John Brown. : An address by Frederick Douglass, at the fourteenth anniversary of Storer
college, Harper's Ferry, West
Virginia, May 30, 1881.
JOHN BROWN.
AN ADDRESS
BY
FREDERICK DOUGLASS,
AT THE
FOURTEENTH ANNIVERSARY
OF
STORER COLLEGE,
HARPER'S FERRY, WEST VIRGINIA, MAY 30, 1881.
DOVE
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PRESENTED
BY THE AUTHOR TO STORER COLLEGE,
THE PROCEEDS TO GO TO THE ENDOWMENT OF A
JOHN BROWN PROFESSORSHIP.
(Copyright Secured .)
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INTRODUCTION.
In substance, this address, now for the first time published, was prepared several years
ago, and has been delivered in many parts of the North. Its publication now
in pamphlet form is due to its delivery at Harper's Ferry, W. Va., on Decoration day,
1881, and to the fact that the proceeds from the sale of it are to be used
toward the endowment of a John Brown Professorship in Storer College, Harper's Ferry--an
institution mainly devoted to the education of colored youth.
That such an address could be delivered at such a place, as such a time, is strikingly
significant, and illustrates the rapid, vast and wonderful changes through which
the American people have been passing since 1859. Twenty years ago Frederick Douglass and
others were mobbed in the city of Boston, and driven from Tremont
Temple for uttering sentiments concerning John Brown similar to those contained in this
address. Yet now he goes freely to the very spot where John Brown
committed the offense which caused all Virginia to clamor for his life, and without
reserve or qualification, commends him as a hero and martyr in the cause of liberty.
This incident is rendered all the more significant by the fact that Hon. Andrew Hunter, of
Charlestown,
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--the District Attorney who prosecuted John Brown and secured his execution,--sat on the
platform directly behind Mr. Douglass during the delivery of the entire
address and at the close of it shook hands with him, and congratulated him, and invited
him to Charlestown (where John Brown was hanged), adding that if Robert
E. Lee were living, he would give him his hand also.
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ADDRESS.
Not to fan the flame of sectional animosity now happily in the process of rapid and I hope
permanent extinction; not to revive and keep alive a sense of shame and
remorse for a great national crime, which has brought own punishment, in loss of treasure,
tears and blood; not to recount the long list of wrongs, inflicted on my race
during more than two hundred years of merciless bondage; nor yet to draw, from the
labyrinths of far-off centuries, incidents and achievements wherewith to rouse
your passions, and enkindle your enthusiasm, but to pay a just debt long due, to vindicate
in some degree a great historical character, of our own time and country,
one with whom I was myself well acquainted, and whose friendship and confidence it was my
good fortune to share, and to give you such recollections, impressions
and facts, as I can, of a grand, brave and good old man, and especially to promote a
better understanding of the raid upon Harper's Ferry of which he was the chief,
is the object of this address.
In all the thirty years' conflict with slavery, if we except the late tremendous war,
there is no subject which in its interest and importance will be remembered longer,
or will form a more thrilling chapter in American history than this strange, wild, bloody
and mournful drama. The story of it is still fresh in the minds of many who now
hear me, but for the sake of those who may have forgotten its details, and in order to
have our subject in its entire range more fully and clearly before us at the outset,
I will briefly state the facts in that extraordinary transaction.
On the night of the 16th of October, 1859, there appeared near the confluence of the
Potomac and Shenandoah rivers, a party of
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nineteen men--fourteen white and five colored. They were not only armed themselves, but
had brought with them a large supply of arms for such persons as might
join them. These men invaded Harper's Ferry, disarmed the watchman, took possession of the
arsenal, rifle-factory, armory and other government property at that
place, arrested and made prisoners nearly all the prominent citizens of the neighborhood,
collected about fifty slaves, put bayonets into the hands of such as were
able and willing to fight for their liberty, killed three men, proclaimed general
emancipation, held the ground more than thirty hours, were subsequently overpowered
and nearly all killed, wounded or captured, by a body of United States, troops, under
command of Colonel Robert E. Lee, since famous as the rebel Gen. Lee.
Three out of the nineteen invaders were captured whilst fighting, and one of these was
Captain John Brown, the man who originated, planned and commanded the
expedition. At the time of his capture Capt. Brown was supposed to be mortally wounded as
he had several ugly gashes and bayonet wounds on his head and body;
and apprehending that he might speedily die, or that he might be rescued by his friends,
and thus the opportunity of making him a signal example of slave-holding
vengeance would be lost, his captors hurried him to Charlestown two miles further within
the border of Virginia, placed him in prison strongly guarded by troops, and
before his wounds were healed he was brought into court, subjected to a nominal trial,
convicted of high treason and inciting slaves to insurrection, and was
executed. His corpse was given to his woe-stricken widow, and she, assisted by Antislavery
friends, caused it to be borne to North Elba, Essex County, N.Y., and
there his dust now reposes amid the silent, solemn and snowy grandeur of the Adirondacks.
Such is the story; with no line softened or hardened to my inclining. It certainly is not
a story to please, but to pain. It is not a story to increase our sense of social
safety and security, but to fill the imagination with wild and troubled fancies of doubt
and danger. It was a sudden and startling surprise to the people of Harper's
Ferry, and it is not easy to conceive of a situation more abundant in all the elements of
horror and consternation.
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They had retired as usual to rest, with no suspicion that an enemy lurked in the
surrounding darkness. They had quietly and trustingly given themselves up to "tired
Nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep," and while thus all unconscious of danger, they
were roused from their peaceful slumbers by the sharp crack of the invader's
rifle, and felt the keen-edged sword of war at their throats, three of their numbers being
already slain.
