Robert W. Woodruff Library EMORY UNIVERSITY Special Collections & Archives 2fyarvey Jo/twos?, Q). Qt), THE NATIONS FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. BY HARVEY JOHNSON, D. D. NASHVILLE, TENN.. NATIONAL BAPTIST PUBLISHING BOARD. Copyrighted 1903, By Harvey Johnson. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page. Introduction 17 CHAPTER I. "The Nations From a New Point of View 43 CHAPTER II. Race Divisions: Are They Ethnological or Histor¬ ical? 59 CHAPTER III. Africa: As it is, and as it Has Been 83 CHAPTER IV. The Hamite; or the Descendants of Ham 115 CHAPTER V. The Question of Race: A Reply to Lawyer W. Ca¬ bell Bruce 137 CHAPTER VI. The White Man's So-Called Scientific and Historic "Negro." 165 CHAPTER VII. Our Status: What is it in This Country? 176 CHAPTER VI IT. Race Intermingling 188 CHAPTER IX. The "Social Equality" Idea 197 CHAPTER X. The White Man Carried Back to His Beginnings 208 CHAPTER XI. Some Facts About Ancient Greece 228 CHAPTER XII. Thu White Man a Failure in Government 238 SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I. The starting place of mankind—Eden—Adam—Cain— Abel—Cain builds the first city—Cain's sons: Jabal, n herdsman; Jubal, an organ-builder; Tubal Cain, a mechanic —End of the history of Cain—Adam again introduced— His son Seth takes the place of Abel—Merging of two branches of mankind into one—Little record given of the achievements of Adam and his family in the interval be¬ tween the death of Abel and the birth of Seth—There has always existed a twofold form of civilization—What is meant by civilization—Which of the two forms is the better?—What the Creator designed when he made man— Man's idea of development and civilization—City-building not of God—City and Tower of Babel—City-building and city life make man selfish—The Ark—Noah—The two sons of Noah: Shem and Ham—The arts and sciences with Ham —Husbandry with Shem—The destruction of the cities of Enoch, Ninevah, Erech, Accad and Calneh—Africa—Egypt Ethiopia and Abyssinia, all dead and buried—Their re¬ mains now being exhumed—Cause of their death—Palestine —Thousands of cities gone—Rome: Cause of her death— Definition of civilization—False ideas concerning civiliza¬ tion—Nations styled "barbarous" and" savage" much nearer proper civilization—Civilization in Africa largely natural— The civilization of Africa a normal civilization, and not a barbarous one—Modes, methods and results of modern civilization—Prof. Geo. D. Carter in "Christian State"— Political parties controlled by private corporations—Legis¬ lation determined by system of lobby—Chief work of Stat® 1 (1) 2 SYNOPSIS. and National Legislatures to obstruct, defeat and cheat the will of the people—Failures in the United States in the lfest year—Failures under the white man's rule—TacomaBank bursted—Building and Loan Association "gone up"—Seven mercantile failures—Two express trains dynamited—Butch¬ ery of helpless lunatics in Illinois—Workmen threaten bloodshed—Seventh Day Adventists working out fines for working on Sunday—Starving garment workers strike— Railway threatened with "tie up"—Five more strikes Incu¬ bating—Another bond issue—Millions of gold leave treas¬ ury for Europe—Thousands of working people receive pub¬ lic help—Advertisements for help—Foreclosures of farm mortgages in Minnesota—Poor man steals a loaf, and mil¬ lionaires tap waterworks and steal a million dollars worth of water—Are we living in a Christian civilization?—Man tries to rob a bank and is captured: banks rob depositors of $25,000,000 by failures, etc., and go free—Another re¬ sult of higher civilization under white man's management —A gigantic railroad combine—Senator Chandler's "re¬ view"?—Statistics of persons killed and injured yearly on railroads—Grounds for objections to modes and methods of "higher states and conditions of life"—Argument for natural civilization versus artificial. CHAPTER II RACE DIVISIONS: ARE THEY ETHNOLOGICAL OR HISTORICAL?. Race Divisions classified—What is Ethnology?—Deriva¬ tion of "Ethnology"—Linnaeus on Divisions of Mankind— De Buffon on the same subject—Blumenbach and Law¬ rence on ditto—Theories, experiments and race tests of Owen, the English anatomist—Peter Camper tells how to ascertain to what race a man belongs—Dr. Morton gives another method—Such statements contradictory and use* SYNOPSIS* 3 less—History—What is true history?—How shall we sep¬ arate truth from falsehood?—Encyclopaedia Britannicaon "History"—Do facts alone make history?—How facts for hisfcpry-making are to be obtained—Myths and fiction can never be the basis of true history—Origin of Greeks and Romans altogether a myth; therefore cannot be history— They can have a history of their myths, but none of them¬ selves as a people—They are entirely without records of any kind—History as to the number of race divisions— There were originally three divisions of mankind: Shem, Haiti, and Japheth—Generation of the sons of Noah —Statement regarding Japheth—Ham's pedigree—Shem and his descendants—Japheth-inhabited islands—Ham-set¬ tled countries—Shem occupied lands—Ham the only son of Noah after whom two countries were named—Coun¬ tries called after Ham—Definition of "Science"—-Was Mo¬ ses scientific?—Theories and guesses not knowledge—Rec¬ ord in Genesis true because of God—Records being found by excavators in the Orient—Points in Africa that reveal wonderful facts on the race question—"Ologists" inconsist¬ ent; they retain the branch or root name of Shem, but create for Ham and Japheth fictitious race uames—Impos¬ sible. to get rid of Ham—Definition of the word "Aryan"— Max Muller on the " Origin of the Word Aryan "—The proper race name for Shem is Shemite; that for Ham, Hamite, and for Japheth, Japhethite—Dr.Geikie on the ta¬ ble in Genesis—What is Philology?—Is it a science?—San¬ scrit can never become truly scientific—The Aryans: Who and what were they?—American Encyclopaedia on "Arya" —Only three branches of the human family—To which of these do the colored races belong?—Must be of Ham—How determined?—Properly called "colored people"—No other name except "Hamite" suitable—Objections raised to be¬ ing called "colored"—Word "Colored" appropriate; the word "Negro" inappropriate—Encyclopaedia Britannica on "Negro"'—NO self-respecting colored man can be proud of the term "Negro" as so treated—All must feel contempt for the man who wrote it—not scientific—"Niger" a Latin 4 SYNOPSIS. adjective—Not racial, but general—The word "Negro" merely describes color. CHAPTER III. AFRICA AND SOMETHING ABOUT IT. Origin of the name Africa—Position of Africa—Africa a world within itself—Africa the source of light and knowl¬ edge—"The Book of the Dead"—Oldest book in the world —The standard of morality of ancient Egyptians very high —Africa still enlightening the world—Illustration of the white' man's history-making—Long before the age of Mo¬ ses there was a belief in the resurrection—Both Greek and Roman art and literature of African origin—Article on the Lotus from "Biblia"—Prof. Goodyear on "The Lotiform origin of the Greek Anthemion"—The white man's mode of settling difficult questions—The relationship of the people of Egypt to the inhabitants of Africa—Were they one and the same?—Were they descended from Ham? After the flood, every family carried with them their own lan¬ guage—Bible genealogy—Egyptians descendants of Ham— Genealogical table of races—Egyptians traced—The Bible, the only Book—Mizraim the first king of Egypt—Ethiopia settled by Cush, the oldest son of Ham—We must continue to bring in question the white man's use of terms—The word Aryan derived from a verb—No proof that an Aryan nation eyer existed—Philology an uncertain quantity— Africa in Scripture called "The land of Cush"—Egypt "The land of Ham"—Close connection between Egypt and Ethiopia—Africa's historic fame—Great men among the ancients studied in Africa:Plato the great philosopher, and others—Moses, the great law-giver, born in Africa— Relationship between Carthage and Phoenicia—The reader warned as to the data of facts—Many so-called facts false and unfit for history-making—Who established Carthage and Rome?—Legend of the founding of Carthage—No SYNOPSIS. 5 proof that Dido ever lived—Virgil's Aeneid nothing but a poetical story—The only reasonable view that Carthage was founded by native Africans—Writers disagree as to the account of the establishment of Carthage—Cajthage's relationship to the settlement of Rome, Italy and Latium —The legend of the founding of Rome—The story of the founding of Rome and Italy not history—The story of Washington and his hatchet probably a "campaign yarn" —No proof that Aeneas of Troy ever lived—Legend of Aeneas—All a myth—The reasonable view is that the Carthaginians were the colonizers of Rome—Evidences— The Carthaginians available ones to do the work—Descend¬ ants of Ham the first colonizers of every habitable country on the globe. CHAPTER IV. THE HAMITE. The Hamite a "bone of contention—The first govern¬ ment after the flood formed by Nimrod, a descendant of Ham--Canaan, the father of the Phoenicians—Cadmus, a Phoenician—Hamitic people—Proofs—The race that first settles a country gives to it its language—Hebrew unjustly so cahed—Properly of Canaanitish origin—Language of the Hebrews identical with that of the Canaanites—The term "Hebrew language" not found in the Old Testament— The basis of the Latin language also of Ham—The Hamite has always been active—Civilization and religion devel¬ oped along the line of Ham—Abraham the new custodian of true religion—Melchizedek a Canaanite—The race of Ham has never had a "degradation"—The curse of Noah on Canaan had no application to the three older sons of Ham—Ham himself, nor any of his sons but Canaan, was cursed—Unreasonable that the curse extend to all the pos¬ terity of Ham, when,it was Canaan who received the curse —What was the curse?—Was the curse fulfilled?—Not the 6 SYNOPSIS. posterity of Ham, but that of Shem, were the first servants —Greeks and Romans descendants of Japheth—Among them existed the most cruel system of slavery—White sJavery over two thousand years older than black slavery —Which of the races have been the most degraded by slavery?—r-Both master and servant white—Difference be¬ tween race conditions and race characteristics—The term "Negro" a misnomer—It describes only one complexion-— Has no race honor about it?—The colored race can trace its descent to Noah—Why be proud of the term "Negro?"— It means only what is black—Much in the term "Hamitic" of which to be proud—Worcester's definition of "Negro"— Nothing in it of which to be proud—God "made of one blood, all nations of men"—Blumenbach, the author of the Caucasian race theory—Mount Caucasus not the dispers¬ ing point of the races—The Caucasian race rests upon a single skull—Chambers on "The Georgians"—In what has the Caucasian type of man distinguished itself—Knowl¬ edge of the fine arts derived from the descendants of Ham—Hamite leaders and pioneers—Why the Caucas¬ ian race theory is false—Multiplicity of names—Anglo- Saxon blood a mixture—Source of Anglo-Saxon blood— a. he colored race claim but one origin—The Hamite can stand the tests of time. CHAPTER V. THE QUESTION OF RACE: A REPLY TO LAWYER W. CABELL BRUCE. Lawyer Bruce's attack nothing but abuse and misrepre¬ sentation—Mr. Bruce's statements and arguments—Many physical differences of appearance in the races—The white man's color perhaps a freak of nature—God created man dark—A very large portion of the world governed by the darker races—Mr. Bruce's argument in support of the superiority of the white race—Not ashamed of our origin or history—The white man's history untrue and unfair SYNOPSIS. 7 False theories—Max Muller breaks up linguistic families —Conflicting statements as to Africa—History of the three original branches of men stands out clear— Facts as to Japheth—Inachus and Cadmus descendants of Ham—Nimrod the first king—History of the Egyp¬ tians not known until 1790—Japheth and the Romans— The Anglo-Saxons claim to be the offspring of the Romans —Branches of the colored race—When does Roman his¬ tory begin?—The Roman's foster-mother a she-wolf— The African brought to this country—Africa the only country not conquered—The white man's Christianity not in the way when he covets his neighbor's goods—Rea¬ sons given why the white man has not been able to take Africa—Physical endurance lacking in the white man— Other reasons why the white man has not gone into Africa and conquered it—Africans making a living after their own idea—Noted men of Africa—The colored race brought in contrast with the Anglo-Saxon—What does Mr. Bruce mean by "Anglo-Saxon" race?—Britain not great for many years—Early stages in the life and history of Anglo-Saxons —Why did the "superior race" remain for four hundred years under the Romans?—Docility of the colored people —Sixty millions of white slaves in the Roman province—• White slaves exceeded the colored by the million—Efforts of colored people for freedom—White race the "race of reforms"—Mr. Bruce makes a thrust at the chastity of our women—Some things the colored people know. CHAPTER VI. THE WHITE MAN'S SO-CALLED SCIENTIFIC AND HISTORIC "NEGRO." Term "Negro" not a proper name for the colored race— The name "stuck on to us by the white man—An undis¬ guised fraud—Encyclopaedia Britannica on the word "Ne- 8 SYNOPSIS. gro"—Description of a so-called "Negro"—Rev. Dr. Tucker at the American Church Congress in 1883—Opinion of the "Negro"—American Cyclopaedia on the term "Negro"—The word "Negro" does not apply to Northern Africans—The word "Negro" not synonymous with African—Denotes an "ideal type"—Characteristics of "ideal type"—Ethiopians merely any people darker than the Hellenic—The Caffres of South Africa—Further characterises of the white man's "ideal Negro." Some of the peculiar characteristics of the so-called scientific "Negro"—He mufct be black—He must have an oily skin—His head must be flat—The arms must be Ions --He must lean forward—Must be small and short—Can the word "niger" describe such a wonderful being?—It cannot be done—The white man all at sea—To the Latins, word means "black"—To the Africans it means "great river"—Not scientific after all—Where there is no agree¬ ment, there is no definite knowledge—Dr. Barth on the word "niger"—Derived from a native African word—No black people among the Latins—The Latins constructed the word to mean a color—The word "Negro" is Spanish— Simply means "black"—English Encyclopaedia says "Ne* gro" is from the French "negre"—"Nigger" better English for it than "Negro"—The word "Negro" is not used in Af¬ rica by Africans. CHAPTER VII. OUR STATUS: WHAT IS IT IN THIS COUNTRY? The claim that the colored race has no right to this country as a home—Discpuraging to the race—Historical facts as to our occupation of this country—Columbus com¬ ing to this continent pure accident—Not the discoverer First colony of Africans on this continent in 1503—Do- SYNOPSIS. 9 scendants of Ham here before Columbus—Africans in the West India Islands in 1502—Africans first removed to be made slaves of in 1442—Portugal the first country to which they were shipped—Data as to when Europe was settled—Data as to when Africans were first brought to this continent—Africans in the West Indies one hundred and five years before the first colony was formed here—An important fact in history—Africans more hardy than the inhabitants of the Islands—Columbus and Priest De Las Casas recommend the transportation of Africans—How did they know they were more hardy than the Indians?— Columbus, the priest, and the Governor Ovando, all offi¬ cers of the Spanish Government—A discrepancy between history, and the report of Governor Ovando—Which shall be accepted?—Acquirements of real estate and finance give us a right in this country—Statistics from the Chi¬ cago Inter-Ocean—Amount of taxes paid by colored people in the District of Columbia alone—Our educational status —Students pay to the State of Virginia $10,COO a year for their education—Our Constitutional and legal status—Ar¬ ticle Fourth of the Constitution—National Government re¬ sponsible for our citizen rights and privileges—Modes of becoming citizens of the United States—United States must protect her citizens—Article Fourteenm of the Con¬ stitution—The general government has stood still, and seen mean customs grow into practice—This our home— The white man not where he is by wise and deliberate plans—He has reached his presenl status by haps and mishaps—Mistakes with reference to this continent—Afri¬ cans not the first to be enslaved in America,—White wom¬ en sold to the colonies in Virginia with tke colored—The white women "dissolute and vagabond"—Jail birds—The white-man's so-called purpose in migrating to this country to establish religious liberty and freedom of conscience— Not out of a colonial state before they burned several per¬ sons a ive for their religious opinions—The white man still persecuting people for religious opinions—No limit to the instances. 10 SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER VIII. RACE INTERMINGLING. Race intermixing began in antediluvian times, and kept up to the present—Asserted that Caucasian races and de¬ scendants of Ham never mixed—Abraham took a Hamite wife—The sons of Ishmael intermarried with the descend¬ ants of Cush—Joseph married to the daughter of an Egyp¬ tian priest—The wife of Moses a daughter of the race of Ham—Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses—Moses' two sons half Hamite—Esau took his wives of the daughters of Ca¬ naan—The line of the Saviour's birth—Judah, the leader of the twelve tribes of Israel marries a Canaanite—Lot and his family—Sampson a Shemite, married a Philistine or Hamite—Solomon intermarried with the Egyptians— Effort made to prove that Joseph did not serve under the Egyptian kings—The Israelites the only people who can be historically traced into Egypt—"Captive Shepherds," and "Shepherd Kings"—A nation of kings!—Conflicting statements regarding them—Who were the "Shepherd Kings?"—Some say they were Ishmaelites—IshmaeliteS half Hamites—Ahab, a Shemite King, marries a princess of Ham—Only to look about us for proofs that intermar¬ rying is still going on. CHAPTER IX. THE "SOCIAL EQUALITY" IDEA. "Social equality" the terror of the white man—What is meant by "social equality?"—The white man not disposed to deal with realities—The white man's life barbarous and degraded in its early stages—The doctrine of the "sur¬ vival of the fittest"—Is the white man sincere in his cry of "social equality?"—Worcester's definition of "social" The white man talking folly—Worcester on "equality"— SYNOPSIS. 11 The white man declares in his constitution, that "all men are created equal"—That the Creator has given all men cer tain inalienable rights—The white man's own standards de¬ clare the colored man to be his social equal—It is impossible for him to avoid social equality—We have homes of out1 own as sacred and pure as those of the white man—What makes the white man's home a model of perfection?— Life to the colored man, real, and not sham—The white woman taught to believe herself only a thing of beauty to her husband, and not a help—The colored woman knows the realities of life. She is the real support and comfort— The home life of the white man—His home not nearly so sacred and dear to him as he wishes the world to believe —The white man has two standards of morality—One standard for the women, and another for the men—A cer¬ tain class begging for admission at the white man's "so¬ cial" door—Admission of white men and women—Proofs that the standard of morality among the whites is very low—Regularly organized companies that deal in human flesh—230,000 erring girls in the country—The white man winks at immorality, and sets himself up as a model and example for human society—Rev. F. W. Farrar on the family life among the Romans—Literature and art in¬ fected with the present degradation—Characteristics of Roman civilization summed up—Women a3 "living pic¬ tures" at the present time—"Traffic in immorality—The white man's code of morals—Morality and virtue com¬ pletely eliminated from politics and business—Assertion made by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher—Case of Rev. Dr. Brown—Further comment unnecessary. CHAPTER X. THE WHITE MAN CARRIED BACK TO HIS BEGIN¬ NINGS. Origin of the white man; as a people—Has he con¬ nection with Noah, and his descendants?—History does 12 SYNOPSIS. not show that the white man is the descendant of Japhetn —Geikie on the"Cimbrians"—CyclopaediaBritannica on the same—Distribution of nations based on distinctions of color —The white man finds difficulty in making out an histori¬ cal descent from Japheth—The history of Japheth a total blank—Lines from Homer purporting to refer to Japheth and his desfcendants—A dark and dismal picture—The white man's groundless assertions cannot stand for his¬ torical facts and data—Japheth's color not known—Knobel thinks "white" the most "beautiful color"—Black also a "beautiful color"—The white man does not know when white people first began to exist in the world—Greek origin of the white man—What does history say about it—In no case can the white man talk of the greatness and grandeur of his beginnings—What is Greek His¬ tory?—Homer as an historian—Plot of Homer's work— Worcester on the History of Greece—Belden on the His¬ tory of the Greeks—The whole fabric received by the Greeks as true—Some characters of Greek and Roman times—Uranus—Saturn—King and god at the same time— The "Golden Age"—Jupiter—Mythical trash called "beauti¬ ful conception of the Greek mind!"—If the myth and fable were omitted from the white man's history he would have none at all—Amphion—Orpheus—Mercury— The white man's relationship to the State, as a man and citizen—Mr. Ward on "Aryan," or "White Slavery"—The growth of slavery before the beginning of the Christian era the cause of great uprisings—Monopoly of public land's by the few at Rome—30,000 war prisoners sold when Ta- rentum was captured—Graecchus set upon by an infuriated mob because his nature revolted against bloodshed and atrocities—15,000 people sold as slaves after the siege of Persia—Athens and her population—Corinth and her slave population—The white man's race a race of slaves—Mil¬ lions of slaves without family, religion, possessions or rights — Lower classes of the Roman Empire Their wretched life. SYNOPSIS. 13 CHAPTER XI. SOME PACTS ABOUT ANCIENT GREECE. The real facts about ancient Greece rarely brought out in their true light—Extract from Whelpley's Compend of History—The first civilization given the Greeks was by the descendants of Ham—Inachus and the Kingdom of Argos—Cecrops builds Cecropia—Cadmus, a Hamite, founds Thebes—Why Greece and Greeks?—Who first in¬ habited Greece—Extract from "Biblia"—Eleusinian mys¬ teries—The Helots of Greece said not to have been in a true sense—Slaves of Laeedaemon—Spartan slaves—Ser¬ vices required of Helots—The murder of a slave not pun¬ ishable by law—Once a year young Spartans waylay and assassinate a Helot. CHAPTER XII. THE WHITE MAN IN GOVERNMENT. The white man sentimental in government—As a race, he is cruel, heartless and bloodthirsty—Set of resolutions denouncing lynchings and other outrages ana lawlessness—Is the white man capable of independ¬ ent self-government?—Are the rights of the people safe in his hands—The fatal doctrine of State inde¬ pendence—Any city may entail international burdens upon the general government—Outside parties busily buying up the land in this country—English aristocrats rule large dominions in the United States—A list of English persons owning lands over here—English land owners refuse to sell—Viscount Scully owns in Illinois the best part of three counties—Effects of a "memorial"— English landowners form an alliance among themselves —European holdings of land in this country nearly twenty- five millions of acres—Statistics from The Peninsular 14 SYNOPSIS. Farmer—The country calling for men who will be true to republican institutions—The Monroe Doctrine—Resolu¬ tions adopted at a Boston mass-meeting—The white man's course in government a list of blunders and mistakes—A deadlock in the country—The country billions of dollars in debt—The white man tried to maintain a free and a slave country at the same time—Still trying to debar ten milions of citizens from their Constitutional rights—An¬ other source of weakness in this nation's government—- Nine men can turn down the will of sixty-five millions of people—No independence or sovereignty of* the people— Crushing dictums of the Supreme Court—Cases that ought to have come back to the people—The Declaration of Inde¬ pendence bestows rights upon all—The prejudiced judge decided that we had no rights that the white man was bound to respect—This principle has worked untold harm to humanity everywhere—The purpose of the formation of the Supreme Court—Judge Taney and his unjust deci¬ sion—The white man of this country too prejudiced and bi¬ ased and therefore unfit for the whole people — Senator Sherman and his recent book—"Justice and Jurispru¬ dence:" a quotation—The President and the Monroe Doe- trine—The Baltimore American on the Atlanta Exposition —The World's Fair had a collapse—The Centennial cost Philadelphia millions of dollars—The Exposition in New Orleans a failure—The proposed Maryland Exposition— Shall the colored race set the white man up as their family, church and business model?—Mr. Depew on the "Boom" system—The white man acts upon the ground of haphazard and chan,ce—The Monroe Doctrine again—Ex¬ tracts from the English press on the Monroe Doctrine— "Impossible to disguise the gravity of the difficulties that have arisen between Great Britain and the United States" —England bound to resist the claim of Monroeism—Sen¬ tences which include the Monroe Doctrine—Is the whit« man a safe custodian of the rights of the people?—The nation almost bankrupt—Nations turning from us to otk- SYNOPSIS. 15 ers for their grain—Decision rendered by the Court of Appeals in New York regarding saloons—A jumble of af¬ fairs—The Constitution like patchwork—Quotations from an address of Senator Randall, of Maryland—Six hundred and sixty-live new laws passed in 1894—A bad state of af¬ fairs—An immense amount of unnecessary legislation—■ One of the consequences of the present system of legisla¬ tion—The jury system an easy way of escape for certain parties—The white map's former custom of trying beasts and animals—Curious cases of animal trial nnd conviction —A pig burnt for having eaten a child—Oxen and cows punished legally for offences—Cocks believed to be asso¬ ciated with witches—Snails, fleas, mice, etc., proceeded against and condemned—Anecdote of a Barbary Turk—■ Conjuration of witches, etc., practiced and taught in Lon¬ don—The white man not nearly so shrewd and wise as he has thought himself to be—The Venezuelan question—The white man not disposed to co-operate fairly—The white man a gambler in the staples and means of human life and livelihood—American Cyclopaedia on "Bulls and Bears"—Dispatch from New York to the Baltimore World —Wall Street robbery—Wicked work surpassed—Stock gambling—How has the white man dealt with the people's interests?—The white man's projects fly up like sky-rock¬ ets—Failure of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad—The white man has had every advantage to show himself a success— Disgraceful "row" between Senators—Plots to steal bills before the Legislature of Virginia—Senator Flood cuts Senator Flanagan's head to the bone—Compelled to lock up bills in the safe of the Executive Office until needed by the Senate. INTRODUCTION. Introductions are almost always valuable adjuncts to books of a certain character; but it seems to the writer that an introduction is indispensable to the present volitme. The one purposed will consider three things: First, the object of the work; then a short sketch of the author's life; and lastly, the life-work of the same. The writer of this introduction does not deem an apology for undertaking this preface necessary; for, since nothing but simple, plain, unvarnished f&cts will be dealt with, it matters little, if anything, who shall handle them. The object, aim and import of the work shall be considered first, because naturally one wishes to know if it has an object, and what has constrained the au¬ thor to undertake it. A sketch of his' life will be given, because when one reads of the aim, etc., one would like to know something personal of the writer, his career and advantages or training in order to be able to draw conclusions as to his ability and authority to write the book in question. His life, efforts and work must necessarily follow; for one must be in¬ formed as to whether the author be sufficiently public- spirited or interested in the well-being of his feUow man to give him the right to talk as he does. We will devote no more time to preliminaries, but will consider the first part of our proposed course: Why did the author of "The Nations: From a New Point of View," choose such subjects as he has chosen, to discuss in this book ? may be asked mentally by more than one reader. The answer must be: For various reasons, under various circumstances, and from va¬ rious moving causes. 2 (17) 18 INTRODUCTION. One paper or essay, "The Hamite," was written from a desire to show that the African had had something of which to be proud, and to correct misleading state¬ ments, and as a sort of antidote for prejudice-poisoned history. Another essay, "The Question of Race," was written in defense of the race, against the coarse, scur¬ rilous pamphlet attack of a certain Wm. Cabell Bruce, Esq., presumably a dyspeptic and evil-tempered barris¬ ter of the city'of -Baltimore. And so it goes on through the list, aiming to set the colored race forth in an hon¬ est and true light; offsetting damaging and falsely-col¬ ored descriptions and so-called historical facts; endeav¬ oring to correct wrong ideas among ourselves, im¬ bibed from the too highly self-loving white people of this country; tracing our ancestry back to the first and only true source that we may have something solid to go upon ; and last, if not least, giving our white brother a taste of the lash of criticism; which is only fair, see¬ ing that it is ever his delight to lay it upon us, both for causes well founded and unfounded. We, as a people, do not claim to be saints and angels, but we can do very well without the charges innumerable that are daily trumped up against us by our not-by-any-means-too- good white brethren. There is much written about us, as a race, that is intended to humiliate, mortify, and "keep us in our place," as the white people of this country are fond of puttin'P" it. But it is. not an easy taak to repress quicksil¬ ver, and, like it, we are continually bobbing up and slip¬ ping out of the way of our would-be repressers. Oh, yes; a vast number of ill-natured whites have had a fling at us. But times are changing, slowly but surely, and the colored people are taking up the cudgels in our own defence, and we mean to make a genuinely even- handed fight: no mincing: no stepping back two steps when one is taken; but giving just as hard blows as the white man gives when he gives at all. Why should we be careful of his feelings when he cares not a jot INTRODUCTION. 19 for ours ? Why not make assertions that detract from him, when he has always been doing so for us? Because it is not Christianlike? Yes; but these are white professing Christians I have in mind, the best of their race. What is right for one Christian to do, must surely be so for another. Color has nothing at all to do with the matter. "It is not politic to do so? The' white man holds the reins of government in his hands; we will get no public office, nor will we share in the electoral spoils if we hit the white man as he hits us." Very well. So much the meaner is the white man. But those who have tried the experiment find that one gains just as much by being independent as by cringing. We are not going to get very much either way; but we might as well get our little with the feeling that we got it standing as to feel that we got it kneeling. It is cowardly not to defend one's; self and one's peo¬ ple from calumny and false reports, if such defence can possibly be made with any certainty or ground. The white man needs but little ground on which to build his statements. Why should we require more, even suppos¬ ing we cannot get it? And supposing we can, why, we are so much the better off. Now the writer of this introduction, for one, is quite satisfied with the solidity of the groundwork furnished in the present work, upon which we are to rest our race history. It is quite as solid as the offsetting ground held by the white historian for the use of the other side. The white historian has ever striven to show the better part of the best side a.s his share of the historical spoils, and exhibit the worst part of the worst as ours, appar¬ ently with a refreshing innocence of the selfishness and meanness of his act. To say the least, this is not fair; but if we accept it unquestionably, really it is good enough for us. But we do not all mean to accept it unquestionably. But some of us are too fond of sifting 20 introduction. and weighing the things the white brother says, in or¬ der to see which "is wheat and which is chaff . And why should we not? It is sifting, then, that the author of "The Nations" has done. He has done it honestly, earnestly and conscientiously. He believes every word he has writ¬ ten, and we consider that he has as good proofs for his assertions as can possibly be produced on the opposing side; for he has searched and compared both. Only, when a white historian will overlook and twist things to make them cover his particular case in the particular way in which he wishes to have them, the author has gone unswervingly down the line, and claimed what he justly considers his own. No fault, surely, can be found with this course. He has felt that there is a deep need for a work of tViis kind; and truly there is, since so many of us are Slow to contend for our right¬ ful place in the world's ranks—the place belonging to a race of people calculated to be useful factors in its achievements. There is no such thing as keeping us down truly—keeping us back successfullv. We are convinced that God from the first designed otherwise. And no amount of abuse and falsehoods heaped upon us, can suffice to cover us; and the false and prejudice- tinged accounts by which historians seek to aid the un¬ just part of the world in the work of keeping us from rising, are but so much material placed in our hands to make us search out, examine, reject and deny the wretched misrepresentations. So much for the object of the author in writing this book. Now in order to introduce the readers, to the man himself, I cannot do better than insert the fol¬ lowing- sketch, taken from the Phrenological Journal of February, 1877: The South furnishes few, if any, better representatives of true progress of the emancipated race than Rev. Harvey .Johnson, pastor of the Union Baptist Church of Baltimore, INTRODUCTION. 21 He is progressive in the highest sense of the term. * * * He was born in Fauquier County, Va. (Aug. 4th, 1843.) At an ea,rly age he became a freeman in the Lord, and with a fearless courage and undaunted perseverance has gained a well-earned reputation as an evangelieal leader that m&ny in far more favored circumstances would be proud to pos¬ sess. He worked his way up by his own efforts, and is a graduate of the Wayland Seminary, Washington, D. C. He accepted a call as pastor of the Union Church in No¬ vember, 1872. It then had a membership of about 250, and now has nearly 2,200, being the largest church in the State. And this is not all, for it has "swarmed," so to speak, some half dozen times; that is, has established six missions and independent churches, all large and prosperous, and in which former members are now laboring. This wonderful success may be attributed, in part, to the pastor's executive ability and indomitable energy as a worker; but more, doubtless, to his true devotedness to the Master, and implicit trust in His promises. He does not suffer himself to be shackled by the creeds and opinions of men, but reads and thinks for himself, and seeks by every means to make men better. * * * He is an ardent temperance work¬ er, and is connected with several benevolent and humani¬ tarian institutions, and is truly a power for good among his people and in the community at large. He was the origi¬ nator of the Baptist State Convention (now merged into the Maryland State and District of Columbia Missionary Bap¬ tist Convention) and also of the "Mutual United Brother¬ hood of Liberty of the United States of America," which was organized for the purpose of using "all legal means within our power to procure and maintain our rights as citizens of this our common country," * * * some important cases have already been satisfactorily prosecuted. * * * Harvey Johnson is emphatically a practical man of large executive ability. * * * The author's life work began in earnest, we may say, in 1872, when he first became pastor of the Union 22 INTRODUCTION. Baptist Church of this city. But this gradually took in more than actual church work, other denominational labors, such as Foreign Mission work (his church con¬ tributing $100.00 a year), Conventional work, benevo¬ lent projects, etc., but he has not ceased to lend a hand in the struggles of the race for just recognition in this city, in a number of directions. Rev. Wm. J. Simmons, in his book, "Men of Mark," said of him: He has never held any political position from the fact he never took part in politics, except for prohibition; he has labored, however, very earnestly in trying to obtain the rights of the race as citizens, which has brought hitn into communication with a large number of the prominent men of the country. In support of this statement it may be well to insert just here the following extracts from personal letters bearing on the admission of colored lawyers to prac¬ tice at the Baltimore bar: Baltimore, March 20, 1885. Dear Sir:—At 6:53 this a. m., I finished reading the de¬ cision of the Supreme Bench in the "Colored Lawyer's Case," and at 6:54, I went to my desk to write you a con¬ gratulatory note as having been chiefly instrumental in bringing about such a result. As reluctantly as it may come by others, I, for one, accord you the undying honor of having accomplished for this State, or the colored popu¬ lation thereof, a boon that has slumbered for years, and would have continued to slumber but for the efforts of a live and intelligent citizen, which has been found in the person of the Rev. Harvey Johnson. All honor to Johnson and Hobbs—not forgetting to let God be praised. Fraternally yours, (Rev.) P. S. Henry. This extract is from a letter written by J. H. Wolff, Esq., Attorney and Counsellor at Law: Boston, Oct. 3rd, 1889. My Dear Sir:—I take this opportunity to thank you for INTRODUCTION. 23 the grand service you have rendered the race in removing from the Maryland Code, a discrimination that was a dis¬ grace to the State, and a blot upon the American Judiciary. I think that you have been instrumental in opening up a rich field for a young colored lawyer of ability and charac¬ ter. * * * This is from Mr. Joseph E. Briscoe, formerly Editor of the Vindicator: March 17th, 1885. My Dear Sir: You will please accept my congratulations and heartfelt gratitude for the grand victory that the col¬ ored people of Maryland have achieved through your ef¬ forts in testing, in our courts, the rights of colored law¬ yers to plead in the courts of our city and State as Attor¬ neys at Law. The victory is a grand one for Maryland and the colored race; but to your unselfish and patriotic efforts belong the victory. The colored race owe you, therefore, more than they do any other man in Maryland. * * * Now, Sir, one more effort to obtain the appointment of some competent colored teachers in the colored schools of our city. * * * Just now (March, 1896), that the question of the schools and colored teachers is making things so lively in Baltimore, it will be apropos to quote the following from an article of the author's sent to the National Baptist, at that time the organ of the white Baptists of Philadelphia, to show that his attention had already turned in the direction of the schools: July 16th, 1885. Right here in the city of Baltimore we are not allowed to teach our own children in the colored schools. I hold that this is a gross injustice. Shall we forgive it while the injustice continues? We have separate schools, and not a single colored teacher allowed to teach, although they hold certificates qualifying them for such a position. There is a Normal School, a High School, and a City College in this City of Baltimore for white boys and youth; but neither High School (this was in 1885) nor College for the colored; 24 INTRODUCTION. nor can we send our children to either of these institu* tions. I admit that there is what is called a High School. There is no High School building, and only one Grammar School to accommodate the children of 65,000 inhabitants; and this so-called High School for the colored chidren is a simple class, consisting of 22 scholars, who are taught by the Principal of the Grammar School, who receives the pay of a Grammar School teacher only. To crown it all, these children are not allowed to graduate even from this so- called High School Department. Is this right? Is it just? Is it an equal chance in the race for life? Is it fair? espe¬ cially in the face of the fact that there are being kept from year to year, statistical records of our progress, which are to count for or against us in after years. * * * The following quotation is from a report taken by the Baltimore Daily American of a public speech made by the author in 1886, at Douglass Institute, this city: Mr. Johnson attacked the Republican party of Maryland for its neglect of the colored people during the past four¬ teen years. Not a public man nominated in fourteen years had declared for the repeal of the bastardy law, the open¬ ing of the bar to colored men, the jury box to colored men, and higher education for colored children (the speech was in the interest of prohibiton). Another extract from a report by the Daily American of another speech for prohibition at a mass,meeting of citizens held at Mount Pisgah Tabernacle: If you announce through your public speakers, and put it in your platform, promising to give us better opportunties to educate our children, I guarantee that every colored man will come into the movement. The faces you see here to-oay expect such action. We have only one-third the fa¬ cilities now. It is not fair, etc. The speaker then named the various high schools, including the Normal School, Bal¬ timore City College and two female high schools for white children, while the sixty-five thousand colored citizens had only a ricketty, condemned building on Holliday Street, which was vacated by the city officers, because it was un- INTRODUCTION. 25 safe. In this there were six hundred children. Twenty- two scholars in the upper class constituted the high school. Is this right? * * * If you want us, tell us that we shall aave equal school facilities, etc., etc. About two years later Baltimore did improve the school facilities for its colored citizens. A new and commodious High and Grammar School Was built; the Grammar and High School courses properly graded; annual commencements instituted, and pupils gradu¬ ated. So far, so good. But the good was not without alloy. Instead of the new building being used exclu¬ sively as a High and Grammar School, for which it would serve comfortably, those classes were cramped and put to inconvenience by having included in the building one of the primary schools, thereby taking -from it a portion of its dignity. Another portion was clipped off by the refusal of the Board to recognize and pay to the principal a regular High Scjiool princi¬ pal's 'salary.* These and some other things still, in 1896, constitute a grievance to the colored people. Strenuous efforts were put forth to have these differ¬ ences adjusted, as well as other just claims recognized. The following clipping from the Baltimore Standard of January, 1896, bears on this subject: The announcement that Dr. Harvey Johnson, the able divine, has come forward again in the immediate interest of better educational facilities for the colored youth of our city, should be received with great joy. It will be remem¬ bered that it was through the efforts of Dr. Johnson, and a few other representative men of our race, that an ordi¬ nance was passed making it possible, under certain condi¬ tions, for colored teachers to get positions in our colored public schools. At the time it was considered a radical de¬ parture from the ordinary, and looked upon by some as an experiment. Good results, however, have been obtained * Since the above was written these conditions have been remedied. 26 introduction. thereby, and it is our wish that Dr. Johnson will be emi¬ nently successful in his effort to obtain the desired and rightful aim. This editorial had reference to the following item in the same paper: Dr. Harvey Johnson has presented an ordinance to Dr. J. Marcus Cargill (our colored representative in the Balti¬ more City Council) entitled "An Act to Perfect a Colored School." The ordinance will be submitted to the City Council on Monday night next. And also this: The Committee on Education of the First Branch City Council is favorable to the ordinance known as "An Act for a Perfect Colored High School," which Rev. Harvey Johnson, through our Councilman, Dr. J. Marcus Cargill, submitted. Dr. Johnson should have the support of all in his endeavor to bring about this needed improvement. * * * Now is the time to clamor for reform. Dr. Harvey John¬ son has a thorough appreciation of the situation, and noth¬ ing less than a perfect High School, with, the same facili¬ ties for both races, should meet the demand of the colored people of our city. The following letter received by the author from a former colored representative of the Baltimore City Council, Harry S. Cummings, Esq., while on a subject perhaps not of so very much importance as the fore¬ going, will, however, go to show his interest and care for the general welfare of his people. The letter will speak for itself: Baltimore, April 13, 1902. My Dear Friend:—You will remember the talk we had sometime since concerning the changing of the names of alleys to streets. The enclosed clipping will show that I have carried out the promise I made you. On Monday evening I offered an ordinance to change the name of every alley in my ward to a street, and it has been passed. * • * I have also succeeded in having a great many alleys in all sections of the city changed to streets. As I told you, this INTRODUCTION. 27 was a matter that concerned our people, and that I would see it through. Very truly, Harry S. Cummings. The reason why the author desired this change made was because many of our very respectable fam¬ ilies lived in small streets which were very generally dubbed "alleys," which name carries with it a by no means pleasant sound and appearance. Now, why, he argued, should these good people be put to the mortifi¬ cation of writing "alley" on their address, when they paid rent and were otherwise self-respecting and in¬ dustrious? Hence his request to Councilman Cum¬ mings. On the barbarous practice of lynching, too, the au¬ thor of "The Nations" was' ever ready with protests and denunciations. As he expressed himself on the subject in the National Baptist: "* * * * As Christians, we propose to pray, and as citizens, we will protest against these lawless Outrages; and we will petition the nation in general and the Legislature of the United States in particular, that they so make and enforce the laws that this curse upon the nation cease." This, of course, had reference to the object and intention of the "Brotherhood of Liberty," the body organized for the purpose of raising funds for prosecuting cases of un¬ just discrimination in the courts, and obtaining, if pos¬ sible, justice. In the meeting of November 28, 1887, strong pro¬ tests against the brutal crime of lynching were made; and in the case of a man who had been lynched about that time the Brotherhood, in condemning lynching, called on the authorities to offer a reward for the ap¬ prehension of the lynchers, and also offered a reward of $500 for the arrest and conviction of the party con¬ nected with the lynching. It would consume too much time to mention more of such instances of the author's interest and labors in the public weal, and so I will pass 28 INTRODUCTION. on to his efforts along a literary line. Among his first efforts is a collection of sermons and papers, which he published at different periods in pamphlet form. Of one of these sermons, viz.: "The Equality of the Father and the Son," the late Major Martin R. Delaney has this to say: My Dear Sir:—I have read your extraordinary discourse in the "Equality of the Father and the Son." I never be¬ fore had a clear conception of the relation of the Three Persons in the Godhead. Though I believed it was simply by faith, yet I confess I did not understand. But you-have made us understand by giving us the mental sight of the functions, the offices to be performed by the" Three-One God, and thereby of the Godhead. I could wish that all our people had an opportunity to read this able discourse—as originally coming from one of their own race—as treated, that it might thereby inspire them with that love and pride of race so desirable among us. I am, dear sir, Your friend and brother, M. R. Delaney. These sermons have all been well received and favor¬ ably commented upon; but the author "found his level," as the expression goes, when he began to search out facts about and write upon the subject of the Hamitic Race. With reference to his pamphlet, "The Hamite," Prof. Pegues has this to say in his book entitled "Our Baptist Ministers"It has cost the author years of research," which is certainly true. Prof. Pegues fur¬ ther says: " 'The Hamite' has had a large sale, has been widely read, and has -been received with marked favor, and even with enthusiasm in some cases, when offered for sale." I will here insert a few press notices of the above-named pamphlet: From the Baltimore Daily American: Rev. Dr. Harvey Johnson, of Union Baptist Church, has just published a book called "The Hamite." It gives an original and spicy history of the origin of the colored race. J. F. Weishampel is publisher. INTRODUCTION. 29 From the Kansas Citizen'. Dr. Johnson's "Hamite," and sermons of that order, will do more good than a century's rant on the "Sea of Glass" and "Shining Pavements." In his efforts to show what the race has been, in exploding the popular fallacy that Ham was cursed and that our present condition is of divine origin and sanction, in endeavoring, to lift the Hamites to their proper level in the human family, he well deserves the thanks of the race and the thinking people generally. We quite agree with him when he says, "No one knows what a depressing effect the application of the words, 'a servant of servants shall he be', have had upon us as a race." Black men still cower in the presence of a white face, the hat slides off, the knees become nimble and the teeth visible from the fallacious interpretation of the scrip¬ tures. "The Hamite" is a good book, and well worth read¬ ing. From the Sunday Scho'ol Helper (Baltimore) : "The Hamite" is the title of a very interesting pamphlet by the Rev. Harvey Johnson, D. D. This is one of a series of sermons and addresses by this distinguished divine, and it will fully repay a perusal. Those of our friends who claim that the colored man came from nowhere, and is go¬ ing nowhere, should read this paper, and they would, no doubt, have good cause for reflection. From the Home Protector (Baltimore) : It will help to remove the idea so long entertained that an eternal curse was put on the colored race, who are the descendants of Ham, and that they are forever to be sub¬ ordinate to the other two branches of the sons of Noah. It is a looking glass in which a Hamite can look and see his origin, struggles, achievements and the disadvantages with which the race has to contend. From the Sower and Reaper (Baltimore) : On the whole, the Doctor has given us a magfcerly produc¬ tion well digested, well written, concise and conclusive. 30 INTRODUCTION. It is a book that should be read by every member of the colored race; for no one can read it without feeling a re¬ newed interest in the achievements of his race, and a desire to be an honor to it. From an article by Rev. W. A. Creditt, in t5ie Sower and Reaper: Becoming enthusiastic over the contents as suitable to awaken the noblest ambitions of our young, without invita¬ tion, I sought the privilege of an agency. The pamphlet has been enthusiastically received as one of the greatest helps to our future development. It is one of the most helpful articles I ever read. At first reading, the facts are simply startling. Having been in darkness many years, the suddenness and glare of the light blind one until his optics become inured. At first the men are as trees; medi¬ tation and personal research say they are men—after all, the trouble was with my sight. May Dr. Harvey Johnson live long to champion our cause, and to infuse enthusiasm in our young. From the American Baptist (Louisville, Ky.) : * * * You will find in it the other side of the question that sheds light upon which way the Negro went, where he came from and how he got along for thousands of years; and it removes much prejudice and blindness that have hung over the mind so long. As a man, he (the author) is full of life, educated, talented and a gifted minister of Jesus Christ, warm and enthusiastic in speech, a strong Bap¬ tist and a lover of his race. I will also quote from the following correspondence with reference to "The Hamite From Harry S. Cummings, Esq., Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Baltimore, Md.: Rev. Harvey Johnson, D. D.: My Dear Sir:—I have read with much pleasure and profit your treatise on the "Hamite," and it gives me much pleasure to say that it is an able and careful treatment of the subject. I confess that from a perusal of it, I have introduction. 