Oh! child of grief, why
weepest thou?
Why droops thy sad and mournful brow? Why
is thy look so like despair ?
What deep, sad sorrow lingers there? The
State of Virginia is famous in American annals for the multitudinous array of
her statesmen and heroes. She has been dignified by some the mother of
statesmen. History has not been sparing in recording their names, or in
blazoning their deeds. Her high position in this respect, has given her an
enviable distinction among her sister States. With Virginia for his
birth-place, even a man of ordinary parts, on account of the general partiality
for her sons, easily rises to eminent stations. Men, not great enough to
attract special attention in their native States, have, like a certain
distinguished citizen in the State of New York, sighed and repined that they
were not born in Virginia. Yet not all the great ones of the Old Dominion have,
by the fact of their birth-place, escaped undeserved obscurity. By some strange
neglect, one of the truest, manliest, and bravest of her children,--one who, in
after years, will, I think, command the pen of genius to set his merits forth,
holds now no higher place in the records of that grand old Commonwealth than is
held by a horse or an ox. Let those account for it who can, but there stands
the fact, that a man who loved liberty as well as did Patrick Henry,--who
deserved it as much as Thomas Jefferson,--and who fought for it with a valor as
high, an arm as strong, and against odds as great, as he who led all the armies
of the American colonies through the great war for freedom and independence,
lives now only in the chattel records of his native State.
Glimpses of this great
character are all that can now be presented. He is brought to view only by a
few transient incidents, and these afford but partial satisfaction. Like a
guiding star on a stormy night, he is seen through the parted clouds and the
howling tempests; or, like the gray peak of a menacing rock on a perilous
coast, he is seen by the quivering flash of angry lightning, and he again
disappears covered with mystery.
Curiously, earnestly,
anxiously we peer into the dark, and wish even for the blinding flash, or the
light of northern skies to reveal him. But alas! he is still enveloped in
darkness, and we return from the pursuit like a wearied and disheartened
mother, (after a tedious and unsuccessful search for a lost child,) who returns
weighed down with disappointment and sorrow. Speaking of marks, traces,
possibles, and probabilities, we come before our readers.
In the spring of 1835,
on a Sabbath morning, within hearing of the solemn peals of the church bells at
a distant village, a Northern traveller through the State of Virginia drew up
his horse to drink at a sparkling brook, near the edge of a dark pine forest.
While his weary and thirsty steed drew in the grateful water, the rider caught
the sound of a human voice, apparently engaged in earnest conversation.
Following the direction
of the sound, he descried, among the tall pines, the man whose voice had
arrested his attention. "To whom can he be speaking?" thought the
traveller. "He seems to be alone." The circumstance interested him
much, and he became intensely curious to know what thoughts and feelings, or,
it might be, high aspirations, guided those rich and mellow accents. Tieing his
horse at a short distance from the brook, he stealthily drew near the solitary
speaker; and, concealing himself by the side of a huge fallen tree, he
distinctly heard the following soliloquy: --
"What, then, is
life to me? it is aimless and worthless, and worse than worthless. Those birds,
perched on yon swinging boughs, in friendly conclave, sounding forth their
merry notes in seeming worship of the rising sun, though liable to the
sportsman's fowling-piece, are still my superiors. They live free, though they
may die slaves. They fly where they list by day, and retire in freedom at
night. But what is freedom to me, or I to it? I am a slave,--born a slave, an
abject slave,--even before I made part of this breathing world, the scourge was
platted for my back; the fetters were forged for my limbs. How mean a thing am
I. That accursed and crawling snake, that miserable reptile, that has just
glided into its slimy home, is freer and better off than I. He escaped my blow,
and is safe. But here am I, a man,--yes, a man!--with thoughts and wishes, with
powers and faculties as far as angel's flight above that hated reptile,--yet he
is my superior, and scorns to own me as his master, or to stop to take my
blows. When he saw my uplifted arm, he darted beyond my reach, and turned to give
me battle. I dare not do as much as that. I neither run nor fight, but do
meanly stand, answering each heavy blow of a cruel master with doleful wails
and piteous cries. I am galled with irons; but even these are more tolerable
than the consciousness, the galling consciousness of cowardice and indecision.
Can it be that I dare not run away? Perish the thought, I dare do any thing
which may be done by another. When that young man struggled with the waves for
life, and others stood back appalled in helpless horror, did I not plunge in,
forgetful of life, to save his? The raging bull from whom all others fled, pale
with fright, did I not keep at bay with a single pitchfork? Could a coward do
that? No,--no,--I wrong myself,--I am no coward. Liberty I will have, or die in
the attempt to gain it. This working that others may in idleness! This cringing
submission to insolence and curses! This living under the constant dread and
apprehension of being sold and transferred, like a mere brute, is toomuch for
me. I will stand it no longer. What others have done, I will do. These trusty
legs, or these sinewy arms shall place me among the free. Tom escaped; so can
I. The North Star will not be less kind to me than to him. I will follow it. I
will at least make the trial. I have nothing to lose. If I am caught, I shall
only be a slave. If I am shot, I shall only lose a life which is a burden and a
curse. If I get clear, (as something tells me I shall,) liberty, the
inalienable birth-right of every man, precious and priceless, will be mine. My
resolution is fixed. I shall be free."
At these words the
traveller raised his head cautiously and noiselessly, and caught, from his
hiding-place, a full view of the unsuspecting speaker. Madison (for that was
the name of our hero) was standing erect, a smile of satisfaction rippled upon
his expressive countenance, like that which plays upon the face of one who has
but just solved a difficult problem, or vanquished a malignant foe; for at that
moment he was free, at least in spirit. The future gleamed brightly before him,
and his fetters lay broken at his feet. His air was triumphant.
Madison was of manly
form. Tall, symmetrical, round, and strong. In his movements he seemed to
combine, with the strength of the lion, a lion's elasticity. His torn sleeves
disclosed arms like polished iron. His face was "black, but comely."
His eye, lit with emotion, kept guard under a brow as dark and as glossy as the
raven's wing. His whole appearance betokened Herculean strength: yet there was
nothing savage or forbidding in his aspect. A child might play in his arms, or
dance on his shoulders. A giant's strength, but not a giant's heart was in him.
His broad mouth and nose spoke only of good nature and kindness. But his voice,
that unfailing index of the soul, though full and melodious, had that in it
which could terrify as well as charm. He was just the man you would choose when
hardships were to be endured, or danger to be encountered,--intelligent and
brave. He had the head to conceive, and the hand to execute. In a word, he was
one to be sought as a friend, but to be dreaded as an enemy.
As our traveller gazed
upon him, he almost trembled at the thought of his dangerous intrusion. Still
he could not quit the place. He had long desired to sound the mysterious depths
of the thoughts and feelings of a slave. He was not, therefore, disposed to
allow so providential an opportunity to pass unimproved. He resolved to hear
more; so he listened again for those mellow and mournful accents which, he says,
made such an impression upon him as can never be erased. He did not have to
wait long. There came another gush from the same full fountain; now bitter, and
now sweet. Scathing denunciations of the cruelty and injustice of slavery;
heart-touching narrations of his own personal suffering, intermingled with
prayers to the God of the oppressed for help and deliverance, were followed by
presentations of the dangers and difficulties of escape, and formed the burden
of his eloquent utterances; but his high resolution clung to him,--for he ended
each speech by an emphatic declaration of his purpose to be free. It seemed
that the very repetition of this, imparted a glow to his countenance. The hope
of freedom seemed to sweeten, for a season, the bitter cup of slavery, and to
make it, for a time, tolerable; for when in the very whirlwind of
anguish,--when his heart's cord seemed screwed up to snapping tension, hope
sprung up and soothed his troubled spirit. Fitfully he would exclaim, "How
can I leave her? Poor thing! what can she do when I am gone? Oh! oh! 'tis
impossible that I can leave poor Susan!"
A brief pause
intervened. Our traveller raised his head, and saw again the sorrow-smitten
slave. His eye was fixed upon the ground. The strong man staggered under a heavy
load. Recovering himself, he argued thus aloud: "All is uncertain here.
To-morrow's sun may not rise before I am sold, and separated from her I love.
What, then, could I do for her? I should be in more hopeless slavery, and she
no nearer to liberty,--whereas if I were free,--my arms my own,--I might devise
the means to rescue her."
This said, Madison cast
around a searching glance, as if the thought of being overheard had flashed
across his mind. He said no more, but, with measured steps, walked away, and
was lost to the eye of our traveller amidst the wildering woods.
Long after Madison had
left the ground, Mr. Listwell (our traveller) remained in motionless silence,
meditating on the extraordinary revelations to which he had listened. He seemed
fastened to the spot, and stood half hoping, half fearing the return of the
sable preacher to his solitary temple. The speech of Madison rung through the
chambers of his soul, and vibrated through his entire frame. "Here is
indeed a man," thought he, "of rare endowments,--a child of
God,--guilty of no crime but the color of his skin, hiding away from the face
of humanity, and pouring out his thoughts and feelings, his hopes and
resolutions to the lonely woods; to him those distant church bells have no
grateful music. He shuns the church, the altar, and the great congregation of
christian worshippers, and wanders away to the gloomy forest, to utter in the
vacant air complaints and griefs, which the religion of his times and his
country can neither console nor relieve. Goaded almost to madness by the sense
of the injustice done him, he resorts hither to give vent to his pent up
feelings, and to debate with himself the feasibility of plans, plans of his own
invention, for his own deliverance. From this hour I am an abolitionist. I have
seen enough and heard enough, and I shall go to my home in Ohio resolved to
atone for my past indifference to this ill-starred race, by making such
exertions as I shall be able to do, for the speedy emancipation of every slave
in the land.
