BREAKFAST IN LIVERPOOL--APRIL
11.
THE REV. DR. M'NEILE, who had
been requested by the respected host to express to Mrs. Stowe
the hearty congratulations of the first meeting of friends she had
seen in England, thus addressed her: "Mrs. Stowe: I have been
requested by those kind friends under whose hospitable roof we are
assembled to give some expression to the sincere and cordial
welcome with which, we greet your arrival in this country. I find
real difficulty in making this attempt, not from want of matter,
nor from want of feeling, but because it is not in the power of any
language I can command, to give adequate expression to the
affectionate enthusiasm which pervades all ranks of our community,
and which is truly characteristic of the humanity and the
Christianity of Great Britain. We welcome Mrs. Stowe as the honored
instrument of that noble impulse which public opinion and public
feeling throughout Christendom have received against the
demoralizing and degrading system of human slavery. That system is
still, unhappily, identified in the minds of many with the supposed
material interests of society, and even with the well being of the
slaves themselves; but the plausible arguments and ingenious
sophistries by which it has been defended shrink with shame from
the facts without exaggeration, the principles without compromise,
the exposures without indelicacy, and the irrepressible glow of
hearty feeling--O, how true to nature!-- which characterize Mrs.
Stowe's immortal book. Yet I feel assured that the effect produced
by Uncle Tom's Cabin is not mainly or chiefly to be traced to
the interest of the narrative, however captivating, nor to the
exposures of the slave system, however withering: these would,
indeed, be sufficient to produce a good effect; but this book
contains more and better than even these; it contains what will
never be lost sight of--the genuine application to the several
branches of the subject of the sacred word of God. By no part of
this wonderful work has my own mind been so permanently impressed
as by the thorough legitimacy of the application of Scripture,--no
wresting, no mere verbal adaptation, but in every instance the
passage cited is made to illustrate something in the narrative,
or in the development of character, in strictest accordance with
the design of the passage in its original sacred context. We
welcome Mrs. Stowe, then, as an honored fellow-laborer in the
highest and best of causes; and I am much mistaken if this
tone of welcome be not by far the most congenial to her own
feelings. We unaffectedly sympathize with much which she must feel,
and, as a lady, more peculiarly feel, in passing through that
ordeal of gratulation which is sure to attend her steps in every
part of our country; and I am persuaded that we cannot manifest our
gratitude for her past services in any way more acceptable to
herself than by earnest prayer on her behalf that she may be
kept in the simplicity of Christ, enjoying in her daily
experience the tender consolations of the Divine Spirit, and in the
midst of the most flattering commendations saying
and feeling, in the instincts of
a renewed heart, 'Not unto me, O Lord, not unto me, but unto thy
name be the praise, for thy mercy, and for thy truth's
sake.'"
PROFESSOR STOWE then rose, and
said, "If we are silent, it is not because we do not feel, but
because we feel more than we can express. When that book was
written, we had no hope except in God. We had no expectation of
reward save in the prayers of the poor. The surprising enthusiasm
which has been excited by the book all over Christendom is an
indication that God has a work to be done in the cause of
emancipation. The present aspect of things in the United States is
discouraging. Every change in society, every financial revolution,
every political and ecclesiastical movement, seems to pass and
leave the African race without help. Our only resource is
prayer. God surely cannot will that the unhappy condition of this
portion of his children should continue forever. There are some
indications of a movement in the southern mind. A leading southern
paper lately declared editorially that slavery is either right or
wrong: if it is wrong, it is to be abandoned: if it is right, it
must be defended. The Southern Press, a paper established to defend
the slavery interest at the seat of government, has proposed that
the worst features of the system, such as the separation of
families, should be abandoned. But it is evident that with that
restriction the system could not exist. For instance, a man
wants to buy a cook; but she has a husband and seven children. Now,
is he to buy a man and seven children, for whom he has no
use, for the sake of having a cook? Nothing on the present
occasion has been so grateful to our feelings as the reference
made by Dr. M'Neile to the Christian character of the book.
Incredible as it may seem to those who are without prejudice, it is
nevertheless a fact that this book was condemned by some
religious newspapers in the United States as anti-Christian, and
its author associated with infidels and disorganizers; and had not
it been for the decided expression of the mind of English
Christians, and of Christendom itself, on this point, there is
reason to fear that the proslavery power of the United States would
have succeeded in putting the book under foot. Therefore it is
peculiarly gratifying that so full an indorsement has been given
the work, in this respect, by eminent Christians of the highest
character in Europe; for, however some in the United States may
affect to despise what is said by the wise and good of this kingdom
and the Christian world, they do feel it, and feel it intensely."
In answer to an inquiry by Dr. M'Neile as to the mode in which
southern Christians defended the institution, Dr. Stowe remarked
that "a great change had taken place in that respect during the
last thirty years. Formerly all Christians united in condemning the
system; but of late some have begun to defend it on scriptural
grounds. The Rev. Mr. Smylie, of Mississippi, wrote a pamphlet in
the defensive; and Professor Thornwell, of South Carolina, has
published the most candid and able statement of that argument which
has been given. Their main reliance is on the system of Mosaic
servitude, wholly unlike though it was to the American system of
slavery. As to what this American system of slavery is, the best
documents for
enlightening the minds of
British Christians are the commercial newspapers of the
slaveholding states. There you see slavery as it is, and certainly
without any exaggeration. Read the advertisements for the sale of
slaves and for the apprehension of fugitives, the descriptions of
the persons of slaves, of dogs for hunting slaves, &c., and you
see how the whole matter as viewed by the southern mind. Say what
they will about it, practically they generally regard the
separation of families no more than the separation of cattle, and
the slaves as so much property, and nothing else. Their own papers
show that the pictures of the internal slave trade given in Uncle
Tom, so far from being overdrawn, fall even below the truth. Go on,
then, in forming and expressing your views on this subject. In
laboring for the overthrow of American slavery you are pursuing a
course of Christian duty as legitimate as in laboring to suppress
the suttees of India, the cannibalism of the Fejee Islands, and
other barbarities of heathenism, of which human slavery is but a
relic. These evils can be finally removed by the benign influence
of the love of Christ, and no other power is competent to the
work."
PUBLIC MEETING IN
LIVERPOOL--APRIL 13.
