March 6, 1860
MR. PRESIDENT AND FELLOW-CITIZENS OF NEW HAVEN: If the Republican
party of this nation shall ever have the national house entrusted to its
keeping, it will be the duty of that party to attend to all the affairs of
national house-keeping. Whatever matters of importance may come up, whatever
difficulties may arise in the way of its administration of the government, that
party will then have to attend to. It will then be compelled to attend to other
questions, besides this question which now assumes an overwhelming
importance---the question of Slavery. It is true that in the organization of
the Republican party this question of Slavery was more important than any
other; indeed, so much more important has it become that no other national
question can even get a hearing just at present. The old question of tariff---a
matter that will remain one of the chief affairs of national housekeeping to
all time---the question of the management of financial affairs; the question of
the disposition of the public domain---how shall it be managed for the purpose
of getting it well settled, and of making there the homes of a free and happy
people---these will remain open and require attention for a great while yet,
and these questions will have to be attended to by whatever party has the
control of the government. Yet, just now, they cannot even obtain a hearing,
and I do not purpose to detain you upon these topics, or what sort of hearing
they should have when opportunity shall come.
For, whether we will or not, the question of Slavery is the question, the all absorbing topic of the day. It is
true that all of us---and by that I mean, not the Republican party alone, but
the whole American people, here and elsewhere---all of us wish this question
settled---wish it out of the way. It stands in the way, and prevents the
adjustment, and the giving of necessary attention to other questions of
national house-keeping. The people of the whole nation agree that this question
ought to be settled, and yet it is not settled. And the reason is that they are
not yet agreed how it shall be settled. All wish it
done, but some wish one way and some another, and some a third, or fourth, or
fifth; different bodies are pulling in different directions, and none of them
having a decided majority, are able to accomplish the common object.
In the beginning of the year 1854 a new policy was
inaugurated with the avowed object and confident promise that it would entirely
and forever put an end to the Slavery agitation. It was again and again
declared that under this policy, when once successfully established, the
country would be forever rid of this whole question. Yet under the operation of
that policy this agitation has not only not ceased, but it has been constantly
augmented. And this too, although, from the day of its introduction, its
friends, who promised that it would wholly end all agitation, constantly
insisted, down to the time that the Lecompton bill was introduced, that it was
working admirably, and that its inevitable tendency was to remove the question
forever from the politics of the country. Can you call to mind any Democratic
speech, made after the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, down to the time of
the Lecompton bill, in which it was not predicted that the Slavery agitation
was just at an end; that “the abolition excitement was played out,” “the Kansas
question was dead,” “they have made the most they can out of this question and
it is now forever settled.” But since the Lecompton bill no Democrat, within my
experience, has ever pretended that he could see the end. That cry has been
dropped. They themselves do not pretend, now, that the agitation of this
subject has come to an end yet. [Applause.]
The truth is, that this question is one of national
importance, and we cannot help dealing with it: we must do something about it,
whether we will or not. We cannot avoid it; the subject is one we cannot avoid
considering; we can no more avoid it than a man can live without eating. It is
upon us; it attaches to the body politic as much and as closely as the natural
wants attach to our natural bodies. Now I think it important that this matter
should be taken up in earnest, and really settled. And one way to bring about a
true settlement of the question is to understand its true magnitude.
There have been many efforts to settle it. Again and again
it has been fondly hoped that it was settled, but every time it breaks out
afresh, and more violently than ever. It was settled, our fathers hoped, by the
Missouri Compromise, but it did not stay settled. Then the compromises of 1850
were declared to be a full and final settlement of the question. The two great
parties, each in National Convention, adopted resolutions declaring that the
settlement made by the Compromise of 1850 was a finality---that it would last
forever. Yet how long before it was unsettled again! It broke out again in
1854, and blazed higher and raged more furiously than ever before, and the
agitation has not rested since.
These repeated settlements must have some fault about them.
There must be some inadequacy in their very nature to the purpose for which
they were designed. We can only speculate as to where that fault---that
inadequacy, is, but we may perhaps profit by past experience.
I think that one of the causes of these repeated failures
is that our best and greatest men have greatly underestimated the size of this
question. They have constantly brought forward small cures for great
sores---plasters too small to cover the wound. That is one reason that all
settlements have proved so temporary---so evanescent. [Applause.]
