I lately attended a meeting of the citizens of Concord,
expecting, as one among many, to speak on the subject of
slavery in Massachusetts; but I was surprised and
disappointed to find that what had called my townsmen
together was the destiny of Nebraska, and not of
Massachusetts, and that what I had to say would be entirely
out of order. I had thought that the house was on fire, and
not the prairie; but though several of the citizens of
Massachusetts are now in prison for attempting to rescue a
slave from her own clutches, not one of the speakers at that
meeting expressed regret for it, not one even referred to
it. It was only the disposition of some wild lands a
thousand miles off which appeared to concern them. The
inhabitants of Concord are not prepared to stand by one of
their own bridges, but talk only of taking up a position on
the highlands beyond the Yellowstone River. Our Buttricks
and Davises and Hosmers are retreating thither, and I fear
that they will leave no Lexington Common between them and
the enemy. There is not one slave in Nebraska; there are
perhaps a million slaves in Massachusetts.
They who have been bred in the school of politics
fail now and always to face the facts. Their measures are
half measures and makeshifts merely. They put off the day of
settlement indefinitely, and meanwhile the debt accumulates.
Though the Fugitive Slave Law had not been the subject of
discussion on that occasion, it was at length faintly
resolved by my townsmen, at an adjourned meeting, as I
learn, that the compromise compact of 1820 having been
repudiated by one of the parties, "Therefore,... the
Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 must be repealed." But this is
not the reason why an iniquitous law should be repealed. The
fact which the politician faces is merely that there is less
honor among thieves than was supposed, and not the fact that
they are thieves.
As I had no opportunity to express my thoughts at
that meeting, will you allow me to do so here?
Again it happens that the Boston Court-House is full
of armed men, holding prisoner and trying a MAN, to find out
if he is not really a SLAVE. Does any one think that justice
or God awaits Mr. Loring's decision? For him to sit there
deciding still, when this question is already decided from
eternity to eternity, and the unlettered slave himself and
the multitude around have long since heard and assented to
the decision, is simply to make himself ridiculous. We may
be tempted to ask from whom he received his commission, and
who he is that received it; what novel statutes he obeys,
and what precedents are to him of authority. Such an
arbiter's very existence is an impertinence. We do not ask
him to make up his mind, but to make up his pack.
I listen to hear the voice of a Governor,
Commander-in-Chief of the forces of Massachusetts. I hear
only the creaking of crickets and the hum of insects which
now fill the summer air. The Governor's exploit is to review
the troops on muster days. I have seen him on horseback,
with his hat off, listening to a chaplain's prayer. It
chances that that is all I have ever seen of a Governor. I
think that I could manage to get along without one. If he
is not of the least use to prevent my being kidnapped, pray
of what important use is he likely to be to me? When freedom
is most endangered, he dwells in the deepest obscurity. A
distinguished clergyman told me that he chose the profession
of a clergyman because it afforded the most leisure for
literary pursuits. I would recommend to him the profession
of a Governor.
Three years ago, also, when the Sims tragedy was
acted, I said to myself, There is such an officer, if not
such a man, as the Governor of Massachusetts?--what has he
been about the last fortnight? Has he had as much as he
could do to keep on the fence during this moral earthquake?
It seemed to me that no keener satire could have been aimed
at, no more cutting insult have been offered to that man,
than just what happened?--the absence of all inquiry after him
in that crisis. The worst and the most I chance to know of
him is that he did not improve that opportunity to make
himself known, and worthily known. He could at least have
resigned himself into fame. It appeared to be forgotten
that there was such a man or such an office. Yet no doubt he
was endeavoring to fill the gubernatorial chair all the
while. He was no Governor of mine. He did not govern me.
But at last, in the present case, the Governor was
heard from. After he and the United States government had
perfectly succeeded in robbing a poor innocent black man of
his liberty for life, and, as far as they could, of his
Creator's likeness in his breast, he made a speech to his
accomplices, at a congratulatory supper!
I have read a recent law of this State, making it
penal for any officer of the "Commonwealth" to "detain or
aid in the... detention," anywhere within its limits, "of
any person, for the reason that he is claimed as a fugitive
slave." Also, it was a matter of notoriety that a writ of
replevin to take the fugitive out of the custody of the
United States Marshal could not be served for want of
sufficient force to aid the officer.