The Chairman, (A. HODGSON, Esq.,)
in opening the proceedings, thus addressed Mrs. Beecher Stowe: "The
modesty of our English ladies, which, like your own, shrinks
instinctively from unnecessary publicity, has devolved on me, as
one of the trustees of the Liverpool Association, the gratifying
office of tendering to you, at then request, a slight testimonial
of their gratitude and respect. We had hoped almost to the last
moment that Mrs. Cropper would have represented, on this day,
the ladies with whom she has cooperated, and among whom she has
taken a distinguished lead in the great work which you had the
honor and the happiness to originate. But she has felt with you
that the path most grateful and most congenial to female exertion,
even in its widest and most elevated range, is still a retired and
a shady path; and you have taught us that the voice which most
effectually kindles enthusiasm in millions is the still small
voice which comes forth from the sanctuary of a woman's breast,
and from the retirement of a woman's closet--the simple but
unequivocal expression of her unfaltering faith, and the evidence
of her generous and unshrinking self-devotion. In the same
spirit, and as deeply impressed with the retired character of
female exertion, the ladies who have so warmly greeted your arrival
in this country have still felt it entirely consistent with the
most sensitive delicacy to make a public response to your appeal,
and to hail with acclamation your thrilling protest against those
outrages on our common nature which circumstances have forced on
your observation. They engage in no political discussion, they
embark in no public controversy; but when an intrepid sister
appeals to the instincts of women of every color and of every clime
against a system which sanctions the violation of the fondest
affections and the disruption of the tenderest ties; which snatches
the clinging wife from the agonized husband, and the child from the
breast of its fainting mother; which leaves the young and innocent
female a helpless and almost inevitable victim of a
licentiousness controlled by no law and checked by no public
opinion,--it is surely as feminine as it is Christian to sympathize
with her in her perilous task, and to rejoice that she has shed
such a vivid light on enormities which can exist only while unknown
or unbelieved. We acknowledge with regret and shame that that fatal
system was introduced into America by Great Britain; but having
in our colonies returned from our devious paths, we may
without presumption, in the spirit of friendly suggestion, implore
our honored transatlantic friends to do the same. The ladies of
Great Britain have been admonished by their fair sisters in
America, (and I am sure they are bound to take the admonition in
good part,) that there are social evils in our own country
demanding our special vigilance and care. This is most true; but it
is also true that the deepest sympathies and most strenuous efforts
are directed, in the first instance, to the evils which exist
among ourselves, and that the rays of
benevolence which flash across
the Atlantic are often but the indication of the intensity of the
bright flame which is shedding light and heat on all in its
immediate vicinity. I believe this is the case with most of those
who have taken a prominent part in this great movement. I am sure
it is preeminently the case with respect to many of those by whom
you are surrounded; and I hardly know a more miserable fallacy, by
which sensible men allow themselves to be deluded, than that
which assumes that every emotion of sympathy which is kindled by
objects abroad is abstracted from our sympathies at home. All
experience points to a directly opposite conclusion; and surely the
divine command, 'to go into all the world, and preach the gospel to
every creature,' should put to shame and silence the specious but
transparent selfishness which would contract the limits of
human sympathy, and veil itself under the garb of superior
sagacity. But I must not detain you by any further observations.
Allow me, in the name of the associated ladies, to present you
with this small memorial of great regard, and to tender to you
their and my best wishes for your health and happiness while you
are sojourning among us, for the blessing of God on your children
during your absence, and for your safe return to your native
country when your mission shall be accomplished. I have just been
requested to state the following particulars: In December last, a
few ladies met in this place to consider the best plan of
obtaining signatures in Liverpool to an address to the women of
America on the subject of negro slavery, in substance coinciding
with the one so nobly proposed and carried forward by Lord
Shaftesbury. At this meeting it was suggested that it would be a
sincere gratification to many if some testimonial could be
presented to Mrs. Stowe which would indicate the sense, almost
universally entertained, that she had been the instrument in the
hands of God of arousing the slumbering sympathies of this country
in behalf of the suffering slave. It was felt desirable to render
the expression of such a feeling as general as possible; and to
effect this it was resolved that a subscription should be set on
foot, consisting of contributions of one penny and upwards, with a
view to raise a testimonial, to be presented to Mrs. Stowe by the
ladies of Liverpool, as an expression of their grateful
appreciation of her valuable services in the cause of the negro,
and as a token of admiration for the genius and of high esteem for
the philanthropy and Christian feeling which animate her great
work, Uncle Tom's Cabin. It ought, perhaps, to be added, that some
friends, not residents of Liverpool, have united in this
tribute.
As many of the ladies connected
with the effort to obtain signatures to the address may not be
aware of the whole number appended, they may be interested in
knowing that they amounted in all to twenty-one thousand nine
hundred and fifty-three. Of these, twenty thousand nine hundred and
thirty-six were obtained by ladies in Liverpool, from their friends
either in this neighborhood or at a distance; and one thousand and
seventeen were sent to the committee in London from other parts, by
those who preferred our form of address. The total number of
signatures from all parts of the kingdom to Lord Shaftesbury's
address was upwards of five hundred thousand."
PROFESSOR STOWE then said, "On
behalf of Mrs. Stowe I will read from her pen the response to
your generous offering: 'It is impossible for me to express the
feelings of my heart at the kind and generous manner in which I
have been received upon English shores. Just when I had begun to
realize that a whole wide ocean lay between me and all that is
dearest to me, I found most unexpectedly a home and friends waiting
to receive me here. I have had not an hour in which to know the
heart of a stranger. I have been made to feel at home since the
first moment of landing, and wherever I have looked I have seen
only the faces of friends. It is with deep feeling that I have
found myself on ground that has been consecrated and made holy by
the prayers and efforts of those who first commenced the struggle
for that sacred cause which has proved so successful in England,
and which I have a solemn assurance will yet be successful in my
own country. It is a touching thought that here so many have given
all that they have, and are, in behalf of oppressed humanity. It is
touching to remember that one of the noblest men which England has
ever produced now lies stricken under the heavy hand of disease,
through a last labor of love in this cause. May God grant us all to
feel that nothing is too dear or precious to be given in a work for
which such men have lived, and labored, and suffered. No great
good is ever wrought out for the human race without the
suffering of great hearts. They who would serve their fellow-men
are ever reminded that the Captain of their salvation was made
perfect through suffering. I gratefully accept the offering
confided to my care, and trust it may be so employed that the
blessing of many "who are ready to perish" will return upon your
heads. Let me ask those--those fathers and mothers in Israel--who
have lived and prayed many years for this cause, that as they
prayed for their own country in the hour of her struggle, so they
will pray now for ours. Love and prayer can hurt no one, can offend
no one, and prayer is a real power. If the hearts of all the real
Christians of England are poured out in prayer, it will be felt
through the heart of the whole American church. Let us all look
upward, from our own feebleness and darkness, to Him of whom it
is said, "He shall not fail nor be discouraged till he have set
judgment in the earth." To him, the only wise God our Saviour, be
glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and ever.
