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the anti-slavery crusade-第7部分

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id what men could not do。 In the territory of the enemy the men were reached through the gradual and tentative efforts of women whom the uninitiated supposed to be spending idle hours at a sewing circle。 Interest was maintained by the use of information of the same general character as that which later took the country by storm in Uncle Tom's Cabin。 In course of time all disguise was thrown aside。 A public speaker of national reputation would appear; a meeting would be announced; and a rousing abolition speech would be delivered; the mere men of the neighborhood would have little conception how the surprising change had been accomplished。 On rare occasions the public presentation of the anti…slavery view would be undertaken prematurely; as in 1840 at Pendleton; Indiana; when Frederick Douglass attempted to address a public meeting and was almost slain by missiles from the mob。 Pendleton; however; was not given over to the enemy。 The victim of the assault was restored to health in the family of a leading citizen。 The outrage was judiciously utilized to convince the fair…minded that one of the evils of slavery was the development of minds void of candor and justice。 On the twenty…fifth anniversary of the Pendleton disturbance there was another great meeting in the town。 Frederick Douglass was the hero of the occasion。 The woman who was the head of the family that restored him to health was on the platform。 Some of the men who threw the brickbats were there to make public confession and to apologize for the brutal deed。 In the minds of a few persons of rare intellectual and logical endowment; democracy has always implied the equality of the sexes。 From the time of the French Revolution there have been advocates of this doctrine。 As early as 1820; Frances Wright; a young woman in Scotland having knowledge of the Western republic founded upon the professed principles of liberty and equality; came to America for the express purpose of pleading the cause of equal rights for women。 To the general public her doctrine seemed revolutionary; threatening the very foundations of religion and morality。 In the midst of opposition and persecution she proclaimed views respecting the rights and duties of women which today are generally accepted as axiomatic。 The women who attended the meetings for the organization of the American Anti…Slavery Society were not suffragists; nor had they espoused any special theories respecting the position of women。 They did not wish to be members of the men's organizations but were quite content with their own separate one; which served its purpose very well under prevailing local conditions。 James G。 Birney; the candidate of the Liberty party for the Presidency in 1840; had good reasons for opposition to the inclusion of men and women in the same organization。 He knew that by acting separately they were winning their way。 The introduction of a novel theory involving a different issue seemed to him likely to be a source of weakness。 The cause of women was; however; gaining ground and winning converts。 Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were delegates to the World's Anti…Slavery Convention at London。 They listened to the debate which ended in the refusal to recognize them as members of the Convention because they were women。 The tone of the discussion convinced them that women were looked upon by men with disdain and contempt。 Because the laws of the land and the customs of society consigned women to an inferior position; and because there would be no place for effective public work on the part of women until these laws were changed; both these women became advocates of women's rights and conspicuous leaders in the initiation of the propaganda。 The Reverend Samuel J。 May; of Syracuse; New York; preached a sermon in 1845 in which he stated his belief that women need not expect to have their wrongs fully redressed until they themselves had a hand in the making and in the administration of the laws。 This is an early suggestion that equal suffrage would become the ultimate goal of the efforts for righting women's wrongs。 At the same time there were accessions to the cause from a different source。 In 1833 Oberlin College was founded in northern Ohio。 Into some of the first classes there women were admitted on equal terms with men。 In 1835 the trustees offered the presidency to Professor Asa Mahan; of Lane Seminary。 He was himself an abolitionist from a slave State; and he refused to be President of Oberlin College unless negroes were admitted on equal terms with other students。 Oberlin thus became the first institution in the country which extended the privileges of the higher education to both sexes of all races。 It was a distinctly religious institution devoted to radical reforms of many kinds。 Not only was the use of all intoxicating beverages discarded by faculty and students but the use of tobacco as well was discouraged。 Within fifteen years after the founding of Oberlin; there were women graduates who had something to say on numerous questions of public interest。 Especially was this true of the subject of temperance。 Intemperance was a vice peculiar to men。 Women and children were the chief sufferers; while men were the chief sinners。 It was important; therefore; that men should be reached。 In 1847 Lucy Stone; an Oberlin graduate; began to address public audiences on the subject。 At the same time Susan B。 Anthony appeared as a temperance lecturer。 The manner of their reception and the nature of their subject induced them to unite heartily in the pending crusade for the equal rights of women。 The three causes thus became united in one。 Along with the crusade against slavery; intemperance; and women's wrongs; arose a fourth; which was fundamentally connected with the slavery question: Quakers and Southern and Western abolitionists were ardently devoted to the interests of peace。 They would abolish slavery by peaceable means because they believed the alternative was a terrible war。 To escape an impending war they were nerved to do and dare and to incur great risks。 New England abolitionists who labored in harmony with those of the West and South were actuated by similar motives。 Sumner first gained public notice by a distinguished oration against war。 Garrison went farther: he was a professional non…resistant; a root and branch opponent of both war and slavery。 John Brown was a fanatical antagonist of war until he reached the conclusion that according to the Divine Will there should be a short war of liberation in place of the continuance of slavery; which was itself in his opinion the most cruel form of war。 Slavery as a legally recognized institution disappeared with the Civil War。 The war against intemperance has made continuous progress and this problem is apparently approaching a solution。 The war against war as a recognized institution has become the one all…absorbing problem of civilization。 The war against the wrongs of women is being supplanted by efforts to harmonize the mutual privileges and duties of men and women on the basis of complete equality。 As Samuel May predicted more than seventy years ago; in the future women are certain to take a hand both in the making and in the administration of law。

CHAPTER IV。 THE TURNING…POINT The year 1831 is notable for three events in the history of the anti…slavery controversy: on the first day of January in that year William Lloyd Garrison began in Boston the publication of the Liberator; in August there occurred in Southampton; Virginia; an insurrection of slaves led by a negro; Nat Turner; in which sixty…one white persons were massacred; and in December the Virginia Legislature began its long debate on the question of slavery。 On the part of the abolitionists there was at no time any sudden break in the principles which they advocated。 Lundy did nothing but revive and continue the work of the Quakers and other non… slaveholding classes of the revolutionary period。 Birney was and continued to be a typical slaveholding abolitionist of the earlier period。 Garrison began his work as a disciple of Lundy; whom he followed in the condemnation of the African colonization scheme; though he went farther and rejected every form of colonization。 Garrison likewise repudiated every plan for gradual emancipation and proclaimed the duty of immediate and unconditional liberation of the slaves。 The first number of the Liberator contained an Address to the Public; which sounded the keynote of Garrison's career。 〃I shall contend for the immediate enfranchisement of our slave populationI will be as harsh as truth and as uncompromising as justice on this subjectI do not wish to think; or speak; or write with moderationI am in earnestI will not equivocateI will not retreat a single inch; and I WILL BE HEARD!〃 The New England Anti…Slavery Society; of which Garrison was the chief organizer; was in essential harmony with the societies which Lundy had organized in other sections。 Its first address to the public in 1833 distinctly recognized the separate States as the sole authority in the matter of emancipation within their own boundaries。 Through moral suasion; eschewing all violence and sedition; its authors proposed to secure their object。 In the spirit of civil and religious liberty and 
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