I had thought that the Governor was, in some sense,
the executive officer of the State; that it was his
business, as a Governor, to see that the laws of the State
were executed; while, as a man, he took care that he did
not, by so doing, break the laws of humanity; but when there
is any special important use for him, he is useless, or
worse than useless, and permits the laws of the State to go
unexecuted. Perhaps I do not know what are the duties of a
Governor; but if to be a Governor requires to subject one's
self to so much ignominy without remedy, if it is to put a
restraint upon my manhood, I shall take care never to be
Governor of Massachusetts. I have not read far in the
statutes of this Commonwealth. It is not profitable reading.
They do not always say what is true; and they do not always
mean what they say. What I am concerned to know is, that
that man's influence and authority were on the side of the
slaveholder, and not of the slave?--of the guilty, and not of
the innocent?--of injustice, and not of justice. I never saw
him of whom I speak; indeed, I did not know that he was
Governor until this event occurred. I heard of him and
Anthony Burns at the same time, and thus, undoubtedly, most
will hear of him. So far am I from being governed by him. I
do not mean that it was anything to his discredit that I had
not heard of him, only that I heard what I did. The worst I
shall say of him is, that he proved no better than the
majority of his constituents would be likely to prove. In my
opinion, be was not equal to the occasion.
The whole military force of the State is at the
service of a Mr. Suttle, a slaveholder from Virginia, to
enable him to catch a man whom he calls his property; but
not a soldier is offered to save a citizen of Massachusetts
from being kidnapped! Is this what all these soldiers, all
this training, have been for these seventy-nine years
past? Have they been trained merely to rob Mexico and carry
back fugitive slaves to their masters?
These very nights I heard the sound of a drum in our
streets. There were men training still; and for what? I
could with an effort pardon the cockerels of Concord for
crowing still, for they, perchance, had not been beaten that
morning; but I could not excuse this rub-a-dub of the
"trainers." The slave was carried back by exactly such as
these; i.e., by the soldier, of whom the best you can say in
this connection is that he is a fool made conspicuous by a
painted coat.
Three years ago, also, just a week after the
authorities of Boston assembled to carry back a perfectly
innocent man, and one whom they knew to be innocent, into
slavery, the inhabitants of Concord caused the bells to be
rung and the cannons to be fired, to celebrate their
liberty?--and the courage and love of liberty of their
ancestors who fought at the bridge. As if those three
millions had fought for the right to be free themselves, but
to hold in slavery three million others. Nowadays, men wear
a fool's-cap, and call it a liberty-cap. I do not know but
there are some who, if they were tied to a whipping-post,
and could but get one hand free, would use it to ring the
bells and fire the cannons to celebrate their liberty. So
some of my townsmen took the liberty to ring and fire. That
was the extent of their freedom; and when the sound of the
bells died away, their liberty died away also; when the
powder was all expended, their liberty went off with the smoke.
The joke could be no broader if the inmates of the
prisons were to subscribe for all the powder to be used in
such salutes, and hire the jailers to do the firing and
ringing for them, while they enjoyed it through the grating.
Every humane and intelligent inhabitant of Concord,
when he or she heard those bells and those cannons, thought
not with pride of the events of the 19th of April, 1775, but
with shame of the events of the 12th of April, 1851. But now
we have half buried that old shame under a new one.
Massachusetts sat waiting Mr. Loring's decision, as
if it could in any way affect her own criminality. Her
crime, the most conspicuous and fatal crime of all, was
permitting him to be the umpire in such a case. It was
really the trial of Massachusetts. Every moment that she
hesitated to set this man free?--every moment that she now
hesitates to atone for her crime, she is convicted. The
Commissioner on her case is God; not Edward G. God, but
simply God.
I wish my countrymen to consider, that whatever the
human law may be, neither an individual nor a nation can
ever commit the least act of injustice against the obscurest
individual without having to pay the penalty for it. A
government which deliberately enacts injustice, and persists
in it, will at length even become the laughing-stock of the
world.
Much has been said about American slavery, but I
think that we do not even yet realize what slavery is. If I
were seriously to propose to Congress to make mankind into
sausages, I have no doubt that most of the members would
smile at my proposition, and if any believed me to be in
earnest, they would think that I proposed something much
worse than Congress had ever done. But if any of them will
tell me that to make a man into a sausage would be much
worse?--would be any worse?--than to make him into a slave?--than
it was to enact the Fugitive Slave Law, I will accuse him of
foolishness, of intellectual incapacity, of making a
distinction without a difference. The one is just as
sensible a proposition as the other.
I hear a good deal said about trampling this law
under foot. Why, one need not go out of his way to do that.
