D. A. BUEHLER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. yot, FREE SOIL VB. SLAVERY. conviroli eitEAT spgiati Against the, comPrenthe Sig ssussiss is . 'TO . VINITID 'TAM MOUT", 4 ' ' Welfncyr, an. 24, le4B. Ma. Pitemoriftv! I hnk! o scarcely \un dertake to , assign to t e Senate a reason for *prolonging this debate, especially after the very elaborate and lucid exposition ofl the bill now before us 'Which has been giv •en by the :Senator from Vermont I feel' c.e i mpelled, however, from various consid eration/4 with which I will not trouble the Senate, to state, in very few words, if that 'be possible, whet my objections are to the passager - of the bill hand, limey be, to of- Sersoine few observations in reply to such propositions as' have been announced at various times during this debate, by Sena tors on the other side of the chamber. I' have listened with great eagerness, since the • commencement of this discussion, to every thing that has been said, with the most sin cere and unfeigned' desire to make ,myself acquainted with at least.the primary ele ments and principles which enter Into the composition of the bill. And, I think I .may say, 'without exposing myself to the charge of egotism, that I feel as little the inflifences which have been spoken of by the Senator from Vermont as it is desira ble that any gentleman, acting in the capac ity of a legislator, shbuld feel, I do hot participate, however, I may advertise gen tlemen, in the belief which has been so -constantly expressed during this discus sion, that this is a subject which is likely to produce that terrible and momentous ex citement that is spoken of. I believe if this principle were discussed solemnly, and, so to speak, abstactedly from those extraneous circumstances so frequently adverted to here, that we should be much more likely to arrive at a satisfactory con -elusion to ourselves, and at more satisfac tory results, I hope, to those who are to come after us. I have tto belief that the --passage of a law, such_ as is- now . before the Senate, will produce a disruption of die bonds that hold this Union together. I have no belief that the passage of the law so much deprecated by some,_ gentlemen on this side, by the name, if you please, of• the "Wilmot Proviso, could; by any pos sibility whatever, induce the Southern por etion of the Union, which; we are told, is so much excited on the subject, to tear themselves asunder from the conatitUtional -compact by which we are held together.— Sir, if I entertained an opinion of this kind, IShouldscarcely think a seat on this floor worth possessing for a single day. I do • not think the technical term spoken of by ithe Senator from Vermont, the "Wilmot Proviso," can of itself exercise that Mlle - once urein statesmen orexalted intellect of • the south, which has been intimated by gen . denten who have participatettin this de : bate. What is this terrible Wilmot Pro % vise, that has been erected here and else % where into such a raw head and bloody ', bones, to use a very expressive phrase of, , the.mursery 1 What is it 1 Why, sir, l there are about one Senators who know , very well to whom the paternity of the , • "" Wilma!. Proviso," as it has been recently', baptized, belonged. They know that the -same gentleman who drafted the Declara tion of Independence, which is hung up inl . our halls and placed in our libraries, and I regarded with the same reverence as our Bible—for it has become a Gospel of freed om all over the world as well as in this country----drafted that which is called the - "Wilmot Proviso," composing as it did a • section of the ordinance of 1787,, and that the hand that shafted both was Jefferson's. ' There have been some strange misnomers in regard to -sets, some strange confusion of nomenclature in this country, as in this • case, when a part of the ordinance of 1787 has come to bear the appellation of the " Wilmot Proviso." Sir, much as I res pect that gentleman for hiaposition on this I subject, which has connected his very name with tke Ordinance of 1787, I deny to him-the-honer of originating it. It is a piracy of the copy-right. 1 do not see that there -is any danger that Southern ,gentlemen, after the lapse of so many ,years, and after the founding of a young empire in the west, by virtue of that Ordi nance, will so desecrate the memory of Jefferson and epit on his grave, because we , merely re-enact that Ordinance over a Ter , ritory which has tiubsequently come. into . our Rosoeseion. I have he 4dea that 8101 consequences will follow from the passage -of such it,la is, aegentleman have predicted. 'There mist have been sinning° revolution - %trough; . fill the minds of Southern gentle melt between 1787 and 184t1f such con sequences are to folloW. And I could not - ]telp, obseriitg,. while the ` Senator frem :Vertriont was expressing " - these noble stialithents, witicli every :body, even ' theist Who Illb' not feol them, must ad 5411iret Piling !tte wo,ahoold act here inde pendently of•the excitement without these , walla,. and -that we should acorn Ade .. —. ... ~ •, -.'newipititer.paragraphs in which we 'are '.11114181s .written by those who know tide or.ll,,,notivs by which we are influenced, oaloo careless;, I could not holtiob serviiig that it list the . Senator admonish „ad us that theta was an excitement abroad '..illitiktiS*O . fink - Altar • and to do that, he , • (•tibiirlr4 to Ibis bill, `a l th o ugh ' it was some . ly : aqi,ffreireiit from that which he desired ..v- 4 f, 9,4111 the lion-hearted Senator from ' .'' Vertimet has agreed to this Compromise, ,tinit'it is ca l l e d, becam- there is an excite , anent which lie wishes to allay by it. Sir, 'II de sire to see guilt - 41mi act and vote here .:,as-if there were no excitement on the sub „ject:, I should be very sorry, ut least, to .allow any influences to operate upon