"The gaudy,
blabbling and remorseful day
Is crept into the bosom
of the sea;
And now loud-howlig
wolves arouse the jades
That drag the tragic
melancholy night;
Who with their drowsy,
slow, and flagging wings
Clip dead men's graves,
and from their misty jaws
Breathe foul
contagions, darkness in the air."
Shakspeare.
Five years after the
foregoing singular occurence, in the winter of 1840, Mr. and Mrs. Listwell sat
together by the fireside of their own happy home in the State of Ohio. The
children were all gone to bed. A single lamp burnt brightly on the
centre-table. All was still and comfortable within; but the night was cold and
dark; a heavy wind sighed and moaned sorrowfully around the house and barn,
occasionally bringing against the clattering windows a stray leaf from the
large oak trees that embowered their dwelling. It was a night for strange
noises and for strange fancies. A whole wilderness of thought might pass
through one's mind during such an evening. The smouldering embers, partaking of
the spirit of the restless night, became fruitful of varied and fantastic
pictures, and revived man bygone scenes and old impressions. The happy pair
seemed to sit in silent fascination, gazing on the fire. Suddenly this reverie was
interrupted by a heavy growl. Ordinarily such an occurrence would have scarcely
provoked a single word, or excited the least apprehension. But there are
certain seasons when the slightest sound sends a jar through all the subtle
chambers of the mind; and such a season was this. The happy pair started up, as
if some sudden danger had come upon them. The growl was from their trusty
watch-dog.
"What can it mean?
certainly no one can be out on such a night as this," said Mrs. Listwell.
"The wind has
deceived the dog, my dear; he has mistaken the noise of falling branches,
brought down by the wind, for that of the footsteps of persons coming to the
house. I have several times to-night thought that I heard the sound of
footsteps. I am sure, however, that it was but the wind. Friends would not be
likely to come out at such an hour, or such a night; and thieves are too lazy
and self-indulgent to expose themselves to this biting frost; but should there
be any one about, our brave old Monte, who is on the lookout, will not be slow
in sounding the alarm."
Saying this they
quietly left the window, whither they had gone to learn the cause of the
menacing growl, and re-seated themselves by the fire, as if reluctant to leave
the slowly expiring embers, although the hour was late. A few minutes only
intervened after resuming their seats, when again their sober meditations were
disturbed. Their faithful dog now growled and barked furiously, as if assailed
by an advancing foe. Simultaneously the good couple arose, and stood in mute
expectation. The contest without seemed fierce and violent. It was, however,
soon over,--the barking ceased, for, with true canine instinct, Monte quickly
discovered that a friend, not an enemy of the family, was coming to the house,
and instead of rushing to repel the supposed intruder, he was now at the door,
whimpering and dancing for the admission of himself and his newly made friend.
Mr. Listwell knew by
this movement that all was well; he advanced and opened the door, and saw by
the light that streamed out into the darkness, a tall man advancing slowly
towards the house, with a stick in one hand, and a small bundle in the other.
"It is a traveller," thought he, "who has missed his way, and is
coming to inquire the road. I am glad we did not go to bed earlier,--I have
felt all the evening as if somebody would be here to-night."
The man had now halted
a short distance from the door, and looked prepared alike for flight or battle.
"Come in, sir, don't be alarmed, you have probably lost your way."
Slightly hesitating,
the traveller walked in; not, however, without regarding his host with a
scrutinizing glance. "No, sir," said he "I have come to ask you
a greater favor."
Instantly Mr. Listwell
exclaimed, (as the recollection of the Virginia forest scene flashed upon him,)
"Oh, sir, I know not your name, but I have seen your face, and heard your
voice before. I am glad to see you. I know all. You are flying for your
liberty,--be seated,--be seated,--banish all fear. You are safe under my roof."
This recognition, so
unexpected, rather disconcerted and disquieted the noble fugitive. The timidity
and suspicion of persons escaping from slavery are easily awakened, and often
what is intended to dispel the one, and to allay the other, has precisely the
opposite effect. It was so in this case. Quickly observing the unhappy
impression made by his words and action, Mr. Listwell assumed a more quiet and
inquiring aspect, and finally succeeded in removing the apprehensions which his
very natural and generous salutation had aroused.
Thus assured, the
stranger said, "Sir, you have rightly guessed, I am, indeed, a fugitive
from slavery. My name is Madison,--Madison Washington my mother used to call
me. I am on my way to Canada, where I learn that persons of my color are
protected in all the rights of men; and my object in calling upon you was, to
beg the privilege of resting my weary limbs for the night in your barn. It was
my purpose to have continued my journey till morning; but the piercing cold,
and the frowning darkness compelled me to seek shelter; and, seeing a light
through the lattice of your window, I was encouraged to come here to beg the
privilege named. You will do me a great favor by affording me shelter for the
night."
"A resting-place,
indeed, sir, you shall have; not, however, in my barn, but in the best room of
my house. Consider yourself, if you please, under the roof of a friend; for
such I am to you, and to all your deeply injured race."
While this introductory
conversation was going on, the kind lady had revived the fire, and was
diligently preparing supper; for she, not less than her husband, felt for the
sorrows of the oppressed and hunted ones of earth, and was always glad of an
opportunity to do them a service. A bountiful repast was quickly prepared, and
the hungry and toil-worn bondman was cordially invited to partake thereof.
Gratefully he acknowledged the favor of his benevolent benefactress; but
appeared scarcely to understand what such hospitality could mean. It was the
first time in his life that he had met so humane and friendly a greeting at the
hands of persons whose color was unlike his own; yet it was impossible for him
to doubt the charitableness of his new friends, or the genuineness of the welcome
so freely given; and he therefore, with many thanks, took his seat at the table
with Mr. and Mrs. Listwell, who, desirous to make him feel at home, took a cup
of tea themselves, while urging upon Madison the best that the house could
afford.
Supper over, all doubts
and apprehensions banished, the three drew around the blazing fire, and a
conversation commenced which lasted till long after midnight.
"Now," said
Madison to Mr. Listwell, "I was a little surprised and alarmed when I came
in, by what you said; do tell me, sir, why you thought you had seen my face
before, and by what you knew me to be a fugitive from slavery; for I am sure
that I never was before in this neighborhood, and I certainly sought to conceal
what I supposed to be the manner of a fugitive slave."
Mr. Listwell at once
frankly disclosed the secret; describing the place where he first saw him;
rehearsing the language which he (Madison) had used; referring to the effect
which his manner and speech had made upon him; declaring the resolution he
there formed to be an abolitionist; telling how often he had spoken of the
circumstance, and the deep concern he had ever since felt to know what had
become of him; and whether he had carried out the purpose to make his escape,
as in the woods he declared he would do.
"Ever since that
morning," said Mr. Listwell, "you have seldom been absent from my
mind, and though now I did not dare to hope that I should ever see you again, I
have often wished that such might be my fortune; for, from that hour, your face
seemed to be daguerreotyped on my memory."
Madison looked quite
astonished, and felt amazed at the narration to which he had listened. After
recovering himself he said, "I well remember that morning, and the bitter
anguish that wrung my heart; I will state the occasion of it. I had, on the
previous Saturday, suffered a cruel lashing; had been tied tip to the limb of a
tree, with my feet chained together, and a heavy iron bar placed between my
ankles. Thus suspended, I received on my naked back forty stripes, and was kept
in this distressing position three or four hours, and was then let down, only
to have my torture increased; for my bleeding back, gashed by the cow-skin, was
washed by the overseer with old brine, partly to augment my suffering, and
partly, as he said, to prevent inflammation. My crime was that I had stayed
longer at the mill, the day previous, than it was thought I ought to have done,
which, I assured my master and the overseer, was no fault of mine; but no
excuses were allowed. 'Hold your tongue, you impudent rascal,' met my every
explanation. Slave-holders are so imperious when their passions are excited, as
to construe every word of the slave into insolence. I could do nothing but
submit to the agonizing infliction. Smarting still from the wounds, as well as
from the consciousness of being whipt for no cause, I took advantage of the
absence of my master, who had gone to church, to spend the time in the woods,
and brood over my wretched lot. Oh, sir, I remember it well, and can never
forget it."
"But this was five
years ago; where have you been since?"
"I will try to
tell you," said Madison. "Just four weeks after that Sabbath morning,
I gathered up the few rags of clothing I had, and started, as I supposed, for
the North and for freedom. I must not stop to describe my feelings on taking
this step. It seemed like taking a leap into the dark. The thought of leaving
my poor wife and two little children caused me indescribable anguish; but
consoling myself with the reflection that once free, I could, possibly, devise
ways and means to gain their freedom also, I nerved myself up to make the
attempt. I started, but ill-luck attended me; for after being out a whole week,
strange to say, I still found myself on my master's grounds; the third night
after being out, a season of clouds and rain set in, wholly preventing me from
seeing the North Star, which I had trusted as my guide, not dreaming that
clouds might intervene between us.
"This circumstance
was fatal to my project, for in losing my star, I lost my way; so when I
supposed I was far towards the North, and had almost gained my freedom, I
discovered myself at the very point from which I had started. It was a severe
trial, for I arrived at home in great destitution; my feet were sore, and in
travelling in the dark, I had dashed my foot against a stump, and started a
nail, and lamed myself. I was wet and cold; one week had exhausted all my
stores; and when I landed on my master's plantation, with all my work to do
over again,--hungry, tired, lame, and bewildered,--I almost cursed the day that
I was born. In this extremity I approached the quarters. I did so stealthily,
although in my desperation I hardly cared whether I was discovered or not.