31 gathered much instruction, and from the strong and conclu¬ sive manner in which your assertions are authenticated, one may well be proud that he is a son of Ham. A subject of this kind, treated in such a manner, is calculated to in¬ spire the young of the race and disabuse their minds of the erroneous idea that to be a Hamite is to be doomed, and lead them to play the part in these, that their ances¬ tors played in days of yore. You have my congratulations and my sincere thanks for the instruction which I have acquired. I sincerely hope that this contribution to the lit¬ erature of our race may have the influence and publicity to which it is justly entitled. From Rev. W. A. Creditt, Pastor Berean Church, Waohington, D. C. Dear Bro. Johnson:—To-night I sold my fifty "Kara¬ ites" at one move. Oh, that I had then about two hundred! Send me at once, one hundred more. * * * You are doing wonderful good through your pamphlets. From Rev. R. A. McGuinn, of Baltimore, Md.: * * * I have read it (The Hamite) with much interest, and have had my mind awakened and enlightened in a re¬ search of history, both novel and valuable. It ought to rid the race of some odious misconceptions and lead, as well, to an exhaustive and patient study of whether those things were so. From Mr. G. F. Riehings, Philadelphia, Pa. * * * U you had never done anything else in the interest of your race but write that little book, why that in itself marks you as a great man, I tell you, there is some deep thought in that very "Hamite." I only wish you could make every Southerner read that, and when he had read it, have sense enough to understand it. From Mr. J. E. Bruce, newspaper correspondent and writer: My Dear Dr. Johnson:—I have read the "Hamite" very carefully. It is well written and its style is graceful and forceful. The argument is, in my judgment, unanswerable 32 INTRODUCTION. and the facts of history—modern and profane—upon which it is based, make it invulnerable at every point. The book ought to have wide circulation. It contains facts and in¬ formation which the great mass of our people should be possessed of. For myself, I wish to thank you for the in¬ tellectual and historical feast you have given me in this book. From Mr. Thomas H. White, a student of the Vir¬ ginia Seminary, Lynchburg, Va.: My Dear Sir:—Your favor was duly received. * * * "The Hamite" is a history in itself. * * * Your kind offer to an¬ swer any difficult question that we may find in studying the "Negro Race," is highly appreciated by me, and meets the hearty concurrence of all the rest. Please accept our many thanks and congratulations upon the advance steps which we see in your work to uplift the race. His next effort along his favorite line of study and argument was ,a pamphlet of thirty-one pages, entitled the "Question of Race." This little book, in the form of a "paper," was read before the Monumental Liter¬ ary and Scientific Association of Baltimore by special invitation; and at its close, the following resolution was adopted: Whereas, the Monumental Literary and Scientific Asso¬ ciation of Baltimore, Md., has listened with great pleasure to the reading by Dr. Harvey Johnson of his exhaustive paper, "A Reply to W. Cabell Bruce's Pamphlet on the Negro Problem," and believing that such a paper should be generally read; therefore, Be it Resolved, That the Association respectfully request Dr. Johnson to print his paper in pamphlet form that it may be available to all. J. McGuinness, President. W. Ashbie Hawkins, Secretary. This pamphlet, as I have said, was a reply to an abusive and contemptible harangue published by Law¬ yer W. Cabell Bruce, and when "The Question of INTRODUCTION. 33 Race" was published, it was received gladly as a defence' against and reply to the ranting utterances of this lawyer. The Richmond Planet, in speaking of it, says: We have received "The Question of Race," by Rev. Har¬ vey Johnson, D. D. This is an admirable reply to W. Cabell Bruce, Esq., relative to his strictures upon the colored race. Rev. Johnson ably maintains his position, gives facts from history, and proves that the colored race has an ancestry of which it may well be proud. His assertions are from biblical history, supported by the incontrovertible evidence adduced by writers of even profane history. We are en¬ thusiastic over his efforts, and hasten to congratulate him upon the service he has rendered the race. The National Monitor (Brooklyn, N. Y.) says: Dr. Johnson is unmerciful, but dignified, in his scathing castigation of Mr. Cabell (Bruce), and in his effective thrusts with his javelin of logic at Mr. Cabell's false prop¬ ositions, which he calls nothing more nor less than a bun¬ dle of abuse, slander, vituperation and misrepresentation cast and heaped upon a whole race of people. He then goes on and shows that Mr. Cabell must better arm himself in defence of his race prejudices, or hide himself and let the "Negro Problem" alone. The American Baptist says: It is a strong and vigorous attack upon the false and il¬ logical position assumed by Mr. Bruce in regard to the race. He handles the subject in his usual entertaining and chaste manner; and it is withal, a very instructive treatise on an interesting subject. The Waylan.d Alumni Journal (Washington, D. C.) says: Few men in this country are as well prepared to discuss the Hamitic question as Dr. Johnson, because for years he has studied the best authors on Ethnology, and is pecu¬ liarly fitted to grasp a subject of that kind. He is also an able logician, having a way of disarming the most obdurate 3 34 INTRODUCTION. antagonist, and carrying conviction to the skeptic. We are proud of bis scholarship and any production from his eru¬ dite pen. The Baptist Messenger (Baltimore, Md.) says: It is a reply to one W. Cabell Bruce, Esq., who has ma¬ liciously assailed the whole colored race. * * * Mr. Bruce boasted claims for the white race, but his only foundation for such claims is bold assertion. On the other hand, Mr. Johnson has given facts, stubborn facts, historical facts; such facts as no one with common sense would attempt to dispute. Such a pamphlet as this is what is needed in every home as a text book to instruct the race and to en¬ lighten the enemies who are blinded by unreasoning preju¬ dice and conceit. The Gloucester Letter says: Dr. Harvey Johnson, of Baltimore, takes the front rank in discussing the race question. He is a stern advocate of the descendants of Ham, and in his able reply to Mr. W. C. Bruce, proved by historical facts that he is master of the subject. C. Osborne Ward, Esq., Librarian of the Department of Labor, Washington, D. C., writes: I have not seen the Bruce pamphlet, but was already pre¬ pared by my own study of the question to see that your excoriating quill has done justice to an egotistical brag¬ gart. J. M. Townsend, Esq., Recorder General Land Of¬ fice, Washington, D. C., writes: I have read with pleasure your work, "The Question of Race." I congratulate you upon your unanswerable reply to Mr. Bruce. Mr. D. Virgil, of Bermuda, writes: The book seems to open or throw a great light where darkness has been for a long, long time. Thanks to kind Providence that he has made you the instrument of such a work; and may he keep and strengthen you to continue. INTRODUCTION. 35 Mr. John E. Bruce, writes: I have read with profit and instruction your scathing re¬ view to this man's puny effort to detract from and belittle the reputation of the black race; and here is my hand; I'm with you. The Hon. John H. Smythe, Ex-Minister to Liberia, and his estimable wife have also read the book, and they are delighted 'with it. Lawyer Chas. W. Johnson, writes: It is a work that I think ought to be in the hands of every member of our race. Mr.. G. F. Richings, writes: Your book proves two things: first, your ability as a writer, and, next, your great knowledge from a historical standpoint of your own and other races. Prof. I. Garland Penn, writes: It is a complete answer to Bruce. It is indeed worthy of every laudable remark that has been made about it. * * * It is simply unanswerable. Rev. W. T. Dixon, Pastor Concord Baptist Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: With all my heart I thank our God for giving to us a Harvey Johnson to defend our race from the cowardly as¬ saults of such men as W. Cabell Bruce, as you have so man¬ fully done by arguments conclusive and logic irresistible, in your paper, "The Question of Race," now in pamphlet form. T. D. Tharpe, M. D., writes: I have read with admiration and delight the kindred productions, "The Hamite" and "The Question of Race," and consider them a masterpiece. These should certainly be read by every colored person, and with feelings of due pride that they have a representative capable of defending the race so incontrovertibly. Prof. J. E. Jones, of Richmond (Va.) Theological Seminary, writes: Your book I have read'with great joy and satisfaction. It is excellent, and goes at the matter with a master hand, 36 INTRODUCTION. I am prepared to say after reading it that you have taken in the situation and "gone for" the man with gloves off. The race feels proud to have one who can champion its cause in such a masterly manner. Rev. A. P. Eaton, writes: I have just finished reading "The Equality of the Father and Son;" "Christ the Covenant Messenger;" "The Ham- ite;" "The Question of Race;" and now sit down after re¬ viewing them, to thank you heartily for them. And after all of the great men of the Hamitic race, you are the big¬ gest man I see. Surely W. Cabell Bruce will not again at¬ tempt to touch that subject, for you have whipped him out of the fight of the race problem. Rev. H. N. Jeter, of Newport, R. I., writes: It is the best thing I ever read on the Race Question. It is sublime. You have completely used Bruce up and shown him to be ignorant of history. And the following is from the Suburban Enterprise, Lawyer Rufus White, Editor: We return our thanks to Dr. Harvey Johnson, of Balti¬ more, for two very interesting and able sermons from his pen-; also for "The Hamite' and the 'Question of Race;' the former showing that colored men ■ are directly de¬ scended frpm Ham, and have been once powerful in civili¬ zation and glorious in history; while the latter deals with the race from an ethnological standpoint. And now that I have dealt with the three sections into which I at first divided this Introduction, viz: The aim and object of the author in writing- this work, a personal sketch of the same, and, thirdly, his life work and literary efforts, there yet remains one accompani¬ ment to a thorough Introduction, and that is, a brief re¬ view of such personal opinions and expressions of ap¬ preciation with regard to the author's character and standing in the community in which he lives, and among the people with whom he is a co-worker, both at home and elsewhere, Tp this end, I shall make some INTRODUCTION. 37 quotations from correspondence and public print. One cannot in good taste speak in praise of oneself, even if he be not too modest to do so; and one does not al¬ ways care to have one's autobiographer do so; but when a person has so comported himself that he has made friends both at home and abroad, and those friends have been good and kind enough to speak well of him, heartily and sincerely, believing that he is wor¬ thy of the same, I think that those opinions and ex¬ pressions ought to be carefully preserved out of a feel¬ ing qf gratitude to and appreciation of, the ones who have given them. And from them, too, the reader can draw his own conclusions or inferences, as to the writer's right to a hearing. This clipping from the Suburban Enterprise will serve to show that the author, as the Chinaman would exoress it, "can muchee talkee," which, to be sure, a pers'on ought to be able to do when he aims to be an au¬ thority on such subjects as he makes a special study: "Your correspondent spent a very enjoyable hour with Dr. Harvey Johnson on Saturday. The Doctor is one of the most interesting gentlemen to talk to, it has been our pleas¬ ure to meet. He seems brimful of theology, philosophy, law, and above all, common sense, which he showers down upon hib auditor in that Telemaquen manner for which he is noted. While in Boston attending the Baptist Anniversaries held there in May, 1889, he met a correspondent to the New York Age, a young lawyer, and judging from his report of the meetings, a keen observer: From the New York Age: Re\. Harvey Johnson, D. D., pastor of the North Street Baptist Church in Baltimore, and so well known as the missionary preacher of that city, made a very favorable impression by his earnest simplicity and plain practical views*. He carries in his very air the courteous gentleman, the experienced man of affairs, and the friend of the peo- INTRODUCTION. pie. His broad views on religion, his earnest stand for temperance, and his efforts in opening free schools, in hav¬ ing colored men admitted to the Maryland bar, and for the removal of all odious black laws from the legis'ation of ibe State, stamp him a live, public-spirited citizen of ability and courage. Some years ago the society of the Twelfth Baptist Church in this city extended him a call to their pul¬ pit; but he did not see fit to accept it. Sunday evening he preached in that pulpit to a very large audience of his old friends. Monday evening he spoke to a crowded audience at Tremont Temple on educational work among the colored people of the South. Earnest, incisive, practical and fear¬ less, his address was so admirably tempered with consider¬ ation for those holding opposite opinions that the audience would not have it when he finished, and he was compelled to decline to speak longer, in order not to disarrange the program of otner speakers. A Baltimore Correspondent to the New York Age, has this to say: Among the Baptists, Rev. Harvey Johnson, D. D., stands well. He has been to Afro-Americans here a Colossus of strength, and wrought many reforms, and no great reform has come to us here that he has not assisted in bringing about. He is an earnest Christian. As a speaker, in style and manner of composition and delivery, he is like the late Spurgeon, on account of the simplicity of his language. For more than twenty years he has been pastor of the Union Baptist Church, with a membership of over 2,000, and his congregation is undying in its affection for him. Lawyer E. J. Waring, of the Baltimore Bar, writes thus in the Baltimore News: In all that concerns his people, he is aggressive ana fearless. In agitating the question of equal rights before the law, he has been in the front rank and took a leading part in the movements that opened the Bar to colored lawyers in Baltimore. INTRODUCTION. 39 Miss Ida B. Wells, (Iola) writes in the New York AgeJ as follows: Rev. Harvey Johnson, of Baltimore, has stood in the fore¬ front battling for his race's rights, and is still wielding an influence by which his race is benefiting and will benefit, long after he is dead. He has been invited to lecture in different places, both on his favorite theme, "The Harnite," which has always been enthusiastically received, and on other sub¬ jects. In speaking of a lecture at Wayland Seminary, the Wayland Alumni Journal says: Dr. Harvey Johnson's lecture before the students on "Our Obligations," was a masterpiece. It was an eloquent ex¬ position of the Negro's position as a factor in our social, political and religious life. He has been honored in many ways: in positions of¬ fered; by invitations to take part in public gatherings, and in numberless other directions. When these hon¬ ors have not conflicted either with his work, duty, or conscience, they have been gratefully accepted; other¬ wise they have been respectfully declined, for he has never cared for honors that would merely benefit him¬ self ; but such as he felt would reflect credit on his race and be of service to mankind, he has not refused. He was enrolled a member of the Virginia Teachers' As¬ sociation, in 1892. It was in 1888, that the degree of "Doctor of Divinity" was conferred upon him by the Richmond Theological Seminary, this being the first degree, I believe, conferred by this institution. Of late years, becoming more and more convinced, both from observation and experience, that the colored Baptists, in order to better develop themselves along educational- and other lines, should make efforts to found, support and manage their own educational in¬ stitutions, etc., as they build, support and manage their own churches; for, as he said, "Why else are we being educated?" To this end he wrote a series of "Open Letters" to Baptists of America through the Philadel- 40 INTRODUCTION. phi a Christian Banner. These letters created some stift arguments and spirited debates. The letters themselves were a plea for independence of thought and action along the various lines of progress and advancement, which, one would suppose, would commend itself to all freedom-loving people. It is truly self-evident that our white friends do not wish us to rise beyond certain boundSj and that they will use every advantage they possess—and they possess many—to thwUrt us and keep us within those bonds. Some of us will not sei this, but there are those who do see it. The Open Letters referred to created considerable comment, as I have said. Editor T. Thomas Fortune, of the Nezv York Age, wrote the author with refer¬ ence to the opening one: Dear Friend:—I have read your luminous and unanswer¬ able article in the Christian Banner of June 21st, and I commend you for the position you have taken, and endorse the position without reservation. If the Afro-American Baptists cannot stand upon their own legs, they ought to fall down. They are rated as a separate organization, and are at the same time unable to move hand or foot without permission of the whites' organization. I hope your strike for liberty-will succeed. In commenting on theste same Open Letters, Rev. Dr. E. K. Love says in the Banner: If there was nothing else grand in Dr. Harvey Johnson, his race pride, independence, love of our denomination, and manhood, should commend him most highly to every Negro Baptist in this great country. * * * Sooner or later, Dr. Johnson's ideas must obtain. An editorial in the Baptist Magazine says: Dr. Harvey Johnson's Open Letters in the Christian Ban¬ ner, of Philadelphia, Pa., are characteristic of the man. They are pointed, dignified and honest in statement. The American Baptist Home Mission Society is a public institu tion. and as such may expect to have its methods criticised. INTRODUCTION. 41 The man who crosses swords with the Secretary of that organization in this controversy is a life member of the Society and regular money contributor to its school at Washington (and has been for perhaps over fifteen years), sending the best of his young men and women from his church to the institution under its (the Society's) care, and since the controversy has made an appropriation to Way- land Seminary. Now, we submit, such a man is entitled to a respectful hearing; such a grand man as Harvey John¬ son should not have his motives impugned when he asks in his way for information. He has many sympathizers who believe in the sincerity of his motives and the justness of his cause * * *. The controversy has opened many eyes, and puts, in part, in our possession the very facts Dr. John¬ son was anxious to secure. This brings us around again to the starting point in our introduction. The aim or object of the author of "The Nations," in writing these Open Letters, was his anxiety for the true and independent advancement of his people, and his aim, or object, in putting this book into the hands of that same people is' to further among them the same ends, which is the only genuine way to become again a great nation on the earth. Many things will conspire to defeat these ends, but they cannot be permanently thwarted if God be with us and for us, as it has been well proven He is. And now having done what I could to make his readers acquainted with the author of this book, I close, feeling sure that if it be accepted and read as sincerely as' it is offered and writ¬ ten, it cannot fail of the object for which it is published. A. E. J. THE NATIONS FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. CHAPTER I. WHAT IS THE NEW POINT OF VIEW? To answer such an inquiry as the above properly, would require volumes upon volumes. But still there are many things, both profitable and interesting, that may be said of the nations, in very small space. And I know of no better place to begin than at the starting place of mankind, and that is1 at Eden. There we find after the great tragedy in the garden, and the expul¬ sion of man therefrom, that the nations began to flow down the stream of time in a two-fold form, sometimes obscure and almost invisible, and then, again, showing themselves plain and distinct. After Cain slew his brother Abel, he betook himself to himself, and he and his family formed one of the branches of the race of mankind that has come down to us in history. The other branch consisted of Adam, and the other part of his family, including his wife and others that were born to them after Cain left. The life of Cain stands out clear and plain after he broke away from the rest of the family, or, rather, after he was driven off to himself, for his great wickedness in so stealthily and cruelly slaying his brother Abel. History informs us that he moved off to the East of Eden, and built the city of Enoch and dwelt there with his posterity and became the artisans and artificers of the antediluvian world. In other words, they were the skilled workmen. One of his sons was also a herds¬ man, namely the family of Jabal, and Jubal, was the or¬ gan builder of his age;and Tubal-cain, who had part of 44 THE NATIONS his Grandfather Cain's name, was the chief mechanic of his day, for he is said to be an instructor in brass, iron, etc., or, in other words, the artificer in all kinds of cunning- work. But just here seems to end the history of Cain in about the same way as it began, for he comes on the stage of life in a scene that ends in the cruel death of his brother. So we hear Lamaeh saying, "I have slain a man !".and thus ends the history of Cain in its public and national form. So Adam, and that line or branch of the nation that came down through him, is again introduced in the form of the birth of his son Seth, who is to take the place of Abel in Adam's family. So we have here what I call two important epochs in the early history of man¬ kind. The end of Cain, and his posterity, as a distinct nation, and the birth of Seth, which marks the merging of the two branches of mankind into one, which had been kept separate since the death of Abel, and, as I said, Cain's history stops here, and Adam's alone is taken up again, and the history comes down through him alcne, until after the flood. When I say through Adam alone, I mean we have no one of his family living apart from the rest of the family as did Cain and his posterity. We have shown that Cain and his descend¬ ants were actively busying themselves with that side of life that pertains to the arts and sciences, both in agriculture and other arts, for Cain was a tiller of the ground and his sons and their descendants were artisans of the different kinds that then existed. Now, let us turn to Adam, and see what he and his family were dtfing during the period of which we have just been waiting. Strange as it may appear, it is nevertheless a fact that we have very little record of anything that Adam and the rest of his family did dur¬ ing1 this laps'e of time between the death of Abel and the birth of Seth. The most that is said of Adam in this interval, is, that certain ones were added to his family at different times; but whether he taught his from a new point op view. 45 descendants any of the trades is not stated, or whether he and they followed a life of shepherdy and farming altogether, is not said; or whether they did neither, is not said. But as they had to live, and that, too, accord¬ ing to the prediction and commandment of God, in the sweat of their faces, we may well suppose that they were agriculturists solely, that is, I mean, they were not, in any sense, mechanics, but farmers. So we have before us the life of mankind in its earli¬ est stages, presented in a twofold form of civilization; and so most of the time, until the present, there has, speaking in general terms, existed a twofold form of civilization. The question is, therefore, here raised as to which of the two was, and is, the proper, or better, form. But we might first ask, What is civilization ? or, what is meant by the termi? It depends entirely upon who it is that asks the question; that is, of what race or nation is he ? And in what stage of the world's his¬ tory does he live. For it will be remembered that in the past there was what we may call the Adamic Age, and a civilization with which he was concerned. Then there was a Cainite civilization, which we have des¬ cribed at some length, and it was totally different from that of Adam. And these forms continued on down through the antediluvian ages, and the patriarchal pe¬ riods and to the earlier times of the present generations, if not even to now, which I think it does, though not as sharoly and distinctlv marked as in the past. I have been speaking wholly thus far of civilization as seen in Biblical history; but when we turn aside and view what is "known as Gentile civilization, the aspects are entirely different; for, indeed, the beginnings of Gentile or Greek and Briton life had not even the g-erms nor symptoms of a civilization, but were, when first found, in a state of savagery of the lowest grade. Y_t they did, in the course of long generations, strug¬ gle into semi-forms of civilization. But let us retrace our steps to where we started, with this important ques- 46 THE NATIONS tion, and let us ask again, What is civilization, and th*1 best form of it? Well, I would venture the following, as the best defi¬ nition of which I know anything, or the best I can give: Civilization is that form or mode of human' life that brines the greatest amount of true happiness and com¬ fort to the greatest number of God's creatures, without respect to kinds of creatures, or, in other words, what¬ ever makes man and the other orders of God's crea¬ tures live the longest with the greatest amount of ease and comfort, and, at the same time, make them best serve the ends of their creation, is civilization, and the best form of the same. It would probably be well to state just here that the term civilization is, itself, a very equivocal one, as we find it defined in dictionaries, histories on political economy, cyclopaedias, etc., for with one people it means one thing, and with other ages and peoples, quite another. And, indeed, I do not find booked a real clear-cut, concise definition of the term anywhere. We have asked which of the two forms of civilization that have come down to us, and is now prevalent among us, is the better. Of course, this carries us back to our beginning again, or to man's starting off in life. And this, as a matter of fact, finds us in the Garden' of Eden, face to' face with that civilization with which our fore- parents were surrounded. And all know how simple and plain and easy-going, and non-perplexing it was, for it was truly innocent and guiltless in the extreme. Now it will be remembered that this state and form of civili¬ zation was not of man's choosing or making, but it was made for him, and he was placed in it, and commanded to carry it on. And he was, so far as we are informed, to carry it on after the same mode and manner as was given him by his Creator. Now, just here arises a very grave and serious point, and that is : Had man the right and authority to make the many different changes in the mode of living that have appeared since man left from a new point of view. 47 his garden home in Eden, Of course, it is almost uni¬ versally held and argued that he had both the right and authority to make progress and improvement, and that these impressions and desires were, and are, inherent in man, and, therefore, right and authorized. But, if you will keep in mind that the whole of the above is an argument, based on a proposition that has nothing un¬ der it but the supposition of those holding the view, vou will conclude that there is not one word of com¬ mand or hinted permission from the Creator, and noth¬ ing given of the first forms of civilization to alter or change them in any respect whatever. You say, "Yes; but it is argued from the fact, as has already been said, that man finds within him, a de¬ sire and. capacity for change and improvement, and that is, therefore, proof that the Creator designed that all the powers and faculties in a man should be devel¬ oped, and in as much as there was not sufficient breadth and scope within the first forms of civilization, the Creator designed that man should go on until he had reached his full capacity." The trouble with this last proposition is, that it also assumes what it has never proven, and that is, that the Creator designed when he made man, that he should be developed to his full capacity, and that he shcxuld nut his developed faculties into full operation, or that they should be used to their fullest extent. Now, it can be proven, not by argument, but by tht citation of facts, that it never was the design of the Creator that man should do all that he finds himself with inclination and ability to do. So, we will start with the first prohibition with which man is confronted after his creation. And that is this: that "Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it." It is further said: "And when the woman saw that 48 THE NATIONS the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof/' You see, in the passage just quoted, that there are three important characteristics of that tree pointed out; namely: It was a food tree, a pleasant tree, a tree of wisdom. Yet, from all of these man was barred right at the very beginning of his ca¬ reer in life. So here is proof positive that it is not the design of the Creator that man should develop to the fullest capacity all the faculties and inclinations with which he finds himself endowed. And we see here, also, that there is a progress that is neither civil noi civilizing in its results; for it was very uncivil in our first parents to break over the desire and command¬ ment of their Creator, simply to satisfy their own ideas of what was best. Then there is Cain. He found vested in himself both the faculty and inclination to murder his brother, and it is also a fact, that he had not developed his full powers until he did this. And yet, we see bow dis¬ pleased was God with him for so doing, even to the driving of him from His presence forever. I repeat, that God started man oft" with the kind and form of civilization that He desired man to have, and that was best for him. He knew what kind was the best for him, and it was not city building, nor was it the manufacture of tools, nor what is known to-day as instruments of art. But He simply created this earth and furnished it with all that was good for man, and commanded him to take care of them. He did not tell him to make anything; but to take care of that He, himself had made. So city building is not of God, but of man, and a v£ry wicked man, too, for the first city builder history gives us a record of, was Cain, and the name of the city he built was Enoch. And he went off there and walled himself in for two reasons. One was, that he was not from a new point of view. 49 fit for general society, because he had been driven from society as a vagabond. The other was, his sins made him feel unsafe outside of city walls. The next city we have on record makes us have to 'drop down the line of time to between sixteen and seventeen hundred years to the building of the city and tower of Babel; and we all know what their fate was, and of thos^ who built them: they were dispersed, divided up, and sent forth to people and settle the dif¬ ferent parts of the earth. And in no case do we find anywhere that they were commanded or recommended to build a city; but they lived a pastoral and shepherd life, that which God has smiled uoon, because, as 1 take it, a life of agriculture and husbandry is the near¬ est to God's plan and purpose for man on the earth. And because it is the only natural life for man to live; all other modes of life are artificial and, therefore, un¬ certain, unstable and unsatisfactory. City building and citv life make man selfish and self-seeking. They also make him very unsociable, though he be very closely associated. After we leave the Ark of Noah, for a few years it seems that the life of man was wholly that of hus¬ bandry ; and life seems to continue in the family of Noah, as a whole, just as it had done with Adam be¬ fore the flood, from the birth of Seth until the birth of Noah. I mean to say we first see man after the floo'l living a natural, not an artificial life. And he is happy, too, and well pleasing to his Creator and Benefactor. But there seems to dawn on the minds of some of that once happy household that a change is needed for the betterment of mankind. It seems that they re¬ solve to break away from the rest of mankind, and make the change. And the thing to be clonle is to build a city and tower. It was done—Babel is built. But What prompted it? Why, a proud ambition to better the condition that God had made and placed man in; 4 50 THE NATIONS the same thing that had brought ruin and destruction upon him at the beginning im the Garden. Here we see the two branches of civilization take up again, and come down to us, through two of the sons of Noah, just as they did in the families oif Adam and Cain after the death of Abel. The two> sons are Shem and Ham. The art and sciences are with Ham almost wholly and solely, for at least three thousand years forward; but husbandry, and husbandry alone, is with Shem for al¬ most the same length of time. I repeat, that God no¬ where ever commanded the founding and building of a city; but he has commanded the destruction of them by the thousand, beginning with the city of Babel. And as a proof of this, let us call up the city of Enoch which Cain built, and the first city ever built by man: Then call up old Babel, Nineveh, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, and ask the question: "Where are they?" Again the solemn answer will be: "They are destroyed, and gone down, and are no more." Then leave Asia, and come over into Africa, and ask for all that vast number of cities and kingdoms of Egypt, Ethiopia, Abyssinia, etc., and the answer will be: They have been dead and buried for thousands of years, and their remains are now beinp" exhumed by busy and energetic excavators, who are trying to find out with what disease they died, and in every case, when they examine closely, they find written on their temples, tablets, and tombs the words: "Died of hyper or abnormal civilization!" Come, now, into Palestine, where there were thou¬ sands of cities, and inquire about them, and you will be told that the displeasure of God rested upon them, and they are no more, but are gone the way of all the cities. Go, now, to Rome and Greece, and ask for Argos, Cccropia, Sparta, Troy, and even "the eternal city" of Rome itself, and the answer will be: Died of arrogance and corruption. This raises the important question: Is the civilization of the present day after the order and From a new point of view. 51 purpose of God? And I answer emphatically, No! and it must either be altered or go down as have' all the ages of the past. It will be seen by reference to the definition given in these pages, that civilization does not consist of the amount of clothes worn by a people, nor of the texture of them, that is, as to whether they be coarse or fine, thin or heavy; nor of the amount of what is known as the arts, fine arts; but of the amount of ease, comfort, and the regularity with which a community, state or nation of people live and carry out the laws by which they are governed, and that, too, as it relates to the individual first, and then to the whole people, as a consequence. So it is a mistaken idea that has taken hold of the nations, that civilization, that is, the best form of it, consists of great cities, massive structures, beautiful architecture, railroads of all kinds, steamboats, etc., for it is a fact that nations who have these and they that have had them in the past, have often been, and are now, often the' most oppressive and burdensome to mankind. In¬ deed, under them it is only the so-called "fittest" that •can maintain themselves and live. I repeat that in order to the best state of govern¬ ment, the individual is to be first in consideration, on the ground that all proper calculation must begin with one or the unit and not with ten nor the ten thou¬ sand; therefore, any government or form of it that takes first into consideration the many and not the few, is unsound and is sure to be oppressive and unsatisfac¬ tory, and therefore can only endure for a time. It must necessarily fall to pieces as a consequence. But when government is formed it should be regulated for the best good of the individual, and then for the whole, on the basis that what is good for one is also good for a hundred, and so on to the whole community. But it is a fact that those governments who undertake to carry out 52 THE NATIONS what are called great improvements and enterprises, are soulless, heartless and thoughtless of the individual and individual rights and, in turn, the rights of the whole, simply because the rights of the whole must be¬ gin with the rights of the one; and this can at no time be lost sight of any more than you can lose sight of the unit in a problem and then expect to get a correct result. I also want to say that I believe that those nations and races that are generally styled barbarous and sav¬ age because of their manners and customs of living, are much nearer a normal and proper civilization than those who consider themselves at the very height of refinement and culture. Refinement and culture races and nations ought to have; but it ought to be natural, true, pure and simple, and not artificial, frothy and false. So I am now prepared to say, for the reasons already given and many others I might try to name, that I do net share the shame, sorrow and chagrin for what is known as "African civilization, that many others seem to, and many of my own race, too. But I repeat that I am not one of those. First, because the civilization of Africa is largely natural; and it is natural because, and only because, it is in keeping with nature, and it may be said to be more in keeping with nature for the reason that it is nearer to the divine model that was given to man when he was created and started off in life. For, as I have said, man's life model was simplicity itself; yes, it was a personified simplicity. Secondly, it is a normal civilization and not a bar¬ barous one; for they have well-regulated governments, with laws and practices that were established thousands of years ago, and they still stand all of the tests and ravages of time unchanged, and the oeople are happy under them, and live to reach an age in years that is FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 53 unknown to modern nations, where men and women seem to be born, as it were, to-day and die to-morrow, and that, too, a natural death—that is, if they do not commit suicide in the meantime. But let me now give an example of some of the modes, methods and results of what is known as modern higher civilization. So in order to do that, as a beginning, I here insert what Prof. Geo. D. Carter has to say in his new book, en¬ titled "Christian State:" We do not select the repre¬ sentatives we elect; we do not make our own laws; we do not govern ourselves. Our political parties are con¬ trolled by private, close corporations that exist as para¬ sites upon the body politic, giving us the most corrupt¬ ing and humiliating despotisms in political history, and tending to destroy all political faith in righteousness. Our legislation is determined by a vast system of lob¬ by. The people know, though, that our legislative methods have become the organization of indirect brib¬ ery and corruption. It is hardly an exaggeration to sav that the chief work of both state and national legis¬ latures in recent years has been to obstruct, defeat or cheat the will of the people." Listen again to this: "There were 9,299 mercantile failures in the United States during the past nine months, 48 more than in the like portion of last year, which coincidence is paralleled by the total amount of assets and liabilities of failing trades this year, being substantially the same as in like period one year ago." The Baltimore Daily Record, Sept. 30, 1895, says: " The total number of business failures reported throughout the United States last week aggregated 289, as against 274 in the previous week, 253 in the like week one year ago." The following is one day's record, taken from a report made in the daily press —only for one day! and this state of affairs is a condi¬ tion to be found not in Africa, but in proud and boast¬ ing America and under the white man's rule: 54 THE NATIONS "Tacoma bank bursted; liabilities, $477,000; assets, $44.00. "Building and loan association gone up; liabilities, $1,900,000 ; assets 40 per cent of dues. "Seven .mercantile failures, involving from $50,000 to $200,000 each. "Two express trains dynamited by robbers. "Horrible butchery of helpless lunatics in an Illinois asylum. "Locked out workmen threaten bloodshed in Wis¬ consin. "Seventh Day Adventists wearing ball and chain in Kentucky and working out fines on rock piles, for working on' Sunday. "Starving garment workers in Boston win their strike. Great Northern Railway threated with a tie- up. Five-more strikes incubating. "Another bond issue coming. "Four and. a quarter millions of gold leaves the treasury for Europe in the last two days. 19,000 work¬ ing people in Minneapolis receiving public help. A widow's ad: "Wanted—Some one to give me work in exchange for winter clothing for my children." Another: "Please try and give me any kind of work, at any price, to help feed my dear children; won't some one please try ?" "Foreclosures of farm mortgages aggregate over 300,000 acres in Minnesota annually. Ad: "Homes for sale for cash for amount of mort¬ gage on them and foreclosure costs." This time I quote from the Coming Nation; and here is what it has to say: "A few days ago a hungry man, stripped of his natural and social rights, by our Chris¬ tian civilization, broke into a bakery in Chicago and stole a loaf. He was arrested and sent to the house of correction. A day or two later the discovery was made that some 'respectable' millionaire heads of the packing FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 55 concerns of Chicago had tapped the socialistic water¬ works and stole a million dollars' worth of water. They will probably be elected to the house of representa¬ tives." Hurrah for the most individualistic nation on earth! If working for seventy hours a week in a tempera¬ ture as hot as Hades for the price of three meals a day don't prove that bakers are opulent., is it because we are living in a Christian civilization? If working in a coal mine, furnishing your own tools, buying at a "pluck me" store and never netting a taste or smell of nature, for less than enough to live on, don't prove that miners are opulent, is it because we are living in a Christian civilization? If working before a fiery furnace, doing two men's work for a slave's pay, exhausting one's vitality in the effort, never hearing the sweet strains of the church organ, because of pains in the body, and rags on' the back, don't prove that glass workers are opulent, is it because we are living in a Christian civilization ? If riding in a box car across the country, looking af¬ ter some bob-tailed horses consigned to the monopolis¬ tic coxcombs, for a dollar and a quarter, seeking a "job," seeing the horses removed to a padded stall in a palace stable, and then walking the streets without as much as ten cents for a bed, don't prove that cigar- makers are opulent, is it because we are living in a Christian civilization? If working in a filthy factory Leti hours a day for enough to pull ends together at home, because father can't find work, with the body stunted, mind destroyed, and soul seared, don't prove that children are having "good times" in this country, is it because we are living in a Christian civilization? "On Tuesday a man tried to rob a bank in Butte, Mont., and was captured, as he ought to be. He is a bad man, and should be punished. During last year the banks robbed their depositors in this country of $25,- 56 THE NATIONS 000,000 by failures, etc., but that's different. The bank¬ ers are at large yet. The crime in this country con¬ sists not in robbing the depositors, but in robbing the bankers."^Nezv Charter, San Jose. Cal. And here is still another result of higher civilization, under the white man's superior rule and management: "A gigantic railroad combine involving three bil¬ lions of capital, is reported between the leading rail¬ roads of the United States. They have effected thus to prevent low, and to secure high, rates of railroad transportation. It has been many months in develop¬ ing, but it is at last completed and made known to the public. Senator Chandler calls it 'the most gigantic and powerful union of corporate interests against the people that the world has ever known.' Thev having a complete monopoly of the transportation business in the territory involved mean to charge 'all the traffic will bear,' a phrase which means the death warrant to every productive enterprise not specially favored by the combine. It will be in condition to dictate to politi¬ cians more effectually than ever, and in connection with its sister trusts and combines, will rule the nation more despotically than ever. Where is the reformer who claims that free coinage of silver will cure all ills ? Let him look at this and a hundred other trusts and com¬ bines recently developed under our system of competi¬ tive industry, and hasten to atone for being so blind to our industrial and political needs by now working the harder for the public ownership of all monopolies." The New York Voice ably reviews the situation thus: "The facts to which Senator Chandler calls attention afe but another evidence of an irresistible tendency of the age. Competition is to-day 'played out' in business wherever combination can be effected. The people must recognize this fact and act accordingly. How¬ ever carefully the Inter-State Commerce Commission may watch this last attempt at combination by FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 57 the great common-carriers, we believe that past ex¬ perience justifies the assertion that the commission will be able to do little to protect the peopte. What then ? One remedy stares us in the face, and only one: tlie people must protect themselves by making the roads public highways instead of private roads run by private parties for private profits. "The interests at stake are too great and too momen¬ tous to much longer leave the highways of the nation to be managed for private ends. Public ownership is the solution—public ownership of railroads, or else the ownership of the public by the road. Which shall it be?" "Any people on the globe where the railroads are subject to even partial control in the interest of the people. Persons who have paid no attention to the subject do not realize the fearful carnage of our present corporate railroad management. The official tables of the Interstate Commerce Commission statistics (fifth annual report, page 58) show the killed and injured from 1888 to 1892, inclusive (five years), as follows: Persons killed :. .31,616 Fersons injured 151,755 Average per annum: Persons killed 6,323 Persons injured 30,351 "In other words, we are killing and wounding on our railroads an annual average of 36,764 persons. "All have heard with sadness of the battle of Shiloh, one of the bloodiest struggles of the late war. Bryant's history says that not far from 100,000 men were en¬ gaged on the two sides, and that about every fifth man was killed or wounded, making on the two sides 20,000 men killed or wounded. "The tables referred to show the average annual casualties in the management of the American rail¬ roads to be nearly twice as great as the carnage at the battle of Shiloh. The killed and wounded at Shiloh, 58 THE NATIONS. with an aggregate of 100,000 men engaged, did not exceed 20,000; the killed and wounded on our rail¬ roads in 1892 were 43, 699, and the annual average for five years, as already stated, was 36,664 persons. By comparison of statistics it is foun-d that the slaugh1- ter of people by the American railroads is far greater here than in England or Continental Europe, in propor¬ tion to mileage, and more than three times greater in proportion to the number of passengers carried (Inter- slate Commerce Report, 1890, pages 58, 59; Todd's Railway in Europe and America, pafe 74.) The Amer¬ ican people can vote the railroads into collective hu- manitarian control at the next election if they want to." —Peninsula Farmer. Yes, and I wish to say just here that no better ground need be desired for objection to the modes and methods of the so-called higher states and conditions of life than the power and opportunity it affords for combination by way of trusts and monopolies—and thus the centralization of power, affluence and influence to the very great detriment of the state or general good of mankind. Thus combined, wealth becomes king, monarch and ruler of the people. So as to better see this, read again the article I have just inserted, entitled "A Gigantic Railroad Combine." I repeat that the proper state of civilization for man is a normal one, because that is the most natural one; and a natural one in accordance to the purpose and plan of the great Creator and all others are artificial, ficti¬ tious, false and delusive; for the facts shown prove it, and facts are facts! Yes, they stand as monuments to reality and truth, while fictions and fancies fade, reel, crumble and fall to the dust, notwithstanding the bold, loud and repeated assertion of the "greatest and most superior race on earth," to the contrary. CHAPTER II. RACE DIVISIONS: ARE THEY .ETHNOUJGICAI, OR HIS¬ TORICAL? Into how many divisions is the human family di¬ vided ? Secondly. To which of the divisions does the col¬ ored race belong-? The answer to the first question depends upon an¬ other, namely. What kind,do we mean: historical or theoretical division ? All depends upon the answer to this last. What I mean by historical, Is a division made upon anciently recorded facts as against a division made upon modernly recorded theories and fancies. What I mean by a theoretical division, is one based upon modern theories: for example, ethnology, ethnography and anthropology. These are all modern theories, which are in a speculative and formative state; that is, neither of them, is universally accepted as a fixed science, like mathematics. For instance, all civilized men and nations, in all ages, have accepted the mathe¬ matical fact that two. and two make four, and no more, and no less, no matter who manipulates them—whether the celebrated geometrician, Euclid, or the little boy just learning multiplication—four will be the only re¬ sult that can possibly be gotten. Not so with the "ologies" and "ographies" about which I have just.been speaking. They can be, and have been, ever since their institution, used to teach different lessons, and reach different conclusions, just according to the views, tastes and opinions of the per- (59) 60 THE NATIONS son using them. I -repeat that the above named tenta¬ tive theories have nothing like the scientific certainty of mathematics. Let us take ethnology for example: It is the oldest and is probably in some sense the mother of them all, and yet, ethnology is only about a hundred years old, for Peter Camper, its author, just died in 1789, and it was in the latter end of his life he wrote. I said by means of the above theories, different speculators reached different conclusions. The American Cyclopaedia says, when speaking of ethnology as a science: "It may well be conceived from the difficulties inherent in the subject, and from the rarity with which the necessary qualifications exisc in observers, that the science of ethnology is at present in a verv unsatisfactorv though progressive condition. Cyclopaedia Britannica, when speaking of ethnology and its indefiniteness as a teacher and definer of the characteristics of the different races, says: "We are obliged fo^ the sake of convenience to draw up classi¬ fications, but the more rigorous and strict we make them, the more artificial they become." Lamarck, the celebrated French naturalist, said when writing on the subject: "Nature recognizes nei¬ ther kingdom nor classes, nor orders, nor genera, nor sub-genera. Nature recognizes nothing but individ¬ uals." It is he»e further stated that ethnqlogy is as yet in its infancy, for its very name does not date back fur¬ ther thatr the present generation, and ethnologists themselves are said to be mere squatters in the far- west of learning,* and yet their findings, decisions and dictums are almost universallv taken as settling beyond a doubt which are the superior, and which are the in¬ ferior races. And all this pretended knowledge is made to r^st on two great words, namely: "ethnos,'' * Encyclopaedia Britannica. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 61 and "logos." The first of these means "race," and that is all it does mean in its own tongue—the Greek; whether it be a race of birds, sheep, horses, cats, dogs, or what not; the same word, "ethnos," is used to define it; and it is also used to define a race of men. The second word "logos" means "talk," and talk about anything and everything under Heaven about vvhich the Greeks wanted, and had to talk. Now, what I warnt to know is, how in the name of facts, science and common-sense, can these two simple Greek words,'"logos," and "ethnos," in themselves—that is, in. their etymological nature, or thefir scientific arrange¬ ment, or by their philosophical teaching, being simply translated into English, and making the colmpound word ethnology, contain or teach any such wonders about the races of men, as is claimed for ihem. One of them, as I have said, means simply a race, or tribe, whether that tribe or race be of men, beasts or birds?* The other means simply a talk, a discourse, or a conversa¬ tion about anything in the world, and only means a race of men when applied to them, or when the talk is about them. Remember, I have not said that in ap¬ plication they are not made to teach more than I have described, but in their etymological or root form they mean and teach nothing else than I have said; and that they themsjelves, or in themselves, do teach anything else, is what I am demanding to be shown. If I multiply two and two, or put two and two to¬ gether, I get four; or if the little infant does the same he gets the same result. The four is the result of addition or multiplication, and not by imagination. Or take the acorn, and plant it, and the result is a tree; nothing but a tree, no matter who plants it; whether scientist, philosopher or laborer. If any result comes, it is a tree, and if an acorn has been planted it is an oak tree, no matter on what part of the globe, or in * See Liddell and Scott's Greek Lexicon. 62 THE NATIONS what age of the world's history it may have been planted. And this is true of "ethnos," wherever found in its simple root meaning: that is, it means a "race," without any reference whatever to the kind or charac¬ ter of that race; and so, the simple word "logos," means 'Halk." But when it gets into the- hands of the theorist, and is made into an "ology," or "ethnology," it is. made to produce wonderful things about man and his kind. But they are all productions of theory, and never become a fact, because the theorist of the next age comes along in his search for knowledge and forms the proposition or hypothesis of his predecessors; and whatever conclusion the former may have reached, the latter's simple denial of them, and the laying down of other premises, puts the word and work of the form¬ er again into speculation, or a question as to their truth or falsity. Not so with the addition of two and two. For all the world says it is four. The denial of all the geom¬ etricians in the world will not alter that fact; it is set- tied beyond contradiction. And so with the tree from the acorn; it stands there a living fact, with its trunk, limbs, branches and leaves. All the naturalists, biolo¬ gists and botanists to the contrary, notwithstanding. They ipay. all theorize upon it, but it is there—a tree, and nothing but a tree. But let us return to our first question; that is, Into how many divisions is the human family divided?