my ilelliterate judgement, except those which belong to the relation of representative and ottoetituent. .It is the farthest from my intention of any thing that can he cutlet:iv , thl of say any thing in regard to this bill , which may wound the feelings of gentle men 'who have labored so hard to produce something that would satisfy us all. The &hater from Vermont has acted as - he should have acted, has acted nobly in re laden to this matter, and I know very well that ho will be willing to accord to me the seine rule of action, the 'tame indepetidence • hat ha has used ; mil I fun., w,tit I come to speak of the itiU, I shall be under,...she necessity of availing myself of what the gentleman has called a "special demurrer ;" for I do hot think there is such pressing necessity for the passage of the bill, as to oblige us to forego the statement of duch objections as we may entertain. ?Suppose you enact no law, what will happen ? Or egon has for many years taken dare of her , . self, and I believe on one or two occasions made better laws for herself than she is likely to get at our hands, the has taken care of herself ever since she became an integral portion of the Union, by the Ilettiti raent of the dispute between us and Great Britain. How the new provinces may fare, what may happen to New Mexico and California in the intermediate hole which. asilt-elapse,if weithoukl.autbstablo to act upon this matter at the present ses sion, is not a matter of much concern or apprehension with me, because I know they have been in your custody for a year or two, and have not complained at all for , the want of legal enactments ; they have only complained that you -have made too free use of gun powder. .Rather than not act in the matter fully and definitively, as I would if there were no emergency, I would allow those provinces to take care of them selves for another twelve months, and come here at the beginning, of a new session, ready to act upon these subjects as my judgment should dictate. Now, Sir, in the first place, I under stand we have a message from the Presi dent, although I believe it has not been ad verted to by any one, calling upon us to designate the boundaries of these Territo ries of New Mexico and California ; and another branch of the Legislature has been anxiously looking to the geography of those countries, and tracing their history ; and are as yet incapable of determining where Texas ends and New Mexico be gins ; and they have been under the neces sity of applying to the Chief 'Magistrate to give them a lesson in Geography. - What the substance of the information they have received was I do not know, but I have been informed, upon the floor of the Sen ate; that Texas extends to the banks of the Rio Gande. If this be so, I must be permitted to look to the gentleman of the Committee for in formation as to how much is left for New Mexico, what extent of territory, and what amount of population 1 Is it worth while to establish a'Verritorial Government there, Wit be true that Texas extends to the Rio Grande ? I think it will be found that there will be but a fragment of New Mex ico left, so far as population is concerned. It will be very convenient, perhaps, to at tach it to the Government of California. If you Send your Governors and other ()friars there without establishing the boundaries, there will be a conflict of territorial juris diction. Is it not expedient to settle it now, when you are founding new Govern. ments, and placing side by side institutions which may be very dissimilar. It is per-! feetly certain that Texas will extend her laws to the Rio Grande ; and if she does, she will comprehend within her jurisdic tion a large proportion of the population of what was formerly New Mexico. Here, then, is my special demurrer. Under oth er circumstances, I am sure the Senator I from Vermont would agree with me that it is indispensible to the Governments which we are about to establish, that the limits of e their jurisdiction should be defined, al though I do not know that this would be an insuperable objection with me, if the other pqrtions of the bill were such as I gould give my assent to. And now I intend, in few words, testate why I object to tnis Compromise Sir, there is no one—there can be no one' —who does not desire that every subject of legislation which comes before the Sen- I ate should be settled harmoniously, and, if it might be so, with the unanimous concur rence of every Senator. But, sir, in my judgment, with this subject as it stands be fore us, it would be arrogant presumption to undertake to vote upon this bill, with a question-before us which we undertake to transfer to the Judtciary department of the country. How is this I Is it not a new I thing in your legislation, when a system of policy is proposed, and-the constitution al propriety of that policy is questoned, to pass an act for the purpose of getting a case before the Supreme Coup, that that Court may instruct the Semite of the U. States as to Constitutional duty in the mat ter I Sir, if we know certainly. what that law will be, need there be any hesitancy how we shall vote upon this bill I Calk any one suppose that the Senator (ham Georgia,'or the Senator from South Caro- lina, if they believed that the litigation ' that is proposed by this bill to be brought Into the Judicial 'Whitings of thin country would result contrary to their determine• Lion of what the law should be, 'that they would be in favor of such a bill as this Does any one believe that if the Senator from Vermont could anticipate thitn the Su pronto Court of the United States might decide that Cbngtess being , silent upon the subject, had allowed Slavery to pass, at he pleasure, into , these newly acquired territories, and to become parts of the nip -Mei* instiutions of those territories, and , to decide, also, that if Congress had enact ed a prohibitory law; it ieould not have gone there, he would vote for this bill 1- Certainly he would not. Is there any ne cessity that there Should be a prohibitory law passed, in order that the question of Slavery should be resented with the aid of Congressional legislation to the Supreme Court of the United States ? I will not en ! dertake to say that I differ with the Senator from Vermont in a single legal proposition that he has laid down. 1 regard Slavery as a local institution. I believe it rests up ! on that basis, as the only one that can give it a mod Vent's security. 