Peeping through the rents of the quarters, I saw my fellow-slaves seated by a
warm fire, merrily passing away the time, as though their hearts knew no
sorrow. Although I envied their seeming contentment, all wretched as I was, I
despised the cowardly acquiescence in their own degradation which it implied,
and felt a kind of pride and glory in my own desperate lot. I dared not enter
the quarters,--for where there is seeming contentment with slavery, there is
certain treachery to freedom. I proceeded towards the great house, in the hope
of catching a glimpse of my poor wife, whom I knew might be trusted with my
secrets even on the scaffold. Just as I reached the fence which divided the
field from the garden, I saw a woman in the yard, who in the darkness I took to
be my wife; but a nearer approach told me it was not she. I was about to speak;
had I done so, I would not have been here this night; for an alarm would have
been sounded, and the hunters been put on my track. Here were hunger, cold,
thirst, disappointment, and chagrin, confronted only by the dim hope of
liberty. I tremble to think of that dreadful hour. To face the deadly cannon's
mouth in warm blood unterrified, is, I think, a small achievement, compared
with a conflict like this with gaunt starvation. The gnawings of hunger
conquers by degrees, till all that a man has he would give in exchange for a
single crust of bread. Thank God, I was not quite reduced to this extremity.
"Happily for me,
before the fatal moment of utter despair, my good wife made her appearance in
the yard. It was she; I knew her step. All was well now. I was, however, afraid
to speak lest I should frighten her. Yet speak I did; and, to my great joy, my
voice was known. Our meeting can be more easily imagined than described. For a
time hunger, thirst, weariness, and lameness were forgotten. But it was soon
necessary for her to return to the house. She being a house-servant, her
absence from the kitchen, if discovered, might have excited suspicion. Our
parting was like tearing the flesh from my bones; yet it was the part of wisdom
for her to go. She left me with the purpose of meeting me at midnight in the
very forest where you last saw me. She knew the place well, as one of my
melancholy resorts, and could easily find it, though the night was dark.
"I hastened away,
therefore, and concealed myself, to await the arrival of my good angel. As I
lay there among the leaves, I was strongly tempted to return again to the house
of my master and give myself up; but remembering my solemn pledge on that
memorable Sunday morning, I was able to linger out the two long hours between
ten and midnight. I may well call them long hours. I have endured much
hardship; I have encountered many perils; but the anxiety of those two hours,
was the bitterest I ever experienced. True to her word, my wife came laden with
provisions, and we sat down on the side of a log, at that dark and lonesome
hour of the night. I cannot say we talked; our feelings were too great for
that; yet we came to an understanding that I should make the woods my home, for
if I gave myself up, I should be whipped and sold away; and if I started for
the North, I should leave a wife doubly dear to me. We mutually determined,
therefore, that I should remain in the vicinity. In the dismal swamps I lived,
sir, five long years,--a cave for my home during the day. I wandered about at
night with the wolf and the bear,--sustained by the promise that my good Susan
would meet me in the pine woods at least once a week. This promise was
redeemed, I assure you, to the letter, greatly to my relief. I had partly
become contented with my mode of life, and had made up my mind to spend my days
there; but the wilderness that sheltererd me thus long took fire, and refused
longer to be my hiding-place.
"I will not harrow
up your feelings by portraying the terrific scene of this awful conflagration.
There is nothing to which I can liken it. It was horribly and indescribably
grand. The whole world seemed on fire, and it appeared to me that the day of
judgment had come; that the burning bowels of the earth had burst forth, and
that the end of all things was at hand. Bears and wolves, scorched from their
mysterious hiding-places in the earth, and all the wild inhabitants of the
untrodden forest, filled with a common dismay, ran forth, yelling, howling,
bewildered amidst the smoke and flame. The very heavens seemed to rain down
fire through the towering trees; it was by the merest chance that I escaped the
devouring element. Running before it, and stopping occasionally to take breath,
I looked back to behold its frightful ravages, and to drink in its savage
magnificence. It was awful, thrilling, solemn, beyond compare. When aided by
the fitful wind, the merciless tempest of fire swept on, sparkling, creaking,
cracking, curling, roaring, out-doing in its dreadful splendor a thousand
thunderstorms at once. From tree to tree it leaped, swallowing them up in its
lurid, baleful glare; and leaving them leafless, limbless, charred, and
lifeless behind. The scene was overwhelming, stunning,--nothing was spared,--cattle,
tame and wild, herds of swine and of deer, wild beasts of every name and
kind,--huge night-birds, bats, and owls, that had retired to their homes in
lofty tree-tops to rest, perished in that fiery storm. The long-winged buzzard,
and croaking raven mingled their dismal cries with those of the countless
myriads of small birds that rose up to the skies, and were lost to the sight in
clouds of smoke and flame. Oh, I shudder when I think of it! Many a poor
wandering fugitive, who, like myself, had sought among wild beasts the mercy
denied by our fellow men, saw, in helpless consternation, his dwelling-place
and city of refuge reduced to ashes forever. It was this grand conflagration
that drove me hither; I ran alike from fire and from slavery."
After a slight pause,
(for both speaker and hearers were deeply moved by the above recital,) Mr.
Listwell, addressing Madison, said, "If it does not weary you too much, do
tell us something of your journeyings since this disastrous burning,--we are
deeply interested in everything which can throw light on the hardships of
persons escaping from slavery; we could hear you talk all night; are there no
incidents that you could relate of your travels hither? or are they such that
you do not like to mention them."
"For the most
part, sir, my course has been uninterrupted; and, considering the
circumstances, at times even pleasant. I have suffered little for want of food;
but I need not tell you how I got it. Your moral code may differ from mine, as
your customs and usages are different. The fact is, sir, during my flight, I
felt myself robbed by society of all my just rights; that I was in an enemy's
land, who sought both my life and my liberty. They had transformed me into a
brute; made merchandise of my body, and, for all the purposes of my flight,
turned day into night,--and guided by my own necessities, and in contempt of
their conventionalities, I did not scruple to take bread where I could get
it."
"And just there
you were right," said Mr. Listwell; "I once had doubts on this point
myself, but a conversation with Gerrit Smith, (a man, by the way, that I wish
you could see, for he is a devoted friend of your race, and I know he would
receive you gladly,) put an end to all my doubts on this point. But do not let
me interrupt you."
"I had but one
narrow escape during my whole journey, " said Madison.
"Do let us hear of
it," said Mr. Listwell.
"Two weeks
ago," continued Madison, "after travelling all night, I was overtaken
by daybreak, in what seemed to me an almost interminable wood. I deemed it
unsafe to go farther, and, as usual, I looked around for a suitable tree in
which to spend the day. I liked one with a bushy top, and found one just to my
mind. Up I climbed, and hiding myself as well I could, I, with this strap,
(pulling one out of his old coat-pocket,) lashed myself to a bough, and
flattered myself that I should get a good night's sleep that day; but in this I
was soon disappointed. I had scarcely got fastened to my natural hammock, when
I heard the voices of a number of persons, apparently approaching the part of
the woods where I was. Upon my word, sir, I dreaded more these human voices
than I should have done those of wild beasts. I was at a loss to know what to
do. If I descended, I should probably be discovered by the men; and if they had
dogs I should, doubtless, be 'treed.' It was an anxious moment, but hardships
and dangers have been the accompaniments of my life; and have, perhaps,
imparted to me a certain hardness of character, which, to some extent, adapts
me to them. In my present predicament, I decided to hold my place in the
tree-top, and abide the consequences. But here I must disappoint you; for the
men, who were all colored, halted at least a hundred yards from me, and began
with their axes, in right good earnest, to attack the trees. The sound of their
laughing axes was like the report of as many well-charged pistols. By and by
there came down at least a dozen trees with a terrible crash. They leaped upon
the fallen trees with an air of victory. I could see no dog with them, and felt
myself comparatively safe, though I could not forget the possibility that some
freak or fancy might bring the axe a little nearer my dwelling than comported
with my safety.
"There was no
sleep for me that day, and I wished for night. You may imagine that the thought
of having the tree attacked under me was far from agreeable, and that it very
easily kept me on the look-out. The day was not without diversion. The men at
work seemed to be a gay set; and they would often make the woods resound with
that uncontrolled laughter for which we, as a race, are remarkable. I held my
place in the tree till sunset,--saw the men put on their jackets to be off. I
observed that all left the ground except one, whom I saw sitting on the side of
a stump, with his head bowed, and his eyes apparently fixed on the ground. I
became interested in him. After sitting in the position to which I have alluded
ten or fifteen minutes, he left the stump, walked directly towards the tree in
which I was secreted, and halted almost under the same. He stood for a moment
and looked around, deliberately and reverently took off his hat, by which I saw
that I saw that he was a man in the evening of life, slightly bald and quite
gray. After laying down his hat carefully, he knelt and prayed aloud, and such
a prayer, the most fervent, earnest, and solemn, to which I think I ever
listened. After reverently addressing the Almighty, as the all-wise, all-good,
and the common Father of all mankind, he besought God for grace, for strength,
to bear up under, and to endure, as a good soldier, all the hardships and
trials which beset the journey of life, and to enable him to live in a manner
which accorded with the gospel of Christ. His soul now broke out in humble supplication
for deliverance from bondage. 'O thou,' said he, 'that hearest the raven's cry,
take pity on poor me! O deliver me! O deliver me! in mercy, O God, deliver me
from the chains and manifold hardships of slavery! With thee, O Father, all
things are possible. Thou canst stand and measure the earth. Thou hast beheld
and drove asunder the nations,--all power is in thy hand,--thou didst say of
old, "I have seen the affliction of my people, and am come to deliver
them,"--Oh look down upon our afflictions, and have mercy upon us.' But I
cannot repeat his prayer, nor can I give you an idea of its deep pathos. I had
given but little attention to religion, and had but little faith in it; yet, as
the old man prayed, I felt almost like coming down and kneel by his side, and
mingle my broken complaint with his.