—I mean now theoretical divisions. The matter depends altogether upon the name of the author we quote. For example, Linnaeus, a Swedish naturalist, born in 1707, in his "Genus homo" makes four, based upon the color of the skin: The European, whitish; the American, coppery; the Asiatic, tawny; and the African, black. Now, one has only to stop a minute, and examine into such a division and its basis, i. e., the color of the skin, from a new point of view. 63 to see how false and uncertain it is, as a proof of which race one belongs; because the colors and shades often differ greatly within a single family, and I was about to say, yes, all the four shades named by this writer, namely, whitish, coppery, tawny and black, much less whole nations. But De Buffon, a French philosopher, born in 1707, says, "No, the color of the skin will not do for a basis of division of the races." He says it "must be geographical," and the number must be "five," not four, and that they "include the oolar regions of eastern Asia, southern Asiatic, Euro¬ pean, Ethiopian and American, or the Indian of this country. Blumenbach, a German anatomist, says that the five¬ fold division will do, but that DeBuffon is wrong as to the names to be applied to the races cited in his divi¬ sion. He says they should be Caucasian, Mongolian, Ethiopian, American and Malay.' Blumenbach says Linnaeus' theory, i. e., the color of the skin, will not do for a basis of division of mankind, but a proper division must be based on the complexion, hair and skull. Then in comes Lawrence and says, "Yes, Blumenbach is right as to a proper basis for the division, but is wrong when he makes all the races of mankind to have but one origin. The American Cyclopaedia notes that Owen's exam¬ ination of the base of the skull as a test of a race affin¬ ity was very valuable in the study of anthropology, but is of little or no good in the study of ethnology. Now, let us pause for a moment. Who was Owen ? He was an English zoologist and "anatomist and palaeon¬ tologist, born in 1804, and a graduate of the Univer¬ sity of Edinburg. I call especial attention to the theo¬ ries, experiments and race-tests of this author, because of his greater qualification to learn and know race- affinities, being, as he was, a zoologist, which led him into the study of animal nature and animal character 64 THE} NATIONS of all kinds; and as an anatomist he must study and know along structural lines, both of man and beast. He was also a palaeontologist, and as ruch must be in¬ formed not only about living creatures but dead ones, and their remains, and also extinct species and their remains. [ have quoted thus largely and fully at this point, to show how those wonderful sciences, the "ologies," do not prove anything as to which race a man belongs, for Owen uses the laws according to anthropology, which say, the way to know to which race a man be¬ longs, is simply "to measure the base of the skull," and you have the solution. But Blumenbach says, "No," the way to do it is "to measure the breadth of the skull and the projection of the face, etc. . . "No," says Peter Camper, who lived and wrote before Blumenbach, "the way to tell to which race a man be¬ longs, you must draw two straight lines through the head, one of which must be drawn through the open¬ ing of the ear to the base of the nose, and the other touching the most prominent centre of the forehead, and falling thence on the most advancing part of the upper jaw-bone, etc. * Dr. Morton, in his ethnological works, says, If you want to know to which race a man belongs, you must fill his skull with small grain of some sort. I might continue this list of contradictory statements almost 'ad infinitum. But why do so? for it is all con¬ jecture and supposition, for neither Ethnology, An¬ thropology, Zoology, or Philology, separately, or com¬ bined, contain the germ that is necessary to make them certain in their teaching. And, indeed, at best they are only points of view, from which one may argue and theorize. Now, how different the facts of history to all this! I say the facts of history; and I mean by that, the things that did really take place, and are * See works of Blumenbach and Camper. FROM A NEW POINT OF1 VIi£W. 65 taking place every day in this world of ours; yes, and in other worlds, too. Nothing- is true history but a line of facts. And nothing is true written history but a record of that line of facts. And there are no facts but the things that did actually happen. But just here we meet with a difficulty that is not gotten over simply with a pass¬ ing notice; and it is not simply an imaginary diffi¬ culty, but a real one, and one that only the sincere seeker after truth will in any true sense overcome, and that is, how to separate facts from falsehood, and so get at true and real history. In other words, the difficulty lies in, How shall I know of two or more records made of certain happen ings—that one is true and all the others are false? And again: How shall I prove to others, for instance, that this one is the record of the facts, and the others false? For it is one thing to know for oneself, and quite another to show it to others. Indeed, under certain circumstances it is impossible to do so. For instance, any one who does not want to be convinced or acknowledge that he is convinced, has only to say, "I do not believe that ycu are right,'' or "I do not ac¬ cept your nroof as sufficiently satisfactory," and that settles the matter so far as he is concerned, though I may have an array of proofs that will satisfy all the world besides. But his simple refusal to accept the facts, does not alter them, for they are facts still, and will remain so throughout eternity, because facts are principles, and principles are eternal. Not so with theories, propositions and hypotheses., for they rest solely on the reason, ideas and judgment of the man holding them, and so are unsettled and un- established. Let us insert just here what Mr. J. C. Morrison says of history in Encyclopaedia Britannica: * "His- * See "Historv," Encyclopaedia Britannica. 5 66 THE NATIONS lory, in the most correct use of the word, means the prose narrative of past events, as probably true as the fallibility of human testimony will allow. This defini¬ tion takes no account of chronicles in verse which were not uncommon in the Middle Ages. With this exception the definition is fairly exact, both in what it comprehends and what it excludes. Obviously pjose narrative is not history when it deals with fictitious events, as in the case of the novel; and verse narrative even when it deals with true events (as in the ac¬ count of the battle of Salamis in the Persae of iEschy- lus, etc.), is either more or less than history, and in any case a sub-species by itself. In practice, the line between history and mythology is often not easy to draw, but the theoretical distinction is plain. History reposes, however remotely, on con¬ temporary witness to the fact related. Written rec¬ ords are not absolutely indispensable, as history may supply their place, and represent authentic contempo¬ rary testimony. But tradition is very insecure and apt to be equally inventive and oblivious. It is in the-half light of tradition that- mythology is born of the creative farcy of man, and the difficulty of separating fact from fiction in this border land of mingled fable and reality very often amounts to impossibility. "But even authentic facts alone are not sufficient to constitute history. Many facts and dates are recorded with reference to China, Egypt, and Assyriai in olden times, which in all probability are true; but these facts and dates are not enough to give those countries a his¬ tory, The bare fact that a certain ting reigned in a certain year, and conquered or was defeated in battle with a neighbor, is, perhaps, chronologically valuable, but it is not history. History only attains its full stat¬ ure when it not only records but describes in consider¬ able fulness social events and evolutions, when it iriarlcs FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 67 change and growth, the movement of society from one phase to another," etc. This is the clearest definition of what history is, that I have been permitted to read, and yet I cannot agree with Mr. Morrison when he says that "history is more than the record of factsfor he says: "But even authentic facts alone are not sufficient to consti¬ tute history." He further says, "History only attains its full stature when it not only records but describes in considerable fulness, social events and evolution; when it marks change and growth, the movements of society from one phase to another." But the trouble here with Mr. Morrison's argument is in the latter part of this paragraph. He is arguing the point between history in its beginnings, and his¬ tory at its full stature. But the question is, Do facts and facts alone make history? I hold they do. Sup¬ pose, in order to a full and complete history, the differ¬ ent changes cf all kinds which a people, society, or the individual undergo, must be noted: These changes of whatever kind, are also facts. Yes, as much so, as the chronology of the reigning of a certain king over a certain country, in, a given year, but no more so. All true history must adhere for a foundation or basis in the individuals who know the events they nar¬ rate or transmit to others. And in order to a full and complete nariation the when and 'how, cause and ef¬ fect of the same, no matter whether that be moral or phenomenal; that is, whether referring to animate or inanimate nature, all are the subjects and objects of, and are essential to history and history-making, be¬ cause they have a relation bearing on man and his destiny. So, properly speaking, and in the broadest sense of the term, history apprehends and compre¬ hends all past and present knowledge of whatever kind, only provided- it is the knowledge of facts. But how are the facts to be obtained for history- making ; or how are we to know that the narratives 68 THE NATIONS about any one stage of the world's history are true? Only, of course, by contemporaneous, corroborated testimony and circumstantial evidence. There must be those who saw, felt or heard the things they com¬ municated ; and if they saw, felt or heard them, then they are facts and arc proper matter for history. But if they were created by their imagination, either as a whole, or in part, then they are not proper objects and subjects of history, but are the subjects of fictitious lit¬ erature only, and so belong to the realm of myths, and not to history. Myths and fiction can never make his¬ tory nor the basis of it. Nor can time, or age, ever make them become the proper material for history. Thus, the Greeks and Romans, in their origin as races and nations, were conceived in a myth, and born in the same, and can never have a history of their origin. They can have a history, and a true one, too, of their myths—yes, a wonderful one; but of them¬ selves as a people, never, while the world stands, nor throughout eternity, because history consists of facts, and facts are eternal, but myths are nothing but fabu¬ lously imaginative stories and of such' are the histories of the Greeks and Romans made up"; for hundreds and hundreds of years of their existence as a people, and so, as I said, they have no true, or real, history. For in their early beginning, or as to how and when they begian, they have neither monuments, books, nor parchments to show that the stories they tell of them¬ selves are true, and so are without proper corrobora¬ tive testimony, either personal, or circumstantial; whereas, they should have both in order to the best form of history-making. Now, what is the history as to the number of the di¬ visions into which the races are divided? I have said that in order to make history, there must be the facts, and the corroboration of these facts: these are pre¬ requisites. Now, then, what is the testimony of his- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 69 lory about the divisions of mankind ? It is that 'they were originally three, namely, Shem, Ham. and Ja¬ pheth. Well, what is the evidence that this is true? First, their names are recorded in books, and on parchments as the heads and progenitors of families and nations. I will here quote from the oldest record in existence, if we may accept the hieroglyphics of Egypt and the cuniforms of Assyria, and the Chinese writings. The book of Genesis, tenth chapter, first verse: Here is what it says: "Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah; Shem, Ham, and Japheth: and unto them were sons born after the flood." Here is a positive record /'f the progenitors of the human family after the flood and they are three, and only three—Shem, Ham and Japheth. It is also here shown that the race was per petuated, for it says "unto them were sons born;" and that has continued true to the present time—that is, unto chem, through their descendants, sons are born. Thus we have a continual stream of humanity, traceable back to Noah, and his three sons, and from them, down thf* ages to the present time, with the records of each, more or less clear, as they were careful to make them. We also have here a chronology of the event when these divisions began, which is very important to a correct knowledge of history. It was "after the flood." says the record. Turning now to Genesis, tenth chapter, and thirty- second verse, you will find the following plain and clear-cut record made of the three sons of Noah and their families and nations, for it shows that they be¬ gan with families, and then grew into nations. Here is what it says about them: "These are the families of the sons of Noah, after their generations, in their nations: and by these were the nations divided in the earth after the flood." 70 THE NATIONS It will be borne in mind, that before the flood the divisions were two, namely, at first represented bv Adam himself and his sen Cain, and afterwards in Cain and his brother Seth. Then follows a plain statement with reference to all three of the sons of Noah. Of Japheth, it is said: "By these were the isles of the Gentiles divided in their lands; every one after his tongue, after their families, in their nations." In the twentieth verse of the tenth chapte1* is found Ham's pedigree, which reads thus: "These are the son's of Ham, after their families, after their tongues, in their countries and in their nations." Then in the thirty-first verse of the tenth chapter Shem and his descendants are noted; of them it is said: "These ar<-' the sons of Shem, after their families, after their tongues, in their lands, after their nations." Of Japheth it is here said he inhabitated the islands, and that Ham settled countries, and Shem occupied lands. Two countries bore the name of Ham, and he is the only one of Noah's sons who has that honor. The countries which bore the name of Ham are Af¬ rica and a country of Palestine. (Psalm 105:23.) Israel also came into Egypt; and Jacob sojourned in the land of Ham. (See also Psalm 78:51. For the country in Palestine see Genesis 14:5.) It is in that part of the country that was afterwards occupied by the Amonites, who were the descendants of Lot. That this place is called Ham, need not be thought strange, for it is within the borders of the land of Canaan, who was the son of Ham: and that a country within his territory should bear his father's name is very much in keeping, indeed. We are here called to note that there are those who, in order to get rid of the historical and geographical record I have just been citing, declare that the Bible narrative of the division of races and nations is not scientific. But they do not seem to be aware that in from a new point of view. 71 so saying it is equivalent to saying that the Bible is false; because a thing that is not scientific is not true. Or else it is saying that science is false, and if science is false, it -would not help the Bible narrative, even if that narrative were scientific. The first definition Worcester gives of "Science" is "Knowledge : that which one knows." This definition of "Scientific" is: "Proceeding by, or, founded on the methods of science." The question is, then: Did Moses have knowledge? Worcester also says, "Science is that which one knows." Did Moses know the things he wrote? If so, his knowledge was science, and he could, therefore, be scientific; but was he scientific ? Worcester says to be scientific is to proceed by the methods of science. Then, did the writer of the chronological table of the races given above proceed by method? If he did, then he was, according to Worcester, scientific. Read it, and it will be found that the orden is wonderfully methodical and beauti¬ ful. It starts with Noah and his three sons, and it starts with them after the flood and proceeds to give the names of the heads of the families of all three of them, what countries they settled and the boundaries that marked them. We see, then, that "science" is knowledge, and "scientific" is knowledge methodically arranged. Well, there is more knowledge found in the table of na¬ tions, as given in ^Genesis tenth and other chapters, than in all other works combined. Not more theories and guesses, but more knowledge* for the whole is a plain, simple positive statement of facts, and when there are not facts, there is not really true knowledge, for true knowledge must rest on facts, and facts only. Yes, there may be knowledge of falsehoods, but it is unprofitable because untrue. But the record of -Gene¬ sis is- true, because it is of God, and it is backed up by 72 the nations numberless evidences, such as records made of the events, cr, rather, corroborating records at or about the time of their occurrence by the Babylonians and Egyptians. These are now being found by the exca¬ vations that are being made daily in the Orient, and csneciallv in or about ancient Ninevah and the cities of Egypt, or rather, Africa, for there are a number of pther points in Africa that reveal wonderful facts on this race question, such as Ethiopia, Lybia, Nubia, Ab¬ yssinia and others. 'But I find that even the "ologists," because of the late discoveries which have so fully and completely corroborated the Scripture record, now admit that the original divisions were three, but they are very in¬ consistent in that in one case, namely, that of Shem, they retain his branch or root name; but in the cases of Ham and Japheth they create for them mythical and fictitious names—that is, for their family, or race names, so instead of the Hamite race and the Japheth- ite race, for Ham we have absolutely no name in the modern table of nations to tell us that such a person as Ham and his descendants ever lived. I do not mean that there is no record of him and his descendants to be fov.nd in historical and biographical works, for there is any amount of it, because he played such an important part in the history; of mankind it is impossi¬ ble to get rid of him, for we meet with him in every a^e, and at every epoch of the world's history; but I mean there is no name given to designate him in the modern table of nations. We have for Shem and the Shemite, his own original, ethnic, or race name; and for Japheth and his descendants the name Aryan is given. But, when (he name to designate Ham and his descendants ought to ccrrenn, we have in its stea-.l the term Turanian, which points entirely away from Fam, and leads into the Persians. See the .term "Turanian" in the Chambers,' Britannica, FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 73 and the American Encyclopedias: They will refer you to the word "Iran," and then tell you to see "Per¬ sians;" not Ham or Hamite, but Persians. Now, have I not proven that there is no name to designate Ham and his posterity? But, for Japheth and his descendants, the name Aryan is given, which as I said before, is a mythical, fictitious cognomen, and so means nothing as a race title, and can mean nothing, because its very origin is based on Hindoo and Persian mythology. And, again, I wish to be directly understood, that the name Aryan is derived, or rather, made from the word Arya, and that word does not point to a people, but a language; namely: the Sanscrit, which is nothing but the Hindoo. (See American Encyclopedia and Article "Arya.") It says when naming the branches into which Sanscrit is divided, that the branches are first the Sanscrit or Hindoo, then naming ^ix others, making seven. Now, let us see what Max Muller, Professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Oxford, has to say cn the subject. I quote him to how that the word Arya, from which Aryan is. derived is not settled even now. Professor Bopp says, the root is "Ar," wihich is "to go." Not the name of a people, but simply "to go." The same writer also says that the word "Aryan" mav just as well be derived from "Ark," which, means "to venerate." Yes, Professor Bopp, whb was the founder of modern Comparative Philology, born 1791, says the word "Ar," from which Aryan can, and, therefore, may have been derived, means "to go." But I ask, "Go where? Well, I suppose anywhere one may want, but more probably off on a search for a great, mysteriously wonderful and mighty people, in whom all the languages, all the arts and sciences have adhered in all ag"es, and do still abide. What is its name? Friedricn Schlegel says that the 74 THE NATIONS name should be Indo-Germanic; Bopp says: No, the name is not Indo-Germanic, but Indo-European, and others say Japhetic; others, Sanscritic; and others, Mediterranean. Others say it is Indo-Celtic rather than Indo-Germanic. Prof. Bopp says again it should be Indo-Classic. I am well aware that these names are technically attached to the language known as Sanscrit, but it is well known that all languages must be spoken by a people, and I have just been giving the names of the people that is said to have spoken it, and all these names are said to grew out of the word "Arya." Btit at the same time, although so many names have been mentioned, they all mean one and the same people. Is not the very idea in itself ridiculous? And Prof. Bopp also says that the word "Ar," from which all these may be derived—I-mean directly, and indirectly, first and last, means "to go." Will we - not have to keep on1 the go? And where will we arrive at a cer¬ tainty that there ever was a people who lived on the earth bearing the name of Aryan? Prof. Bopp says, too, that the word may be derived from "Ark," which means "to venerate or worshin," and of course points, not to the name of a people, but to the Hindoo gods whom they worshipped. We here insert the words of Prof. Max Muller; they are as follows: "Origin of the word Aryan as a tech¬ nical term has been borrowed from the Sanscrit arya or arya. In the latter Sanscrit, Arya means a 'good fam ily.' It is used as a complimentary address. Originally, however, it was used as a national name, and evert as late as the time of the Laws of Manu. India is still called the Arya Avarta, i. e., the abode of the Aryas." It can be seen here that Max Muller says that the word Aryan is borrowed from the Sanscrit; but then, as Bopp saj£, the word in the Sanscrit may be derived from "Ar—to go" or "Ark—to venerate," How does that FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 75 help us to get at a proper name for Japheth and his descendants, for the term "to go" is not a fit and proper name, and, he says, Aryan is from "Ax," or may be, which means "to go." I ask again, How can we get to Japheth if we follow that root? All must agree that it is impossible. Or, take the word "Ark," which means "to venerate;" that is as unsuitable for a name as the other, and, indeed, any one can see that it would make no sense at all in the first case, and in the second one could never derive the word Aryan from Ark. I mean that it could never be done etymologically. It may be done technically and arbitrarily, and, in fact, that is th« only way the name "Aryan" ever became a proper name for the Japhetic family; that is to say, technically and arbitrarily. It has just been boldly so declared by the ethnologist and philologist. Yes, and regardless, too, of the fact that all the obstacles I have been citing were lying squarely across their path. What other conclusion, now, can we come to, but that Japheth, according to modern history, as well as Ham, has been ruled out of a proper race name? So, the only one of the three sons of Noah, who remains, and has a proper race name, is Shem, and his race name is Shemite. The proper race name for Ham is Ham- ite, and for Japheth, Japhethite, so it can be seen we are necessarily thrown back on the doctrine of the threefold division of the human family, going by the names just quoted: Shem, Ham and Japheth. Rev. Dr. Geikie, who is the author of "The Life and Words of Jesus," says, the table in Genesis is not phil- ologically scientific; that is, it is not scientific, accord¬ ing to philology. We will readily admit that to be true. What other conclusion, now, can we come to, but that historically scientific? And it is historically scientific if it notes the facts in the case. It says .that the nations that, now inhabit the earth sprang from Noah and his three sons. Well, did they? If they did, then the table 76 THE NATIONS is a table of facts; and if of facts, and methodically nar¬ rated in history, it is absolutely scientific. Not, how¬ ever, according to philology, for philology itself is not scientific, but simply hypothetical, and, therefore, still in the realm of guess work or speculation. Let us notice its definition: That given in Liddell and Scott's Greek lexicon of "Dhilogia" is "love, of discus¬ sion ; love of learning, and literature; the study of lan¬ guage and history." Hence, the English word, "philol¬ ogy" must of necessity mean the love to talk and dis¬ cuss literature, learning, language and history. Now for further proof that philology as a science is wholly unsettled and unestablished, see Encyclopaedia Britannica, article, Philology." And if it is not fixed and settled, how can it be a science? It dwells and la¬ bors in the field of myths; yes, almost wholly so, for its main field of operation is the Sanscrit, or rather, more properly the Hindoo, and all information about that language that is to be found in their books is nothing else than Hindoo and Persian myths; and what is a myth but a never-to-be-proven conjecture; for the very idea of a myth, or its very meaning is that which is false. So Sanscrit can never become truly scientific, because all that is known or can be known of it is founded on myths, and myths are not facts, and can never become such while true science must rest on nothing but facts. And one is no less bewildered and confused when he asks just where to look for that wonderful people, the Aryans, and where they begin and end, and of what race or races were they comoosed; for one writer of au¬ thority says the word "Arya" refers to the country in which the Sanscrit laneuage is found; and hence is not an ethnic term, but ethnographical, or rather it is geo¬ graphical, and only ethnographical incidentally, in that it is said a people lived there. Says the American Cy¬ clopaedia; "Arya is a name given to various Asiatic FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 77 countries. In the most general and extensive significa¬ tion in the remotest antiquity Arva was the denomina¬ tion for a great part of western and southwestern Asia." But just hear what the same work further says of the Aryans as a people: "Their history disappears in the remotest and darkest night of time: more than twenty-three centuries before the Christian Era." Thus it has been ever four thousand years since this so- called people lived and acted. But what is the truth of the matter? Why the people through their descend¬ ants who spoke the language now known as Sanscrit still live and act their party and are now known as In¬ dians of Hindoostan, or India in Asia. Now, having, as we think, established beyond con¬ tradiction, the fact that historicallv there were three, and only three, branches of the human family—thi Shemite, Hamite and Japhethite—our second question is, To which of the three do the colored race or races be¬ long? Current history says positively, not to Shem, nor of Japheth: then they must be of Ham. Well, how is that to be determined ? Certainly not by color of the skin, nor the texture of the hair, tor all the shades of color to be found on the globe are found to exist among the eight or ten millions of colored people in this coun¬ try, and each of the shades, from coal black to snow white, is classed as belonging to the colored race. And I also assert that there is not a form of the human hair that is not found among us here in America, from the close criso to the curly and wavy and from that to the straight black, auburn and flaxen, and yet all who weat them are classed colored and there is no trouble about it, either. The nation, the state, and society know just where to place them; that is, they are placed among the colored race, no matter how straight, how auburn, or flaxen the hair; they are classed as colored. Nol because of any one color among them, nor the texture of the hair, shape of the skull, or structure of the body 78 The nations but because of the diversity of colors and shades, yes, and for that reason, and that reason alone. And they are properly called colored people. No other name would so truly designate them except the term Hamite, and that is not sufficiently familiar for ready local use, but is the proper universal ethnic term, for it will des¬ ignate all branches of the race from the days of Noah to the present time; no matter in what country found, or to what stem they adhere, they can rightly be called Hamites. Objections are sometimes raised by mem¬ bers of our race to being called colored, for the reason I heard one say in a public meeting, that he was not colored, but was born as he was." His hair was au¬ burn and his color the shade of those who are known as white, but his mother, I am told, was quite black. Now, where did he get his shade of color ? There must cer¬ tainly have been some coloring done somewhere, or how did he get his shade so different from that of his mother ? The word "colored" is grandly appropriate for a local name, for no matter what the hue of the face, that word comprehends it completely; but the word "Ne¬ gro" is offensively inappropriate, unmeaning and out of place. It is inappropriate because it in no sense fills the function assigned it, namely, the designation of the colored race. It does not describe the race, because it was not made or originated with that view. And if it had been, it could not do it, because the etymology of the word itself bars the possibility. It is said to be from the Latin niger. Weil, let us admit that although there are those who hold it to be derived from the French word negre, and that from negre, "Nigger" is the proper name by which the race should be called. But to this the whole race, with one consent, object, and rightly, too. But it has just as much mean¬ ing and is just as appropriate as "Negro." Yes, one means about as much as the other, and that is, they both mean black. Certainly all will agree that is what the Latin word niger means. How then does that word from a new point of view. 79 describe a race of people whose shades of color are probably from five to ten in number? And even if it meant brown cr dark brown, then) how does that cover it still ? The fact is, niger is a conventional term, and not an ethnic one, and so does not refer to races of any kind, but to a color, or to the color of anything that is black; not to the thing itself as such, but to the color of it. That is, I mean, it does not in any sense refer to the character, nature or qualities of a person cr thing. How, then, can the word niger be adequate to designate the so-called historical "Negro," for he, the "Negro," is described as differentiated by the following peculiar characteristics. He is depicted in Encyclopae¬ dia Britannica by Prof. A. H. Keane in these words: "Negro (Spanish, from Latin Niger, black) in anthro¬ pology designates the distinctly dark as opposed to the fair, yellow and brown varieties of mankind. .. .By the nearly unanimous consent of anthropologists this type occupies at the same time the lowest position in the evo¬ lutionary scale, thus affording the best material for the comparative study of the highest anthropoids and the human soecies. The chief points in which the Negro either approaches the Quadrnmana, or differs miost from his own congeners are:—(i) the abnormal length of the arm, which in the erect position sometimes reaches the knee-pan, and which on average exceeds that of the Caucasian by about two inches; (2) the pro¬ jection of the jaws; (3) weight of brain, as indicating cranial capacity, 35 ounces (highest gorilla 20, average European, 45) ; (4) full black eye, with black iris and yellowish sclerotic coat, a very marked feature; (5) short, flat snub nose, deeply depressed at the base or frontal suture, broad at extremity, with dilated nostrils and concave edge; (6) thick, protruding lips, plainly showing the inner red surface; (7) high and prom¬ inent cheek bones; (8) exceedingly thick cranium, en¬ abling the negro to butt with the head and resist blows 80 THE NATIONS which would inevitably break any ordinary European's skull; (9) correspondingly weak lower limbs, terminat¬ ing" in a broad, flat foot, with low instep, divergent and somewhat prehensile great toe, and heel projecting backwards ("lark heel"); C10) complexion deep brown, or blackish, and in some cases even distinctly black, due not to any special pigment, as is often sup¬ posed, but merely to the greater abundance of the col¬ oring matter in the Malpighian mucous membrance be¬ tween the inner or true, and the epidermis or scarf skin; (li) short, black hair, eccentrically elliptical or almost flat in section, and distinctly woolly, not merely frizzly, as Pritchard supposed on insufficient evidence; (12) thick epidermis (skin), cool, soft and velvety to the touch mostly hairless, and emitting a peculiar rancid odour; (13) frame of medium height, thrown somewhat out of the perpendicular by the shape of the pelvis, the spine and the projection of the head, and the anatomical structure; (14) the cranial sutures which close much earlier in theNegro than in other races. To this premature ossification of the skull, preventing all further development of the brain, many pathologists have attributed the inherent inferiority which is even more marked than the physical differences." The above description is brought down as the stand¬ ard characteristics of the "Negro" to so late a date as 1888, and so to the present. Yes, this is "the white man's so-called scientific definition of his "scientific Ne¬ gro race!" Now, what any self-respecting colored man, with a great and noble Hamitic origin and de¬ scent can be thinking about when he is proud of the name "Negro" while he is being thus characterized, I confess with sadness I cannot tell; and, yes, I am more than ashamed when I see some of the race whose shade of color haopens to be a little different than that given in this table, willing to accept the description as true and correct of their forefathers or ancestry. The table from a new point of view. 81 lwe given makes us all their offspring, and if they have no intelligence, business capacity and honorable histor¬ ical record, where do anv of us get ours ? For it is aimed in this to show that the branches are like the parent stock and have been in all ages. Can any one read the table of comparison just noted without feeling a deep, silent contempt for the man who wrote it, and for a company who" would publish such to the world as the standard bv which a race is to be remembered and judged? To call such bosh as that scientific is a travestv on science. For a thing to be scientific, it must be in accordance with truth, for sci¬ ence is ascertained truth, and not the white man's cul¬ tivated prejudice and race hate. But let us examine a little more closely that wonderfully much-used, and still more abused "scientific" term "Negro," for it is made the genus of the characteristics of the so-called "Ne¬ gro," since it is said to be a common character, agree¬ ing with his other characteristics, noted in the table of comparisons. Now, in what sense is there any agreement between the term "Negro" and the several special peculiar characteristics he is said in that table to have. And if there is not that agreement, where does the science come in ? And how can the table of comparison be a scientific one? It must be kept in mind that the term niger from which "Negro" is derived is a Latin adjec¬ tive, and of conventional origin, and not ethnical, and so not racial, but general in application, and can there¬ fore as well mean a black horse, sheep, fowl or bird as man. So, then, the only proper and logical conclusion that can be reached is that a "negro" horse, because he is "negro" is inferior io a white one simply and only because the first is "negro" or black, and the latter white. The truth is, the whole table of differences will have to be ruled out as non-scientific, because the term "Negro" fails to point out anything that shows the black 82 THE} NATIONS. man to be in any sense different from the white man, save in the color of his skin; for no ethnologist will contend for a moment that the word "Negro" shows that his, the ''Negro's," arms reach to the kneepan, and that they are "about two inches longer than those of the Caucasiannor does it in any way show a differ¬ ence in the set of his jaws to that of other men. CHAPTER III. AFRICA : AS IT IS, AND AS IT HAS BEEN. The name Africa is of uncertain origin, but it is thought to be of Roman origin. The proper and origin¬ al name for Africa is the "Land of Ham," because it was named after Ham, the second son of Noah; and the Bible calls it, in more than one place, the "Land of Ham." (See that Book for reference.) Africa is one of the main and largest divisions of earth, being nearly one-fourth of the surface of the globe, and is inhab¬ ited by nearly one-fourth of the people of the earth. Africa occupies the most prominent place with refer¬ ence to the solar system, of any country on the earth, for it is the center of the globe. Yes, the center of the world; and the proof of this is that the equator passes clear through it from East to West. Hence, if you wanted to cut this world into two globes, or in half, you would have to go to the Continent of Africa to per¬ form the act. Is Africa, then, the least of all the conti¬ nents as geographers and other writers and historians tell us it is ? Are they honest and truthful ? Africa is a world within itself, being a continent 5,000 miles long, and 4,000 miles wide, with nearly or quite 300,000,000 of people to live in it, cultivate its scil, and enjoy its many and abundant products; for its soil and climate produce every variety of vegetation that is known to earth, and it has every climate of the four quarters of the globe shut up within her bounds, from a cold North with its snow-capped and icy mountains, down through a temperate region, to a more 84 THE NATIONS torrid—to a hot, burning South. A glorious country, this! Africa has in all ages of the past, and does at the present time, stand to the other parts of the world as the fountain and source of light and knowledge; for the prominent men among the ancients did not con¬ sider their education complete without it was finished up in Africa. "I shall give a number of examples to show the truthfulness of this assertion, and the various exploration and excavation societies now at work in the different parts of Africa unearthing its stores of buried and hidden knowledge, is sufficient proof that Africa is the fountain of light for the present age, because the knowledge being now dug up, which has been buried for thousands of years, is now throwing a flood of light on the history of all the ages of the past. Yes, it is bringing into the light of a noonday sun things that have been in the past, and to the present age, dark, hidden, unknown; but now they are made clear and plain, for Africa, as of old, is still teaching the world knowledge. If proof of this is sought, go to the musuems and libraries of the world, and ask them to show you the wisdom and knowledge that has been Africa's for thousands upon thousands of years, and you will stand abashed in wonder and with awe, as cnOINT OF VIEW. 85 of this special Egyptian literature as the "Book of the Dead,'" as it is said, because it speaks of the dead, and the state of the soul hereafter. But this is very mis¬ leading, for it circumscribes the work, and makes it ap¬ pear that it is simply a book in Which the Egyptian deaths were recorded; whereas the wxork consists of large numbers of books, and, indeed, a whole library containing their moral and religious laws, and their rules of life and practice for more than 5,000 years. No\V, to call such a work simply the "Book of the Dead," I say again, is a great iniustice, and especially when the Egyptians themselves, have the title alreadv written on its pages. You will see by reference to the article that'follows, that the title of the work is "The Manifestation of Light." Yes, and this fact sustains whet I have.just been saying about the light of Africa. "The Book of the Dead," is the most ancient, and the most important of the religious texts which have come down to the present day, as regards the extent and va¬ riety of information that it affords. "This celebrated Egyptian theological work, and the oldest book work in the world, is a group of hermetic books, which has been called the 'Funeral Ritual, or Book of the Dead,' and was. considered by the Egyp¬ tians as an inspired work, and for over 5,000 years its prayers and hymns and litanies were in use. Some chapters of the book declare that they were written by God himself, and that they reveal His will and the divine mysteries to man. "The Egyptian title was 'The Manifestation of Light," or, in other words, the Book Revealing Light to the Soul. The book was destined to instruct the soul in that which would befall it after death, and its con¬ tents informed the reader what he would have to pass through, and their efficacy secured him against the dangers feared and assured to him blessings desired 86 The nations "The 'Book of the Dead' gives us the completest ac¬ count of primitive belief. We learn from this remark¬ able book, that the standard of morality with the an¬ cient Egyptians -was very high. 'Not one of the Chris¬ tian virtues,' writes Chabas, 'is forgotten in the Egyp¬ tian code: piety, charity, gentleness, self-command in word and action, chastity, the protection of the weak, benevolence toward the needy, deference to superiors, respect for property in its minutest details,' etc. It shows that thousands of years before Christ, the Egyptians held lofty conceptions of the Deity; that they believed in one God, self-existent and omnipotent, and that their moral ideas were of t3ie purest and best." I quote as further proof that Africa is still enlight¬ ening the world on things not only that pertain to this world, but on that also which is t;o come, because the quotation which I shall make will show that the inhab¬ itants of Africa-believed in the immortality of the soul, and the resurrection of the dead, not only before the days of the Children of Israel and Moses, but long be¬ fore Abraham, their father, was born. The author from whom I now quote, is still calling the Egyptian book of revelation, the "Book of the Dead," thus still making and perpetuating an erroneous impression and giving a false idea of what this great Egyptian religious and literary work really is; for as it will be seen, they, themselves, call it the "Manifestation of Light," or, in other words the "Revelation of Light,'* because the word "manifestation" means "revelation" and so it might well be called the Egyptian Bible, or sacred book, ■—but the "Bock of the Dead," never, because such a name is unmeaning, as to the true char?~ter of the work. I may say just here that the foregoing is a good il¬ lustration of the white man's history-making still, for it is a settled fact that nothing that pertains to the FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 87 Hamite can come under liis noticf and escape the bane and Has of his malignant rp"e prejrHice and pride. Another peculiar characteristic of the white histo¬ rian is the readiness with which he, in his blindness and ignorance as to the facts in any given case, falls into error as to the truth of said facts, and his slowness to make proper corrections when the truth is made known to him. For instance, here is a case that will illustrate the false practice of styling all time prior to Herodotus as prehistoric, or before history-making be¬ gan, when at the same time it has been shown by many infallible proofs, even by Herodotus himself, that the greater part of his history was written from data col¬ lected from African documents that were stored in the archives of Egypt, and that many of them were writ¬ ten over 5,°oo years before Herodotus himself was born, and that the Egyptians, Abyssinians and Assyri¬ ans all had written historical works for thousands of years before Herodotus' day. Yes, you may touch any part of the history of mankind that l as been written by the white man, and it will be found to be largely false. But let me here make the quotation I spoke of above. It is from a report made by the President of the "Bibli¬ cal Archaeological Society" of the British Museum. The President read before the body a translation of the sixty-fourth chapter'-of that Egyptian work known by them as the "Manifestation of Light," but here falsely called the "Book of the Dead " 'The Book of the Dead' is the title generally used for a collection of religious treatises which have been recovered amidst Egyptian antiquities. This one is profoundly interesting from its immense antiquity. As early as the eleventh dvnasty—that is to say, at a date prior to the times of the patriarchs—it was known as an ancient book. A rubric tells us 'This chapter was discovered at Hermopolis upon a slab of alabaster in- 88 THU NATIONS scribed in blue at the time of King Menkara by the royal prince, Hortalaf, when he was journeying for the purpose of inspecting the temples, and he carried off the slab in the royal chariot when he saw what was on it.' The rubric of another copy tells, 'This chapter was discovered on a plinth of the god of the Hemm- bark, by a master builder of the wall in the time of King Septa, the victorious.' No other composition claims a remoter antiquity. Here then/is a religious treatise coming to us from the earliest ages of history. "The rubrics show the work to be very remarkable. In the Turin papyrus it is headed 'Chapter of going out by days, sole chapter.' Another papyrus heads it 'Knowledge of going out by day in a single chapter/ indicating that this contains the complete knowledge required by the spirit at the day of resurrection. This is confirmed by the statements of later texts, and by a note at the conclusion, which runs, ~To be said on com¬ ing forth by day, that one may not be kept back on the path of the Gnat (or Hades), whether on entering or cn coming forth; for taking all the forms which one desireth and the soul of the person die not a second time. If, then, this chapter be known, the person is made triumphant upon earth (and in' the Netherworld), and he performeth all things which are done by the liv¬ ing.' No wonder another note asserts that he who re¬ cites this must be sanctified and pure. "The value of such a record as this in our inquiries with the history of religious thought cannot but be great. Examining these statements in connection with others in the treatise, we found that long anterior to the age of Moses there was a belief in the resurrection after death. And further, that this belief was a ground of very anxious inquiry. And, again, that there was a, peril of not rising to a state of blessedness which was spoken of as 'coming forth by day;' and yet, again, that there was a danger of a second death. And, still more FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 89 remarkable, that the method of salvation was by the use of an inspired written revelation. Thus 'Salvation by faith' is one of the oldest known religious ideas." Here I quote again, to show that the white man has at last been made to admit, and to submit, proof that both Greek and Roman art and literature—yes, and that of all Europe an'd America at the present day— is of African origin; yes, the original production of the Hamites. The article is from "Biblia" again, and the title is: "The Lotus, in Egyptian and Greek Art." The Lotus, the beautiful lily of the Nile, is one of the most characteristic forms of Egyptian ornament. The columns of the temples have originally their capitals in the form of the lotus bud, or of the fully expanded flower, and we find the same beautiful symbol again in the pottery, jewelry, and, in fact, everything suscep¬ tible of decoration. The Egyptians fully felt the beauty of natural forms, yet they gave us but little beyond the lotus, the papyrus or the palm. There is but little doubt but that the stem of the lotus, with its open flower at the top, was the prototype of the Egyptian column, and that the Greeks borrowed the Doric from Egypt, where it was known for more than a thousand years before its introduction into Greece, as proved by the monu¬ ments of Beni Hassan. At Karnac is an example of a granite pillar on which is carved in relief a column having a trefoil lotus capital with incipient Ionic vol¬ utes. This is the only Egvptian example in actual ar¬ chitecture of an Egyptian Ionic form, for the reason that in Egyptian use the form was confined to capitals of wood, and these have all disappeared. Prisse d'.Avcnnes, in 1879, brought forward proofs that such capitals of wood once existed, from the tomb paintings. Prof. Goodyear has shown in his "Gram¬ mar of the Lotus" that this plant presents itself in nu¬ merous modifications throughout every varieiv of art products in Egypt—reliefs, wood-carvings, amulets, 90 THE NATIONS frescoes, terra cottas, etc., and also that tlie lotus mi¬ grated from Egypt in every direction as an inspiration and pattern of beauty in Phoenician, Cypriote, Rhodian, Melian, Mysenaen; in fact, every style, school or de¬ velopment of Greek art. Mariette contended, however, that the bell-shaped capital was freely copied from the plume of the papy¬ rus plant, -and Perrot and Chipieg contend that the lo¬ tus has no more right than the papyrus to be considered the unique origin, of the various decorative forms. Many other .writers have claimed that the cyperus plant, out of which papyrus was manufactured, was frequently copied in the architectural columns of Egypt ahd in. decoration throughout Egyptian art. In tlie Architectural Record for March, Prof. Good¬ year has a well-written article on "The Lotiform Ori¬ gin of the Greek Anthemion," with upwards of one hundred illustrations, in which he shows in the matter of the Ionic column, certain significant indications drawn from Egyptian examples. Great importance is given to the character of the sepals of the lotus, and the writer shows that the successive conventional steps eliminated in the petals (in some cases) until the skele¬ ton form of the three sepals alone survived. This is the origin of the lotus trefoil, which is so common in' Egyp¬ tian art; in the Greek art derived from it; in the Byz¬ antine art derived from the Greek, and in the Arab de¬ signs derived from the Byzantine. It is also the form from which the conventional "fleur-de-lis" is derived. Prof. Goodyear has made it plain that the trefoil capitals of the tomb paintings are lotuses, and conse¬ quently that the volutes of the trefoils are volutes of the sepals—a point made especially clear by an amulet in the Louvre and by a tombstone from Cyprus, which he illustrates. Prof. Goodyear positively asserts that that the lotus of Egypt did have, among other forms, FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 91 an Ionic or volute form, and that this Ionic form di)PHATH a°d To UUllicl j garmah 3 [families. No Families. No Families. [ Elishah, Tar- ■tflvfln' shish< kittim, JdlfdIi)and Dodanim— (4 fatnil llies. Tubal { No Families, ttesherii |no Families. Tiras{ No Families. f SONS and GRANDSONS. [Seba. Havilah, plkll' sabtah' kaamah, UUollj n i m r o d. sabte- [chah—7 families. Mizraim Ham-i Ludim, Anamim, Lehabim, Naphtuhim, pathri;sim, Casluhim, 'out of whom came Philistrin,) and Caphtohim—7 families. Phut j No Families. 11 families includ ing Sikon and Huth ; and the Jebusite, and the _ Amorite.and the Canaan Girgasite, and 1 the Hivite, and the Arkite, and the Linite, and I tlie Arvadite.and the Zemarite.and I the Hamathite." Sbem SONS and GRANDSONS. Elamj No Families. AsshuH No Families. ( Salah and •j EBER 2 ( Families. Lud ■5 No Families. Uz. Hul, Geth- Aram \ ER and Mash— 4 familes. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 97 We are to do this, because in the Book, Egypt is called the "Land of Ham." I will here quote the pas¬ sages in full, in which Egypt is called the "Land of Ham." Psalms 105th and 106th; "Israel also came- into Egypt, and Jacob sojourned in the land df Ham." "They forgot God their Saviour, which had done great things m Egpyt; Wondrous things in the land of Ham." Now I have gone to the Book, and the only Book that contains an original, historical account of the line of descent of the nations; and that Book says that Egypt belonged to Ham. Then, if Egypt belonged to Ham, it, for that reason, belonged also to his sons who dwelt there; and all of his sons bore the relation of brothers to each other, just as sons of the same father do to-day. And all historians, I think, without a sin¬ gle exception, agree that Mizraim, the second son of Ham, settled and reigned over Egypt as its first king. And Cush, Mizraim, and Phut were the only sons of Ham that went into Africa to settle, for Canaan never went to Africa, but went and settled another country, and called it Canaan, after himself. And Phut went to Africa, but he did not have any offspring; so the two sons of Ham who are known to have had any part in the settlement of Africa, are Cush, the oldest son of Ham, and Mizraim, the second son of Ham. I repeat that it is agreed on all hands, and by ail writers, that Mizraim settled Egypt, and Cush, the old¬ est son, settled Ethiopia and other parts of Africa; and Cush is brother to Mizraim, who settled Egypt. How, then, could the ancient Egyptians be anything else than the same people as the rest of Africa. I say they are, beyond a doubt, one and the same, for, as i have shown, there is no ground for doubt. Yet, I am aware that there has been any number of arguments advanced to prove that the Egyptians were a different race from the rest of Africa; but this I have shown to be impos- 98 THE NATIONS sible, for they were the children of two brothers, namely Cush and Mizraim, the first and second sons of Ham. I have said that it is agreed on all hands, that Miz¬ raim settled Egypt, but the Bible history of the matter does not say so, foir the first history we have of the matter, after it is called the "land of Ham," is, that the Ethiopians are the ones that are found there, and if the Ethiopians settled Egypt also, then we do not have even a brother to come in between the Egyptians and the other inhabitants of Africa, because if Cush settled both Ethiopia and Egypt, why, they are to all intents and purposes the same people in a clearer light still. The argument that is now being advanced that there were physical differences in the appearances of the Ethiopians and Egyptians, I simply want to say, does not prove anything whatever as to the race descent of a people. It simply shows that in the course of time there has been an intermixture among them, just as does the difference in make-up of the colored people in this caiimry to-day and others show the same thing. I want to say right here that the thing for us to do in dealing with this all-important question of proper race descent and relation of the Egyptians to the rest of the inhabitants of Africa and all other historical matter and information that, concerns the history of our race in all ages and countries of the world, is for us to continue to bring in question the white man's use of words and terms. Yes, call them in question, so as to have an opportunity to examine into their accuracy, and also whether thev are not foreign to the matter that is being considered, or whether he is not making his words and terms stand for a great deal more than thev really mean and teach. For this is what I consider a great weakness in the white man. He will overdraw, &nd he will overtjo almost everything he lays his hand FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 99 upon to do. Why, the white man can do wonders with one simple word. He can take one word and produce a race of people; yes, with one single word! Take, for example, the word "Caucasian." Now, Blumenbach took this single word and produced out of it his great "Caucasian race." But not only so, but so great, mighty and wonderful is the white man when he comes to the use of words that one of them can take one word and use it to the production of a whole race of people, and then another one can take another different word altogether, and one that means something else en¬ tirely, and make this other new word produce the same people who were already produced by the former word. You say, "Why that is impossible! because if one word has already produced them, how can another word do the same thing?" Well, this w6uld be an im¬ possibility, yes, an utter impossibility with any other race on earth but the white man. This thing he claims to have done. Now. let me prove that he has made such a claim. I have given you Blumenbach's word, "Caucasian,'' out of which he gets the "Caucasian race;" and the other word out of which other white men .get the very same race, is "Arya," from which is produced the Anglo-Saxon race," which is said to> be precisely the same sis the "Caucasian race." Now, the term "Aryan," they tell us, is from "Ar," which, in this sense, means "to go;" and the word "Caucasian" is an adjective, and means anything that pertains to Mount Caucasus, and it does not mean any¬ thing else, onlv as it .is forced to mean other and more than that; and this is just what the white man has done in the person "of Blumenbach, the author of the word. And so the word "aryan" is a verb, derived from "Ar," its root, which means "to go." Now I am sure I have given good reasons why we, 3.S a race, are to watch with great care for the decep- 100 THE NATIONS tiveness of the white man's words and terms. It will also be remembered that I stated in the opening of this chapter, that the white man would make things like he wanted them to be by simple assertion. So let us now prove the assertion. .Just listen to these quotations from Chambers' Encyclopaedia. The first of these quotations will show that the whole theory of the existence of an Aryan race is based upon supposi¬ tion, and the paragraph distinctly says that the views advanced rest solely upon supposing the thing to be so; not that it is, but they suppose it, and that this was done because it could not be explained in any other way. Now read the following paragraph which I here quote: "The researches of philologv have within the present century, established such affinities as can be accounted for1 only by supposing that the nations speaking them had a common origin." Now just listen to another paragraph.. It shows up the fraud and pretence of the greatly learned white man in a worse light still, for here is what it says: "No one of these nations, whether existing, or his¬ torical, can claim to be the parent nation of which the others are colonies. ,The »elation among the languages mentioned, is that of sisters,—daughters of on" moth¬ er, which' perished, as ii were, in: giving them, birth. No monuments of this mother-language have been pre¬ served, nor have we any history (listen, reader) or even traditions of the nation that spoke it. That such a nation of people ever existed and spoke such a tongue is an inference of comparative philology." Only an inference, mind you; not a settled, proven fact, but an inference only, Oh, think of it! that a na¬ tion—and said to be now the greatest nation on the earth—built on an "inference," yes, an "inference," a simple insignificant . thing like an "inference!" But thanks to the facts, yes, solid facts, as recorded on FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 101 monuments, tombs, tablets and parchments in number¬ less instances, the great Hamitic races have the history of the storv told to the ages by these monuments, tablets and parchments, as the foundation of their ori¬ gin, and record in the world as a race of people. So we. the colored race, do not have to resort to that young, yes, that very young and uncertain quantity known as philology, which was just born here in the latter part of the nineteenth century of the world's his¬ tory. Oh, may what I have written inspire some one else to search for the truth and find it, and be profited by it! But let us consider a little further, the subject of the race connection of the Egyptians to the rest of Af¬ rica and the people. The country of Africa is called in Scripture the ''Land of Cush,"as well as Egypt is called the"Land of Ham." Of course the reasoning is that Ham left his country to his oldest son, who was Cush, and it there¬ fore took his name, like it had before gone by the name of Ham, his father. We now want to bring Egypt and Africa together and show them to be one and the same people—not by the supposition, but by the writ¬ ten record made of them; and the people who made it are living to-day, which are the Jews. I here quote Isaiah, and the passages are to show the close connection that existed at that time between Egypt and Ethiopia: "My servant Isaiah walked three years before Egypt and Ethiopia, for a sign unto them. * * * * "And they shall be ashamed and afraid of Egypt their glory. "I will make the land of Egypt utterly waste and desolate from the tower of Syene, even unto the bor¬ ders of Ethiopia." Now, these passages show that the kingdoms and countries of Egypt joined each other. So they are brought together in that respect, that is, in the relation 102 THE NATIONS of cooperation witn each other, which argues to some extent their oneness as a people. Here is another passage in Daniel which strengthens the statement just made. It is this: "But he shall have power over the treasures of gold and of silver, and over all the precious things of Egypt * * * * the Ethiopians shall be at his steps." These passages, as I have said, go to show the close relationship of these two peoples to each other in des¬ tiny, war and danger. But the real and conclusive ev¬ idence of the oneness of the Egyptians and Ethiopians, as to race and descent, is the grand and important fact that they are both the offsprings of the same father, namely, Ham, the second son of Noah; for Cush, the oldest son of Ham, was the progenitor of the Cushites, who are also called Ethiopians; and Mizraim, the fa¬ ther of the Egyptians, was the second son of Ham, therefore making Cush and Mizraim own brothers. How, then, in the name of the Scriptures which record the facts, and in the name of common sense and com¬ mon reason, could the Egyptians and Ethiopians be other than one and the same people? I think I have now settled this vexed question be¬ yond a reasonable doubt, because it is settled according to the facts in the case, and not simply by supposition, assumption and assertion. Yes, it will stay settled for¬ ever in favor of the oneness of the Egyptians and the rest of the original inhabitants of Africa, if we in our history-searching will simply brush aside the white man's cobweb "supposings," and take the original re¬ corded facts and stand by them, hold to them, and teach them and nothing else. Then, again, Africa's historic fame stands out boldly when we recall the fact that the three most noted and far-famed war generals of the world are lying buried in Africa. They are Hannibal, Alexander and Napo¬ leon. Their remains are sleeping in African soil. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 103 I asserted in another part of this chapter that the great men among- the ancients did not consider their education complete until they had traveled and studied in Africa. So let me here give the names of a few of them for an example. The following are their names: Plato, the greatest of Greek philosophers; Herodotus, the preatest of Greek historians, and falsely called the "Father of History;" Menetho, the great Egyptian historian; Polybius, a Greek historian whose works consisted of forty books; Mark Antony, a great Ro¬ man general; Solon,, another Greek philosopher : Philo, the great Jewish historian, etc. Then it was in Africa that Moses, tjhe great lawgivelr, was born, reared and educated. It was in Africa that all of the children of Israel were born and reared, with the exception of seventy who went down with Jacob. It was also in Africa that the first paschal lamb was slain' and the passover of the Jews was instituted and eaten. But I come now to speak of Africa in connec¬ tion with another one of her great cities and kingdoms, namely, Carthage. This mighty city was at one time one of the most far-famed and historical of the earth. Now it is about her connection with Phoenicia and Rome that I want to speak. But let us take Phoenicia first, and show what relationship Carthage may reason¬ ably be supposed to have held to Phoenicia; and then in the same manner, and with the same object in view, turn our attention to Rome—"Old Rome!" Yes, great and mighty Rome!—and let us see if we cannot find the truly reasonable relationship which she,- proud and haughty Rome, bore to Carthage; yes, from her foun¬ dation to the destruction of Carthage by the Romans. The first and.most important, thing I want to do, in this connection, is to put the reader on his guard as to the true nature of the matter with which we have to deal—that is, as to date or facts or our narrative. Because what ought to be facts and what has been 104 THE NATIONS received and brought dow.ti' the. ages as facts about the matter, are nothing but myths and fiction, and so are false and unfit for true history-making. But there are some facts about the matter, and on these we will have to base what we shall have to say on this subject, and so find a reasonable ground upon which to rest our conclusions, for in no case in connec¬ tion with the history given of the origin either of-Rome or Carthage has this been done, but on the contrary, the histories and narratives we have to-day of them rest wholly and entirely on fiction and myth. But it is an established fact, that there were such places as Car¬ thage and Rome established, and it is also a fact that somebody established them. Now then the question is, Who established them? As for Carthage, we are told that the Phoenicians es¬ tablished it; but I do not believe a word of it to be the facts in the case. One of the many, many stories told us for history about the establishment of Carthage is, that a widowed aueen of .the Phoenicians, her husband having been killed by Pygmalion, who was king of Tyre, and brother of Dido, whiph was the name of the queen, who, we are told established the city and king¬ dom of Carthage. It is said she became despondent on account of the cruel death of her husband, and that she also got disgusted with her people and country. Tyre and the Tynans, and started out in search of a kingdom for herself, and that a great storm arose at sea, and she and those who accompanied her, were driven upon the shores of Africa, where she landed and negotiated with the inhabitants for a piece of land on which sh$ might build a citadel. She said she only wanted as much as an ox's hide would compass, so they readily—as the story goes—granted her that for noth¬ ing ; they having no idea of the "caper" she intended to "cut" in the matter. But when the grant was made, she took an ox's liide and made it into small thongs, FROM A NEW POINT OE VIEW. 105 and made it encircle a large tract of land. And it was upon this and at this time, and these are the circum¬ stances under which the City of Carthage was estab¬ lished. And such a story is the kind of history we have, as to how the Phoenicians came to be credited with the establishment of Carthage. That such a nerson as Dido ever lived in Tyre or anywhere else, rests upon the authority of Virgil, as told in his book the -ZEneid, and it will be remem¬ bered and carefully thought of, that the iEneid of Virgil is nothing in the world but an adventurous poetical story of how ^neas, one of the so-called he¬ roes of the so-called city of Troy, escaped after its de¬ struction and made his way into Italy and Latium. The reader can see that as soon as I say that it is a poetical story, that of itself destroys the historical char¬ acter of the narrative, or in other words, shows that it cannot be the real facts as to how Carthage was found¬ ed, because all secular or profane poetry is nothing but the work of imagination of the mind. Of course I make an exception when I come to Bible poetry, be¬ cause that is revealed from God, and is not, there¬ fore, the work of the undirected and unaided mind. But Virgil's story of Dido and Carthage is simply myth of the rankest kind. I have shown that the theory of the establishment of Carthage by the Phoenicians through a woman called Dido is based wholly on the mythical poems of Virgil, and so is no history at all of the matter. Now, what then is the reasonable side of the question? for it is a question; but is-so only because of the great efforts that have been-put forth to give a fictitious origin to the city. The only reasonable view to take of it is, that Carthage was established by native Africans them¬ selves. Then, and then only, do we have an assump¬ tion with some sense about it. But that foolish idiotic lie of some Dido or other, wandering all the way from 106 THE NATIONS Tyre in Phoenicia to build the city, is too childish and unreasonable for an intelligent people to receive and believe for a single moment. And yet, the white man has received and believed it for thousands of years. But, may we ask,Why is it so reasonable to believe that the Africans themselves founded the city and king¬ dom of Carthage? Because city-building is a natural trait of character with all the descendants of Ham, and the Africans are no exception to the fact; for -look at Egypt, Ethiopia, Nubia and all the other great cities that are found in Africa. So why not they be consid¬ ered the builders of Carthage also? Why, the only Y' ason in the way is that the poet Virgil by his imagina¬ tion created a Dido, who, he says, built it. But which skill we take for the truth in the matter ? The side of reason and common sense every time! Put that the Carthaginians had large and frequent intercourse with the Phoenicians seems to be clear be¬ yond a reasonable doubt. But it seems to have been nothing more than commercial and treaty relationships, such as she had with Sicily, Italy, Rome, etc. Why n^ed it be more than that ? And what proof is there that it ever was more, or other than that ? Then, again, there is another thing that goes to show the mythical character of the "Dido" theory of the es¬ tablishment of Carthage. It is that each one of the fol¬ lowing writers gives a different account of the matter: Minander, Eusebius, Appian and Howel. Not one of them agrees with the other about how and when the city was established; so there is, then, this one thing of which I will assure the reader, and that is, you will lose nothing, either in argument or in fact, by taking the view that the Africans themselves were the makers and builders of both t!he city and kingdom of Car¬ thage ; but on the contrary, will have the only proper view of it that is to be had. FROM A NEW POINT Of4 VIEW. 107 We next turn our attention to the relationship which Carthage bore to the settlement of Rome, Italy and La- tium, for they were all one and the same country under these different names, and at different times, and under different circumstances. Rome, which was at first but a very small city, afterwards so. grew and spread as to include the whole province and, indeed, to become the greatest of empires. But what people established it, and how it was done, is the all-important question with which we now want to deal. I want just here to make a quotation from "The World: Historical and Actual," first, to show that Rome, Italy and Latium, included one and the same territory; and secondly, to show that the story told of the settlement of Rome, Italy and La¬ tium is pure fiction, without one spark of true history. The quotation is as follows: "Latium was the old term applied to a region bound¬ ed on the north by the Tiber, east by the Marsi and Samnium, and southwest by the Tyrrhene Sea. Besides Rome, it included Tivoli, Osta, Tusculum and' Alba Longa, the latter being the parent city of Rome. "Of Magna Graecia and the Italian islands known to the Greeks, an account has already been given, and we are now prepared to explain the archives of the Rome of traditional kings. "The story elaborated by Virgil of the founding of what became the Roman state by a band of Trojan ref¬ ugees, may have some- truth in it. There was certainly nothing improbable in the supposition, but it has no place in actual history. The founding of Rome as a city by Romulus and his brother Remus is hardly less poetic and fanciful than the exploits of iEneas; but un¬ til a comparatively recent date it was supposed that a veritable history of Rome existed from the birth of those wolf-suckled twins to the extinguishment of the Western Empire. The truth is, however, that for about one-half of that period the history is legendary. 108 THE NATIONS "The more notable persons and events in Roman his¬ tory have been so creditably investigated that there is hardly the shadow of a shade of real fact left. It is not until we come down to Scioio, midway between the two ends, that we encounter a famous Roman of whose actual life we have historic data. Karly Ro¬ man history has a deep interest, nevertheless, and an inestimable value; for with all its untrustworthiness in detail, it fairly represents the spirit of early Rome and explains the phenomenal growth of a small town into the most far-reaching empire the world ever saw. It will not be our purpose to point out the probable his¬ tory, in distinction from romance, in the records of those times, for it could not be done with any degree of accuracy, and if done would be unsatisfactory. It is enough to call attention to the general fact at the outset, partly to guard against attaching too much importance to details, and oartly as an explanation of the oroposed disregard of all the details given of that period, except those which possess value in throwing light upon the Roman character. "A pure fiction often has a positive and great im¬ portance in a historical point of view. The story of William Tell, for example, may be, as now claimed, a myth, but it none the less fairly represents the Swiss struggle for liberty. Again, George Washington's 'little hatchet' never cut down a parental cherrv tree, but the story none the less illustrates the truthfulness of 'the Father of his Country.' " "The subject of the iEneid is the settlement of the Trojans in Italy. In the 'Iliad' iEneas is one of the minor heroes of Troy, and Virgil represents him as escaping with great difficulty from that city at the time of the great conflagration, leading a small colony of refugees to Italy. Their journey there was an eventful one. The story of his stay at Carthage and the passion of Queen Dido, the device by which he escaped, and FROM A NEW POINtf Off VIEW. 109 her tragic end, are familiar to these at all familiar with classic legends. He catered to the national prejudice representing the Queen of Carthage as jilted by the hero to whom it was pretended the descent of the Em¬ peror Augustus could be traced. The story has no his¬ torical foundation beyond the probability that some fugitives from' Iroy may have found their way to It¬ aly and formed part of the stock of the Roma poeple." The above-quoted writer says the story of Romulus and Remus being nursed by the wolf teaches us what was the character of the Romans at that time. I do not see how it does unless it points to what would likely be their future wolfish character. But my object in using the quotation is to show that the story of the set¬ tlement of Rome and Italy is not in any sense history, but simply a poetical myth, and does not prove anything as to who, how or When either Rome or Italy was founded. And as to the story of George Washington, the little hatchet and cherry tree—instead of it teaching, us of the truthfulness of the "Father of his Country,"' it can and may serve to teach an entirely different les¬ son, and that is instead of his being so truthful, he may have been very untruthful, and somebody may have charged him with it at some public meeting or cam¬ paign gathering, and some one may have told the story of the little hatchet and the cherry tree as his recollec¬ tion of the boyhood days of Washington. Why , I can in my imagination now seem to hear that old campaign war horse as he mounts the political stump ve, was set up in the land of Shinar, and that Nimrod was its king. He tells us also that this was only the beginning of his kingdom; so here in Shinar began the power of ruling among the Hamites, and they spread almost all over the then known world, as governors, kings and rulers of the earth; for instance, Nimrod and Cush, first in Shinar and then in Arabia; and Mizraim in Egypt: and out of his seed came the Philistines; there- J (US) 116 THE NATIONS fore the great giant Goliath, of Gath, was a Hamite, and also all that great Philistine host. Then Phut, the third son of Ham, went to Africa, and there settled the country called Libya; and Canaan, the youngest son of Ham, settled the land of Canaan, and was the father and progenitor of the Canaanites, and all those "rites," "vites" and "ites," that multiplied and spread abroad, as it were, over all the face of the earth. Canaan was also the father of the Phoenicians, of whom Cadmus was one, and he taught the Greeks to read and write. He was also founder of the city of Thebes. It is sometimes made a question in history, whether the Phoenicians taught the Egyptians letters or the Egyptians taught the Phoenicians ; but to us as a race question that makes no difference, as both the Phoeni¬ cians and Egyptians were of the descendants of Ham— the Egyptians, through Mizraim, the second son of Ham: the Phoenicians, through Canaan, the fourth son of Ham. They were therefore both Hamitic people; so the Greeks got their letters from a Hamite, whether Phoenician or Egyptian, and the Hamites not only taught the Greeks their letters, but the present govern- in^ and prevailing mother languages of the earth are Hamitic in their origin. I say they are Hamitic in their origin, and not Shemitic, as is most universally held, and one of my first proofs of that fact is the posi¬ tions that the different races occupied after the flood. No historian, who is a standard author of to-day, de¬ nies that the first kingdom the world ever knew was that one that was set up in the land of Shinar; and no one will deny that Nimrod was the founder of it, and was also its first king; and that he was a Hamite is not denied by any. Now, these statements being true, and no one deny¬ ing their truthfulness, what other legitimate and logi¬ cal conclusion can be reached than that Nimrod and FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 117 his coadjutors and descendants made and formu¬ lated the language that governed the people of his kingdom; and to suppose anything else is unreason¬ able, for it is an unalterable fact that the race of people that first :'ett1e and civilize a country also give to it its language, and in the case under consideration there can be no exception to the rule. And that the different branches of civilization were for more than a thousand years developed along the line of Ham, no one can prove to the contrary. One of the mother tongues is known to be what is wrongly and unjustly called the "Hebrew"—unjust¬ ly so-called, because it is properly of Canaanitish ori¬ gin, and to call it Hebrew is to rob the Canaanites of the honor properly due them of being the rightful orig¬ inators of one of the principal languages of the earth; and to rob the Canaanites of this honor is to rob the Hamites, and to rob the Hamites is to rob the colored race of the same honor, because the colored race is descended from Ham. My first proof that what is now called Hebrew "is a Canaanitish language, is to be found in the Bible it¬ self: Isaiah calls it the "language of Canaan" (see chap. 19, verse 18). Again, the language of the He¬ brews was in its chief feature identical with that of the Canaanites, and this came about by the Hebrews learning the language of the Canaanites, and to sup¬ pose anything else is unreasonable, because Abraham, who was by the Canaanites called the Hebrew, must have given the name to his descendants (see Gen. 14: 13) ; and this is the first time that the word Hebrew is used as .a name for Abraham, and it is now used by a Canaanite, and not by Abraham himself or any of his family; therefore, we argue that the very word He¬ brew is a Canaanitish word. And again, it is not rea¬ sonable to suppose that Abraham, who was only an immigrant into Canaan, which was at that time ad- 118 THE NATIONS vanced to a very high state of civilization, should change the language of the people who had dwelt there for ages into that of his own, any more than it would be to suppose that a French or a Dutch colony coming into this country at this late date could change the language we now speak to that of their own. An¬ other strong vproof that the Jews learned and spoke the language!of Canaan is to be seen in the fact that the term "Hebrew language" is not seen in the Old Testament at all, and neither Abraham nor Moses nor any of the Old Testament writers spoke of the lan¬ guage they used as being Hebrew. The Greek was also Hamitic, because this language was taught the Greeks by Cadmus, who was a Hamite, being, as he was, a descendant of Canaan, and Canaan was the fourth son of Ham. The basis of Latin language is also of Hamitic ori¬ gin, because the Greek is the basis of the Latin, and they depend the one upon the other, on into the French, German, Saxon, English; but all, all derived from a Hamitic root, which was first planted in the land of Shinar, under Nimrod, the first king of the world, who was the grandson of Ham. Yes, the Hamite has ever been active. He founded the first government, built cities, established king¬ doms, built the first monument and pyramids, and reared the first temples to the gods that men served. So not only did civilization develop along the line of Ham, but religion, and the religion of the true God at that. This I draw from where it is first found, and it is first found in its most advanced stages,where ? Show¬ ing itself along the line of Shem ? Not at all; but along the line of Ham; for you look in vain in the word of God for signs of the worship of the one only true God among the descendants of Shem or himself until the days of Abraham, and in his days the worship of the true God had dwelt so long with the descendants of FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 119 Ham that it had become corrupt among them, and Abraham was raised up for the express purpose of its re-establishment; and so God called him out of the midst of idolatry, and sent him into the land of Canaan, to re-establish by him the worship of the true God that had then become corrupt with Ham. I repeat, that Abraham was raised up to become the new custodian of true religion; and thus, when the Hamite failed to serve God aright, He took away the privilege, and gave it to the Shemites or Jews; and when they failed to serve him aright, he took it away from the Jews, and gave it to the Japhethites, or what is known as the Gentiles. Now, let us prove that the worship of the true God was first with the posterity of Ham: You have only to ask where it is found in its purest form, and the an¬ swer will be: in the land of Canaan, and Melchisedek is found to be in possession of it,, for he is priest of the Most High God, and I might say here that Melchis¬ edek is the first to apply that title; others worshipped God as a god; and Melchisedek was a Canaanite, and the Canaanites were Hamites, and Melchisedek was God's first high priest; and so pure had he preserved the word of God, that Abraham sacrifices to him, and he is also the similitude after which the Son of God is made. Then it was not only after Adam Christ was formed, but also after the order of Melchisedek, that is, in his priesthood; and Melchisedek was a Canaanite; and the Canaanites were Hamites; therefore Christ was made a priest after the order of a descendant of Ham. If T am asked, Were not the posterity of Ham cursed in the person of Canaan, thereby causing the past and present degradation of the race of Ham? in the first place, I would say that I do not see that the race of Ham, as such, has ever had, nor has it now, a degra¬ dation. There are individual persons of the race, who have in different ages of the world, as there are in all 120 THE NATIONS other races, been mistreated and dragged down to a very low level; but the race, as such, never. I should be more than glad to have any one liv¬ ing point out to me in what the degradation of the race of Ham has ever, in any stage of the world's history, consisted. Was it, and is it to be found in the words of Noa£, "Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren?" In what sense, I would like to know, could this curse of Noah on Ca¬ naan have any application to Cush, Mizraim and Phut, the three older sons of Ham? You will remember it was not Ham himself, nor either of the other three of his sons who was cursed, but Canaan only. Now, I ask therefore, could the curse of Noah have fallen upon the whole race of Ham when only one-fourth part of that great and world-renowned race had received a curse, namely, Canaan ? And then, again, if Noah had intended the curse for the whole posterity of Ham, would he not have begun with Ham himself, so that the curse might pass from father to son, down through the third and fourth generations ? But here the curse is at the last end of Ham's posterity, ana to say that this is the curse of the race is like saying that a man who wishes to destroy a tree cuts off one of the last branches instead of cutting the root; for Canaan was the last branch in the Hamitic family, being the young¬ est son. Now, inasmuch as we see it to be unreasonable to suppose that Noah meant the curse to apply to all of the family of Ham, let us then notice the curse itself as it rested upon Canaan: What is it ? It is an assign¬ ment of Canaan to the servitude of Shem and Ja- phexh. Now, Canaan may have served both Shem and Japheth during their lifetime, but if he did do so, it does not appear, either in sacred or profane history, and not only is there no Scripture bearing directly on its fulfillment, but there is not even a passage that J FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 121 can find that has the remotest reference to its fulfill¬ ment ; and not only is there no proof of Canaan having ever served Shem and Japheth as an individual, but there is no proof that his descendants served them as slaves. It cannot be said that they of Africa did so, for the Africans are not the descendants of Canaan, but of Cush, the first son of Ham, and they were not cursed; yet Matthew Henry in his Commentary says the curse was fulfilled with the inhabitants of Gibeon, when the children of Israel entered the land of Ca¬ naan. Now, let us see: The Gibeonites were Canaanites, and were therefore a part of the nation which God had commanded Joshua to utterly destroy. What I want Mr. Henry, and others who take, his view of the matter, to do, is to harmonize these two purposes of God: one was, they tell us, to make the Canaanites per¬ petual bondsmen and slaves, because Ham told Shem and Japheth that he had seen his father in the tent in an intoxicated condition; and the other purpose we know to be utter destruction, because God so com¬ manded Moses. I therefore ask, how could God de¬ sign the Canaanites by the curse of Noah to be com¬ manded to perpetual slavery under Shem and Japheth and at the same time design them to be utterly de¬ stroyed from the face of the earth ? And we know that had Joshua done what the Lord commanded him to do, that is, destroy all the Canaanites, there would not have been one on the earth. And again, I do not see how the making of the Gib¬ eonites to hew wood and draw water can be construed into a fulfillment of the perpetual bondage of the Ca¬ naanites to Shem and Taoheth, because the Gibeonites were but a handful of the Canaanites, comparatively sneaking, when there were millions upon millions of the Canaanites, where the Gibeonites were onlv four cities; and indeed, if you .will only take the trouble to exam- 122 THE NATIONS ine the matter a little closely, you will find that the curse was entirely gratuitous on the part of Joshua, he not having inquired of the Lord about the matter. (See Joshua 9:14, 15.) Again, the servitude was partly self-imposed, for the Gibeonites came a day's journey to the camp of Israel, and said to the Israelites: "We will be your Servants,"' preferring service to death, and, indeed, service is to be preferred to idleness, much less death. And then, again, the service itself was honorable, for it was none other than to prepare material for the house and altar of God. And if the servitude was. to be perpetual, it was simply to be perpetually in the serv¬ ice of the Lord; and my daily prayer is: "Lord, give us more and more of this kind of servitude." This was the same kind of service that the Jews them¬ selves had performed from the time that the taber¬ nacle was set up in the camp of Israel, until now. which was for over forty years; so if the same work in and of itself was a disgrace to the Gibeonites, was it not also to the Israelites, who had performed it for forty years? If not, why? Once more I ask, how could the enslavement of the inhabitants of Gibeon be construed into the enslave¬ ment of the whole of the Canaanites, much less the race of Ham, which consisted of four great branches of the human family? And this is the only passage that is ever quoted as a proof of the fulfillment of the curse of Noah, and it has been nearly a thousand years since its utterance, and Noah by his curse con¬ demned one branch of the posterity of Ham to servi¬ tude under Shem and Japheth, and yet the first serv¬ ants we read of are Shemites, and they were Abra¬ ham's. (See Gen. 11:5.) Dr. Gill says the persons spoken of in that passage were Abraham's servants; and not only that, but the very first persons we read of suffering in slavery were from a new point of view. 123 the Shemites, who were four hundred years in bondage under the Hamites in Egypt. You read of others being subdued and conquered in war, before this, but not en¬ slaved. Greek and Roman slavery did not have an existence for many generations after, because the Greeks and Romans did not exist. But it was among them that the most cruel system of slavery, and the most extensive that the world ever knew, was carried on. They were the descendants of Japheth, both the slaves themselves and the enslavers. I repeat that the descendants of Japheth, or the white men, were the verv first to enslave their own brethren; so the race degradation is on the other side, for slavery existed among the Greeks and Romans before the days of Ho¬ mer, and he lived a thousand years before Christ. African slavery—so-called—did not begin for more than a thousand years after Christ; and therefore white slavery is over two thousand years older than black slavery; or in other words, the white race were slaves for more than two thousand years before the colored race (see Chamber's Encyclopaedia, also En¬ cyclopaedia Britannica), and it is among this same peo¬ ple ycu will find all of the cruelties and barbarities that human savagery can invent. And as to the numbers of the colored and white slaves that have existed, I wish to say, right here, that so far as records show, the colored slaves are as nothing in comparsion. Then, if to be enslaved is a degradation—and it is a very great one—which of the races have been the most de¬ graded, I would ask, Shem, Ham or Japheth? But the fact is, that the colored race in this and all other slaveholding countries, have been made to feel that it is the colored race alone that has been enslaved; whereas, they have been so both last and least. I mean to say that the bondage of the white man began first, lasted lonp-er, and that he was enslaved in far greater- numbers than the colored man ever was. 124 THE NATIONS We b^ve been preached to by the white ministers of this country from those passages in Paul's Epistles, where the words "master" ynd "servant" are men¬ tioned. Nearly all the time 4he rule has been to make them apply to us as a people, as though in those pas¬ sages the "master" was white and the "servant" col¬ ored, when the fact is that in every case both "master" and "servant" were white. And that man whom Paul sent back to Philemon, whose name was Onesimus, was also a white slave. Now, while the passage in question would apply to the colored race while in slav¬ ery. a just and fair interpretation of them would have enabled that race to know that they were designed for and written to white men, but could also be made to apply to the colored. I tell you such would have had a sfreat tendency to encourage the race to bear th«nr afflictions and hope for a better day; and it would at the same time have made the white man a fair and truthful interpreter of the Scriptures, for no one knows what a depressing effect the application of the words "a servant of servants shall he be," have had on us as a race, because the white man construed them to mean our perpetual bondage; but we see now that the passage did not mean that, because we are free and arf in bondage to no man; and so, after the same shallow way of reasoning has the white man brought himself to feel his superiority, and the colored man to falsely and foolishly acknowledge his inferiority. This is done, of course, by confounding facts with fiction, and condition with character. There is a vast difference between race conditions and race characteristics, be¬ cause one enters into the state into which the race is brought, and as.to how they got there; and the other enters into the qualities that make up a race, not what is their present and past conditions, but what are they per se and inherently as a people. What are they from a new point of view. 125 capable of being- made? Can they be civilized and chris¬ tianized? Can they be brought to a high state of cul¬ ture and refinement? My answer: Search history and compare facts with facts both past and present, and you have the solution of the problem. I desire to say, at this point, that there is no one thing within my knowledge and to the best of my be¬ lief j_th at is better calculated to lower the colored man in the estimation o£ the white man, than the term "Ne¬ gro," because it is nothing more than an objectionable misnomer; first, because of its origin, in that it is neither ethnographical, ethnological nor anthropolog¬ ical, but is purely conventional in its origin, standing as it does in the Spanish and Portuguese languages as an adjective, and is only a noun by application, and can only be properly applied when the object or objects referred to are black and only black. A brown, gray, blue or white object cannot be designated by the term, because it means black, and only black; therefore, it is a misnomer when designed to designate the colored race, because it can describe only one complexion, and that black, whereas the shades of the race are varied and many; for instance, mulatto, quadroon and octoroon. The word "Negro" does not describe either of these for the simple reason that the term "Negro" means black, and only black. Now you need only consider how many of the race belong to the three classes just named, to see how in¬ appropriate the name is, because so very inadequate to embrace the whole colored race in all lands. The term is not only a misnomer, and therefore ob¬ jectionable,'but it is too recent of origin to have any race honor about it. It is therefore not calculated to inspire race pride in us. Who are the Spanish people? Why, they did not have a national existence until the other day, comparatively speaking. They were the subjects of the Moors in the northern part of Africa, 126 THE NATIONS and they remained in a very mixed and tangled condi¬ tion, subject first to one power and then another, until 1492, only 400 years ago; and again, it was not until the twelfth' century that they had a formulated lan¬ guage of their own, they having all before this time spoken a mixture of languages, composed of African, Arabic, Roman and others. I repeat, that their lan¬ guage, as a distinctive feature of their nationality, is but of yesterday; whereas the colored race in its Hani- itic descent through Phut, the third sen of Ham, can trace itself backito the days of Noah and the ark. But if you do not want to go back so far, let us trace this same Phut into the country now called Africa, and there you will find him founding the country called Libya, the name by which it was called until after the Carthaginian war with the Romans, and the Romans gave the name of Africa to the part that they con¬ quered, which was round about Carthage. But Libya was inhabited by the descendants of Phut, long before the days of Abraham, Moses, Herodotus or Manetho; or in other words, between three and four thousand years ago, and the race in its different branches has had many names, but its great generic term is Hamitic. The best local term, however, for a race name, is "Col¬ ored," because it is sufficiently comprehensive in its definition to embrace the whole race, wherever found and of whatever shading of color. We often hear it said, "Why not be proud of the term 'Negro' as a race name? Are not the English, Scotch, Irish, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Ital¬ ians proud of their national names?" But where do they lead them ? The English to England, the Scotch to Scotland, the Irish to Ireland, the French to France, the Spanish to Spain, the Portuguese to Portugal, the Italian to Italy. But where does the term Negro lead? To whatever is black, whether cat, dog, horse, or what not, just so it is black. Any one can readily see that tfROM A NEW POINT* OF VIEW. 127 the term is not national, as are ffie ones enumerated above, and therefore there is nothing in it of which to be proud. Now, the term "Hamitic" leads one to all the countries where the descendants of Ham have in the past and do at present reside; therefore there is all that we need in the name "Hamitic" of which to be proud, as I have shown in speaking of the Hamite. Why not, then, adopt this as a general race name? Not only does the term "Negro" signify nothing honorable from an etymological point ot view, but it has always been used to degrade our race. And to con¬ firm the truthfulness of this statement, you have only- to read some of the definitions the white man gives of it. Webster says, "It is the Spanish word for black, and is from the Latin word niger, or a descendant of the black race of men in Africaand he says: "The word is never applied to the tawny or olive-colored inhabitant of the northern coast of Africa, but to the more southern race of men who are quite black." This is Webster's definition of the term; he says that the tawny colored race in Africa itself are not covered by it; then how can we, over here, use it with any sense of propriety? Now let us look at Worcester's definition: he says "the word 'Negro' is Italian, Spanish and Portuguese and is from the Latin word niger. That is "one of the black, woolly-headed, flat-nosed and thick Lipped race of men inhabiting Africa." That is what Worces¬ ter has to say about it. Is there anything very race- inspiring in that definition, think you?—and he takes it from the English Encyclopaedia. The American Stand¬ ard Dictionary says it is "a black man of Africa or his descendants." You can turn to Chambers' Encyclo¬ paedia and read his description of the Negro; he says the word "is Spanish, and is the name given to a con¬ siderable branch of the human family, possessing cer¬ tain physical characteristics which distinguish it in 128 THE NATIONS a marked degree from the other branches of varieties of mankind;" he says further: "the true Negro has black skin, thick lips, woolly hair, depressed nose, and is exceedingly small;" again: "the lower part of the face is projecting, like a muzzle, with the skull long and narrow, and a low, retreating forehead. Now, this may be true of the white man's "Negro," but it is not true of the Colored Race, of which we are a very small part. You can also see Blumenbach's Five-fold Division of Mankind; also Pritchard and Latham; and Picker¬ ing on the "Races of Man." I repeat that the term "Negro" when applied to a race is a misnomer, in which there is nothing what¬ ever of which to be proud. There is another thought to which I would like to call attention; and that is the much-boasted superior¬ ity of the—so-called—Caucasian race, for it, like the term "Negro," is purely a misnomer, from the very fact that no such race has ever lived on the globe; and so far as I have been able to find out, there has lived only one man that has tried to establish the fact of the ex¬ istence of such a race, and he has utterly failed. But there are others who have eagerly seized and adopted that theoretical idea, and have built up a wide-spread belief in said theory—for it is only a theory, and a flimsy, weak one, at that. In order to see this, one has but to look, at the theory itself. What is it ? Why, it is nothing more, nor less than an attempt to" establish the superiority of one branch", of the human race over the other, which is an. impossibility, for the reason that God has declared that he has "made of one blood, all nations of men." If all the nations of men are made of one blood, then are all the nations as one man, and we all know that it is an impossibility that the same man be superior or inferior to himself. He certainly can only be equal FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 129 to himself; so the race of mankind being- only one, but existing in different branches, cannot be superior the one branch to the other. Blumenbach, who is the author of the Caucasian race theory, was a German phrenologist, born in 1752, died in 1840; and these dates, so modern as they are, make an additional reason why the claim and the¬ ory of Blumenbach are absurd. The idea of a race who claims a history as -old as the ark of Noah itself, to be proud of just having its race, name and affinity settled here in the very last century in the world's his¬ tory! What were they in all those ages before they became Caucasian? What element of character does the Caucasian theory infuse into this same people that they did not possess before? Further objection may be urged against the exist¬ ence of such a race from the claim that Blumenbach makes, that Mount Caucasus was the radiating point out from which the human family went to repeople the earth, and that the elevating influence of an hab¬ itation round about the mount had the tendency, and did produce that race quality of manhood out of which he forms his great Caucasian race. In the first place, we know according to history and all trustworthy his¬ torians, Caucasus never was a dispersing ix>int of the races of men. We find some of the races of mankind early inhabiting those regions, but as a point from which the earth was peopled, by no means. 'Nor do we .find this or any other mountain to be the place where the evidences of manhood and of character be¬ gan to develop, but rather in the valleys, and along the river banks, such as the Tigris, Euphrates and Nile, and the great Shinar valley, where the first kingdom was formed, and the first king, Nimrod, the grandson of Ham, reigned. Yes, it was here that man began to distinguish himself in the arts and sciences of govern- 9 130 THE NATIONS ment and architecture, by the building of the city and tower of Babel. This is admitted by all. The slenderness of Blumenbach's claim as a basis for his Caucasian race theory forms the ground for further objection to it, whether viewed geographically or ethnologically. Every one knows that Caucasus and its surroundings form but a speck of the habitable part of the earth, and the ethnological basis is still weaker from the fact it rests upon the single skull of a Georgian woman; that is to say, that Blumenbach, in the founding of his great Caucasian race theory, se¬ lected from a number of human skulls he had collected in his travels, one of the many, and just simply de¬ clared that this was the type of the great race he had in his mind; and in his mind it remained, and it has never shown itself to this day. And it will be remembered that this investigation is the work, not of a council of ethnologists and philolo¬ gists, but that of one man; and who knows the faith¬ fulness of his statements? Men generally, when they think that they are right, are glad to know that their work is tested by others. Now, I wish to say, just here, that the strongest and most commendable thing about the whole theory is that is has a woman's skull for a basis. Then the great Caucasian race rests upon a single skull, does it? Slender foundation, indeed! And one can here see the unfairness of Blumenbach's tests; he does not put his tests on a comparative or average basis, but chooses the most beautiful specimen in his collection. Now, who, except on the average system, can tell what the whole of a thing is likely to be? Does not his system rather argue against the superiority which he aims to establish, than for it? For if he has to take the very best skull for his type, in 01- «w /e an average, his scale must go downward: that, at any rate, is the way it appears to me. from a new point of view. 131 Another thing that tends greatly to weaken Blumen- bach's theory of a great Caucasian race, is that the material with which he would construct it has no com¬ mon source of origin, whereas all of the great races of the earth have a common source, and can trace their origin back to a common root; but Blumenbach gets his material from everywhere in general and nowhere in particular; for it includes all of the inhabitants of ancient and modern Europe; the Huns of Asia; the Assyrians, Arabians, Jews, Phoenicians of Asia Minor, and the inhabitants of Caucasus. And he even steps across the line and goes into Africa; there he gets the Egyptians, Abyssinians and Moors. In a word, he claims that whoever has beauty of head a/nd features and symmetry of form in bod.y and limbs, belongs to his great Caucasian race. Then he comes back to Georgia or Caucasus^ after this long ramble and wide range; there he picks up a woman's skull and begins to rear his structure, the future superior race of the world. Now, let us see who were the Georgians as a people, that even their verv name should be considered suffi¬ cient to make all the world besides stand in awe of them. I quote from Chambers' Encyclopaedia: "That the different tribes inhabiting the Caucasus, long believed to be the purest type of the Indo-Eurooean family, are now considered not. to belong to it at all, but to have more affinitv with the Mongolian races. * * * The present Christianity of the nominally Christian tribes is more akin to heathenism than true Christianity. In character they are distinguished for their valor and love of freedom; but cruelty and treachery are also amongst their marked traits. They carry on a little agriculture, but live more by the care of herds and flocks, and by hunting, and they are not averse to rob- 132 THE NATIONS bery. The only manufacture that is carried on by them is that of arms." The foregoing is the description given of the Georgians by Chambers. The Encyclo¬ paedia Britannica, in giving the history of the same says that they were subjected by Alexander the Great, until 324 B. C., and that they afterwards became a province of the Arabs. They were then ruled by the Persians, and they are at the present time in a sub¬ jected state to Russia. Not only so, but as one ex¬ amines into the history of this people, among whom Blumenbach found his ideal skull, from which he ar¬ gues the past and future greatness of his greatly su¬ perior race, he will find the same defects, failures and weaknesses that are found with all other branches of mankind, whether of body or mind, character or con¬ dition ; for, as one reads their sketch, he will see that they have had their times of prosperity and adversity; of peace and war; of freedom and bondage; of eleva¬ tion and degradation; of light and darkness; of learn¬ ing and ignorance; of savagery and civilization; of heathenism and Christianity. And history tells us that at the present day their Christianity is little better than heathenism: so at the very time when Blumenbach's superior people, from, whom he got his type of what he and others are pleased to style the greatest race on earth, should be showing themselves as such, we find them in partial heathenism, without the ability to establish and maintain themselves in a separate gov¬ ernment, but are a subjected province of Russia, whose name is derived from it is not known what: whose real and true history begins, it is not known when; the origin of whose people is from, it is not known where, and whose religion is almost anything and any kind, or, in other words, it is like their origin —it cannot be told what it is. And indeed I would like to know, and I have been trying hard tc find out, in what has this Caucasian type FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 133 of man so distinguished itself that it should be laying claim to such high honors. Was it war? It is true that they did maintain themselves for quite a time against the Russians, but then they had been in sub¬ jection under three governments before that, viz.: the Romans, Persians and Aribians; and as I before said, are now under the Russians. Again, I ask, what were the great distinguishing characteristics of this people that there should be claimed for them so much? Of their architecture it simply- is said in history that there are a few ruins of their former buildings and temples left visible, which only go to show that they had attained some degree of knowledge of the fine arts, but there is nothing mentioned among them as very striking or rare; and we know that whatever of this knowledge they possessed was not original with them, but was de¬ rived—and was derived from the descendants of Ham. Yes, was derived from that dreadfully cursed and doomed race of Ham, because his descendants are fully admitted by scholars of the present day to have been the authors of the arts and sciences of architec¬ ture, sculpture, agriculture and literature, all having their foundation and beginning with Ham, for there is no true historical record of any people preceding them in any of these things. Then even Blumenbach's great Caucasian type derived their civilization and cul¬ ture. what of it they had, from the Hamites. Of ne¬ cessity, then, the ones from whom they got their civil¬ ization were higher up in the scale of improvement than they themselves. But shall I argue from this fact the race superiority of the Hamite to that of the Shem- ite, Japhethite or the" Caucasian? No. not by any means; but simply see that they (the Hamites), were leaders, and pioneers in that which all .of the human family were fully capable according to conditions and circumstances, locations and situations in life, just as 134 THE NATIONS these were favorable or unfavorable; and these are wha'c have been in all ages of the world, and always wid be, the formers and moulders of the life and character of a people. Just as according to the state and condi¬ tion of the soil, so the grain will be; for you may take the very finest of grain, and no matter what average, either in size, quality or quantity, and place it in an un¬ favorable situation, and in poor, barren soil, I defy the man to produce the same results. You observe that the grain in both cases is just the same. No, the fault was not in the grain, but in the conditions in which it was placed,and it would be unfair and unjust to charge the grain in the latter case with inferiority, because it is the same grain, but is planted under different con¬ ditions. What I wish to say is, change the conditions, and the grain will be the same as it formerly was, because the grain of which we speak is from the same seed, and therefore cannot be superior or inferior as to its nature, tut may appear so because of condition? and circumstances; and so it is with the race of man— they are found in different places on the globe, and in different stages of progress, development and im¬ provement, according to the many conditions with which they are surrounded. If they are backward in improvement, change the conditions, and you will have -a changed people in manners, life, customs and appear¬ ances. Allow me, now, to give another reason why the Cau¬ casian race theory is false, and therefore a misname: It is the large number of tribes of the different na¬ tions and peoples that have from the very earliest times dwelt about Caucasus. They seem to have migrated into that region from all parts, until, as we are in¬ formed by historians, the number of different dia¬ lects there spoken ranged from one to three- hundred. So we can readily see" that Blumenbach, in selecting his single female skull, would be as likely to get hofd FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 135 of the head of one woman as another; and Chambers says it was the "skull of a woman." O how bewildered one gets when he sets out to find the true name and real origin of this many-named, world-renowned race; for it is at one time styled the great Indo-European family, and then, again, the great Aryan race. Again you will hear them boasting of their Syro-Arabian origin; and then the great Caucasian claim is made again; but most of all you hear the cry "Anglo-Saxon blood" and "Anglo-Saxon civilization," which was little better than barbarism (see Hume's History of England), and it remained so until the pe¬ riod when the name ceased to be Anglo-Saxon, and became that of England. Then, and not until then, does the true state of civilization begin. And as to the Anglo-Saxon blood idea, it is as if you were to mix up the blood of bulls, goats, wolves, tigers and bears; and as many other different bloods as there are ani¬ mals in the forest, and then call this mixture lamb's blood; you then have the true idea of what is "Anglo- Saxon blood." The term "Anglo-Saxon" is compounded from the names of the Angles and the Saxons, two peoples who migrated into the Island of Britain. Then, in order to learn whether the preceding is an overdrawn picture or not, we have only to ask who the Anglo-Saxons were, and the answer will be that they were made up of the inhabitants of the Island of Britain. And who were these? Why, they were the Moors from Africa, the Arabs of Arabia, the original Britons, the Angles, Picts and Scots, the Saxons or Germans, and many others which time and space fail me to name. So out of these came the Anelo-Saxons—hence the source of the much boasted Anglo-Saxon blood. But the Hamites or the Colored Race claim but one origin, and there is but one claimed for them; and there are some who have at times tried to rule them 136 THE NATIONS. out of that one, because they have endeavored to make them believe that they had no origin at all. But the Hamite is here, and here to stay; and will stand the tests of time, whether Blumenbach's theories of a "great Caucasian race" will, or not. CHAPTER V. the; question of race. If it were not for the fact that I fear there are far tco many of my own race, and a great many more.of the white race, who will take the bold assertion of Mr. Bruce to be historical facts and his propositions, argu¬ ments and conclusions for logical truths, I would not attempt a word in refutation of them. But, knowing as I do that they are conclusions jumped at,, and not reached by proper syllogism, I therefore undertake to show their fallacy in that respect, and also their his¬ torical inaccuracy and unfairness. Indeed, the whole affair is nothing more nor less than a bundle of abuse, slander, vituperation and mis¬ representation, cast and heaped upon a whole race of people by an individual of another race. I repeat, that I would not notice the matter, if it were not for the fact that so many will believe the state¬ ments and arguments of Mr. Bruce to be true; and for that other fact, that he will be lareelv quoted as au¬ thority on the past, present and probable future degra¬ dation of the colored race. Let us notice some of Mr. Bruce's arguments and statements, for they may be seen through at a glance by fair-minded.persons. We are to bear in mind that abuse is not argument; nor is ridicule logic. This is a fact that Mr. Bruce seems to have entirely lost sight of. He has taken his own bold, dogmatic assertions for profound argu¬ ments, and his pitiable and contemptible ridicule of the colored race for irrefutable logic. 