Amen.'--These are the words, my friends, which Mrs. Stowe has
written, and I cannot forbear to add a few words of my own. It was
our intention, as the invitation to visit Great Britain came from
Glasgow, to make our first landing there. But it was ordered by
Providence that we should land here; and surely there is no place
in the kingdom where a landing could be more appropriate, and where
the reception could have been more cordial. [Hear, hear!] It was
wholly unexpected by us, I can assure you. We know that there were
friendly hearts here, for we had received abundant testimonials to
that effect from letters which had come to us across the
Atlantic--letters wholly unexpected, and which filled our souls
with surprise; but we had no thought that there was such a feeling
throughout England, and we scarcely know how to conduct
ourselves
under it, for we are not
accustomed to this kind of receptions. In our own country,
unhappily, we are very much divided, and the preponderance of
feeling expressed is in the other direction, entirely in
opposition, and not in favor. [Hear, hear!] We knew that this city
had been the scene of some of the greatest, most disinterested, and
most powerful efforts in behalf of emancipation. The name of
Clarkson was indissolubly associated with this place, for here he
came to make his investigations, and here he was in danger of
his life, and here he was protected by friends who stood by him
through the whole struggle. The names of Cropper, and of Stephen,
and of many others in this city, were very familiar to us-
-[Hear, hear!]--and it was in
connection with this city that we received what to our feelings was
a most effective testimonial, an unexpected letter from Lord
Denman, whom we have always venerated. When I was in England in
1836, there were no two persons whom I more desired to see than the
Duke of Wellington and Lord Denman; and soon I sought admission to
the House of Lords, where I had the pleasure both of seeing and
hearing England's great captain; and I found my way to the Court
of Queen's Bench, where I had the pleasure of seeing and hearing
England's great judge. But how unexpected was all this to us!
When that book was written, in sorrow, and in sadness, and
obscurity, and with the heart almost broken in the view of the
sufferings which it described, and the still greater sufferings
which it dared not describe, there was no expectation of any thing
but the prayers of the sufferers and the blessing of God, who has
said that the seed which is buried in the earth shall spring up in
his own good time; and though it may be long buried, it will still
at length come forth and bear fruit. We never could believe
that slavery in our land would be a perpetual curse; but we felt,
and felt deeply, that there must be a terrible struggle before we
could be delivered from it, and that there must be suffering and
martyrdom in this cause, as in every other great cause; for a
struggle of eighteen years had taught us its strength. And,
under God, we rely very much on the Christian public of Great
Britain; for every expression of feeling from the wise and good of
this land, with whatever petulance it may be met by some, goes to
the heart of the American people. [Hear, hear!] You must not judge
of the American people by the expressions which have come across
the Atlantic in reference to the subject. Nine tenths of the
American people, I think, are, in opinion at least, with you on
this great subject; [Hear, hear!] but there is a tremendous
pressure brought to bear upon all who are in favor of
emancipation. The whole political power, the whole money power,
almost the whole ecclesiastical power is wielded in defence of
slavery, protecting it from all aggression; and it is as much as a
man's reputation is worth to utter a syllable boldly and openly on
the other side. Let me say to the ladies who have been active in
getting up the address on the subject of slavery, that you have
been doing a great and glorious work, and a work most appropriate
for you to do; for in slavery it is woman that suffers most
intensely, and the suffering woman has a claim upon the sympathy of
her sisters in other lands.
This address will produce a
powerful impression throughout the country. There
are ladies already of the highest
character in the nation pondering how they shall make a suitable
response, and what they shall do in reference to it that will be
acceptable to the ladies of the United Kingdom, or will be
profitable to the slave; and in due season you will see that the
hearts of American women are alive to this matter, as well as the
hearts of the women of this country. [Hear, hear!] Such was the
mighty influence brought to bear upon every thing that threatened
slavery, that had it not been for the decided expression on this
side of the Atlantic in reference to the work which has exerted,
under God, so much influence, there is every reason to fear that
it would have been crushed and put under foot, as many other
efforts for the overthrow of slavery have been in the United
States.
But it is impossible; the
unanimous voice of Christendom prohibits it; and it shows that
God has a work to accomplish, and that he has just commenced it.
There are social evils in England. Undoubtedly there are; but the
difference between the social evils in England and this great evil
of slavery in the United States is just here: In England, the power
of the government and the power of Christian sympathy are exerted
for the removal of those evils. Look at the committees of inquiry
in Parliament, look at the amount of information collected with
regard to the suffering poor in their reports, and see how ready
the government of Great Britain is to enter into those inquiries,
and to remove those evils. Look at the benevolent institutions of
the United Kingdom, and see how active all these are in
administering relief; and then see the condition of slavery in the
United States, where the whole power of the government is used in
the contrary direction, where every influence is brought to bear to
prevent any mitigation of the evil, and where every voice that is
lifted to plead for a mitigation is drowned in vituperation and
abuse from those who are determined that the evil shall not be
mitigated. This is the difference: England repents and
reforms.
America refuses to repent and
reform. It is said, 'Let each country take care of itself, and
let the ladies of England attend to their own business.' Now I have
always found that those who labor at home are those who labor
abroad; [Hear, hear!] and those who say, 'Let us do the work at
home,' are those who do no work of good either at home or abroad.