This law rises not to the level of the head or the reason;
its natural habitat is in the dirt. It was born and bred,
and has its life, only in the dust and mire, on a level with
the feet; and he who walks with freedom, and does not with
Hindoo mercy avoid treading on every venomous reptile, will
inevitably tread on it, and so trample it under foot?--and
Webster, its maker, with it, like the dirt-bug and its ball.
Recent events will be valuable as a criticism on the
administration of justice in our midst, or, rather, as
showing what are the true resources of justice in any
community. It has come to this, that the friends of liberty,
the friends of the slave, have shuddered when they have
understood that his fate was left to the legal tribunals of
the country to be decided. Free men have no faith that
justice will be awarded in such a case. The judge may decide
this way or that; it is a kind of accident, at best. It is
evident that he is not a competent authority in so important
a case. It is no time, then, to be judging according to his
precedents, but to establish a precedent for the future. I
would much rather trust to the sentiment of the people. In
their vote you would get something of some value, at least,
however small; but in the other case, only the trammeled
judgment of an individual, of no significance, be it which
way it might.
It is to some extent fatal to the courts, when the
people are compelled to go behind them. I do not wish to
believe that the courts were made for fair weather, and for
very civil cases merely; but think of leaving it to any
court in the land to decide whether more than three millions
of people, in this case a sixth part of a nation, have a
right to be freemen or not! But it has been left to the
courts of justice, so called?--to the Supreme Court of the
land?--and, as you all know, recognizing no authority but the
Constitution, it has decided that the three millions are and
shall continue to be slaves. Such judges as these are merely
the inspectors of a pick-lock and murderer's tools, to tell
him whether they are in working order or not, and there they
think that their responsibility ends. There was a prior case
on the docket, which they, as judges appointed by God, had
no right to skip; which having been justly settled, they
would have been saved from this humiliation. It was the case
of the murderer himself.
The law will never make men free; it is men who have
got to make the law free. They are the lovers of law and
order who observe the law when the government breaks it.
Among human beings, the judge whose words seal the
fate of a man furthest into eternity is not he who merely
pronounces the verdict of the law, but he, whoever he may
be, who, from a love of truth, and unprejudiced by any
custom or enactment of men, utters a true opinion or
sentence concerning him. He it is that sentences him.
Whoever can discern truth has received his commission from a
higher source than the chiefest justice in the world who can
discern only law. He finds himself constituted judge of the
judge. Strange that it should be necessary to state such
simple truths!
I am more and more convinced that, with reference to
any public question, it is more important to know what the
country thinks of it than what the city thinks. The city
does not think much. On any moral question, I would rather
have the opinion of Boxboro' than of Boston and New York put
together. When the former speaks, I feel as if somebody
had spoken, as if humanity was yet, and a reasonable
being had asserted its rights?--as if some unprejudiced men
among the country's hills had at length turned their
attention to the subject, and by a few sensible words
redeemed the reputation of the race. When, in some obscure
country town, the farmers come together to a special
town-meeting, to express their opinion on some subject which
is vexing the land, that, I think, is the true Congress, and
the most respectable one that is ever assembled in the
United States.
It is evident that there are, in this Commonwealth
at least, two parties, becoming more and more distinct?--the
party of the city, and the party of the country. I know that
the country is mean enough, but I am glad to believe that
there is a slight difference in her favor. But as yet she
has few, if any organs, through which to express herself.
The editorials which she reads, like the news, come from the
seaboard. Let us, the inhabitants of the country, cultivate
self-respect. Let us not send to the city for aught more
essential than our broadcloths and groceries; or, if we read
the opinions of the city, let us entertain opinions of our own.
Among measures to be adopted, I would suggest to
make as earnest and vigorous an assault on the press as has
already been made, and with effect, on the church. The
church has much improved within a few years; but the press
is, almost without exception, corrupt. I believe that in
this country the press exerts a greater and a more
pernicious influence than the church did in its worst
period. We are not a religious people, but we are a nation
of politicians. We do not care for the Bible, but we do care
for the newspaper. At any meeting of politicians?--like that
at Concord the other evening, for instance?--how impertinent
it would be to quote from the Bible! how pertinent to quote
from a newspaper or from the Constitution! The newspaper is
a Bible which we read every morning and every afternoon,
standing and sitting, riding and walking. It is a Bible
which every man carries in his pocket, which lies on every
table and counter, and which the mail, and thousands of
missionaries, are continually dispersing. It is, in short,
the only book which America has printed and which America
reads. So wide is its influence. The editor is a preacher
whom you voluntarily support. Your tax is commonly one cent
daily, and it costs nothing for pew hire. But how many of
these preachers preach the truth? I repeat the testimony of
many an intelligent foreigner, as well as my own
convictions, when I say, that probably no country was ever
rubled by so mean a class of tyrants as, with a few noble
exceptions, are the editors of the periodical press in
this country. And as they live and rule only by their
servility, and appealing to the worse, and not the better,
nature of man, the people who read them are in the condition
of the dog that returns to his vomit.