Every feeling of the human heart was naturally outraged at this occurrence, and hence at
the moment the air was full of denunciation and execration. So intense was
this feeling, that few ventured to whisper a word of apology. But happily reason has her
voice as well as feeling, and though slower in deciding, her judgments are
broader, deeper, clearer and more enduring. It is not easy to reconcile human feeling to
the shedding of blood for any purpose, unless indeed in the excitement which
the shedding of blood itself occasions. The knife is to feeling always an offence. Even
when in the hands of a skillful surgeon, it refuses consent to the operation long
after reason has demonstrated its necessity. It even pleads the cause of the known
murderer on the day of his execution, and calls society half criminal when, in cold
blood, it takes life as a protection of itself from crime. Let no word be said against
this holy feeling; more than to law and government are we indebted to this tender
sentiment of regard for human life for the safety with which we walk the streets by day
and sleep secure in our beds at night. It is nature's grand police, vigilant and
faithful, sentineled in the soul, guarding against violence to peace and life. But whilst
so much is freely accorded to feeling in the economy of human welfare,
something more than feeling is necessary to grapple with a fact so grim and significant as
was this raid. Viewed apart and alone, as a transaction separate and distinct
from its antecedents and bearings, it takes rank with the most cold-blooded and atrocious
wrongs ever perpetrated; but just here is the trouble-this raid on Harper's
Ferry, no more than Sherman's march to the sea can consent to be thus viewed alone.
There is, in the world's government, a force which has in all ages been recognized,
sometimes as Nemesis, sometimes as the
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judgment of God and sometimes as retributive justice; but under whatever name, all history
attests the wisdom and beneficence of its chastisements, and men
become reconciled to the agents through whom it operates, and have extolled them as
heroes, benefactors and demigods.
To the broad vision of a true philosophy, nothing in this world stands alone. Everything
is a necessary part of everything else. The margin of chance is narrowed by
every extension of reason and knowledge, and nothing comes unbidden to the feast of human
experience. The universe, of which we are a part, is continually proving
itself a stupendous whole, a system of law and order, eternal and perfect. Every seed
bears fruit after its kind, and nothing is reaped which was not sowed. The
distance between seed time and harvest, in the moral world, may not be quite so well
defined or as clearly intelligible as in the physical, but there is a seed time, and
there is a harvest time, and though ages may intervene, and neither he who ploughed nor he
who sowed may reap in person, yet the harvest nevertheless will surely
come; and as in the physical world there are century plants, so it may be in the moral
world, and their fruitage is as certain in the one as in the other. The bloody
harvest of Harper's Ferry was ripened by the heat and moisture of merciless bondage of
more than two hundred years. That startling cry of alarm on the bank of the
Potomac was but the answering back of the avenging angel to the midnight invasions of
Christian slave-traders on the sleeping hamlets of Africa. The history of the
African slave-trade furnishes many illustrations far more cruel and bloody.
Viewed thus broadly our subject is worthy of thoughtful and dispassionate consideration.
It invites the study of the poet, scholar, philosopher and statesman. What
the masters in natural science have done for man in the physical world, the masters of
social science may yet do for him in the moral world. Science now tells us
when storms are in the sky, and when and where their violence will be most felt. Why may
we not yet know with equal certainty when storms are in the moral sky,
and how to avoid their desolating force? But I can invite you to no such profound
discussions. I am not the man, nor is this the occasion
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for such philosophical enquiry. Mine is the word of grateful memory to an old friend; to
tell you what I knew of him--what I knew of his inner life--of what he did and
what he attempted, and thus if possible to make the mainspring of his actions manifest and
thereby give you a clearer view of his character and services.
It is said that next in value to the performance of great deeds ourselves, is the capacity
to appreciate such when performed by others; to more than this I do not
presume. Allow me one other personal word before I proceed. In the minds of some of the
American people I was myself credited with an important agency in the
John Brown raid. Governor Henry A. Wise was manifestly of that opinion. He was at the
pains of having Mr. Buchanan send his Marshals to Rochester to invite me
to accompany them to Virginia. Fortunately I left town several hours previous to their
arrival.
What ground there was for this distinguished consideration shall duly appear in the
natural course of this lecture. I wish however to say just here that there was no
foundation whatever for the charge that I in any wise urged or instigated John Brown to
his dangerous work. I rejoice that it is my good fortune to have seen, not
only the end of slavery, but to see the day when the whole truth can be told about this
matter without prejudice to either the living or the dead. I shall however allow
myself little prominence in these disclosures. Your interests, like mine, are in the
all-commanding figure of the story, and to him I consecrate the hour. His zeal in the
cause of my race was far greater than mine--it was as the burning sun to my taper
light--mine was bounded by time, his stretched away to the boundless shores of
eternity. I could live for the slave, but he could die for him. The crown of martyrdom is
high, far beyond the reach of ordinary mortals, and yet happily no special
greatness or superior moral excellence is necessary to discern and in some measure
appreciate a truly great soul. Cold, calculating and unspiritual as most of us are,
we are not wholly insensible to real greatness; and when we are brought in contact with a
man of commanding mold, towering high and alone above the millions, free
from all
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conventional fetters, true to his own moral convictions, a "law unto himself,"
ready to suffer misconstruction, ignoring torture and death for what he believes to be
right, we are compelled to do him homage.
In the stately shadow, in the sublime presence of such a soul I find myself standing
to-night; and how to do it reverence, how to do it justice, how to honor the dead
with due regard to the living, has been a matter of anxious solicitude.
Much has been said of John Brown, much that is wise and beautiful, but in looking over
what may be called the John Brown literature, I have been little assisted with
material, and even less encouraged with any hope of success in treating the subject.
Scholarship, genius and devotion have hastened with poetry and eloquence,
story and song to this simple altar of human virtue, and have retired dissatisfied and
distressed with the thinness and poverty of their offerings, as I shall with mine.