138 THE NATIONS Mr. Bruce makes the first ground of his race pre¬ judice to rest upon the physical distinctions that exist between the colored and white races, which, he says, consist of "woolly hair, receding forehead, flat nose, thick lips and protruding iaw," including the "color." This is the description Mr. Bruce gives of the colored race; but he does not stop one minute to notice that the existence of these differences found in the races is not the same thing as proving superiority and inferiority of race. Yet that is just the conclusion to which he has jumped. He simply says that the differences exist, and therefore the white race, he coolly and calmly con¬ cludes, is superior to the colored race. Any fool can readily see that there are many physical differences of appearance in any of the five races that divide the bulk of mankind; but the same fool cannot so readily prove that the simple existence" of these physical distinctions is in any sense proof that the white race is superior to the colored. If Mr. Bruce does not like the race, or, rather, those of the race who are constructed by na¬ ture with different physical characteristics from him¬ self, that only proves a matter of taste and choice with him, and not which is superior or inferior, in race qualities. If I were enough of a philosopher or a scientist, I would declare the white man's color to be a disease, or a strange freak of nature. But not being such, I do not know what is is—whether a disease or a very strange freak of nature. At any rate, it is extra-natural, if not even anti-natural. And I do say most emphatically, that it is an act of nature for which the white man himself cannot account. And I would inform Mr. Bruce that we are beginning seri¬ ously to investigate that matter; for we want to know wbfre the handful of white people that inhabit this globe came from, because thev were not made white at the creation of man, for Sir Henry Rawlinson, one of from a new point of view. 139 the greatest paleologists that ever lived, himself being a white man, says that the word "Adam" means "dark race." So that we have the best of authority for saying that God never created man white, but created him dark: and that the color of the white man is an un¬ known, and probably an unknowable act of nature. No one ever has been able yet to trace the white man's color to its origin. But the dark man's color is traced to his creation. He was made so. And, again, if Mr. Bruce means to take the matter for granted, that the white man is superior to the col¬ ored, because he is to be found in the majority in this country his proposition will prove too much for him, for it will orove all that is needed to constitute superi¬ ority is to be the dominant class, or to be the ruling class, by reason' of majorities. I say, if this is the stand he takes, then he is well aware, as are all of us, that there are large portions of the habitable globe in which the darker portions of the races rule the lighter; for example, in Arabia and India and Africa. What would Mr.: Bruce liave us to conclude from these facts ? Nothing, of course, but that in those countries, and parts of countries, where the darker portions of man¬ kind are in rule, they are, therefore, superior. Very well, then, he will fall very far short of establishing his universal superiority of the whites, for a very large portion of the world is governed and controlled by the darker races. Then, again, he fails to account for his prejudice against the whole race, if the cause of his dislike^ for them is because of the dark color, "the woolly hair, the receding forehead, the thick lips and protruding jaw for not more than one in ten, will anything like meet the above description. I ask again, why does he ex¬ tend his hate and spite to all of the race because of a few specimens in it, which he does not like? Is this humane? Is it manly? Is it intelligent? No, it is 140 THE NATIONS unusual, unreasonable, and discriminating; and, in¬ deed, such a disposition is only found in ^ the lqwer strata of man, and never in the higher and intellectual classes. It belongs to that class that believes that might is right because it is might, and happens to be in their possession; and that brute force is right sim¬ ply because it is force, and is a means to an end. Let us notice another of Mr. Bruce's great and weighty arguments in proof of the superiority of the white to the colored race. We quote from his pam¬ phlet as follows: "But the lines of separation between the negro and the white man are far from being purely physical. Even if the personal characteristics, to which we have alluded, were wanting, his origin, his history, his present condition, and moral and intellectual idio¬ syncrasies of his would still impart to his individuality an invidious relief." A more bunglesome and tautological paragraph one seldom meets with in public print, and certainly not emanating from one who puts himself forth at once as historian, biologist, and profound statesman. Mr. Bruce says in the paragraph just quoted, that the ori¬ gin of the colored man is against him, so I have been looking all through his pamphlet to find the place where he proves his assertion, but I fail to find even the slightest attempt to do so. Why is this ? Is it be¬ cause he did not know the origin of the colored race? Then he had no right to make such an assertion. Or was it that he feared the facts would contradict his own statement? Then in that case he would prove himself an unfaithful, unfair historian. No, we are not ashamed either of our origin or history, for both are so eminent and honorable that we are greatly- proud of them. We are not afraid to have them brought to the light. But Mr. Bruce and others of his ilk are, as they have long been, at work, and have {succeeded in establishing for the colored race a false FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 141 and ficticious origin and history, and we have found it out; so we go behind the returning board to find the true returns, and we find that the historical ballot-box has been stuffed. Indeed, so untrue and unfair is, and has been, the white man's history-making, that we no longer accept it as true, for the late discoveries have given the lie to nearly all of it. But what is that to a man like Bruce, who tacitly admits that he is a creature of race- prejudice and race-hate? Yes, the white man' has for ages artfully and systematically robbed the historical safe deposit of its sacred treasures of truth, and has deposited in their stead a lot of rubbish and trash that is now being shelved all over the civilized world. My proof for the statements just made is to be found in the fact that the old theories so long held and taught by the white man, are now admitted to be false. For example, that thievish theory which taught that the Egyptian', Hebrew, Chaldaic, Ethiopian and a number of other existing languages belonged to what is known as the Semitic family of languages*—that is, that Shem, through his descendants brought them down to us. I say this is a thievish theory, because it gives to the descendants of Shem credit and honor that belong to Ham, for the Egyptians and Ethiopians were the inventors of written language. Then there arose an¬ other class, who looked with jealous eye upon the idea of the Jew, or Shemite, being the inventor and trans¬ mitter of written language; so the Sanscrit theory was then trumped up and put forth as the foster-mother of all languages of the earth. But it changed and inter¬ changed its name so often one hardly knows at which end to begin to reckon them up. At one time Sanscrit is said to be the mother of all other languages, and then again it is said to be independent of all others, or in other words, to have an independent origin. * See Dr. Philip Schaff's History. 142 THE NATIONS But at one time it is known as the Indo-European, then the Indo-Germanic, then the Indian itself is brought in and made to do duty. Then it is known as the Medo-Persian, or Grseco-Latin, or Germanic and Gallo-Celtic family, and so on. But being content with this, the Aryan theory is started, which is by one writer made to appear the offspring of the Sanscrit, and by another the mother of them all; and so on, until one is made to stop and ask: Which is it? and What does it all mean? The answer is at hand: That a race of people, proud, haughty and ambitious, finding themselves without na¬ tional honors, resolve, by a cunningly devised scheme, to cheat another race out of his national and historical rights, and to add them to their own stock, just af¬ ter the same manner as they have invaded this country, to which they had no right whatever, and claimed it as their own. The white race, I say, has thus planned to beat the descendants of Ham out of their legitimate and heav¬ en-born rights, and the instrument used in this in¬ stance is comparative philology. But Prof. Max Mul- ler, in his search for name and fame, has by his recent discoveries, knocked the bottom all out of that, for he says, "There is no proof that the Aryan, Semitic and Turanian families of language had independent begin¬ nings, and that the radicals existing in all the three can be traced to> the common source," which, of course, goes back to Noah and his family. So the theorist will have to start off again, for Max Muller, in a very few terse and pointed sentences, has stepped in and with a cruel coolness hard to describe has broken up all those dear linguistic families. What a pity! Yes, with one fell stroke he has swept them all away. I wonder what Mr. Bruce and his other "superior race" theorists will do now. Gentlemen, my advice is that you had better begin to look after your fences, or rather go back and FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 143 begin your historical lives over; and this time I would advise you to begin fair, be honest, be just, be truthful; for we, as a race, are watching your every step. Take for instance the history and geopgraphy of Af¬ rica as it has come down to us from the "kith and kin" of the white man and what have we? Simply a vast array of misrepresentations and historical, geographical and ethnological contradictions. First, we were in¬ formed that Africa, as a country, for the most part, was a dry, barren, sterile desert of shifting sands. Nov/ Stanley comes out and informs us that Africa is the richest of all the continents. Then again, we were told by old geographers that it was largely unwatered. But we are now told by later authorities that the same country abounds with lakes and rivers, and that these are among the largest in the world. As for its people, we were told that they were sim- plv a lot of dwarfs, abnormally constituted, with heads, arms and feet peculiarly different from those of other peoples. But now we are told with, as it were, bated breath of astonishment, that there are men stalwart and beautifully formed, brave and warlike, in Africa. Which of these statements shall we receive as true? And as for the language of the African, we are told with a cool daring that would almost give one a chill, that they had no language that was above the gabble of the goose; but now Dr. Grattan Guinness says he has found in the Congo and Soudan countries languages having as many as forty tenses to the verb. Can that people who have a language so richly embellished as to enable them to express an idea in forty different ways, be considered without a language? That is just what the forty tenses to the verb means. Yes, it means forty modes of expressing one's thoughts. The foregoing are only a^few of the misrepresenta¬ tions. I repeat that I find nowhere in Mr. Bruce's paper that he attempts to show anything concerning the ori- 144 THE NATIONS gin of the colored race, so I will refer him to one his¬ torical, work, and it is the oldest history in existence, and it is called The Book, or The Bible. I do not sup¬ pose that he has made a very thorough study of it ; or if he has, he has not imbibed its spirit nor profited by its teachings. If he had, he would have made known that The Book i:ays that God "made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth." The other lesson is a commandment to Mr. Bruce that he should "do unto others as he would that they should do unto him." It does seem strange that one of such apparently deep piety as he should not follow more closely that very important command. He says that the history of the colored man is also against him, but he does not prove the assertion. And yet the history of the three original branches of men stands out clear and distinct, or rather that of two of them, Ham and Shem. The history of Japheth is ob¬ scure. As Mr. Bruce does not seem to know, I would inform him that the history o-f Japheth, except a, very short portion of it, is entirely lost, there being no rec¬ ord whatever made of him after the short account to which I have^ referred. I am well aware that k is claimed that the race of Japheth is perpetuated through the Medes and Persians, and Greeks and Romans, but I want here to take on somewhat the manner of Mr. Bruce in dealing with things, and make this bold asser¬ tion : The man does not live who can trace Japheth his¬ torically out of Asia or link him historically with the Greeks; for they themselves say that they are the de¬ scendants of the gods, and we know that Japheth was as far from, being a god as were any of his descendants, though the so-called European branch of them often tried to make gods of each ether, and at times set up one of their number and worshipped him. But that did not make him a god: it simply showed the vanity, igno¬ rance and superstition of the so-called European branch from a new point of view. 145 of the Japhetic family. And even if Japheth could be traced to the Greeks and Romans, what has the white man in the early history of either of which he may be proud and boastful ? In the case of the Greeks, they lay hid away up there in that pent-up penin¬ sula, without government in any of its forms, neither family, church nor state; for they were without all, and were simply living huddled together, as so' many wild beasts, feeding on roots and herbs, and wearing for clothing—when they wore any—the skins of beasts. And they remained in that low, degraded and pitiable condition until Inachus, the Phoenician, arrived among them about 1856 B. C., and founded the kingdom of Argos, and formed for them a government, and gave them laws for their family and state. Later on, B. C. in 1556, Cecrops carried a colony ro Greece and built the city of Cecropia (which was after¬ wards called Athens). But still they could not read or write until Cadmus, another Phoenician, arrived in 1493 B. C. and taught them letters. I want now to in¬ form Mr. Bruce, as he dwelt long on race origin and race history, that Inachus and Cadmus, being Phoeni¬ cians, were the descendants of Ham through Canaan, who was his youngest son, and therefore were oT the colored race and have in common the same history. I also want to inform him that Cecrops, being an Egyp¬ tian, was a descendant of Ham through Mizraim, who was Ham's second son. Thus the early history of the Egyptians was also the history of the colored race, be¬ cause the Egyptians were Hamites, and the colored race, it is agreed on all hands, were the descendants of Ham; consequently his honors are ours. There is another part of current history that stands to the credit of the colored race. I call Mr. Bruce's attention to it. It is that the first kingdom ever estab¬ lished on earth was Babylon, and the first king that ever reigned on earth with the title of "king," was 10 146 THE NATIONS Nimrod; and also that Nimrod was the grandson of Ham: so the colored r!ace in their history have all the honor. And I wish to inform him of another fact that is not brought down in the current history, and that is that we, as a race, know all this and intend to trans¬ mit the record as a legacy to our children forever. I have already proved that the Egyptians belong to the colored race that has the fullest and one of the most that neither Greeks nor Romans ever learned to read the hieroglyphics written on the monuments and tem¬ ples of Egypt ? I ask, has he ever thought of this, for I nowhere find it made prominent in current history. It has a very important bearing on the rise and progress of the white and colored races in that it shows that here is a matter that stands to the honor and credit of the colored race, that he did not take into consideration when he so confidently, and with such an air of tri¬ umph, affirmed that the history of the colored man was against him. Yes, it is a significant fact that here is a branch of the colored race that has one of the fullest and most complete histories of their government and nation that the world has ever known, lying right before the white man's eyes for thousands of years; yet all those years produced no cne who could decipher that valuable Egyptian hieroglyphic writing. But what did the white man do in this case ? He did as he is still doing: that which he cannot conquer he says is not worth hav¬ ing; and that which he cannot learn is not-worth know¬ ing. And so the oldest and finest history in the world, except the Bible, was for thousands of years called trash and rubbish by the white man, simply because he did not have the ability to understand it; and for an¬ other important reason, which is prevalent in the white man everywhere, and that is his lack of manliness and moral fitness to acknowledge his inability to do. And yet it is a patent fact that there'was not a man among FROM A NEW POINT Of VIEW. 147 the Greeks, nor ?mong the Romans; neither among the Saxons, nor among- the Anglo-Saxons, that could read and learn the history of that great people, the Egyp¬ tians, until the year 1790, when Champollion, a French¬ man was born. He succeeded, before he died, in learn¬ ing enough of the Egyptian language to give a key to it, but that is as yesterday, for he died in 1832, only fifty-nine years ago. It seems to me that facts like these ought to make Mr. Bruce and others like him feel a great humiliation, and cause them to hesitate before rushing into print with a wholesale condemna¬ tion and vilification of a peaceable, inoffensive people; for the white man lives in a very thin glass house, and I would advise him that he had better cease throwing stones, and he had better do so now at once, for he is no longer pulling the blind over the eyes of the colored people, because we see through him like a man looking through a thin piece of gauze, and we can certainly read him with far more ease than he has ever been able to read the hieroglyphics of Egypt. But let us return to Japheth and the Romans. I have already said that there is nothing in the origin and early history either of Greeks or Romans, about which the white man can legitimately boast and be proud, even if he could trace them to Japheth; and I have in another place shown that the early history of the Greeks was disgraceful in the extreme, and that their origin was very obscure and uncertain. But how about the Romans? What is their origin and history? It will be remembered that Mr. Bruce has called for a comparison, and has attempted to make one between the origin and historv of the colored and white races. Now it is well known that the reputed origin of the Romans is nothing more than a myth, and their history is altogether fabulous. Examine into both and what do vou find? Nothing but a huge bundle of fables, and a colossal masg of misrepresentations, 148 THE NATIONS How did they get up, into that little boot-shaped pen¬ insula called Italy? It is not known. When did they go there? No one can tell. Did they come from Asia? It is an unknown matter. Did they come into Italy at a northern, southern, eastern or western point? It is all dark and unknown. There is no record that has yet been found, either above or under the ground, nor written on parchment or paper, that answers the fore¬ going questions. Then where did they come from? No one knows. The white man or Anglo-Saxon claims to be the offspring of the Romans. Is there anything in such an origin as that which I have just described about which to be proud and haughty and boastful? Yet of such an origin Mr. Bruce is proud, and asks for a contrast of the colored and white. We take great pleasure just here in giving it to him. "Where did the colored race come from?" he asks, with a con¬ temptuous scoff. I very readily and gladly answer the question, and say, They sprang from Ham, who was the second son of Noah. And as to their historv, I would inform him that it is a matter of public record, and is found written on almost everything about the city of ancient Babylon, and indeed the whole country of Babylonia, and in the names of the bridges that span its streams, and also on monuments and in grottoes which are to be found on both sides of the rivers Ti¬ gris and Euphrates. It is also written on the long-buried plates and slabs of the ancient city of Nineveh, that are now being found and read. Another branch of the colored race is to be found in the Egyptians, traced through Mizraim, the second son of Ham; and through Ham himself, for Egypt is often called the "Land of Ham." Their history can be found written on their temples, monuments and tombs, and in their grand libraries of all kinds, and their display of arts and sciences, the remains of which are found everywhere. Can the Greeks or Romans or Britons show any such from a new point of view. 149 record of their origin and early history? Not by any means. Another branch of the colored race can be traced in the descendants of Cush, who was the oldest son of Ham, and who settled India, Arabia and Africa, and founded the kingdom of Ethiopia in Africa, which was such a strong and powerful empire that at times she well nigh ruled the world. And there is another noble branch of the colored race, and cne which, perhaps, has the most remarkable history of them all, because this is the branch of Ham's descendants upon which that wonderful curse of Noah was pronounced. It is that of Canaan, the youngest son of Ham. Has Mr. Bruce ever read or heard of him? Well, what is his history, and what has he done for the world in which he and his descendants lived? What record has he left? Why, he, like his brothers Cush and Mizraim, settled countries, built cities and advanced civilization everywhere throughout the land of Canaan. The Canaanites were the inventors of money, meas¬ ures and weights, and were also the first to establish a scale for the measurement and valuation of land (see Machpelah and the transaction that took place between Abraham and Ephron in the land of Canaan). Ephron was the son of Heth, and Heth was the second-bom son of Canaan. Ephron valued the land which Abra¬ ham bought, at 400 shekels of silver, which is about $250. It is also there called "current money." The Canaanites also preserved and transmitted to Abraham the knowledge of the true God, and Melchiz- edek pronounced upon him the divine priestly bless¬ ing; and indeed it appears that the Land of Canaan was the only country at this time on the earth where none but the true God was worshiped. The Canaanites in after years adopted and worshiped idols, but not in Abraham's day, neither in the days of Isaac and Jacob. The first idols we read of 150 the: nations being in the Land of Canaan, were carried there from Syria by Rachel, one of Jacob's wives. She took them from Laban, her father. And I want to tell Mr. Bruce another thing about the Canaanites while we are com¬ paring the histories of the white and colored races. I am sure he has heard of the "Tribe of Judah;" the chief Israelitish tribe, because from that tribe descended the Saviour of the world. Well, I want to tell him that the mother of that tribe belonged to the colored race, because she was a daughter of Canaan, her father, was a son of Ham; and the colored race descended from Ham. The name of the mother of the tribe of Judah was Tamar, and I repeat that she was a descendant of Canaan, the son of Ham. We have in another place, spoken of the origin of the Romans, but what of their history? When does their history begin? Who can tell ? How can we have a true history of the Romans when there did not arise a man among them, who at¬ tempted to write their history, for six hundred years after the foundation of the city of Rome? We will take special notice here of the fact that this people exists six hundred years before they do any¬ thing worth recording, or else they do not in all that time produce a man who is able to write an account of his nation—it is one or the other—in either case it tells a very bad story for their descendants, the so-called Caucasians of to-day, who boast so loudly of their Roman origin and history. I have already said that the whole matter was a myth; for Romulus and Remus, the reputed founders of the city of Rome—and Rome was the beginning of their state and government— were twins, and were sons of a woman by the name of Rhea Sylvia, and it is said she was the daughter of Numitor, the king of the country. But the father of the two boys, Romulus and Remus, was Mars and Mars was the chief god of the country. Wonderful heirship this, for Romulus and Remus! for according from a new point of view. 151 to this account they were the grandsons of a king and the sons of a god. No wonder the white man is so proud of his origin and descent, when he, according to the h;story made of himself, is the offspring of a kitlg and a god; or, in other words, when he is half king, half god. Truly, at that, he is a wonderful being! But there is another important fact about this mat¬ ter, but it is neither the kingly nor the deistic side of which I now speak, but the moral ; and that is, the re- lationshio between the god Mars and Rhea Sylvia was an illicit one. Is the white man also proud of that side of the matter? I do not often hear of his men¬ tioning it, but that is the history of it. But there is another remarkable fact about the his¬ tory of the white man that is brought down to us, and that is: we learn who was the Romans foster-mother. She was a she-wolf, we are told, who heard the two boys crying on the banks of the river Tiber, where they had been cast by order of the king of the country to die. This she-wolf came, we are seriously told, to the banks of the river, day after diy, and nursed and cared for these two wonderful, kingly boys. They truly were of high and noble birth, being, ?s Roman history tells us, the grandsens of a king, and the sons of a god. Their foster-mother and father too, were of very noble birth, being -none other than a she-wolf and a woodpecker; for we are told by history, that the wolf did the nursing, and the woodpecker brought the boys whatever else they got to eat, which consisted, we may well suppose, of worms and bugs plucked from decaying trees. But what was the final result of all this? It was that all the Roman leaders, both men and women, for manv years afterwards, were turned into gods and goddesses. It is true that Romulus killed Remus, but Romulus became a god after he died, or rather dis¬ appeared, and came back, and watched over, and 152 THE NATIONS guarded and protected the Roman nation. I wish to ask Mr. Bruce, was there ever superstition to surpass that? I mean a superstition that could believe the things to which I have just alluded, as true? And yet, that is just what every white man does, when he boasts so proudly of his Roman birth and descent. When' I see the white man skipping from principle to policy, and from one policy to another, yet seldom coming back tb principle, I am vividly reminded of the wood¬ pecker as he skips from limb to limb in his native for¬ est. And when I see him scheming and planning as he does, to get the advantage of his colored fellow-man, I am simply reminded of the fact that history says his foster-mother was a wolf. I refer to those things be¬ cause Mr. Bruce says the colored man's origin and his¬ tory are against him. And he set out in his pamphlet to draw a comparison, but inasmuch as he failed to re¬ fer to any of those things, I thought I would do so, be¬ cause they form an important part of the white man's history. He seems to take pride in relating the mode and manner by which the African was introduced into this country. He says all other than the colored man came, and that he was brought. I will quote a para¬ graph of his, to show how he says it was done, and the following is it: "Captured by his own kith and kin, in Africa; sold by his captors to the slave dealers; sold by the slave dealers to the slave ship; transported by the slave ship to our shores." I am glad Mr. Bruce unwittingly told the true story of how the Africans were brought to this country. He says they were captured by the Af¬ rican himself; sold to the slave dealer, which we ac¬ cept. Very well, then, he was not captured by the white man going up into Africa, and fighting with, and con¬ quering him, and making him his slave. But as mean and disgusting a business as making and dealing in slaves as that would have been, I want him to remember From a new point of view. 153 that the business is even robbed of that paltry honor, because he says the African captured his own people and sold them to the slave dealer. But he does not tell them that they were captives of war. He would leave the impression that at the time the slave trade was carried on in Africa for the gain there was in it; where¬ as, the fact is, the slaves that were sold to the slave ships were captives of war, and were sold by way of disposing of prisoners in what was considered a more humane manner than putting them to death. No, the white man did not go up into Africa to cap¬ ture anybody, but stayed on his boat, and got what was brought to him, because he dared not venture away from the shore; he had neither courage nor manhood to do so. And Africa not only kept the slave ships out of her territory, but has in a large degree, kept out all the na¬ tions for thousands of years. Neither the Greeks nor the Romans were eyer able to penetrate into Africa further than the narrow belt along the coast. It is wonderfully interesting to note the many in¬ genious reasons that have been assigned from time to time, for this and also for the lack of the knowledge of the interior of the country and its people. It is astonishing to see how the white man strives to keep from acknowledging that he was not able to con¬ quer the people and take their country. Nevertheless, it is a fact that Africa is the only country on the globe to-day, that has not at some time in its history been con¬ quered by other nations; for, as I have said, the Greeks and Romans were both closely confined to the northern coast, and the Jews, even in Solomon's day, knew so little about it that they could only say that the queen of Sheba, when she came up to view Solomon's tem¬ ple, had come from the uttermost parts of the earth. I am not rash enough to say that no part of Africa has ever been taken, but I do, with great boldness, assert 154 THE NATIONS that as a country, it had never been taken by any one of the nations, or by all of them combined, even down to the present day. I am well aware that Mr. Bruce asserts that the Christian and civilized nations of the earth have gone into the country and divided it up 'among1 themselves, with little or no regard for the wishes of the people who own it. Well, what does that argue for the "Christian nations," even if it were true? It simply argues that the white man's Christianity does not at all stand in the way when he sees his neighbor's goods and covetst them. Has Mr. Bruce ever stopped to consider how mis¬ leading are his statements, as to how thcfce "Christian Nations," of which he speaks, got hold of Africa? Will, he not at some time tell the public what those technical terms, "sphere of German influence," "sphere of Eng¬ lish influence," and "sphere of French influence," mean? Do they not simply mean that these nations came together and- agreed to divide up the country of Africa, and after that manner call it their own, with¬ out being actually in. possession of it at all ? In other words,- is not the possession of these nations simply on charts and paper.? What I mean is, that it is one thing to lay claim to foods, and quite another to have them, turned over, or to come in possession of them. I have already called attention to the ingenious man¬ ner, by which the white man has evaded giving the true reasons as to why he had never been able to take Africa, conquer its people, and own the country. Oh, the many reasons given by writers, bookmakers, his¬ torians, and missionaries, why Africa was so little known to the white man, and why he has been so slow in making his home there! I must say, that in all this, the white man makes himself appear to us more ridiculous than he does the honest, impartial, faithful historian. from a new point of view. 155 First, it was said that the people were too cruel and savage, and that they were nearly all cannibals and would catch the white man and eat him. But now, a missionary, writing in a late number of the Mission¬ ary Revieiv of the World, tells us that a white woman missionary can go alone and unattended into the in¬ terior for hundreds of miles among tribes of ten mil¬ lions of so-called cannibals, and still be unmolested in any way whatever. The next was, that it was too deadly in climate for the white man to live there. The story as told was that the whole country was not much else than one vast, pestilential, miasmatic swamp of death-dealing air and poisonous vapors; and that if the white man came within reach of them he was done for. But now the Germans, who are the princes of the white progeny, are planning to colonize the same coun¬ try by thousands of their race, and we are also told that the climate is not torrid at all, but temperate, like that of Asia, and even the southern part of this coun¬ try. Now, what I want to know is, which of these lies shall we believe. There is another thing I would like Mr. Bruce and his other "superior race" theorists to answer: Sup¬ pose all of the deadly climate conditions named for Africa were true, and that the white man could not live there, what would that prove, except the fact that he finds himself living in a world to one-fourth of which he is not adapted. Or, in other words, what would it argue but his inadaptability to certain climates ? And would not that prove a lack of that very important quality found in man, known as physical endurance, and, therefore, make him unequal to the endurance of certain climates and, consequently, destroy his much- loved doctrine of the "survival of the fittest?" And. also, would it not destroy his hobby, the superiority of the Anglo-Saxon, Caucasian, Syro-Arabian, Indo- European, Anglo-Germanic and as -many-more-named 156 THE NATIONS race? I mean that all these names belong to one peo¬ ple. They sometimes call themselves the one, and sometimes the other, and I do not mean different races. Or does it not argue that the white man is not in all things equal to the colored? For the colored man can, and does live and prosper in every part of the habitable globe. But now, since he has been permitted to enter and quietly take up his abode there, and buy things very cheap and to sell them very high, and thus soon become rich, he declares Africa to be a most charming country—that is, when he is writing from a money and mercenary point of view. But still, when he begins to write from the race point, Africa is an aw¬ fully desolate and dangerous place. But,, as I have said, there must be other reasons giv¬ en than those I have named as to why the white man has not gone into Africa before; so they are soon found, and one of them is its inaccessibility because of a great desert that is said to stretch clear across the continent; but the bottom is effectually knocked out of that by the statements of other white men that the des¬ ert is not more than a third as large as it has been described to be. Another reason given is, that but one river was known to history, and yet we are told by Herodotus that the king of Egypt, Necho by name, sent out an expedition which circumnavigated Africa* and also penetrated the interior, when its great lakes, rivers and creeks were explored and made known to the world thousands of years before either Parke, Livingstone, Stanley, or any of the modern visitors to Africa were born; and then with that other fact before the white man's eye, that Africa is at this time inhabited by nearly three hundred millions of people who are tilling the country and making a living after their own ideas. * See Cyclopaedia Britannica on Africa. from a new point of view. 157 How can he, I ask, under such circumstances, talk about Stanley having discovered Africa? Yes, it may have been, and was, a discovery to Stanley and others, just in the same light it is to every missionary that goes there; and, indeed,-I see by the Missionary Re¬ view of the World that a certain missionary, named Chambers, I believe, is set down as an "explorer and discoverer." Now, what these men see and find among the peo¬ ple of Africa is no more a discovery in the true sense of that term than are the visits of any European tour¬ ist to the woods and forests of his or any other country inhabited and cultivated by its natives. But what shall I say more about Africa—for instance, of the men she has and is still producing? Mr. Bruce has given a long list of the men produced by the whites. Will he listen while I shall give him a few names of the men of Africa, whose lives and char¬ acters it will pay him to study ? Has he ever heard of that great African general named Hannibal, who was born in Africa, B. C. 247, and that he was the son of a noble African named Hamilcar, and that he had a brother named Asdrubal, who was also a famous general? And has he ever heard that these Africans made Rome howl for years upon years, until they brought her almost to the brink of desolation? And that they so weakened her that she was never able fully to recover herself, and that she continued to decline, decay and crumble, until she tottered and fell, a mangled mass of wreck and ruin, to rise no more forever? To-day she is a disgrace to the name she once bore. And these same generals made great conquests in Spain, and subdued nearly all of Sicily. I want also to inform Mr. Bruce of Augustine, the great, of Tertullian and Cyprian. These were born at or near Carthage, and I hold that they were Africans. 158 THE NATIONS And I would also name Novatian, Donatus and No- vatus. These were all noble sons of Africa, and known as the Latin Fathers, and outside of the Church itself were the greatest lights the Christian Church has ever produced since the days of Christ and his apos¬ tles. These were all writers of Christian literature. So we see that the first and best Christian literature we have, was produced not only by Africa's great writers, but in Africa, and upon African soil. As to the men and women of the present day, we have examples of ability and genius too numerous to mention by name. They are here and here to stay, and still they come: scientists, artists, artisans, professors, ministers of church and ministers of state, lawyers, doctors of divinity and doctors of physics, authors re¬ ligious and authors secular. And we have laborers, too, and they are none the less honorable for being such, although Mr. Bruce would have it so. He has brought the Anglo-Saxon race in particular contrast with the colored race, as well as the white man in general; and surely he has given a bright and beau¬ tiful picture of them. But there are two sides to all questions. Let us, then, take a look at the other side: Who are the Anglo-Saxons? What is their ori¬ gin and early history? Is it honorable or is it other¬ wise? These are a few' of the plain questions that pushed to the front and demanded an answer, but Mr. Bruce failed to answer them, though they stood be¬ fore him, looking him squarely in the face demanding an answer. But instead of answering them, he soars away on the height of his imagination and gets com¬ pletely lost in the mazes of his own delights. And what a beautiful, intelligent, brave, warlike, energetic, enterprising and business-like white race ris¬ es up out of the sea of his surmises, and stands before him in all of its grandeur and glory. But what are the facts about this great and mighty Anglo-Saxon FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 159 race ? Let us see: The first thing we must do is to have Mr. Bruce define his terms. What does he mean when he speaks of the Anglo-Saxon race? Is he talking by the etymology of the term "Anglo- Saxon?" If he is talking from an etymological point of view, "Anglo-Saxon Race" sounds very musi¬ cal. But if he is talking from an historical point, we must ask the liberty to carry him back a little to the words "Britain" and "the Britonsnot "Great Britain," but plain "Britain;" for it will be remem¬ bered that it did not become great for many, many years. And as to the territory of the island, it is known to be but a speck of the earth, in comparative geogra¬ phy. Now, what does history say about the inhabit¬ ants of that little island ? The first we hear of it or its people is about fifty years before the Christian era. They then lay there hid away, wild savages, poor, and without government, without clothes, save the un¬ dressed skins of beasts, which only consisted of straps and strings wound , about the loins, and so on, with the rest of the body painted and stained with a mixture of clay and berries picked from the bushes found in the swamps, just after the same manner as have done all savage nations. The whole country abounded with forests and swamps and the natives made no attempt to improve the swamps or clear the forests. They were without roads or bridges; nor did they know how to make the one or build the other. They had no houses, but lived in the ground., for the most part, with some few mud huts, and where these existed, they were absolutely without design in their arrange¬ ment, for they had no streets, but just squatted and dotted the earth, here* and there and everywhere, with¬ out plan and without purpose. This is only a faint picture of the early stages in the life and history of the Anglo-Saxons. I say that it is only a faint picture, for they were without letters 160 THE NATIONS and without learning and, apparently, without ability or disposition to learn. But still they are, to Mr. Bruce, wonderfully superior. Superior to what, and to whom, I should like to know? There they are, lying in this isolated island, ignorant, lazy, superstitious, sav¬ age and thriftless; yet, they are the "great superior race." If they are the direct descendants of Japheth, where is the knowledge of civilization he left them? They were too worthless to keep it in memory. And they had but a speck of earth there on that island to look after, and they were actually too lazy to improve it in any way whatever for centuries, and yet they were very "superior." Another thing I would like Mr. Bruce to tell me: Why is it that this superior race could remain for four hundred years under the Rom¬ ans, and then learn so little of civilization and make so little of progress along the ways of true life? I have said they were superstitious. Were they not, when they believed in the power of charms, wor¬ shipped serpents as gods, and believed in the enchant¬ ments of a magician's wand? And they also believed in the sacrifice of human beings to the serpent god. Yes, and they were cruel and bloodthirsty, for they burnt alive those whom they suspected of any crime. And I wish to say that this is a trait of the "superior" Anglo-Saxon race, that has not left them yet; but it will be noticed that the practice is still kept up after the same manner as of old—that is, they still lay cruel and wicked hands on the helpless few or on the one, as the case may be, and ruthlessly take away life, and then brag and boast of their bravery and manhood. Mr. Bruce makes reference to the docility with which the colored people bore the yoke of slavery in this country. Not more so than have other races, the Anglo-Saxon,, for instance, who were made prisoners of war and sold into slavery. We do not read of any efforts on their part to free themselves from bondage. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. ltyl The fighting that went on was tribal and racial—that is, the Scots fought the Picts, and the Picts fought the Saxons, and the Saxons fought the Britons; but it was all done for greed of gain, and to dislodge each othei from certain territory. But nowhere do we read -of the slaves, as such, uprising at any time, in anv of the before-named tribes, to deliver themselves from bond¬ age and slavery. And the same is equally true of all white slaves, wherever they have existed, whether among the Saxons, Picts, Britons, Greeks or Romans ; and we are told by F. W. Farrar, in his "Early Days of Christianity," that there were not less than sixty mil¬ lions of white slaves in the Roman province alone! Six¬ ty million, mark you! Can Mr. Bruce place his finger on a single page of history that treats of an uprising among them? No, he cannot; and the same writer to whom I have just referred, says that "they were will¬ ing to serve anybody as masters, simply for what they could get to eat and to wear." And then, again, there were those other slaves in Athens and Corinth and other Grecian cities. They were also white, and Dr. Gill tells us in his exposition of Deuteronomy 28:68, that "thirty sold for one penny in Rome." Did Mr. Bruce ever read of an uprising among them, as slaves, and on account of their bondage attempting to free themselves? However, I believe one of them did try to escape, but the Apostle Paul sent him back home again to his master, whose name was Philemon; the slave's name was Onesimus. Could a people make less effort to free themselves than the classes of whites to which I have referred? I want to inform Mr. Bruce that the white slaves in the world have exceeded the colored by the million: As was just shown, there were sixty millions in the Roman province; and, on investigation, it will be found there were equally as many in Greece, which will make one hundred and twenty millions. This added to the 11 162 THIS NATIONS two millions of Jews who were slaves in Egypt, would make the enormous number of one hundred and twen¬ ty-two millions of white slaves that have existed in the three countries above named, namely, Greece, Egypt and Rome. But the largest number that was ever brought from Africa, those in the West India Islands and including all in this country, did not exceed ten millions. Now, deduct this from one hundred and twenty-two mil¬ lions, and it will leave a balance against the whites who were enslaved, of one hundred and twelve mil lions. But, is it true, as Mr. Bruce asserts, that the colored people of this country never made any attempt to free themselves? If he thinks so, let him read "The Un¬ derground Railroad," a book written by Mr. William Still. And is it possible that he has forgotten the name of Nat Turner, of Virginia, and the date of Au¬ gust, 1831, and the sixty whites who fell under his hand in that mighty stroke be made for his own lib- berty and that of his fellows? And has he forgotten the dates of 1710, 1740, 1814?