TheLiberator and the Commonwealth were the only
papers in Boston, as far as I know, which made themselves
heard in condemnation of the cowardice and meanness of the
authorities of that city, as exhibited in '51. The other
journals, almost without exception, by their manner of
referring to and speaking of the Fugitive Slave Law, and the
carrying back of the slave Sims, insulted the common sense
of the country, at least. And, for the most part, they did
this, one would say, because they thought so to secure the
approbation of their patrons, not being aware that a sounder
sentiment prevailed to any extent in the heart of the
Commonwealth. I am told that some of them have improved of
late; but they are still eminently time-serving. Such is the
character they have won.
But, thank fortune, this preacher can be even more
easily reached by the weapons of the reformer than could the
recreant priest. The free men of New England have only to
refrain from purchasing and reading these sheets, have only
to withhold their cents, to kill a score of them at once.
One whom I respect told me that he purchased Mitchell's
Citizen in the cars, and then throw it out the window. But
would not his contempt have been more fatally expressed if
he had not bought it?
Are they Americans? are they New Englanders? are
they inhabitants of Lexington and Concord and Framingham,
who read and support the Boston Post, Mail, Journal,
Advertiser, Courier, and Times? Are these the Flags of
our Union? I am not a newspaper reader, and may omit to name
the worst.
Could slavery suggest a more complete servility than
some of these journals exhibit? Is there any dust which
their conduct does not lick, and make fouler still with its
slime? I do not know whether the Boston Herald is still in
existence, but I remember to have seen it about the streets
when Sims was carried off. Did it not act its part
well-serve its master faithfully! How could it have gone
lower on its belly? How can a man stoop lower than he is
low? do more than put his extremities in the place of the
head he has? than make his head his lower extremity? When I
have taken up this paper with my cuffs turned up, I have
heard the gurgling of the sewer through every column. I have
felt that I was handling a paper picked out of the public
gutters, a leaf from the gospel of the gambling-house, the
groggery, and the brothel, harmonizing with the gospel of
the Merchants' Exchange.
The majority of the men of the North, and of the
South and East and West, are not men of principle. If they
vote, they do not send men to Congress on errands of
humanity; but while their brothers and sisters are being
scourged and hung for loving liberty, while?--I might here
insert all that slavery implies and is?--it is the
mismanagement of wood and iron and stone and gold which
concerns them. Do what you will, O Government, with my wife
and children, my mother and brother, my father and sister, I
will obey your commands to the letter. It will indeed grieve
me if you hurt them, if you deliver them to overseers to be
hunted by bounds or to be whipped to death; but,
nevertheless, I will peaceably pursue my chosen calling on
this fair earth, until perchance, one day, when I have put
on mourning for them dead, I shall have persuaded you to
relent. Such is the attitude, such are the words of
Massachusetts.
Rather than do thus, I need not say what match I
would touch, what system endeavor to blow up; but as I love
my life, I would side with the light, and let the dark earth
roll from under me, calling my mother and my brother to follow.
I would remind my countrymen that they are to be men
first, and Americans only at a late and convenient hour. No
matter how valuable law may be to protect your property,
even to keep soul and body together, if it do not keep you
and humanity together.
I am sorry to say that I doubt if there is a judge
in Massachusetts who is prepared to resign his office, and
get his living innocently, whenever it is required of him to
pass sentence under a law which is merely contrary to the
law of God. I am compelled to see that they put themselves,
or rather are by character, in this respect, exactly on a
level with the marine who discharges his musket in any
direction he is ordered to. They are just as much tools, and
as little men. Certainly, they are not the more to be
respected, because their master enslaves their
understandings and consciences, instead of their bodies.