He had already gained
my confidence; as how could it be otherwise? I knew enough of religion to know
that the man who prays in secret is far more likely to be sincere than he who
loves to pray standing in the street, or in the great congregation. When he
arose from his knees, like another Zacheus, I came down from the tree. He
seemed a little alarmed at first, but I told him my story, and the good man
embraced me in his arms, and assured me of his sympathy.
"I was now about
out of provisions, and thought I might safely ask him to help me replenish my
store. He said he had no money; but if he had, he would freely give it me. I
told him I had one dollar; it was all the money I had in the world. I gave it
to him, and asked him to purchase some crackers and cheese, and to kindly bring
me the balance; that I would remain in or near that place, and would come to
him on his return, if he would whistle. He was gone only about an hour.
Meanwhile, from some cause or other, I know not what, (but as you shall see
very wisely,) I changed my place. On his return I started to meet him; but it
seemed as if the shadow of approaching danger fell upon my spirit, and checked
my progress. In a very few minutes, closely on the heels of the old man, I
distinctly saw fourteen men, with something like guns in their hands."
"Oh! the old
wretch!" exclaimed Mrs. Listwell "he had betrayed you, had he?"
"I think
not," said Madison, "I cannot believe that the old man was to blame.
He probably went into a store, asked for the articles for which I sent, and
presented the bill I gave him; and it is so unusual for slaves in the country
to have money, that fact, doubtless, excited suspicion, and gave rise to
inquiry. I can easily believe that the truthfulness of the old man's character
compelled him to disclose the facts; and thus were these blood-thirsty men put
on my track. Of course I did not present myself ; but hugged my hiding-place
securely. If discovered and attacked, I resolved to sell my life as dearly as
possible.
"After searching
about the woods silently for a time, the whole company gathered around the old
man; one charged him with lying, and called him an old villain; said he was a
thief; charged him with stealing money; said if he did not instantly tell where
he got it, they would take the shirt from his old back, and give him
thirty-nine lashes.
"'I did not steal
the money,' said the old man, 'it was given me, as I told you at the store; and
if the man who gave it me is not here, it is not my fault.'
"'Hush! you lying
old rascal; we'll make you smart for it. You shall not leave this spot until
you have told where you got that money.'
"They now took
hold of him, and began to strip him; while others went to get sticks with which
to beat him. I felt, at the moment, like rushing out in the midst of them; but
considering that the old man would be whipped the more for having aided a
fugitive slave, and that, perhaps, in the melée he might be killed outright, I
disobeyed this impulse. They tied him to a tree, and began to whip him. My own
flesh crept at every blow, and I seem to hear the old man's piteous cries even
now. They laid thirty-nine lashes on his bare back, and were going to repeat
that number, when one of the company besought his comrades to desist. 'You'll
kill the d--d old scoundrel! You've already whipt a dollar's worth out of him,
even if he stole it!' 'O yes,' said another, 'let him down. He'll never tell us
another lie, I'll warrant ye!' With this, one of the company untied the old
man, and bid him go about his business.
"The old man left,
but the company remained as much as an hour, scouring the woods. Round and
round they went, turning up the underbrush, and peering about like so many
bloodhounds. Two or three times they came within six feet of where I lay. I
tell you I held my stick with a firmer grasp than I did in coming up to your
house tonight. I expected to level one of them at least. Fortunately, however,
I eluded their pursuit, and they left me alone in the woods.
"My last dollar
was now gone, and you may well suppose I felt the loss of it; but the thought
of being once again free to pursue my journey, prevented that depression which
a sense of destitution causes; so swinging my little bundle on my back, I
caught a glimpse of the Great Bear (which ever points the way to my beloved
star,) and I started again on my journey. What I lost in money I made up at a
hen-roost that same night, upon which I fortunately came."
"But you did 'nt
eat your food raw? How did you cook it?" said Mrs. Listwell.
"O no,
Madam," said Madison, turning to his little bundle:--"I had the means
of cooking." Here lie took out of his bundle an old-fashioned tinder-box,
and taking up a piece of a file, which he brought with him, he struck it with a
heavy flint, and brought out at least a dozen sparks at once. "I have had
this old box," said he, "more than five years. It is the only
property saved from the fire in the dismal swamp. It has done me good service.
It has given me the means of broiling many a chicken!"
It seemed quite a
relief to Mrs. Listwell to know that Madison had, at least, lived upon cooked
food. Women have a perfect horror of eating uncooked food. By this time
thoughts of what was best to be done about getting Madison to Canada, began to
trouble Mr. Listwell; for the laws of Ohio were very stringent against any one
who should aid, or who were found aiding a slave to escape through that State.
A citizen, for the simple act of taking a fugitive slave in his carriage, had
just been stripped of all his property, and thrown penniless upon the world.
Notwithstanding this, Mr. Listwell was determined to see Madison safely on his
way to Canada. "Give yourself no uneasiness," said he to Madison,
"for if it cost my farm, I shall see you safely out of the States, and on
your way to a land of liberty. Thank God that there such a land so near us! You
will spend to-morrow with us, and to-morrow night I will take you in my
carriage to the Lake. Once upon that, and you are safe."
"Thank you! thank
you," said the fugitive; "I will commit myself to your care."
For the first time
during five years, Madison enjoyed the luxury of resting his limbs on a
comfortable bed, and inside a human habitation. Looking at the white sheets, he
said to Mr. Listwell, "What, sir! you don't mean that I shall sleep in
that bed?"
"'Oh yes, oh
yes."
After Mr. Listwell left
the room, Madison said he really hesitated whether or not he should lie on the
floor; for that was far more comfortable and inviting than any bed to which he
had been used.
We pass over the
thoughts and feelings, the hopes and fears, the plans and purposes, that
revolved in the mind of Madison during the day that he was secreted at the
house of Mr. Listwell. The reader will be content to know that nothing occurred
to endanger his liberty, or to excite alarm. Many were the little attentions bestowed
upon him in his quiet retreat and hiding-place. In the evening, Mr. Listwell,
after treating Madison to a new suit of winter clothes, and replenishing his
exhausted purse with five dollars, all in silver, brought out his two-horse
wagon, well provided with buffaloes, and silently started off with him to
Cleveland. They arrived there without interruption, a few minutes before
sunrise the next morning. Fortunately the steamer Admiral lay at the wharf, and
was to start for Canada at nine o'clock. Here the last anticipated danger was
surmounted. It was feared that just at this point the hunters of men might be
on the look-out, and, possibly, pounce upon their victim. Mr. Listwell saw the
captain of the boat; cautiously sounded him on the matter of carrying
liberty-loving passengers, before he introduced his precious charge. This done,
Madison was conducted on board. With usual generosity this true subject of the
emancipating queen welcomed Madison, and assured him that he should be safely
landed in Canada, free of charge. Madison now felt himself no more a piece of
merchandise, but a passenger, and, like any other passenger, going about his
business, carrying with him what belonged to him, and nothing which rightfully
belonged to anybody else.
Wrapped in his new
winter suit, snug and comfortable, a pocket full of silver, safe from his
pursuers, embarked for a free country, Madison gave every sign of sincere
gratitude, and bade his kind benefactor farewell, with such a grip of the hand
as bespoke a heart full of honest manliness, and a soul that knew how to
appreciate kindness. It need scarcely be said that Mr. Listwell was deeply
moved by the gratitude and friendship he had excited in a nature so noble as
that of the fugitive. He went to his home that day with a joy and gratification
which knew no bounds. He had done something "to deliver the spoiled out of
the hands of the spoiler," he had given bread to the hungry, and clothes
to the naked; he had befriended a man to whom the laws of his country forbade
all friendship,--and in proportion to the odds against his righteous deed, was
the delightful satisfaction that gladdened his heart. On reaching home, he
exclaimed, "He is safe,--he is safe,--he is safe,"-- and the cup of
his joy was shared by his excellent lady. The following letter was received
from Madison a few days after.
"WINDSOR, CANADA
WEST, DEC. 16, 1840.
My dear Friend,--for
such you truly are:--
Madison is out of the woods at last; I nestle in the mane of the British lion,
protected by his mighty paw from the talons and the beak of the American eagle.
I AM FREE, and breathe an atmosphere too pure for slaves, slave-hunters, or
slave-holders. My heart is full. As many thanks to you, sir, and to your kind
lady, as there are pebbles on the shores of Lake Erie; and may the blessing of
God rest upon you both. You will never be forgotten by your profoundly grateful
friend,
MADISON
WASHINGTON."
--His head was with his
heart,
And that was far away! Childe
Harold.
