Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century.

Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century.

The agitation for reform spread far and wide.  The people seemed to be about to rise en masse.  The powers of British society were shaken and alarmed.  The authorities put out their hands and the Chartist meetings in many places were broken up.  The leading spirits were seized and thrown into prison for nothing.  Three of the agitators were sent to the penal colonies, for no other offence than the delivery of democratic speeches.  For several years the movement was in abeyance, but in 1848, in the month of April, the agitation broke out afresh and rose to a formidable climax.  A great meeting was appointed for the Kensington common, and there, on the tenth of the month just named, a monster demonstration was held.  A petition had meanwhile been drawn up, praying for reform, and was signed by nearly two million Englishmen!

After this the Chartist agitation ebbed away.  The movement was said to be a failure; but it failed, not because of the political principles on which it was founded, but because those principles had in the meantime been acknowledged and applied.  At least three of the six articles of the Chartist charter were soon adopted by Parliament.  The principle of Manhood Suffrage is virtually a part of the English Constitution.  The right of voting by Secret Ballot, deposited in a ballot-box, has also been acknowledged as a part of the modus operandi of all British elections.  In like manner the Property Qualification formerly imposed on candidates for Parliament, against which the Chartists so vehemently and justly declaimed, has long since been abolished.

THE ABOLITION OF HUMAN BONDAGE.

Certainly no greater deed of philanthropy has been accomplished by mankind than the extinction of human servitude.  True, that horrible relic of antiquity has not yet been wholly obliterated from the world, but the nineteenth century has dealt upon it such staggering and fatal blows as have driven it from all the high places of civilization and made it crouch in obscure corners and unenlightened regions on the outskirts of paganism.  Slavery has not indeed been extinguished; but it is scotched, and must expire.  According to the tendency of things, the sun in his course at the middle of the twentieth century will hardly light the hovel of a single slave!

The opening of the modern era found slavery universally distributed.  There was perhaps at the middle of the eighteenth century not a single non-slave-holding race or nation on the globe!  All were alike brutalized by the influences and traditions of the ancient system.  All were familiar with it—­aye, they were nursed by it; for it has been one of the strange aspects of human life that the children of the free have been nursed by the mothers of the enslaved.  All races, we repeat, were alike poisoned with the venom of the serpent.  Thus poisoned were France and Germany.  Thus poisoned was England; and thus also our colonies.  Time was, even down to the dawn of the Revolution, when every American colony was slave-holding.  Time was when the system was taught in the schools and preached in the pulpits of all the civilized world.

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Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.