1 believe it can not be carried, by the power of the master over his servant, one inch beyond the ter ritorial limits of the power that makes the ! law. I believe that a slave carried by his master into the territory about which we are talking, if Slavery be abolished there, will be free from the moment he enters the territory, and any attempt to exercise pow• or over hint ass slave will bet nugatory.— That is my judgment, Hut I would guard against any doubt outing subject. I would GETTYOBiIiRgi PA. FRIDAY EVESIttGr,,, 4iterlJ,Sr se act that there should be nothing left Un done on my part to prevent the admission of slaves, for I am free to declare, that if you were to acquire the etnintry thit lies under the lines, the hottest country to be found on the globe, Where the white man is supposed not to,be able to work, I would not alloy yon to take slaves there, if Sla very did not exist there, already. More then that : I would abolish it if I could, if it did exist. These are my opinions, and they always have been thesame. I know that they were the opinions of Washing ten up to the hour of his death ; and they were the opinions of Jefferson and of oth ers who, in the, infancy of the institution, saw and deplored its evils, and deprecated its continuance, and would have taxed themselves. to_the Omar to_ exterminate it then. I possess no opinion on the sub ject that I have not derived from these sources. I have only to say, that these opinions have always received , the concurrence of my otvn understanding, and this, after the most careful investigation I have been able to give the subject. I find the institution of Slavery existing in several States of the Union—it is a local, a State institution, existing under the guaranties •of the Con stitution. I find that, as a legislator of this National Government, I am forbidden by the Constitution to act upon this or any other merely State institution. I cannot, therefore, interfere with Slavery in the States as I can in a Territory, where as yet no State sovereignty exists. and as I will there, and would everywhere else on theface of the earth, where I ain notforbid den, and were my power might extend. And here, sir, I ask, what has been your practice as a Government on this subject ? If at any time in your progress since 1789, you have acquired territory where Slavery existed in such form and consistency as to make it now difficult to overthrow it, it has been permitted, only permitted, to remain where by law it did exist: as in the North western Territory before 1789, but had not taken deep root, it was expelled and mein the Missouri compromise, excluding it in all territory north of latitude 311 deg. 30 min. after 1789. When Louisiana was acquired, such was the tone Of public opinion then against Slavery, that I am sure the men of that day would have abolished it there, but for the supposed evil of displacing a system long established, on which, and by which the social and political systems of the country were necessarily formed. Per haps, also, the terms of the treaty were with some an obstacle. The same men who directed public opinion in 1787 in a great measure controlled it in 1804. Jef ferson, who was the author of the Ordi nance of 1787, was President in 1804, when Louisiana was acquired: By his influence, the Ordinance of 1787 made five free States in the Northwest, and I doubt net Lduisiana would have been also freed from Slavery too, but for the reasons I have assigned. Such were the views of men who directed public opinion then ; would to God they, or such as they, had mere•to do with public opinion now. .When the ample patrimony_ of Virginia was transferred to the Confederacy, Jef ferson, and those of his school, who made this noble donation, at once declared that Slavery should not pollute the soil of five rich and powerful new States. Such was Virginia, such was American opinion then. I cannot suppose the opinions of these men were so changed between 1787 and 1804 that Slavery at the latter period would be spared by them, except for the reasons I hays assigned already. Liberty, perfect freedom to all men, of all colors and nations, was the doctrine of Jefferson then, and I am told he is now the author itative expounder of free principles to the school calling itself " Virginian' as well as " Democratic." Whys, thenris scarcely a Virginian who ventures to have an opinion contrary to the lightest thought that he ever express ed. And is it so, that we are now to lie required, for the sake of some imaginary balance of power, to carry Slavery into a country where it does not now exist!— That, sir, is the question propounded by this bill. The Senator from Vermont is satisfied that Slayery cannot be extended to these territories. I believe; if his con fidence' in the judicial tribunals of the coun try were well founded, that Slavery could not possibly go into these Territories, pro vided the Senate is right both as to law and the facts. I ask every member of the Senate- - z-verhaps I may be less informed than any—whether Slavery does not ex.. jet by some Mexican law, at thie hour, in California Mr. lIANNSOAN t (in his seat.l uods exist: Peon Slavery exists there. Mr. Comm. I would thank the Sena tor from Indiana if he will inform me what Peon Slavery is; and really I ask the question for the purpose of obtaining in formation. I desire to know its condi tions. Is it transmissable by inheritance! Does the marvellous doctrine of which the Hon. Senator from Virginia spoke as be ing part and parcel of the law adopted in virginis.