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CHAPTER XVIII Future Condition Of Three Races In The
United States
The Present And Probable Future Condition Of The Three Races
Which Inhabit The Territory Of The United States
The principal part of the task which I had imposed upon myself
is now performed. I have shown, as far as I was able, the laws and the manners
of the American democracy. Here I might stop; but the reader would perhaps feel
that I had not satisfied his expectations.
The absolute supremacy of democracy is not all that we meet
with in America; the inhabitants of the New World may be considered from more
than one point of view. In the course of this work my subject has often led me
to speak of the Indians and the Negroes; but I have never been able to stop in
order to show what place these two races occupy in the midst of the democratic
people whom I was engaged in describing. I have mentioned in what spirit, and
according to what laws, the Anglo-American Union was formed; but I could only
glance at the dangers which menace that confederation, whilst it was equally
impossible for me to give a detailed account of its chances of duration,
independently of its laws and manners. When speaking of the united republican
States, I hazarded no conjectures upon the permanence of republican forms in
the New World, and when making frequent allusion to the commercial activity
which reigns in the Union, I was unable to inquire into the future condition of
the Americans as a commercial people.
These topics are collaterally connected with my subject without
forming a part of it; they are American without being democratic; and to
portray democracy has been my principal aim. It was therefore necessary to
postpone these questions, which I now take up as the proper termination of my
work.
The territory now occupied or claimed by the American Union
spreads from the shores of the Atlantic to those of the Pacific Ocean. On the
east and west its limits are those of the continent itself. On the south it
advances nearly to the tropic, and it extends upwards to the icy regions of the
North. The human beings who are scattered over this space do not form, as in
Europe, so many branches of the same stock. Three races, naturally distinct,
and, I might almost say, hostile to each other, are discoverable amongst them
at the first glance. Almost insurmountable barriers had been raised between
them by education and by law, as well as by their origin and outward
characteristics; but fortune has brought them together on the same soil, where,
although they are mixed, they do not amalgamate, and each race fulfils its
destiny apart.
Amongst these widely differing families of men, the first which
attracts attention, the superior in intelligence, in power and in enjoyment, is
the white or European, the man pre-eminent; and in subordinate grades, the
negro and the Indian. These two unhappy races have nothing in common; neither
birth, nor features, nor language, nor habits. Their only resemblance lies in
their misfortunes. Both of them occupy an inferior rank in the country they
inhabit; both suffer from tyranny; and if their wrongs are not the same, they
originate, at any rate, with the same authors.
If we reasoned from what passes in the world, we should almost
say that the European is to the other races of mankind, what man is to the
lower animals; - he makes them subservient to his use; and when he cannot
subdue, he destroys them. Oppression has, at one stroke, deprived the
descendants of the Africans of almost all the privileges of humanity. The negro
of the United States has lost all remembrance of his country; the language
which his forefathers spoke is never heard around him; he abjured their
religion and forgot their customs when he ceased to belong to Africa, without
acquiring any claim to European privileges. But he remains half way between the
two communities; sold by the one, repulsed by the other; finding not a spot in
the universe to call by the name of country, except the faint image of a home
which the shelter of his master's roof affords.
The negro has no family; woman is merely the temporary
companion of his pleasures, and his children are upon an equality with himself
from the moment of their birth. Am I to call it a proof of God's mercy or a
visitation of his wrath, that man in certain states appears to be insensible to
his extreme wretchedness, and almost affects, with a depraved taste, the cause
of his misfortunes? The negro, who is plunged in this abyss of evils, scarcely
feels his own calamitous situation. Violence made him a slave, and the habit of
servitude gives him the thoughts and desires of a slave; he admires his tyrants
more than he hates them, and finds his joy and his pride in the servile
imitation of those who oppress him: his understanding is degraded to the level
of his soul.
The negro enters upon slavery as soon as he is born: nay, he
may have been purchased in the womb, and have begun his slavery before he began
his existence. Equally devoid of wants and of enjoyment, and useless to
himself, he learns, with his first notions of existence, that he is the
property of another, who has an interest in preserving his life, and that the
care of it does not devolve upon himself; even the power of thought appears to
him a useless gift of Providence, and he quietly enjoys the privileges of his
debasement. If he becomes free, independence is often felt by him to be a
heavier burden than slavery; for having learned, in the course of his life, to
submit to everything except reason, he is too much unacquainted with her
dictates to obey them. A thousand new desires beset him, and he is destitute of
the knowledge and energy necessary to resist them: these are masters which it
is necessary to contend with, and he has learnt only to submit and obey. In
short, he sinks to such a depth of wretchedness, that while servitude
brutalizes, liberty destroys him.
Oppression has been no less fatal to the Indian than to the
negro race, but its effects are different. Before the arrival of white men in
the New World, the inhabitants of North America lived quietly in their woods,
enduring the vicissitudes and practising the virtues and vices common to savage
nations. The Europeans, having dispersed the Indian tribes and driven them into
the deserts, condemned them to a wandering life full of inexpressible
sufferings.
Savage nations are only controlled by opinion and by custom.
When the North American Indians had lost the sentiment of attachment to their
country; when their families were dispersed, their traditions obscured, and the
chain of their recollections broken; when all their habits were changed, and
their wants increased beyond measure, European tyranny rendered them more
disorderly and less civilized than they were before. The moral and physical
condition of these tribes continually grew worse, and they became more
barbarous as they became more wretched. Nevertheless, the Europeans have not
been able to metamorphose the character of the Indians; and though they have
had power to destroy them, they have never been able to make them submit to the
rules of civilized society.
The lot of the negro is placed on the extreme limit of
servitude, while that of the Indian lies on the uttermost verge of liberty; and
slavery does not produce more fatal effects upon the first, than independence
upon the second. The negro has lost all property in his own person, and he
cannot dispose of his existence without committing a sort of fraud: but the
savage is his own master as soon as he is able to act; parental authority is
scarcely known to him; he has never bent his will to that of any of his kind,
nor learned the difference between voluntary obedience and a shameful
subjection; and the very name of law is unknown to him. To be free, with him,
signifies to escape from all the shackles of society. As he delights in this
barbarous independence, and would rather perish than sacrifice the least part
of it, civilization has little power over him.
The negro makes a thousand fruitless efforts to insinuate
himself amongst men who repulse him; he conforms to the tastes of his
oppressors, adopts their opinions, and hopes by imitating them to form a part
of their community. Having been told from infancy that his race is naturally
inferior to that of the whites, he assents to the proposition and is ashamed of
his own nature. In each of his features he discovers a trace of slavery, and,
if it were in his power, he would willingly rid himself of everything that
makes him what he is.
The Indian, on the contrary, has his imagination inflated with
the pretended nobility of his origin, and lives and dies in the midst of these
dreams of pride. Far from desiring to conform his habits to ours, he loves his
savage life as the distinguishing mark of his race, and he repels every advance
to civilization, less perhaps from the hatred which he entertains for it, than
from a dread of resembling the Europeans.a While he
has nothing to oppose to our perfection in the arts but the resources of the
desert, to our tactics nothing but undisciplined courage; whilst our
well-digested plans are met by the spontaneous instincts of savage life, who
can wonder if he fails in this unequal contest?
The negro, who earnestly desires to mingle his race with that
of the European, cannot effect if; while the Indian, who might succeed to a
certain extent, disdains to make the attempt. The servility of the one dooms
him to slavery, the pride of the other to death.
I remember that while I was travelling through the forests
which still cover the State of Alabama, I arrived one day at the log house of a
pioneer. I did not wish to penetrate into the dwelling of the American, but
retired to rest myself for a while on the margin of a spring, which was not far
off, in the woods. While I was in this place (which was in the neighborhood of
the Creek territory), an Indian woman appeared, followed by a negress, and
holding by the hand a little white girl of five or six years old, whom I took
to be the daughter of the pioneer. A sort of barbarous luxury set off the
costume of the Indian; rings of metal were hanging from her nostrils and ears;
her hair, which was adorned with glass beads, fell loosely upon her shoulders;
and I saw that she was not married, for she still wore that necklace of shells
which the bride always deposits on the nuptial couch. The negress was clad in
squalid European garments. They all three came and seated themselves upon the
banks of the fountain; and the young Indian, taking the child in her arms,
lavished upon her such fond caresses as mothers give; while the negress
endeavored by various little artifices to attract the attention of the young
Creole.
The child displayed in her slightest gestures a consciousness
of superiority which formed a strange contrast with her infantine weakness; as
if she received the attentions of her companions with a sort of condescension.
The negress was seated on the ground before her mistress, watching her smallest
desires, and apparently divided between strong affection for the child and
servile fear; whilst the savage displayed, in the midst of her tenderness, an
air of freedom and of pride which was almost ferocious. I had approached the
group, and I contemplated them in silence; but my curiosity was probably
displeasing to the Indian woman, for she suddenly rose, pushed the child
roughly from her, and giving me an angry look plunged into the thicket. I had
often chanced to see individuals met together in the same place, who belonged
to the three races of men which people North America. I had perceived from many
different results the preponderance of the whites. But in the picture which I
have just been describing there was something peculiarly touching; a bond of
affection here united the oppressors with the oppressed, and the effort of
nature to bring them together rendered still more striking the immense distance
placed between them by prejudice and by law.
The Present And Probable Future Condition Of The Indian
Tribes Which Inhabit The Territory Possessed By The Union
Gradual disappearance of the native tribes - Manner in which it
takes place -Miseries accompanying the forced migrations of the Indians - The
savages of North America had only two ways of escaping destruction; war or
civilization -They are no longer able to make war - Reasons why they refused to
become civilized when it was in their power, and why they cannot become so now
that they desire it - Instance of the Creeks and Cherokees - Policy of the
particular States towards these Indians - Policy of the Federal Government.
None of the Indian tribes which formerly inhabited the
territory of New England - the Naragansetts, the Mohicans, the Pecots - have
any existence but in the recollection of man. The Lenapes, who received William
Penn, a hundred and fifty years ago, upon the banks of the Delaware, have
disappeared; and I myself met with the last of the Iroquois, who were begging
alms. The nations I have mentioned formerly covered the country to the
sea-coast; but a traveller at the present day must penetrate more than a
hundred leagues into the interior of the continent to find an Indian. Not only
have these wild tribes receded, but they are destroyed;b and as they give way or perish, an immense and
increasing people fills their place. There is no instance upon record of so
prodigious a growth, or so rapid a destruction: the manner in which the latter
change takes place is not difficult to describe.
When the Indians were the sole inhabitants of the wilds from
whence they have since been expelled, their wants were few. Their arms were of
their own manufacture, their only drink was the water of the brook, and their
clothes consisted of the skins of animals, whose flesh furnished them with
food.
The Europeans introduced amongst the savages of North America
fire-arms, ardent spirits, and iron: they taught them to exchange for
manufactured stuffs, the rough garments which had previously satisfied their
untutored simplicity. Having acquired new tastes, without the arts by which
they could be gratified, the Indians were obliged to have recourse to the
workmanship of the whites; but in return for their productions the savage had
nothing to offer except the rich furs which still abounded in his woods. Hence
the chase became necessary, not merely to provide for his subsistence, but in
order to procure the only objects of barter which he could furnish to Europe.c Whilst the wants of the natives were thus
increasing, their resources continued to diminish.
From the moment when a European settlement is formed in the
neighborhood of the territory occupied by the Indians, the beasts of chase take
the alarm.d Thousands of savages, wandering in the
forests and destitute of any fixed dwelling, did not disturb them; but as soon
as the continuous sounds of European labor are heard in their neighborhood,
they begin to flee away, and retire to the West, where their instinct teaches
them that they will find deserts of immeasurable extent. "The buffalo is
constantly receding," say Messrs. Clarke and Cass in their Report of the year
1829; "a few years since they approached the base of the Alleghany; and a few
years hence they may even be rare upon the immense plains which extend to the
base of the Rocky Mountains." I have been assured that this effect of the
approach of the whites is often felt at two hundred leagues' distance from
their frontier. Their influence is thus exerted over tribes whose name is
unknown to them; and who suffer the evils of usurpation long before they are
acquainted with the authors of their distress.e
Bold adventurers soon penetrate into the country the Indians
have deserted, and when they have advanced about fifteen or twenty leagues from
the extreme frontiers of the whites, they begin to build habitations for
civilized beings in the midst of the wilderness. This is done without
difficulty, as the territory of a hunting-nation is ill-defined; it is the
common property of the tribe, and belongs to no one in particular, so that
individual interests are not concerned in the protection of any part of it.
A few European families, settled in different situations at a
considerable distance from each other, soon drive away the wild animals which
remain between their places of abode. The Indians, who had previously lived in
a sort of abundance, then find it difficult to subsist, and still more
difficult to procure the articles of barter which they stand in need of.
To drive away their game is to deprive them of the means of
existence, as effectually as if the fields of our agriculturists were stricken
with barrenness; and they are reduced, like famished wolves, to prowl through
the forsaken woods in quest of prey. Their instinctive love of their country
attaches them to the soil which gave them birth,f
even after it has ceased to yield anything but misery and death. At length they
are compelled to acquiesce, and to depart: they follow the traces of the elk,
the buffalo, and the beaver, and are guided by these wild animals in the choice
of their future country. Properly speaking, therefore, it is not the Europeans
who drive away the native inhabitants of America; it is famine which compels
them to recede; a happy distinction which had escaped the casuists of former
times, and for which we are indebted to modern discovery!
