was the best way to avoid disturbing debate on the subject of slavery.He quoted his own previous experience;he had made known his opposition to the purposes of the petitioners; their memorials were duly referred to a committee and there they slept the sleep of death.At that time only one voice had been raised in the House in support of the abolition petitioners, that of John Dickson of New York, who had delivered a speech of two hours in length advocating their cause; but not a voice was raised in reply.Mr.Adams mentioned this incident with approval.The way to forestall disturbing debate in Congress, he said, was scrupulously to concede all constitutional rights and then simply to refrain from speaking on the subject.

This sound advice was not followed.For several months a considerable part of the time of the House was occupied with the question of handling abolition petitions.And finally, in May, 1836, the following resolution passed the House: "Resolved, That all petitions, memorials, resolutions, propositions, or papers relating in any way or to any extent whatever to the subject of slavery or the abolition of slavery, shall, without being either printed or referred, be laid on the table, and that no further action whatever shall be had thereon." This is commonly known as the "gag resolution." During four successive years it was reenacted in one form or another and was not repealed by direct vote until 1844.

When the name of Mr.Adams was called in the vote upon the passage of the above resolution, instead of answering in the ordinary way, he said: "I hold the resolution to be a direct violation of the Constitution of the United States, of the rules of this House, and of the rights of my constituents." This was the beginning of the duel between the "old man eloquent" and a determined majority in the House of Representatives.Adams developed undreamed-of resources as a debater and parliamentarian.He made it his special business to break down the barrier against the right of petition.Abolitionists cooperated with zeal in the effort.Their champion was abundantly supplied with petitions.The gag resolution was designed to prevent all debate on the subject of slavery.Its effect in the hands of the shrewd parliamentarian was to foment debate.On one occasion, with great apparent innocence, after presenting the usual abolition petitions, Adams called the attention of the Speaker to one which purported to be signed by twenty-two slaves and asked whether such a petition should be presented to the House, since he was himself in doubt as to the rules applicable in such a case.This led to a furious outbreak in the House which lasted for three days.Adams was threatened with censure at the bar of the House, with expulsion, with the grand jury, with the penitentiary; and it is believed that only his great age and national repute shielded him from personal violence.After numerous passionate speeches had been delivered, Adams injected a few important corrections into the debate.He reminded the House that he had not presented a petition purporting to emanate from slaves; on the contrary, he had expressly declined to present it until the Speaker had decided whether a petition from slaves was covered by the rule.Moreover, the petition was not against slavery but in favor of slavery.He was then charged with the crime of trifling with the sensibilities of the House; and finally the champion of the right of petition took the floor in his own defense.His language cut to the quick.His calumniators were made to feel the force of his biting sarcasm.They were convicted of injustice, and all their resolutions of censure were withdrawn.The victory was complete.

After the year 1838 John Quincy Adams had the effective support of Joshua R.Giddings from the Western Reserve, Ohio--who also fought a pitched battle of his own which illustrates another phase of the crusade against liberty.The ship Creole had sailed from Baltimore to New Orleans in 1841 with a cargo of slaves.The negroes mutinied on the high seas, slew one man, gained possession of the vessel, sailed to Nassau, and were there set free by the British Government.Prolonged diplomatic negotiations followed in which our Government held that, as slaves were property in the United States, they continued to be such on the high seas.In the midst of the controversy, Giddings introduced a resolution into the House, declaring that slavery, being an abridgment of liberty, could exist only under local rules, and that on the high seas there can be no slavery.For this act Giddings was arraigned and censured by the House.He at once resigned, but was reelected with instructions to continue the fight for freedom of debate in the House.

In the campaign against the rights of freemen mob violence was first employed, but in the South the weapon of repressive legislation was soon substituted, and this was powerfully supplemented by social and religious ostracism.Except in a few districts in the border States, these measures were successful.

Public profession of abolitionism was suppressed.The violence of the mob was of much longer duration in the North and reached its height in the years 1834 and 1835.But Northern mobs only quickened the zeal of the abolitionists and made converts to their cause.The attempt to substitute repressive state legislation had the same effect, and the use of church authority for making an end of the agitation for human liberty was only temporarily influential.

As early as 1838 the Presbyterian Church was divided over questions of doctrine into Old School and New School Presbyterians.This served to forestall the impending division on the slavery question.The Old School in the South became pro-slavery and the New School in the North became anti-slavery.