The judges and lawyers?--simply as such, I mean?--and
all men of expediency, try this case by a very low and
incompetent standard. They consider, not whether the
Fugitive Slave Law is right, but whether it is what they
call constitutional. Is virtue constitutional, or vice? Is
equity constitutional, or iniquity? In important moral and
vital questions, like this, it is just as impertinent to ask
whether a law is constitutional or not, as to ask whether it
is profitable or not. They persist in being the servants of
the worst of men, and not the servants of humanity. The
question is, not whether you or your grandfather, seventy
years ago, did not enter into an agreement to serve the
Devil, and that service is not accordingly now due; but
whether you will not now, for once and at last, serve God?--in
spite of your own past recreancy, or that of your
ancestor?--by obeying that eternal and only just CONSTITUTION,
which He, and not any Jefferson or Adams, has written in
your being.
The amount of it is, if the majority vote the Devil
to be God, the minority will live and behave accordingly?--and
obey the successful candidate, trusting that, some time or
other, by some Speaker's casting-vote, perhaps, they may
reinstate God. This is the highest principle I can get out
or invent for my neighbors. These men act as if they
believed that they could safely slide down a hill a little
way?--or a good way?--and would surely come to a place, by and
by, where they could begin to slide up again. This is
expediency, or choosing that course which offers the
slightest obstacles to the feet, that is, a downhill one.
But there is no such thing as accomplishing a righteous
reform by the use of "expediency." There is no such thing as
sliding up hill. In morals the only sliders are backsliders.
Thus we steadily worship Mammon, both school and
state and church, and on the seventh day curse God with a
tintamar from one end of the Union to the other.
Will mankind never learn that policy is not
morality?--that it never secures any moral right, but
considers merely what is expedient? chooses the available
candidate?--who is invariably the Devil?--and what right have
his constituents to be surprised, because the Devil does not
behave like an angel of light? What is wanted is men, not of
policy, but of probity?--who recognize a higher law than the
Constitution, or the decision of the majority. The fate of
the country does not depend on how you vote at the polls?--the
worst man is as strong as the best at that game; it does not
depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot-box
once a year, but on what kind of man you drop from your
chamber into the street every morning.
What should concern Massachusetts is not the
Nebraska Bill, nor the Fugitive Slave Bill, but her own
slaveholding and servility. Let the State dissolve her union
with the slaveholder. She may wriggle and hesitate, and ask
leave to read the Constitution once more; but she can find
no respectable law or precedent which sanctions the
continuance of such a union for an instant.
Let each inhabitant of the State dissolve his union
with her, as long as she delays to do her duty.
The events of the past month teach me to distrust
Fame. I see that she does not finely discriminate, but
coarsely hurrahs. She considers not the simple heroism of an
action, but only as it is connected with its apparent
consequences. She praises till she is hoarse the easy
exploit of the Boston tea party, but will be comparatively
silent about the braver and more disinterestedly heroic
attack on the Boston Court-House, simply because it was
unsuccessful!
Covered with disgrace, the State has sat down coolly
to try for their lives and liberties the men who attempted
to do its duty for it. And this is called justice! They
who have shown that they can behave particularly well may
perchance be put under bonds for their good behavior. They
whom truth requires at present to plead guilty are, of all
the inhabitants of the State, preeminently innocent. While
the Governor, and the Mayor, and countless officers of the
Commonwealth are at large, the champions of liberty are
imprisoned.
Only they are guiltless who commit the crime of
contempt of such a court. It behooves every man to see that
his influence is on the side of justice, and let the courts
make their own characters. My sympathies in this case are
wholly with the accused, and wholly against their accusers
and judges. Justice is sweet and musical; but injustice is
harsh and discordant. The judge still sits grinding at his
organ, but it yields no music, and we hear only the sound of
the handle. He believes that all the music resides in the
handle, and the crowd toss him their coppers the same as
before.
Do you suppose that that Massachusetts which is now
doing these things?--which hesitates to crown these men, some
of whose lawyers, and even judges, perchance, may be driven
to take refuge in some poor quibble, that they may not
wholly outrage their instinctive sense of justice?--do you
suppose that she is anything but base and servile? that she
is the champion of liberty?
Show me a free state, and a court truly of justice,
and I will fight for them, if need be; but show me
Massachusetts, and I refuse her my allegiance, and express
contempt for her courts.