---partua .sequitur venirent---pre vail 1 Is that holy ordinance. ihat tbe off spring of the womb of her who is a OM Must necessarily be slaves also. there 're cegnizdd. Mr. Al I understand. Slavery exists in California and New Mex ico,'as it does throUghaUt the Republic of Mexico, and is termed Peon Slavery.—. Slavery for debt, by which the creditor has a right to hold the debtor through all time in a far more absolute bondage than that by which any Southern planter holds his slaves here. Mr. Cowin,. So it has been described to me. I have not seen the Mexican laws upon the subject, but the statement just made agrees with that of many gentlemen who profess to know something on the subject, and therefore I am inclined to think that it is so, and that these people are the subjects of that infernal law. The Senator from Delaware, the other day; informed us that the Committee have Pot given to the people of California and New Mexico the right of sufrrage, because they were inca pable of exercising it--because a large por tion of them . were of lite colored races.-- .FllAliti4ES AND rm." Now, suppoetnethat to be the cage, and supposing the proeositien to be submitted to the Suwetne Court of the United States —was Slavery r an instution of New Mex ico t--ivhat would be the answer t If the Senator from Indhini 'siert there to make response, he would reply in the affirma tive; he would say that the institution of Slavery was there- - that to be ante it had its modifications and its peculiarities. but that it Half still Slavery, though there, might not have existed .a law, as strong as, that glorious principle of free Government spo ken of by the Senatorfrom Virginiaar hi. sequitur ventrpn 7 If, sir, thes three Latin words can condemn to everlasting slavery the posterity of a woman whq is a slave, may not that muhicipal regulation of which _we aro littW.BMtkiNT. in.Ptgifortiin and New' Mexico, with equal propriet y, be denominated Slavery ? I find, thin, Slavery, as it is called,. existing here 4tia degree, and" to till practical purposes as lasting and inexorable as in the State of Virginia; and therefore the whole of the hypothesis of the gentleman from Ver. mont falls to the ground as a matter of Let, inasmuch as the Supreme Court will decide that Slavery existed there. and that there fore she whole slave population of the Uni ted States may be transferred to that coun ry. Mr. PHELPS. the gentleman will ex-. cube me, hkapoke of African Slavery. . Mr. Collins/. ' Of that I am aware. ,I speak new of the general proposition.— Now, this ts a 'very burious spectable pre sented this day end 'for weeks past in the American Congress; "and one cannot help pausing at this point, and reflecting upon the events of the last few years. On look= ing back at what has 'happened to that pe riod, I am sure that the magnanimous seir it of the Senator from South Carolina him self will be obliged toconcedeto the North-- ern States at least some apology for the slight degree of ellicitement on thte subject. His hypothelie is, that to every portion of this newly acquired territory—Califor- ' nia not excepted—every slaveholder in the 'United States' has a right to migrate to-morrow. tiictsarry with him his eaves —holding them there forever, subject only to the AbOlition of Slavery when these Territories shall be made into States, and come into the Union. What, thei, would be those few chapters in our history t , We find ourselves now in the possession of Territories with a population of one hen., dred and fifty thousand souls, if I am cor rectly it.formed, in California and New Mexico. The best authenticated history of the social institutions of that population informs us that there exists there at this moment a species of slavery as absolute and inexorable as exists anywhere on the lice of ,the 2 earth 4 and that about.five in six of the population of that country are subjected to the iron rule of this abomina ble institution there. Now, I do not expect that any man will rise up and say, that because an individual happens to be the debtor of another, he shall have his own person sold into Slave ry ; and not only that, but that the curse shall extend—worse than that of the' Re brew, not to the third and.fourth genera tion, but to the remotest posterity of that unfortunate man. Nobody will pretend to rise up in defence of such a prapositidn as that. Now, then, I will give over the criticism. Suppose there is a law in New Mexico. :which obliges a marCio work all the days of his life for another, because he happens to owe.him five dollars, by time means contrived by the creditor to keep him always his debtor. Do you intend that that law shall exist there for .au hour. I -Well, you have Made a law here, that your law-makers who are to go to New Mexico and California, shall not touch the subject of Slavery; and if that which is designa ted in the popular language of that.country Slavery, exists there, do you, indeed, send abroad, as you promised to do, your mitt , sionary of liberty t You went there with tho sword, and made it red in the blood of these people I 'What did you tell them !.We come to give you freedom 1" In stied of that, you enact your code here— , bloody as that of Draco—that there shall be judges and law-givers over them, but that they shall make no law touching that Slavery to which five out of six of them are subjected. Mr: President, this chapter in your ry furnishes instructive minter for your. considerationi It is a - strange act in the great drama of what we call progress. I have looked upon it with 'Dome concern. I was one of those who predicted that this, or something like this, would, be the result of your Mexican war. 1 always belieired, notwithstanding your denials here, ,that you made war upon Mexipo foram pur pose and with the intention of conquest. ventured .