Sunday, December 9, 2018

Gerrit Smith at Syracuse, New York, January 9, 1851


Would to God, brethren, that you were inspired with self-respect! Then would others be inspired with respect for you; — and then would the days of American slavery be numbered. We entreat you to rise up and quit yourselves like men, in all your political and ecclesiastical and social relations. You admit your degradation; — but you seek to excuse it on the ground that it is forced — that it is involuntary. An involuntary degradation! We are half disposed to deny its possibility, and to treat the language as a solecism. At any rate, we feel comparatively no concern for what of your degradation comes from the hands of others. It is your self-degradation which fills us with sorrow — sorrow for yourselves, and still more for the millions whose fate turns so largely on your bearing. We know, and it grieves us to know, that white men are your murderers. But, our far deeper grief is that you are suicides.

SOURCES: Octavius Brooks Frothingham, Gerrit Smith: A Biography, p. 230

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