The effect of a good government is to make life more
valuable?--of a bad one, to make it less valuable. We can
afford that railroad and all merely material stock should
lose some of its value, for that only compels us to live
more simply and economically; but suppose that the value of
life itself should be diminished! How can we make a less
demand on man and nature, how live more economically in
respect to virtue and all noble qualities, than we do? I
have lived for the last month?--and I think that every man in
Massachusetts capable of the sentiment of patriotism must
have had a similar experience?--with the sense of having
suffered a vast and indefinite loss. I did not know at first
what ailed me. At last it occurred to me that what I had
lost was a country. I had never respected the government
near to which I lived, but I had foolishly thought that I
might manage to live here, minding my private affairs, and
forget it. For my part, my old and worthiest pursuits have
lost I cannot say how much of their attraction, and I feel
that my investment in life here is worth many per cent less
since Massachusetts last deliberately sent back an innocent
man, Anthony Burns, to slavery. I dwelt before, perhaps, in
the illusion that my life passed somewhere only between
heaven and hell, but now I cannot persuade myself that I do
not dwell wholly within hell. The site of that political
organization called Massachusetts is to me morally covered
with volcanic scoriae and cinders, such as Milton describes
in the infernal regions. If there is any hell more
unprincipled than our rulers, and we, the ruled, I feel
curious to see it. Life itself being worth less, all things
with it, which minister to it, are worth less. Suppose you
have a small library, with pictures to adorn the walls?--a
garden laid out around?--and contemplate scientific and
literary pursuits.&c., and discover all at once that your
villa, with all its contents is located in hell, and that
the justice of the peace has a cloven foot and a forked
tail?--do not these things suddenly lose their value in your
eyes?
I feel that, to some extent, the State has fatally
interfered with my lawful business. It has not only
interrupted me in my passage through Court Street on errands
of trade, but it has interrupted me and every man on his
onward and upward path, on which he had trusted soon to
leave Court Street far behind. What right had it to remind
me of Court Street? I have found that hollow which even I
had relied on for solid.
I am surprised to see men going about their business
as if nothing had happened. I say to myself, "Unfortunates!
they have not heard the news." I am surprised that the man
whom I just met on horseback should be so earnest to
overtake his newly bought cows running away?--since all
property is insecure, and if they do not run away again,
they may be taken away from him when he gets them. Fool!
does he not know that his seed-corn is worth less this
year?--that all beneficent harvests fail as you approach the
empire of hell? No prudent man will build a stone house
under these circumstances, or engage in any peaceful
enterprise which it requires a long time to accomplish. Art
is as long as ever, but life is more interrupted and less
available for a man's proper pursuits. It is not an era of
repose. We have used up all our inherited freedom. If we
would save our lives, we must fight for them.
I walk toward one of our ponds; but what signifies
the beauty of nature when men are base? We walk to lakes to
see our serenity reflected in them; when we are not serene,
we go not to them. Who can be serene in a country where both
the rulers and the ruled are without principle? The
remembrance of my country spoils my walk. My thoughts are
murder to the State, and involuntarily go plotting against her.
But it chanced the other day that I scented a white
water-lily, and a season I had waited for had arrived. It is
the emblem of purity. It bursts up so pure and fair to the
eye, and so sweet to the scent, as if to show us what purity
and sweetness reside in, and can be extracted from, the
slime and muck of earth. I think I have plucked the first
one that has opened for a mile. What confirmation of our
hopes is in the fragrance of this flower! I shall not so
soon despair of the world for it, notwithstanding slavery,
and the cowardice and want of principle of Northern men. It
suggests what kind of laws have prevailed longest and
widest, and still prevail, and that the time may come when
man's deeds will smell as sweet. Such is the odor which the
plant emits. If Nature can compound this fragrance still
annually, I shall believe her still young and full of vigor,
her integrity and genius unimpaired, and that there is
virtue even in man, too, who is fitted to perceive and love
it. It reminds me that Nature has been partner to no
Missouri Compromise. I scent no compromise in the fragrance
of the water-lily. It is not a Nymphoea Douglasii. In it,
the sweet, and pure, and innocent are wholly sundered from
the obscene and baleful. I do not scent in this the
time-serving irresolution of a Massachusetts Governor, nor
of a Boston Mayor. So behave that the odor of your actions
may enhance the general sweetness of the atmosphere, that
when we behold or scent a flower, we may not be reminded how
inconsistent your deeds are with it; for all odor is but one
form of advertisement of a moral quality, and if fair
actions had not been performed, the lily would not smell
sweet. The foul slime stands for the sloth and vice of man,
the decay of humanity; the fragrant flower that springs from
it, for the purity and courage which are immortal.
Slavery and servility have produced no sweet-scented
flower annually, to charm the senses of men, for they have
no real life: they are merely a decaying and a death,
offensive to all healthy nostrils. We do not complain that
they live, but that they do not get buried. Let the
living bury them: even they are good for manure.