Just upon the edge of the
great road. from Petersburg, Virginia, to Richmond, and only about fifteen
miles from the latter place, there stands a somewhat ancient and famous public
tavern, quite notorious in its better days, as being the grand resort for most
of the leading gamblers, horse-racers, cock-fighters, and slave-traders from
all the country round about. This old rookery, the nucleus of all sorts of
birds, mostly those of ill omen, has, like everything else peculiar to
Virginia, lost much of its ancient consequence and splendor; yet it keeps up
some appearance of gaiety and high life, and is still frequented, even by
respectable travellers, who are unacquainted with its past history and present
condition. Its fine old portico looks well at a distance, and gives the building
an air of grandeur. A nearer view, however, does little to sustain this
pretension. The house is large, and its style imposing, but time and
dissipation, unfailing in their results, have made ineffaceable marks upon it,
and it must, in the common course of events, soon be numbered with the things
that were. The gloomy mantle of ruin is, already, outspread to envelop it, and
its remains, even but now remind one of a human skull, after the flesh has
mingled with the earth. Old hats and rags fill the places in the upper windows
once occupied by large panes of glass, and the moulding boards along the
roofing have dropped off from their places, leaving holes and crevices in the
rented wall for bats and swallows to build their nests in. The platform of the
portico, which fronts the highway is a rickety affair, its planks are loose,
and in some places entirely gone, leaving effective mantraps in their stead for
nocturnal ramblers. The wooden pillars, which once supported it, but which now
hang as encumbrances, are all rotten, and tremble with the touch. A part of the
stable, a fine old structure in its day, which has given comfortable shelter to
hundreds of the noblest steeds of "the Old Dominion" at once, was
blown down many years ago, and never has been, and probably never will be,
rebuilt. The doors of the barn are in wretched condition; they will shut with a
little human strength to help their worn out hinges, but not otherwise. The
side of the great building seen from the road is much discolored in sundry places
by slops poured from the upper windows, rendering it unsightly and offensive in
other respects. Three or four great dogs, looking as dull and gloomy as the
mansion itself, lie stretched out along the door-sills under the portico; and
double the number of loafers, some of them completely rum-ripe, and others
ripening, dispose themselves like so many sentinels about the front of the
house. These latter understand the science of scraping acquaintance to
perfection. They know every-body, and almost every-body knows them. Of course,
as their title implies, they have no regular employment. They are (to use an
expressive phrase) hangers on, or still better, they are what sailors would
denominate holders-on to the slack, in every-body's mess, and in nobody's watch.
They are, however, as good as the newspaper for the events of the day, and they
sell their knowledge almost as cheap. Money they seldom have; yet they always
have capital the most reliable. They make their way with a succeeding traveller
by intelligence gained from a preceding one. All the great names of Virginia
they know by heart, and have seen their owners often. The history of the house
is folded in their lips, and they rattle off stories in connection with it,
equal to the guides at Dryburgh Abbey. He must be a shrewd man, and well
skilled in the art of evasion, who gets out of the hands of these fellows
without being at the expense of a treat.
It was at this old
tavern, while on a second visit to the State of Virginia in 1841, that Mr.
Listwell, unacquainted with the fame of the place, turned aside, about sunset,
to pass the night. Riding up to the house, he had scarcely dismounted, when one
of the half dozen bar-room fraternity met and addressed him in a manner
exceedingly bland and accommodating.
"Fine evening,
sir."
"Very fine,"
said Mr. Listwell. "This is a tavern, I believe?"
"O yes, sir, yes;
although you may think it looks a little the worse for wear, it was once as
good a house as any in Virginy. I make no doubt if ye spend the night here,
you'll think it a good house yet; for there aint a more accommodating man in
the country than you'll find the landlord."
Listwell. "The
most I want is a good bed for myself, and a full manger for my horse. If I get
these, I shall be quite satisfied."
Loafer. "Well, I
alloys like to hear a gentleman talk for his horse; and just becase the horse
can't talk for itself. A man that don't care about his beast, and don't look
arter it when he's travelling, aint much in my eye anyhow. Now, sir, I likes a
horse, and I'll guarantee your horse will be taken good care on here. That old
stable, for all you see it looks so shabby now, once sheltered the great
Eclipse, when he run here agin Batchelor and Jumping Jemmy. Them was fast
horses, but he beat 'em both."
Listwell.
"Indeed."
Loafer."Well, I
rather reckon you've travelled a right smart distance to-day, from the look of
your horse?"
Listwell. "Forty
miles only."
Loafer. "Well!
I'll be darned if that aint a pretty good only. Mister, that beast of yours is
a singed cat, I warrant you. I never see'd a creature like that that was'nt
good on the road. You've come about forty miles, then?"
Listwell. "Yes,
yes, and a pretty good pace at that."
Loafer. "You're
somewhat in a hurry, then, I make no doubt? I reckon I could guess if I would,
what you're going to Richmond for? It would'nt be much of a guess either; for
it's rumored hereabouts, that there's to be the greatest sale of niggers at Richmond
to-morrow that has taken place there in a long time; and I'll be bound you're a
going there to have a hand in it."
Listwell. "Why,
you must think, then, that there's money to be made at that business?"
Loafer. "Well,
'pon my honor, sir, I never made any that way myself; but it stands to reason
that it's a money making business; for almost all other business in Virginia is
dropped to engage in this. One thing is sartain, I never see'd a nigger-buyer
yet that had 'nt a plenty of money, and he was 'nt as free with it as water. I
has known one on 'em to treat as high as twenty times in a night; and,
ginerally speaking, they's men of edication, and knows all about the
government. The fact is, sir, I alloys like to hear 'em talk, bekase I alloys
can learn something from them."
Listwell. "What
may I call your name, sir?"
Loafer. "Well,
now, they calls me Wilkes. I'm known all around by the gentlemen that comes
here. They all knows old Wilkes."
Listwell. "Well,
Wilkes, you seem to be acquainted here, and I see you have a strong liking for
a horse. Be so good as to speak a kind word for mine to the hostler to-night,
and you'll not lose anything by it."
Loafer. "Well,
sir, I see you don't say much, but you I've got an insight into things. It's
alloys wise to get the good will of them that's acquainted about a tavern; for
a man don't know when he goes into a house what may happen, or how much he may
need a friend. Here the loafer gave Mr. Listwell a significant grin, which
expressed a sort of triumphant pleasure at having, as he supposed, by his tact
succeeded in placing so fine appearing a gentleman under obligations to him.
The pleasure, however, was mutual; for there was something so insinuating in
the glance of this loquacious customer, that Mr. Listwell was very glad to get
quit of him, and to do so more successfully, he ordered his supper to be
brought to him in his private room, private to the eye, but not to the ear.
This room was directly over the bar, and the plastering being off, nothing but
pine boards and naked laths separated him from the disagreeable company
below,--he could easily hear what was said in the bar-room, and was rather glad
of the advantage it afforded, for, as you shall see, it furnished him important
hints as to the manner and deportment he should assume during his stay at that
tavern.
Mr. Listwell says he
had got into his room but a few moments, when he heard the officious Wilkes
below, in a tone of disappointment, exclaim, "Whar's that gentleman?"
Wilkes was evidently expecting to meet with his friend at the bar-room, on his
return, and had no doubt of his doing the handsome thing. "He has gone to
his room," answered the landlord, "and has ordered his supper to be
brought to him."
Here some one shouted
out, "Who is he, Wilkes? Where's he going?"
"Well, now, I'll
be hanged if I know; but I'm willing to make any man a bet of this old hat agin
a five dollar bill, that that gent is as full of money as a dog is of fleas.
He's going down to Richmond to buy niggers, I make no doubt. He's no fool, I
warrant ye."
"Well, he acts
d--d strange," said another, "anyhow. I likes to see a man, when he
comes up to a tavern, to come straight into the bar-room, and show that he's a
man among men. Nobody was going to bite him."
"Now, I don't blame
him a bit for not coming in here. That man knows his business, and means to
take care on his money," answered Wilkes.
"Wilkes, you 're a
fool. You only say that, becase you hope to get a few coppers out on him."
"You only measure
my corn by your half-bushel, I won't say that you're only mad becase I got the
chance of speaking to him first."
"O Wilkes! you're
known here. You'll praise up any body that will give you a copper; besides,
'tis my opinion that that fellow who took his long slab-sides up stairs, for
all the world just like a half-scared woman, afraid to look honest men in the
face, is a Northerner, and as mean as dish-water."
"Now what will you
bet of that," said Wilkes.
The speaker said,
"I make no bets with you, 'kase you can get that fellow up stairs there to
say anything."
"Well," said
Wilkes, "I am willing to bet any man in the company that that gentleman is
a nigger-buyer. He did 'nt tell me so right down, but I reckon I knows enough
about men to give a pretty clean guess as to what they are arter."
The dispute as to who
Mr. Listwell was, what his business, where he was going, etc., was kept up with
much animation for some time, and more than once threatened a serious
disturbance of the peace. Wilkes had his friends as well as his opponents.
After this sharp debate, the company amused themselves by drinking whiskey, and
telling stories. The latter consisting of quarrels, fights, rencontres, and
duels, in which distinguished persons of that neighborhood, and frequenters of
that house, had been actors. Some of these stories were frightful enough, and
were told, too, with a relish which bespoke the pleasure of the parties with
the horrid scenes they portrayed. It would not be proper here to give the
reader any idea of the vulgarity and dark profanity which rolled, as "a
sweet morsel," under these corrupt tongues. A more brutal set of
creatures, perhaps, never congregated.
Disgusted, and a little
alarmed withal, Mr. Listwell, who was not accustomed to such entertainment, at
length retired, but not to sleep. He was too much wrought upon by what he had
heard to rest quietly, and what snatches of sleep he got, were interrupted by
dreams which were anything than pleasant. At eleven o'clock, there seemed to be
several hundreds of persons crowding into the house. A loud and confused
clamour, cursing and cracking of whips, and the noise of chains startled him
from his bed; for a moment he would have given the half of his farm in Ohio to
have been at home. This uproar was kept up with undulating course, till near
morning. There was loud laughing,--loud singing,--loud cursing,--and yet there
seemed to be weeping and mourning in the midst of all. Mr. Listwell said he had
heard enough during the forepart of the night to convince him that a buyer of
men and women stood the best chance of being respected. And he, therefore,
thought it best to say nothing which might undo the favorable opinion that had
been formed of him in the bar-room by at least one of the fraternity that
swarmed about it. While he would not avow himself a purchaser of slaves, he
deemed it not prudent to disavow it. He felt that he might, properly, refuse to
cast such a pearl before parties which, to him, were worse than swine. To
reveal himself, and to impart a knowledge of his real character and sentiments
would, to say the least, be imparting intelligence with the certainty of seeing
it and himself both abused. Mr. Listwell confesses, that this reasoning did not
altogether satisfy his conscience, for, hating slavery as he did, and regarding
it to be the immediate duty of every man to cry out against it, "without
compromise and without concealment," it was hard for him to admit to
himself the possibility of circumstances wherein a man might, properly, hold
his tongue on the subject. Having as little of the spirit of a martyr as
Erasmus, he concluded, like the latter, that it was wiser to trust the mercy of
God for his soul, than the humanity of slave-traders for his body. Bodily fear,
not conscientious scruples, prevailed.