Look at the magnitude of this subject! One sixth of our
population, in round numbers---not quite one sixth, and yet more than a
seventh,---about one sixth of the whole population of the United
States are slaves! The owners of these slaves consider them
property. The effect upon the minds of the owners is that of property, and
nothing else---it induces them to insist upon all that will favorably affect
its value as property, to demand laws and institutions and a public policy that
shall increase and secure its value, and make it durable, lasting and
universal. The effect on the minds of the owners is to persuade them that there
is no wrong in it. The slaveholder does not like to be considered a mean
fellow, for holding that species of property, and hence he has to struggle
within himself and sets about arguing himself into the belief that Slavery is
right. The property influences his mind. The dissenting minister, who argued
some theological point with one of the established church, was always met by
the reply, “I can't see it so.” He opened the Bible, and pointed him to a
passage, but the orthodox minister replied, “I can't see it so.” Then he showed
him a single word---“Can you see that?” “Yes, I see it,” was the reply. The
dissenter laid a guinea over the word and asked, “Do you see it now?” [Great
laughter.] So here. Whether the owners of this species of property do really
see it as it is, it is not for me to say, but if they do, they see it as it is
through 2,000,000,000 of dollars, and that is a pretty thick coating.
[Laughter.] Certain it is, that they do not see it as we see it. Certain it is,
that this two thousand million of dollars, invested in this species of
property, all so concentrated that the mind can grasp it at once---this immense
pecuniary interest, has its influence upon their minds.
But here in Connecticut and at the North Slavery does not
exist, and we see it through no such medium. To us it appears natural to think
that slaves are human beings; men, not property;
that some of the things, at least, stated about men in the Declaration of
Independence apply to them as well as to us. [Applause.] I say, we think, most
of us, that this Charter of Freedom applies to the slave as well as to
ourselves, that the class of arguments put forward to batter down that idea,
are also calculated to break down the very idea of a free government, even for
white men, and to undermine the very foundations of free society. [Continued
applause.] We think Slavery a great moral wrong, and while we do not claim the
right to touch it where it exists, we wish to treat it as a wrong in the
Territories, where our votes will reach it. We think that a respect for
ourselves, a regard for future generations and for the God that made us,
require that we put down this wrong where our votes will properly reach it. We
think that species of labor an injury to free white men---in short, we think
Slavery a great moral, social and political evil, tolerable only because, and so
far as its actual existence makes it necessary to tolerate it, and that beyond
that, it ought to be treated as a wrong.
Now these two ideas, the property idea that Slavery is
right, and the idea that it is wrong, come into collision, and do actually
produce that irrepressible conflict which Mr. Seward has been so roundly abused
for mentioning. The two ideas conflict, and must conflict.
Again, in its political aspect, does anything in any way
endanger the perpetuity of this Union but that single thing, Slavery? Many of
our adversaries are anxious to claim that they are specially devoted to the
Union, and take pains to charge upon us hostility to the Union. Now we claim
that we are the only true Union men, and we put to them this one proposition:
What ever endangered this Union, save and except Slavery? Did any other thing
ever cause a moment's fear? All men must agree that this thing alone has ever
endangered the perpetuity of the Union. But if it was threatened by any other
influence, would not all men say that the best thing that could be done, if we
could not or ought not to destroy it, would be at least to keep it from growing
any larger? Can any man believe that the way to save the Union is to extend and
increase the only thing that threatens the Union, and to suffer it to grow
bigger and bigger? [Great applause.]
Whenever this question shall be settled, it must be settled
on some philosophical basis. No policy that does not rest upon some
philosophical public opinion can be permanently maintained. And hence, there
are but two policies in regard to Slavery that can be at all maintained. The
first, based on the property view that Slavery is right, conforms to that idea
throughout, and demands that we shall do everything for it that we ought to do
if it were right. We must sweep away all opposition, for opposition to the
right is wrong; we must agree that Slavery is right, and we must adopt the idea
that property has persuaded the owner to believe---that Slavery is morally
right and socially elevating. This gives a philosophical basis for a permanent
policy of encouragement.
The other policy is one that squares with the idea that
Slavery is wrong, and it consists in doing everything that we ought to do if it
is wrong. Now, I don't wish to be misunderstood, nor to leave a gap down to be
misrepresented, even. I don't mean that we ought to attack it where it exists.
To me it seems that if we were to form a government anew, in view of the actual
presence of Slavery we should find it necessary to frame just such a government
as our fathers did; giving to the slaveholder the entire control where the
system was established, while we possessed the power to restrain it from going
outside those limits. [Applause.] From the necessities of the case we should be
compelled to form just such a government as our blessed fathers gave us; and,
surely, if they have so made it, that adds another reason why we should let
Slavery alone where it exists.
