Frederick Douglass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about Frederick Douglass.

Frederick Douglass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about Frederick Douglass.
their caste, made his strictures on the South a personal matter, and threatened to throw him overboard.  Their zeal was diminished by an order of the captain to put them in irons.  They sulked in their cabins, however, and rushed into print when they reached Liverpool, thus giving Douglass the very introduction he needed to the British public, which was promptly informed, by himself and others, of the true facts in regard to the steamer speech and the speaker.

VI.

The two years Douglass spent in Great Britain upon this visit were active and fruitful ones, and did much to bring him to that full measure of development scarcely possible for him in slave-ridden America.  For while the English government had fostered slavery prior to the Revolution, and had only a few years before Douglass’s visit abolished it in its own colonies, this wretched system had never fastened its clutches upon the home islands.  Slaves had been brought to England, it is true, and carried away; but, when the right to remove them was questioned in court, Lord Chief Justice Mansfield, with an abundance of argument and precedent to support a position similar to that of Justice Taney in the Dred Scott case, had taken the contrary view, and declared that the air of England was free, and the slave who breathed it but once ceased thereby to be a slave.  History and humanity have delivered their verdict on these two decisions, and time is not likely to disturb it.

A few days after landing at Liverpool, Douglass went to Ireland, where the agitation for the repeal of the union between Great Britain and Ireland was in full swing, under the leadership of Daniel O’Connell, the great Irish orator.  O’Connell had denounced slavery in words of burning eloquence.  The Garrisonian abolitionists advocated the separation of the free and slave States as the only means of securing some part of the United States to freedom.  The American and Irish disunionists were united by a strong bond of sympathy.  Douglass was soon referred to as “the black O’Connell,” and lectured on slavery and on temperance to large and enthusiastic audiences.  He was introduced to O’Connell, and exchanged compliments with him.  A public breakfast was given him at Cork, and a soiree by Father Matthew, the eminent leader of the great temperance crusade which at that time shared with the repeal agitation the public interest of Ireland.  A reception to Douglass and his friend Buffum was held in St. Patricks Temperance Hall, where they were greeted with a special song of welcome, written for the occasion.  On January 6, 1846, a public breakfast was given Douglass at Belfast, at which the local branch of the British and Foreign Anti-slavery Society presented him with a Bible bound in gold.

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Frederick Douglass from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.