In this spirit he rose
early in the morning, manifesting no surprise at what he had heard during the
night. His quondam friend was soon at his elbow, boring him with all sorts of
questions. All, however, directed to find out his character, buiness,
residence, purposes, and destination. With the most perfect appearance of good
nature and carelessness, Mr. Listwell evaded these meddlesome inquiries, and
turned conversation to general topics, leaving himself and all that specially
pertained to him, out of discussion. Disengaging himself from their troublesome
companionship, he made his way towards an old bowling-alley, which was
connected with the house, and which, like all the rest, was in very bad repair.
On reaching the alley
Mr. Listwell saw, for the first time in his life, a slave-gang on their way to
market. A sad sight truly. Here were one hundred and thirty human
beings,--children of a common Creator--guilty of no crime--men and women, with
hearts, minds, and deathless spirits, chained and fettered, and bound for the
market, in a christian country,--in a country boasting of its liberty,
independence, and high civilization! Humanity converted into merchandise, and
linked in iron bands, with no regard to decency or humanity! All sizes, ages,
and sexes, mothers, fathers, daughters, brothers, sisters,--all huddled
together, on their way to market to be sold and separated from home, and from
each other forever. And all to fill the pockets of men too lazy to work for an
honest living, and who gain their fortune by plundering the helpless, and
trafficking in the souls and sinews of men. As he gazed upon this revolting and
heart-rending scene, our informant said he almost doubted the existence of a
God of justice! And he stood wondering that the earth did not open and swallow
up such wickedness.
In the midst of these
reflections, and while running his eye up and down the fettered ranks, he met
the glance of one whose face he thought he had seen before. To be resolved, he
moved towards the spot. It was MADISON WASHINGTON! Here was a scene for the
pencil! Had Mr. Listwell been confronted by one risen from the dead, he could
not have been more appalled. He was completely stunned. A thunderbolt could not
have struck him more dumb. He stood, for a few moments, as motionless as one
petrified; collecting himself, he at length exclaimed, "Madison! is that
you?"
The noble fugitive, but
little less astonished than himself, answered cheerily, "O yes, sir, they
've got me again."
Thoughtless of
consequences for the moment, Mr. Listwell ran up to his old friend, placing his
hands upon his shoulders, and looked him in the face! Speechless they stood
gazing at each other as if to be doubly resolved that there was no mistake
about the matter, till Madison motioned his friend away, intimating a fear lest
the keepers should find him there, and suspect him of tampering with the
slaves.
"They will soon be
out to look after us. You can come when they go to breakfast, and I will tell
you all."
Pleased with this
arrangement, Mr. Listwell passed out of the alley; but only just in time to
save himself, for, while near the door, he observed three men making their way
to the alley. The thought occurred to him to await their arrival, as the best
means of diverting the ever ready suspicions of the guilty.
While the scene between
Mr. Listwell and his friend Madison was going on, the other slaves stood as
mute spectators,--at a loss to know what all this could mean. As he left, he
heard the man chained to Madison ask, "Who is that gentleman?"
"He is a friend of
mine. I cannot tell you now. Suffice it to say he is a friend. You shall hear
more of him before long, but mark me! whatever shall pass between that
gentleman and me, in your hearing, I pray you will say nothing about it. We are
all chained here together,--ours is a common lot; and that gentleman is not
less your friend than mine." At these words, all mysterious as they were,
the unhappy company gave signs of satisfaction and hope. It seems that Madison,
by that mesmeric power which is the invariable accompaniment of genius, had
already won the confidence of the gang, and was a sort of general-in-chief
among them.
By this time the
keepers arrived. A horrid trio, well fitted for their demoniacal work. Their
uncombed hair came down over foreheads "villainously low," and with
eyes, mouths, and noses to match. "Hallo! hallo!" they growled out as
they entered. "Are you all there!"
"All here,"
said Madison.
"Well, well,
that's right! your journey will soon be over. You'll be in Richmond by eleven
to-day, and then you'll have an easy time on it."
"I say, gal, what
in the devil are you crying about?" said one of them. I 'll give you
something to cry about, if you don't mind." This was said to a girl,
apparently not more than twelve years old, who had been weeping bitterly. She
had, probably, left behind her a loving mother, affectionate sisters, brothers,
and friends, and her tears were but the natural expression of her sorrow, and
the only solace. But the dealers in human flesh have no respect for such
sorrow. They look upon it as a protest against their cruel injustice, and they
are prompt to punish it.
This is a puzzle not
easily solved. How came he here? what can I do for him? may I not even now be
in some way compromised in this affair? were thoughts that troubled Mr.
Listwell, and made him eager for the promised opportunity of speaking to
Madison.
The bell now sounded
for breakfast, and keepers and drivers, with pistols and bowie-knives gleaming
from their belts, hurried in, as if to get the best places. Taking the chance
now afforded, Mr. Listwell hastened back to the bowling-alley. Reaching
Madison, he said, "Now do tell me all about the matter. Do you know
me?"
"Oh, yes,"
said Madison, "I know you well, and shall never forget you nor that cold
and dreary night you gave me shelter. I must be short," he continued,
"for they'll soon be out again. This, then, is the story in brief. On
reaching Canada, and getting over the excitement of making my escape, sir, my
thoughts turned to my poor wife, who had well deserved my love by her virtuous
fidelity and undying affection for me. I could not bear the thought of leaving
her in the cruel jaws of slavery, without making an effort to rescue her.
First, I tried to get money to buy her; but oh! the process was too slow. I
despaired of accomplishing it. She was in all my thoughts by day, and my dreams
by night. At times I could almost hear her voice, saying, 'O Madison! Madison!
will you then leave me here? can you leave me here to die? No! no! you will
come! you will come!' I was wretched. I lost my appetite. I could neither work,
eat, nor sleep, till I resolved to hazard my own liberty, to gain that of my
wife! But I must be short. Six weeks ago I reached my old master's place. I
laid about the neighborhood nearly a week, watching my chance, and, finally, I
ventured upon the desperate attempt to reach my poor wife's room by means of a
ladder. I reached the window, but the noise in raising it frightened my wife,
and she screamed and fainted. I took her in my arms, and was descending the
ladder, when the dogs began to bark furiously, and before I could get to the
woods the white folks were roused. The cool night air soon restored my wife,
and she readily recognized me. We made the best of our way to the woods, but it
was now too late,--the dogs were after us as though they would have torn us to
pieces. It was all over with me now! My old master and his two sons ran out
with loaded rifles, and before we were out of gunshot, our ears were assailed
with 'Stop! stop! or be shot down .' Nevertheless we ran on. Seeing that we
gave no heed to their calls, they fired, and my poor wife fell by my side dead,
while I received but a slight flesh wound. I now became desperate, and stood my
ground, and awaited their attack over her dead body. They rushed upon me, with
their rifles in hand. I parried their blows, and fought them 'till I was
knocked down and overpowered."
"Oh! it was
madness to have returned," said Mr. Listwell.
"Sir, I could not
be free with the galling thought that my poor wife was still a slave. With her
in slavery, my body, not my spirit, was free. I was taken to the
house,--chained to a ring-bolt,--my wounds dressed. I was kept there three
days. All the slaves, for miles around, were brought to see me. Many
slave-holders came with their slaves, using me as proof of the completeness of
their power, and of the impossibility of slaves getting away. I was taunted,
jeered at, and berated by them, in a manner that pierced me to the soul. Thank
God, I was able to smother my rage, and to bear it all with seeming composure.
After my wounds were nearly healed, I was taken to a tree and stripped, and I
received sixty lashes on my naked back. A few days after, I was sold to a
slave-trader, and placed in this gang for the New Orleans market."
"Do you think your
master would sell you to me?"
"O no, sir! I was
sold on condition of my being taken South. Their motive is revenge."
"Then, then,"
said Mr. Listwell, "I fear I can do nothing for you. Put your trust in
God, and bear your sad lot with the manly fortitude which becomes a man. I
shall see you at Richmond, but don't recognize me." Saying this, Mr.
Listwell handed Madison ten dollars; said a few words to the other slaves;
received their hearty "God bless you," and made his way to the house.
Fearful of exciting
suspicion by too long delay, our friend went to the breakfast table, with the
air of one who half reproved the greediness of those who rushed in at the sound
of the bell. A cup of coffee was all that he could manage. His feelings were
too bitter and excited, and his heart was too full with the fate of poor
Madison (whom he loved as well as admired) to relish his breakfast; and
although he sat long after the company had left the table, he really did little
more than change the position of his knife and fork. The strangeness of meeting
again one whom he had met on two several occasions before, under extraordinary
circumstances, was well calculated to suggest the idea that a supernatural
power, a wakeful providence, or an inexorable fate, had linked their destiny
together; and that no efforts of his could disentangle him from the mysterious
web of circumstances which enfolded him.
On leaving the table,
Mr. Listwell nerved himself up and walked firmly into the bar-room. He was at
once greeted again by that talkative chatter-box, Mr. Wilkes.
"Them's a likely
set of niggers in the alley there," said Wilkes.
"Yes, they're fine
looking fellows, one of them I should like to purchase, and for him I would be
willing to give a handsome sum."