[Hear, hear!] It was just so when the great missionary effort came
up in the United States. They said, 'We have a great territory
here. Let us send missionaries to our own territories. Why should
we send missionaries across the ocean?' But those who sent
missionaries across the ocean were those who sent missionaries in
the United States; and those who did not send missionaries across
the ocean were those who sent missionaries nowhere. [Hear,
hear!] They who say, 'Charity begins at home,' are generally those
who have no charity; and when I see a lady whose name is signed to
this address, I am sure to find a lady who is exercising her
benevolence at home. Let me thank you for all the interest you have
manifested and for all the kindness which we have received at your
hands, which we shall ever remember, both with gratitude to you and
to God our Father."
The REV. C.M. BIRRELL afterwards
made a few remarks in proposing a vote of thanks to the ladies who
had contributed the testimonial which had been presented to the
distinguished writer of Uncle Tom's Cabin. He said it was most
delightful to hear of the great good which that remarkable volume
had done, and, he humbly believed, by God's special inspiration
and guidance, was doing, in the United States of America. It was
not confined to the United States of America. The volume was going
forth over the whole earth, and great good was resulting, directly
and indirectly, by God's providence, from it. He was told a few
days ago, by a gentleman fully conversant with the facts, that an
edition of Uncle Tom, circulated in Belgium, had created an earnest
desire on the part of the people to read the Bible, so frequently
quoted in that beautiful work, and that in consequence of it a
great run had been made upon the Bible Society's depositories
in that kingdom. [Hear, hear!] The priests of the church of
Rome, true to their instinct, in endeavoring to maintain the
position which they could not otherwise hold, had published
another edition, from which, they had entirely excluded all
reference to the word of God. [Hear, hear!] He had been also told
that at St. Petersburg an edition of Uncle Tom had been translated
into the Russian tongue, and that it was being distributed, by
command of the emperor, throughout the whole of that vast
empire. It was true that the circulation of the work there did not
spring from a special desire on the part of the emperor to give
liberty to the people of Russia, but because he wished to create a
third power in the empire, to act upon the nobles; he wished to
cause them to set free their serfs, in order that a third
power might be created in the empire to serve as a check upon them.
But whatever was the cause, let us thank God, the Author of all
gifts, for what is done.
Sir GEORGE STEPHEN seconded the
motion of thanks to the ladies, observing that he had peculiar
reasons for doing so. He supposed that he was one of the oldest
laborers in this cause. Thirty years ago he found that the work of
one lady was equal to that of fifty men; and now we had the work of
one lady which was equal to that of all the male sex.
[Applause.]
PUBLIC MEETING IN GLASGOW--APRIL
15.
THE REV. DR. WARDLAW was
introduced by the chairman, and spoke as follows:--
"The members of the Glasgow
Ladies' New Antislavery Association and the citizens of
Glasgow, now assembled, hail with no ordinary satisfaction, and
with becoming gratitude to a kindly protecting Providence, the safe
arrival amongst them of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. They feel
obliged by her accepting, with so much promptitude and cordiality,
the invitation addressed to her--an invitation intended to express
the favor they bore to her, and the honor in which they held her,
as the eminently gifted authoress of Uncle Tom's Cabin--a work of
humble name, but of high excellence and world-wide celebrity; a
work the felicity of whose conception is more than equalled by the
admirable tact of its execution, and the Christian benevolence of
its design, by its exquisite adaptation to its accomplishment;
distinguished by the singular variety and consistent
discrimination of its characters; by the purity of its
religious and moral principles; by its racy humor, and its
touching pathos, and its effectively powerful appeals to the
judgment, the conscience, and the heart; a work, indeed, of whose
sterling worth the earnest test is to be found in the fact of
its having so universally touched and stirred the bosom of our
common humanity, in all classes of society, that its humble name
has become 'a household word,' from the palace to the cottage, and
of the extent of its circulation having been unprecedented in
the history of the literature of this or of any other age or
country. They would, at the same time, include in their hearty
welcome the Rev.
C.E. Stowe, Professor of
Theological Literature in the Andover Theological Seminary,
Massachusetts, whose eminent qualifications, as a classical
scholar, a man of general literature, and a theologian, have
recently placed him in a highly honorable and responsible position,
and who, on the subject of slavery, holds the same principles and
breathes the same spirit of freedom with his accomplished partner;
and, along with them too, another member of the same singularly
talented family with herself. They delight to think of the amount
of good to the cause of emancipation and universal liberty which
her Cabin has already done, and to anticipate the still larger
amount it is yet destined to do, now that the Key to the Cabin has
triumphantly shown it to be no fiction; and in whatever further
efforts she may be honored of Heaven to make in the same noble
cause, they desire, unitedly and heartily, to cheer her on, and bid
her 'God speed.' I cannot but feel myself highly honored in having
been requested to move this resolution. In doing so, I have the
happiness of introducing to a Glasgow audience a lady from the
transatlantic continent, the extraordinary production of whose pen,
referred to in the resolution, had made her name familiar in our
country and
through Europe, ere she appeared
in person among us. My judgment and my heart alike fully
respond to every thing said in the resolution respecting that
inimitable work. We are accustomed to make a distinction between
works of nature and works of art, but in a sense which, all will
readily understand, this is preeminently both. As a work of art, it
bears upon it, throughout, the stamp of original and varied genius.
And yet, throughout, it equally bears the impress of nature--of
human nature--in its worst and its best, and all its
intermediate phases. The man who has read that little volume
without laughing and crying alternately--without the meltings of
pity, the thrillings of horror, and the kindlings of
indignation--would supply a far better argument for a distinct race
than a negro. [Loud laughter and cheers.] He must have a humanity
peculiarly his own. And he who can read it without the breathings
of devotion must, if he calls himself a Christian, have a
Christianity as unique and questionable as his humanity.
[Cheering.] Never did work produce such a sensation. Among us that
sensation has happily been all of one kind. It has been the
stirring of universal sympathy and unbounded admiration. Not so in
the country of its own and of its gifted authoress's birth. There,
the ferment has been among the friends as well as the foes of
slavery. Among the former all is rage. Among the latter, while
there are some--we trust not a few--who take the same high and
noble position with the talented authoress, there are too many, we
fear, who are frightened by this uncompromising boldness, and who
are drawn back rather than drawn forward by it--who 'halt between
two opinions,' and are the advocates of medium principles and
medium measures. By many among ourselves, the excitement which
has been stirred is contemplated with apprehension. They regard it
as unfavorable to emancipation, and likely to retard rather than to
advance its progress. I must confess myself of a somewhat
different mind. That the cause may be obstructed by it for a
time, may be true. But it will work well in the long run. Good will
ultimately come out of it. Stir is better than stagnancy.