The difficulty in doing justice to the life and character of such a man is not altogether
due to the quality of the zeal, or of the ability brought to the work, nor yet to any
imperfections in the qualities of the man himself; the state of the moral atmosphere about
us has much to do with it. The fault is not in our eyes, nor yet in the object, if
under a a murky sky we fail to discover the object. Wonderfully tenacious is the taint of
a great wrong. The evil, as well as "the good that men do, lives after them."
Slavery is indeed gone; but its long, black shadow yet falls broad and large over the face
of the whole country. It is the old truth oft repeated, and never more fitly
than now, "a prophet is without honor in his own country and among his own
people." Though more than twenty years have rolled between us and the Harper's
Ferry raid, though since then the armies of the nation have found it necessary to do on a
large scale what John Brown attempted to do on small one, and the great
captain who fought his way through slavery has filled with honor the Presidential chair,
we yet stand too near the days of slavery, and the life and times of John
Brown, to see clearly the true martyr and hero that he was and rightly to estimate the
value of the man and his works. Like the great and good of all ages--the men
born
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in advance of their times, the men whose bleeding footprints attest the immense cost of
reform, and show us the long and dreary spaces, between the luminous points
in the progress of mankind,--this our noblest American hero must wait the polishing wheels
of after-coming centuries to make his glory more manifest, and his worth
more generally acknowledged. Such instances are abundant and familiar. If we go back four
and twenty centuries, to the stately city of Athens, and search among
her architectural splendor and her miracles of art for the Socrates of today, and as he
stands in history, we shall find Ourselves perplexed and disappointed. In
Jerusalem Jesus himself was only the "carpenter's son"--a young man wonderfully
destitute of worldly prudence --pestilent fellow, "inexcusably and perpetually
interfering in the world's business,"--"upsetting the tables of the
money-changers"--preaching sedition, opposing the good old religion--"making
himself greater than
Abraham," and at the same time "keeping company" with very low people; but
behold the change! He was a great miracle-worker, in his day, but time has worked
for him a greater miracle than all his miracles, for now his name stands for all that is
desirable in government, noble in life, orderly and beautiful in society. That which
time has done for other great men of his class, that will time certainly do for John
Brown. The brightest gems shine at first with subdued light, and the strongest
characters are subject to the same limitations. Under the influence of adverse education
and hereditary bias, few things are more difficult than to render impartial
justice. Men hold up their hands to Heaven, and swear they will do justice, but what oaths
against prejudice and against inclination! In the face of high-sounding
professions and affirmations we know well how hard it is for a Turk to do justice to a
Christian, or for a Christian to do justice to a Jew. How hard for an
Englishman to do justice to an Irishman, for an Irishman to do justice to an Englishman,
harder still for an American tainted by slavery to do justice to the Negro or
the Negro's friends. "John Brown," said the late Wm. H. Seward, "was justly
hanged." "John Brown," said the late John A. Andrew, "was right."
It is easy to
perceive the sources of these two opposite judgments: the
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one was the verdict of slave-holding and panic-stricken Virginia, the other was the
verdict of the best heart and brain of free old Massachusetts. One was the heated
judgment of the passing and passionate hour, and the other was the calm, clear,
unimpeachable judgment of the broad, illimitable future.
There is, however, one aspect of the present subject quite worthy of notice, for it makes
the hero of Harper's Ferry in some degree an exception to the general rules
to which I have just now adverted. Despite the hold which slavery had at time on the
country, despite the popular prejudice against the Negro, despite the shock
which the first alarm occasioned, almost from the first John Brown received a large
measure of sympathy and appreciation. New England recognized in him the spirit
which brought the pilgrims to Plymouth rock and hailed him as a martyr and saint. True he
had broken the law, true he had struck for a despised people, true he had
crept upon his foe stealthily, like a wolf upon the fold, and had dealt his blow in the
dark whilst his enemy slept, but with all this and more to disturb the moral sense,
men discerned in him the greatest and best qualities known to human nature, and pronounced
him "good." Many consented to his death, and then went home and
taught their children to sing his praise as one whose "soul is marching on"
through the realms of endless bliss. One element in explanation of this somewhat anomalous
circumstance will probably be found in the troubled times which immediately succeeded, for
"when judgments are abroad in the world, men learn righteousness."
The country had before this learned the value of Brown's heroic character. He had shown
boundless courage and skill in dealing with the enemies of liberty in
Kansas. With men so few, and means so small, and odds against him so great, no captain
ever surpassed him in achievements, some of which seem almost beyond
belief. With only eight men in that bitter war, he met, fought and captured Henry Clay
Pate, with twenty-five well armed and mounted men. In this memorable
encounter, he selected his ground so wisely, handled his men so skillfully, and attacked
the enemy so vigorously, that they could neither run nor
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fight, and were therefore compelled to surrender to a force less than one-third their own.