Turning to one of his
comrades, and with a grin of victory, Wilkes said, "Aha, Bill, did you
hear that? I told you I know'd that gentleman wanted to buy niggers, and would
bid as high as any purchaser in the market."
"Come, come,"
said Listwell, "don't be too loud in your praise, you are old enough to
know that prices rise when purchasers are plenty."
"That's a
fact," said Wilkes, "I see you knows the ropes--and there's not a man
in old Virginy whom I'd rather help to make a good bargain than you, sir.
"Mr. Listwell here
threw a dollar at Wilkes, (which the latter caught with a dexterous hand,)
saying, "Take that for your kind good will." Wilkes held up the
dollar to his right eye, with a grin of victory, and turned to the morose
grumbler in the corner who had questioned the liberality of a man of whom he
knew nothing.
Mr. Listwell now stood
as well with the company as any other occupant of the bar-room.
We pass over the hurry
and bustle, the brutal vociferations of the slave-drivers in getting their
unhappy gang in motion for Richmond; and we need not narrate every application
of the lash to those who faltered in the journey. Mr. Listwell followed the
train at a long distance, with a sad heart; and on reaching Richmond, left his
horse at a hotel, and made his way to the wharf in the direction of which he
saw the slave-coffle driven. He was just in time to see the whole company
embark for New Orleans. The thought struck him that, while mixing with the
multitude, he might do his friend Madison one last service, and he stept into a
hardware store and purchased three strong files. These he took with him, and
standing near the small boat, which lay in waiting to bear the company by
parcels to the side of the brig that lay in the stream, he managed, as Madison
passed him, to slip the files into his pocket, and at once darted back among
the crowd.
All the company now on
board, the imperious voice of the captain sounded, and instantly a dozen hardy
seamen were in the rigging, hurrying aloft to unfurl the broad canvas of our
Baltimore built American Slaver. The sailors hung about the ropes, like so many
black cats, now in the round-tops, now in the cross-trees, now on the
yard-arms; all was bluster and activity. Soon the broad fore topsail, the royal
and top gallant sail were spread to the breeze. Round went the heavy windlass,
clank, clank went the fall-bit,--the anchors weighed, jibs, mainsails, and
topsails hauled to the wind, and the long, low, black slaver, with her cargo of
human flesh, careened and moved forward to the sea.
Mr. Listwell stood on
the shore, and watched the slaver till the last speck of her upper sails faded
from sight, and announced the limit of human vision. "Farewell! farewell!
brave and true man! God grant that brighter skies may smile upon your future
than have yet looked down upon your thorny pathway."
Saying this to himself,
our friend lost no time in completing his business, and in making his way
homewards, gladly shaking off from his feet the dust of Old Virginia.
Oh, where's the slave
so lowly
Condemn'd to chains
unholy,
Who could he burst His bonds at first Would
pine beneath them slowly ?
Moore.
--Know ye not
Who would be free,
themselves must strike the blow.
Childe Harold.
What a world of
inconsistency, as well as of wickedness, is suggested by the smooth and gliding
phrase, AMERICAN SLAVE TRADE; and how strange and perverse is that moral
sentiment which loathes, execrates, and brands as piracy and as deserving of
death the carrying away into captivity men, women, and children from the
African coast; but which is neither shocked nor disturbed by a similar traffic,
carried on with the same motives and purposes, and characterized by even more
odious peculiarities on the coast of our MODEL REPUBLIC. We execrate and hang
the wretch guilty of this crime on the coast of Guinea, while we respect and
applaud the guilty participators in this murderous business on enlightened
shores of the Chesapeake. The inconsistency is so flagrant and glaring, that it
would seem to cast a doubt on the doctrine of the innate moral sense of
mankind.
Just two months after
the sailing of the Virginia slave brig, which the reader has seen move off to
sea so proudly with her human cargo for the New Orleans market, there chanced
to meet, in the Marine Coffee-house at Richmond, a company of ocean birds, when
the following conversation, which throws some light on the subsequent history,
not only of Madison Washington, but of the hundred and thirty human beings with
whom we last saw him chained.
"I say, shipmate,
you had rather rough weather on your late passage to Orleans?" said Jack
Williams, a regular old salt, tauntingly, to a trim, compact, manly looking
person, who proved to be the first mate of the slave brig in question.
"Foul play, as
well as foul weather," replied the firmly knit personage, evidently but
little inclined to enter upon a subject which terminated so ingloriously to the
captain and officers of the American slaver.
"Well, betwixt you
and me," said Williams, that whole affair on board of the Creole was
miserably and disgracefully managed. Those black rascals got the upper hand of
ye altogether; and, in my opinion, the whole disaster was the result of
ignorance of the real character of darkies in general. With half a dozen
resolute white men, (I say it not boastingly,) I could have had the rascals in
irons in ten minutes, not because I'm so strong, but I know how to manage 'em.
With my back against the caboose, I could, myself, have flogged a dozen of
them; and had I been on board, by every monster of the deep, every black devil
of 'em all would have had his neck stretched from the yard-arm. Ye made a
mistake in yer manner of fighting 'em. All that is needed in dealing with a set
of rebellious darkies, is to show that yer not afraid of 'em. For my own part,
I would not honor a dozen niggers by pointing a gun at one on 'em,--a good
stout whip, or a stiff rope's end, is better than all the guns at Old Point to
quell a nigger insurrection. Why, sir, to take a gun to a nigger is the best
way you can select to tell him you are afraid of him, and the best way of
inviting his attack."
This speech made quite
a sensation among the company, and a part of them indicated solicitude for the
answer which might be made to it. Our first mate replied, "Mr. Williams,
all that you've now said sounds very well here on shore, where, perhaps, you
have studied negro character. I do not profess to understand the subject as
well as yourself; but it strikes me, you apply the same rule in dissimilar
cases. It is quite easy to talk of flogging niggers here on land, where you
have the sympathy of the community, and the whole physical force of the
government, State and national, at your command; and where, if a negro shall
lift his hand against a white man, the white community, with one accord, are
ready to unite in shooting him down. I say, in such circumstances, it's easy to
talk of flogging negroes and of negro cowardice ; but, sir, I deny that the negro
is, naturally, a coward, or that your theory of managing slaves will stand the
test of salt water. It may do very well for an overseer, a contemptible
hireling, to take advantage of fears already in existence, and which his
presence has no power to inspire; to swagger about whip in hand, and discourse
on the timidity and cowardice of negroes; for they have a smooth sea and a fair
wind. It is one thing to manage a company of slaves on a Virginia plantation,
and quite another thing to quell an insurrection on the lonely billows of the
Atlantic, where every breeze speaks of courage and liberty. For the negro to
act cowardly on shore, may be to act wisely; and I've some doubts whether you,
Mr. Williams, would find it very convenient were you a slave in Algiers, to
raise your hand against the bayonets of a whole government."
"By George,
shipmate," said Williams, you're coming rather too near. Either I've
fallen very low in your estimation, or your notions of negro courage have got
up a button-hole too high. Now I more than ever wish I'd been on board of that
luckless craft. I'd have given ye practical evidence of the truth of my theory.
I don't doubt there's some difference in being at sea. But a nigger's a nigger,
on sea or land; and is a coward, find him where you will; a drop of blood from
one on 'em will skeer a hundred. A knock on the nose, or a kick on the shin,
will tame the wildest 'darkey' you can fetch me. I say again, and will stand by
it, I could, with half a dozen good men, put the whole nineteen on 'em in
irons, and have carried them safe to New Orleans too. Mind, I don't blame you,
but I do say, and every gentleman here will bear me out in it, that the fault
was somewhere, or them niggers would never have got off as they have done. For
my part I feel ashamed to have the idea go abroad, that a ship load of slaves
can't be safely taken from Richmond to New Orleans. I should like, merely to
redeem the character of Virginia sailors, to take charge of a ship load on 'em
to-morrow."
Williams went on in
this strain, occasionally casting an imploring glance at the company for
applause for his wit, and sympathy for his contempt of negro courage. He had,
evidently, however, waked up the wrong passenger; for besides being in the
right, his opponent carried that in his eye which marked him a man not to be
trifled with.
"Well, Sir,"
said the sturdy mate, "you can select your own method for distinguishing
yourself;--the path of ambition in this direction is quite open to you in
Virginia, and I've no doubt that you will be highly appreciated and compensated
for all your valiant achievements in that line; but for myself, while I do not
profess to be a giant, I have resolved never to set my foot on the deck of a
slave ship, either as officer, or common sailor again; I have got enough of
it."
"Indeed!
indeed!" exclaimed Williams, derisively.
"Yes,
indeed," echoed the mate; "but don't misunderstand me. It is not the
high value that I set upon my life that makes me say what I have said; yet I'm
resolved never to endanger my life again in a cause which my conscience does
not approve. I dare say here what many men feel, but dare not speak, that this
whole slave-trading business is a disgrace and scandal to Old Virginia."
"Hold! hold on!
shipmate," said Williams, I hardly thought you'd have shown your colors so
soon,--I'll be hanged if you're not as good an abolitionist as Garrison
himself."
The mate now rose from
his chair, manifesting some excitement. "What do you mean, sir," said
he, in a commanding tone. "That man does not live who shall offer me an
insult with impunity."
The effect of the words
was marked; and the company clustered around. Williams, in an apologetic tone,
said, "Shipmate! keep your temper. I mean't no insult. We all know that
Tom Grant is no coward, and what I said about your being an abolitionist was
simply this: you might have put down them black mutineers and murderers, but
your conscience held you back."
"In that,
too," said Grant, "you were mistaken. I did all that any man with
equal strength and presence of mind could have done. The fact is, Mr. Williams,
you underrate the courage as well as the skill of these negroes, and further,
you do not seem to have been correctly informed about the case in hand at
all."