• to predict just what we now see, that acquisition of territory would fol low the war as its cOulequence, and its ob ject was. that, and nothing else ; and .that this very queation would arise, .and.arise hate, to _distract your cOnocils, disunite your.people, and threaten, as we are now told it does, that peace which you (bought of so lightly when war was so wantonly waged *met Mexico. It now seems your, pretensions were all hypocritical from the beginning. You said your armed ' men went forth to her'in the spirit of love. You pretended then-mission was not con quest, btit to set free the captive, to raise up the prostrate Peon df that country—and now what follows? As soon as your arms have subdued the country, the gentle note of the dove is changed to the lion's roar. Instead of the proper blessing of peace to your conquered subjects, you propose to leave the chains of the Peon untouched, and now gravely contend that negro slave ry shall be superadded to slavery for debt, This is your improvement, your progress in Mexico. To exalt the miserable Pcon, you give him the enslaved negro for asso ciation and example. Sir, this is indeed a 'spectacle worth noting, in this bright noon of the nineteenth century. We proelaimed to the world we would take nothing by conqueru. This was our eolemo hypocritical declaration for two dark years, while our progress was mar ked by blood, while the march of our power was like another people of old, by clouds of smoke in the day, and the by night. ' 04:after city s* fell bed' the as sanits of yete n 'ollant army, awd still you ,ceased not to dec4ret you take n o thing by conquest. you sal this tet.rttory was conqeered, was acquired by the coin- , Ilion blood of bur coninidd tdunlry: Yciu trace back the uonaidehttlint which" you have paid"for this country to'the'blood and the bones of the gallant teed that yea dent there to be sacrificed ; and pointing to the unburied corposi: of her sens_who have hi& len there, the South exclaims.-•&•Theidt these txtnatitnte my title to earsymy saves to that land. I It was purchased by the blood of my sons." The egad:parent; kfe- I refs of his children, and the widow, with the family that remains, desire to go there to better their .forames,,i6 it may be, aria 2.9ia14 1 11 to AP 1.11114Y.9t.i 9r 11 .3 1 0194. sad . , c_hi. La" ren t exclaim. t h e r e 19e-Pcicit. paid for our prepettion of this tepltery! Is that trued If that Could be made on—if you dare to. Pat that' upon yolk reeord-if you can assert that you hum fitoCiouniry -by the Strong hand, then you hive a right to go there With your If we of the North have-united 'with you of the Soda in an espedidoli of frotivel;lipi bark, and murder, that ,oldest law' khowtt among men—" Honesty among thieves"-u -requires us to divide it with you Olean,. [Laughter.] • • - • - t• If, indeed, Mrs President, We have no, other right than Mit. which. force gives us .to these new. possemionett if,• indeed, we have slaughtered fifty thousand of God's! creature* only to subject toourpower one hundred sad fifty thoussod of, an alien, en- ,slaved, and barbarous , people ) it, to het a fitting finile to all this to rive} yet closer 1 the chain of god; Personel slavery , ikon. Ais d 'Mexican peon, and , people your peewee 'Aims thus acquired by Stereo, I repeat, that this right of conquest applied tekelirl tiory,'is the same—no either add lio'befter than that by:whichiiitiiitry eriefiried - edard _claim to hold another in Avery.- Ills but the right, Ifright it may be militia, of the strOngesi—the'law in both ousels 'imply thelaw, of force. You • march .over ,, a country, wrest by .war from its ownee.rindl eity..tn.Jher. vantntiohid. possessor; thiaris 1 now,mine. I have seized your.propsrty; I hold it by the, law. of force. And 4 , 0 0- rigitodly the slave dealer spirted the aggro in hie African home, illiaYlekreo by 9° 9?... i .af , part Of 'his family ,; betted AIM , rest A . chains, brought them bete, an , i! liailihe . 'lt is eldiplY poker,'and not Ittglei, id kici cases, that make the` Claim. I" rekai, it seems indeed 'fitting in charieteri that the, two should' accompany each other. - ''" As in the ease of Midi' thus aennited, long possession and continued acquiescence (in the judgemen 'of men )` ripen the claim legal right, soiathe case of legal tr/lave ry, the captive originally held only by force, in time, .by the law of melt, oddly' the judgment of teen, becomes propertyl , l And we are told by the Senator from Yir -1 ginia [Mr. Mason] that the posterity, of 1 such become property ouly through the magical influence of these word, Raman words ; ..Portus sequitur ventrem"— "The child follows the condition, of its mother," Adinirable—philosophical—ra honal—Christian maxim I!- ! litho moth er be captured in war, it secants thetilhe will of a just God, "whose tender mercies are over all his works," that 'her offspring to the remotest time shall be tioorhed to Slavery, What sublime morality i Whit lovely pooled combine to sanctify this ar ticie in that, new, dettalogue 'of freedom which we say, it is our destiny to Ole to the world "Parkes; sequitur ventrem 1" Why, it said to be •"conttnon law," Alas, 1 Mr. Predident, it is but to "common," as we see, This right of land is the seine as that by. which. a man may hold another in bondage. You may make it into a law if you please ; you may en act that it may be sot it may be convenient 1 to do so, r after perriqtrating the original sin, it may he well to do se. But the case is not altered !Ihb imuree of the right re. Maine tinchanged: •Whtit is the meaning of the Roman Word Serviari.' r 'profess no skill in philological leurning, but I Mtn' very well conceive bow somebody, !edit ing into this thing, might understand what was the law in those days. The mates life was saved when his enemy conquered him in battle. . He became. servus-..