If I saw a venomous snake crawling in the road, any man
would say I might seize the nearest stick and kill it; but if I found that
snake in bed with my children, that would be another question. [Laughter.] I
might hurt the children more than the snake, and it might bite them.
[Applause.] Much more, if I found it in bed with my neighbor's children, and I
had bound myself by a solemn compact not to meddle with his children under any circumstances,
it would become me to let that particular mode of getting rid of the gentleman
alone. [Great laughter.] But if there was a bed newly made up, to which the
children were to be taken, and it was proposed to take a batch of young snakes
and put them there with them, I take it no man would say there was any question
how I ought to decide! [Prolonged applause and cheers.]
That is just the case! The new Territories are the newly
made bed to which our children are to go, and it lies with the nation to say
whether they shall have snakes mixed up with them or not. It does not seem as
if there could be much hesitation what our policy should be! [Applause.]
Now I have spoken of a policy based on the idea that
Slavery is wrong, and a policy based upon the idea that it is right. But an
effort has been made for a policy that shall treat it as neither right or
wrong. It is based upon utter indifference. Its leading advocate has said “I
don't care whether it be voted up or down.” [Laughter.] “It is merely a matter
of dollars and cents.” “The Almighty has drawn a line across this continent, on
one side of which all soil must forever be cultivated by slave labor, and on
the other by free;” “when the struggle is between the white man and the negro,
I am for the white man; when it is between the negro and the crocodile, I am
for the negro.” Its central idea is indifference. It holds that it makes no
more difference to us whether the Territories become free or slave States, than
whether my neighbor stocks his farm with horned cattle or puts it into tobacco.
All recognize this policy, the plausible sugar-coated name of which is “popular sovereignty.” [Laughter.]
This policy chiefly stands in the way of a permanent
settlement of the question. I believe there is no danger of its becoming the
permanent policy of the country, for it is based on a public indifference.
There is nobody that “don't care.” ALL THE PEOPLE DO CARE! one way or the
other. [Great applause.] I do not charge that its author, when he says he “don't
care,” states his individual opinion; he only expresses his policy for the
government. I understand that he has never said, as an individual, whether he
thought Slavery right or wrong---and he is the only man in the nation that has
not! Now such a policy may have a temporary run; it may spring up as necessary
to the political prospects of some gentleman; but it is utterly baseless; the
people are not indifferent; and it can therefore have no durability or
permanence.
But suppose it could! Then it could be maintained only by a
public opinion that shall say “we don't care.” There must be a change in public
opinion, the public mind must be so far debauched as to square with this policy
of caring not at all. The people must come to consider this as “merely a
question of dollars and cents,” and to believe that in some places the Almighty
has made Slavery necessarily eternal. This policy can be brought to prevail if
the people can be brought round to say honestly “we don't care;” if not, it can
never be maintained. It is for you to say whether that can be done. [Applause.]
You are ready to say it cannot, but be not too fast!
Remember what a long stride has been taken since the repeal of the Missouri
Compromise! Do you know of any Democrat, of either branch of the party---do you
know one who declares that he believes that the Declaration of Independence has
any application to the negro? Judge Taney declares that it has not, and Judge
Douglas even vilifies me personally and scolds me roundly for saying that the
Declaration applies to all men, and that negroes are men. [Cheers.] Is there a
Democrat here who does not deny that the Declaration applies to a negro? Do any
of you know of one? Well, I have tried before perhaps fifty audiences, some
larger and some smaller than this, to find one such Democrat, and never yet
have I found one who said I did not place him right in that. I must assume that
Democrats hold that, and now, not one of these Democrats
can show that he said that five years ago! [Applause.] I venture to defy
the whole party to produce one man that ever uttered the belief that the
Declaration did not apply to negroes, before the repeal of the Missouri
Compromise! Four or five years ago we all thought negroes were men, and that
when “all men” were named, negroes were included.
But the whole Democratic party has deliberately taken
negroes from the class of men and put them in the class of brutes.
[Applause.] Turn it as you will, it is simply the truth! Don't be too hasty
then in saying that the people cannot be brought to this new doctrine, but note
that long stride. One more as long completes the journey, from where negroes
are estimated as men to where they are estimated as mere brutes---as rightful
property!