At the same time the Methodist Church of the entire country was beset by a division on the main question.In 1844 Southern Methodist Episcopalian conferences resolved upon separation and committed themselves to the defense of slavery.The division in the Methodist Church was completed in 1846.A corresponding division took place in the Baptist Church in 1845.The controversy was dividing the country into a free North and an enslaved South, and Southern white men as well as negroes were threatened with subjection to the demands of the dominant institution.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 群英三国

    群英三国

    一梦千年,再度醒来居然成了黄巾军伤兵。人生似乎充满了绝望,但身为主角岂能没个挂?群英系统,致力于培养最强大的三国武将,要文武双全,很简单!什么,自创武将?很好,这是要培养出牛X小弟的节奏啊!!什么,武魂系统?杀了历史武将可以夺取其武魂强化自身属性?不知道为什么,突然明白为什么是重生黄巾军了……
  • 倾城天下:愿君留

    倾城天下:愿君留

    初遇。他是温润尔雅的少年却似乎有道不尽的忧愁。她是不问人间百态的药女,忘却世事。却似乎都只是被丢弃的可怜人。他觉得她好像那么熟悉。她觉得他好像不那么平凡。“不是说好要带我走的吗?”“不是说好的吗?”药谷的撕心裂肺却毫无回应有的只是鸟兽惊飞。终于寻觅他却发现他们似乎永远也不可能,他十四岁以一手暖玉萧名震天下而她是那么的平凡。她走了,他未留。当我寻得倾城容颜你是否会留下。粉身碎骨也不惜。当我们再次相遇我一定要带你走。万劫不复又如何。倾城天下,愿君留。万劫不复,愿汝怡。
  • 凤舞依天

    凤舞依天

    天生丽质,就会得人宠爱吗?出生高贵,就能诸事顺利吗?嫁入皇宫,就会享尽荣华吗?哪儿有那么容易!本文的女主经历了人生不易、命途多舛,但是她选择了接受挑战,并活出了精彩。女神是怎样炼成的?凤凰涅槃便是最好的诠释。
  • 身观经

    身观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 单纯少女追上冷漠校草

    单纯少女追上冷漠校草

    五岁那年的约定,她依稀记得,。她,从没放弃对他的执念,苦苦的寻找。果然,皇天不负有心人,她又遇见了他。她的付出只为幼时的约定,可印在他身上的只有冷漠.......
  • 烟草工业与人类健康

    烟草工业与人类健康

    《烟草工业与人类健康》从烟草工业的起源、发展与盛衰及在全球的传播开始介绍,详细阐述了烟草对人类健康的危害,同时分析了当前中国乃至全球控烟的困境与突破之关键。全书分四章,包括烟草工业的盛衰和持续、吸烟与疾病、戒烟的治疗、戒烟的预防。其内容丰富、观点鲜明,是普及、宣传“烟草危害健康”的好书。
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 改变:从平凡到优秀

    改变:从平凡到优秀

    本书针对普通社会读者,为广大立志实现梦想的人群介绍了从平凡到优秀的种种方法,这些中肯的建议将帮助读者朋友从“改变”开始,逐步走向“优秀”。
  • 王俊凯少年我们私奔可好

    王俊凯少年我们私奔可好

    “王俊凯,你是不是喜欢我?”“怎么可能。”“那你是不是爱我?”“impossible.”“那你为什么对我那么好?”“我只是想你以后嫁不出去。”这个小说是主凯的,希望大家可以支持啦!
  • 冥界神迹

    冥界神迹

    一个帝国永存的传说,一段少年忘却的记忆,一群消失十年的亡灵,......再重头,三尺寒芒手中剑,一阵屠尽天下威!可敢否,以我之血洗涤这污浊世间?众神在九天俯瞰世间,亡灵在云端歌唱,有一道声音在永恒回荡:宁可永劫受沉沦,不从诸圣求解脱!少年从永夜之中走出,却发现历史早已为他留白,他一步一步沿着先圣千年之前就已为他写好的剧本走下去,想回头,已是百年身!这是个背叛与欺骗的故事,世间生灵,苍生万物,各自冷眼众生,各自为营。而我...正在冷漠的创造着这个世界。