Irritation is better than apathy. Whence does it arise? From two
sources. The conscience and the honor of the country have both been
touched. Conscience winces under the touch. The provocation shows
it to be ill at ease. The wound is painful, and it naturally
awakens fretfulness and resentment. But by and by the angry
excitement will subside, and the salutary conviction will remain
and operate. The national honor, too, has been touched. Our friends
across the wave boast, and with good reason, of the free
principles of their constitution. They glory in their liberty. But
they cannot fail to feel the inconsistency of their position, and
the exposure of it to the world kindles on the cheek the blush of
shame and the reddening fire of displeasure. Now, the blush has
aright source. It is the blush of patriotism--it is for their
country. But there is anger with the shame; for few things are more
galling than to feel that to be wrong which you are unable to
justify, and which, yet, you are not prepared to relinquish. [Loud
applause.] On the whole, I cannot but regard the agitation which
has been produced as an auspicious, rather than a discouraging
omen. It was when the waters of the pool
were troubled that their healing
virtue was imparted. Let us then hope that the troubling of the
waters by this ministering angel of mercy may impregnate them with
a similar sanative influence, [the reverend doctor here pointed
towards Mrs. Stowe, while the audience burst out with enthusiastic
acclamations and waving of handkerchiefs,] and thus ultimately
contribute to the healing of the ghastly wounds of the chain and
the lash, and to the setting of the crushed and bowed down erect in
the soundness and dignity of their true manhood. [Loud cheering.]
Sorry we are that Mrs. Stowe should appear amongst us in a state
of broken health and physical exhaustion. No one who looks at the
Cabin and at the Key, and who knows aught of the effect of severe
mental labor on the bodily frame, will marvel at this. We fondly
trust, and earnestly pray, that her temporary sojourn among us may,
by the divine blessing, recruit her strength, and contribute to the
prolongation of a life so promising of benefit to suffering
humanity, and to the glory of God. [Cheers.] Meanwhile she enjoys
the happy consciousness that she is suffering in a good cause. A
better there could not be. It is one which involves the well being,
corporeal and mental, physical and spiritual, temporal and eternal,
of degraded, plundered, oppressed, darkened, brutalized, perishing
millions. And, while we delight in furnishing her for a time with a
peaceful retreat from 'the wrath of men,' from the resentment of
those who, did they but rightly know their own interests, would
have smiled upon her, and blessed her. We trust she enjoys, and
ever will enjoy, quietness and assurance of an infinitely higher
order--the divine Master, whom she serves and seeks to honor;
proving to her, in the terms of his own promise, 'a refuge from the
storm, and a covert from the tempest.' [Enthusiastic cheering.] It
may sound strangely, that, when assembled for the very purpose
of denouncing 'property in man,' we should be putting in our claims
for a share of property in woman. So, however, it is. We claim Mrs.
Stowe as ours-
-[renewed, cheers]--not ours
only, but still ours. She is British and European property as well
as American. She is the property of the whole world of literature
and the whole world of humanity. [Cheers.] Should our transatlantic
friends repudiate the property, they may transfer their
share--[laughter and cheers]-- most gladly will we accept the
transference."
PROFESSOR STOWE, on rising to
reply, was greeted with the most enthusiastic applause. He said
that he appeared in the name of Mrs. Stowe, and in his own name,
for the purpose of cordially thanking the people of Glasgow for the
reception that had been given to them. But he could not find
words to do it. Was it true that all this affectionate interest
was merited? [Cheers.] He could not imagine any book capable of
exciting such expressions of attachment; indeed he was inclined to
believe it had not been written at all--he "'spected it grew."
[Tremendous cheers.] Under the oppression of the fugitive slave law
the book had sprung from the soil ready made. He regretted
exceedingly that in consequence of the state of Mrs. Stowe's
health, and in consequence of the great pressure of engagements on
himself, their stay in this country would be necessarily
short.
But he hoped they would accept of
the expression of thanks they offered, and their apology for
not being in a condition to meet their kindness as they would
desire. When they were about to set out from Andover, a friend
of theirs expressed his astonishment that they should enter upon
such a journey in the delicate state of Mrs. Stowe's health. The
Scotch people, he doubted not, would be kind to them--they would
kill them with kindness; and he feared it would be so. It was from
Glasgow the idea of the invitation they had received had
originated; and well might it originate in that city, for when had
been the time that Glasgow was not in earnest on the subject of
freedom? They had had hard struggles for liberty, and they had been
successful, and the people in the United States were now struggling
for the same privilege. But they labored under circumstances
greatly different from those in Great Britain. Scotland had ever
been distinguished for its love of freedom. [Great applause.] The
religious denominations in the United States--to a great extent,
give few and feeble expressions of disapprobation against the
system of slavery. Two denominations had never been silent--the Old
Scotch Seceders, or Covenanters, and the disciples of William
Penn--not one of their number, in the United States, owns a
slave. Not one can own a slave without being ejected from the
society.[A] In fact, the general feeling was against slavery; but
to avoid trouble, the people hesitate to give publicity to their
feelings. Were this done, slavery would soon come to an end. Great
sacrifices are sometimes made by slaveholders to get rid of
slavery. He went once to preach in the State of Ohio. He found
there a little log house. Inside was a delicate woman, feeble and
with white hands. She seemed wholly unaccustomed to work. Her
husband had the same appearance of delicacy. They were very
poor. How had they come into that state? They belonged to a
slave State, where they had formerly possessed a little family
of slaves. They had felt slavery to be wrong.
They set them free, and with the
remainder of their little property tried to get their living by
farming; but like many similar cases, it had been one of martyrdom.
The Professor then proceeded to make some very practical remarks on
the character of the fugitive slave law, after which he said that
the prosperity of Great Britain in a great measure resulted from
the products of slave labor. American cotton was the chief support
of the system. We must, both in Britain and America, get free-
grown cotton, or slavery will not, at least for a long time to
come, be abolished.