That saying, “in the struggle between the white man and the
negro,” &c., which I know came from the same source as this policy---that
saying marks another step. There is a falsehood wrapped up in that statement. “In
the struggle between the white man and the negro” assumes that there is a
struggle, in which either the white man must enslave the negro or the negro
must enslave the white. There is no such struggle! It is merely an ingenious
falsehood, to degrade and brutalize the negro. Let each let the other alone,
and there is no struggle about it. If it was like two wrecked seamen on a
narrow plank, when each must push the other off or drown himself, I would push
the negro off or a white man either, but it is not; the plank is large enough
for both. [Applause.] This good earth is plenty broad enough for white man and
negro both, and there is no need of either pushing the other off. [Continued
applause.]
So that saying, “in the struggle between the negro and the
crocodile,” &c., is made up from the idea that down where the crocodile
inhabits a white man can't labor; it must be nothing else but crocodile
inhabits a white man can't labor; it must be nothing else but crocodile or
negro; if the negro does not the crocodile must possess the earth; [laughter;]
in that case he declares for the negro. The meaning of the whole is just this:
As a white man is to a negro, so is a negro to a crocodile; and as the negro
may rightfully treat the crocodile, so may the white man rightfully treat the
negro. This very dear phrase coined by its author, and so dear that he
deliberately repeats it in many speeches, has a tendency to still further
brutalize the negro, and to bring public opinion to the point of utter
indifference whether men so brutalized are enslaved or not. When that time
shall come, if ever, I think that policy to which I refer may prevail. But I
hope the good freemen of this country will never allow it to come, and until
then the policy can never be maintained.
Now consider the effect of this policy. We in the States
are not to care whether Freedom or Slavery gets the better, but the people in
the Territories may care. They are to decide, and they may think what they
please; it is a matter of dollars and cents! But are not the people of the
Territories detailed from the States? If this feeling of indifference---this
absence of moral sense about the question---prevails in the States, will it not
be carried into the Territories? Will not every man say, “I don't care, it is
nothing to me?” If any one comes that wants Slavery, must they not say, “I
don't care whether Freedom or Slavery be voted up or voted down?” It results at
last in naturalizing [nationalizing?] [2] the
institution of Slavery. Even if fairly carried out, that policy is just as
certain to naturalize [nationalize] Slavery as the doctrine of Jeff Davis
himself. These are only two roads to the same goal, and “popular sovereignty”
is just as sure and almost as short as the other. [Applause.]
What we want, and all we want, is to have with us the men
who think slavery wrong. But those who say they hate slavery, and are opposed
to it, but yet act with the Democratic party---where are they? Let us apply a
few tests. You say that you think slavery is wrong, but you denounce all
attempts to restrain it. Is there anything else that you think wrong, that you
are not willing to deal with as a wrong? Why are you so careful, so tender of
this one wrong and no other? [Laughter.] You will not let us do a single thing as if it was wrong; where is no place
where you will allow it to be even called wrong! We
must not call it wrong in the Free States, because it is not
there, and we must not call it wrong in the Slave States because it is there; we must not call it wrong in politics because
that is bringing morality into politics, and we must not call it wrong in the
pulpit because that is bringing politics into religion; we must not bring it
into the Tract Society or the other societies, because those are such
unsuitable places, and there is no single place, according to you, where this
wrong thing can properly be called wrong! [Continued laughter and applause.]
Perhaps you will plead that if the people of Slave States
should themselves set on foot an effort for emancipation, you would wish them
success, and bid them God-speed. Let us test that! In 1858, the emancipation
party of Missouri, with Frank Blair at their head, tried to get up a movement
for that purpose, and having started a party contested the State. Blair was
beaten, apparently if not truly, and when the news came to Connecticut, you,
who knew that Frank Blair was taking hold of this thing by the right end, and
doing the only thing that you say can properly be done to remove this
wrong---did you bow your heads in sorrow because of that defeat? Do you, any of
you, know one single Democrat that showed sorrow over that result? Not one! On
the contrary every man threw up his hat, and hallooed at the top of his lungs, “hooray
for Democracy!” [Great laughter and applause.]
Now, gentlemen, the Republicans desire
to place this great question of slavery on the very basis on which our fathers
placed it, and no other. [Applause.] It is
easy to demonstrate that “our Fathers, who framed this government under which
we live,” looked on Slavery as wrong, and so framed it and everything about it
as to square with the idea that it was wrong, so far as the necessities arising
from its existence permitted. In forming the Constitution they found the slave
trade existing; capital invested in it; fields depending upon it for labor, and
the whole system resting upon the importation of slave-labor. They therefore
did not prohibit the slave trade at once, but they gave the power to prohibit
it after twenty years. Why was this? What other foreign trade did they treat in
that way? Would they have done this if they had not thought slavery wrong?