With just thirty men on another important occasion during the same border
war, he met and vanquished four hundred Missourians under the command of Gen. Read. These
men had come into the territory under an oath never to return to
their homes till they had stamped out the last vestige of free State spirit in Kansas; but
a brush with old Brown took this high conceit out of them, and they were glad
to get off upon any terms, without stopping to stipulate. With less than one hundred men
to defend the town of Lawrence, he offered to lead them and give battle to
fourteen hundred men on the banks of the Waukerusia river, and was much vexed when his
offer was refused by Gen. Jim Lane and others to whom the defense of
the town was confided. Before leaving Kansas, he went into the border of Missouri, and
liberated a dozen slaves in a single night, and, in spite of slave laws and
marshals, he brought these people through a half dozen States, and landed them safely in
Canada. With eighteen men this man shook the whole social fabric of
Virginia. With eighteen men he overpowered a town of nearly three thousand souls. With
these eighteen men he held that large community firmly in his grasp for thirty
long hours. With these eighteen men he rallied in a single night fifty slaves to his
standard, and made prisoners of an equal number of the slave-holding class. With
these eighteen men he defied the power and bravery of a dozen of the best militia
companies that Virginia could send against him. Now, when slavery struck, as it
certainly did strike, at the life of the country, it was not the fault of John Brown that
our rulers did not at first know how to deal with it. He had already shown us the
weak side of the rebellion, had shown us where to strike and how. It was not from lack of
native courage that Virginia submitted for thirty long hours and at last was
relieved only by Federal troops; but because the attack was made on the side of her
conscience and thus armed her against herself. She beheld at her side the sullen
brow of a black Ireland. When John Brown proclaimed emancipation to the slaves of Maryland
and Virginia he added to his war power the force of a moral
earthquake. Virginia felt all her strong-ribbed mountains
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to shake under the heavy tread of armed insurgents. Of his army of nineteen her conscience
made an army of nineteen hundred.
Another feature of the times, worthy of notice, was the effect of this blow upon the
country at large. At the first moment we were stunned and bewildered. Slavery
had so benumbed the moral sense of the nation, that it never suspected the possibility of
an explosion like this, and it was difficult for Captain Brown to get himself
taken for what he really was. Few could seem to comprehend that freedom to the slaves was
his only object. If you will go back with me to that time you will find
that the most curious and contradictory versions of the affair were industriously
circulated, and those which were the least rational and true seemed to command the
readiest belief. In the view of some, it assumed tremendous proportions. To such it was
nothing less than a wide-sweeping rebellion to overthrow the existing
government, and construct another upon its ruins, with Brown for its President and
Commander-in-Chief; the proof of this was found in the old man's carpet-bag in
the shape of a constitution for a new Republic, an instrument which in reality had been
executed to govern the conduct of his men in the mountains. Smaller and
meaner natures saw in it nothing higher than a purpose to plunder. To them John Brown and
his men were a gang of desperate robbers, who had learned by some
means that government had sent a large sum of money to Harper's Ferry to pay off the
workmen in its employ there, and they had gone thence to fill their pockets
from this money. The fact is, that outside of a few friends, scattered in different parts
of the country, and the slave-holders of Virginia, few persons understood the
significance of the hour. That a man might do something very audacious and desperate for
money, power or fame, was to the general apprehension quite possible;
but, in face of plainly-written law, in face of constitutional guarantees protecting each
State against domestic violence, in face of a nation of forty million of people,
that nineteen men could invade a great State to liberate a despised and hated race, was to
the average intellect and conscience, too monstrous for belief. In this
respect
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the vision of Virginia was clearer than that of the nation. Conscious of her guilt and
therefore full of suspicion, sleeping on pistols for pillows, startled at every unusual
sound, constantly fearing and expecting a repetition of the Nat Turner insurrection, she
at once understood the meaning, if not the magnitude of the affair. It was this
understanding which caused her to raise the lusty and imploring cry to the Federal
government for help, and it was not till he who struck the blow had fully explained
his motives and object, that the incredulous nation in any wise comprehended the true
spirit of the raid, or of its commander. Fortunate for his memory, fortunate for
the brave men associated with him, fortunate for the truth of history, John Brown survived
the saber gashes, bayonet wounds and bullet holes, and was able, though
covered with blood, to tell his own story and make his own defense. Had he with all his
men, as might have been the case, gone down in the shock of battle, the
world would have had no true basis for its judgment, and one of the most heroic efforts
ever witnessed in behalf of liberty would have been confounded with base
and selfish purposes. When, like savages, the Wises, the Vallandinghams, the Washingtons,
the Stuarts and others stood around the fallen and bleeding hero, and
sought by torturing questions to wring from his supposed dying lips some word by which to
soil the sublime undertaking, by implicating Gerrit Smith, Joshua R.
Giddings, Dr. S.G. Howe, G.L. Stearns, Edwin Morton, Frank Sanborn, and other prominent
Anti-slavery men, the brave old man, not only avowed his object to
be the emancipation of the slaves, but serenely and proudly announced himself as solely
responsible for all that had happened. Though some thought of his own life
might at such a moment have seemed natural and excusable, he showed none, and scornfully
rejected the idea that he acted as the agent or instrument of any man or
set of men. He admitted that he had friends and sympathizers, but to his own head he
invited all the bolts of slave-holding wrath and fury, and welcomed them to do
their worst. His manly courage and self-forgetful nobleness were not lost upon the crowd
about him, nor upon the country. They drew applause from his bitterest
enemies. Said Henry A. Wise, "He is the gamest man I ever met."
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"He was kind and humane to his prisoners," said Col. Lewis Washington.
To the outward eye of men, John Brown was a criminal, but to their inward eye he was a
just man and true. His deeds might be disowned, but the spirit which made
those deeds possible was worthy highest honor. It has been often asked, why did not
Virginia spare the life of this man? why did she not avail herself of this grand
opportunity to add to her other glory that of a lofty magnanimity? Had they spared the
good old man's life--had they said to him, "you see we have you in our power,
and could easily take your life, but we have no desire to hurt you in any way; you have
committed a terrible crime against society; you have invaded us at midnight
and attacked a sleeping community, but we recognize you as a fanatic, and in some sense
instigated by others; and on this ground and others, we release you. Go
about your business, and tell those who sent you that we can afford to be magnanimous to
our enemies." I say, had Virginia held some such language as this to John
Brown, she would have inflicted a heavy blow on the whole Northern abolition movement, one
which only the omnipotence of truth and the force of truth could have
overcome. I have no doubt Gov. Wise would have done so gladly, but, alas, he was the
executive of a State which thought she could not afford such magnanimity.