What he would impress on the
minds of Christians was unity in this great work. Let slaveholders
be ever so much opposed to each other on other topics, they were
unanimous in their endeavors to support slavery. But let the
prayers of all Christians and the efforts of all Christians be
united; and the system of oppression would speedily be destroyed
forever.
PUBLIC MEETING IN
EDINBURGH--APRIL 20.
THE LORD PROVOST rose, and stated
that a number of letters of apology had been received from parties
who had been invited to take part in the meeting, but who had been
unable to attend. Among these he might mention Professor Blackie,
the Rev. Mr. Gilfillan, of Dundee, Rev. J. Begg, D.D., the Earl of
Buchan, Dr. Candlish, and Sir W. Gibson Craig, all of whom
expressed their regret that they could not be present. One of them,
he observed, was from a gentleman who had long taken an interest in
the antislavery cause,--Lord Cockburn,[B]--and his note was so
warm, and sympathetic, and hearty on the subject about which they
had met, that he could not resist the temptation of reading it. It
proceeded, "I regret, that owing to my being obliged to be in
Ayrshire, it will not be in my power to join you in the expression
of respect and gratitude to Mrs. Stowe; she deserves all the honor
that can be done her; she has done more for humanity than was ever
accomplished before by a single book of fiction. [Cheers.] It did
not require much to raise our British feeling against slavery, but
by showing us what substantially are facts, and the necessary
tendency of this evil in its most mitigated form, she has greatly
strengthened the ground on which this feeling rests. Her work may
have no immediate or present influence on the states of her own
country that are now unhappily under the curse, and may indeed for
a time aggravate its horrors; but it is a prodigious accession to
the constantly accumulating mass of views and evidence, which by
reason of its force must finally prevail." [Cheers.] The Lord
Provost proceeded to say, that they had now assembled chiefly to do
honor to their distinguished guest, Mrs. Stowe. [Applause.] They
had met, however, also to express their interest in the cause which
it had been the great effort of her life to promote--the abolition
of slavery.
They took advantage of her
presence, and the effect which was produced on the public mind of
this country, to reiterate their love for the abolition cause, and
their detestation of slavery. Before they were aware that Mrs.
Stowe was to grace the city of Edinburgh with her presence, a
committee had been organized to collect a penny offering--the
amount to be contributed in pence, and other small sums, from the
masses of this country--to be presented to her as some means of
mitigating, through her instrumentality, the horrors of slavery, as
they might come under her observation. It was intended at once as a
mark of their esteem for her, of their confidence in her, of their
conviction that she would do what was right in the cause, and, at
the same time, as an evidence of the detestation in which the
system of slavery was held in this free country. That penny
offering now, he was happy to say, by the spontaneous efforts of
the inhabitants of this and other towns, amounted to a considerable
sum; to certain gentlemen in Edinburgh forming the committee the
whole credit of this organization was due, and he believed one of
their number, the Rev. Mr. Ballantyne, would present the
offering that evening, and tell
them all about it. He would not, therefore, forestall what he would
have to say on the subject. They were also to have the pleasure of
presenting Mrs. Stowe with an address from the committee in this
city, which would be presented by another reverend friend, who
would be introduced at the proper time. As there would be a number
of speakers to follow during the evening, his own remarks must
be exceedingly short; but he could not resist the temptation of
saying how happy he felt at being once more in the midst of a great
meeting in the city of Edinburgh, for the purpose of expressing
their detestation of the system of slavery. They could appeal to
their brethren in the United States with clean hands, because they
had got rid of the abomination themselves; they could therefore say
to them, through their friends who were now present, on their
return home, and through the press, which would carry their
sentiments even to the slave states--they could say to them that
they had washed their own hands of the evil at the largest
pecuniary sacrifice that was ever made by any nation for the
promotion of any good cause. [Loud applause.] Some parties said
that they should not speak harshly of the Americans, because they
were full of prejudice with regard to the system which they had
seen growing up around them. He said so too with all his heart; he
joined in the sentiment that they should not speak harshly, but
they might fairly express their opinion of the system with which
their American friends were surrounded, and in which he thought all
who supported it were guilty participators. [Hear, hear!] They
could denounce the wickedness, they could tell them that they
thought it was their duty to put an end to it speedily.
The cause of the abolition of
slavery in our own colonies long hung without any visible progress,
notwithstanding the efforts of many distinguished men, who did
all they could to mitigate some of its more prominent evils; and
yet, so long as they never struck at the root, the progress which
they made was almost insensible. They knew how many men had
spent their energies, and some of them their lives, in attempting
to forward the cause; but how little effect was produced for the
first half of the present century! The city of Edinburgh had
always, he was glad to say, taken a deep interest in the cause; it
was one of the very first to take up the ground of total and entire
abolition. [Cheers.] A predecessor of his own in the civic chair
was so kind as to preside at a meeting held in Edinburgh twenty-
three years ago, in which a very decided step was proposed to be
taken in advance, and a resolution was moved by the then Dean of
Faculty, to the effect that on the following first of January,
1831, all the children born of slave parents in our colonies were
from that date to be declared free. That was thought a great and
most important movement by the promoters of the cause. There were,
however, parties at that crowded meeting who thought that even this
was a mere expedient--that it was a mere pruning of the branches,
leaving the whole system intact. One of these was the late Dr.
Andrew Thomson--[cheers]--who had the courage to propose that the
meeting should at once declare for total and immediate abolition,
which proposal was seconded by another excellent citizen, Mr.
Dickie. Dr. Thomson replied to some of the arguments which had been
put
forward, to the effect that the
total abolition might possibly occasion bloodshed; and he said
that, even if that did follow, it was no fault of his, and that he
still stuck to the principle, which he considered right under any
circumstances. The chairman, thereupon, threatened to leave the
chair on account of the unnecessarily strong language used, and
when the sentiments were reiterated by Mr. Dickie, he actually
bolted, and left the meeting, which was thrown into great
confusion. A few days afterwards, however, another meeting was
held--one of the largest and most effective that had been ever held
in Edinburgh--at which were present Mr. John Shank More in the
chair, the Rev. Dr. Thomson, Rev. Dr Gordon, Dr. Ritchie, Mr.