Another thing was done by some of the same men who framed
the Constitution, and afterwards adopted as their own act by the first Congress
held under that Constitution, of which many of the framers were members; they
prohibited the spread of Slavery into Territories. Thus the same men, the
framers of the Constitution, cut off the supply and prohibited the spread of
Slavery, and both acts show conclusively that they considered that the thing
was wrong.
If additional proof is wanting it can be found in the
phraseology of the Constitution. When men are framing a supreme law and chart
of government, to secure blessings and prosperity to untold generations yet to
come, they use language as short and direct and plain as can be found, to
express their meaning. In all matters but this of Slavery the framers of the
Constitution used the very clearest, shortest, and most direct language. But
the Constitution alludes to Slavery three times without mentioning it once! The
language used becomes ambiguous, roundabout, and mystical. They speak of the “immigration
of persons,” and mean the importation of slaves, but do not say so. In
establishing a basis of representation they say “all other persons,” when they
mean to say slaves---why did they not use the shortest phrase? In providing for
the return of fugitives they say “persons held to service or labor.” If they
had said slaves it would have been plainer, and less liable to misconstruction.
Why didn't they do it. We cannot doubt that it was done on purpose. Only one
reason is possible, and that is supplied us by one of the framers of the
Constitution---and it is not possible for man to conceive of any other---they
expected and desired that the system would come to an end, and meant that when
it did, the Constitution should not show that there ever had been a slave in this
good free country of ours! [Great applause.]
I will dwell on that no longer. I see the signs of the
approaching triumph of the Republicans in the bearing of their political
adversaries. A great deal of their war with us now-a-days is mere bushwhacking.
[Laughter.] At the battle of Waterloo, when Napoleon's cavalry had charged
again and again upon the unbroken squares of British infantry, at last they
were giving up the attempt, and going off in disorder, when some of the
officers in mere vexation and complete despair fired their pistols at those
solid squares. The Democrats are in that sort of extreme desperation; it is
nothing else. [Laughter.] I will take up a few of these arguments.
There is “THE IRREPRESSIBLE CONFLICT.” [Applause.] How they
rail at Seward for that saying! They repeat it constantly; and although the
proof has been thrust under their noses again and again, that almost every good
man since the formation of our government has uttered that same sentiment, from
Gen. Washington, who “trusted that we should yet have a confederacy of Free
States,” with Jefferson, Jay, Monroe, down to the latest days, yet they refuse
to notice that at all, and persist in railing at Seward for saying it. Even
Roger A. Pryor, editor of the Richmond Enquirer, uttered the same sentiment in
almost the same language, and yet so little offence did it give the Democrats
that he was sent for to Washington to edit the States---the Douglas organ
there, while Douglas goes into hydrophobia and spasms of rage because Seward
dared to repeat it. [Great applause.] This is what I call bushwhacking, a sort
of argument that they must know any child can see through.
Another is JOHN BROWN! [Great laughter.] You stir up
insurrections, you invade the South! John Brown! Harper's Ferry! Why, John
Brown was not a Republican! You have never implicated a single Republican in
that Harper's Ferry enterprise. We tell you that if any member of the
Republican party is guilty in that matter, you know it or you do not know it.
If you do know it, you are inexcusable not to designate man and prove the fact.
If you do not know it, you are inexcusable to assert it, and especially to
persist in the assertion after you have tried and failed to make the proof. You
need not be told that persisting in a charge which one does not know to be true
is simply malicious slander. Some of you admit that no Republican designedly
aided or encouraged the Harper's Ferry affair; but still insist that our
doctrines and declarations necessarily lead to such results. We do not believe
it. We know we hold to no doctrines, and make no declarations, which were not
held to and made by our fathers who framed the Government under which we live,
and we cannot see how declarations that were patriotic when they made them are
villainous when we make them. You never dealt fairly by us in relation to that affair---and
I will say frankly that I know of nothing in your character that should lead us
to suppose that you would. You had just been soundly thrashed in elections in
several States, and others were soon to come. You rejoiced at the occasion, and
only were troubled that there were not three times as many killed in the
affair. You were in evident glee---there was no sorrow for the killed nor for
the peace of Virginia disturbed---you were rejoicing that by charging
Republicans with this thing you might get an advantage of us in New York, and
the other States. You pulled that string as tightly as you could, but your very
generous and worthy expectations were not quite fulfilled. [Laughter.] Each
Republican knew that the charge was a slander as to himself at least, and was
not inclined by it to cast his vote in your favor. It was mere bushwhacking,
because you had nothing else to do. You are still on that track, and I say, go
on! If you think you can slander a woman into loving you or a man into voting
for you, try it till you are satisfied! [Tremendous applause.]