She had that within her bosom which could more safely tolerate the presence of a criminal
than a saint, a highway robber than a moral hero. All her hills and valleys
were studded with material for a disastrous conflagration, and one spark of the dauntless
spirit of Brown might set the whole State in flames. A sense of this appalling
liability put an end to every noble consideration. His death was a foregone conclusion,
and his trial was simply one of form.
Honor to the brave young Col. Hoyt who hastened from Massachusetts to defend his friend's
life at the peril of his own; but there would have been no hope of
success had he been allowed to plead the case. He might have surpassed Choate or Webster
in power--a thousand physicians might have sworn that Capt. Brown
was insane, it would have been all to no purpose; neither
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eloquence nor testimony could have prevailed. Slavery was the idol of Virginia, and pardon
and life to Brown meant condemnation and death to slavery. He had
practically illustrated a truth stranger than fiction,--a truth higher than Virginia had
ever known,--a truth more noble and beautiful than Jefferson ever wrote. He had
evinced a conception of the sacredness and value of liberty which transcended in sublimity
that of her own Patrick Henry and made even his fire-flashing sentiment of
"Liberty or Death" seem dark and tame and selfish. Henry loved liberty for
himself, but this man loved liberty for all men, and for those most despised and scorned,
as well as for those most esteemed and honored. Just here was the true glory of John
Brown's mission. It was not for his own freedom that he was thus ready to lay
down his life, for with Paul he could say, "I was born free." No chain had bound
his ankle, no yoke had galled his neck. History has no better illustration of pure,
disinterested benevolence. It was not Caucasian for Caucasian--white man for white man;
not rich man for rich man, but Caucasian for Ethiopian--white man for
black man--rich man for poor man--the man admitted and respected, for the man despised and
rejected. "I want you to understand, gentlemen," he said to his
persecutors, "that I respect the rights of the poorest and weakest of the colored
people, oppressed by the slave system, as I do those of the most wealthy and
powerful." In this we have the key to the whole life and career of the man. Than in
this sentiment humanity has nothing more touching, reason nothing more noble,
imagination nothing more sublime; and if we could reduce all the religions of the world to
one essence we could find in it nothing more divine. It is much to be
regretted that some great artist, in sympathy with the spirit of the occasion, had not
been present when these and similar words were spoken. The situation was
thrilling. An old man in the center of an excited and angry crowd, far away from home, in
an enemy's country--with no friend near--overpowered, defeated,
wounded, bleeding--covered with reproaches--his brave companions nearly all dead--his two
faithful sons stark and cold by his side--reading his death--warrant in
his fast--oozing blood and increasing weakness as in the faces of all around him--yet
calm, collected, brave, with a heart for any
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fate--using his supposed dying moments to explain his course and vindicate his cause: such
a subject would have been at once an inspiration and a power for one of
the grandest historical pictures ever painted. . . .
With John Brown, as with every other man fit to die for a cause, the hour of his physical
weakness was the hour of his moral strength--the hour of his defeat was the
hour of his triumph--the moment of his capture was the crowning victory of his life. With
the Alleghany mountains for his pulpit, the country for his church and the
whole civilized world for his audience, he was a thousand times more effective as a
preacher than as a warrior, and the consciousness of this fact was the secret of
his amazing complacency. Might with the sword of steel, he was mightier with the sword of
the truth, and with this sword he literally swept the horizon. He was more
than a match for all the Wises, Masons, Vallandinghams and Washingtons, who could rise
against him. They could kill him, but they could not answer him.
In studying the character and works of a great man, it is always desirable to learn in
what he is distinguished from others, and what have been the causes of this
difference. Such men as he whom we are now considering, come on to the theater of life
only at long intervals. It is not always easy to explain the exact and logical
causes that produce them, or the subtle influences which sustain them, at the immense
hights where we sometimes find them; but we know that the hour and the man
are seldom far apart, and that here, as elsewhere, the demand may in some mysterious way,
regulate the supply. A great iniquity, hoary with age, proud and defiant,
tainting the whole moral atmosphere of the country, subjecting both church and state to
its control, demanded the startling shock which John Brown seemed
especially inspired to give it.
Apart from this mission there was nothing very remarkable about him. He was a wool-dealer,
and a good judge of wool, as a wool-dealer ought to be. In all visible
respects he was a man like unto other men. No outward sign of Kansas or Harper's Ferry was
about him. As I knew him, he was an even-tempered man, neither
morose, malicious nor misanthropic, but kind, amiable,
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courteous, and gentle in his intercourse with men. His words were few, well chosen and
forcible. He was a good business man, and a good husband and father: a
man apparently in every way calculated to make a smooth and pleasant path for himself
through the world. He loved society, he loved little children, he liked music,
and was fond of animals. To no one was the world more beautiful or life more sweet. How
then as I have said shall we explain his apparent indifference to life? I can
find but one answer, and that is, his intense hatred to oppression. I have talked with
many men, but I remember none, who seemed so deeply excited upon the
subject of slavery as he. He would walk the room in agitation at mention of the word. He
saw the evil through no mist or haze, but in a light of infinite brightness,
which left no line of its ten thousand horrors out of sight. Law, religion, learning, were
interposed in its behalf in vain. His law in regard to it was that which Lord
Brougham described, as "the law above all the enactments of human codes, the same in
all time, the same throughout the world--the law unchangeable and
eternal-the law written by the finger of God on the human heart-that law by which property
in man is, and ever must remain, a wild and guilty phantasy."
Against truth and right, legislative enactments were to his mind mere cobwebs--the pompous
emptiness of human pride--the pitiful outbreathings of human
nothingness. He used to say "whenever there is a right thing to be done, there is a
'thus said the Lord' that it shall be done."