Muirhead, the Rev. Mr. Buchanan of North Leith, Mr. J. Wigham, Jr.,
Dr. Greville, &c. The Lord Provost proceeded to read extracts
from the speeches made at the meeting, showing that the sentiments
of the inhabitants of Edinburgh, so far back as 1830, as uttered by
some of its most distinguished men,--not violent agitators, but
ministers of the gospel, promoters of peace and order, and every
good and every benevolent purpose,--were in favor of the immediate
and total abolition of slavery in our colonies. He referred
especially to the speech of Dr. Andrew Thomson on this occasion,
from which he read the following extract: "But if the argument is
forced upon me to accomplish this great object, that there must be
violence, let it come, for it will soon pass away--let it come and
rage its little hour, since it is to be succeeded by lasting
freedom, and prosperity, and happiness. Give me the hurricane
rather than the pestilence. Give me the hurricane, with its
thunders, and its lightnings, and its tempests--give me the
hurricane, with its partial and temporary devastations, awful
though they be--give me the hurricane, which brings along with it
purifying, and healthful, and salutary effects--give me the
hurricane rather than the noisome pestilence, whose path is never
crossed, whose silence is never disturbed, whose progress is never
arrested by one sweeping blast from the heavens--which walks
peacefully and sullenly through the length and breadth of the land,
breathing poison into every heart, and carrying havoc into every
home-- enervating all that is strong, defacing all that is
beautiful, and casting its blight over the fairest and happiest
scenes of human life--and which from day to day, and from year to
year, with intolerant and interminable malignity, sends its
thousands and tens of thousands of hapless victims into the
ever-yawning and never-satisfied grave!"--[Loud and long applause.]
The experience which they had had, that all the dangers, all the
bloodshed and violence which were threatened, were merely
imaginary, and that none of these evils had come upon them although
slavery had been totally abolished by us, should, he thought, be an
encouragement to their American friends to go home and tell their
countrymen that in this great city the views now put forward were
advocated long ago--that the persons who now held them said the
same years ago of the disturbances and the evils which would arise
from pressing the question of immediate and total abolition--that
the same kind of arguments and the same predictions of evil were
uttered in England--and although she had not the experience,
although she had
not the opportunity of pointing
to the past, and saying the evil had not come in such a case,
still, even then, they were willing to face the evil, to stick to
the righteous principle, and to say, come what would, justice must
be done to the slave, and slavery must be wholly and immediately
abolished. [Cheers.] He had said so much on the question of
slavery, because he was very sure it would be much more agreeable
to their modest and retiring and distinguished guest that one
should speak about any other thing than about herself. Uncle Tom's
Cabin needed no recommendation from him. [Loud cheers.] It was the
most extraordinary book, he thought, that had ever been published;
no book had ever got into the same circulation; none had ever
produced a tithe of the impression which it had produced within a
given time. It was worth all the proslavery press of America put
together. The horrors of slavery were not merely described, but
they were actually pictured to the eye. They were seen and
understood fully; formerly they were mere dim visions, about which
there was great difference of opinion; some saw them as in a mist,
and others more clearly; but now every body saw and understood
slavery. Every body in this great city, if they had a voice in the
matter, would be prepared to say that they wished slavery to be
utterly extinguished. [Loud cheers.]
PROFESSOR STOWE then rose, and
was greeted with loud cheers. He begged to read the following note
from Mrs. Stowe, in acknowledgment of the honor:--
"I accept these congratulations
and honors, and this offering, which it has pleased Scotland
to bestow on me, not for any thing which I have said or done, not
as in any sense acknowledging that they are or can be deserved, but
with heartfelt, humble gratitude to God, as tokens of mercy to
a cause most sacred and most oppressed. In the name of a people
despised and rejected of men--in the name of men of sorrows
acquainted with grief, from whom the faces of all the great and
powerful of the earth have been hid--in the name of oppressed and
suffering humanity, I thank you. The offering given is the dearer
to me, and the more hopeful, that it is literally the penny
offering, given by thousands on thousands, a penny at a time.
When, in travelling through your country, aged men and women
have met me with such fervent blessings, little children gathered
round me with such loving eyes--when honest hands, hard with toil,
have been stretched forth with such hearty welcome--when I have
seen how really it has come from the depths of the hearts of the
common people, and know, as I truly do, what prayers are going up
with it from the humblest homes of Scotland, I am encouraged. I
believe it is God who inspires this feeling, and I believe God
never inspired it in vain. I feel an assurance that the Lord
hath looked down from heaven to hear the groaning of the
prisoner, and according to the greatness of his power, to loose
those that are appointed to die. In the human view, nothing
can be more hopeless than this cause; all the wealth, and all the
power, and all the worldly influence is against it. But here in
Scotland, need we tell the children of
the Covenant, that the Lord on
high is mightier than all human power? Here, close by the
spot where your fathers signed that Covenant, in an hour when
Scotland's cause was equally poor and depressed--here, by the spot
where holy martyrs sealed it with their blood, it will neither seem
extravagance nor enthusiasm to say to the children of such parents,
that for the support of this cause, we look, not to the things
that are seen, but to the things that are not seen; to that
God, who, in the face of all worldly power, gave liberty to
Scotland, in answer to your fathers' prayers. Our trust is in Jesus
Christ, and in the power of the Holy Ghost, and in the promise that
he shall reign till he hath put all things under his feet.
There are those faithless ones, who, standing at the grave of a
buried humanity, tell us that it is vain to hope for our brother,
because he hath lain in the grave three days already. We turn from
them to the face of Him who has said, 'Thy brother shall rise
again.' There was a time when our great High Priest, our Brother,
yet our Lord, lay in the grave three days; and the governors and
powers of the earth made it as sure as they could, seeding the
stone and setting a watch. But a third day came, and an
earthquake, and an angel. So shall it be to the cause of the
oppressed; though now small and despised, we are watchers at the
sepulchre, like Mary and the trusting women; we can sit
through the hours of darkness. We are watching the sky for the
golden streaks of dawning, and we believe that the third day will
surely come. For Christ our Lord, being raised from the dead, dieth
no more; and he has pledged his word that he shall not fail nor be
discouraged till he have set judgment on the earth.
He shall deliver the poor when He
crieth, the needy, and him that hath no helper. The night is far
spent--the day is at hand. The universal sighing of humanity in all
countries, the whole creation groaning and travailing in pain
together--the earnest expectation of the creature waiting for the
manifestation of the sons of God--show that the day is not distant
when he will break every yoke, and let the oppressed go free. And
whatever we are able to do for this sacred cause, let us cast it
where the innumerable multitude of heaven cast their crowns, at the
feet of the Lamb, saying, 'Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to
receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and
glory, and blessings.'"