Another specimen of this bushwhacking, that “shoe strike.”
[Laughter.] Now be it understood that I do not pretend to know all about the
matter. I am merely going to speculate a little about some of its phases. And
at the outset, I am glad to see that a system of labor
prevails in New England under which laborers CAN strike when they want
to [Cheers,] where they are not obliged to work under all circumstances, and
are not tied down and obliged to labor whether you pay them or not! [Cheers.] I
like the system which lets a man quit when he wants
to, and wish it might prevail everywhere. [Tremendous applause.] One of the
reasons why I am opposed to Slavery is just here. What is the true condition of
the laborer? I take it that it is best for all to leave each man free to
acquire property as fast as he can. Some will get wealthy. I don't believe in a
law to prevent a man from getting rich; it would do more harm than good. So
while we do not propose any war upon capital, we do wish to allow the humblest
man an equal chance to get rich with everybody else. [Applause.] When one
starts poor, as most do in the race of life, free society is such that he knows
he can better his condition; he knows that there is no fixed condition of
labor, for his whole life. I am not ashamed to confess that twenty five years
ago I was a hired laborer, mauling rails, at work on a flat-boat---just what
might happen to any poor man's son! [Applause.] I want every man to have the
chance---and I believe a black man is entitled to it---in which he can better his condition ---when he may look forward and
hope to be a hired laborer this year and the next, work for himself afterward,
and finally to hire men to work for him! That is the true system. Up here in
New England, you have a soil that scarcely sprouts black-eyed beans, and yet
where will you find wealthy men so wealthy, and poverty so rarely in extremity?
There is not another such place on earth! [Cheers.] I desire that if you get
too thick here, and find it hard to better your condition on this soil, you may
have a chance to strike and go somewhere else, where you may not be degraded,
nor have your family corrupted by forced rivalry with negro slaves. I want you
to have a clean bed, and no snakes in it! [Cheers.] Then you can better your
condition, and so it may go on and on in one ceaseless round so long as man
exists on the face of the earth! [Prolonged applause.]
Now, to come back to this shoe strike,---if, as the Senator
from Illinois asserts, this is caused by withdrawal of Southern votes, consider
briefly how you will meet the difficulty. You have done nothing, and have
protested that you have done nothing, to injure the South. And yet, to get back
the shoe trade, you must leave off doing something that you are now doing. What
is it? You must stop thinking slavery wrong! Let your institutions be wholly
changed; let your State Constitutions be subverted, glorify slavery, and so you
will get back the shoe trade---for what? You have brought owned labor with it
to compete with your own labor, to under work you, and to degrade you! Are you
ready to get back the trade on those terms?
But the statement is not correct. You have not lost that
trade; orders were never better than now! Senator Mason, a Democrat, comes into
the Senate in homespun, a proof that the dissolution of the Union has actually
begun! but orders are the same. Your factories have not struck work, neither
those where they make anything for coats, nor for pants, nor for shirts, nor
for ladies' dresses. Mr. Mason has not reached the manufacturers who ought to
have made him a coat and pants! To make his proof good for anything he should
have come into the Senate barefoot! (Great laughter.)
Another bushwhacking contrivance; simply that, nothing
else! I find a good many people who are very much concerned about the loss of
Southern trade. Now either these people are sincere or they are not.
(Laughter.) I will speculate a little about that. If they are sincere, and are
moved by any real danger of the loss of Southern trade, they will simply get
their names on the white list, [3] and
then, instead of persuading Republicans to do likewise, they will be glad to
keep you away! Don't you see they thus shut off competition? They would not be
whispering around to Republicans to come in and share the profits with them.
But if they are not sincere, and are merely trying to fool Republicans out of
their votes, they will grow very anxious about your
pecuniary prospects; they are afraid you are going to get broken up and ruined;
they did not care about Democratic votes---Oh no, no, no!
You must judge which class those belong to whom you meet; I leave it to you to
determine from the facts.
