“An Atrocious Crime”

A thought for the Black History Month from Sydney Smith, an English writer and Anglican clergyman, in the Edinburgh Review, Dec 1818:

Sydney_smith If nations rank according to their wisdom and their virtue, what right has the American, a scourger and murderer of slaves, to compare himself with the least and lowest of the European nations? — much more with this great and humane country [England], where the greatest lord dare not lay a finger upon the meanest peasant? What is freedom, where all are not free? where the greatest of God’s blessings is limited, with impious caprice, to the colour of the body?  And these are the men who taunt the English with their corrupt Parliament, with their buying and selling votes. Let the world judge which is the most liable to censure — we who, in the midst of our rottenness, have torn off the manacles of slaves all over the world; — or they who, with their idle purity, and useless perfection, have remained mute and careless, while groans echoed and whips clanked round the very walls of their spotless Congress. We wish well to America — we rejoice in her prosperity — and are delighted to resist the absurd impertinence with which the character of her people is often treated in this country: but the existence of slavery in America is an atrocious crime, with which no measure can be kept — for which her situation affords no sort of apology — which makes liberty itself distrusted, and the boast of it disgusting.

And Abraham Lincoln in a letter to Joshua F. Speed, 24 August 1855:

As a nation we began by declaring that “all men are created equal.” We now practically read it “all men are created equal, except the Negroes.” When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read “all men are created equal, except Negroes and foreigners and Catholics.” When it comes to this, I shall prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretense of loving liberty — to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy.

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One response to ““An Atrocious Crime””

  1. Of course, there is not just a little touch of pomposity and ignorance in Sydney Smith’s pronouncement in 1818. While it’s true that Britain abolished the slave trade in 1807, the practice of slavery itself was permitted in the Empire until 1833, when the Slavery Abolition Act was passed. Furthermore, “as a notable exception to the rest of the British Empire, the Act did not ‘extend to any of the Territories in the Possession of the East India Company, or to the Island of Ceylon, or to the Island of Saint Helena.’” Read more here.

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