-the man preserved by his magnanimous foe , ;; and perpetual Slavery was thou thought, to be a boon preferable. to death.. That.woe the way in which `Slavery began. , Has anybody fatted on the face of the earth a man fool enough to /Live hitnselteri to ri-' neither, and beg him' to, make lom his slave? Ido not kndw of oneotueh instance under Heaven. Yet it mayberm. !mill I think that nut one maw of out complexion of the ' Caucasion race , could be .found quite willing to do that,[. Thus far we have been brought after having fought for this country end conquer ed it. The solemn: appeal is made to ns —,. Have we not Mingled our blood with yours in acquiring this country ?" But did we mingle our. blood' with ,yours for ehe•purpose of wresting thus country[ by force front this, people t' . 'net is the mice ,lion. You did not say so six Months ago. You dare not say so now ! You may Say that it was purchased, as Louisiana or as Florida was, with ihe coirnmon treasure of the country ; and then tve coins to the dis cussion of another proposition : IV hat right do you acquire to establish Slavery there t But I was about to ask of some gentleman, 'the Senator from Smith Carolina, for in stance—whose` eye at a glom .° has com prehended the history of the world, what he supposes will he the impression abroad of our Mexican war, and these, our Mex icali aequisitions 4 if we should give to thorn the direction which Int desires f Idu not speak - of the propriety. of slave labor being curried anywhere. I will waive the ques tion entirety. What is it of which the Senator from Vermont has told its this morning, and of which we have, heard bo much during the last three weeks ? And how will our history road by the side of that 1 Every gilu that floats a cross the Athlone comes freighted with the dealt-groans of a Ring ; every vessel that touches your shores, hears with her sidings that the 'captives of the Old World are at last becoming free—that they are booking, through blood sod slaughter— ,;,#,H.r' ' bliadljl eqd madly ; it may be—but never thele'W teaelniely-4elivernitce from the fetters that have held them in bondage.—: Who are they 1 Almost the *hole Of Eu rope. And it is only about a year ago, I believe, thftt the officer of the Turkish Em pire who holds sway in Tunis; one of the old slave markets of the world, whose prisone formally received those of our' people taken upon the high seas and made elm* to theircaptors—anuolinced to the World that all should there be free. And, if I am not mistaken, it will be found that this magic line Which the Senator from South Carolina believes has been drawn around the globe which we inhabit, with the view of seperating Freedom and Slite rt,...,r3e., deg; 30 min.—brings this very tunis into that region in whin sonic sup posed; brordinanee of nature; Pfeil are to be held ih bondage ! All over the world the air is vocal with the shouts of men made free.. What does it all mean It means that they here been redeemed from political servitude / and itt Cod's name I SA, if it be ,a boon to mankind to be free from pi/liked pervititde,, must it pot be ay eepted se spatter of. some gratulation that I they have been relieved.from personal ser vitude—absolute subjection to the arbitra ty post& of others ! What do we say Of them 1 lam not speaking of the pro priety of this thing ; it may be all wrong, and these poor fellows in Paris, who have Stout hands and Willing hearts, anxious to earn their bread, may be very unreasona ble in fighting for it. It may be all wrong to Ctin Olr the head of a King, or trend him across the Channel. It may highly int 'projptirand foolish in Austria to send a- Waf Metternich; and say, "We will look into,thia business ourselves," According tlio doctrine preached in these free Atnerieninstead of sending shouts .of gratulation across the water to these Peepliti . sve should send to them groans and enpuniseration, for their folly, calling on IfteM tri beware how they take this bust- Mess into their own hands— = informing them than universal liberty is a curse ; that as onernaithr horn with a right to govern an aspire; he and bis posterity in um condo eel!) ekertise that power, because in this vine it ie not exactly partus sequitur yen. Iretn, but parltia requitur putrem—that is all the differelice. The Crown follows the father ! Under your law; the chain fol lows the roolherl . . Pii.s: we may,; we ought td rouomber, lu4 was /au, in this country in 1770, that Kings hada right to rule us, dkl rule ns-t- , George 'Heald then "parses sequitur pateron;" my son inherits my crown, "he 'follows the Condition'of the tether," "lie isj bore; to he yeti ruler ;" your Whets 8141,1 this nut true, this shall be law no longer, Let usionk for a.moment at the doings of tatgood old lime, _1777. Then, sir, our Obese, be,ing oppressed, lifted up their hands and appealed to the God of justice, the common Father of all men td deliver them' anti their posterity. from that law, Which preelainted that "Kings Wore born to•rule,'' They (the men of. 1770) did not believe that one man was boree "boot ed sad ; sporrod" to ride another. And if, as theY!ttidflio , ntan wart born to role ant;tll- er, afd ii notrolltiw, that no man could he , rightfully. borne to serve another, Sir, in 1 ;oitak days,lcirginia and Virginia's sons, . asbingitin and Jefferson, hail as little re 4Peet far , that ;1)11;1114par:0i acquit& veil rue_ that .Other cognate dogma, !Itrings are borne to ride." I infer front our history, air; i tliat the men of that day j Irea3 sincere men; earnest, honest men, ' thatthey Meant 'whet they said. From their declaration "cell men are born equally