It is impossible to conceive the extent of the sufferings which
attend these forced emigrations. They are undertaken by a people already
exhausted and reduced; and the countries to which the newcomers betake
themselves are inhabited by other tribes which receive them with jealous
hostility. Hunger is in the rear; war awaits them, and misery besets them on
all sides. In the hope of escaping from such a host of enemies, they separate,
and each individual endeavors to procure the means of supporting his existence
in solitude and secrecy, living in the immensity of the desert like an outcast
in civilized society. The social tie, which distress had long since weakened,
is then dissolved; they have lost their country, and their people soon desert
them: their very families are obliterated; the names they bore in common are
forgotten, their language perishes, and all traces of their origin disappear.
Their nation has ceased to exist, except in the recollection of the antiquaries
of America and a few of the learned of Europe.
I should be sorry to have my reader suppose that I am coloring
the picture too highly; I saw with my own eyes several of the cases of misery
which I have been describing; and I was the witness of sufferings which I have
not the power to portray.
At the end of the year 1831, whilst I was on the left bank of
the Mississippi at a place named by Europeans, Memphis, there arrived a
numerous band of Choctaws (or Chactas, as they are called by the French in
Louisiana). These savages had left their country, and were endeavoring to gain
the right bank of the Mississippi, where they hoped to find an asylum which had
been promised them by the American government. It was then the middle of
winter, and the cold was unusually severe; the snow had frozen hard upon the
ground, and the river was drifting huge masses of ice. The Indians had their
families with them; and they brought in their train the wounded and sick, with
children newly born, and old men upon the verge of death. They possessed
neither tents nor wagons, but only their arms and some provisions. I saw them
embark to pass the mighty river, and never will that solemn spectacle fade from
my remembrance. No cry, no sob was heard amongst the assembled crowd; all were
silent. Their calamities were of ancient date, and they knew them to be
irremediable. The Indians had all stepped into the bark which was to carry them
across, but their dogs remained upon the bank. As soon as these animals
perceived that their masters were finally leaving the shore, they set up a
dismal howl, and, plunging all together into the icy waters of the Mississippi,
they swam after the boat.
The ejectment of the Indians very often takes place at the
present day, in a regular, and, as it were, a legal manner. When the European
population begins to approach the limit of the desert inhabited by a savage
tribe, the government of the United States usually dispatches envoys to them,
who assemble the Indians in a large plain, and having first eaten and drunk
with them, accost them in the following manner: "What have you to do in the
land of your fathers? Before long, you must dig up their bones in order to
live. In what respect is the country you inhabit better than another? Are there
no woods, marshes, or prairies, except where you dwell? And can you live
nowhere but under your own sun? Beyond those mountains which you see at the
horizon, beyond the lake which bounds your territory on the west, there lie
vast countries where beasts of chase are found in great abundance; sell your
lands to us, and go to live happily in those solitudes." After holding this
language, they spread before the eyes of the Indians firearms, woollen
garments, kegs of brandy, glass necklaces, bracelets of tinsel, earrings, and
looking-glasses.g If, when they have beheld all
these riches, they still hesitate, it is insinuated that they have not the
means of refusing their required consent, and that the government itself will
not long have the power of protecting them in their rights. What are they to
do? Half convinced, and half compelled, they go to inhabit new deserts, where
the importunate whites will not let them remain ten years in tranquillity. In
this manner do the Americans obtain, at a very low price, whole provinces,
which the richest sovereigns of Europe could not purchase.h
a The native of North
America retains his opinions and the most insignificant of his habits with a
degree of tenacity which has no parallel in history. For more than two hundred
years the wandering tribes of North America have had daily intercourse with the
whites, and they have never derived from them either a custom or an idea. Yet
the Europeans have exercised a powerful influence over the savages: they have
made them more licentious, but not more European. In the summer of 1831 I
happened to be beyond Lake Michigan, at a place called Green Bay, which serves
as the extreme frontier between the United States and the Indians on the
north-western side. Here I became acquainted with an American officer, Major
H., who, after talking to me at length on the inflexibility of the Indian
character, related the following fact: - "I formerly knew a young Indian," said
he, "who had been educated at a college in New England, where he had greatly
distinguished himself, and had acquired the external appearance of a member of
civilized society. When the war broke out between ourselves and the English in
1810, I saw this young man again; he was serving in our army, at the head of
the warriors of his tribe, for the Indians were admitted amongst the ranks of
the Americans, upon condition that they would abstain from their horrible
custom of scalping their victims. On the evening of the battle of . . ., C.
came and sat himself down by the fire of our bivouac. I asked him what had been
his fortune that day: he related his exploits; and growing warm and animated by
the recollection of them, he concluded by suddenly opening the breast of his
coat, saying, 'You must not betray me - see here!' And I actually beheld," said
the Major, "between his body and his shirt, the skin and hair of an English
head, still dripping with gore."
b In the thirteen
original States there are only 6,273 Indians remaining. (See Legislative
Documents, 20th Congress, No. 117, p. 90.) [The decrease in now far greater,
and is verging on extinction. See page 360 of this volume.]
c Messrs. Clarke and
Cass, in their Report to Congress on February 4, 1829, p. 23, expressed
themselves thus: - "The time when the Indians generally could supply themselves
with food and clothing, without any of the articles of civilized life, has long
since passed away. The more remote tribes, beyond the Mississippi, who live
where immense herds of buffalo are yet to be found and who follow those animals
in their periodical migrations, could more easily than any others recur to the
habits of their ancestors, and live without the white man or any of his
manufactures. But the buffalo is constantly receding. The smaller animals, the
bear, the deer, the beaver, the otter, the muskrat, etc., principally minister
to the comfort and support of the Indians; and these cannot be taken without
guns, ammunition, and traps. Among the Northwestern Indians particularly, the
labor of supplying a family with food is excessive. Day after day is spent by
the hunter without success, and during this interval his family must subsist
upon bark or roots, or perish. Want and misery are around them and among them.
Many die every winter from actual starvation."
The Indians will not live as Europeans live, and
yet they can neither subsist without them, nor exactly after the fashion of
their fathers. This is demonstrated by a fact which I likewise give upon
official authority. Some Indians of a tribe on the banks of Lake Superior had
killed a European; the American government interdicted all traffic with the
tribe to which the guilty parties belonged, until they were delivered up to
justice. This measure had the desired effect.
d "Five years ago,"
(says Volney in his "Tableau des Etats-Unis," p. 370) "in going from Vincennes
to Kaskaskia, a territory which now forms part of the State of Illinois, but
which at the time I mention was completely wild (1797), you could not cross a
prairie without seeing herds of from four to five hundred buffaloes. There are
now none remaining; they swam across the Mississippi to escape from the
hunters, and more particularly from the bells of the American cows."
e The truth of what I
here advance may be easily proved by consulting the tabular statement of Indian
tribes inhabiting the United States and their territories. (Legislative
Documents, 20th Congress, No. 117, pp. 90-105.) It is there shown that the
tribes in the centre of America are rapidly decreasing, although the Europeans
are still at a considerable distance from them.
f "The Indians," say
Messrs. Clarke and Cass in their Report to Congress, p. 15, "are attached to
their country by the same feelings which bind us to ours; and, besides, there
are certain superstitious notions connected with the alienation of what the
Great Spirit gave to their ancestors, which operate strongly upon the tribes
who have made few or no cessions, but which are gradually weakened as our
intercourse with them is extended. 'We will not sell the spot which contains
the bones of our fathers,' is almost always the first answer to a proposition
for a sale."
g See, in the
Legislative Documents of Congress (Doc. 117), the narrative of what takes place
on these occasions. This curious passage is from the above-mentioned report,
made to Congress by Messrs. Clarke and Cass in February, 1829. Mr. Cass is now
the Secretary of War.
"The Indians," says the report, "reach the
treaty-ground poor and almost naked. Large quantities of goods are taken there
by the traders, and are seen and examined by the Indians. The women and
children become importunate to have their wants supplied, and their influence
is soon exerted to induce a sale. Their improvidence is habitual and
unconquerable. The gratification of his immediate wants and desires is the
ruling passion of an Indian. The expectation of future advantages seldom
produces much effect. The experience of the past is lost, and the prospects of
the future disregarded. It would be utterly hopeless to demand a cession of
land, unless the means were at hand of gratifying their immediate wants; and
when their condition and circumstances are fairly considered, it ought not to
surprise us that they are so anxious to relieve themselves."
h On May 19, 1830,
Mr. Edward Everett affirmed before the House of Representatives, that the
Americans had already acquired by treaty, to the east and west of the
Mississippi, 230,000,000 of acres. In 1808 the Osages gave up 48,000,000 acres
for an annual payment of $1,000. In 1818 the Quapaws yielded up 29,000,000
acres for $4,000. They reserved for themselves a territory of 1,000,000 acres
for a hunting-ground. A solemn oath was taken that it should be respected: but
before long it was invaded like the rest. Mr. Bell, in his Report of the
Committee on Indian Affairs, February 24, 1830, has these words: - "To pay an
Indian tribe what their ancient hunting-grounds are worth to them, after the
game is fled or destroyed, as a mode of appropriating wild lands claimed by
Indians, has been found more convenient, and certainly it is more agreeable to
the forms of justice, as well as more merciful, than to assert the possession
of them by the sword. Thus the practice of buying Indian titles is but the
substitute which humanity and expediency have imposed, in place of the sword,
in arriving at the actual enjoyment of property claimed by the right of
discovery, and sanctioned by the natural superiority allowed to the claims of
civilized communities over those of savage tribes. Up to the present time so
invariable has been the operation of certain causes, first in diminishing the
value of forest lands to the Indians, and secondly in disposing them to sell
readily, that the plan of buying their right of occupancy has never threatened
to retard, in any perceptible degree, the prosperity of any of the States."
(Legislative Documents, 21st Congress, No. 227, p. 6.)
These are great evils; and it must be added that they appear to
me to be irremediable. I believe that the Indian nations of North America are
doomed to perish; and that whenever the Europeans shall be established on the
shores of the Pacific Ocean, that race of men will be no more.i The Indians had only the two alternatives of war or
civilization; in other words, they must either have destroyed the Europeans or
become their equals.
At the first settlement of the colonies they might have found
it possible, by uniting their forces, to deliver themselves from the small
bodies of strangers who landed on their continent. j They several times attempted to do it, and were on
the point of succeeding; but the disproportion of their resources, at the
present day, when compared with those of the whites, is too great to allow such
an enterprise to be thought of. Nevertheless, there do arise from time to time
among the Indians men of penetration, who foresee the final destiny which
awaits the native population, and who exert themselves to unite all the tribes
in common hostility to the Europeans; but their efforts are unavailing. Those
tribes which are in the neighborhood of the whites, are too much weakened to
offer an effectual resistance; whilst the others, giving way to that childish
carelessness of the morrow which characterizes savage life, wait for the near
approach of danger before they prepare to meet it; some are unable, the others
are unwilling, to exert themselves.
It is easy to foresee that the Indians will never conform to
civilization; or that it will be too late, whenever they may be inclined to
make the experiment.
Civilization is the result of a long social process which takes
place in the same spot, and is handed down from one generation to another, each
one profiting by the experience of the last. Of all nations, those submit to
civilization with the most difficulty which habitually live by the chase.
Pastoral tribes, indeed, often change their place of abode; but they follow a
regular order in their migrations, and often return again to their old
stations, whilst the dwelling of the hunter varies with that of the animals he
pursues.
Several attempts have been made to diffuse knowledge amongst
the Indians, without controlling their wandering propensities; by the Jesuits
in Canada, and by the Puritans in New England;k but
none of these endeavors were crowned by any lasting success. Civilization began
in the cabin, but it soon retired to expire in the woods. The great error of
these legislators of the Indians was their not understanding that, in order to
succeed in civilizing a people, it is first necessary to fix it; which cannot
be done without inducing it to cultivate the soil; the Indians ought in the
first place to have been accustomed to agriculture. But not only are they
destitute of this indispensable preliminary to civilization, they would even
have great difficulty in acquiring it. Men who have once abandoned themselves
to the restless and adventurous life of the hunter, feel an insurmountable
disgust for the constant and regular labor which tillage requires. We see this
proved in the bosom of our own society; but it is far more visible among
peoples whose partiality for the chase is a part of their national character.
Independently of this general difficulty, there is another,
which applies peculiarly to the Indians; they consider labor not merely as an
evil, but as a disgrace; so that their pride prevents them from becoming
civilized, as much as their indolence.l
There is no Indian so wretched as not to retain under his hut
of bark a lofty idea of his personal worth; he considers the cares of industry
and labor as degrading occupations; he compares the husbandman to the ox which
traces the furrow; and even in our most ingenious handicraft, he can see
nothing but the labor of slaves. Not that he is devoid of admiration for the
power and intellectual greatness of the whites; but although the result of our
efforts surprises him, he contemns the means by which we obtain it; and while
he acknowledges our ascendancy, he still believes in his superiority. War and
hunting are the only pursuits which appear to him worthy to be the occupations
of a man.m The Indian, in the dreary solitude of
his woods, cherishes the same ideas, the same opinions as the noble of the
Middle ages in his castle, and he only requires to become a conqueror to
complete the resemblance; thus, however strange it may seem, it is in the
forests of the New World, and not amongst the Europeans who people its coasts,
that the ancient prejudices of Europe are still in existence.