—these dates all tell of uprisings of the colored people of this country, who either struck, or planned to strike for liberty. And has he forgotten those who died with John Brown at Har¬ per's Ferry? or the two hundred thousand brave sol¬ dier boys who willingly and gladly offered their lives for their freedom in the late Rebellion? If so, I kindly remind him of these facts. He says "the white race is pre-eminently the race of reforms." Well, I very readily grant that, but take the liberty to assert that their reforms have been, for the most part, worse than the evils complained of, and have seldom accomplished more than to disturb peace and destroy harmony. And this has been true of the white man from the middle ages down to the present day4. This is true from a new point of view. 163 with Family, Church and State. Can any white man mention the term "middle age," with its state and con¬ dition, without a blush ? For one has only to mention this term in order to call up all the superstition, ignor¬ ance, misery, bloodshed and death that occurred in that peri6d. Is Mr. Bruce and the other white men proud- of this also? Yes, simply because the white man did it, and therefore it was right, and the very best thing that could have happened to the world and mankind, for he magnifies his very weakness into strength, his ignorance into profound knowledge, his wickedness and cruelty into bravery, his evil into good, and his white color is to him the very synonym for "Ruler of the World." Oh! the vanity, the brass, the gush that is innate and inherent in the white man! Mr. Bruce takes the liberty to make a thrust at the chastity of our women. I think he might have spared the virtue of our wives and daughters; but he has failed to do so. Well, we can afford to grant him a monopoly of that kind of business. But when he comes to speak of the morality that he says there is lacking among the colored race, I simply have this to say (if he speaks of honesty in dealing and fidelity to trust reposed in us) : that we have not robbed many banks as yet; that we have no representatives in Cana¬ da who are fugitives from justice on account of rob¬ beries, forgeries and embezzlements; neither have we seven defaulting treasurers who, in seven different states of the Union, have robbed the State treasuries of between two and three millions of dollars; neither have we wrecked the homes of thousands of widows and orphan children by foolish, wild cat, hair-brained speculations. But has not the white man done this, and is he not doing it every day ? And if Mr. Bruce wishes to contrast morals from the side of virtue and purity of life in the home and fam¬ ily circle, I would say that we have not many Marvins, 164 THE NATIONS who married no less than fifteen wives. Neither have we many Brigham Youngs among us. We have not established a Salt Lake Citv nor an Oneida commu¬ nity. Neither have we any such thing as a Mormon question' to settle, for there is not a colored Mormon in all this broad land, although the white man sought for two hundred and fifty years to make us such through his reform institutions—Slavery, for instance. And neither have we had a London Pall Mall Gazette ex¬ posure of the extensive corruption and sale of young girls to profligates. But all this is too true of the white man. I would say to Mr. Bruce that the Scriptural injunc¬ tion is, "Let him that is without sin cast the first stone." And if we, as a race, have not sense enough to know who Wiljiam Lloyd Garrison was, as he implies by a quotation^of what he has heard, there are some other things which we do know, and therefore take great pleasure in calling his attention to them. CHAPTER VI. the white man's so-called scientific and his¬ toric "negro." There are many reasons why I do not accept the term "Negro" as a proper race designation of the col¬ ored man. I want to say that you may rest assured that there is no honor in the term "Negro," from the simple fact, that no white man, up to the present time, has contested our sole right to it. That is, I mean that no white man has come forward and said that it was not a proper race-name. But he, having stuck it on to us, has let us rest serenely in possession of our peculiar and strange cognomen. Now, whatever we may have, and the white man does not try to dispute our right to it, we may rest assured that he does not consider that there is anything in it that is worth his having. I have used as the topic for this article, "The White Man's So-called Scientific and Historic Negro," be¬ cause his definition and description is considered scien¬ tific ; and that there is a history of the term "Negro," all will admit—yes, a long and painful one. Such a history as all of us might well be ashamed. We, be¬ cause of the degrading and debasing effect had on us as a race; and the white man, that he has so long palmed off on a credulous and confiding public, in the name of science, such an undisguised fraud; and the public ought to be ashamed that it ever accepted it as a proper term by which to distinguish a people. Now, for the benefit of my own people especially, I will here insert what Encyclopaedia Britannica brings down to us, the scientific "Negro:" ' 165* 166 THE NATIONS "Negro (Spanish and Italian Negfo, from Latin Ni¬ ger, black), in anthropology designates the distinctly dark, as -opposed to the fair, yellow and brown vari¬ eties of mankind. In this, its widest sense, embraces all the dark races, whose original homes are the inter-trop¬ ical and sub-tropical regions of the Eastern Hemis¬ phere, stretching roughly from Senegambia, West Af¬ rica, to the Fiji Archipelago, Pacific Ocean, west and east, and lying north and south between the extreme parallels of the Philippines and Tasmania. ***** But wherever found, in a comparatively pure state, as on the coast of Guinea in the Gaboon, along the lower Zam¬ besi, and in the Beuna and Sahara Basins the African aborigines present almost a greater uniformity of phy¬ sical and moral type than any of the other great di¬ visions of mankind. By the nearly unanimous con¬ sent of anthropologists this type occupies at the same time the lowest position in the evolutionary scale, thus affording the best material for the comparative study of the highest anthropoids and the human species. The chief points in which the Negro either approaches the Quadrumana or differ most from his own con- genus are: (i) abnormal length of the arm, which in the erect position sometimes reaches the knee-pan, and which on an average exceeds that of the Caucasian by almost two inches; (2) prognathism, or projection of the jaws (index number of facial angle about 70, as compared, with the Caucasian, 82); (3) weight of brain as indicating cranial capacity, 35 ounces (high¬ est gorilla 20, average European 45) ; (4) full black eye, with black iris and yellowish and sclerotic coat, a very marked feature; (5) short, flat, snub nose, deeply depressed at the base, or frontal suture, broad at ex¬ tremity, with dilated nostrils and concave ridge; (6) thick, protruding lips, plainly showing the inner red surface; (7) very large zygomatic arches—high and prominent cheek bones; (8) exceedingly thick crani- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 167 um, enabling the Negro to butt with the head and re¬ sist blows which would inevitably break any ordinary European's skull; (9) correspondingly weak lower limbs, terminating in a broad, flat foot with low instep, divergent and somewhat prehensible great toe, and heel projecting backwards ("lark heel"); (10) com¬ plexion deep brown or blackish, and in some cases even distinctly black, due not to any special pigment, as is oif- ten supposed, but merely to the greater abundance of the colouring matter in the Malpighian mucous mem¬ brane between the inner or true skin and the epidermis or scarf skin; (nj short, black hair, eccentrical¬ ly elliptical or almost flat in section and distinctly woolly, not merely frizzly as Prichard supposed on in¬ sufficient evidence; (12) thick epidermis, cool, soft arid velvety to the touch, mostly hairless, and emitting a peculiar rancid odor, compared by Pruner Bey to that of the buck goat; (15) frame of medium height, thrown somewhat out of the perpendicular by the shape of the pelvis, the spine, the backward projection of the head, and the whole anatomical structure; (14) the cranial sutures, which close much earlier in the ne¬ gro than in other races. To this premature ossification of the skull, preventing all further development of the brain, many pathologists have attributed the inherent mental inferiority of the blacks, an inferiority which is eyen more marked than their physical differences. Nearly all observers admit that the Negro child is on the whole quite as intelligent as these of other human varieties, but that on arriving at puberty all further progress seems" to be arrested, No one has more care¬ fully studied this point than Filippo Manetta, who, during: a long residence on the plantations of the Southern States of America, noted that "the Negro children were sharp, intelligent and full of vivacity, but on aooroachiner the adult period, a gradual change set m. The intellect seemed to become clouded, ani- 168 THE NATIONS mation giving place to lethargy, briskness yielding to indolence. We must necessarily suppose that the de¬ velopment of the Negro and the white proceeds on dif¬ ferent lines. It must at the same time be confessed that the question of the mental temperament of the Negro has been greatly complicated by the partisan¬ ship of interested advocates on either side. But for this disturbing element, it would perhaps be readily admitted that the mental are, at least, as marked as the physical differences between the dark and other races, and as both are the gradual outcome of external conditions, fixed by heredity, it follows that the attempt to suddenly transform the Negro mind by foreign cul¬ ture must be, as it has proved to be, as futile as the attempt would be to suddenly transform his physical type. On his moral status, even when removed from the old associations and brought directly under more fav¬ orable influences, a lurid light is cast by the report of the Rev. Dr. Tucker at the American Church Congress for 1883, on the present condition of the black com¬ munities in the Southern States * * * No full-blood Negro has ever been distinguished as a man of science, a poet, or an artist, and the fundamental equality claimed for him by ignorant philanthropists is belied by the whole history of the race throughout the his¬ toric period." I have, in the above quotation given you a small sketch of what is known as the scientific "Negro," or rather, the white man's idea and description of what a "Negro" is; and there are colored men who claim that they are Negroes, and are proud that they are the off¬ spring of that abnormally constituted creature, which the white man, by reason of his race prejudice and hate, has seen fit, with pen and ink, to construct for us, and we have eagerly and ignorantly seized it, and have been wonderfully proud of it, regardless of the fact that the white man has used all the degrading FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 169 terms he could find, in all the languages of the earth, with which to construct his "Negro." But let us again revert to what the white man has to say of the scientific "Negro" in the American Cyclopae¬ dia." It can there be seen at a glance, and also in "Britannica" and "Chamber's," that these writers go into Africa and divide up its people, and attempt to show that only a very small portion of the inhabitants are "Negroes." So that ought to be sufficient to make every colored man drop the use of the word. The fol¬ lowing is what the "American Cyclopaedia" has to say on the subject: "Negro, a name properly applied to the races inhab¬ iting the African continent, principally between latitude io degrees North, and 20 degrees South, and to their descendants in the old and new world; it does not in¬ clude the Northern Africans (like the Egyptians, Ber¬ bers, Abyssinians, Nubians, etc.), though in popular language, especially in the older writings, it comprises these and other dark-skinned nations, who are not however, characterized by the crisp hair of the true negro; in some of his border countries there has been considerable intermixture of negro blood and dialects. The Hottentots in the South do not belong to the ne¬ gro race. The term negro, therefore, is not synonymous with African, and is not a national appellation, but denotes an ideal type constituted by certain physical characters, such as are seen in the people of the coast of Guinea, viz.: black skin, woolly hair, flat nose, thick everted lips, and a prognathous form of skull. -Ne¬ groes occupy about one-half of Africa, excluding, the northern and southern extremities, but including its most fertile portions. Out of Africa, negroes are found in the United States, the West Indies, Brazil, Peru, the Cape Verde Islands and Arabia. * * * Ne¬ groes were nearly unknown to the Hebrews and the Homeric Greeks; the Egyptians, however, about 2,500 170 THE NATIONS B. C., became acquainted with negroes through the conquests of their rulers, and represented them on their monuments as early as 1600 B. C.; for nearly 35 centuries the type has remained unchanged in Egypt. Negroes were unknown to the Greeks until the 7th cen¬ tury, B; C., their Ethiopians being merely any people darker than the Hellenic, like the Arabs, Egyptians, Libyans, or Carthaginians, none of which are Negroes. The typical Negroes of the Guinea Gold and Slave Coasts are generally rude and nearly naked savages, of a deep black color and ugly features; in the interior, many of the tribes, like the Fan and others visited with¬ in the last five years by Mr. Du Chaillu, and described in his work (New York, 1861) are fierce cannibals, but fine-lcoking, war-like, ingenious and skillful in the working of iron. Those on the slave coast are the most degraded, selling their neighbors to slave deal¬ ers. "In the vast region explored by Barth, Livingstone, Du Chaillu and other recent travelers, there are many tribes, more or less savage, for an account of which, the reader is referred to their works. The Caffres of South-Africa may also be classed among negroes, as well as the fine and ferocious races of Mozambique and the East Coast of Africa. The skin of the Negro is soft and silky, dull cherry-red in the infant, and growing black very soon; it differs from that of the whites prin¬ cipally in the greater amount of pigment cells in the reto Malphighii (the epidermis being uncolored), and in the greater number of cutaneous glands. The hair, though called wool, does not present the characters of the latter, especially the" imbricated projecting scales, and differs but little from' that of the other races, except in color and in its curled and twisted form; it is harsh and wiry, and, according to some microscopists more or less flattened, grooved longitudi¬ nally lying perpendicularly in the dermis and piercing FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 171 the cuticle in this direction,, the coloring matter being diffused throughout its substance, and, in a few in¬ stances, so imbricated, as to be capable of felting like wool. The skull is long and narrow, with a depressed forehead, prominent occiput and jaws, a facial angle of 70 to 65 degrees, and an internal capacity of about 82 cubic inches; a peculiarity of some negro crania, though by no means constant, is that the sphenoid does not reach the parietal bones, the coronal suture joining the margin of the temporals; the skull is very thick and solid, as would be indicated by the Negro's favorite mode of fighting, both sexes butting like rams, and so flat that burdens are easily carried upon it. The stat¬ ure of the Negro is seldom 6 feet, and rarely below 5 1-2; some of their figures are fine, especially the torso, and have been taken by Chantrey and other sculptors as models; in the female the development is so rapid that it is common to see childhood's grace combined with the prominent characters of maturity. Seen from behind, the spine usually appears depressed, ow¬ ing to the greater curvature of the ribs; * * * Beside the characters already mentioned, mav be noticed the projecting upper edge of orbit; broad re¬ treating chin; great development of lower part of face; small eyes, in which but little of the yellowish white ball is seen; small, thick ears, standing off from the head, with a small lobe and a general stunted look; black iris; very wide zygomatic arches, giving large space for the muscles of the lower jaw; large and transverse opening of the nasal cavity. The pelvis is long and narrow, its average circumference being from 26 to 28 inches, instead of 30 to 36 as in the whites; this shape in the female, according to Violik and Weber, corresponds to the characteristic shape of the Negro head; those writer? consider it a type of degradation, as it approaches that of the quadrumana in the more vertical direction of the iliac bones and their less width, 172 THE NATIONS in the smaller breadth of sacrum, and in the conse¬ quent less extent of the hips. The bones of the leg are bent forward and outward, the tibia and fibula be¬ ing more convex than in Europeans; the calves are very high; the feet and hands are flatter; the heel bone instead of being arched, is continued in a straight line with the other bones of the foot, causing it to project more behind; in consequence of the longer lever thus obtained, less muscular force is necessary in the movements of the feet, and the muscles of the calf are consequently less developed; the shoulder blades are shorter and broader," etc. Will colored men still cling to the white man's ideal Negro, after reading the above description he has given of him? THE RELATION OF THE WORD "NIGER" TO THE WORD "NEGRO." But before we consider that relation, let us notice some few of the peculiar characteristics of the so- not black he is not a Negro. First.. He has got to be black; not dark-brown, or yellow, but black; for that is the very first pre-requis- ite characteristic to his being a "Negro," for if he is not black he is nota Negro. Secondly. He must have woolly hair, for only the white, man's scientific necro has woolly hair; and if he does not have woolly hair, he is not a Negro. Thirdly. He must have a peculiar smooth, oily skin, sending forth a rancid, unpleasant smell, or else he cannot be a scientific Negro. Fourthly. His head must be flat, his forehead must be of a retreating set; jaw-bones large; cheek bones unusually high; nose flat and spreading well across the face, stub at end, turning up, and so dilating or opening the nostrils that the red inside lining must be plainly visible. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 173 Fifthly. His face must shoot forth like the muzzle of a clog. Sixthly. The arms must be considerably longer than the white man's; when hung at his side, they must extend below the kneepan. Seventhly. He must lean forward, and not stand erect, like the white man; and must move with a shuf¬ fling gait, something like the ape; and he must also have a projecting pelvis. Eighthly. The scientific "Negro" 'must be small and short-set—nothing like the size of the ordinary white man, but altogether another creature—another species entirely. Yes, the description I have just given is the wlhite man's historical and scentific "Negro." Now let us see if there is an etymological possibility of mak¬ ing that one word "niger" produce that wonderful be¬ ing just described. No, it cannot be done, for accord¬ ing to the white man's own definition of the word "niger" as it stands in the Latin language, its only meaning is "black." Then, again, the white man is all at sea in producing his scientific Negro; their defi¬ nitions do not agree as to the meaning of the word; for while to the Latins the word means "black," to the Africans, through whose country the Niger flows, it means "river," or "the great river." So the white man's scientific Negro is not scientific after all, for there are those who hold that the word is derived from the French "negre" and not from the Latin. Now which is true? Can the white man tell us? Certainly not, for there are three different definitions, neither of which agrees with the other. Now, without there is an agreement there is no definite knowledge; and when there is no definite knowledge there can be no science, for science is knowledge or what one knows; and a thing is scientific when it works according to definite knowledge, and not when there is a disagreement as to 174 THE NATIONS the knowledge; and whenever there is uncertainty and irregularity as to any certain matter, and the knowledge of it, the science of it is destroyed. Let us quote what Dr. Barth says: The word "niger" is derived from a native word— a native African word —not Latin, but African, and the word from which it is derived is "Nighirren." He also says "It means simply 'the river.'" See "Niger" in Chambers. I make these quotations to show that the word "ni¬ ger" is of African origin, not Latin; and that among the Africans themselves the word does not mean "black," but river; and I call attention to another fact, that there were no black people among the Latins to whom the niame would be appropriate; therefore, it is t>roof positive that the Latins did not construct the word to designate a people, but a color that is black; so it is simply a Latin adjective and not a noun. The word "Negro" in Spanish means "black," and so cannot be used to construct the white man's scien¬ tific "Neero," because it does not include the other pe¬ culiar characteristics that belong to his ideal "Negro;" not only so, but they have no relationship with it what¬ ever. Well, what shall we say about it further that will throw some light on this very dark and obscure sub¬ ject ? The English Encyclopedia says "negro" is from the French "negre," and that "nigger" is better Eng¬ lish for it than "negro." Dr. Barth says "niger" is derived from an African word, as I have shown, and means "river" or "the river." Again I ask, will the white man stick to his "negro" construction and call it scientific? I will here insert the words of a native African who is very recently from the Congo Valley. This is what he says: "The word Negro is not used in Africa by the Afri¬ cans, for its scandalous meaning, and whoever applies FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 175 it to anybody, has to pay for consequences. The word 'Negro' is as offensive as the word Burnan-gundo is offensive to a European who knows its meaning." CHAPTER VII. OUR STATUS: WHAT IS IT IN THIS COUNTRY ? One is ever and anon pained by hearing it'stated and restated that the colored race has no real claim or right to this country as a home. And this is the more painful because such utterances are often heard from our own pulpits and platforms from men who stand high in the race's esteem and confi¬ dence. The colored press, too, that great uplifter and developer of the race—is also often found to indulge in the same illogical, unreasonable and unhis- torical kind of sentiment. This is a. great pity, for it has a tendency to discourage and dishearten many of the race, and to embolden the holder of a white man's government and a white man's country idea. Then, again, it is all contrary to the facts in the case. First, what are the historical facts as to our pre¬ emption and occupation of this country? Why, they are these: The first Africans, it is historically stated, were brought to the West Indies in 1503, which was only eleven years after Columbus got lost and hap¬ pened to land on this continent, which was in 1492. Yes, his coming to this country at that time was a pure accident, and no discovery about it; for he thought he was in India, which is in Asia, but, behold! he was on the great Western continent, which was inhabited by a people who had discovered it thousands of years before Columbus was born. The people were and are the descendants of Ham, as all the dark races of he earth are his descendants. So, not only do we have a right to this country by the accession of our (176) FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 177 forefathers to it only eleven years after the coming of Columbus, but a branch of the descendants of Ham were here thousands of years before the white man even knew that there was such a continent on the globe. Thus, when the Portuguese brought the first colony of Africans to this continent, which was in 1503, they did not land them among white men, but colored men who were simply another branch of our own race. John Pym Carter, in his "Elements of General His¬ tory," page 173, says the Portuguese brought the first. The Spanish, according to Carter, did not bring their first until 15n, eight years later. But there is another version of our pre-emption and occupancv of this Western Continent which goes to prove that not only was there an unknown branch of Ham's descendants here centuries before Columbus; but it is more than probable that members of the Afri¬ can branch of the race were on the continent long be¬ fore Columbus came. At any rate, we now call on the white man to prove the assertion untrue. J. K. Ingram, LL. D., Librarian of Trinity College, Dublin, says that the Spanish government made Ovando Governor of Hi^paniola, West India Islands, and sent him out in 1502, and when he arrived he found Africans already there, and he does not seem to* know how long they had been there (see Encyclopaedia Brit- annica, page 137). Now, let us note the difference in the two versions, and their significance. Carter's History, published in 1872, says on page 173 that the Portuguese were the first to import Africans into the West Indies, in 1503, and the Spanish, not until 1511. But J. K. Ingram, LL. D., says Ovando went as Governor in 1502, and that he found Africans then there; and he quotes as proof of it that Ovando makes the statement in corre¬ spondence with the home governmen in 1503. So we have documentary proof that representatives of the Af- 72 178 THE NATIONS rican race were here long before the dates were given by Carter, and many other historians. But how long we do not know. It may have been before Columbus came. What real, authentic proof has the white man that this is not the fact in the case? for it will be re¬ membered that the first date given in history that any of the inhabitants of Africa were removed from its soil into any country to be made slaves of, was in A. D. 1442, just fifty years before Columbus got lost, and found himself in this country, which was just 453 years ago. The shippers were the Portuguese, and the first coun¬ try to which they were shipped was, according to the best authority, Portugal, and out of Portugal into Spain, and from Spain to other parts of the West¬ ern Continent; but not a new one, but a very old one, as the governments of Mexico and other islands and countries will show, as well as the recent findings of the many exploration and excavation companies now at work in the country. The current writers, speakers and historians falsely refer to this as a new continent, a new world, a new country, etc., whereas, the pointings are that it was inhabited long before Europe was, for we have a more or less reliable form of data showing when, how and bv whom nearly all Europe was settled; and by the best information now in possession of ex¬ perts in antiquity we are not carried back to an age much beyond what is known as the "stone age," that is, when men used stone to make implements of war and industry. Whereas, we have in this country evidence by means of fossil discoveries, and also documentary, by way of hieroglyphic inscriptions on monuments, tombs, caves, etc., carrying us back thousands of years be¬ yond the "stone age." Agassiz, for example, going back ten thousand years, and Dr. Dowler fifty thou¬ sand years; for he savs that in certain sedimentarv de- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 179 posits found deep down beneath the earth, near New Orleans, in which the remains of men are found, show that age; and indeed this country is so old that the evidences point to a race, both of men and animals, that lived here and then disappeared entirely, or, in other words, died out, and another one arose or came on the stage of action, which Columbus found when he came. (See Encyclopaedia Britannica>, page 691.) I do not attempt to say how valuable or important any of the above is as evidence, for it is based on the theories and doctrines of Geology, and Geology is very young and uncertain as a science at best, but I quote in support of the statement I made, that the pointings were that this country is much older than Europe. But let us again refer to the fact of our pre-emption of this continent, for it is a fact undeniably that Afri¬ ca's sons and daughters were not only in the Indies at a very early date, but were here in the first colony only thirteen years after it was formed; the colony having been planted in 1607 in Virginia, and we were brought in 1620. ' New York was settled in 1614, which was six years before we came—Massachusetts in 1620. So there were only two colonies which had laid their corner¬ stones before we were on the ground. New Hamp¬ shire was settled in 1623, which was three years after we were here; New Jersev in 1624, which is four years after us; Delaware in 1627, but we were here seven years before; Maine in 1630, but we were here ten years before Maine was settled; Maryland was formed in 1634, but we were here fourteen years before; Con¬ necticut comes next, in 1635, but we were here fifteen years before that; Rhode Island began in 1636, but that is sixteen years after we were here; North Car¬ olina in 1660, which is forty years after we were here; South Carolina in 1670, which is fifty years after our coming—yes, a whole half century later; then comes 180 THE NATIONS Pennsylvania, 1681, which is sixty-one years after us; lastly comes Georgia, in 1733, which is one hundred and thirteen years later. Yes, we had been here one hundred and thirteen vears in what is now the United States; we were here felling its forests, tilling its soil and helping to make its borders like the Garden of the Lord. It will be seen, therefore, that there are only two states in the Union whose cornerstones were laid before we were in the limits of the colonial territory, and those two were the colonies of Virginia and New York. All the rest were behind us excepting Massa¬ chusetts, in 1620, the same year of our coming. But it will be remembered that we were on the continent in the West Indies in 1503, which was one hundred and five years before the Virginia colony, which was the first colony, There is another very important fact in history, go¬ ing to establish the ground I take, and that is the rec¬ ommendation of Columbus and a Catholic priest by the name of De Las Casas. The priest was a missionary to the West Indies. Now, what I want to know is, how could Columbus and the priest have that informa¬ tion and knowledge necessary for them to have, in or¬ der to make the recommendation; for it will be re¬ membered that Columbus and the priest De Las Casas based their recommendation for the transportation of Africans into the West Indies on the fact, as they said, that the Africans were much more hardy than the oth¬ er inhabitants of the Islands, and that they could stand the hard labor of mining and farming much bet¬ ter than the so-called Indians. Strict attention will be paid right here to the fact that it is said that the very first Africans that came were brought by the Spanish and Portuguese, was on the recommendation of Colum¬ bus and the priest. Now, how could they make the hardiness, strength and durability of the African a con- FROM A NEW POINT OP VIEW. 181 tfast to the weakness and unfitness of the Indians if there were no Africans there, and enough of them, too, with which to make the experiment and time enough to have proof of the test? The only proper conclusion I can draw is that Co¬ lumbus and the priest found Africans on the islands when he and the priest arrived, just as Ovando, who was appointed governor of the West Indies by the Spanish government, says he found Africans when he came, and does not know how long they had been there. What fact is it that presents itself just here? It is that we have conclusive proof that Africans were here and settled in this country long before the Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, Dutch, Irish, or any other of the white nations. Now let us have the proof of the assertion. It is this: Columbus, the priest and Ovando were all officers of the same government, the Spanish govern¬ ment. Columbus went to the islands in' 1492, and the priest went with him on the second or third trip, and Ovando, the governor, went in 1502. This same year Columbus made his fourth and last voyage to this con¬ tinent. Hence here is Columbus, the priest and Ovando on the islands, or in this country, at the same time; and Ovando writes back to his government that there are Africans already here, and that he does not know how long they had been here, and yet he himself came in 1502, and the first Africans are said to have been brought in 1503, one year after Ovando came; and if they, as is stated in history, came one year after he got there, could he have written to his government that they were here when he came, and that he did not know how they had been here? And again, if Colum¬ bus and his priest knew when the first Africans came, would they not have told Ovando, the governor? Of course, the conclusion is they would have told him if 182 THE NATIONS they had known; that he would have known himself, because he was there on the island one year before the first reputed, Africans were brought. Here, then, is a discrepancy between the history that has been made of the matter and brought down to us, and the report of Ovando, made to his government in Spain, as to the state and condition of the Island. Which shall we accept as evidence in this case: the original state document now on file in the archives of the Spanish government, or the manufactured, ma¬ nipulated history ^making? I say, take the original Spanish state document every time. Then there are our acquirements of real estate and finance, which give us a right here in this country, for the white man does not own all of either, as is so repeatedly said by some of our own leaders; and I do not know of better proof than to quote just here from an article published in the Chicago Inter-Ocean: "In the North Atlantic States there are 5,508 farms and homes owned by colored people, free from mort¬ gage, and 3,Q2i that are mortgaged. In the South At¬ lantic States there are 108,084 homes and farms owned by colored people, free from incumbrance, and 7,608 that are mortgaged. In the South Central States there are 100,581 homes and farms owned by colored people free from incumbrance and 8,607 are mort¬ gaged. In the Western States there are 1,304 homes and farms owned free by colored people and 289 that are mortgaged. In the whole country there are 233,747 homes and farms owned by colored people, free from all incumbrance, and 29,641 that are mortgaged. In the South the percentage of home-owners is larger than of those who have homes in cities' and villages. With the white race the condition is just the opposite; the larger percentage of owners having homes in cities and villages rather than farms. If the same growth that has been made in the last ten years continues for FJROM A NEW POINT OP VIEW. 183 another decade, the colored people will be the most in¬ dependent farmers in the country. From the above statement of facts no better evidence can be produced bv any other race in the United States." The colored people of the District* of Columbia alone pay taxes on $11,000,000 worth of property Can the white man, then, be said to own the District of Columbia, when the colored people own $11,000,000 worth of it? In speaking of our educational status I will not stay to mention the many institutions of learning, and of different grades, too, which we, as a race, are establish¬ ing and maintaining; and not only so, but I find we are very largely self-supporting in those established by others for our benefit. In proof of this I will just here insert the words of Rev. C. C. Smith, Secretary of the Board of Education of the "Disciples' Church "All the church schools for colored people in the South are crowded with students; and they are pay students; for of the 28,000 scholars in' these schools, 25,000 of them pay an average of $100 a year for their education, and only 300 are free scholarships." Again, for further proof, President J. H. Johnson, of the Virginia Normal and Collegiate Institute, says the students of that school pay to the state of Virginia $10,000 a year for their education. Yes, and an equally good showing could be made if statistics could be taken the whole country over. Now, let us note our constitutional and legal status, for both in the original constitution and by the Four¬ teenth and Fifteenth Amendments we have a stand¬ ing: right in this country as a home. I quote from Article Fourth of the Constitution, Section Second, and first clause: "The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States." The fourth clause gives us equal interTState privileges and 184 THIS NATIONS immunities, with all other citizens, because we are citizens; and we are citizens because the Fourteenth Article of the Constitution says so, in that we were born here. It is as follows: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are cit¬ izens of the United States, and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State de prive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." And I wish to say also that we, as a race, hold the National Government equally responsible with the State Governments for our citizen rights and privileges. Yes, and more so', for the Constitution, as just quoted, grants us equal protection of the laws in that it says: "No State shall deny any citizen within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws," and the whole world knows that the Southern States, do> not grant us "equal protection." So we hold the Nation's Government re¬ sponsible, because we and all other persons who are citizens of the United States are so* in a pre-eminent sense, in that they become citizens of the United States before they do or can of any State ; for no one can be¬ come a citizen of a State until he has first become a citizen of the United States. And, again, persons become citizens of the United States by a different process than that of the State. The first is by birth or naturalization, and the other is simply by taking up a residence within the bounds of any State. But citizenship does not follow the taking up of such a residence until he has first become a citizen of the United States. So the States are dependent on th« United States for their citizens. But by becoming a citizen of a State one does not lose his United FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 185 States citizenship; and hence he holds a twofold citi¬ zenship—that of State and United States, and both are bound by constitutional enactment to afford him pro¬ tection to "life, limb and property." But if the State does not protect her citizens, then the United States must do so, or violate its own Consti¬ tution, for in the 14th Article it says: "No State shall make or enforce any law that will abridge the privi¬ leges or immunities of citizens of the United States." Now this Article of the Constitution gives the United States supervising power over the several States, as to what laws they make for the government of citizens of the United States. It says more than that, for it says that the States shall not make any unjust laws, and if they do, it says they shall not enforce them, and all this is said for the simple reason that all persons who are citizens of the several States were citizens of the United States first, and that they do not lose their United States citizenship by becoming citizens of the several States, and that the United States does not re¬ linquish its right to look after and protect its citizens simply because they happen to become citizens of some State. But the United States says that the States shall in no wise oppress her citizens; and yet how shamefully the general Government stood by and allowed the States to make unjust laws and enforce them; and more than that, the general Government has stood still, yes, "stock still," and seen the meanest' kind of Customs grow into practice, and take the place of properly enacted laws, regardless of the fact that the Constitution says no one shall be denied equal protec¬ tion of the laws, on the flimsy pretext that the United States allows the States to exercise their own police regulations; and it is absolutely true that the general Government does that effectually, but only where its colored citizens are concerned. 186 THE NATIONS Yes, this is our home, and let us resolve to live in it, cultivate it, and niever cease our efforts until it is civ¬ ilized and purely Christianized. I will not lengthen this subject by staying to speak of cur right to the country because of our patriotic de¬ fence of it in times of war and rebellion, both national and international, but will leave that for the future. Then there is another very important thing connected with the white man and his occupancy of this country, and that is, he is not where he is and what he is to-day, as to the success he has made, whatever of it there is, by the exercise of wise and deliberate plans, laid and carried out; but he has reached his present status through haps and mishaps of all kinds, and all manner of chance work. Take for example the coming of Columbus to this country, which is blazed abroad by the white man as a great and wonderful feat of genius, whereas, it was a pure accident, and Columbus died, poor fellow, thin kino- he had discovered a new and nearer route to India, and it was a blunder tc begin with, and from that day down to the present time, the white man has been making equally egre¬ gious blunders, mistakes and failures, but has claimed them to be great achievements. The next fraudulent step was to call the coming oi Columbus a discovery of a new country, when, as 1 have shown it was inhabited by millions of people , who had lived in it and cultivated the soil for thou¬ sands of years. The next mistake was the naming of the people Indians, whereas, ihe proper name for them was and is, "Western Continentors." But this mistake grew as I have said, out of the fact that Columbus was lost and thought he was in India. This so-called discov¬ ery has done and is doing great violence to general history, and especially to the ethnographical branch of it. The next was the introduction of slavery on this from a new point of view. 187 continent, which was not done when those twenty slaves are said to have been sold at Jamestown, Va. But Columbus enslaved a shipload of the inhabitants of the islands—five hundred in nupiber—and sent them to his home in Spain. So the African was not the first to be enslaved on this continent. But not only so, he was not the first to be enslaved in the colonies, for white women were sold to the colonies in Virginia the same year with the colored, and in larger numbers, too, for while there were twenty colored, there were one hundred whites; and Lossing's history of the United States says they were dissolute and vagabond (white) women, and other white convicts at different times were sent. Lossing also says that the womien sold to the colonies were called "jail-birds," and were let out on condition they came over here and became wives for the colonists. Again, the white man declared that his deliberate purpose in' migrating as to establish religious liberty and freedom of conscience in all that was religious, and yet they had not gotten out of a colonial state be¬ fore several persons were burned alive for their reli¬ gious opinions in Salem, Mass.; and a large number of others were banished from the colony for the same cause (see Dr. Backus' History). And the white man is now at this time persecuting the Seventh Day Bap¬ tists in this State on account of their religious faith as regards the keeping of the Sabbath day. So there has been at no time since the establishment of the Colonies, till now, true religious liberty; so on this attempt also —at doing something worthy of humanity—will have to be written "failure." And I might continue this list of mistakes and blunders without limit. CHAPTER VIII. RACE INTERMINGLING. While it is a fact that the different races have come down to us with their distinctive characteristics—thar is, with their own languages, colors, physical make-up and habits, yet there has, in all ages of man's history, been an intermingling, more or less, going on among them. It began in the antediluvian world, or before the flood, and is kept up to the present day. The first incident of this kind was that of the descendants of Cain marrying the daughters of Seth, mentioned in the fourth chapter of the book of Genesis, and from that day to this, all races have married and intermarried, mingled and intermingled, until at times they have either become so mixed that it could not be told which was which, or until the one was swallowed up or ab¬ sorbed in the other, as was the case with the ten tribes of Joktan, who'was one of the sons of Shem: they are supposed to have been so completely merged into the Arabians that there was nothing left of them. It is perpetually being asserted that the descendants of Ham and those of the so-called Caucasian races never mixed. Our ourpose is to examine into this matter and state the facts. So let us begin with Abra¬ ham, and we find that he took for his wife, by the re¬ quest of Sarah, Hagar, who was an Egyptian, and the Egyptians were the descendants of Ham, because they are the offspring of Mizraim, who was the second son of Ham. So here a Shemite in the person of Abraham marries a -Hamite in the person of Hagar. Now, the son of Abraham by Hagar, his Hamite wife, was Ish- (188) FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 189 m&ej. This is the first son he ever had. And here is an intermixture, for Ishmael is half Hamite and half Shemite, because his father was a son of Shem and his mother a daughter of Ham. Now, let us see what became of the sons of Ishmael. Why, they went into Arabia, then married and inter¬ married with the descendants pf Cush; and it is well known that Cush was the oldest son of Ham—no one ever denies that—and indeed, the truth is that the his¬ torical and geographical situation of the descendants of Ishmael is such as to make it almost impossible that they could have married any but the descendants of Ham, because they were surrounded on every side by Canaanites and Cushites, who were Hamites. We have been showing who the sons of Ishmael married; but whom did Ishmael himself marry? He is said to have married an Egyptian: (see Encyclopae¬ dia Britannica on Ishmael). Then if Ishmael married an Egyptian wife, which is more than likely, because his mother, who was Hagar, was an Egyptian—so we see that Ishmael himself was a half Hamite, because his mother was a Hamite and his father a Shemite. Then if Ishmael was half Hamite and he married an Egyptian wife, who was a whole Hamite, then his children would be three-fourths Hamite; but the main proof of intermingling in this case is to be found in the fact that Abraham was a Shemite and Hagar a Ham¬ ite, and that they had a sqn who was Ishmael, whose name mean's, "God will hear." The next case we will notice is that of Joseph, who married the daughter of an Egyptian priest. Her name w'as Asenath (see Gen. 41st chapter, 45th verse). She had two sons by Joseph, whose names were Ephraim and Manasseh. So the sons of Joseph were half Hamites and half Shemites, because his father was a Shemite and his mother a Hamite, because she was an Egyptian, and the Egyptians were Hamites through Mizraim, who settled and peopled Egypt. 190 THE NATIONS And he was the second son of Ham. Is not this inter¬ mixture by marriage? and, not only that, but these two half-Hamite boys took their places among the twelve tribes of Israel, and, indeed, without them the twelve tribes could not have been complete, for there were only ten sons of Jacob, and he adopted these two sons of Joseph, and so the list of twelve sons was complete. There, is no proof that I know of, eithfer in or out of the Scripture, that goes to show, that the descendants of Joseph did not continue to intermarry with the Egyp¬ tians ; reason and logic both go to prove that they did, for it is not at all likely that the sons of Joseph would be against marrying ampng their mother's people; but it is more than likely they would be delighted to do so. Now, let us examine into the marriage of Moses, and we find that he married Ziporah, the daughter of a man who was an inhabitant of the country of Midian, his name v/as Ruel or Jethro. He had seven daugh¬ ters, and he was also a priest. . Let us now inquire of what race was the wife of Moses? Why, she was of the race of Ham; and to substantiate this assertion I will quote Num. 12:1: "And Miriam and Aaron spake against Moses because of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married: for he had married an Ethio¬ pian woman." Not only do we here learn to what race the wife of Moses belonged, but also to what race her father, Reuel or Tethro belonged; and that is the Hamite race, because the Ethiopians were Hamites. None. I believe, deny that, and my very proof that Reuel, the father of Ziporah, was an Ethiopian, is that she herself was one, and, of course, she could not be an Ethiopian unless her father was; and if she was. then he must be also; and that she was an Ethiopian the Scripture positively states. That Jethro or Reuel, Moses' father-in-law, being an Ethiopian, is found off here in the country of Mid¬ ian, can be easily accounted for art the same ground FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 191 that Abraham, having been born in Ur, of the Chal- dtcs, yet his future home is in Canaan. Of course, Abraham migrated into Canaan; so could Jethro mi¬ grate into Midian from Ethiopia, and there become a great man and a priest, which he was. Moses had two sons, their names were Gershom and and Eliezer. They were half Hamite and half Shem- ite. because their mother was a Hamite and their father a Shemite. Now into the history of Esau let us examine. He was a twin brother with Jacob, and grandson of Abra¬ ham. His first two wives were of the daughters of Canaan. I quote here from Genesis 36:2: "Esau took his wives of the daughters of Canaan; Adah the daughter of Elon the Hittite, and Aholibamah the Hi- vite." Esau also married wives of the daughters of Ishmael, and Ishmael's mother was Hagar, and she was an Egyptian, and the Egyptians were, as we have already seen, Hamites. And then we are told that Ish¬ mael himself also married an Egyptian wife. So, then, the children of Esau, bv his Ishmaelitish wives, were three-fourths Hamite blood. Would you not call that pretty well mixed? And the children of Esau, by his Canaanitish wives, were half Hamite and half Shemite, because Canaan, who was the father of the Canaanites, and whose daughter Esau married, was the youngest son of Ham, and Esau was the son of Isaac, who was a Shemite because he was a descend¬ ant of Shem through Abraham. Now, Esau was the father of the Edomites. Who, then, were the Edom- ites ? They were a mixed race of Hamites and Shem- ites, with more* of Hamite than Shemite blood in their veins. Then there is Salmon, a prince of the tribe of Tudah. He married Rahab of Jericho, who received the spies that Moses sent to spy out the land of Canaan. Now, Rahab was a descendant of Canaan, and Salmon' was 192 THE NATIONS the son of Nahshon, who was a famous prince in Ju- dah; so here is another Shemite marrying a Hamite; and yet one can see it in print, and hear it said almost any t,ime, that the descendants of Shem and Japheth never mixed with those of Ham, when the truth is that almost every prominent leader of the Hebrew race married and intermarried with the children of Ham. And not only that, but through this marriage of Rahab with Salmon—Rahab, a daughter of Canaan, and Sal¬ mon, a son of? Judah—the descendants of Ham fall in line with the -Saviour's birth, and thus a Hamite be¬ comes a descendant of Judah and therefore belongs to the royal family of David. And so David had th^ blood of Ham in his veins.* Now,, you will remember that when I say that the Saviour sprang from Rahab, I mean that she, by her marriage to Salmon, who was a descendant of Judah, came into the line of descent with Judah and that she became the mother of one of the generations down through whom the Saviour came. For example, she was the mother of Boaz, and Obed was the son of Boaz; and Jesse was the son of Obed; and David, the king, was the son of Jesse; or in other words, David was the double grandson, or the great, great-grandson of Rahab. So we see that Rahab was the great, great- grandmother of David, the king. And here we see also that instead of God recognizing and accepting and carrying out the curse of Noah, which he' pro¬ nounced upon Canaan, he not only gave his descend¬ ants the blessed land in which the Saviour was to be born, but gave him a place directly in line with the birth of Christ—that is, caused one of his descendants, namely, Rahab, to become the mother of one of the families through whom he came. May I be permitted to ask, what greater honor could Cod have put upon Canaan than to give him a home in * See Dr. Gill on Matthew 1:5. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 193 the land that was afterwards to become the birthplace of the Saviour of the world? And not only so, but caused the Saviour to be born through one of his race. I ask again, Is not this a mixing of the Hamite and Shemite ? We will next see who did Judah marry. Read Gen. 38:2, and we find the following: "And Judah saw there a daughter of a certain Canaanite, whose name was Shuah; and he took her, and went in unto herso here is Judah, the leader of the twelve tribes of Israel, who marries a Canaanite! And Judah also had a son by an¬ other Canaanitish woman, and her name was T'amar, and the name of the son was Phares. Turning now to Matthew, first chapter and third verse, we find that this same Phares is there mentioned, and one in the line of the Saviour's birth; and it is also here plainly shown that the tribe of Judah, was half Hamitfe and half Shemite, because the wife of Judah was a Hamite,. and he himself a Shemite. But there is another case we might mention. It is that of Lot, the nephew of Abraham. Who Lot him¬ self married it is not said, but we are told whom some of his daughters married. They were men of Sodom. Genesis 19th chapter and 14th verse says: "And Lot went out and spake unto his sons in law, which mar¬ ried his daughters." We see by this that-Lot's daugh¬ ters intermarried with the inhabitants of Sodom, who were Canaanites, and were therefore Hamites or the descendants of Ham, because their forefather, Canaan, was the youngest son of Ham. Now, turning to the fourteenth chapter of Judges, we find that. Samson, a Jew, married a Philistine wife, and the Jews were Shemites, and the Philistines were Hamites. The Jews were Shemites through Abraham, and the Philistines were Hamites through Philistim, and Philistim was a descendant of Mizraim.* And so * Genesis 10:13-14. 