The Rev. Professor then
continued. "My Lord Provost, Ladies and Gentlemen: This cause, to
be successful, must be carried on in a religious spirit, with a
deep sense of our dependence on God, and with that love for our
fellow-men which the gospel requires. It is because I think I have
met this spirit since I reached the shores of Great Britain, in
those who have taken an interest in the cause, that I feel
encouraged to hope that the expression of your feeling will be
effective on the hearts of Christians on the other side of the
Atlantic. There are Christians there as sincere, as hearty, and as
earnest, as any on the face of the earth. They have looked at this
subject, and been troubled; they have hardly known what to do, and
their hearts have been discouraged. They have almost turned away
their eyes from it, because they have scarcely dared encounter it,
the difficulties appeared
to them so great. Wrong cannot
always receive the support of Christians; wrong must be done away
with; and what must be--what God requires to be--that certainly
will be. Now, in this age, man is every where beginning to regard
the sufferings of his fellow-man as his own. There is an interest
felt in man, as man, which was not felt in preceding ages. The
facilities of communication are bringing all nations in contact,
and whatever wrong exists in any part of the world, is every where
felt. There are wrongs and sufferings every where; but those to
which we are accustomed, we look upon with most indifference,
because being accustomed to them, we do not feel their enormity.
You feel the enormity of slavery more than we do, because you are
not immediately interested, and regard it at a distance.
We regard some of the wrongs that
exist in the old world with more sensibility than you can regard
them, because we are not accustomed to them, and you are.
Therefore, in the spirit of Christian love, it belongs to Christian
men to speak to each other with great fidelity. It has been said
that you know little or nothing about slavery. O, happy men, that
you are ignorant of its enormities. [Hear, hear!] But you do know
something about it. You know as much about it as you know of the
widow-burning in India, or the cannibalism in the Fejee Islands, or
any of those crimes and sorrows of paganism, that induced you to
send forth your missionaries. You know it is a great wrong, and a
terrible obstacle to the progress of the gospel; and that is enough
for you to know to induce you to act. You have as much knowledge as
ever induced a Christian community in any part of the world to
exert an influence in any other part of the world. Slavery is a
relic of paganism, of barbarism; it must be removed by
Christianity; and if the light of Christianity shines on it
clearly, it certainly will remove it. There are thousands of hearts
in the United States that rejoice in your help. Whatever
expressions of impatience and petulance you may hear, be assured
that these expressions are not the heart of the great body of the
people. [Cheers.] A large proportion of that country is free from
slavery. There is an area of freedom ten times larger than Great
Britain in territory.[C] [Cheers.] But all the power over the slave
is in the hands of the slaveholder. You had a power over the
slaveholder by your national legislature; our national legislature
has no power over the slaveholder. All the legislation that can in
that country be brought to bear for the slave, is legislation by
the slaveholders themselves. There is where the difficulty lies. It
is altogether by persuasion, Christian counsel, Christian sympathy,
Christian earnestness, that any good can be effected for the slave.
The conscience of the people is against the system--the conscience
of the people, even in the slaveholding states; and if we can but
get at the conscience without exciting prejudice, it will tend
greatly towards the desired effect. But this appeal to the
conscience must be unintermittent, constant. Your hands must not be
weary, your prayers must not be discontinued; but every day and
every hour should we be doing something towards the object. It is
sometimes said, Americans who resist slavery are traitors to their
country. No; those who would support freedom are the only true
friends of their country. Our fathers never intended slavery to be
identified with the
government of the United States;
but in the temptations of commerce the evil was overlooked; and how
changed for the worse has become the public sentiment even within
the last thirty or forty years! The enormous increase in the
consumption of cotton has raised enormously the market value of
slaves, and arrayed both avarice and political ambition in defence
of slavery. Instruct the conscience, and produce free cotton, and
this will be like Cromwell's exhortation to his soldiers, 'Trust in
God, and keep your powder dry.'" [Continued cheers.]
THE REV. DR. R. LEE then said: "I
am quite sure that every individual here responds cordially to
those sentiments of respect and gratitude towards our honored guest
which have been so well expressed by the Lord Provost and the other
gentlemen who have addressed us. We think that this lady has not
only laid us under a great obligation by giving us one of the most
delightful books in the English language, but that she has improved
us as men and as Christians, that she has taught us the value of
our privileges, and made us more sensible than we were before of
the obligation which lies upon us to promote every good work. I
have been requested to say a few words on the degradation of
American slavery; but I feel, in the presence of the gentleman who
last addressed you, and of those who are still to address you, that
it would be almost presumption in me to enter on such a subject. It
is impossible to speak or to think of the subject of slavery
without feeling that there is a double degradation in the matter;
for, in the first place, the slave is a man made in the image of
God--God's image cut in ebony, as old Thomas Fuller quaintly but
beautifully said; and what right have we to reduce him to the image
of a brute, and make property of him? We esteem drunkenness as a
sin. Why is it a sin? Because it reduces that which was made in the
image of God to the image of a brute. We say to the drunkard, 'You
are guilty of a sacrilege, because you reduce that which God made
in his own image "into the image of an irrational creature."'
Slavery does the very same. But there is not only a degradation
committed as regards the slave--there is a degradation also
committed against himself by him who makes him a slave, and who
retains him in the position of a slave; for is it not one of the
most commonplace of truths that we cannot do a wrong to a neighbor
without doing a greater wrong to ourselves?-- that we cannot injure
him without also injuring ourselves yet more? I observe there is a
certain class of writers in America who are fond of representing
the feeling of this country towards America as one of jealousy, if
not of hatred.. I think, my lord, that no American ever travelled
in this country without being conscious at once that this is a
total mistake--that this is a total misapprehension. I venture to
say that there is no nation on the face of the earth in which we
feel half so much interest, or towards which we feel the tenth part
of the affection, which we do towards our brethren in the United
States of America. And what is more than that--there is no nation
towards which we feel one half so much admiration, and for which we
feel half so much respect, as we do for the people of the United
States of America. [Cheers.] Why, sir, how can it be