More than once, in the course of this work, I have endeavored
to explain the prodigious influence which the social condition appears to
exercise upon the laws and the manners of men; and I beg to add a few words on
the same subject.
When I perceive the resemblance which exists between the
political institutions of our ancestors, the Germans, and of the wandering
tribes of North America; between the customs described by Tacitus, and those of
which I have sometimes been a witness, I cannot help thinking that the same
cause has brought about the same results in both hemispheres; and that in the
midst of the apparent diversity of human affairs, a certain number of primary
facts may be discovered, from which all the others are derived. In what we
usually call the German institutions, then, I am inclined only to perceive
barbarian habits; and the opinions of savages in what we style feudal
principles.
However strongly the vices and prejudices of the North American
Indians may be opposed to their becoming agricultural and civilized, necessity
sometimes obliges them to it. Several of the Southern nations, and amongst
others the Cherokees and the Creeks,n were
surrounded by Europeans, who had landed on the shores of the Atlantic; and who,
either descending the Ohio or proceeding up the Mississippi, arrived
simultaneously upon their borders. These tribes have not been driven from place
to place, like their Northern brethren; but they have been gradually enclosed
within narrow limits, like the game within the thicket, before the huntsmen
plunge into the interior. The Indians who were thus placed between civilization
and death, found themselves obliged to live by ignominious labor like the
whites. They took to agriculture, and without entirely forsaking their old
habits or manners, sacrificed only as much as was necessary to their existence.
The Cherokees went further; they created a written language;
established a permanent form of government; and as everything proceeds rapidly
in the New World, before they had all of them clothes, they set up a
newspaper.o
The growth of European habits has been remarkably accelerated
among these Indians by the mixed race which has sprung up.p Deriving intelligence from their father's side,
without entirely losing the savage customs of the mother, the half-blood forms
the natural link between civilization and barbarism. Wherever this race has
multiplied the savage state has become modified, and a great change has taken
place in the manners of the people.q
The success of the Cherokees proves that the Indians are
capable of civilization, but it does not prove that they will succeed in it.
This difficulty which the Indians find in submitting to civilization proceeds
from the influence of a general cause, which it is almost impossible for them
to escape. An attentive survey of history demonstrates that, in general,
barbarous nations have raised themselves to civilization by degrees, and by
their own efforts. Whenever they derive knowledge from a foreign people, they
stood towards it in the relation of conquerors, and not of a conquered nation.
When the conquered nation is enlightened, and the conquerors are half savage,
as in the case of the invasion of Rome by the Northern nations or that of China
by the Mongols, the power which victory bestows upon the barbarian is
sufficient to keep up his importance among civilized men, and permit him to
rank as their equal, until he becomes their rival: the one has might on his
side, the other has intelligence; the former admires the knowledge and the arts
of the conquered, the latter envies the power of the conquerors. The barbarians
at length admit civilized man into their palaces, and he in turn opens his
schools to the barbarians. But when the side on which the physical force lies,
also possesses an intellectual preponderance, the conquered party seldom become
civilized; it retreats, or is destroyed. It may therefore be said, in a general
way, that savages go forth in arms to seek knowledge, but that they do not
receive it when it comes to them.
If the Indian tribes which now inhabit the heart of the
continent could summon up energy enough to attempt to civilize themselves, they
might possibly succeed. Superior already to the barbarous nations which
surround them, they would gradually gain strength and experience, and when the
Europeans should appear upon their borders, they would be in a state, if not to
maintain their independence, at least to assert their right to the soil, and to
incorporate themselves with the conquerors. But it is the misfortune of Indians
to be brought into contact with a civilized people, which is also (it must be
owned) the most avaricious nation on the globe, whilst they are still
semi-barbarian: to find despots in their instructors, and to receive knowledge
from the hand of oppression. Living in the freedom of the woods, the North
American Indian was destitute, but he had no feeling of inferiority towards
anyone; as soon, however, as he desires to penetrate into the social scale of
the whites, he takes the lowest rank in society, for he enters, ignorant and
poor, within the pale of science and wealth. After having led a life of
agitation, beset with evils and dangers, but at the same time filled with proud
emotions,r he is obliged to submit to a wearisome,
obscure, and degraded state; and to gain the bread which nourishes him by hard
and ignoble labor; such are in his eyes the only results of which civilization
can boast: and even this much he is not sure to obtain.
When the Indians undertake to imitate their European neighbors,
and to till the earth like the settlers, they are immediately exposed to a very
formidable competition. The white man is skilled in the craft of agriculture;
the Indian is a rough beginner in an art with which he is unacquainted. The
former reaps abundant crops without difficulty, the latter meets with a
thousand obstacles in raising the fruits of the earth.
The European is placed amongst a population whose wants he
knows and partakes. The savage is isolated in the midst of a hostile people,
with whose manners, language, and laws he is imperfectly acquainted, but
without whose assistance he cannot live. He can only procure the materials of
comfort by bartering his commodities against the goods of the European, for the
assistance of his countrymen is wholly insufficient to supply his wants. When
the Indian wishes to sell the produce of his labor, he cannot always meet with
a purchaser, whilst the European readily finds a market; and the former can
only produce at a considerable cost that which the latter vends at a very low
rate. Thus the Indian has no sooner escaped those evils to which barbarous
nations are exposed, than he is subjected to the still greater miseries of
civilized communities; and he finds is scarcely less difficult to live in the
midst of our abundance, than in the depth of his own wilderness.
He has not yet lost the habits of his erratic life; the
traditions of his fathers and his passion for the chase are still alive within
him. The wild enjoyments which formerly animated him in the woods, painfully
excite his troubled imagination; and his former privations appear to be less
keen, his former perils less appalling. He contrasts the independence which he
possessed amongst his equals with the servile position which he occupies in
civilized society. On the other hand, the solitudes which were so long his free
home are still at hand; a few hours' march will bring him back to them once
more. The whites offer him a sum, which seems to him to be considerable, for
the ground which he has begun to clear. This money of the Europeans may
possibly furnish him with the means of a happy and peaceful subsistence in
remoter regions; and he quits the plough, resumes his native arms, and returns
to the wilderness forever.s The condition of the
Creeks and Cherokees, to which I have already alluded, sufficiently
corroborates the truth of this deplorable picture.
The Indians, in the little which they have done, have
unquestionably displayed as much natural genius as the peoples of Europe in
their most important designs; but nations as well as men require time to learn,
whatever may be their intelligence and their zeal. Whilst the savages were
engaged in the work of civilization, the Europeans continued to surround them
on every side, and to confine them within narrower limits; the two races
gradually met, and they are now in immediate juxtaposition to each other. The
Indian is already superior to his barbarous parent, but he is still very far
below his white neighbor. With their resources and acquired knowledge, the
Europeans soon appropriated to themselves most of the advantages which the
natives might have derived from the possession of the soil; they have settled
in the country, they have purchased land at a very low rate or have occupied it
by force, and the Indians have been ruined by a competition which they had not
the means of resisting. They were isolated in their own country, and their race
only constituted a colony of troublesome aliens in the midst of a numerous and
domineering people.t
Washington said in one of his messages to Congress, "We are
more enlightened and more powerful than the Indian nations, we are therefore
bound in honor to treat them with kindness and even with generosity." But this
virtuous and high-minded policy has not been followed. The rapacity of the
settlers is usually backed by the tyranny of the government. Although the
Cherokees and the Creeks are established upon the territory which they
inhabited before the settlement of the Europeans, and although the Americans
have frequently treated with them as with foreign nations, the surrounding
States have not consented to acknowledge them as independent peoples, and
attempts have been made to subject these children of the woods to
Anglo-American magistrates, laws, and customs.u
Destitution had driven these unfortunate Indians to civilization, and
oppression now drives them back to their former condition: many of them abandon
the soil which they had begun to clear, and return to their savage course of
life.
i This seems, indeed,
to be the opinion of almost all American statesmen. "Judging of the future by
the past," says Mr. Cass, "we cannot err in anticipating a progressive
diminution of their numbers, and their eventual extinction, unless our border
should become stationary, and they be removed beyond it, or unless some radical
change should take place in the principles of our intercourse with them, which
it is easier to hope for than to expect."
j Amongst other
warlike enterprises, there was one of the Wampanaogs, and other confederate
tribes, under Metacom in 1675, against the colonists of New England; the
English were also engaged in war in Virginia in 1622.
k See the "Histoire
de la Nouvelle France," by Charlevoix, and the work entitled "Lettres
edifiantes."
l "In all the
tribes," says Volney, in his "Tableau des Etats-Unis," p. 423, "there still
exists a generation of old warriors, who cannot forbear, when they see their
countrymen using the hoe, from exclaiming against the degradation of ancient
manners, and asserting that the savages owe their decline to these innovations;
adding, that they have only to return to their primitive habits in order to
recover their power and their glory."
m The following
description occurs in an official document: "Until a young man has been engaged
with an enemy, and has performed some acts of valor, he gains no consideration,
but is regarded nearly as a woman. In their great war-dances all the warriors
in succession strike the post, as it is called, and recount their exploits. On
these occasions their auditory consists of the kinsmen, friends, and comrades
of the narrator. The profound impression which his discourse produces on them
is manifested by the silent attention it receives, and by the loud shouts which
hail its termination. The young man who finds himself at such a meeting without
anything to recount is very unhappy; and instances have sometimes occurred of
young warriors, whose passions had been thus inflamed, quitting the war-dance
suddenly, and going off alone to seek for trophies which they might exhibit,
and adventures which they might be allowed to relate."
n These nations are
now swallowed up in the States of Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi.
There were formerly in the South four great nations (remnants of which still
exist), the Choctaws, the Chickasaws, the Creeks, and the Cherokees. The
remnants of these four nations amounted, in 1830, to about 75,000 individuals.
It is computed that there are now remaining in the territory occupied or
claimed by the Anglo-American Union about 300,000 Indians. (See Proceedings of
the Indian Board in the City of New York.) The official documents supplied to
Congress make the number amount to 313,130. The reader who is curious to know
the names and numerical strength of all the tribes which inhabit the
Anglo-American territory should consult the documents I refer to. (Legislative
Documents, 20th Congress, No. 117, pp. 90-105.) [In the Census of 1870 it is
stated that the Indian population of the United States is only 25,731, of whom
7,241 are in California.]
o I brought back with
me to France one or two copies of this singular publication.
p See in the Report
of the Committee on Indian Affairs, 21st Congress, No. 227, p. 23, the reasons
for the multiplication of Indians of mixed blood among the Cherokees. The
principal cause dates from the War of Independence. Many Anglo-Americans of
Georgia, having taken the side of England, were obliged to retreat among the
Indians, where they married.
q Unhappily the mixed
race has been less numerous and less influential in North America than in any
other country. The American continent was peopled by two great nations of
Europe, the French and the English. The former were not slow in connecting
themselves with the daughters of the natives, but there was an unfortunate
affinity between the Indian character and their own: instead of giving the
tastes and habits of civilized life to the savages, the French too often grew
passionately fond of the state of wild freedom they found them in. They became
the most dangerous of the inhabitants of the desert, and won the friendship of
the Indian by exaggerating his vices and his virtues. M. de Senonville, the
governor of Canada, wrote thus to Louis XIV in 1685: "It has long been believed
that in order to civilize the savages we ought to draw them nearer to us. But
there is every reason to suppose we have been mistaken. Those which have been
brought into contact with us have not become French, and the French who have
lived among them are changed into savages, affecting to dress and live like
them." ("History of New France," by Charlevoix, vol. ii., p. 345.) The
Englishman, on the contrary, continuing obstinately attached to the customs and
the most insignificant habits of his forefathers, has remained in the midst of
the American solitudes just what he was in the bosom of European cities; he
would not allow of any communication with savages whom he despised, and avoided
with care the union of his race with theirs. Thus while the French exercised no
salutary influence over the Indians, the English have always remained alien
from them.
r There is in the
adventurous life of the hunter a certain irresistible charm, which seizes the
heart of man and carries him away in spite of reason and experience. This is
plainly shown by the memoirs of Tanner. Tanner is a European who was carried
away at the age of six by the Indians, and has remained thirty years with them
in the woods. Nothing can be conceived more appalling that the miseries which
he describes. He tells us of tribes without a chief, families without a nation
to call their own, men in a state of isolation, wrecks of powerful tribes
wandering at random amid the ice and snow and desolate solitudes of Canada.
