The Sable Cloud eBook

Nehemiah Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about The Sable Cloud.

The Sable Cloud eBook

Nehemiah Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about The Sable Cloud.

“Some among us seem to think that the power and the opportunity to commit sin must necessarily be followed by criminal indulgence.  They do themselves no credit in this supposition.  They also leave out of view a natural antipathy which must be overcome, sense of degradation, probability of detection, loss of character, conscience, and all the moral restraints which are common to men everywhere; and they only judge that all who exercise authority over an abject race must, as a general thing, be polluted.

“As to opportunities for evil-doing at the South compared with the North, no one who walks the streets of a Northern city, by day or night, with the ordinary discernment of one who sets himself to examine the moral condition of a place, will fail to see that we need not go to the South to find humiliating proofs of baseness and shame.  There is less solicitation at the South; here it is a nightly trade, without disguise.  At the South the young must go in search of opportunity; here it confronts them.  The small number of yellow children in the interior of the Cotton States, on ‘lone plantations,’ is positive proof against the ready suspicions and accusations of Northern people.  Let all be true which is said of ‘yellow women,’ ‘slave-breeders,’ and every form of lechery, he is simple who does not believe that the statistics of a certain wickedness at the North would, if made as public as difference of color makes the same statistics at the South, leave no room for us to arraign and condemn the South in this particular.  Their clergy, their husbands, their young men, if they are no better, are no worse than we.  But there is nothing in which the self-righteousness created by anti-slavery views and feelings is more conspicuous than in the way in which the South is judged and condemned by us with regard to this one sin.  Had the pulpits of the South afforded such dreadful instances of frailty, for the last ten or fifteen years, as we have had at the North, what confirmation would we have found for our invectives against the corrupting and ‘barbarous’ influence of slavery!

“How the morbid fancy of a Northerner loves to gloat over occasional instances of violence at the South, and is never employed in depicting scenes of betrayal and cruelty which our policemen in large cities could recount by scores.”

“I saw,” said Mr. North, “in a recent paper, that a slave in Washington County, N.C., was hanged by the sheriff in the presence of three thousand spectators, for the murder of a white man, whom he shot with a pistol because he suspected him of undue familiarity with the wife of the black man.  Poor fellow! no doubt he swung for it because he was a slave.  He must let his marriage rights be invaded by the whites, and bear it in silence, or die.”

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The Sable Cloud from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.