Let us notice some more of the stale charges against
Republicans. You say we are sectional. We deny it. That makes an issue; and the
burden of proof is upon you. You produce your proof; and what is it? Why, that
our party has no existence in your section---gets no votes in your section. The
fact is substantially true; but does it prove the issue? If it does, then in
case we should, without change of principle, begin to get votes in your
section, we should thereby cease to be sectional. You cannot escape this
conclusion; and yet, are you willing to abide by it? If you are, you will
probably soon find that we have ceased to be sectional, for we shall get votes
in your section this very year. [Applause.] The fact that we get no votes in
your section is a fact of your making, and not of ours. And if there be fault
in that fact, that fault is primarily yours, and remains so until you show that
we repel you by some wrong principle or practice. If we do repel you by any
wrong principle or practice, the fault is ours; but this brings you to where
you ought to have started---to a discussion of the right or wrong of our
principle. If our principle, put in practice, would wrong your section for the
benefit of ours, or for any other object, then our principle, and we with it,
are sectional, and are justly opposed and denounced as such. Meet us, then, on
the question of whether our principle, put in practice, would wrong your section;
and so meet it as if it were possible that something may be said on our side.
Do you accept the challenge? No? Then you really believe that the principle
which our fathers who framed the Government under which we live thought so
clearly right as to adopt it, and indorse it again and again, upon their
official oaths, is, in fact, so clearly wrong as to demand your condemnation
without a moment's consideration.
Some of you delight to flaunt in our faces the warning
against sectional parties given by Washington in his Farewell address. Less
than eight years before Washington gave that warning, he had, as President of
the United States, approved and signed an act of Congress, enforcing the
prohibition of Slavery in the northwestern Territory, which act embodied the
policy of Government upon that subject, up to and at the very moment he penned
that warning; and about one year after he penned it he wrote LaFayette that he
considered that prohibition a wise measure, expressing in the same connection
his hope that we should some time have a confederacy of Free States.
Bearing this in mind, and seeing that sectionalism has
since arisen upon this same subject, is that warning a weapon in your hands
against us, or in our hands against you? Could Washington himself speak, would
he cast the blame of that sectionalism upon us, who sustain his policy, or upon
you who repudiate it? We respect that warning of Washington, and we commend it
to you, together with his example pointing to the right application of it.
[Applause.]
But you say you are conservative---eminently
conservative---while we are revolutionary, destructive, or something of the
sort. What is conservatism? Is it not adherenece to the old and tried, against
the new and untried? We stick to, contend for, the identical old policy on the
point in controversy which was adopted by our fathers who framed the Government
under which we live; while you with one accord reject, and scout, and spit upon
that old policy, and insist upon substituting something new. True, you disagree
among yourselves as to what that substitute shall be. You have considerable
variety of new propositions and plans, but you are unanimous in rejecting and
denouncing the old policy of the fathers. Some of you are for reviving the
foreign slave-trade; some for a Congressional Slave-Code for the Territories;
some for Congress forbidding the Territories to prohibit Slavery within their
limits; some for maintaining Slavery in the Territories through the Judiciary;
some for the “gur-reat pur-rin-ciple” that “if one man would enslave another,
no third man should object,” fantastically called “Popular Sovereignty;” [great
laughter,] but never a man among you in favor of Federal prohibition of Slavery
in Federal Territories, according to the practice of our fathers who framed the
Government under which we live. Not one of all your various plans can show a
precedent or an advocate in the century within which our Government originated.
And yet you draw yourselves up and say “We are eminently conservative!” [Great
laughter.]
It is exceedingly desirable that all parts of this great
Confederacy shall be at peace, and in harmony, one with another. Let us
Republicans do our part to have it so. Even though much provoked, let us do
nothing through passion and ill temper. Even though the Southern people will
not so much as listen to us, let us calmly consider their demands, and yield to
them if, in our deliberate view of our duty, we possibly can. Judging by all
they say and do, and by the subject and nature of their controversy with us,
let us determine, if we can, what will satisfy them?
Will they be satisfied if the Territories be
unconditionally surrendered to them? We know they will not. In all their
present complaints against us, the Territories are scarcely mentioned.
Invasions and insurrections are the rage now. Will it satisfy them if, in the
future, we have nothing to do with invasions and insurrections? We know it will
not. We so know because we know we never had anything to do with invasions and
insurrections; and yet this total abstaining does not exempt us from the charge
and the denunciation.
The question recurs, what will satisfy them? Simply this:
we must not only let them alone, but we must, somehow, convince them that we do
let them alone. [Applause.] This, we know by experience, is no easy task. We
have been so trying to convince them, from the very beginning of our
organization, but with no success. In all our platforms and speeches, we have
constantly protested our purpose to let them alone; but this has had no
tendency to convince them. Alike unavailing to convince them is the fact that
they have never detected a man of us in any attempt to disturb them.
These natural and apparently adequate means all failing,
what will convince them? This, and this only; cease to call slavery wrong, and join them in calling it right.