It must be admitted that Brown assumed tremendous responsibility in making war upon the
peaceful people of Harper`s Ferry, but it must be remembered also that
in his eye a slave-holding community could not be peaceable, but was, in the nature of the
case, in one incessant state of war. To him such a community was not
more sacred than a band of robbers: it was the right of any one to assault it by day or
night. He saw no hope that slavery would ever be abolished by moral or
political means: "he knew," he said, "the proud and hard hearts of the
slave-holders, and that they never would consent to give up their slaves, till they felt a
big stick
about their heads."
It was five years before this event at Harper's Ferry, while the
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conflict between freedom and slavery was waxing hotter and hotter with every hour, that
the blundering statesmanship of the National Government repealed the
Missouri compromise, and thus launched the territory of Kansas as a prize to be battled
for between the North and South. The remarkable part taken in this contest
by Brown has been already referred to, and it doubtless helped to prepare him for the
final tragedy, and though it did not by means originate the plan, it confirmed
him in it and hastened its execution.
During his four years' service in Kansas it was my good fortune to see him often. On his
trips to and from the territory he sometimes stopped several days at my
house, and at one time several weeks. It was on this last occasion that liberty had been
victorious in Kansas, and he felt that he must hereafter devote himself to what
he considered his larger work. It was the theme of all his conversation, filling his
nights with dreams and his days with visions. An incident of his boyhood may
explain, in some measure, the intense abhorrence he felt to slavery. He had for some
reason been sent into the States of Kentucky, where he made the acquaintance
of a slave boy, about his own age, of whom he became very fond. For some petty offense
this boy was one day subjected to a brutal beating. The blows were dealt
with an iron shovel and fell fast and furiously upon his slender body. Born in a free
State and unaccustomed to such revolted at the shocking spectacle and at that
early age he swore eternal hatred to slavery. After years never obliterated the
impression, and he found in this early experience an argument against contempt for
small things. It is true that the boy is the father of the man. From the acorn comes the
oak. The impression of a horse's foot in the sand suggested the art of printing.
The fall of an apple intimated the law of gravitation. A word dropped in the woods of
Vincennes, by royal hunters, gave Europe and the world a "William the Silent,"
and a thirty years' war. The beating of a Hebrew bondsman, by an Egyptian, created a
Moses, and the infliction of a similar outrage on a helpless slave boy in our
own land may have caused, forty years afterwards, a John Brown and Harper's Ferry Raid.
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Most of us can remember some event or incident which has at some time come to us, and made
itself a permanent part of our lives. Such an incident came to me in
the year 1847. I had then the honor of spending a day and night under the roof of a man,
whose character and conversation made a very deep impression on my
mind and heart; and as the circumstance does not lie entirely out of our present
observations, you will pardon for a moment a seeming digression. The name of the
person alluded to had been several times mentioned to me, in a tone that made me curious
to see him and to make his acquaintance. He was a merchant, and our
first meeting was at his store--a substantial brick building, giving evidence of a
flourishing business. After a few minutes' detention here, long enough for me to
observe the neatness and order of the places, I was conducted by him to his residence
where I was kindly received by his family as an expected guest. I was a little
disappointed at the appearance of this man's house, for after seeing his fine store, I was
prepared to see a fine residence; but this logic was entirely contradicted by
the facts. The house was a small, wooden one, on a black street in a neighborhood of
laboring men and mechanics, respectable enough, but not just the spot where
one would expect enough, but not just the spot where one would expect to find the home of
a successful merchant. Plain as was the outside, the inside was plainer.
Its furniture might have pleased a Spartan. It would take longer to tell what was not in
it, than what was; no sofas, no cushions, no curtains, no carpets, no easy
rocking chairs inviting to enervation of rest or repose. My first meal passed under the
misnomer of tea. It was none of your tea and toast sort, but potatoes and
cabbage, and beef soup; such a meal as a man might relish after following the plough all
day, or after performing a forced march of a dozen miles over rough ground
in frosty weather. Innocent of paint, veneering, varnish or tablecloth, the table
announced itself unmistakably and honestly pine and of the plainest workmanship. No
hired help passed from kitchen to dining room, staring in amazement at the colored man at
the white man's table. The mother, daughters and sons did the serving, and
did it well. I heard no apology for doing their own work; they went through it as if used
to it, untouched by any thought of degradation or
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impropriety. Supper over, the boys helped to clear the table and wash the dishes. This
style of housekeeping struck me as a little odd. I mention it because
household management is worthy of thought. A house is more than brick and mortar, wood or
paint; this to me at least was. In its plainness it was a truthful reflection
of its inmates: no disguises, no illusions, no make-believe here, but stern truth and
solid, purpose breathed in all its arrangements. I was not long in company with the
master of this house before I discovered that he was indeed the master of it, and likely
to become mine too, if I staid long with him. He fulfilled St. Paul's idea of the
head of the family--his wives believe in him, and his children observed him with
reverence. Whenever he spoke, his words commanded earnest attention. His
arguments which I ventured at some points to oppose, seemed to convince all, his appeals
touched all, and his will impressed all. Certainly I never felt myself in the
presence of a stronger religious influence than while in this house. "God and duty,
God and duty," run like a thread of gold through all his utterances, and his family
supplied a ready "Amen." In person he was lean and sinewy, of the best New
England mould, built for times of trouble, fitted to grapple with the flintiest hardships.
Clad in plain American woolen, shod in boots of cowhide leather, and wearing a cravat of
the same substantial material, under six feet high, less than one hundred
and fifty lbs. in weight, aged about fifty, he presented a figure straight and symmetrical
as a mountain pine. His bearing was singularly impressive. His head was not
large, but compact and high. His hair was coarse, strong, slightly gray and closely
trimmed and grew close to his forehead. His face was smoothly shaved and
revealed a strong square mouth, supported by a broad and prominent chin. His eyes were
clear and grew, and in conversation they alternated with tears and fire.