Hunger and cold pursue them; every day their life is in jeopardy. Amongst these
men, manners have lost their empire, traditions are without power. They become
more and more savage. Tanner shared in all these miseries; he was aware of his
European origin; he was not kept away from the whites by force; on the
contrary, he came every year to trade with them, entered their dwellings, and
witnessed their enjoyments; he knew that whenever he chose to return to
civilized life he was perfectly able to do so - and he remained thirty years in
the deserts. When he came into civilized society he declared that the rude
existence which he described, had a secret charm for him which he was unable to
define: he returned to it again and again: at length he abandoned it with
poignant regret; and when he was at length fixed among the whites, several of
his children refused to share his tranquil and easy situation. I saw Tanner
myself at the lower end of Lake Superior; he seemed to me to be more like a
savage than a civilized being. His book is written without either taste or
order; but he gives, even unconsciously, a lively picture of the prejudices,
the passions, the vices, and, above all, of the destitution in which he
lived.
s The destructive
influence of highly civilized nations upon others which are less so, has been
exemplified by the Europeans themselves. About a century ago the French founded
the town of Vincennes up on the Wabash, in the middle of the desert; and they
lived there in great plenty until the arrival of the American settlers, who
first ruined the previous inhabitants by their competition, and afterwards
purchased their lands at a very low rate. At the time when M. de Volney, from
whom I borrow these details, passed through Vincennes, the number of the French
was reduced to a hundred individuals, most of whom were about to pass over to
Louisiana or to Canada. These French settlers were worthy people, but idle and
uninstructed: they had contracted many of the habits of savages. The Americans,
who were perhaps their inferiors, in a moral point of view, were immeasurably
superior to them in intelligence: they were industrious, well informed, rich,
and accustomed to govern their own community.
I myself saw in Canada, where the intellectual
difference between the two races is less striking, that the English are the
masters of commerce and manufacture in the Canadian country, that they spread
on all sides, and confine the French within limits which scarcely suffice to
contain them. In like manner, in Louisiana, almost all activity in commerce and
manufacture centres in the hands of the Anglo-Americans.
But the case of Texas is still more striking:
the State of Texas is a part of Mexico, and lies upon the frontier between that
country and the United States. In the course of the last few years the
Anglo-Americans have penetrated into this province, which is still thinly
peopled; they purchase land, they produce the commodities of the country, and
supplant the original population. It may easily be foreseen that if Mexico
takes no steps to check this change, the province of Texas will very shortly
cease to belong to that government.
If the different degrees - comparatively so
slight - which exist in European civilization produce results of such
magnitude, the consequences which must ensue from the collision of the most
perfect European civilization with Indian savages may readily be
conceived.
t See in the
Legislative Documents (21st Congress, No. 89) instances of excesses of every
kind committed by the whites upon the territory of the Indians, either in
taking possession of a part of their lands, until compelled to retire by the
troops of Congress, or carrying off their cattle, burning their houses, cutting
down their corn, and doing violence to their persons. It appears, nevertheless,
from all these documents that the claims of the natives are constantly
protected by the government from the abuse of force. The Union has a
representative agent continually employed to reside among the Indians; and the
report of the Cherokee agent, which is among the documents I have referred to,
is almost always favorable to the Indians. "The intrusion of whites," he says,
"upon the lands of the Cherokees would cause ruin to the poor, helpless, and
inoffensive inhabitants." And he further remarks upon the attempt of the State
of Georgia to establish a division line for the purpose of limiting the
boundaries of the Cherokees, that the line drawn having been made by the
whites, and entirely upon ex parte evidence of their several rights, was of no
validity whatever.
u In 1829 the State
of Alabama divided the Creek territory into counties, and subjected the Indian
population to the power of European magistrates.

In 1830 the State of Mississippi assimilated the Choctaws and
Chickasaws to the white population, and declared that any of them that should
take the title of chief would be punished by a fine of $1,000 and a year's
imprisonment. When these laws were enforced upon the Choctaws, who inhabited
that district, the tribe assembled, their chief communicated to them the
intentions of the whites, and read to them some of the laws to which it was
intended that they should submit; and they unanimously declared that it was
better at once to retreat again into the wilds.
If we consider the tyrannical measures which have been adopted
by the legislatures of the Southern States, the conduct of their Governors, and
the decrees of their courts of justice, we shall be convinced that the entire
expulsion of the Indians is the final result to which the efforts of their
policy are directed. The Americans of that part of the Union look with jealousy
upon the aborigines,v they are aware that these
tribes have not yet lost the traditions of savage life, and before civilization
has permanently fixed them to the soil, it is intended to force them to recede
by reducing them to despair. The Creeks and Cherokees, oppressed by the several
States, have appealed to the central government, which is by no means
insensible to their misfortunes, and is sincerely desirous of saving the
remnant of the natives, and of maintaining them in the free possession of that
territory, which the Union is pledged to respect.w
But the several States oppose so formidable a resistance to the execution of
this design, that the government is obliged to consent to the extirpation of a
few barbarous tribes in order not to endanger the safety of the American Union.
But the federal government, which is not able to protect the
Indians, would fain mitigate the hardships of their lot; and, with this
intention, proposals have been made to transport them into more remote regions
at the public cost.
Between the thirty-third and thirty-seventh degrees of north
latitude, a vast tract of country lies, which has taken the name of Arkansas,
from the principal river that waters its extent. It is bounded on the one side
by the confines of Mexico, on the other by the Mississippi. Numberless streams
cross it in every direction; the climate is mild, and the soil productive, but
it is only inhabited by a few wandering hordes of savages. The government of
the Union wishes to transport the broken remnants of the indigenous population
of the South to the portion of this country which is nearest to Mexico, and at
a great distance from the American settlements.
We were assured, towards the end of the year 1831, that 10,000
Indians had already gone down to the shores of the Arkansas; and fresh
detachments were constantly following them; but Congress has been unable to
excite a unanimous determination in those whom it is disposed to protect. Some,
indeed, are willing to quit the seat of oppression, but the most enlightened
members of the community refuse to abandon their recent dwellings and their
springing crops; they are of opinion that the work of civilization, once
interrupted, will never be resumed; they fear that those domestic habits which
have been so recently contracted, may be irrevocably lost in the midst of a
country which is still barbarous, and where nothing is prepared for the
subsistence of an agricultural people; they know that their entrance into those
wilds will be opposed by inimical hordes, and that they have lost the energy of
barbarians, without acquiring the resources of civilization to resist their
attacks. Moreover, the Indians readily discover that the settlement which is
proposed to them is merely a temporary expedient. Who can assure them that they
will at length be allowed to dwell in peace in their new retreat? The United
States pledge themselves to the observance of the obligation; but the territory
which they at present occupy was formerly secured to them by the most solemn
oaths of Anglo-American faith.x The American
government does not indeed rob them of their lands, but it allows perpetual
incursions to be made on them. In a few years the same white population which
now flocks around them, will track them to the solitudes of the Arkansas; they
will then be exposed to the same evils without the same remedies, and as the
limits of the earth will at last fail them, their only refuge is the grave.
The Union treats the Indians with less cupidity and rigor than
the policy of the several States, but the two governments are alike destitute
of good faith. The States extend what they are pleased to term the benefits of
their laws to the Indians, with a belief that the tribes will recede rather
than submit; and the central government, which promises a permanent refuge to
these unhappy beings is well aware of its inability to secure it to them.y
Thus the tyranny of the States obliges the savages to retire,
the Union, by its promises and resources, facilitates their retreat; and these
measures tend to precisely the same end.z "By the
will of our Father in Heaven, the Governor of the whole world," said the
Cherokees in their petition to Congress,aa "the
red man of America has become small, and the white man great and renowned. When
the ancestors of the people of these United States first came to the shores of
America they found the red man strong: though he was ignorant and savage, yet
he received them kindly, and gave them dry land to rest their weary feet. They
met in peace, and shook hands in token of friendship. Whatever the white man
wanted and asked of the Indian, the latter willingly gave. At that time the
Indian was the lord, and the white man the suppliant. But now the scene has
changed. The strength of the red man has become weakness. As his neighbors
increased in numbers his power became less and less, and now, of the many and
powerful tribes who once covered these United States, only a few are to be seen
- a few whom a sweeping pestilence has left. The northern tribes, who were once
so numerous and powerful, are now nearly extinct. Thus it has happened to the
red man of America. Shall we, who are remnants, share the same fate?
"The land on which we stand we have received as an inheritance
from our fathers, who possessed it from time immemorial, as a gift from our
common Father in Heaven. They bequeathed it to us as their children, and we
have sacredly kept it, as containing the remains of our beloved men. This right
of inheritance we have never ceded nor ever forfeited. Permit us to ask what
better right can the people have to a country than the right of inheritance and
immemorial peaceable possession? We know it is said of late by the State of
Georgia and by the Executive of the United States, that we have forfeited this
right; but we think this is said gratuitously. At what time have we made the
forfeit? What great crime have we committed, whereby we must forever be
divested of our country and rights? Was it when we were hostile to the United
States, and took part with the King of Great Britain, during the struggle for
independence? If so, why was not this forfeiture declared in the first treaty
of peace between the United States and our beloved men? Why was not such an
article as the following inserted in the treaty: - 'The United States give
peace to the Cherokees, but, for the part they took in the late war, declare
them to be but tenants at will, to be removed when the convenience of the
States, within whose chartered limits they live, shall require it'? That was
the proper time to assume such a possession. But it was not thought of, nor
would our forefathers have agreed to any treaty whose tendency was to deprive
them of their rights and their country."
Such is the language of the Indians: their assertions are true,
their forebodings inevitable. From whichever side we consider the destinies of
the aborigines of North America, their calamities appear to be irremediable: if
they continue barbarous, they are forced to retire; if they attempt to civilize
their manners, the contact of a more civilized community subjects them to
oppression and destitution. They perish if they continue to wander from waste
to waste, and if they attempt to settle they still must perish; the assistance
of Europeans is necessary to instruct them, but the approach of Europeans
corrupts and repels them into savage life; they refuse to change their habits
as long as their solitudes are their own, and it is too late to change them
when they are constrained to submit.
The Spaniards pursued the Indians with bloodhounds, like wild
beasts; they sacked the New World with no more temper or compassion than a city
taken by storm; but destruction must cease, and frenzy be stayed; the remnant
of the Indian population which had escaped the massacre mixed with its
conquerors, and adopted in the end their religion and their manners.bb The conduct of the Americans of the United States
towards the aborigines is characterized, on the other hand, by a singular
attachment to the formalities of law. Provided that the Indians retain their
barbarous condition, the Americans take no part in their affairs; they treat
them as independent nations, and do not possess themselves of their hunting
grounds without a treaty of purchase; and if an Indian nation happens to be so
encroached upon as to be unable to subsist upon its territory, they afford it
brotherly assistance in transporting it to a grave sufficiently remote from the
land of its fathers.
The Spaniards were unable to exterminate the Indian race by
those unparalleled atrocities which brand them with indelible shame, nor did
they even succeed in wholly depriving it of its rights; but the Americans of
the United States have accomplished this twofold purpose with singular
felicity; tranquilly, legally, philanthropically, without shedding blood, and
without violating a single great principle of morality in the eyes of the
world.cc It is impossible to destroy men with more
respect for the laws of humanity.
[I leave this chapter wholly unchanged, for it has always
appeared to me to be one of the most eloquent and touching parts of this book.
But it has ceased to be prophetic; the destruction of the Indian race in the
United States is already consummated. In 1870 there remained but 25,731 Indians
in the whole territory of the Union, and of these by far the largest part exist
in California, Michigan, Wisconsin, Dakota, and New Mexico and Nevada. In New
England, Pennsylvania, and New York the race is extinct; and the predictions of
M. de Tocqueville are fulfilled. - Translator's Note.]
Situation Of The Black Population In The United States, And
Dangers With Which Its Presence Threatens The Whites
Why it is more difficult to abolish slavery, and to efface all
vestiges of it amongst the moderns than it was amongst the ancients - In the
United States the prejudices of the Whites against the Blacks seem to increase
in proportion as slavery is abolished - Situation of the Negroes in the
Northern and Southern States - Why the Americans abolish slavery - Servitude,
which debases the slave, impoverishes the master - Contrast between the left
and the right bank of the Ohio - To what attributable - The Black race, as well
as slavery, recedes towards the South - Explanation of this fact - Difficulties
attendant upon the abolition of slavery in the South - Dangers to come -
General anxiety - Foundation of a Black colony in Africa - Why the Americans of
the South increase the hardships of slavery, whilst they are distressed at its
continuance.
The Indians will perish in the same isolated condition in which
they have lived; but the destiny of the negroes is in some measure interwoven
with that of the Europeans. These two races are attached to each other without
intermingling, and they are alike unable entirely to separate or to combine.
The most formidable of all the ills which threaten the future existence of the
Union arises from the presence of a black population upon its territory; and in
contemplating the cause of the present embarrassments or of the future dangers
of the United States, the observer is invariably led to consider this as a
primary fact.
The permanent evils to which mankind is subjected are usually
produced by the vehement or the increasing efforts of men; but there is one
calamity which penetrated furtively into the world, and which was at first
scarcely distinguishable amidst the ordinary abuses of power; it originated
with an individual whose name history has not preserved; it was wafted like
some accursed germ upon a portion of the soil, but it afterwards nurtured
itself, grew without effort, and spreads naturally with the society to which it
belongs. I need scarcely add that this calamity is slavery. Christianity
suppressed slavery, but the Christians of the sixteenth century re-established
it - as an exception, indeed, to their social system, and restricted to one of
the races of mankind; but the wound thus inflicted upon humanity, though less
extensive, was at the same time rendered far more difficult of cure.