13 194 THE NATIONS here we have another intermarriage; and we see that the Philistines were of the descendants of Ham. Your attention is now called to the intermarriage ot Solomcn with the Egyptians; and Solomon, in many respects, was the greatest king the Israelites ever had, and yet he could not resist the temptation of marrying a Hamite wife. He married Pharaoh's daughter. I will here mention the fact that the effort has often been made to prove that Joseph and the other Israelites did not serve under the original Egyptian kings, who were the descendants of Ham through Mizraim, his second son. But it is said that at some time or other there came into Egypt a nation of people known as Shepherds. Now, it is a well known fact that the only people that can be defined and historically traced into Egypt, until many, many years after the Israelites were expelled from Egypt, were the Israelites themselves. And I would state further that the whole matter rests not on historical facts, but on hypothetical supposition. And it is therefore but a very weak theory at best, for the whole of it rests upon the rendering of two Egyp¬ tian words, and then making a compound word of them; and that word is "Hykshos." The two words from which this compound word is* derived are "Hyk," which means "captive," and "Shos" which means "a shepherd." Therefore the word means "a captive shepherd." But those, who first invented the hypothet¬ ical theory before mentioned have translated it to mean "shepherd kings," but the unreasonableness of the idea is readily seen from the fact that it is a nation that is said to have invaded and taken charge of Egypt—a whole nation, mind you. Now, whoever heard of a whole nation of kings? If the whole nation were kings, where were the subjects? Over whom did this nation of kings reign? Then again the theory falls to the ground when we consider the discrepancy in dates, as to the time this nation of kings entered and began to rule in Egypt; and as to FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 195 how long they ruled, and as to just what did happen un¬ der their reign. One says this nation of kings entered Egypt B. C. 1842; another, 1639; another, 1445. Now^ I ask in the name of all that is called historical truth, which of these dates is correct ? And when we come to the length of time they remained in Egypt, we are not helped in the least. One writer puts it at 259 years, and another at 511, and another at 103. I ask again, which was it? But what is to be gained as a proof that Jo¬ seph and his brethren did not serve under the descend¬ ants of Ham? But if the dates mentioned were true; and suppose a nation of "shepherd kings" did rule Egypt, what then? The auestion immediately turns on, who were the "shepherd kings ?" One writer says thev were Phoenicians.. Well, then, they were Hamites still, for the Phoenicians were of the descendants of Canaan, who was the son of Ham, the Noah-cursed, so nothing would be gained by that, for that would still be Ham ruling Shem. But others say the nation of "shepherd kings" were the Ishmaelites. Well, sup¬ pose they were; that would not help the matter any, for the Ishmaelites were the descendants of Ham and Shem, but more of Ham than of Shem, from the fact that Ishmael himself was only half Shemite, through his father, who was Abraham; but Hagar, his mother, was a Hamite, being an Egyptian. Then we are told that Ishmael married an Egyptian wife, so his children, who were the Ishmaelites, were three-fourths Hamite and one-fourth Shemite only, which would make them legally all Hamite. We now ask, "then, into what race did Solomon marry? Evidently it was the race of Ham. But there is another case I might mention. It is the marriage of Ahab, king of Israel, to Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal, king of Tyre and Sidon. Now, it will be remembered that the Tyrians and Sidonians were Hamites, for they were the descendants of Sidon, 196 THE NATIONS. who was the first-born son of Canaan. So here a of Shem marries a princess of Ham. . And to verify the fact that this marrying an ir* er marrying is still going on, we have only to look about us and see the different types and shades among us. CHAPTER IX. THE "SOCIAL EQUALITY" IDEA. Was there ever an image floating- in the white man's brain that gave him so much mental pain and worry as the "social equality" idea he has! It seems to keep him in mental agony year in and year out, and from early morning until late at night. Yes, it is the sub- 1*ect of his dreams while he slumbers, and the terror of his social imaginations by day. The point of anxiety with him is "social equality." Well, what is "social equality"—or rather, what is meant by it? The white man pays great attention to cognomenology, but very little to etymology and derivation. In other words, he is wonderful in making and using terms, but as to their real sense and meaning he pays but little attention. After studying the white man from my earliest rec¬ ollections to the present, I find that he is not disposed to deal with realities; not with facts as they are, but fancies and fictions, fables and myths. And ais I go back in history I find this quality an innate prin¬ ciple with him, whether he has studied as an Aryan, a Greek, a Roman, or Anglo-Saxon or American ; the same thing is found to be true of him. So it need not seem strange to us that he misuses and abuses the term "social equality," for history shows that his whole life or existence has been an irascible, competitive one; not civil in its early stages, but barbarous and degraded; and from that on up through several intermediate steps to a hyper-semi-civilizatiQn which in turn becomes nothing more nor less than a refined barbarism; and the principle with him is not to co-operate and as- (197) 198 THE NATIONS sociate, but compete on the principle of the "survival of the fittest," regardless of what becomes of his iel- low and brother. So I say we need not think his pres¬ ent course strange, for it is just like him in all the ages of his existence. In order to show how the white man deals with fancies and not with facts, take the words "social equal¬ ity" for example. What is "social equality" and what does the white man mean when he cries out, "No social equality!" Is he sincere or is he only gambling with words and terms ? For it simply means to be .civil and civilized. Does the white man think that he is not civilized, and therefore not prepared for civil inter¬ course with colored men? Here is Worcester's definition of "social:" "i. Relating to general or public interests; relating to society." "2. Inclined to associate or have converse with others." Worcester also says under synonym to "social:" "Those who are formed for society are social." Does not the white man know that the colored man in this country largely constitutes the social compact or the society which constitutes the organic whole? And does not the white man know that he is talking folly, ac¬ cording to Worcester's definition of the word "social," when he stands on a public platform and introduces a colored man as speaker of the occasion, and then gets up himself and says the idea of social equality is not to be thought of, much less'practiced ? What is the white man doing every day but practicing social equality with the colored man, for social or society intercourse is all there is of it. Now, in order that this may be seen to be true, let us see the word "equality." Worcester un¬ der the second head of his definition, says this • "The same degree of dignity or claims, as the equal¬ ity of men in the scale of being; the equality of rights " FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 199 Now the white man has declared in that instrument by which he says he is governed, that "all men are cre¬ ated equalhence his own declaration that coloref violating the fourteenth commandment of the Bible, were to vote for the candi¬ date, against whom the charges were brought, he would be elected by over two hundred thousand ma¬ jority;" and he was elected by an overwhelming vote. This statement was made by no less person than the late Rev. Henry Ward Beecher; and no one to my knowl¬ edge, has called the assertion in question, nor contra¬ dicted it, in an)' way whatever. But let me ask in all earnestness, is there anything in the whole catalogue of crimes, in which the white race is not adept? If there is, what is it? If you want to get a true insight into some of the things it is capable of, just read the following. It is published in the Baltimore American of February 29, 1896: "San Francisco, February 28.—The Rev. Dr. Brown, after two months silence, has given his defense to the public. The story is the most startling which has yet been told in the scandal. It was related as a confession of the ecclesiastical court last night, by Miss Martha Overman, who is the first in the sensational case to confess herself a blackmailer. Miss Overman's manner was striking. She spoke so quietly that even the mem¬ bers of the council were forced to draw forward until their chairs formed a small semi-circle on the platform. The woman spoke deliberately, weaving a remarkable story, logically and clearly. She confessed that she was a blackmailer, and tried to be a thief, and she gave the information with a smile. She confessed that she plotted the destruction of the man whose hospitality she now enjoys. She declared that to save herself from work and the possible hardships of poverty, she con¬ spired with Mrs. Mary A. Davidson to ruin the char¬ acter of the Rev. Dr. Brown and to blacken her own. She asserted that she approached the representatives FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 207 of a morning paper with a hope of tempting them to blackmail the accused pastor. She drew her recital to dramatic climax by asserting, with the smile that never left her face, that she wrote the letters which picture her own moral and physical ruin and placed the cause of her deep distress at the door of the Rev. Dr. Brown. Asserting all this, she denied that there had ever been the slightest impropriety in her relations with the man against whom she plotted so shrewdly." The reader will see that further comment is unneces¬ sary. CHAPTER X. THE WHITE MAN CARRIED BACK TO HIS BEGINNINGS. Take the white man back, first, to his origin as a people. This is a matter of vital importance both to us, as a race and also to the white man, because it will serve as a looking-glass to the white man, in which he can see the "rock" from whence he was "hewn," and the "hole of the pit whence he was digged," and thus enable him to see that he was not always what he is to-day; and that he is not to-day all he ought to be. It will also give us a chance to see that the white man's beginnings were not what his every-day proud and haughty actions would have the world of man¬ kind believe they were. The fact of it is, when we take the white man back, we find that he does not know what is the origin of his race, as a people; nei¬ ther does he know the origin of his color, or in other words, he does not know when or how he came to be a race or nation of people—that is, I mean to say, that the white man cannot trace the present white peo¬ ple of to-day to any connection whatever with Noah and his descendants. I know he claims his connection with Japheth, the third or youngest son of Noah; but history fails to trace him there—fails to show that any one of Japheth's descendants ever reached Europe. But, you say, does not history show that the white man is in Europe? Yes, but history does not show that the white man that is in Europe or any other part of the world is the son or descendant of Japheth. What history does show is that Noah had three sons, and one of them was named Japheth. But history (208) THE NATIONS. 209 does not show whatever became of him; neither does it show that he was white; so, in order to show that the present white races are the descendants of Japheth, the son of Noah, they must first show that Japheth and his descendants were white, which they cannot do. The most they can do by history is to show that there is a very small handful of people in the world who are known as white people; but as to how they got into the world, and where they began to exist as a race or natiou, and when and how they got their color,.history is absolutely silent. We are now beginning to hunt for the links by which the attempt is made to hook the white man on to Japheth as his ancestor. Geikie, in his "Hours with the Bible," page 181, says, "Gomer, the son of Japheth, was the same as the Cimbrians r of antiquity, or the Cimbri of the Roman times." But Cyclopaedia Bri- tannica on the same subject, uses these words which completely upset Geikie's statement: ''Cimbri or Cim¬ brians, an ancient nation of unknown affinity, which was one of the most formidable enemies of the Roman power, and has proved one of the most difficult sub¬ jects for the historical investigator." Cyclopaedia Britannica says: "The Cimbrians are of unknown affinity," so we see they do not show any re¬ lationship with Japheth. But in order that it may be seen to what straits the historian is put in hunting material or real evidence that Japheth and the Cimbri or Cimbrians, Greeks and Romans, and the present white races of the earth are one and the same people, I will here insert a paragraph from the writings of one of them: Dr. Geikie, in his book, "Hours with the Bible," in speaking of the distribution and settlement of the vari¬ ous tribes of the Eastern Country, as to what parts of the globe they went after the Flood, says, "The distri¬ bution of the'Various nations and tribes to the respec- 14 210 THE NATIONS tive sons of Noah, has been thought by some to be based on the three great distinctions of color, Shem be¬ ing assumed to stand for the red or brown races; Ham for the dark or black races, and Japheth for the fair or white. Others, however, regard the list as drawn up in reference to the geographical positions of the dif¬ ferent nations or tribes. But it is certain that mere geographical relations do not explain all the character¬ istics of the list, for while the classification by distinct origin may not in every instance be capable of proof, it is indisputable in the case of many." And speaking fur¬ ther, he says: "Beginning with Japheth, the Bible opens with the name of Gomer, the Cimbrians of an¬ tiquity their original seat in the farthest north known to the Hebrews or Greeks, is alluded to in the 'Odyssey.' " Here we see again to what straits the white man is put in order to make out a historical descent from Japheth, the son of Noah. Geikie here makes a leap from Gomer to Homer, and from the Bible to the "Odyssey." He is, indeed, in a close corner. From Gomer's day (see Gen. chapter 10) to Homer's day is 1,497 years. The Bible chronology of Gomer is that his day was 2,347 years B. C. Herodotus says Homer lived about 850 B. C. Thus is seen the difference in date as shown above. Rev. Geikie, D. D., where was Japheth or his son Gomer, or any of Japheth's de¬ scendants all those 1,497 years? What were they do¬ ing? What mark did they leave behind them, either above or under ground, to show that they ever lived and acted a part of life's history? What town did they lay out ? What city did Japheth, Gomer and their de¬ scendants build! What kingdom did they establish? What monuments did they erect to perpetuate their names on the earth during that 1,497 years—that is, from 2347 B. C. to 850 B. C. I answer that it is a total blank. from a new point of view. 211 Yes, I repeat that here is a period of 1,997 years that Dr. Geikie says not a word about, but just jumps to the conclusion that Homer, in one stanza of his poem, the Odyssey, must refer to Japheth and his de¬ scendants. Let me here insert the lines of Homer, and I will leave you to decide how much proof there is in them that he refers to Japheth or how far those liv.cs go to prove that the Greeks, the Romans or that the whites of to-day are the offspring's of Japheth: "The shores of deep Oceanus: Of the Cimmerian men the race and town Were there, in mist and cloud enwrapped; the sun Never looks down upon them with its rays; Nor when it marches up the starry skies, Nor when from heaven it turns again to earth, But over wretched men sad night is spread." Oh! what a dark and dismal picture to be drawn of any people! Could it be worse? But what proof is there in these lines that Homer here refers to> Japheth or any of his descendants ? There is nothing said about Japheth nor Gomer. But he speaks of the Cimme¬ rians, who, Dr. Geike, nor does any other writer prove that the Cimmerians or Cimbrains, were Japhethites; but they simply assert that it must be so. Why must it be so? Because the white man needs it to prove that he did descend from a known race of people? This is all the reason I can' see why it must be so. The "must be" certainly does not rest on historical data, but it rests on the white man's simple desire for something as proof of his common origin with that of the rest of mankind. But I repeat, that when we take him back to hunt for it, he gets com¬ pletely lost. And the day is gone by, and gone for¬ ever, when the white man's simple, bold and ground¬ less assertions can stand for historical facts and data. Now, inasmuch as there are no traces of Japheth and his descendants left in "history, then let us reason 212 THE NATIONS awhile as to what may have become of him and his posterity. He might have been driven by the Hamites,. who had charge of the whole.country of Babylonia, up into the cold, barren north region, and there starved and frozen to death; or he might have been drowned in trying to cross the Euphrates; or he might have staid about Babel and been absorbed by the great Ham- itic family of eighteen nations (and Gomer only oro- duced seven) ; so it would be a very small matter for eighteen nations to absorb seven. But be that as it may, it is a fact that the few passages found in the book of Genesis is all the history that k known of Ja- pheth. Yes, take the white man back, and as you walk, ask him from which of the three sons of Noah did he spring, and he cannot tell you, for he cannot tell you what color Japheth was. Knobel says the wor-1 "Japheth" is derived from "Yaphah, to be beautiful," so he makes beautiful and white to mean the same thing. The same writer says: "Shem means a name of renown, and that Ham means "hot." But think of the idea of making white and beautiful mean the same! And Dr. Geikie says Knobel makes the word "beauti¬ ful" mean "white," because that is thought to be the most beautiful color. "Thought to be," mind you! Not resting on any tangible or scientific proof, but sim¬ ply on Knobel's thought of the matter. And why does he think white the most beautiful color? Because Knobel himself is of the color which is called white. But, are all things that are beautiful for that reason, white? for I have seen many "beautiful" black horses and other animals. Are those black animals also white? According to the argument of Knobel they are. because they are beautiful, for he says "beautiful" and "white" are one and the same thing. I repeat that the white man of to-day cannot tell when his race began to be known as the white race, or FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 213 how it came about that they are so known; neither does he know when the first white people began to exist in the world. Secondly, take the white man back to his Greek origin and growth, and what do we find? We will see: We have already taken him back to the very fountain head of the human family, and asked him to iden¬ tify himself with it, and to show his connection with them. We do not mean that we have asked him to show that he is a human' being, and that he, as such, has a common origin with mankind; but that he show that he ever existed in the family of Noah as "the white man,'' or a "white race," and as the "white peo¬ ple," or, as Noah's "white" children, and they have completely failed. So, we want to see what he can show as to his Greek origin. What does history say about it? Yes, take the white man back to his begin¬ ning, and you will find that he is everywhere a very much mixed up creature, for he does not know his origin in any of these different branches, although he, in his high-strung pride, tries hard to point to a very splendid and magnificent beginning, but it is all in his mind, and not in facts; nor is it on paper, parchments, monuments or documents of any kind. So, when the white man talks about what his racial ancestors were in their greatness and grandeur, he is simply talking in the air; for the fact is, that in no case, positively in no case, did any of them have either greatness or gran¬ deur in their beginnings, but on the contrary, they were in every case the most humble and degrading imag¬ inable, for the Greeks, with whom we are now dealing, struggled into existence, it is not known how, where nor when, for their early history, such as it was, begins with Homer. So, of him, and also of them and their historv. we will now have something to say, for that is one object, in taking him back, that we give him a chance to defend himself as a Greek. 214 THE NATIONS Now we ask, What is Greek history, as made by Homer, the first Greek historian? Was Homer a com¬ petent historian ? for it will be remembered that he was a blind poet only; and is a blind man competent to write history? Could he have seen the incidents of which he wrote? And if he did not see them himself —which he could not do if he were blind—he then had to write what was told him, and hence his history was but tradition. But suppose Homer could see, then could his words be proper or real history? for it will be remembered that both the Iliad and Odyssey were poetry, and poetry cannot be true history, because po¬ etry is the production of the mind; that is, it is the work of the imagination, whereas history, real history, is a simple record of facts, and nothing but facts. Po¬ etry—I do not mean revealed, or divine poetry, such as the Bible contains, but purely human productions—is never the record of facts, but a record of the poet's thoughts. But, vou may say that poetry may have facts for its basis. Yes, it may, or it may not; but simply to have the basis of facts can never be true history, for true history is a record of the facts themselves. Then, again, if Homer lived at the reputed time of the siege and destruction of Troy, he lived before writ¬ ing was known among the Greeks. So he could not have committed the Iliad and Odyssey to writing; and if he did not commit them to writing, they could not constitute history, for history is, ^according to popular definition, a record of past events, and a written re¬ cord, too, mind you. Now, how could Homer's ballad songs be history, when he did not write them down? Herodotus, who is called the "Father of History," says Homer did not live until about 850 B. C., but the fortn- er date of birth and life is given to him—that is, the eleventh century before Christ. So, accordingly, Homer did not live to sing the history of Greece un¬ til 250 years after the things about which he sung had from a new point of view. 215 happened; and so, if he hajd not been blind it threw him too far away from the scenes of action to make it trustworthy history. The truth of it is, the so- called Greek History, which is said to have been sung by Homer, was nothing- more nor less than a number of love songs which the old blind Greek ballad singer is said .to have sung while wandering, homeless and friendless, over the hills and dales of Greece. But after granting that the conception of the Iliad and Odyssey are of themselves the work of a genius, then, what about the subject matter of which they are composed? Is there anything honorable in them? They cannot set forth the real greatness of a nation in battle, because they are pure fables from beginning to end. But even if they had ever been proven to have been founded on facts—which they have not—the fact would still remain, that the whole work is poetry from beginning to end; and so, if there was a fact underly¬ ing it, it would still be true that the whole structure would be only imagination, which is an image in the mind, or a fancy, or a plot. Now, let us see what was the image and plot that was in Homer's mind. Was there ever such treachery and treason, such malice and hatred, s-uch sensual and immoral scenes presented to the mind of any human being? for it is only the merest bits of it, compara¬ tively, that is fit to reach the eye of man. The simple truth is, that the whole affair is a disgrace to be set to the account of any people. Let us now look at the plot: What is it? It is a device to. have an eloping woman returned to her in¬ furiated and enraged husband. It seems that Paris,the son of the King of Troy—wherever that was—took it into his head that he was tired of living a single life, and so, set out from his country to find a bride for him¬ self; and it seems when he found himself, he was in the country of Greece. And it also seems that the only 216 THE NATIONS woman in all Greece, who could please his fastidious, princely fancy, was the wife of the King of Greece. She was all ready to go with him; so on back to the city of Troy they went, and he landed his bride (an¬ other man's wife) within the walls of his city, In order to avenge this insult, and bring back the runaway wife, Helen, war is declared, an army is raised, and Troy is besieged ten years—all for the sake of getting a woman who left her husband and went off with an¬ other man! But did they get her? Oh, yes! pray let us see; for the city of Troy was surrounded with high, broad and mighty walls. Did the Grecians succeed in scaling them? No. Well, did they batter them down? No. How, then, did they capture the runaway wife? Oh, it was by the display of a piece of profound wisdom, for which the Greek character is so very noted. Listen, will you! Here it is: The Greeks were all disheart¬ ened, and had given up and were going home, when Mars, their war-god, came to the rescue, and told them to make a wooden horse, and hide five of their braves in it and leave it near the walls of the city and with¬ draw, as though they had gone home. And the god told them the Trojans would come out and carry this wonderful sight inside the walls; and so it is said they did. Then in the night, when all were sound asleep, these brave and mighty Greeks stepped out of the horse and opened the gates of Troy; and one of the men ran after the Greeks and told them of the great achieve¬ ment. The Greeks returned, entered, and slew nearly all of the inhabitants, and burned up the city. Just think of that for the white man's history and history making! Why, it is not a whit better than the most trashy dime novel of to-day! But think of the cause of the war! the blood Homer makes his characters shed! the vast amount of treasure spent! Away from their homes for ten years, and everything gone to from a new point of view. 217 wreck and ruin! Besides, all the immorality that is mixed up in it, is enough to make a body turn away with horror, disgust, and disdain. Not only so, but from the reputed siege of Troy, until the country went down, it was at no time any better. I do not think I can do better than to insert here what Joseph E. Worcester, LL. D., the author of the dictionary which bears his name, has to say of the History of Greece. This is what he says: "The history of Greece may be distinguished into two general divisions * * * * * The first period, accord¬ ing to the most generally received chronology, reck¬ oning from the foundation of Sicyon, the most ancient kingdom of Greece,* comprises the space of about 1600 years. This long succession of ages is involved in obscurity and fable. There are no records relating to it that really deserve the name of history; and the accounts which have been given of its events were drawn up bv writers who lived long after the transac¬ tions of which they treat, and who possessed few ma¬ terials for authentic history. "This period may be distinguished into' four sub¬ divisions, which are marked by some peculiar histor¬ ical features: The first reaching from the earliest ac¬ counts of Greece to the Trojan war, B. C. 1184, a peri¬ od, which may be termed, by way of eminence, the fab¬ ulous age; the second extending from the earliest ac¬ tion. against Troy to the death of Homer, a period p-enerallv called the heroic age, of which the only history is contained in the poems O'f the Iliad and Odyssey * * * *" We will also here insert for the white man's benefit and information, what Belden, the author of "Belden's Guide" gives as a reason the white man clings to this Greek trash and rubbish for true history; yes, and in spite of the fact that he admits that there is not one * Others say Ar^u* is the oldest. 218 THE NATIONS line of true history distinguishable on it from begin-, ning to end. This is what Belden says: "The early history of the Greeks, like that of most other nations, is pure fable. But there is this differ¬ ence between their fabulous annals and those of other countries, that they were made so beautiful and inter¬ esting by the genius and taste of the people as to be read and enjoyed wherever they became known. Hence, educated persons, hearing them, always accom¬ panied by literature of a high class, have been unwill¬ ing to disbelieve them; and hence, too, it has become very difficult to say what part of the older history is fable and what is true. Great efforts have been made in examining such histories as that of the Trojan war, to separate the truth from the falsehood, but all in vain; because the only accounts we have of things that may be true are intimately connected with those which are known to> be impossible. Some late writers^ however, have adopted the practice of giving at full length the early fabulous, or, as it is termed, mythical history of Greece, without attempting to separate what is true from what is false. They assign as their reason for this, that the whole was implicitly received by the Greeks when they were at the height of their intellec¬ tual greatness, and that it is of importance to preserve what so refined, acute and industrious a people be¬ lieved, even though we, living in a later age, should discredit it." I will now call attention to what Worcester in his his¬ tory, and Belden in his "Guide," have to say of Greek history. Worcester says: "The period of the war against Troy, which lasted ten years, is called the heroic age." "Is calledyes, and that is all there is of it: "called!" And why called heroic ? Simply because the white man wants to make it appear that he is the descendant of a race of heroes,- when the fact is, he is in all cases, and in all of his branches, a descendant of a race of from a new point of view. 219 savages, and that of the lowest grade. In order to prove this assertion true, one needs only to take him back in each case to his beginning. The whole truth is, every thing you touch in the white man's early history is fictitious; yes, more; it is a fiction—a myth— a nothing worth the time and attention of men; thut is, if one is seeking the real true facts and deeds of men, that he may have something real of the past, by which to direct his future course; because, as I said before, he does not know when he has got a real inci¬ dent, a real fact, a real man or set of men—whether Ihey be described as acting on land or sea, at home or abroad, in peace or in war, it is all a myth, a mock¬ ery, a shame, a farce. Nor can one with anything like certainty place his finger on the real time or place of the happening of the things said to have taken place, bv the date given, for it is all guesswork, reck¬ oning and conjecture. Yet this is what the white man has been and is forever quoting as the examples of the past for our future guidance. But just think of it! Belden says that this whole fabric was implicitly received by the Greeks as true, when they were at the very height of their intellectual greatness! Now, if they were that ignorant and su¬ perstitious when at the height of their greatness, what must have been the denseness of the ignorance further back in the ages? I repeat, if you want to show the white man that he was not always what he is to-day, take him back. Thirdly, take the white man back, and let him call up some of his men of Greek and Roman times, and ask them to give an account of themselves. We now, for a while, examine the record, and see what the reply will be. Where shall we begin, or with whom? Shall we begin with Uranus. If so, what about him? for he is one of the first who is said to have had a hand in bringing light to the darkened and benighted Greeks. 220 THE NATIONS Here are just a few of the different tales that are told of him in books called "Histories of Greece." Yes, I say, called Histories. These things are also contained in other works which have reference to these. The word Uranus, means "Sky," or "Heaven." He was the oldest of the gods. According to others he was an Egyptian prince, landed in Greece and became father of a family called Titans; and these Titans were all great and mighty giants. Then the writers make all his sons rebel against their father and kill him, or expel him from the country; and hundreds of other like wonders are told of him. But his son Saturn, who reigned in his stead, also had sons, and he did not in¬ tend to suffer the fate of his father, so he had all of his boys killed as soon as they were born. His sons were Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto, etc: You must bear in mind that Saturn is represented to be a man and reigning king over the Greeks, and at the same time he is made to be a god of the Greeks. At one and the same time he is a god and their king. But there is another story told how he got rid of his sons, to keep them from rebelling against him: He just ate them up as soon as they were born. But his wife Rhea got tired of that sort of thing and made uo ber mind that she would put a stop to it. So when other children were born, and he demanded them, she would wrap up stones in rags, and give them to him to eat instead of the children, and thus they were saved alive. And it seems that this Greek hero and god, for he was both, did not have sense enough to know the difference between stones and rags and that of flesh of his children. A wonderfully wise god that! A wise king, too! and an heroic hero! Now, let us see what became of this great man: Whv. he was dethroned by Jupiter, one of the sons Avhich he did not eat up, and he fled to Italy and was kindly received by Janus, the king, who divided with FROM A NEW POINT OF VIKW. 221 him his own royal power. You see, he has fled out of his own country, Greece, and gone into Italy; or in other words, he has left the Greeks and gone to live among the Romans. And this same god-king, who did not have sense enough to tell the difference be¬ tween children and stones when given him by his wife to eat, is said to have taught the inhabitants of Italy civilization, arts and sciences; and we may well judge what kind of civilization one is prepared to give who eats up his own children. But that is not all. His reign over the Romans Is said to have been so very prosperous, that it is called the "Golden Age." He is represented as an old man with a rod in his hand, and a serpent at the top of it with its own tail in its mouth biting it; and this is said to be an emblem of Eternity. But just how a serpent, biting his tail, can be an emblem of Eternity, I cannot tell. As I said, this was called the "Golden Age," and so he wore a golden crown, golden slippers, and sat on a golden throne. This was truly a golden age! When we come to speak of Jupiter, we get a vivid illustration of what was meant when I said in the study of the so-called Greek and Roman history one does not know when he has anything like a real person, or real thing—a real time, place or date. For differ¬ ent writers have so mixed these myths that it cannot be told with certainty just what myth one is dealing with, or about which a writer may be "writing, for he runs the one into the other, and ascribes to him deeds and acts that belong to another, and also to other times and places than those given, and so one is often made to think that a certain scene was enacted in Rome, when the center of it is Greece. And this is true in the case of Jupiter, and the same things are true of the white man's history-making, and have been, in all ages. Eor instance, Jupiter is represented in Latin literature after such a manner as to make him 222 THE NATIONS half a Greek and half a Roman god, and the writers take the legends and stories told of him and make them represent Roman incidents, when they are wholly Greek. Oh, well, that is just like the white man's wav of doing things. What he has not in reality, he will make up in form, sham and pretense. Now the stories about Jupiter did not originate with him, but with Zeus, the principal Greek god, whose name is sometimes made to mean "the sky," and at other times "Heaven." He is at one time made to be a great hero, conquering and subduing all things in heaven and earth; and then he is the father of all the gods; then the king of his country; then a great and mighty giant; and then he becomes a great, big bull! then a serpent, a little ant, etc. He induces his wife to become a fly, or rather, to take the shape of one, and then he swallowed her. A good way that, to get rid of a bad wife, was it not? And this mythical trash, is what Belden calls the beautiful conception of the Greek mind; and says that their ideas were highly intellectual and refined; that intelligent and educated people of the present day re¬ fuse to give them up, though they know them to be myths and nothing but myths. And thus, the white man is allowed to perpetuate from generation to gen¬ eration what he- knows and admits to be a fraud on its very face. And why is he thus permitted to do so? Simply and only because it is the white man about whom the myths treat. And yet, there is another thing about this matter that is grave and vital to the white man, and that is, if the fable and myth in his history are left out, he will have absolutely no history whatever for nearly or quite two thousand years of his accredited existence. Yes, take the white man back, and let him see him¬ self in his true light. I think it will cure him of many of his overdrawn estimations of himself and race. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 223 Let us call up Amphion, another great Greek per¬ sonage. He is the one whoi performed so skillfully on his wonderful instrument, that he had power to build a wall around the city of Thebes in Greece, by the simple power and sweetness o>f the music produced on his harp. The stones, it is said, shaped themselves into proper form and size, and then placed themselves one upon another in proper order on the wall until it was finished, just by the playing of Amphion's harp. This example gives an illustration of the Greek musical talent. And there is still another we would call on to an¬ swer for himself and his race, and that is Orpheus. This is another wonderfully skilled artist. He is brought down to us as a poet, musician and inventor. He, we are told, played so very sweetly on his lyre that all nature stood still to listen whenever he played. Not only so, but when his wife died, he went down to Hades and he so charmed the keeper of the lower regions, that they let her out and she came back home again. But, from what the poets tell us, Orpheus himself had bad hick in the end. It seemed that he attended a feast of the god Bacchus, and by some means or other offended three of the women at the feast, and they got hold of him, and tore him into pieces. This was, indeed, too bad a fate for so great a man! We next notice Mercury. But he is too great a Greek for mortal tongue to describe! He is repre¬ sented as flying through the air, and he has little wings on his heels, and wings fastened to his cap, and a rod, and two serpents in his hands—a royal and kingly out¬ fit, this! I might continue these descriptions indefinitely, but time and the purpose of the writing will not allow fur¬ ther protraction. 224 THE NATIONS Fourthly, take the white man back, and what do we find his relationship to have been to the state as a man and citizen in the countries where he has lived? Why it has been largely that of a slave and menial up until these later years; and indeed, so true is this of the white man that he may truthfully be said to have been a race of slaves. And this we shall provs from his own books and words. To begin with, I will quote from the "History of the Working People," by Hon. C. Osborne Ward, translator and librarian United States Department of Labor. He says he is here describing the Aryan or white race, and this is what he says of the beginning of their enslavement and bondage (see pp. 48 and 49) ; and this, he also says, was the beginning of slavery in the world. Hear it, please; I now quote him: "It appears, from all the evidences, that the first form of Society was that of Master and Slaves. The extreme lowliness of the la¬ boring man's condition at that remote period can easily be imagined when we consider that all the children of the aristocratic household, except the oldest son, born of the real wife and legal mother, were totally unrec¬ ognized by law—all except this heir were originally slaves. In fact, this was the origin of slavery." The same writer (page 49) says the original Aryan, or white working-man, was not even a citizen. He further speaks as follows: "The enormous growth of slavery just before the beginning of the Christian' era was the cause of several of the most gigantic and bloody uprisings the world has ever known. Those convulsive episodes invariably arose from maltreatment of workingmen and women. Dr. Bucher, whose delineations we so often quote,•shows that the necessary workmen for supplying slave mate¬ rial to man the great estates which the Roman lords about this time were grasping from the original culti¬ vators who farmed the government lands or shares, FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 225 thus turning them out of house and home, were bought and sold, as common goods at ridiculously low prices. "In B.C. 103 there were at Rome scarcely 2,000 per¬ sons owning property considered taxable, such was the ehormous monopoly of the public lands and of other property by a few. These few property owners were pro¬ portionally richer, and their management of the army and of the legislature for suppressing uprisings of the outcasts and the enslaved proletaries was so much the more unlimited. The freedmen, who had many or¬ ganizations for protection which for centuries they had enjoyed when slaves were comparatively few, now found their unions, their business, their homes and freedom un'dermined and supplanted by countless hordes of slaves as prisoners of war, victims of the prodigious slave trade going on between Rome and foreign markets. When Tarentum was captured, B. C. 209 there were sold 30,000 war prisoners. In B. C. 207, after the battle of Metaurus, 5,400 were c-iptured and sold. In B. C. 200 at least 15,000 were seized ?nd sold. In B. C. 137, the event of the return of Tiberius Gnecchus from Sardinia, the fact that 80,- 000 men, women and children had been either killed or sold into perpetual slavery, was brought to light. Because Grrecchus, whose grand nature, though a military commander, revolted against such atrocities and sought reform, he was set upon by a mob of infu¬ riated legislators and wealth-owners and murdered in the streets of Rome. Such was the enormous mass of the Sardinian slaves that prices fell to a ridiculously low ebb, becoming a laughing stock, and the proverb got abroad, "Cheap as a Sardinian." After the siege of Perseus there were 70 cities destroyed, and 150,000 peo^V s^ld a,t the different slave markets. "This fearful condition of human slavery set into Greece Still earlier. By a similar monopoly of land and of othef property by the few, it came to pass that 15 226 THE NATIONS in the great city of Athens, of 515,000 souls, only 9,- 000 (B. C. 300) could be allowed political rights graded and franchised by family and property. Other mention puts it at 21,000 souls or citizens. At the same time, when there were 21,000 propertied or blooded citizens and 10,000 strangers under protection of the city, there were 400,000 slaves. But as Athens at that time (B. C. 309) counted 515,000 persons, we come into a knowledge of the fact that the remaining 84,000 were the plebian or freedmen population. "The great city of Corinth, whose census, B. C. 300, gave only 40,000 souls, had a slave population of 640,- 000, who, of course, according to Plato and other aristocrats, could not possess souls, because too mean to be honored by the gods with a thing so noble; and this accounts for their not being enumerated in the census of the city. They appear to have been too lowly to belong to the numbers of mankind." Have I not proven by the white man's own book and word that his race has been a race of slaves? Read the above over carefully and compare figures, and it will be found that the greater portion of this race were slaves of the most abject kind. As proof of this, wo wijl quote what F. W. Farrar, D. D., has to say on the subject. The following is it, and this was not at the time of what is called the darker early days of Greek and Roman life, but when Christ was born, and after: "At the lowest extreme of the social scale were "mil¬ lions of slaves, without family, without religion, with¬ out possessions, who had no recognized rights, and to¬ ward whom none had any recognized duties, passing normally from a childhood of degradation to a man¬ hood of hardship and an old age of unpitied neglect. Only a little above the slaves stood the lower classes, who formed t^e vast majority of the free-born inhabit¬ ants of the Roman empire. They were, for the most part, 'beggars and idlers,, familiar with the grossest in- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 227 dignities of an unscrupulous dependence. Despising a life of honest industry, they asked only for bread and the games of the circus, and were ready to support any Government, even the most despotic, if it would supply these needs. They spent their mornings in lounging about the Forum, or in dancing attendance at the levees of patrons, for a share in whose largesses they daily struggled. They spent their afternoons and evenings in gossiping at the Public Baths, in listlessly enjoying the polluted plays of the theatre, or looking with fierce thrills o>f delighted horror at the bloody sports of the arena. At night they crept up to their miserable garrets in the sixth and seventh stories of the huge insnlae—the lodging houses of Rome—into which, as into the low lodging houses of the poorer quarters of London, there drifted all that was most wretched and most vile. Their life, as it is described for us by their contemporaries, was largely made up of squalor, misery and vice." CHAPTER XI. SOME FACTS ABOUT ANCIENT GREECE. The real facts about Ancient Greece are rarely ever brought out so as to be seen in their true light This is especially true with the school and other histories of to-clay. The object of this sketch is to point them out as they are, for Greece has a history which is both real and fictitious. We have in another place dealt with the fictitious; so here we want to deal with the real. The first fact is that there is a country on the East¬ ern Continent known to the rest of the world as Greece, which has had and has now, as many other names as there are colors in the rainbow. Let us here insert a paragraph from Whelpley's Compend of History, to which I want to call especial attention. The paragraph is this: "Before the arrival of Cecrops, Danaus, Cadmus, and other adventurers in Greece, its inhabitants were savage, barbarous and unconnected, living entirely in a state of nature, without laws,civilization, or any forms of social order. Bu,t those enterprising chiefs, coming from more enlightened regions, and bringing with them the rudiments of science, were able by policy or arms to establish their authority among those rude tribes and sivage clans. They collected them together, built cities and founded many useful institutions, tend¬ ing to ameliorate their barbarous state." In order that Whelpley's statement may be sup¬ ported as true, see Rollins' Ancient History: "The Greeks." (228) THE NATIONS. 229 The second fact is that the first civilization the Greeks knew or had was given to them by the descend¬ ants of Ham—yes, and that very son of Noah whom the white man has written in all of his-histories was so awfully cursed by his father that he was forever doomed to slavery, degradation and shame. Now let us see the first one to carry these darkened, degraded and benighted Greeks the light of civiliza¬ tion. According to current history, it was Inachus,. a Phoenician emigrant, who migrated out of Phoenicia into Greece in 1856 (B. C.) and founded the kingdom of Argos, the first and oldest kingdom of Greece. The Phoenicians, it will be remembered, were Canaanites, and the Canaanites the descendants of Ham. It will also be remembered that the kingdom of Argos was formed with the colony Inachus brought with him, and not out of the Greeks whom he found there, for they were totally barbarous and not fit material to form anything—not even a simple, single family, much less a kingdom. They must first be taught by precept and example what was meant by family and family life. In 1556 (B. C.) three hundred years after Inachus came into Greece, Cecrops came with a colony from Egypt, and built the city of Cecropia—naming it so, in honor 6f himself. But the Greeks changed the name to Athens, in honor of Athena., a goddess brought by Cecrops from Egypt. The Egyptians were also Hamites or the descendants of Ham. In 1493 (B. C.) Cadmus, from Phoenicia, brought a colony, built a city and called it Thebes. He is also a Hamite, being a Phoenician* and the Phoenicians were Hamites* as has already been said. Then came, in 1520 B. C., Lelex, another Egyptian; he also brought a colony and with it founded Laconia, which is also known in history as Sparta and Lacedemonia. Lelex was also a Hamite. 230 THE NATIONS It is said that Corinth was also established by the Phoenicians, so we have named seven of the principal cities and countries of Greece, that were established by the descendants of Ham, and thes.e were all in their turn the earliest cities that Greece had, or in other words, they were the foundation work of the civiliza¬ tion of Greece, and they were the descendants of Ham who laid these foundations. A third fact I note: We have been speaking of Greece and the Greeks; but why call the country Greece or the people Greeks? for both are very mis¬ leading. They leave the impression that the present Greeks were a homogeneous people; whereas the fact is, they were the most heterogeneous people known to history, for they cannot be traced to any particular race or stock under any circumstances whatever, and far less under the name of Greeks than any one of the many by which they were formerly known, for the term Greeks is not ethnical, and so is not racial, or does not etymologically mean a race—it is simply ar¬ bitrarily so used. The inhabitants of the country of the present time do not know it as Greece, but Hellas. The Romans gave it the name of Greece, and this was not done un¬ til the time of Aristotle, B. C. 384. But the people of the country had been known since 1856 B. C., which was 1572 years before Aristotle's day, or before it took the name of Greece. A fourth fact to which I want to call attention is that the seven Hamite colonies mentioned above, who migrated into, the country, built cities, founded king¬ doms and civilized the people, also married and inter¬ married with the people of the land. Fact Fifth: Were not the Egyptians and Phoeni¬ cians the first to inhabit Greece? This is a thought that has often presented itself to my mind. What violence would be done to historical truth if such a FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 231 proposition were made and maintained? None what¬ ever that I can see. Anyhow, the Egyptians and Phoe¬ nicians were so very early on the ground; the history we get makes the inhabitants of such a low grade and state that the Egyptians and Phoenicians may be said to have settled the country, for they certainly did give form and motion to their governments and spirit and energy to the people. But I believe if the truth, the whole truth, could be known, it would be found that the Hamite was the first to settle even what is now known as Greece. Do not get horrified now, but go and look the question up. The view I take is that the Hamites—that is, Egyptians and Phoenicians—first settled the country, and the white tribes came in and settled afterwards. Or it may be that the Egyptians and Phoenicians who migrated into the country in af¬ ter yCars, developed into what is now known as white races. I think this is far the most probable way that Greece became inhabited by that race, for I have shown conclusively that the idea of Japheth hav¬ ing done so is so impossible that I consider it out of the question. Then, again, nearly all writers agree that there were other peoples in the country, who were not considered of the Greek races, long before the days of Hellas or the Ionians—the first inhabitants of the country of Troy, for instance, in which the city oif Troy is said to have been built. To further sustain my opinion on this whole sub¬ ject, I will here insert a paragraph from "Biblia," a monthly journal of Oriental Research, which shows that even the Eleusis festivals were established in Greece by the Egyptians; yes, established by them, and not modeled only after them—all this Egyptian bric-a-brac and jewelry mentioned in the quoted para¬ graph below. This discovery is just made in 1895. This makes eight countries and cities established in 232 THE} NATIONS Greece by the Egyptians and Phoenicians, with the seven I have before mentioned. The following is the paragraph from "Biblia "The excavations that are being- carried out by the Greek Archaeological Society on the site of Ancient Eleusis, a few miles from Athens, have just yielded some results of exceptional importance. In a very an¬ cient and well preserved tomb, there have been found, in addition to the skeleton of a woman, a number of articles, including earrings of fine gold, silver -and bronze, several finger rings, sixty-eight small vases of various shapes in terra cotta, two tripods, three Egyp¬ tian scarabees and a small statuette of the goddess. Isis in porcelain. These discoveries leave no doubt of the fact that the celebrated mysteries of Eleusis were of Egyptian origin and were borrowed from the re¬ ligious rites of the ancient Egyptians. These impor¬ tant relics have been deposited in the National Mu¬ seum." I repeat that the preceding paragraph shows that the Egyptians established Eleusis, and not that the Greeks borrowed religious rites and ceremonies frt>m them. Now in order to strengthen the view I have already advanced, of the probability that the Egyptians founded. Eleusis also, I will here quote from the Clas¬ sical Rez iew as follows: "In attributing the origin of the Eleusian mysteries to Egyptian sources, M. Foucart revives a theory more fashionable at the time of Herodotus than at the pres¬ ent day. The conclusions at which he arrives are, briefly, as follows: About the sixteenth or seventeenth century B. C., colonists or fugitives from Egypt brought the cult of Isis and Osiris to Argos and At¬ tica. The indigenous Pelasgi probably worshipped the Earth, among- other natural objects, but only in a rude and impersonal way. The Pelasgic Earth-god- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 233 dess was absorbed by Isis, who w!as not only a chthonic deity, but also the giver of agriculture and civilization. As Osiris was closely associated with Isis, the oldest form of the Eleusinian cult included a god as well as a goddess; and in historic times this god, who was at first known by the simple title of Theos, continued to exist as Zeus Eubuleus, Pluto, and Dionysus. Originally the worship of the Eleusin¬ ian Demeter was merely a form of the general wor¬ ship of Isis-Demeter or Demeter Thesmophoros, which was adopted by all the Hellenic tribes before the Do¬ rian invasion. But before the eleventh century the goddess Kore had been abstracted from the primitive Demeter. Such was the development of the cult at Eleusis down to the seventh century, at which period the Greeks became better acquainted with Egypt, and borrowed the doctrine of a future life, as taught in the religion of Isis and Osiris. This idea of ai happy state, reserved for the initiated after death was not a natural outcome of the old worship of Demeter Kar- pophoros and Thesmophoros, but was thus a laiter edi¬ tion to the original debt. "M. Eoucart argues his case with all the learning and all the lucidity that might be expected in the work of so distinguished a scholar and archseologist. Yet, as far as the early history of the Eleusinia is con¬ cerned, the theorv, in spite of M. Eoucart's brilliant advocacy, is not likely to> win general approval, unless it is supported bv more evidence than is at present forthcoming: To begin with, the theory is unneces¬ sary, for no suDposition of Egyptian influence is re¬ quired to explain the presence of mysteries on Greek soil. This is not the place to quote savage analogies to the Eleusinia and Thesmophoria; it is sufficient to remind the reader that such mysteries are world-wide, and are the . product, not of a high civilization, like the Egvptian, but of a very primitive stage of society. 