"All I know about
it is," said Williams, "that on the ninth day after you left
Richmond, a dozen or two of the niggers ye had on board, came on deck and took
the ship from, you;--had her steered into a British port, where, by the by,
every wooly head of them went ashore and was free. Now I take this to be a
discreditable piece of business, and one demanding explanation."
"There are a great
many discreditable things in the world," said Grant. For a ship to go down
under a calm sky is, upon the first flush of it, disgraceful either to sailors
or caulkers. But when we learn, that by some mysterious disturbance in nature,
the waters parted beneath, and swallowed the ship up, we lose our indignation
and disgust in lamentation of the disaster, and in awe of the Power which
controls the elements."
"Very true, very
true," said Williams, "I should be very glad to have an explanation
which would relieve the affair of its present discreditable features. I have
desired to see you ever since you got home, and to learn from you a full statement
of the facts in the case. To me the whole thing seems unaccountable. I cannot
see how a dozen or two of ignorant negroes, not one of whom had ever been to
sea before, and all of them were closely ironed between decks, should be able
to get their fetters off, rush out of the hatchway in open daylight, kill two
white men, the one the captain and the other their master, and then carry the
ship into a British port, where every 'darkey' of them was set free. There must
have been great carelessness, or cowardice somewhere!"
The company which had
listened in silence during most of this discussion, now became much excited.
One said, I agree with Williams; and several said the thing looks black enough.
After the temporary tumultuous exclamations had subsided,--
"I see," said
Grant, "how you regard this case, and how difficult it will be for me to
render our ship's company blameless in your eyes. Nevertheless, I will state
the fact precisely as they came under my own observation. Mr. Williams speaks
of 'ignorant negroes,' and, as a general rule, they are ignorant; but had he
been on board the Creole as I was, he would have seen cause to admit that there
are exceptions to this general rule. The leader of the mutiny in question was
just as shrewd a fellow as ever I met in my life, and was as well fitted to
lead in a dangerous enterprise as any one white man in ten thousand. The name
of this man, strange to say, (ominous of greatness,) was MADISON WASHINGTON. In
the short time he had been on board, he had secured the confidence of every
officer. The negroes fairly worshipped him. His manner and bearing were such,
that no one could suspect him of a murderous purpose. The only feeling with
which we regarded him was, that he was a powerful, good-disposed negro. He seldom
spake to to any one, and when he did speak, it was with the utmost propriety.
His words were well chosen, and his pronunciation equal to that of any
schoolmaster. It was a mystery to us where he got his knowledge of language;
but as little was said to him, none of us knew the extent of his intelligence
and ability till it was too late. It seems he brought three files with him on
board, and must have gone to work upon his fetters the first night out; and he
must have worked well at that; for on the day of the rising, he got the irons
off eighteen besides himself.
"The attack began
just about twilight in the evening. Apprehending a squall, I had commanded the
second mate to order all hands on deck, to take in sail. A few minutes before
this I had seen Madison's head above the hatchway, looking out upon the
white-capped waves at the leeward. I think I never saw him look more
good-natured. I stood just about midship, on the larboard side. The captain was
pacing the quarter-deck on the starboard side, in company with Mr. Jameson, the
owner of most of the slaves on board. Both were armed. I had just told the men
to lay aloft, and was looking to see my orders obeyed, when I heard the
discharge of a pistol on the starboard side; and turning suddenly around, the very
deck seemed covered with fiends from the pit. The nineteen negroes were all on
deck, with their broken fetters in their hands, rushing in all directions. I
put my hand quickly in my pocket to draw out my jack-knife; but before I could
draw it, I was knocked senseless to the deck. When I came to myself, (which I
did in a few minutes, I suppose, for it was yet quite light,) there was not a
white man on deck. The sailors were all aloft in the rigging, and dared not
come down. Captain Clarke and Mr. Jameson lay stretched on the
quarter-deck,--both dying,--while Madison himself stood at the helm unhurt.
"I was completely
weakened by the loss of blood, and had not recovered from the stunning blow
which felled me to the deck; but it was a little too much for me, even in my
prostrate condition, to see our good brig commanded by a black murderer. So I called
out to the men to come down and take the ship, or die in the attempt. Suiting
the action to the word, I started aft. You murderous villain, said I, to the
imp at the helm, and rushed upon him to deal him a blow, when he pushed me back
with his strong, black arm, as though I had been a boy of twelve. I looked
around for the men. They were still in the rigging. Not one had come down. I
started towards Madison again. The rascal now told me to stand back. 'Sir,'
said he, 'your life is in my hands. I could have killed you a dozen times over
during this last half hour, and could kill you now. You call me a black
murderer. I am not a murderer. God is my witness that LIBERTY, not malice, is
the motive for this night's work. I have done no more to those dead men yonder,
than they would have done to me in like circumstances. We have struck for our
freedom, and if a true man's heart be in you, you will honor us for the deed.
We have done that which you applaud your fathers for doing, and if we are
murderers, so were they.'
"I felt little
disposition to reply to this impudent speech. By heaven, it disarmed me. The
fellow loomed up before me. I forgot his blackness in the dignity of his
manner, and the eloquence of his speech. It seemed as if the souls of both the
great dead (whose names he bore) had entered him. To the sailors in the rigging
he said: 'Men! the battle is over,--your captain is dead. I have complete
command of this vessel. All resistance to my authority will be in vain. My men
have won their liberty, with no other weapons but their own BROKEN FETTERS. We
are nineteen in number. We do not thirst for your blood, we demand only our
rightful freedom. Do not flatter yourselves that I am ignorant of chart or
compass. I know both. We are now only about sixty miles from Nassau. Come down,
and do your duty. Land us in Nassau, and not a hair of your heads shall be
hurt.'
"I shouted, Stay
where you are, men,--when a sturdy black fellow ran at me with a handspike, and
would have split my head open, but for the interference of Madison, who darted
between me and the blow. 'I know what you are up to,' said the latter to me.
'You want to navigate this brig into a slave port, where you would have us all
hanged; but you'll miss it; before this brig shall touch a slave-cursed shore
while I am on board, I will myself put a match to the magazine, and blow her,
and be blown with her, into a thousand fragments. Now I have saved your life
twice within these last twenty minutes,--for, when you lay helpless on deck, my
men were about to kill you. I held them in check. And if you now (seeing I am
your friend and not your enemy) persist in your resistance to my authority, I
give you fair warning YOU SHALL DIE.'
"Saying this to
me, he cast a glance into the rigging where the terror-stricken sailors were
clinging, like so many frightened monkeys, and commanded them to come down, in
a tone from which there was no appeal; for four men stood by with muskets in
hand, ready at the word of command to shoot them down.
"I now became
satisfied that resistance was out of the question; that my best policy was to
put the brig into Nassau, and secure the assistance of the American consul at
that port. I felt sure that the authorities would enable us to secure the
murderers, and bring them to trial.
"By this time the
apprehended squall had burst upon us. The wind howled furiously,--the ocean was
white with foam, which, on account of the darkness, we could see only by the
quick flashes of lightning that darted occasionally from the angry sky. All was
alarm and confusion. Hideous cries came up from the slave women. Above the
roaring billows a succession of heavy thunder rolled along, swelling the
terrific din. Owing to the great darkness, and a sudden shift of the wind, we
found ourselves in the trough of the sea. When shipping a heavy sea over the
starboard bow, the bodies of the captain and Mr. Jameson were washed overboard.
For awhile we had dearer interests to look after than slave property. A more
savage thunder-gust never swept the ocean. Our brig rolled and creaked as if
every bolt would be started, and every thread of oakum would be pressed out of
the seams. To the pumps! to the pumps! I cried, but not a sailor would quit his
grasp. Fortunately this squall soon passed over, or we must have been food for
sharks.
"During all the
storm, Madison stood firmly at the helm,-- his keen eye fixed upon the
binnacle. He was not indifferent to the dreadful hurricane; yet he met it with
the equanimity of an old sailor. He was silent but not agitated. The first
words he uttered after the storm had slightly subsided, were characteristic of
the man. 'Mr. mate, you cannot write the bloody laws of slavery on those
restless billows. The ocean, if not the land, is free.' I confess, gentlemen, I
felt myself in the presence of a superior man; one who, had he been a white
man, I would have followed willingly and gladly in any honorable enterprise.
Our difference of color was the only ground for difference of action. It was
not that his principles were wrong in the abstract; for they are the principles
of 1776. But I could not bring myself to recognize their application to one
whom I deemed my inferior.
"But to my story.
What happened now is soon told. Two hours after the frightful tempest had spent
itself, we were plump at the wharf in Nassau. I sent two of our men immediately
to our consul with a statement of facts, requesting his interference in our
behalf. What he did, or whither he did anything, I don't know; but, by order of
the authorities, a company of black soldiers came on board, for the purpose, as
they said, of protecting the property. These impudent rascals, when I called on
them to assist me in keeping the slaves on board, sheltered themselves adroitly
under their instructions only to protect property,--and said they did not
recognize persons as property. I told them that by the laws of Virginia and the
laws of the United States, the slaves on board were as much property as the
barrels of flour in the hold. At this the stupid blockheads showed their ivory,
rolled up their white eyes in horror, as if the idea of putting men on a
footing with merchandise were revolting to their humanity. When these
instructions were understood among the negroes, it was impossible for us to
keep them on board. They deliberately gathered up their baggage before our
eyes, and, against our remonstrances, poured through the gangway,--formed
themselves into a procession on the wharf,--bid farewell to all on board, and,
uttering the wildest shouts of exultation, they marched, amidst the deafening
cheers of a multitude of sympathizing spectators, under the triumphant
leadership of their heroic chief and deliverer, MADISON WASHINGTON."