It is important to make an accurate distinction between slavery
itself and its consequences. The immediate evils which are produced by slavery
were very nearly the same in antiquity as they are amongst the moderns; but the
consequences of these evils were different. The slave, amongst the ancients,
belonged to the same race as his master, and he was often the superior of the
two in educationdd and instruction. Freedom was
the only distinction between them; and when freedom was conferred they were
easily confounded together. The ancients, then, had a very simple means of
avoiding slavery and its evil consequences, which was that of affranchisement;
and they succeeded as soon as they adopted this measure generally. Not but, in
ancient States, the vestiges of servitude subsisted for some time after
servitude itself was abolished. There is a natural prejudice which prompts men
to despise whomsoever has been their inferior long after he is become their
equal; and the real inequality which is produced by fortune or by law is always
succeeded by an imaginary inequality which is implanted in the manners of the
people. Nevertheless, this secondary consequence of slavery was limited to a
certain term amongst the ancients, for the freedman bore so entire a
resemblance to those born free, that it soon became impossible to distinguish
him from amongst them.
The greatest difficulty in antiquity was that of altering the
law; amongst the moderns it is that of altering the manners; and, as far as we
are concerned, the real obstacles begin where those of the ancients left off.
This arises from the circumstance that, amongst the moderns, the abstract and
transient fact of slavery is fatally united to the physical and permanent fact
of color. The tradition of slavery dishonors the race, and the peculiarity of
the race perpetuates the tradition of slavery. No African has ever voluntarily
emigrated to the shores of the New World; whence it must be inferred, that all
the blacks who are now to be found in that hemisphere are either slaves or
freedmen. Thus the negro transmits the eternal mark of his ignominy to all his
descendants; and although the law may abolish slavery, God alone can obliterate
the traces of its existence.
The modern slave differs from his master not only in his
condition, but in his origin. You may set the negro free, but you cannot make
him otherwise than an alien to the European. Nor is this all; we scarcely
acknowledge the common features of mankind in this child of debasement whom
slavery has brought amongst us. His physiognomy is to our eyes hideous, his
understanding weak, his tastes low; and we are almost inclined to look upon him
as a being intermediate between man and the brutes.ee The moderns, then, after they have abolished
slavery, have three prejudices to contend against, which are less easy to
attack and far less easy to conquer than the mere fact of servitude: the
prejudice of the master, the prejudice of the race, and the prejudice of color.
It is difficult for us, who have had the good fortune to be
born amongst men like ourselves by nature, and equal to ourselves by law, to
conceive the irreconcilable differences which separate the negro from the
European in America. But we may derive some faint notion of them from analogy.
France was formerly a country in which numerous distinctions of rank existed,
that had been created by the legislation. Nothing can be more fictitious than a
purely legal inferiority; nothing more contrary to the instinct of mankind than
these permanent divisions which had been established between beings evidently
similar. Nevertheless these divisions subsisted for ages; they still subsist in
many places; and on all sides they have left imaginary vestiges, which time
alone can efface. If it be so difficult to root out an inequality which solely
originates in the law, how are those distinctions to be destroyed which seem to
be based upon the immutable laws of Nature herself? When I remember the extreme
difficulty with which aristocratic bodies, of whatever nature they may be, are
commingled with the mass of the people; and the exceeding care which they take
to preserve the ideal boundaries of their caste inviolate, I despair of seeing
an aristocracy disappear which is founded upon visible and indelible signs.
Those who hope that the Europeans will ever mix with the negroes, appear to me
to delude themselves; and I am not led to any such conclusion by my own reason,
or by the evidence of facts.
Hitherto, wherever the whites have been the most powerful, they
have maintained the blacks in a subordinate or a servile position; wherever the
negroes have been strongest they have destroyed the whites; such has been the
only retribution which has ever taken place between the two races.
I see that in a certain portion of the territory of the United
States at the present day, the legal barrier which separated the two races is
tending to fall away, but not that which exists in the manners of the country;
slavery recedes, but the prejudice to which it has given birth remains
stationary. Whosoever has inhabited the United States must have perceived that
in those parts of the Union in which the negroes are no longer slaves, they
have in no wise drawn nearer to the whites. On the contrary, the prejudice of
the race appears to be stronger in the States which have abolished slavery,
than in those where it still exists; and nowhere is it so intolerant as in
those States where servitude has never been known.
It is true, that in the North of the Union, marriages may be
legally contracted between negroes and whites; but public opinion would
stigmatize a man who should connect himself with a negress as infamous, and it
would be difficult to meet with a single instance of such a union. The
electoral franchise has been conferred upon the negroes in almost all the
States in which slavery has been abolished; but if they come forward to vote,
their lives are in danger. If oppressed, they may bring an action at law, but
they will find none but whites amongst their judges; and although they may
legally serve as jurors, prejudice repulses them from that office. The same
schools do not receive the child of the black and of the European. In the
theatres, gold cannot procure a seat for the servile race beside their former
masters; in the hospitals they lie apart; and although they are allowed to
invoke the same Divinity as the whites, it must be at a different altar, and in
their own churches, with their own clergy. The gates of Heaven are not closed
against these unhappy beings; but their inferiority is continued to the very
confines of the other world; when the negro is defunct, his bones are cast
aside, and the distinction of condition prevails even in the equality of death.
The negro is free, but he can share neither the rights, nor the pleasures, nor
the labor, nor the afflictions, nor the tomb of him whose equal he has been
declared to be; and he cannot meet him upon fair terms in life or in death.
In the South, where slavery still exists, the negroes are less
carefully kept apart; they sometimes share the labor and the recreations of the
whites; the whites consent to intermix with them to a certain extent, and
although the legislation treats them more harshly, the habits of the people are
more tolerant and compassionate. In the South the master is not afraid to raise
his slave to his own standing, because he knows that he can in a moment reduce
him to the dust at pleasure. In the North the white no longer distinctly
perceives the barrier which separates him from the degraded race, and he shuns
the negro with the more pertinacity, since he fears lest they should some day
be confounded together.
Amongst the Americans of the South, nature sometimes reasserts
her rights, and restores a transient equality between the blacks and the
whites; but in the North pride restrains the most imperious of human passions.
The American of the Northern States would perhaps allow the negress to share
his licentious pleasures, if the laws of his country did not declare that she
may aspire to be the legitimate partner of his bed; but he recoils with horror
from her who might become his wife.
Thus it is, in the United States, that the prejudice which
repels the negroes seems to increase in proportion as they are emancipated, and
inequality is sanctioned by the manners whilst it is effaced from the laws of
the country. But if the relative position of the two races which inhabit the
United States is such as I have described, it may be asked why the Americans
have abolished slavery in the North of the Union, why they maintain it in the
South, and why they aggravate its hardships there? The answer is easily given.
It is not for the good of the negroes, but for that of the whites, that
measures are taken to abolish slavery in the United States.
The first negroes were imported into Virginia about the year
1621.ff In America, therefore, as well as in the
rest of the globe, slavery originated in the South. Thence it spread from one
settlement to another; but the number of slaves diminished towards the Northern
States, and the negro population was always very limited in New England.gg
A century had scarcely elapsed since the foundation of the
colonies, when the attention of the planters was struck by the extraordinary
fact, that the provinces which were comparatively destitute of slaves,
increased in population, in wealth, and in prosperity more rapidly than those
which contained the greatest number of negroes. In the former, however, the
inhabitants were obliged to cultivate the soil themselves, or by hired
laborers; in the latter they were furnished with hands for which they paid no
wages; yet although labor and expenses were on the one side, and ease with
economy on the other, the former were in possession of the most advantageous
system. This consequence seemed to be the more difficult to explain, since the
settlers, who all belonged to the same European race, had the same habits, the
same civilization, the same laws, and their shades of difference were extremely
slight.
Time, however, continued to advance, and the Anglo-Americans,
spreading beyond the coasts of the Atlantic Ocean, penetrated farther and
farther into the solitudes of the West; they met with a new soil and an
unwonted climate; the obstacles which opposed them were of the most various
character; their races intermingled, the inhabitants of the South went up
towards the North, those of the North descended to the South; but in the midst
of all these causes, the same result occurred at every step, and in general,
the colonies in which there were no slaves became more populous and more rich
than those in which slavery flourished. The more progress was made, the more
was it shown that slavery, which is so cruel to the slave, is prejudicial to
the master.
v The Georgians, who
are so much annoyed by the proximity of the Indians, inhabit a territory which
does not at present contain more than seven inhabitants to the square mile. In
France there are one hundred and sixty-two inhabitants to the same extent of
country.
w In 1818 Congress
appointed commissioners to visit the Arkansas Territory, accompanied by a
deputation of Creeks, Choctaws, and Chickasaws. This expedition was commanded
by Messrs. Kennerly, M'Coy, Wash Hood, and John Bell. See the different reports
of the commissioners, and their journal, in the Documents of Congress, No. 87,
House of Representatives.
x The fifth article
of the treaty made with the Creeks in August, 1790, is in the following words:
- "The United States solemnly guarantee to the Creek nation all their land
within the limits of the United States."
The seventh article of the treaty concluded in
1791 with the Cherokees says: - "The United States solemnly guarantee to the
Cherokee nation all their lands not hereby ceded." The following article
declared that if any citizen of the United States or other settler not of the
Indian race should establish himself upon the territory of the Cherokees, the
United States would withdraw their protection from that individual, and give
him up to be punished as the Cherokee nation should think fit.
y This does not
prevent them from promising in the most solemn manner to do so. See the letter
of the President addressed to the Creek Indians, March 23, 1829 (Proceedings of
the Indian Board, in the city of New York, p. 5): "Beyond the great river
Mississippi, where a part of your nation has gone, your father has provided a
country large enough for all of you, and he advises you to remove to it. There
your white brothers will not trouble you; they will have no claim to the land,
and you can live upon it, you and all your children, as long as the grass
grows, or the water runs, in peace and plenty. It will be yours
forever."
The Secretary of War, in a letter written to the
Cherokees, April 18, 1829, (see the same work, p. 6), declares to them that
they cannot expect to retain possession of the lands at that time occupied by
them, but gives them the most positive assurance of uninterrupted peace if they
would remove beyond the Mississippi: as if the power which could not grant them
protection then, would be able to afford it them hereafter!
z To obtain a correct
idea of the policy pursued by the several States and the Union with respect to
the Indians, it is necessary to consult, 1st, "The Laws of the Colonial and
State Governments relating to the Indian Inhabitants." (See the Legislative
Documents, 21st Congress, No. 319.) 2d, The Laws of the Union on the same
subject, and especially that of March 30, 1802. (See Story's "Laws of the
United States.") 3d, The Report of Mr. Cass, Secretary of War, relative to
Indian Affairs, November 29, 1823.
aa December 18,
1829.
bb The honor of this
result is, however, by no means due to the Spaniards. If the Indian tribes had
not been tillers of the ground at the time of the arrival of the Europeans,
they would unquestionably have been destroyed in South as well as in North
America.
cc See, amongst
other documents, the report made by Mr. Bell in the name of the Committee on
Indian Affairs, February 24, 1830, in which is most logically established and
most learnedly proved, that "the fundamental principle that the Indians had no
right by virtue of their ancient possession either of will or sovereignty, has
never been abandoned either expressly or by implication." In perusing this
report, which is evidently drawn up by an experienced hand, one is astonished
at the facility with which the author gets rid of all arguments founded upon
reason and natural right, which he designates as abstract and theoretical
principles. The more I contemplate the difference between civilized and
uncivilized man with regard to the principles of justice, the more I observe
that the former contests the justice of those rights which the latter simply
violates.
dd It is well known
that several of the most distinguished authors of antiquity, and amongst them
Aesop and Terence, were, or had been slaves. Slaves were not always taken from
barbarous nations, and the chances of war reduced highly civilized men to
servitude.
ee To induce the
whites to abandon the opinion they have conceived of the moral and intellectual
inferiority of their former slaves, the negroes must change; but as long as
this opinion subsists, to change is impossible.
ff See Beverley's
"History of Virginia." See also in Jefferson's "Memoirs" some curious details
concerning the introduction of negroes into Virginia, and the first Act which
prohibited the importation of them in 1778.
gg The number of
slaves was less considerable in the North, but the advantages resulting from
slavery were not more contested there than in the South. In 1740, the
Legislature of the State of New York declared that the direct importation of
slaves ought to be encouraged as much as possible, and smuggling severely
punished in order not to discourage the fair trader. (Kent's "Commentaries,"
vol. ii. p. 206.) Curious researches, by Belknap, upon slavery in New England,
are to be found in the "Historical Collection of Massachusetts," vol. iv. p.
193. It appears that negroes were introduced there in 1630, but that the
legislation and manners of the people were opposed to slavery from the first;
see also, in the same work, the manner in which public opinion, and afterwards
the laws, finally put an end to slavery.
But this truth was most satisfactorily demonstrated when
civilization reached the banks of the Ohio. The stream which the Indians had
distinguished by the name of Ohio, or Beautiful River, waters one of the most
magnificent valleys that has ever been made the abode of man. Undulating lands
extend upon both shores of the Ohio, whose soil affords inexhaustible treasures
to the laborer; on either bank the air is wholesome and the climate mild, and
each of them forms the extreme frontier of a vast State: That which follows the
numerous windings of the Ohio upon the left is called Kentucky, that upon the
right bears the name of the river. These two States only differ in a single
respect; Kentucky has admitted slavery, but the State of Ohio has prohibited
the existence of slaves within its borders.hh
Thus the traveller who floats down the current of the Ohio to
the spot where that river falls into the Mississippi, may be said to sail
between liberty and servitude; and a transient inspection of the surrounding
objects will convince him as to which of the two is most favorable to mankind.