When on the street, he moved with a long springing, race-horse step, absorbed by his own
reflections, neither seeking nor shunning observation. Such was the man
whose name I heard uttered in whispers--such was the house in which he lived--such were
family and household management--and such was Captain John Brown.
He said to me at this meeting, that he had invited me to his
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house for the especial purpose of laying before me his plan for the speedy emancipation of
my race. He seemed to apprehend opposition on my part as he opened
the subject and touched my vanity by saying, that he had observed my course at home and
abroad, and wanted my co-operation. He said he had been for the last
thirty years looking for colored men to whom he could safely reveal his secret, and had
almost despaired, at times, of finding such, but that now he was encouraged
for he saw heads rising up in all directions, to whom he thought he could with safety
impart his plan. As this plan then lay in his mind it was very simple, and had much
to commend it. It did not, as was supposed by many, contemplate a general rising among the
slaves, and a general slaughter of the slave masters (an insurrection he
thought would only defeat the object), but it did contemplate the creating of an armed
force which should act in the very heart of the South. He was not averse to the
shedding of blood, and thought the practice of carrying arms would be a good one for the
colored people to adopt, as it would give them a sense of manhood. No
people he said could have self-respect or be respected who would not fight for their
freedom. He called my attention to a large map of the U. States, and pointed
out to me the far-reaching Alleghanies, stretching away from the borders of New York into
the Southern States. "These mountains," he said, "are the basis of my
plan. God has given the strength of these hills to freedom; they were placed here to aid
the emancipation of your race; they are full of natural forts, where one man
for defense would be equal to a hundred for attack; they are also full of good hiding
places where a large number of men could be concealed and baffle and elude
pursuit for a long time. I know these mountains well and could take a body of men into
them and keep them there in spite of all the efforts of Virginia to dislodge me,
and drive me out. I would take at first about twenty-five picked men and begin on a small
scale, supply them arms and ammunition, post them in squads of fives on a
line of gathering recruits from the surrounding farms, seeking and selecting the most
restless and daring." He saw that in this part of the work the utmost care must be
used to guard against treachery
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and disclosure; only the most conscientious and skillful should be sent on this perilous
duty. With care and enterprise he thought he could soon gather a force of one
hundred hardy men, men who would be content to lead the free and adventurous life to which
he proposed to train them. When once properly drilled and each had
found the place for which he was best suited, they would begin work in earnest; they would
run off the slaves in large numbers, retain the strong and brave ones in
the mountains, and send the weak and timid ones to the North by the underground Rail-road;
his operations would be enlarged with increasing numbers and would
not be confined to one locality. Slave-holders should in some cases be approached at
midnight and told to give up their slaves and to let them have their best horses
to ride away upon. Slavery was a state of war, he said, to which the slaves were unwilling
parties and consequently they had a right to anything necessary to their
peace and freedom. He would shed no blood and would avoid a fight except in self-defense,
when he would of course do his best. He believed this movement
would weaken slavery in two ways-first by making slave property insecure, it would become
undesirable; and secondly it would keep the anti-slavery agitation alive
and public attention fixed upon it, and thus lead to the adoption of measures to abolish
the evil altogether. He held that there was need of something startling to
prevent the agitation of the question from dying out; that slavery had come near being
abolished in Virginia by the Nat. Turner insurrection, and he thought his method
would speedily put an end to it, both in Maryland and Virginia. The trouble was to get the
right men to start with and money enough to equip them. He had adopted
the simple and economical mode of living to which I have referred with a view to save
money for this purpose. This was said in no boastful tone, for he felt that he
had delayed already too long and had no room to boast either his zeal or his self-denial.
From 8 o'clock in the evening till 3 in the morning, Capt. Brown and I sat face to face,
he arguing in favor of his plan, and I finding all the objections I could against it.
Now mark! this meeting of ours was full twelve years before the strike at Harper's Ferry.
He had been watching and waiting all that time for
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suitable heads to rise or "pop up" as he said among the sable millions in whom
he could confide; hence forty years had passed between his thought and his act. Forty
years, though not a long time in the life of a nation, is a long time in the life of a
man; and here forty long years, this man was struggling with this one idea; like Moses
he was forty years in the wilderness. Youth, manhood, middle age had come and gone; two
marriages had been consummated, twenty children had called him father;
and through all the storms and vicissitudes of busy life, this one thought, like the angel
in the burning bush, had confronted him with its blazing light, bidding him on to
his work. Like Moses he had made excuses, and as with Moses his excuses were overruled.
Nothing should postpone further what was to him his only apology for
existence. He often said to me, though life was sweet to him, he would willingly lay it
down for the freedom of my people; and on one occasion he added, that he had
already lived about as long as most men, since he had slept less, and if he should now lay
down his life the loss would not be great, for in fact he knew no better use
for it. During his last visit to us in Rochester there appeared in the newspapers a
touching story connected with the horrors of the Sepoy War in British India. A
Scotch missionary and his family were in the hands of the enemy, and were to be massacred
the next morning. During the night, when they had given up every hope
of rescue, suddenly the wife insisted that relief would come. Placing her ear close to the
ground she declared she heard the Slogan--the Scotch war song. For long
hours in the night no member of the family could hear the advancing music but herself.
"Dinna ye hear it? Dinna ye hear it?" she would say, but they could not hear it.
