The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,526 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus.

The Editor, in speaking of the sufferings of the slaves which are taken by the internal trade to the South West, says: 

“Place yourself in imagination, for a moment, in their condition.  With heavy galling chains, riveted upon your person; half-naked, half-starved; your back lacerated with the ‘knotted Whip;’ traveling to a region where your condition through time will be second only to the wretched creatures in Hell.

“This depicting is not visionary.  Would to God that it was.”

TESTIMONY OF THE PRESBYTERIAN SYNOD OF KENTUCKY; A large majority of whom are slaveholders.

“This system licenses and produces great cruelty.

“Mangling, imprisonment, starvation, every species of torture, may be inflicted upon him, (the slave,) and he has no redress.

“There are now in our whole land two millions of human beings, exposed, defenceless, to every insult, and every injury short of maiming or death, which their fellow men may choose to inflict. They suffer all that can be inflicted by wanton caprice, by grasping avarice, by brutal lust, by malignant spite, and by insane anger.  Their happiness is the sport of every whim, and the prey of every passion that may, occasionally, or habitually, infest the master’s bosom.  If we could calculate the amount of wo endured by ill-treated slaves, it would overwhelm every compassionate heart—­it would move even the obdurate to sympathy.  There is also a vast sum of suffering inflicted upon the slave by humane masters, as a punishment for that idleness and misconduct which slavery naturally produces.

Brutal stripes and all the varied kinds of personal indignities, are not the only species of cruelty which slavery licenses.”

TESTIMONY OF THE REV.  N.H.  HARDING, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, in Oxford, North Carolina, a slaveholder.

“I am greatly surprised that you should in any form have been the apologist of a system so full of deadly poison to all holiness and benevolence as slavery, the concocted essence of fraud, selfishness, and cold hearted tyranny, and the fruitful parent of unnumbered evils, both to the oppressor and the oppressed, THE ONE THOUSANDTH PART OF WHICH HAS NEVER BEEN BROUGHT TO LIGHT.”

MR. ASA A. STONE, a theological student, who lived near Natchez, (Mi.,) in 1834 and 5, sent the following with other testimony, to be published under his own name, in the N.Y.  Evangelist, while he was still residing there.

“Floggings for all offences, including deficiencies in work, are frightfully common, and most terribly severe.

Rubbing with salt and red pepper is very common after a severe whipping.

TESTIMONY OF REV.  PHINEAS SMITH, Centreville, Allegany Co., N.Y. who lived four years at the South.

“They are badly clothed, badly fed, wretchedly lodged, unmercifully whipped, from month to month, from year to year, from childhood to old age.”

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.