Upon the left bank of the stream the population is rare; from time to time one
descries a troop of slaves loitering in the half-desert fields; the primaeval
forest recurs at every turn; society seems to be asleep, man to be idle, and
nature alone offers a scene of activity and of life. From the right bank, on
the contrary, a confused hum is heard which proclaims the presence of industry;
the fields are covered with abundant harvests, the elegance of the dwellings
announces the taste and activity of the laborer, and man appears to be in the
enjoyment of that wealth and contentment which is the reward of labor.ii
The State of Kentucky was founded in 1775, the State of Ohio
only twelve years later; but twelve years are more in America than half a
century in Europe, and, at the present day, the population of Ohio exceeds that
of Kentucky by two hundred and fifty thousand souls.jj These opposite consequences of slavery and freedom
may readily be understood, and they suffice to explain many of the differences
which we remark between the civilization of antiquity and that of our own time.
Upon the left bank of the Ohio labor is confounded with the
idea of slavery, upon the right bank it is identified with that of prosperity
and improvement; on the one side it is degraded, on the other it is honored; on
the former territory no white laborers can be found, for they would be afraid
of assimilating themselves to the negroes; on the latter no one is idle, for
the white population extends its activity and its intelligence to every kind of
employment. Thus the men whose task it is to cultivate the rich soil of
Kentucky are ignorant and lukewarm; whilst those who are active and enlightened
either do nothing or pass over into the State of Ohio, where they may work
without dishonor.
It is true that in Kentucky the planters are not obliged to pay
wages to the slaves whom they employ; but they derive small profits from their
labor, whilst the wages paid to free workmen would be returned with interest in
the value of their services. The free workman is paid, but he does his work
quicker than the slave, and rapidity of execution is one of the great elements
of economy. The white sells his services, but they are only purchased at the
times at which they may be useful; the black can claim no remuneration for his
toil, but the expense of his maintenance is perpetual; he must be supported in
his old age as well as in the prime of manhood, in his profitless infancy as
well as in the productive years of youth. Payment must equally be made in order
to obtain the services of either class of men: the free workman receives his
wages in money, the slave in education, in food, in care, and in clothing. The
money which a master spends in the maintenance of his slaves goes gradually and
in detail, so that it is scarcely perceived; the salary of the free workman is
paid in a round sum, which appears only to enrich the individual who receives
it, but in the end the slave has cost more than the free servant, and his labor
is less productive.kk
The influence of slavery extends still further; it affects the
character of the master, and imparts a peculiar tendency to his ideas and his
tastes. Upon both banks of the Ohio, the character of the inhabitants is
enterprising and energetic; but this vigor is very differently exercised in the
two States. The white inhabitant of Ohio, who is obliged to subsist by his own
exertions, regards temporal prosperity as the principal aim of his existence;
and as the country which he occupies presents inexhaustible resources to his
industry and ever-varying lures to his activity, his acquisitive ardor
surpasses the ordinary limits of human cupidity: he is tormented by the desire
of wealth, and he boldly enters upon every path which fortune opens to him; he
becomes a sailor, a pioneer, an artisan, or a laborer with the same
indifference, and he supports, with equal constancy, the fatigues and the
dangers incidental to these various professions; the resources of his
intelligence are astonishing, and his avidity in the pursuit of gain amounts to
a species of heroism.
But the Kentuckian scorns not only labor, but all the
undertakings which labor promotes; as he lives in an idle independence, his
tastes are those of an idle man; money loses a portion of its value in his
eyes; he covets wealth much less than pleasure and excitement; and the energy
which his neighbor devotes to gain, turns with him to a passionate love of
field sports and military exercises; he delights in violent bodily exertion, he
is familiar with the use of arms, and is accustomed from a very early age to
expose his life in single combat. Thus slavery not only prevents the whites
from becoming opulent, but even from desiring to become so.
As the same causes have been continually producing opposite
effects for the last two centuries in the British colonies of North America,
they have established a very striking difference between the commercial
capacity of the inhabitants of the South and those of the North. At the present
day it is only the Northern States which are in possession of shipping,
manufactures, railroads, and canals. This difference is perceptible not only in
comparing the North with the South, but in comparing the several Southern
States. Almost all the individuals who carry on commercial operations, or who
endeavor to turn slave labor to account in the most Southern districts of the
Union, have emigrated from the North. The natives of the Northern States are
constantly spreading over that portion of the American territory where they
have less to fear from competition; they discover resources there which escaped
the notice of the inhabitants; and, as they comply with a system which they do
not approve, they succeed in turning it to better advantage than those who
first founded and who still maintain it.
Were I inclined to continue this parallel, I could easily prove
that almost all the differences which may be remarked between the characters of
the Americans in the Southern and in the Northern States have originated in
slavery; but this would divert me from my subject, and my present intention is
not to point out all the consequences of servitude, but those effects which it
has produced upon the prosperity of the countries which have admitted it.
The influence of slavery upon the production of wealth must
have been very imperfectly known in antiquity, as slavery then obtained
throughout the civilized world; and the nations which were unacquainted with it
were barbarous. And indeed Christianity only abolished slavery by advocating
the claims of the slave; at the present time it may be attacked in the name of
the master, and, upon this point, interest is reconciled with morality.
As these truths became apparent in the United States, slavery
receded before the progress of experience. Servitude had begun in the South,
and had thence spread towards the North; but it now retires again. Freedom,
which started from the North, now descends uninterruptedly towards the South.
Amongst the great States, Pennsylvania now constitutes the extreme limit of
slavery to the North: but even within those limits the slave system is shaken:
Maryland, which is immediately below Pennsylvania, is preparing for its
abolition; and Virginia, which comes next to Maryland, is already discussing
its utility and its dangers.ll
No great change takes place in human institutions without
involving amongst its causes the law of inheritance. When the law of
primogeniture obtained in the South, each family was represented by a wealthy
individual, who was neither compelled nor induced to labor; and he was
surrounded, as by parasitic plants, by the other members of his family who were
then excluded by law from sharing the common inheritance, and who led the same
kind of life as himself. The very same thing then occurred in all the families
of the South as still happens in the wealthy families of some countries in
Europe, namely, that the younger sons remain in the same state of idleness as
their elder brother, without being as rich as he is. This identical result
seems to be produced in Europe and in America by wholly analogous causes. In
the South of the United States the whole race of whites formed an aristocratic
body, which was headed by a certain number of privileged individuals, whose
wealth was permanent, and whose leisure was hereditary. These leaders of the
American nobility kept alive the traditional prejudices of the white race in
the body of which they were the representatives, and maintained the honor of
inactive life. This aristocracy contained many who were poor, but none who
would work; its members preferred want to labor, consequently no competition
was set on foot against negro laborers and slaves, and, whatever opinion might
be entertained as to the utility of their efforts, it was indispensable to
employ them, since there was no one else to work.
No sooner was the law of primogeniture abolished than fortunes
began to diminish, and all the families of the country were simultaneously
reduced to a state in which labor became necessary to procure the means of
subsistence: several of them have since entirely disappeared, and all of them
learned to look forward to the time at which it would be necessary for everyone
to provide for his own wants. Wealthy individuals are still to be met with, but
they no longer constitute a compact and hereditary body, nor have they been
able to adopt a line of conduct in which they could persevere, and which they
could infuse into all ranks of society. The prejudice which stigmatized labor
was in the first place abandoned by common consent; the number of needy men was
increased, and the needy were allowed to gain a laborious subsistence without
blushing for their exertions. Thus one of the most immediate consequences of
the partible quality of estates has been to create a class of free laborers. As
soon as a competition was set on foot between the free laborer and the slave,
the inferiority of the latter became manifest, and slavery was attacked in its
fundamental principle, which is the interest of the master.
As slavery recedes, the black population follows its retrograde
course, and returns with it towards those tropical regions from which it
originally came. However singular this fact may at first appear to be, it may
readily be explained. Although the Americans abolish the principle of slavery,
they do not set their slaves free. To illustrate this remark, I will quote the
example of the State of New York. In 1788, the State of New York prohibited the
sale of slaves within its limits, which was an indirect method of prohibiting
the importation of blacks. Thenceforward the number of negroes could only
increase according to the ratio of the natural increase of population. But
eight years later a more decisive measure was taken, and it was enacted that
all children born of slave parents after July 4, 1799, should be free. No
increase could then take place, and although slaves still existed, slavery
might be said to be abolished.
From the time at which a Northern State prohibited the
importation of slaves, no slaves were brought from the South to be sold in its
markets. On the other hand, as the sale of slaves was forbidden in that State,
an owner was no longer able to get rid of his slave (who thus became a
burdensome possession) otherwise than by transporting him to the South. But
when a Northern State declared that the son of the slave should be born free,
the slave lost a large portion of his market value, since his posterity was no
longer included in the bargain, and the owner had then a strong interest in
transporting him to the South. Thus the same law prevents the slaves of the
South from coming to the Northern States, and drives those of the North to the
South.
The want of free hands is felt in a State in proportion as the
number of slaves decreases. But in proportion as labor is performed by free
hands, slave labor becomes less productive; and the slave is then a useless or
onerous possession, whom it is important to export to those Southern States
where the same competition is not to be feared. Thus the abolition of slavery
does not set the slave free, but it merely transfers him from one master to
another, and from the North to the South.
The emancipated negroes, and those born after the abolition of
slavery, do not, indeed, migrate from the North to the South; but their
situation with regard to the Europeans is not unlike that of the aborigines of
America; they remain half civilized, and deprived of their rights in the midst
of a population which is far superior to them in wealth and in knowledge; where
they are exposed to the tyranny of the lawsmm and
the intolerance of the people. On some accounts they are still more to be
pitied than the Indians, since they are haunted by the reminiscence of slavery,
and they cannot claim possession of a single portion of the soil: many of them
perish miserably,nn and the rest congregate in the
great towns, where they perform the meanest offices, and lead a wretched and
precarious existence.
But even if the number of negroes continued to increase as
rapidly as when they were still in a state of slavery, as the number of whites
augments with twofold rapidity since the abolition of slavery, the blacks would
soon be, as it were, lost in the midst of a strange population.
A district which is cultivated by slaves is in general more
scantily peopled than a district cultivated by free labor: moreover, America is
still a new country, and a State is therefore not half peopled at the time when
it abolishes slavery. No sooner is an end put to slavery than the want of free
labor is felt, and a crowd of enterprising adventurers immediately arrive from
all parts of the country, who hasten to profit by the fresh resources which are
then opened to industry. The soil is soon divided amongst them, and a family of
white settlers takes possession of each tract of country. Besides which,
European emigration is exclusively directed to the free States; for what would
be the fate of a poor emigrant who crosses the Atlantic in search of ease and
happiness if he were to land in a country where labor is stigmatized as
degrading?
Thus the white population grows by its natural increase, and at
the same time by the immense influx of emigrants; whilst the black population
receives no emigrants, and is upon its decline. The proportion which existed
between the two races is soon inverted. The negroes constitute a scanty
remnant, a poor tribe of vagrants, which is lost in the midst of an immense
people in full possession of the land; and the presence of the blacks is only
marked by the injustice and the hardships of which they are the unhappy
victims.
In several of the Western States the negro race never made its
appearance, and in all the Northern States it is rapidly declining. Thus the
great question of its future condition is confined within a narrow circle,
where it becomes less formidable, though not more easy of solution.
The more we descend towards the South, the more difficult does
it become to abolish slavery with advantage: and this arises from several
physical causes which it is important to point out.
The first of these causes is the climate; it is well known that
in proportion as Europeans approach the tropics they suffer more from labor.
Many of the Americans even assert that within a certain latitude the exertions
which a negro can make without danger are fatal to them;oo but I do not think that this opinion, which is so
favorable to the indolence of the inhabitants of southern regions, is confirmed
by experience. The southern parts of the Union are not hotter than the South of
Italy and of Spain;pp and it may be asked why the
European cannot work as well there as in the two latter countries. If slavery
has been abolished in Italy and in Spain without causing the destruction of the
masters, why should not the same thing take place in the Union? I cannot
believe that nature has prohibited the Europeans in Georgia and the Floridas,
under pain of death, from raising the means of subsistence from the soil, but
their labor would unquestionably be more irksome and less productive to them
than to the inhabitants of New England. As the free workman thus loses a
portion of his superiority over the slave in the Southern States, there are
fewer inducements to abolish slavery.
All the plants of Europe grow in the northern parts of the
Union; the South has special productions of its own. It has been observed that
slave labor is a very expensive method of cultivating corn. The farmer of corn
land in a country where slavery is unknown habitually retains a small number of
laborers in his service, and at seed-time and harvest he hires several
additional hands, who only live at his cost for a short period. But the
agriculturist in a slave State is obliged to keep a large number of slaves the
whole year round, in order to sow his fields and to gather in his crops,
although their services are only required for a few weeks; but slaves are
unable to wait till they are hired, and to subsist by their own labor in the
mean time like free laborers; in order to have their services they must be
bought. Slavery, independently of its general disadvantages, is therefore still
more inapplicable to countries in which corn is cultivated than to those which
produce crops of a different kind. The cultivation of tobacco, of cotton, and
especially of the sugar-cane, demands, on the other hand, unremitting
attention: and women and children are employed in it, whose services are of but
little use in the cultivation of wheat. Thus slavery is naturally more fitted
to the countries from which these productions are derived. Tobacco, cotton, and
the sugar-cane are exclusively grown in the South, and they form one of the
principal sources of the wealth of those States. If slavery were abolished, the
inhabitants of the South would be constrained to adopt one of two alternatives:
they must either change their system of cultivation, and then they would come
into competition with the more active and more experienced inhabitants of the
North; or, if they continued to cultivate the same produce without slave labor,
they would have to support the competition of the other States of the South,
which might still retain their slaves. Thus, peculiar reasons for maintaining
slavery exist in the South which do not operate in the North.