And this must be done thoroughly---done in acts as
well as in words. Silence will not be tolerated---we
must place ourselves avowedly with them. Douglas's new sedition law must be
enacted and enforced, suppressing all delcarations that Slavery is wrong,
whether made in politics, in presses, in pulpits, or in private. We must arrest
and return their fugitive slaves with greedy pleasure. We must pull down our
Free State Constitutions. The whole atmosphere must be disinfected of all taint
of opposition to Slavery, before they will cease to believe that all their
troubles proceed from us. So long as we call Slavery wrong, whenever a slave
runs away they will overlook the obvious fact that he ran because he was
oppressed, and declare he was stolen off. Whenever a master cuts his slaves
with the lash, and they cry out under it, he will overlook the obvious fact
that the negroes cry out because they are hurt, and insist that they were put up to it by some rascally abolitionist. [Great
laughter.]
I am quite aware that they do not state their case
precisely in this way. Most of them would probably say to us, “Let us alone, do
nothing to us, and say what you please about Slavery.” But we do let them
alone---have never disturbed them---so that, after all, it is what we say,
which dissatisfies them. They will continue to accuse us of doing, until we
cease saying.
I am also aware they have not, as yet, in terms, demanded
the overthrow of our Free State Constitutions. Yet those Constitutions declare
the wrong of Slavery, with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings
against it; and when all these other sayings shall have been silenced, the
overthrow of these Constitutions will be demanded, and nothing be left to
resist the demand. It is nothing to the contrary, that they do not demand the
whole of this just now. Demanding what they do, and for the reason they do,
they can voluntarily stop nowhere short of this consummation. Holding as they
do, that Slavery is morally right, and socially elevating, they cannot cease to
demand a full national recognition of it, as a legal right, and a social
blessing.
Nor can we justifiably withhold this, on any ground save
our conviction that Slavery is wrong. If Slavery is right, all words, acts,
laws, and Constitutions against it, are themselves wrong, and should be
silenced, and swept away. If it is right, we cannot justly object to its
nationality---its universality; if it is wrong, they cannot justly insist upon
its extension---its enlargement. All they ask, we could as readily grant, if
they thought it wrong. Their thinking it right, and our thinking it wrong, is
the precise fact upon which depends the whole controversy. Thinking it right as
they do, they are not to blame for desiring its full recognition, as being
right; but, thinking it wrong, as we do, can we yield to them? Can we cast our
votes with their view, and against our own? In view of our moral, social, and
political responsibilities, can we do this?
Wrong as we think Slavery is, we can yet afford to let it
alone where it is, because that much is due to the necessity arising from its
actual presence in the nation; but can we, while our votes will prevent it,
allow it to spread into the National Territories, and to overrun us here in
these Free States?
If our sense of duty forbids this, then let us stand by our
duty, fearlessly and effectively. Let us be diverted by none of those
sophistical contrivances wherewith we are so industriously plied and
belabored---contrivances such as groping for some middle ground between the
right and the wrong, vain as the search for a man who should be neither a
living man nor a dead man---such as a policy of ``don't care'' on a question
about which all true men do care---such as Union appeals beseeching true Union
men to yield to Disunionists, reversing the divine rule, and calling, not the
sinners, but the righteous to repentance---such as invocations of Washington,
imploring men to unsay what Washington did.
Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false
accusations against us, nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the
Government, nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes
might; and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty, as we
understand it.
Annotation
[1] New Haven Daily Palladium, March 7, 1860. The editors have corrected
a few typographical errors in the remarkably well printed Palladium
text. Brackets are in the source unless otherwise noted. Newspaper comment on
the speeches at Meriden, Connecticut (March 7), Woonsocket, Rhode Island (March
8), Norwich and Bridgeport, Connecticut (March 9 and 10), indicate that Lincoln
repeated this speech substantially at each place, and the only complete report
of any of them---the speech at Norwich printed in the Norwich Weekly Courier, March 15---is admittedly a copy of the Palladium's report of the New Haven speech.
[2] Brackets not in the source. The Palladium text is possible, but Lincoln probably said
``nationalizing.''
[3] Lincoln refers to a movement on the part of
certain business interests to take advantage of the Southern boycott of New
England manufactures by preparing a list of ``white'' (Democrat) rather than
``black'' (Republican) manufacturing concerns for the guidance of Southern
purchasers.
Source: Basler, Collected
Works, Vol. IV, pp. 13-30.
[Downloaded 4/26/2015 from http://quod.lib.umich.edu/l/lincoln/.]