freetv infeethati in their judgements, no man.,4;titelitte,ofhit nature, was horn to beo,slave . vand. therefore, he ought not by any. other law to be burn to he a slave. ! I. think this maxim of being born to rule; and Others being horn only to serve,l ale both of the.same family, and ought to havettane down to the sane place whence I imaginethey . came, long ago, together: I 'do not think that your partes sequitur Venire»! had' much quarter shown it at Yorktown - rat a certain day you may re manibeer • -1 think that when the lion of rEngland oratried in the dust, beneath the taltinapf lour eagles, and Cornwallis stir rendered. to GleorgeWashingion, that max .imihst a man is born to rule, went down, I 114 1 tp.IM,,ARIOn among , us again forever t: ,anal , think, that yttrium sequis er ventretn,: ,in the'esnmaiion of all esnaible men, should hake disepiared along with it. So the Men or th at day thought. And we, are tli bnieght to die proper interpretation 0%4 language of those men which has been s eritiemed by the Senator from South Carnlina. Mr. President, it is worth while td in- Oldie 'What were the publicly expressed I opinions of the leading men and States, as 'to the polity of Negro Slivery, front the 'year 1774 up to the year 178'7, and from thence up to the final adoption of the Con siltation, in 1780. - hell, first, hoW was it MANI' old Commenwealth--- V irginia June, 1774. , ---"At a general meeting id the free holders and inhabitants if Prince Ocorge's county, I Virginia, the following resolves wore unanimously agreed to, (among others :) "• Resolve!, That the African trade is injurious to this Colony, obstructs the mutation of it by lrermen, prevents manufni titters and &lite useful emigrants from Europt . front settling arnongsl us, and a, rad 441.141 ad annual !titivate of the balance of trade against this colimy."—(Seo American Ai. chives, 4th %erica, vol. 1, p. 493.) At a meeting of the freehoklers and other in habitants of the county of Culpeper, in Virginia, assembled on due notice, in .the Court House of the said county, on Thursday, the 7th of July. 1774, to,consitler of the most effectual method preserve the rights and liberties of A monies : "lirtuterd, That the importing slaves and con vie( serv ants is injurious bi this Colony, as it el; su nets the population of it with freemen and m.e -i thl manufacturers; and that we will trot buy any such slave or convict servant hereafter to be Mi -1 ported. —(American Archites, 4th *cries, vol. 1, le. .W 3 ) "At a general meeting of the freeholders and inhabitants of the county oflcanscluond, en the 11th day of July, 1774, the foll ow ing `cau -1 lution were unanimously agreed to: •• Resolved, that the African trade to i , njurious," &c, femme as the aertolotion of Prince George's coolly.)—(Anterican Archives, vol. 1, p. 5304 ' i t July 14,1774, at a similar meting in Litwin? . . county., Virginia— ! t. Resolved, That the African trade is injurious to this Colony, Ate.; and,•therefore, that the per ; chase dull imported slaves ought to tie turraciaied against,"—(Do., p. MI ) TWO DOLLAJUI PER ANSilifs I NEW SUMS-Nil '66. hely I. 1779, at a meeting of Burly noway Virginia- .. " stti. Resolved, That, as the population of this Colony with freemen and useful manufacturers it greatly obstructed by the importation of slain+ sal convict servants, we will not purchase any, *orb slaves or servants . hereafter to be imported. " —American Archives, 4th defies, vol. 1, p. 583.) " At a g,-neml meeting of the freeholder* and other inhabitants of the county of Fairfax, Virgin ia, at the Cdurt House in the town of Alexeutlrii, on Monday, the 18th day of July 1774, °IWO Washington, Esq., in the clutir— " Resolved, That it is the dpinion of tlrie meet.: ins, t h at, during our present diffscultice and dis tress, no slaves ought to be imported WO any elf the British Colonies on thisl continent; and we take this opportunity of declining our most eitrniti wishes td see on entire stop forever put to seas wicked, erne!, and unnatfiral tends. "Resolved, 'That it is the opinion cif this toast; ing, that a &totl covenant and associatiOn &PM be enteral into by all the Colonies," at0. r i11t0,...- American Archives, vol. I, p. 000.) George Washington, Mr. President, was the presiding officer at one af these meetings. Corr tain young men here may have "'IRAs', something' of this Geroge Washington I lie was then it far mer of Fairfax. What he did after that meeting, shall he known, remembered, and revered, tr world, thou:amide of years to come, long after rots and 1, and all of us, hate been food fen worms., Similar Meetings %vett held, and tinnier resells- thins passed, in the folloriing countiew in Virginia: In Hanover, on the 2011- July, 1774; in Prince*" Ann, in illy of the name year. I extract from the same volume of American Archives the f:1- lowing, Which, from Mr. Jellbrion'a iconneetiMs witlt it, becomes ?rnportnnt : At a very Sill meeting di delegitea gelid ike. dilTin'ent counties in the l'olimy and lidtninkm of Virginia, begun "ill Willianishurg, the lit day of A ughst, 177 I, the following association Was anent , nrously agreed to. il I omit, MI. Presidenti all not bearing upon the subject of Shivery, and quow curly the following! " We will not obritelves impost, nor pareiklit Orly slave; or slaves imported by any Other penmen,' after the first day of November next, eitbee,from Africa, the West Indies, or any other plan" It attests Mr. Jefferson was a delegate td this Cott , Vention, but was prevented by sickness from at , lending. He hoWever addressed a letter to the Convention, which I commend to the especial at. - tention M gentlemen from the Strinh, who object sif strongly to the expression of opinions as to' B.llevery here. Mr. Jefferson, in due paragraph in Iris letter to the Convention, writes that, on thif subject of negro slavery : o The abolition of Slave ry as the present object of desire in these Colonies, where it was unhappily introduced in their infest state." Mark these words, Mr. President. Be complains that Slavery was intralticed into our A atiorica at Colonies in their "injiarti stale." Would Mr. Jelli•rson, were he "here today, send Slavery to the infaut colonies of Oregon, New Mexico and I..;:alifornial But Mr. Jefferson goes on to say, "But polvions to the enfranchisement of the slaves we have, it is necessity to exclude all further int. portationa front Africa; but our repeated attempts . to effect this by prohibitions, and by imposing du tien which might amount to prohibition . , have hith erto been defeated by his Majesty's negative, thus preferring the immediate advantage of a few Ain , enneorsaire to the lasting iti,etest of the rteserirea States and to the rights of human nature, deeply a:omitted by this infamous practice:" Here we hew praofs undeniable, that Mr. Jeffer , sort, the leading spirit then, confidently anticipated, ' not the continuance and further extension 0f431a- , very, but its abolition ; and, hu order to the siiesidy ..enfranchisement' of the slaves theri in Virginia,- he desires la prevent their augmentation, by pro• hilailing their importation. lie compliant; that Slivery wits prejudicial to the "11l FA 111 el/LUNT of Virginia. Were be her.. would he not vote to exclude Slavery frOte the ot NPAIIT " Cololtiell e4OV argon, New Mexico, and Califignia 1 We have seen that he dratted the clause against Slavery in the Ordinance of 1787. We knew he remained unchanged till his death. Ilow stood public opinion, Mr. President, in the year 1775, in the State of Georgie? From the proceedings of a patriotic associatinn. in Georgia at that time, called the "Darnell Committee," take the following r "We, there ore, the Representatives of the es , tensive district of barrien, in the colony'of Geor gia, Itsving now assembled in Congress, by au thority and free choice of the Inhabitants of the RAJ district, now freed from their fetters, do re, • .'5. To show the world that we are not Influ enced by any cmdructed or interested motives, but a general philanthropy for all mankind, of what ever climate, language, or complexion, we hereby declare our approbetion and abhorrence of the un natural practice of slavery in kmerica, (however tfic uncultivated state of our country, or other spe cious erguments tour plead tor it,) a practice founded in injustice and cruelty, and highly dam , germ's to our liberties, (as' well as lives,) debasing' 'pelt of our creatures below men, and corrupting the virtues and morals of the rest ; and as laying the basis of that liberty we contend fik (and which we pray the Almighty to continue to the latest posterity) upon a very wrung Mundation. We, therefore, resolve nt all times tonne our utmost ere' deacon, for the manumission of our states in this colony, Upon the most safe oink equitable footing fin the toasters and themselves."-=(Anierican At , chives, out. 1, p. 1136.) From these ;repent. as Well as the genefai hie tore of the times, we an see What the &thew thought on this snltject. May I nut, with profound respect, suggest that these papers, tinted in 1774 and 1775, explain to us the Melting of the De- , elaration of lodependenec, adopted in 1776: timely, the men who voted the foregoing resole= thins in 1775, might, very consistently, in 1770, declare an they did—"We hold these truth. to pro' self-evident, Mot all men are ctrated equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain Mallen:dile rights ; that among these are life, Id,- rny, arid the pursuit of happiness" Well might these men, with their hearts purified from sellisli-* new liv the dredilltil conflict which then we. seen to he inevitable, feel that all Inca were egdal be fore Cosh in wlrdth alone they email trust for aid in that dark hour, and that therefore nil Men were or eight to be masters of themsdret, unit answer.' Ode only to the Creator for the n* the, should make either liberty—well might those brave good ' old Men, after stieh a declaration, loot rip calmly i and hopefully to the ileavelet and declare : "Awl fin the support of this declaration, with % firm rat allre on do roirciion• el Divine Proridenee,' , w a mutpally pledge to each ether out frees, Oar for , turns, end our sacred honor.'' Mr. President, these men, when they spoke of Slavery and its extension, did not get some hybrid ,sort of ocompreniise," . arri consult scale supremo court. They declared Slavery an aril. a wrong, d prejudice to free colonies; a social mischief, and it political evilthese Were rkflied, plied, nTheao truths are aelf-mident." Andrem' the nutriments of men they appealed to he earthly court; .they took um appe a I "to the 'Supreme Judge of the World." When I ant asked to extend to this nevi Empire of aura, now in its Infancy, an in..titidion which they pronounced an coil to AO co3tnionilies ; when I refuse to agree with Wild here whew.: judgements I revere. and whose mew tiros I know to be pure, I can Wily sly, I stied when, our fathers stood oi old, I am Othltnilled lit my Position by the men who istinded the Bat system of rational liberty on glirlit• , ..., With them by my side. I.imn . 40/01 4 to inn er 1 with tleios here *hoe, i respect. With jet* •t 1 thority fin my lon,lnet, I can eheetloll, *neat" tar the frow 'lord war, the scorn of AS IMOD tom tunor lathers of such, sad by eriseedcd. The knew , whA Wile best for . 2 0 itartt-PotTl i .i‘!!" ,' . . . I tArriggling into existence. 'lf there 001411Infle 110 worth any thing--11the ophdoweeir the essetive • men are to be Considered le liathlailli - eeask Illeulko meow inlet:ten what they ettstOolatt they SA MC to (Wend ithieety to the &keit Ammo girth ° .., Pat itletkeen.steiihrikftiolobla wiw ~ soct ' and Virginie sod that atm* teskttewe owellty4 •