But there is yet another motive which is more cogent than all
the others: the South might indeed, rigorously speaking, abolish slavery; but
how should it rid its territory of the black population? Slaves and slavery are
driven from the North by the same law, but this twofold result cannot be hoped
for in the South.
The arguments which I have adduced to show that slavery is more
natural and more advantageous in the South than in the North, sufficiently
prove that the number of slaves must be far greater in the former districts. It
was to the southern settlements that the first Africans were brought, and it is
there that the greatest number of them have always been imported. As we advance
towards the South, the prejudice which sanctions idleness increases in power.
In the States nearest to the tropics there is not a single white laborer; the
negroes are consequently much more numerous in the South than in the North.
And, as I have already observed, this disproportion increases daily, since the
negroes are transferred to one part of the Union as soon as slavery is
abolished in the other. Thus the black population augments in the South, not
only by its natural fecundity, but by the compulsory emigration of the negroes
from the North; and the African race has causes of increase in the South very
analogous to those which so powerfully accelerate the growth of the European
race in the North.
In the State of Maine there is one negro in 300 inhabitants; in
Massachusetts, one in 100; in New York, two in 100; in Pennsylvania, three in
the same number; in Maryland, thirty-four; in Virginia, forty-two; and lastly,
in South Carolinaqq fifty-five per cent. Such was
the proportion of the black population to the whites in the year 1830. But this
proportion is perpetually changing, as it constantly decreases in the North and
augments in the South.
It is evident that the most Southern States of the Union cannot
abolish slavery without incurring very great dangers, which the North had no
reason to apprehend when it emancipated its black population. We have already
shown the system by which the Northern States secure the transition from
slavery to freedom, by keeping the present generation in chains, and setting
their descendants free; by this means the negroes are gradually introduced into
society; and whilst the men who might abuse their freedom are kept in a state
of servitude, those who are emancipated may learn the art of being free before
they become their own masters. But it would be difficult to apply this method
in the South. To declare that all the negroes born after a certain period shall
be free, is to introduce the principle and the notion of liberty into the heart
of slavery; the blacks whom the law thus maintains in a state of slavery from
which their children are delivered, are astonished at so unequal a fate, and
their astonishment is only the prelude to their impatience and irritation.
Thenceforward slavery loses, in their eyes, that kind of moral power which it
derived from time and habit; it is reduced to a mere palpable abuse of force.
The Northern States had nothing to fear from the contrast, because in them the
blacks were few in number, and the white population was very considerable. But
if this faint dawn of freedom were to show two millions of men their true
position, the oppressors would have reason to tremble. After having
affranchised the children of their slaves the Europeans of the Southern States
would very shortly be obliged to extend the same benefit to the whole black
population.
hh Not only is
slavery prohibited in Ohio, but no free negroes are allowed to enter the
territory of that State, or to hold property in it. See the Statutes of
Ohio.
ii The activity of
Ohio is not confined to individuals, but the undertakings of the State are
surprisingly great; a canal has been established between Lake Erie and the
Ohio, by means of which the valley of the Mississippi communicates with the
river of the North, and the European commodities which arrive at New York may
be forwarded by water to New Orleans across five hundred leagues of
continent.
jj The exact numbers
given by the census of 1830 were: Kentucky, 688,-844; Ohio, 937,679. [In
1890 the population of Ohio was 3,672,316, that of Kentucky,
1,858,635.]
kk Independently of
these causes, which, wherever free workmen abound, render their labor more
productive and more economical than that of slaves, another cause may be
pointed out which is peculiar to the United States: the sugar-cane has hitherto
been cultivated with success only upon the banks of the Mississippi, near the
mouth of that river in the Gulf of Mexico. In Louisiana the cultivation of the
sugar-cane is exceedingly lucrative, and nowhere does a laborer earn so much by
his work, and, as there is always a certain relation between the cost of
production and the value of the produce, the price of slaves is very high in
Louisiana. But Louisiana is one of the confederated States, and slaves may be
carried thither from all parts of the Union; the price given for slaves in New
Orleans consequently raises the value of slaves in all the other markets. The
consequence of this is, that in the countries where the land is less
productive, the cost of slave labor is still very considerable, which gives an
additional advantage to the competition of free labor.
ll A peculiar reason
contributes to detach the two last- mentioned States from the cause of slavery.
The former wealth of this part of the Union was principally derived from the
cultivation of tobacco. This cultivation is specially carried on by slaves; but
within the last few years the market-price of tobacco has diminished, whilst
the value of the slaves remains the same. Thus the ratio between the cost of
production and the value of the produce is changed. The natives of Maryland and
Virginia are therefore more disposed than they were thirty years ago, to give
up slave labor in the cultivation of tobacco, or to give up slavery and tobacco
at the same time.
mm The States in
which slavery is abolished usually do what they can to render their territory
disagreeable to the negroes as a place of residence; and as a kind of emulation
exists between the different States in this respect, the unhappy blacks can
only choose the least of the evils which beset them.
nn There is a very
great difference between the mortality of the blacks and of the whites in the
States in which slavery is abolished; from 1820 to 1831 only one out of
forty-two individuals of the white population died in Philadelphia; but one
negro out of twenty-one individuals of the black population died in the same
space of time. The mortality is by no means so great amongst the negroes who
are still slaves. (See Emmerson's "Medical Statistics," p. 28.)
oo This is true of
the spots in which rice is cultivated; rice-grounds, which are unwholesome in
all countries, are particularly dangerous in those regions which are exposed to
the beams of a tropical sun. Europeans would not find it easy to cultivate the
soil in that part of the New World if it must be necessarily be made to produce
rice; but may they not subsist without rice-grounds?
pp These States are
nearer to the equator than Italy and Spain, but the temperature of the
continent of America is very much lower than that of Europe.
The Spanish Government formerly caused a certain
number of peasants from the Acores to be transported into a district of
Louisiana called Attakapas, by way of experiment. These settlers still
cultivate the soil without the assistance of slaves, but their industry is so
languid as scarcely to supply their most necessary wants.
qq We find it
asserted in an American work, entitled "Letters on the Colonization Society,"
by Mr. Carey, 1833, "That for the last forty years the black race has increased
more rapidly than the white race in the State of South Carolina; and that if we
take the average population of the five States of the South into which slaves
were first introduced, viz., Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina, North
Carolina, and Georgia, we shall find that from 1790 to 1830 the whites have
augmented in the proportion of 80 to 100, and the blacks in that of 112 to
100."
In the United States, in 1830, the population
of the two races stood as follows: -
States where slavery is abolished, 6,565,434
whites; 120,520 blacks. Slave States, 3,960,814 whites; 2,208,102 blacks.
[In 1890 the United States contained a population of 54,983,890 whites, and
7,638,360 negroes.]
In the North, as I have already remarked, a twofold migration
ensues upon the abolition of slavery, or even precedes that event when
circumstances have rendered it probable; the slaves quit the country to be
transported southwards; and the whites of the Northern States, as well as the
emigrants from Europe, hasten to fill up their place. But these two causes
cannot operate in the same manner in the Southern States. On the one hand, the
mass of slaves is too great for any expectation of their ever being removed
from the country to be entertained; and on the other hand, the Europeans and
Anglo-Americans of the North are afraid to come to inhabit a country in which
labor has not yet been reinstated in its rightful honors. Besides, they very
justly look upon the States in which the proportion of the negroes equals or
exceeds that of the whites, as exposed to very great dangers; and they refrain
from turning their activity in that direction.
Thus the inhabitants of the South would not be able, like their
Northern countrymen, to initiate the slaves gradually into a state of freedom
by abolishing slavery; they have no means of perceptibly diminishing the black
population, and they would remain unsupported to repress its excesses. So that
in the course of a few years, a great people of free negroes would exist in the
heart of a white nation of equal size.
The same abuses of power which still maintain slavery, would
then become the source of the most alarming perils which the white population
of the South might have to apprehend. At the present time the descendants of
the Europeans are the sole owners of the land; the absolute masters of all
labor; and the only persons who are possessed of wealth, knowledge, and arms.
The black is destitute of all these advantages, but he subsists without them
because he is a slave. If he were free, and obliged to provide for his own
subsistence, would it be possible for him to remain without these things and to
support life? Or would not the very instruments of the present superiority of
the white, whilst slavery exists, expose him to a thousand dangers if it were
abolished?
As long as the negro remains a slave, he may be kept in a
condition not very far removed from that of the brutes; but, with his liberty,
he cannot but acquire a degree of instruction which will enable him to
appreciate his misfortunes, and to discern a remedy for them. Moreover, there
exists a singular principle of relative justice which is very firmly implanted
in the human heart. Men are much more forcibly struck by those inequalities
which exist within the circle of the same class, than with those which may be
remarked between different classes. It is more easy for them to admit slavery,
than to allow several millions of citizens to exist under a load of eternal
infamy and hereditary wretchedness. In the North the population of freed
negroes feels these hardships and resents these indignities; but its numbers
and its powers are small, whilst in the South it would be numerous and strong.
As soon as it is admitted that the whites and the emancipated
blacks are placed upon the same territory in the situation of two alien
communities, it will readily be understood that there are but two alternatives
for the future; the negroes and the whites must either wholly part or wholly
mingle. I have already expressed the conviction which I entertain as to the
latter event.rr I do not imagine that the white
and black races will ever live in any country upon an equal footing. But I
believe the difficulty to be still greater in the United States than elsewhere.
An isolated individual may surmount the prejudices of religion, of his country,
or of his race, and if this individual is a king he may effect surprising
changes in society; but a whole people cannot rise, as it were, above itself. A
despot who should subject the Americans and their former slaves to the same
yoke, might perhaps succeed in commingling their races; but as long as the
American democracy remains at the head of affairs, no one will undertake so
difficult a task; and it may be foreseen that the freer the white population of
the United States becomes, the more isolated will it remain.ss
I have previously observed that the mixed race is the true bond
of union between the Europeans and the Indians; just so the mulattoes are the
true means of transition between the white and the negro; so that wherever
mulattoes abound, the intermixture of the two races is not impossible. In some
parts of America, the European and the negro races are so crossed by one
another, that it is rare to meet with a man who is entirely black, or entirely
white: when they are arrived at this point, the two races may really be said to
be combined; or rather to have been absorbed in a third race, which is
connected with both without being identical with either.
Of all the Europeans the English are those who have mixed least
with the negroes. More mulattoes are to be seen in the South of the Union than
in the North, but still they are infinitely more scarce than in any other
European colony: mulattoes are by no means numerous in the United States; they
have no force peculiar to themselves, and when quarrels originating in
differences of color take place, they generally side with the whites; just as
the lackeys of the great, in Europe, assume the contemptuous airs of nobility
to the lower orders.
The pride of origin, which is natural to the English, is
singularly augmented by the personal pride which democratic liberty fosters
amongst the Americans: the white citizen of the United States is proud of his
race, and proud of himself. But if the whites and the negroes do not
intermingle in the North of the Union, how should they mix in the South? Can it
be supposed for an instant, that an American of the Southern States, placed, as
he must forever be, between the white man with all his physical and moral
superiority and the negro, will ever think of preferring the latter? The
Americans of the Southern States have two powerful passions which will always
keep them aloof; the first is the fear of being assimilated to the negroes,
their former slaves; and the second the dread of sinking below the whites,
their neighbors.
If I were called upon to predict what will probably occur at
some future time, I should say, that the abolition of slavery in the South
will, in the common course of things, increase the repugnance of the white
population for the men of color. I found this opinion upon the analogous
observation which I already had occasion to make in the North. I there remarked
that the white inhabitants of the North avoid the negroes with increasing care,
in proportion as the legal barriers of separation are removed by the
legislature; and why should not the same result take place in the South? In the
North, the whites are deterred from intermingling with the blacks by the fear
of an imaginary danger; in the South, where the danger would be real, I cannot
imagine that the fear would be less general.
If, on the one hand, it be admitted (and the fact is
unquestionable) that the colored population perpetually accumulates in the
extreme South, and that it increases more rapidly than that of the whites; and
if, on the other hand, it be allowed that it is impossible to foresee a time at
which the whites and the blacks will be so intermingled as to derive the same
benefits from society; must it not be inferred that the blacks and the whites
will, sooner or later, come to open strife in the Southern States of the Union?
But if it be asked what the issue of the struggle is likely to be, it will
readily be understood that we are here left to form a very vague surmise of the
truth. The human mind may succeed in tracing a wide circle, as it were, which
includes the course of future events; but within that circle a thousand various
chances and circumstances may direct it in as many different ways; and in every
picture of the future there is a dim spot, which the eye of the understanding
cannot penetrate. It appears, however, to be extremely probable that in the
West Indian Islands the white race is destined to be subdued, and the black
population to share the same fate upon the continent.
