Page:An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans.djvu/49

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

CHAPTER II.


COMPARATIVE VIEW OF SLAVERY, IN DIFFERENT AGES AND NATIONS.



E'en from my tongue some heart-felt truths may fall;
And outraged Nature claims the care of all.
These wrongs in any place would force a tear;
But call for stronger, deeper feeling here."

O, sons of freedom! equalize your laws—
Be all consistent—plead the negro's cause—
Then all the nations in your code may see.
That, black or white, Americans are free."



Between ancient and modern slavery there is this remarkable distinction—the former originated in motives of humanity; the latter is dictated solely by avarice. The ancients made slaves of captives taken in war, as an amelioration of the original custom of indiscriminate slaughter; the moderns attack defenceless people, without any provocation, and steal them, for the express purpose of making them slaves.

Modern slavery, indeed, in all its particulars, is more odious than the ancient; and it is worthy of remark that the condition of slaves has always been worse just in proportion to the freedom enjoyed by their masters. In Greece, none were so proud of liberty as the Spartans; and they were a proverb among the neighboring States for their severity to slaves. The slave code of the Roman republic was rigid and tyrannical in the extreme; and cruelties became so common and excessive, that the emperors, in the latter days of Roman power, were obliged to enact laws to restrain them. In the modern world, England and America are the most conspicuous for enlightened views of freedom, and bold vindication of the equal rights of man; yet in these two countries