As the morning slowly dawned a Scotch regiment was found encamped indeed about them, and
they were saved from the threatened slaughter. This circumstance,
coming at such a time, gave Capt. Brown a new word of cheer. He would come to the table in
the morning his countenance fairly illuminated, saying that he had
heard the Slogan, and he would add, "Dinna ye hear it? Dinna ye hear it?" Alas!
like the Scotch missionary I was obliged to say "No." Two weeks prior to the
mediated attack, Capt.
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Brown summoned me to meet him in an old stone quarry on the Conecochequi river, near the
town of Chambersburgh, Penn. His arms and ammunition were stored
in that town and were to be moved on to Harper's Ferry. In company with Shields Green I
obeyed the summons, and prompt to the hour we met the dear old man,
with Kagi, his secretary, at the appointed place. Our meeting was in some sense a council
of war. We spent the Saturday and succeeding Sunday in conference on
the question, whether the desperate step should then taken, or the old plan as already
described should be carried out. He was for boldly striking Harper's Ferry at
once and running the risk of getting into the mountains afterwards. I was for avoiding
Harper's Ferry altogether. Shields Green and Mr. Kagi remained silent listeners
throughout. It is needless to repeat here what was said, after what has happened. Suffice
it, that after all I could say, I saw that my old friend had resolved on his
course and that it was idle to parley. I told him finally that it was impossible for me to
join him. I could see Harper's Ferry only as a trap of steel, and ourselves in the
wrong side of it. He regretted my decision and we parted.
Thus far, I have spoken exclusively of Capt. Brown. Let me say a word or two of his brave
and devoted men, and first of Shields Green. He was a fugitive slave
from Charleston, South Carolina, and had attested his love of liberty by escaping from
slavery and making his way through many dangers to Rochester, where he
had lived in my family, and where he met the man with whom he went to the scaffold. I said
to him, as I was about to leave, "Now Shields, you have heard our
discussion. If in view of it, you do not wish to stay, you have but to say so, and you can
go back with me." He answered, "I b'l'eve I'll go wid de old man;" and go
with him he did, into the fight, and to the gallows, and bore himself as grandly as any of
the number. At the moment when Capt. Brown was surrounded, and all
chance of escape was cut off, Green was in the mountains and could have made his escape as
Osborne Anderson did, but when asked to do so, he made the same
answer he did at Chambersburg, "I b'l'eve I'll go down wid de ole man." When in
prison at Charlestown, and he was not allowed to see his old friend, his fidelity to
him was in
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no wise weakened, and no complaint against Brown could be extorted from him by those who
talked with him.
If a monument should be erected to the memory of John Brown, as there ought to be, the
form and name of Shields Green should have a conspicuous place upon it.
It is a remarkable fact, that in this small company of men. but one showed any sign of
weakness or regret for what he did or attempted to do. Poor Cook broke
down and sought to save his life by representing that he had been deceived, and allured by
false promises. But Stephens, Hazlett and Green went to their doom like
the heroes they were, without a murmur, without a regret, believing alike in their captain
and their cause.
For the disastrous termination of this invasion, several causes have been assigned. It has
been said that Capt. Brown found it necessary to strike before he was
ready; that men had promised to join him from the North who failed to arrive; that the
cowardly negroes did not rally to his support as he expected, but the true
cause as stated by himself, contradicts all these theories, and from his statement there
is no appeal. Among the questions put to him by Mr. Vallandingham after his
capture were the following: "Did you expect a general uprising of the slaves in case
of your success?" To this he answered, "No, sir, nor did I wish it. I expected
to
gather strength from time to time and then to set them free." "Did you expect to
hold possession here until then?" Answer, "Well, probably I had quite a
different
idea. I do not know as I ought to reveal my plans. I am here wounded and a prisoner
because I foolishly permitted myself to be so. You overstate your strength
when you suppose I could have been taken if I had not allowed it. I was too tardy after
commencing the open attack in delaying my movements through Monday
night and up to the time of the arrival of government troops. It was all because of my
desire to spare the feelings of my prisoners and their families."
But the question is, Did John Brown fail? He certainly did fail to get out of Harper's
Ferry before being beaten down by United States soldiers; he did fail to save his
own life, and to lead a liberating army into the mountains of Virginia. But he did not go
to Harper's Ferry to save his life. The true question
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is, Did John Brown draw his sword against slavery and thereby lose his life in vain? and
to this I answer ten thousand times, No! No man fails, or can fail who so
grandly gives himself and all he has to a righteous cause. No man, who in his hour of
extremest need, when on his way to meet an ignominious death, could so forget
himself as to stop and kiss a little child, one of the hated race for whom he was about to
die, could by any possibility fail. Did John Brown fail? Ask Henry A. Wise
in whose house less than two years after, a school for the emancipated slaves was taught.
Did John Brown fail? Ask James M. Mason, the author of the inhuman
fugitive slave bill, who was cooped up in Fort Warren, as a traitor less than two years
from the time that he stood over the prostrate body of John Brown. Did John
Brown fail? Ask Clement C. Vallandingham, one other of the inquisitorial party; for he too
went down in the tremendous whirlpool created by the powerful hand of
this bold invader. If John Brown did not end the war that ended slavery, he did at least
begin the war that ended slavery. If we look over the dates, places and men,
for which this honor is claimed, we shall find that not Carolina, but Virginia--not Fort
Sumpter, but Harper's Ferry and the arsenal--not Col. Anderson, but John
Brown, began the war that ended American slavery and made this a free Republic. Until this
blow was struck, the prospect for freedom was dim, shadowy and
uncertain. The irrepressible conflict was one of words, votes and compromises. When John
Brown stretched forth his arm the sky was cleared. The time for
compromises was gone--the armed hosts of freedom stood face to face over the chasm of a
broken Union--and the clash of arms was at hand. The South staked all
upon getting possession of the Federal Government, and failing to do that, drew the sword
of rebellion and thus made her own, and not Brown's, the lost cause of
the century.