In the West India Islands the white planters are surrounded by
an immense black population; on the continent, the blacks are placed between
the ocean and an innumerable people, which already extends over them in a dense
mass, from the icy confines of Canada to the frontiers of Virginia, and from
the banks of the Missouri to the shores of the Atlantic. If the white citizens
of North America remain united, it cannot be supposed that the negroes will
escape the destruction with which they are menaced; they must be subdued by
want or by the sword. But the black population which is accumulated along the
coast of the Gulf of Mexico, has a chance of success if the American Union is
dissolved when the struggle between the two races begins. If the federal tie
were broken, the citizens of the South would be wrong to rely upon any lasting
succor from their Northern countrymen. The latter are well aware that the
danger can never reach them; and unless they are constrained to march to the
assistance of the South by a positive obligation, it may be foreseen that the
sympathy of color will be insufficient to stimulate their exertions.
Yet, at whatever period the strife may break out, the whites of
the South, even if they are abandoned to their own resources, will enter the
lists with an immense superiority of knowledge and of the means of warfare; but
the blacks will have numerical strength and the energy of despair upon their
side, and these are powerful resources to men who have taken up arms. The fate
of the white population of the Southern States will, perhaps, be similar to
that of the Moors in Spain. After having occupied the land for centuries, it
will perhaps be forced to retire to the country whence its ancestors came, and
to abandon to the negroes the possession of a territory, which Providence seems
to have more peculiarly destined for them, since they can subsist and labor in
it more easily that the whites.
The danger of a conflict between the white and the black
inhabitants of the Southern States of the Union - a danger which, however
remote it may be, is inevitable - perpetually haunts the imagination of the
Americans. The inhabitants of the North make it a common topic of conversation,
although they have no direct injury to fear from the struggle; but they vainly
endeavor to devise some means of obviating the misfortunes which they foresee.
In the Southern States the subject is not discussed: the planter does not
allude to the future in conversing with strangers; the citizen does not
communicate his apprehensions to his friends; he seeks to conceal them from
himself; but there is something more alarming in the tacit forebodings of the
South, than in the clamorous fears of the Northern States.
This all-pervading disquietude has given birth to an
undertaking which is but little known, but which may have the effect of
changing the fate of a portion of the human race. From apprehension of the
dangers which I have just been describing, a certain number of American
citizens have formed a society for the purpose of exporting to the coast of
Guinea, at their own expense, such free negroes as may be willing to escape
from the oppression to which they are subject.tt
In 1820, the society to which I allude formed a settlement in Africa, upon the
seventh degree of north latitude, which bears the name of Liberia. The most
recent intelligence informs us that 2,500 negroes are collected there; they
have introduced the democratic institutions of America into the country of
their forefathers; and Liberia has a representative system of government, negro
jurymen, negro magistrates, and negro priests; churches have been built,
newspapers established, and, by a singular change in the vicissitudes of the
world, white men are prohibited from sojourning within the settlement.uu
This is indeed a strange caprice of fortune. Two hundred years
have now elapsed since the inhabitants of Europe undertook to tear the negro
from his family and his home, in order to transport him to the shores of North
America; at the present day, the European settlers are engaged in sending back
the descendants of those very negroes to the Continent from which they were
originally taken; and the barbarous Africans have been brought into contact
with civilization in the midst of bondage, and have become acquainted with free
political institutions in slavery. Up to the present time Africa has been
closed against the arts and sciences of the whites; but the inventions of
Europe will perhaps penetrate into those regions, now that they are introduced
by Africans themselves. The settlement of Liberia is founded upon a lofty and a
most fruitful idea; but whatever may be its results with regard to the
Continent of Africa, it can afford no remedy to the New World.
In twelve years the Colonization Society has transported 2,500
negroes to Africa; in the same space of time about 700,000 blacks were born in
the United States. If the colony of Liberia were so situated as to be able to
receive thousands of new inhabitants every year, and if the negroes were in a
state to be sent thither with advantage; if the Union were to supply the
society with annual subsidies,vv and to transport
the negroes to Africa in the vessels of the State, it would still be unable to
counterpoise the natural increase of population amongst the blacks; and as it
could not remove as many men in a year as are born upon its territory within
the same space of time, it would fail in suspending the growth of the evil
which is daily increasing in the States.ww The
negro race will never leave those shores of the American continent, to which it
was brought by the passions and the vices of Europeans; and it will not
disappear from the New World as long as it continues to exist. The inhabitants
of the United States may retard the calamities which they apprehend, but they
cannot now destroy their efficient cause.
I am obliged to confess that I do not regard the abolition of
slavery as a means of warding off the struggle of the two races in the United
States. The negroes may long remain slaves without complaining; but if they are
once raised to the level of free men, they will soon revolt at being deprived
of all their civil rights; and as they cannot become the equals of the whites,
they will speedily declare themselves as enemies. In the North everything
contributed to facilitate the emancipation of the slaves; and slavery was
abolished, without placing the free negroes in a position which could become
formidable, since their number was too small for them ever to claim the
exercise of their rights. But such is not the case in the South. The question
of slavery was a question of commerce and manufacture for the slave-owners in
the North; for those of the South, it is a question of life and death. God
forbid that I should seek to justify the principle of negro slavery, as has
been done by some American writers! But I only observe that all the countries
which formerly adopted that execrable principle are not equally able to abandon
it at the present time.
When I contemplate the condition of the South, I can only
discover two alternatives which may be adopted by the white inhabitants of
those States; viz., either to emancipate the negroes, and to intermingle with
them; or, remaining isolated from them, to keep them in a state of slavery as
long as possible. All intermediate measures seem to me likely to terminate, and
that shortly, in the most horrible of civil wars, and perhaps in the
extirpation of one or other of the two races. Such is the view which the
Americans of the South take of the question, and they act consistently with it.
As they are determined not to mingle with the negroes, they refuse to
emancipate them.
Not that the inhabitants of the South regard slavery as
necessary to the wealth of the planter, for on this point many of them agree
with their Northern countrymen in freely admitting that slavery is prejudicial
to their interest; but they are convinced that, however prejudicial it may be,
they hold their lives upon no other tenure. The instruction which is now
diffused in the South has convinced the inhabitants that slavery is injurious
to the slave-owner, but it has also shown them, more clearly than before, that
no means exist of getting rid of its bad consequences. Hence arises a singular
contrast; the more the utility of slavery is contested, the more firmly is it
established in the laws; and whilst the principle of servitude is gradually
abolished in the North, that self-same principle gives rise to more and more
rigorous consequences in the South.
The legislation of the Southern States with regard to slaves,
presents at the present day such unparalleled atrocities as suffice to show how
radically the laws of humanity have been perverted, and to betray the desperate
position of the community in which that legislation has been promulgated. The
Americans of this portion of the Union have not, indeed, augmented the
hardships of slavery; they have, on the contrary, bettered the physical
condition of the slaves. The only means by which the ancients maintained
slavery were fetters and death; the Americans of the South of the Union have
discovered more intellectual securities for the duration of their power. They
have employed their despotism and their violence against the human mind. In
antiquity, precautions were taken to prevent the slave from breaking his
chains; at the present day measures are adopted to deprive him even of the
desire of freedom. The ancients kept the bodies of their slaves in bondage, but
they placed no restraint upon the mind and no check upon education; and they
acted consistently with their established principle, since a natural
termination of slavery then existed, and one day or other the slave might be
set free, and become the equal of his master. But the Americans of the South,
who do not admit that the negroes can ever be commingled with themselves, have
forbidden them to be taught to read or to write, under severe penalties; and as
they will not raise them to their own level, they sink them as nearly as
possible to that of the brutes.
The hope of liberty had always been allowed to the slave to
cheer the hardships of his condition. But the Americans of the South are well
aware that emancipation cannot but be dangerous, when the freed man can never
be assimilated to his former master. To give a man his freedom, and to leave
him in wretchedness and ignominy, is nothing less than to prepare a future
chief for a revolt of the slaves. Moreover, it has long been remarked that the
presence of a free negro vaguely agitates the minds of his less fortunate
brethren, and conveys to them a dim notion of their rights. The Americans of
the South have consequently taken measures to prevent slave-owners from
emancipating their slaves in most cases; not indeed by a positive prohibition,
but by subjecting that step to various forms which it is difficult to comply
with.
I happened to meet with an old man, in the South of the Union,
who had lived in illicit intercourse with one of his negresses, and had had
several children by her, who were born the slaves of their father. He had
indeed frequently thought of bequeathing to them at least their liberty; but
years had elapsed without his being able to surmount the legal obstacles to
their emancipation, and in the mean while his old age was come, and he was
about to die. He pictured to himself his sons dragged from market to market,
and passing from the authority of a parent to the rod of the stranger, until
these horrid anticipations worked his expiring imagination into frenzy. When I
saw him he was a prey to all the anguish of despair, and he made me feel how
awful is the retribution of nature upon those who have broken her laws.
These evils are unquestionably great; but they are the
necessary and foreseen consequence of the very principle of modern slavery.
When the Europeans chose their slaves from a race differing from their own,
which many of them considered as inferior to the other races of mankind, and
which they all repelled with horror from any notion of intimate connection,
they must have believed that slavery would last forever; since there is no
intermediate state which can be durable between the excessive inequality
produced by servitude and the complete equality which originates in
independence. The Europeans did imperfectly feel this truth, but without
acknowledging it even to themselves. Whenever they have had to do with negroes,
their conduct has either been dictated by their interest and their pride, or by
their compassion. They first violated every right of humanity by their
treatment of the negro and they afterwards informed him that those rights were
precious and inviolable. They affected to open their ranks to the slaves, but
the negroes who attempted to penetrate into the community were driven back with
scorn; and they have incautiously and involuntarily been led to admit of
freedom instead of slavery, without having the courage to be wholly iniquitous,
or wholly just.
If it be impossible to anticipate a period at which the
Americans of the South will mingle their blood with that of the negroes, can
they allow their slaves to become free without compromising their own security?
And if they are obliged to keep that race in bondage in order to save their own
families, may they not be excused for availing themselves of the means best
adapted to that end? The events which are taking place in the Southern States
of the Union appear to me to be at once the most horrible and the most natural
results of slavery. When I see the order of nature overthrown, and when I hear
the cry of humanity in its vain struggle against the laws, my indignation does
not light upon the men of our own time who are the instruments of these
outrages; but I reserve my execration for those who, after a thousand years of
freedom, brought back slavery into the world once more.
Whatever may be the efforts of the Americans of the South to
maintain slavery, they will not always succeed. Slavery, which is now confined
to a single tract of the civilized earth, which is attacked by Christianity as
unjust, and by political economy as prejudicial; and which is now contrasted
with democratic liberties and the information of our age, cannot survive. By
the choice of the master, or by the will of the slave, it will cease; and in
either case great calamities may be expected to ensue. If liberty be refused to
the negroes of the South, they will in the end seize it for themselves by
force; if it be given, they will abuse it ere long.xx
rr This opinion is
sanctioned by authorities infinitely weightier than anything that I can say:
thus, for instance, it is stated in the "Memoirs of Jefferson" (as collected by
M. Conseil), "Nothing is more clearly written in the book of destiny than the
emancipation of the blacks; and it is equally certain that the two races will
never live in a state of equal freedom under the same government, so
insurmountable are the barriers which nature, habit, and opinions have
established between them."
ss If the British
West India planters had governed themselves, they would assuredly not have
passed the Slave Emancipation Bill which the mother-country has recently
imposed upon them.
tt This society
assumed the name of "The Society for the Colonization of the Blacks." See its
annual reports; and more particularly the fifteenth. See also the pamphlet, to
which allusion has already been made, entitled "Letters on the Colonization
Society, and on its probable Results," by Mr. Carey, Philadelphia,
1833.
uu This last
regulation was laid down by the founders of the settlement; they apprehended
that a state of things might arise in Africa similar to that which exists on
the frontiers of the United States, and that if the negroes, like the Indians,
were brought into collision with a people more enlightened than themselves,
they would be destroyed before they could be civilized.
vv Nor would these
be the only difficulties attendant upon the undertaking; if the Union undertook
to buy up the negroes now in America, in order to transport them to Africa, the
price of slaves, increasing with their scarcity, would soon become enormous;
and the States of the North would never consent to expend such great sums for a
purpose which would procure such small advantages to themselves. If the Union
took possession of the slaves in the Southern States by force, or at a rate
determined by law, an insurmountable resistance would arise in that part of the
country. Both alternatives are equally impossible.
ww In 1830 there
were in the United States 2,010,327 slaves and 319,439 free blacks, in all
2,329,766 negroes: which formed about one-fifth of the total population of the
United States at that time.
xx This chapter
is no longer applicable to the condition of the negro race in the United
States, since the abolition of slavery was the result, though not the object,
of the great Civil War, and the negroes have been raised to the condition not
only of freedmen, but of citizens; and in some States they exercise a
preponderating political power by reason of their numerical majority. Thus, in
South Carolina there were in 1870, 289,667 whites and 415,814 blacks. But the
emancipation of the slaves has not solved the problem, how two races so
different and so hostile are to live together in peace in one country on equal
terms. That problem is as difficult, perhaps more difficult than ever; and to
this difficulty the author's remarks are still perfectly
applicable.
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