234 THE NATIONS The Eleusinia and Thesmophoria arose from, agrarian ritual; and M. Foucart will hardly contend that agrk culture in general was introduced into Greece by the Egyptians. He states, it is true, that wheat and bar¬ ley were not indigenous in Greece, but were imported from the region of the Euphrates; but it. may be pointed out that the Euphrates is not the Nile, and Demeter was something more than the mere giver of wheat and barley. But the theory (as far as we can at present judge) is not only unnecessary, but improba¬ ble. For it has yet to be proved that the Egyptians had any direct intercourse with the Greeks on the main¬ land from the seventeenth to the thirteenth century B. C., the period mentioned by M. Foucart as the date of an Egyptian maritime supremacy in the islands of the iEgean. It is known that these islands-were for some time subjject to the Egyptians; but their empire was probably Maintained through the agency of the Phoenicians. Atad with regard to Greece proper, there is no evidence \of any relations between the early Greeks and the Egyptians, except through the medium of Phoenician traders or colonists. This, view is held by the most recent historians. M. Foucart asks why we should reject the myth of Danaus when we accept the myth of Cadmus as the embodiment of historical fact. To this objection it may be replied that the- myth of Cadmus would not be admitted as historical if the Phoenician influence in Greece were not proved by further evidence of a conclusive character. But as such corroborative testimony is lacking in the case of the Egyptians, we are not justified in reading actual "history from an isolated myth. Or, if we are deter¬ mined to extract a historical kernel from the legend,, we must be content to follow E. Meyer, who sees in it a faded reminiscence of the Egyptian empire in the Greek islands during;the fifteenth century. FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 235 "Very probably the author is right in reckoning Egyptian influence as a force which, exerted itself upon the later developments of the Eleusinian mysteries. Whether this influence was direct or indirect, is a point more difficult to decide. According to Lenormant and other scholars, certain elements of the mysteries were borrowed from Egypt, notably, the conception of Di¬ onysus Zagreus; but these elements were transmitted through the medium of Orphism. M. Foucart, on the other hand, disbelieves in the theory that the recon¬ struction of the Eleusinia was due to the Orphic sect. "The Orphic doctrines were similar to the Eleusinian because they were in both cases borrowed from Egyp¬ tian sources. Perhaps the most striking part of M. Foucart's argument is his explanation of the secret formulas spoken by the hierophant. In these mys¬ terious sayings he sees the Eleusinian counterpart of the Book of the Dead. The only difference was that while the Book of the Dead was buried with the mummy, to guide the soul on its last journey, the formulas spoken at Eleusis were (he believes) learnt by heart, so that there was no need to commit them to writing. The Orphics, on the other hand, closely fol¬ lowed the Egyptian practice. M. Foucart quotes the interesting- series of Orphic inscriptions in Greek hex¬ ameters, from the tombs of Petelia, Thurii, and Eleu- thera (Crete) in which the soul is directed on its way 'to the sacred meadows and groves of Persephone.' " There is another fact to which I would call attention, and that is, we often see in print and hear said that the Helots of Greece were not in a real and true sense slaves, or that the slavery of Greece was not absolute bondage, such as existed in America. Now, for the purpose of settling-that question beyond all doubt and dispute, and to show that the colored people in this country never at any time experienced more absolute 236 THE NATIONS bondage than they, I will now quote Greek history on the subject as follows: "In Lacedsemon the slaves were the property of the state, and were distributed with the land among the free inhabitants of Laconia, nearly in the same manner as transported convicts are portioned out among the free settlers in some modern colonies. "The Spartan slaves consisted of the descendants of the original inhabitants of Laconia, and were called Helots, from the name of a town, Helo>s, the inhabit¬ ants of which had made a very obstinate resistance to the Dorian invaders of the Peloponnesus. "To the Helots Lycurgus assigned the labors of agriculture and the mechanical arts. They were re¬ quired to follow their masters in time of war, and formed a numerous light-armed force in every Lace¬ daemonian army. They likewise officiated as domestic servants and in every other menial capacity. "Yet, although the Helots were the most truly use¬ ful members of the Spartan community, they were treated by their haughty masters in the most cruel and contumelious manner, and often put to death out of mere whim or sport. They were obliged to appear in a dress betokening their bondage, a bonnet of dog¬ skin ard a sheepskin vest. They were prohibited to teach their children any accomplishments which might equalize them with their lords. "A Lacedaemonian might flog his slaves once a day, merely to remind them that they were slaves. They were sometimes compelled to drink till they were drunk, and to perform extravagant and indecent dances, for the purpose of showing the young Spar¬ tans the disgusting conditions to which men are re¬ duced by intoxicating liquors. "The murder of a slave was not punishable by law, and once a year it was customary for the young Spar- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 237 tans to disperse themselves over the country in small parties, and waylay and assassinate the stoutest and best-looking Helots they could find, by way of exer¬ cising their prowess!" CHAPTER XII. the; white man a failure in government. The white man is almost entirely sentimental in gov¬ ernment, and this causes irregularity, confusion, injus¬ tice, and, therefore, failure. He is not deliberate, nor careful and painstaking, but hasty, rash and thought¬ less. So true is this of him that it seems he goes into the halls of State and makes laws simply to have them broken or overruled by the courts and construed to be defective, unconstitutional or otherwise inappropriate and out of order. This is the case not in one State alone, but in every State of the Union and in every county, district, township or city, and more especially is it true pf the national government when operating in congressional capacity. I repeat, that there is this looseness of enactment to be found everywhere. Take the white man in any stage of the. world in which he has acted a part, and he will show up as a lawbreaker and a disturber of the general peace. He is not dis¬ posed to be at peiace. He is never content nor satisfied. He is everywhere in history creating a confusion a tur¬ moil, a rebellion. He is against law and order. He is, as a race, cruel, heartless and bloodthirsty. With him it is rule cr ruin. This is true of him whether in ancient, middle or modern times, whether in Greek, Roman or Anglo-Saxon mythology, or in real, historical acts— he is seen in the same jight and plight. Let me here insert a set of resolutions adopted at a mass meeting held in Haverhill, Mass., October 28, 1895, to protest against lynching and other outrages and lawlessness now going on in the South and other parts of the countrv. I insert these resolutions to prove (238) ' ^ THE NATIONS. 239 that the laws and constitution are not enforced nor obeyed. The resolutions are in the following- words: "Whereas, We believe that the prosperity and well- being- of any country depend upon the treatment of its subjects; and, "Whereas, The constitution of these United States gives to every American citizen civil and political rights and a trial by a jury of his peers.; and, "Whereas, We believe that man has been endowed by the Almighty God with certain inalienable rights, among them life, liberty and the pursuits of happiness; and, "Whereas, There are American citizens of African descent who are denied the privileges guaranteed to every American citizen without regard to race, color or previous condition of servitude upon the pretext that they have no rights which the white man is bound to respect. "We believe the negro to be a law-abiding citizen, that he has never raised his hand to traduce or disinte¬ grate- the union formed by the fathers of this great re¬ public ; but, on the other hand, his blood has been spilled in three wars for her preservation. "We believe they are entitled to all the rights of citi¬ zenship, and the- man or set of men who deprives-men of their constitutional rights are traitors to the cause of good government. '•'We believe, further,-that the South owes the negro a. debt of-gratitude for his 250 years of unrequited toil. "We believe, that with proper treatment, the South; which- is the home of the negro, would reap a hundred¬ fold greater blessing than she has ever before wit¬ nessed } that prosperity would overflow her valleys and crown her mountain- tops with greater rapidity than ever before known. "After 250 years of the most inhuman slavery the world has ever known, when it was a crime to teach the negro the arts of civilization, he has emerged from 240 THE NATIONS this mcst degrading position and proven beyond a reasonable doubt that he has brain and intellect capable of the highest improvement. "We believe, further, that God has created all men of one flesh and blood to dwell upon the earth, and that no one should be deprived of his God-given rights ; therefore, "Resolved, That civilization and progress is impeded by mob law, and that, like others, it is contagious and threatens the very foundation principles of this repub¬ lic; "Resolved, That the frequent lynching of American citizens in the South is an attack upon the free institu¬ tions for which loyal subjects have'bled and died; "Resolved,' That these murderings surpass anything in cold-blooded barbarity that has come down to us from the dark ages of the world; "Resolved, That we invoke the Christian- Church to awake and use her God-given rights to stop these atro¬ cious cruelties that are rolling a tide of woe to our doors that we cannot overlook; "Resolved, That it is the sense of this meeting that every church and pulpit owes it to God and humanity to use every means in their power to stop these mid¬ night murderers and bring them to justice. "Resolved, That while we believe in States' rights, we also believe that the constitution and its amend¬ ments are sacred, and that no State has a paramount right to violate that sacred instrument, and the State that allows the flagrant abuse of that instrument is an enemy to the common union of States; "Resolved, That we request our representatives in both bouses of Congress of these United States to in¬ troduce such resolves as will secure to eyery American citizen, without regard to race, color t»r previous con¬ dition of servitude, equal civil and political rights; FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 241 "Resolved, That we request all papers to publish these resolutions that the world may know that we be¬ lieve in the rights of man." These facts lead one to ask the question, Is the white man capable of independent self-government, or what is known as popular government, or government by the people? Are the rights of the people safe in the white man's hands ? These questions may be better answered by asking another: Has he, in any stage of the world's history in which he has had control, proved that he could give the people that rest, that happiness, that peace of body and mind so much desired, longed for and sought after by every civilized community ? If he ever has, in what age of the world did it happen? Certainly not in the time of the so-called Greek and Roman republics and Anglo-Saxon States or town¬ ships, for in all of these there was little more than the "idea and form." But after that, the populist idea, as in everv case in the past and present, was soon lost sight of, and the community has in each and every in¬ stance, without a single exception, given up and given away its rights, privileges and immunities as a com¬ munity and commonwealth, and has settled down into an aristocracy or an oligarchy, which means the few and not the people; it means the nobility, the gentry, and, finally, into anarchy, which means confused gov¬ ernment, or without order in government, and an an¬ archist is one who attempts to introduce disorder or confusion into a country. Government means control, rule, orderly constraint and proper management, and not form only. This leads me to assert that this is just the state and condition of this country to-dav. It h^S the form, and plenty of it, but no government iti anv part or department of it. Take the police deoartment of the country, for ex¬ ample, and what do we find? Why, lawlessness, blood¬ shed and riot everywhere with no power anywhere to 16 242 THE NATIONS check it. Arid why ? Because of the fatal doctrine of State independence, and it is fatal, because when car¬ ried to its legitimate results, it creates national depend¬ ence on the States as to what it can do, or cannot do and say as to the management of the affairs of the country. And yet the general government is charged with the solemn duty of observing peace and order, both national and international. Still, any State, in its independence, may make a breach of the peace, or, in common parlance, "kick up a fuss" with any other nation and leave the national government to settle it as best it cafi by way of large indemnities and other diplo¬ matic negotiations and great cost to the people. Not only so, but a city—any city in any State—may entail great international burdens upon the general government which the whole people of the nation have to pay, as, for instance, the slaughtering of the Italians in New Orleans a few years ago. It cost the govern¬ ment an indemnitv of $25,000, besides all other costs and expenses, which were verv great. And yet the ereneral government was and is still powerless, under t1?e conditions of States' rights, to help herself in any way whatever, either ap-ainst Italy or the city of New Orleans. Moreover, that act came near plunging the nation into a bloody and devastating war. This is what I consider one of the organic weaknesses of the na¬ tional government. And another very great weakness in the government is that the constitution does not ore- vent individuals from selling out the country to other nations, and the result is that both the wealth and ter¬ ritory of this country is largely, yes, very largely, in the hands and ownership of foreign powers. Do you ask, "Can this be true?" Yes, it is true, and I, for one. have not many tears to shed over the fact, either, be¬ cause instead of the whites of this country busying themselves over matters of infernal improvements, the development and progress of the nation and its fortifi- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 243 cation against a foreign power, they have spent their best powers,, energies and intellects in devising ways and means to prevent what he is pleased to call "Negro domination." I mean to sav, that while the white man of this country has had his eyes steadfastly fixed on us, as a race, with a view to keeping us down, others out¬ side have been busy buying up and otherwise coming into possession of the land and other wealth of the country. In order to prove these assertions, let us quote some figures on the subject—see what they say: That English aristocrats should rule large dominions in the United States, and rule them from London, is at first a difficult thing to grasp; for, until it is borne in mind that peers and peeresses of Great Britain are larere landed proprietors in our country—Viscount Scul¬ ly alone owns 3,000,000 acres in Illinois, Iowa and Ne¬ braska—does the significance of absenteeism in land¬ lords become apparent. But now the matter will be brought home to Americans more directly than it has •ever been brought home yet, for there is shortly to be a union in London of the American land-owning in¬ terests, and a series of drastic measures are scheduled which, it is believed, will not onlv increase the annual rentals of the vast domain involved, but which will greatlv affect the destiny of the hundreds of thousands who dwell upon it. First of all, a list of the members of the aristocracy who own the lands in question will not be without in¬ terest. Such a list has never been given before in full. The greatest of the English holdings and the persons interested are these: Alexander Grant, London (in Kansas)—35,000 acres. Syndicate No. 1—50,000 acres. This is a Scotch concern and its land is in Florida. English Land Company (in California)—50,000 acres. 244 THE NATIONS English Land Company (in Arkansas)—50,000 acres. Lord Houghton (in Florida)—60,000 acres. Lord Dunraven (in Colorado)—60,000 acres. Benjamin Newgas, Liverpool—100,000 acres. Syndicate No. 6—110,000 acres. This syndicate in¬ cludes the Earl of Vimlam and the Earl of Lankeville. The land is in Wisconsin. Lord Dunmore—120.000 acres. The Duke of Sutherland—125,000 acres. This is the actress-loving, champagne-bidding and rack-rent nobleman of police-court fame. William Whaley—210,000 acres. Mr. Whaley is the squire of Peterboro, England. Robert Tennant—2^0,000 acres. This is all farming land. Mr. Tennant lives in London. Dundee Land Company - 24,700 acres. The Missouri Land Company—300,000 acres. This operates a Missouri dominion, and has headquarters at Edinburgh. The British Land Company—320,000 acres. This land is all in Kansas. M. Eifenhauser of Halifax—600,000 acres. The land is in West Virginia. Bryan H. Evans—700,000 acres. Mr. Evans resides in London. His lands are in Mississippi. The Angle-American. Syndicate, London—750,000 acres. The funds of widowed peeresses are largely in¬ vested here. The lands are in the South and West. Phillips, Marshall & Co., London—1,300,000 acres. This firm has the whole peerage for their clients. Marquis of Tweedale—1,750,000 acres. The Mar¬ quis is, William Montague Hay, famed all over Scot¬ land a£- the rack-rent landlord. Syndicate No. 4—1,800,000 acres. This syndicate has all its holdings in Mississippi. It includes the Marquis of Dalhousie, George Henry Howard Choi- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 245 mondeley (Viscount Cholmondeley), Georgiana, Vis¬ countess Cross; Hon. Lady Hamilton Gordon and Hon. Lady Biddulph. Sir Edward Reid—2,900,000 acres. This is a syndi¬ cate which owns lands in Florida only. It includes the present Duchess of Marlborough, Lady Randolph Churchill and Lady Lister Kaye. Viscount Scully—3,000,000 acres. His lordship maintains an elaborate system of bailiffs. The Texas Land Union (Syndicate No. 3)—3,000,- 000 acres. Interested peers—Baroness Burdett-Coutts, Earl Cadogan, H. C. Fitzroy Somerset (this is the Duke of Beaufort), William Alexander Lochiel Ste¬ phen Douglass Hamilton, Duke of Deaudon; the Duke of Rutland, Ughtaed J. Kay Shuttleworth and Eand Ethel Cadogan (maid in waiting to the Queen). This syndicate holds whole counties in Texas, and tens of thousands of persons pay its rentals. It is claimed that fully 20,000,000 acres of American lands are thus owned by great landowners in England and Scotland. This does not include the Holland Syn¬ dicate, which owns 5,000.000 acres of grazing lands in Western States, nor the German syndicate, owning 2,000,000 acres in various States. For some time past it has been evident to the foreign landowners that con¬ certed action cn their part was essential to their inter¬ ests. It is well known to those who have even casually looked into the matter that foreign landowning has much impeded the development of the Western Com¬ monwealths. These great land owners positively refuse to sell. They prefer to establish a system of bailiffs, with the results that verv serious complications have resulted. The State legislatures have done their best to deal with the question, but heretofore with only in¬ different success. Viscount Scully is, rightly or wrongly, made the scapegoat of this whole business. He has for some years been a thorn in the path of 246 THE NATIONS one State administration after another, and his shrewd¬ ness in evading' every provision of law directed against him has extorted the admiration of thousands. Thus, Scully practically owns in Illinois the best part of the counties of Logan, Livingston- and Tazewell. The State in 1877 passed an alien land law, directed solely against Scully. To evade it he insisted beforehand upon a clause in all his leases stipulating that the lessee should pay all taxes accruing against the property leased. The result was the creation of a large and solid body of voters in the Scully counties, as they are called, opposed to propositions of public improvement by taxation. The war against Scully in Illinois threw the other British landowners into- a panic, and as fast as leases have fallen in tbev have been renewed under heavier and heavier conditions. Alien land laws have occupied the attention of legislatures, and in Kansas and Ne¬ braska the struggle for a time had a serious effect upon land securities of all kinds. Finally matters came'to such a deplorable stage that a committee of the American tenantry was appointed to present a memorial to the London landowners, set¬ ting forth the ruin that stared the Western farmers in the face as the result of the rack-renting system that had been evolved out of the chaos. This memorial had a marked effect on Baroness Burdett-Coutts, who in¬ sisted upon no more evictions of American farmers. It only aggravated the Duke of Sutherland, who was then in sore need of funds, and he cabled his agents to col¬ lect the rents and send them over at all hazards. Finding that mild measures availed nothing, the ten¬ antry resorted to a more radical expedient. An associ¬ ation has been formed in Illinois, Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas to resist to the utmost the demands of the Eng¬ lish landlords. The organization is a lively one, and is the first really agrarian agitation in American history. The association works more secretly than the Holy FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 247 Vehm Gefichte, but it has already influenced legislation in a marked manner. This is the development in the situation which, more than anything- else, caused the English landowners to form an alliance among themselves. The movement was first proposed in the interest of the Scully estate. It is intended to have an agent in attendance at the meetings of legislatures of all the States involved this winter. The matter was brought to the attention of Sir Julian Pauncefcte this autumn when he visited the London Foreign Office. What he is to do in the mat¬ ter, no one cares to say. The above quotations are from the Ottawa Journal. And the "Little Giant Cyclopaedia" points out Euro¬ pean holdings of land in this country to the amount of nearly 25,000,000 acres. Let us quote a little further, this time from the Petv- insula Farmer:- " 'Is it true,' I asked a great thinker, 'that England alone holds $ 500,000,000 of United (States) securi¬ ties, bearing interest, including exchange, of 6 per cent., payable in gold?" " 'Yes, according- to the public statements of Lon¬ don statisticians. The Secretary of the Treasury says there is no public record in this country showing the amount of foreign investments. We must, therefore, go to Europe to learn, not only how much we are in debt to Great Britain, but that at least $500,000,000 additional of United States investments are held in France and Germany. This makes a total in three countries of $3,000,000,000, imposing an interest charge, including exchanges, of $180,000,000 per an¬ num. A nice state of serfdom, isn't it ?' " _ Yes, foreign powers can call a halt on this country, no matter what project she may have in view. Take, for example, the action of the land monopolies I have just been quoting, and the Behring Sea fishery matter, 248 THE NATIONS and the Nicaragua episode, and American interests at Venezuela, and the English holdings, and the read- juster matters in Virginia. Well, what about them, do you say? I say they prove that the United States is tied hand and foot by foreign powers and cannot help herself. And the "Monroe Doctrine" is no longer the Monroe Doctrine; or, in other words, if it ever did mean anything, it does not now, for it seems that the weakest of the foreign countries, even little Spain, can come into Cuba and do about as she pleases, and the United States, through her press, cries out with a loud and plaintive voice for the enforcement of the "Monroe Doctrine," but no enforcing is done. And why is the Monroe Doctrine, in such cases as I have just men¬ tioned, not enforced? Simply because, as I have said, this country is powerless in the matter. And she is powerless because of bad government, and the bad gov¬ ernment is by reason of poor and incompetent states¬ manship, for, instead of the State and the general gov¬ ernment studying the best good of the people—the whole people—they are almost entirely engaged in making and unmaking laws to establish white su¬ premacy and to prevent what they are pleased to call "Negro domination." Again I ask, with all sincerity, Is the white man com¬ petent of either national, State or local self-govern¬ ment? If so, in what has it been proven ? Just here I cannot do better than to quote what another of their own witnesses has to say on the subject. The person is Governor Altgeld, of Illinois, who said in his public address delivered at Chattanooga: "Instead of an armed force that we can meet on the field, there is to-day an enemy that is invisible, but everywhere at work, destroying our institution*. That enemy is corruption. It seeks to direct official action, it dictates legislation and endeavors to control the con¬ struction of the laws. It seeks to control the press, to FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 249 set fashion and shape public sentiment; it has emascu¬ lated American politics and places it on the low plane °f jugglery. The tendency is now for political parties to drop principle arid follow expediency, and their plat¬ forms are often drawn to evade or straddle every live issue. The idea is now to cajole rather than convince, to ignore great wrongs and wink at abuses, to court the support of conflicting interests, though it involves the deception of one or both. We are substituting office- seeking and office-holding in place of real achievement, and instead of great careers in public life we are facing a harvest of slippery, blear-eyed and empty mediocrity, which glides into oblivion without the assistance of death. "To be an eligible candidate for office now often means to stand for nothing- in particular, and to repre¬ sent no definite principle; but to be all things to all men, and in the end be coptemptible. Thirty-four years ago the call was for men to fight an open enemy in the field. To-dav our countrv is calling for men who will be true to republican institutions at home. Never be¬ fore did this republic call so loudly as it does to-day for a strong, sturdv manhood that will stand up defi¬ antly and dare to do right. For more than a decade the tendency in this country has been toward a color¬ less and negative dilettanteism, having the countenance of the Pharisee with the greed of the wolf, and drawing all its inspirations from the altar of concentrating and corrupting wealth. The flag has been' praised at champagne dinners, while the very pole from which it floated was being eaten off by corruption, and repub¬ lican institutions were being stabbed to the vitals. A new gospel has come among us, according to which 'it is mean to rob a henroost of a hen, but plundering thousands make us gentlemen.' My friends, the men of the past did their duty. Shall we do ours? They were asked to face death. You may have to face 250 THE NATIONS calumny and obloquy. No man ever saved his coun¬ try without being vilified, for all who make profit of injustice will be your enemies. But as sure as the heavens are high and justice is eternal you will triumph in the end." Indeed, the fact is, that foreign powers have either formed protectorates over most of the Southern, Central ancf North American States, or they have formed such other treaty relations with them as to make the "spheres of influence" of almost every foreign nation such as to nullify almost entirely the "Monroe Doctrine/,' until, as I said before, the Monroe Doc¬ trine means virtually nothing but an empty declara¬ tion for the entire East, beside treaty and protectorate rights and interests, have many other unknown and, at the present, unknowable material rights and holdings in this country, consisting of lands, mining interests, stocks, bonds, etc. So if this country were to attempt the real rigid enforcement of the so-called "Monroe Doctrine in the case of any one of them, all the other powers of the East would come to their rescue, because of their own interests that are over here. If further proof of the white man's unfitness for self- government, which means self-control, were needed, one has only to call up his unseemly acts and conduct on the floor of the House of Representatives at almost every session of the Congress that has met since the Declaration of Independence was made in 1776. Then, again, for the least pretext, and on the slightest provo¬ cation, he will set the regularly constituted authorities ruthlessly aside and take the law in his own hand, and commit bloodshed and murder, and that, too, without any compunction of conscience whatever. Here are a set of resolutions offered and unanimously passed at a Boston mass meeting, which shows that my picture is not overdrawn: FROM A NSW POINT OF VIEW. 251 strong resolutions adopted at a boston mass meeting. "Boston, November 12.—Nearly 3,000 people attend¬ ed a mass meeting in Eaneuil Hall to-night, to pro¬ test against the practice of lynching and burning ne¬ groes in Southern and other States. The meeting was held under the auspices of the various colored societies of Boston and vicinity. "The speeches were by both white and colored men, and were vigorously applauded. Mayor Edwin U. Curtis presided, and among the speakers were Con¬ gressman Elijah A. Morse, Judge Edward Walker and Father Scully. At the conclusion of the speeches Hon. George T. Downing presented the following resolu¬ tion, which was adopted unanimously: "We condemn-without any reservation the lynching, the mutilating, the roasting alive of men and women, now commonly • practiced in parts of our country—so ccmmonlv practiced as to arrest the attention of the world. We condemn this God-defying heartlessness with most indignant feelings, as civilized beings, as cit¬ izens, as Christians. "We are, as human civilized beings, as proud Ameri¬ cans, made to hold our heads down in shame because of the almost daily reports which reach us of beings born in the image of God thrust into consuming fires, with all the consequent agonies, with the outraged pit- eously entreating their heartless tormentors for mercy, protesting their innocence even while in the very jaws of death, while gazing imploringly—that is, if their eyes have not been gouged out—upon men, women and children, assembled from miles around to witness and gloat over God's image scoffed at while writhing in agony. "We emphatically state that we would not stand in the way of a just and full punishment of all crimes, but 252 THE NATIONS the law of the land must be respected in meting out such punishment ; all the persons charged with crime are entitled to a fair trial before a jury oif their.peers. "The heartless, bloodthirsty disregard of the su¬ preme law of the land must cease. Massachusetts de¬ clares it; she calls upon all lovers of law and order all over the nation to rise in their might and majesty, and say Amen to the declaration. She takes no part in the falsehood that the Negro race is more immoral than are other races; that they are rapists. It is her firm con¬ viction that the charge is false; that it is manufactured to appeal to sentiment calculated to cover up and pal¬ liate to a great extent the burning alive of black men, the real design being concealed, which is to crush the lawful-growing aspirations manifesting itself among black men. "We invoke the uncompromising spirit of Garrison, of Phillips, of Sumner, of Andrew, and in their names to these defiers of God and humanity, cry out, Stop this brutality which darkens our nation's fair name, adding that, if it be not stopped, the impetuous spirit of Cris- pus Attucks, of John Brown, which is still marching on, will in its march, haunt into action." Now, if there was ever a time in the white man's his¬ tory when he had opportunity to prove himself capable of independent self-government, it was when he under¬ took to establish a republic on the Western Continent. But the fact is that from the very incipiency of the idea down to the present time his acts have been one long, perpetual, eternal list of egregious blunders and mis- lakes, and now, after a lapse of over four hundred years since he first came on these shores, he finds himself in such a national, international, economical, financial, state and interstate, moral and religious tangle and be¬ wilderment as would make any other race on the face of the globe but the white man forever ashamed to lift FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 253 its head and claim that it had ever had any part what¬ ever to do with such a dismal failure. Only look at the state of the country to-day. A dead¬ lock almost everywhere, so that we can hardly move a wheel toward real, true and lasting' progress; and cor¬ ruption everywhere so thick that, figuratively speak¬ ing1, it can be felt with the hand and seen in the air. If such a condition of affairs is success in government, pray, tell me what would be a failure? With a million of men out of employment, families starving to death, the countrv billions of dollars in debt at home and abroad, the countrv flooded with millions upon millionss of paper bonds to be redeemed in gold, and no gold pro¬ duction, comparativelv, to pay it, and the country being drained week after week of the little that is left, in or¬ der to keep the ship of State afloat—who, I ask, with all this and a thousand times more, can call this gov¬ ernment under the white man's rule a success, with hundreds upon hundreds of the banks into which the peoole were induced to put their hard-earned savings gone down with millions of their money, and with hundreds of thousands of them burdened with heavy mortgages, and the European evicting officer standing at their door ready to set them out, and this govern¬ ment powerless to help them by. reason of bad manage¬ ment and poor statesmanship! The inability of proper and good government is seen in the fact that this people came together and formed the colonies into a federal compact, or union, and in one article of the federation declared it to be a compact, or union, and in another actually declared themselves to be separate and independent of said compact and that sowed the seeds of secession and disunion, and hence the early secession of South Carolina, and finally the great rebellion. These same all-wise white men at¬ tempted another great impossibility, and thev are just now beginning to see it. and thousands of them do not 254 THE NATIONS see it yet, and that is, they tried to establish and main¬ tain a free and slave country at one and the same time; for they positively and deliberately declared, both in the Declaration of Independence and Constitution, that "all men are free and equal" for the fundamental rea¬ son that they were "created so," and then set right about to make millions of men slaves. And I here and now feel like exclaiming: O fools! how slow of heart you were and are, to see and believe the impossibility of your task! Another proof that the white man is not yet fitted for self-government is that he rebelled and split the Union which he himself had made for himself. He then asked to be admitted to return to the compact under an amended constitution, which still more clearly declared the oneness of the whole peoole, and yet he is, this pres¬ ent moment, busilv eng.a^ed in trying to debar ten mil¬ lions of citizens from their constitutional rights without the alteration of one single word in the national Consti¬ tution so that he might do so by law. Thus he shows himself not only whollv unfitted to mold and frame laws, but, as it seems, innately incapable of even being law-abiding- citizens. We might point out another source of weakness in the nation's government. It is the judiciary, with its powers, discretions and privileges, which are so great that it might appropriately be called the organized aris¬ tocracy of the country, or a "government within the government," with powers far exceeding those of the other or eeneral government. At a casual glance, this assertion may seem absurd; but on careful examination it will be found to be too true; for in many respects it is an absolute power, differing very little from an abso¬ lute monarchy, and every member is a monocrat, with more or less absolute powers and functions of office. And not onlv so, but the Supreme bench of the judi¬ ciary is infallible, for in the eyes and light of the Con- from a new point of view. 255 stitution it never makes a mistake, neither can its acts be reviewed, no matter how obnoxious the people may consider them and know them to be. And this makes the Supreme Court of the nation superior to the na¬ tion, for, as I have said, the nation itself cannot call in question any decision the court makes. The people, the whole people, may, through the Congress, enact any law they choose, and they may desire it to p"o into effect ever so much after it is enacted, but if the Su¬ preme Court does not like it, the people cannot have it, no matter how much they may want it. Now, what is the fact just here made plain? It is that nine men have the constitutional right conferred upcn them to turn down the will of sixty-five millions of people, and they are absolutely powerless to> help themselves. And yet this nation calls itself an inde¬ pendent, sovereign people. But where is the sovereignty of, in, by or among the people, when the people have bv constitutional enactment given it away, or conferred supremacy upon nine men of its number called a court ? No, there is no independence or sovereignty with the people, for they are irrevocably tied hand and foot by anv and every act of the Supreme Court, and. indeed, so broad and unlimited are the powers and functions of the court that it is the real lawmaking power in this country after all, for it has both the power of construc¬ tion and destruction, and it is unlimited and unreview¬ able, so they can enlarge or restrict any and every law that Congress makes, and thus r^ake the law another law, or no lnw at all. and this lact is done simply by the use of one phrase, ?nd that phrase is that "This law is unconstitutional." When that is said, all that pertained to that law. though it contained the best brain work in the land, all is "done for"—it is "knocked out" and counts for naught, and that forever, so far as the peo¬ ple's power to remedy it is concerned. 256 THE NATIONS But I now want to advance this important thought: The President is constitutionally made the head or the chief of the nation. Is that not. so? Then he is chief, or in other words, he is the head of the nation. Yet if he vetoes any acts passed by Congress for whatever reasons he may give, and no matter how cogent his rea¬ sons may be, the Congress can pass it over hb veto; it then becomes thelaw of the land. This makes the peo¬ ple sovereign, and if it were otherwise the President would be sovereign through the veto power. This is also what I call an outlet for the pe.ople. Why not, then, let the people have seme relief in some way from what has become to be the awful dicta of the SupremeCourt? The relief might be brought about by making, it pos¬ sible by constitutional enactment that certain cases, under certain conditions, could come back to the peo¬ ple, although the court had rendered an adverse deci¬ sion. The people then could vote to sustain the decision of the court, or pass it over their decision, just as Congress does with the President's veto. A proper case for an act of this kind would be such a case as that of the income-tax bill, which, after all the hard work done on it, and as much as the people wanted it, the court turned it down, and that, too, against the protest of thousands of the people. So I hold that, in such cases the people are not free to make and have such laws as thev want so long as their power is delegated abso¬ lutely to nine men, and that without any condition of remedy whatever in cases of gross error. I repeat that this is a very great weakness to a popular form of gov¬ ernment. The Dred Scott case was another that ought to have come back to the people for their decision, for Tudge Taney certainly did err when he declared in his de¬ cision a colored man, or a "Negro," had no rights that the white man was bound to respect. This decision was wholly erroneous, for the colored man had all the eth- from a new point of view. 257 nic rights of a man granted him by nature, and when the confederation of colonies was made, which confed¬ eration was formed into what is now the United States, we, as a people, were included in it. So we had con¬ federate rights; therefore, the white man was in duty bound to respect, or else be false to the articles of the confederation. Then, again, we had the rights of all other men in¬ cluded in the Declaration o>f Independence, for that Declaration said and still says that all men are created equal by their Creator; so we had the right granted us by the Creator, which the white man was bound to re¬ spect. Then again, there were our constitutional rights, which were in no sense abridged, neither in the origi¬ nal document, nor by the amendments that were of¬ fered when the Constitution was adopted, nor when the next two were made. So, then, we had full consti¬ tutional rights, equal with the white man, which he was bound to respect. Yes, we had all this when the learned judge, by reason of his great race prejudice, de¬ cided that we had "no rights that the white man was bound to respect." And this unjust, unholy, unright¬ eous, ungodly decision was concurred in by the associ¬ ate justices, and thus they inserted into the body poli¬ tic a -false and pernicious principle which has worked untold harm and. injury, not to the colored race alone, but to the whole nation; . and, indeed, to humanity everywhere, and it has been an untold source of evil to the white people of this country, for it has completely unhumanized and made them more like savages to us than a, civilized, cultivated people, and so the very great slaughter of my people without judge or jury. May God, the God of the nation, have mercy on them, change their hearts of stone, iron and brass, and give them hearts of flesh! The excuse for the formation and continuance of the Supreme Court was that the purpose of the framers of 17 258 THE NATIONS the Constitution would have a body of judicature that was non-partisan and non-political, to. whom! the nation might refer all matter of State and persons, and; have them finally and impartially settled. This, it is said, was the purnose of the founders of the government, and yet from Judge Roger B. Taney, of Dred Scott fame, and the first, for it was in that case he ruled him out of his constitutional and confederated rights, for he had both, and he was also included in the Declaration of Inde¬ pendence; and all the chief justices down to the pres¬ ent time have, with hardly a single exception, been party politicians of the most pronounced kind. I have said that the real legislative body in this country is the Supreme Court. The Congress is not much more than a committee to formulate matters and present them in shape for the Supreme Court to say whether they shall become laws of the land. Let us refer to the Dred Scott decision again for example. I have shown that all the rights, privileges and immunities of men and citizens had been granted us, and yet Judge Taney sets them all aside, or declares them all to be null and void by the following strange, monstrous, and inhuman de¬ cision, that for more than a century before the Declara¬ tion of Independence "negroes" had been reearded as beings of an inferior order, altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in sccial or political rela¬ tions : and so far inferior that they had no right3 which the white man was bound to respect, and that the "ne¬ gro" might justly and lawfully be reduced to slavery "for his own benefit." Tndsre Taney savs the colored man had been thus re¬ garded for more than a whole century before the Dec¬ laration of Indepenence, and yet not one word of it is mentioned or even hinted at in the Declaration but on the contrary, the colored man is declared in'that document to be created the eaual of the white man nd that fact is what makes the decision a nionstro from a new point of view. 259 version of truth as well as of human and divine law. He reversed the legislation of Congress by declaring the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional, and so opened up Missouri as a slave State regardless of the fact that Congress had made it a free State, and the President had signed the act. Now, all that I have said goes to show the white man in this country to be an unfit repository for the rights of the whole people, because he is too prejudiced in mind, biased in judgment, and envious of heart, to do justice to his own race and people, and so is totally un¬ fitted to even concede the rights and privileges of other races. That he is envious and treacherous one has only to call to memory, as proof, the many schemes, plans, deals and bargains made in presidential nominations down to a spittoon-cleaner in the most petty office within his gift. I repeat, all is done by bargain, trade, barter, deal, etc., in a little mean, contemptible, petty, underhanded way, that is below the dignity and man¬ hood of all that is called manly and statesmanlike. And I here warn and beseech my people who are just now in a formative state and condition, not to copy their ex¬ ample. Senator Sherman in his ucent book has con¬ firmed me in this conviction which I have held for years. He just opened wide the mouth of the political bag, and the pent-up and for a long time hushed-up and smothered stifled "cat" springs forth, labeled with all I have s^id in plain letters—yes, all may be read, and more, too—far more—in the Senator's book. The truth of it is, this country had its birth in a sharp scheme and whirlwind, and I very much fear that it will die in' a great storm. In order to further snow the falsity and unconstitu¬ tionality of Judge Taney when he declared that the "nepro had no' rights that the white man was bound to respect," and also to further show that the colored men were already in the full possession of all rights of 260 THE NATIONS American citizens for a year Or more before the de¬ cision of the so-called learned judge, I will here quote from "Justice and Jurisprudence," a very elaborate work issued by J. B. L,ippincott & Co. in 1899 (see page 528). It reads as follows : "In early times free colored persons exercised the right of suffrage in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey and North Carolina, and this was the case in New Hampshire and Massachusetts in 1856, and colored aliens could be naturalized. It is not true that the Constitution was made exclusively for and bv the white race; it was established by 'the people of the United States' for themselves and their posterity, and, as free colored people were then citizens of at least five States, and in every sense part of the people of the United States, they were among those for whom and for whose posterity the Constitution was established." What more do I need to say to prove that the white .man is self-governing in theory only, and is for that reason, in every practical sense unfitted to have in his keeping the rights of the people? Let me refer to the Monroe Doctrine again for the purpose of inserting a paragraph from the current issue of the Baltimore American, contained in its editorial, and to point out by contrast the difference of views on the Monroe Doctrine as held by the President of the United States, and as expressed in his annual message to Congress, and that of the above-mentioned editor and, as he says, probablv bv a large majority of the peoole of the country. The President restricts the ac¬ quirement of territory on this continent by European powers to the phrase "by force;" that is, he construes the Monroe Doctrine thus to mean,, but the following paragraph t^kes a far wider scope of view: "The construction now given to the Monroe Doc¬ trine by manv—nrohably a large majority—of the American people, is that no European government shall FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 261 be permitted to acquire territory on the American conti¬ nent by force, treaty or purchase, or in any other way." All the editorial says in the paragraph may be true, but it is nevertheless a fact that large quantities of this continent are now being acquired by all the ways it is so confidently affirmed they cannot be obtained—yes, by millions upon millions of acres. The "cat" is out of the white man's business manage¬ ment "bag" again, and the following editorial from the Baltimore American, December 12, 1896, tells'what she is labeled with. Every colored hi an, woman and child ought to read and ponder it well, and then stop quoting and aping the white man as an example of success in great business enterprises, and no longer make futile attempts to succeed with plans and management that he, in so many cases, has utterly failed, as cited in this editorial: "We observe with interest that the Baltimore visitors who recentlv returned from Atlanta, and who are talk¬ ing wildly about the success of the Exposition, carefully refrain from mentioning the fact that the citizens had to get together the other day- andv raise $100,000 to save the show from bankruptcy. In order to secure this sum one gentleman contributed $50,000. The cold, un¬ varnished truth is that the Atlanta Exposition will wind up its existence this month at a loss. The attendance has not come up to the expectations of its projectors, and the business men of Atlanta—the merchants and the manufacturers—will be glad when it is over. The verv fact that Maryland Day was the largest of the Ex¬ position ought to have shown the Marylanders the true condition of the enterprise. * * * Granting that the Exposition could be organized and opened in time, the fact still remains that financially it would not oav and that it would not help' the city. One of the men who did as much .as any one else to get the World's Fair to Chicago, and to whom was offered the director-gen- 262 the; nations eralship of the enterprise, told us in Chicago that the Exposition was doing the city great injury, and was costing the business men hundreds of thousands of dollars. His prediction of a collapse was dismally ful¬ filled, and this was the greatest of our fairs. The Cen¬ tennial left Philadelphia in a condition of reaction that lasted several-years and cost that city millions of dol¬ lars. New York's Exposition, forty years ago was not more successful. The Exposition in New Orleans was a failure, and in San Francisco the Midwinter Fair pulled through only because of the generosity of the city's rich men. «* * * And yet, in spite of this record, Baltimore city is asked to give $500,000, the State of Maryland $500,000, the national government $2,000,000—all on the uncertain basis of $ coo,000 in popular subscriptions, obtained largelv by 'professional canvassing. We are filled with great plans for a $5,000,000 show, and Balti¬ more is advertised to the country in this manner. It is not right that the city should be misrepresented or belittled in this manner." Again I ask, will the colored race still set the white man up as their family, church, State and business model ? And if so, how much longer ? And why is it that we would rather fail, following in the white man'* false and deceptive wake than to plan and succeed for ourselves on surer, though it be on a slower basis? I demand an answer to these questions. Give it, or give up the problem altogether. I here cite another example of the white man's "wild¬ cat" business exploits, and this time it is the words of Mr. Chauncey Deoew of New York. And it will also show that there is a natural and fictitious growth in business as in other things: "I went through a city recently in the South, which was an example of boom as against natural growth. There were streets and broad avenues, blocks of con- PROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 263 structed business buildings, large plants built for the manufacturer to take possession of, streets of comforta¬ ble and cozy dwelling houses, public squares and parks, a belt railway and a trolley line already con¬ structed, and yet beyond the capitalists who invested their money, and the workmen while the construction was going on, the place had never had an inhabitant, and never will. It was built upon air and fancy. Yes, it was built upon air and fancy, and upon air and fancy alone." The above-quoted facts show too clearly the truth¬ fulness of the proposition with which I started out, namely that the white man did not sit down and delib¬ erate and count the cost, and then act upon the result of the knowledge gained by such a course; but, to quote from the editorial first mentioned, he acts entirely upon the ground of haphazard and chance, for it says: "And yet. in spite of this record, Baltimore city is asked to give $500,000, the State of Maryland $500,- 000, the national government $2,000,000—and all on the uncertain basis of $500,000 in popular subscrip¬ tions obtained largely by professional canvassing." And I wish to say, this editorial shows that it is not one or two little isolated, petty cases of which it speaks, but of world-wide and universal range and scope. Yes, the most gigantic affairs of which the white man is ca¬ pable, going back, as it does, forty years, and bringing down all before it to the present day, and writes on it all. "Failure! total failure!" Since I have written what I have to say about the Monroe Doctrine as it affects the relationship of other nations to this country, certain negotiations which were at that time pending between this country and Great Britain have come fo the surface in the form of an act of Congress calling for all correspondence of this gov¬ ernment with England on that subject. The Secretary of State transmitted to Congress the desired informa- 264 THE NATIONS tion, and along with it the President sent a special mes¬ sage on the same subject, and the correspondence be¬ tween the two governments, especially that of Eng¬ land, goes to show that what I had written was true, and that the Monroe Doctrine was no doctrine, or that it did not mean anything to foreign powers, from the very fact, as I have said, foreign powers have been ac¬ quiring territory on this continent from the time Presi¬ dent Monroe uttered it—which was in 1823—to the present time—until, as I have shown by abundant proof, that this government has not the slightest idea how much of the continent is owned by outside powers. And it shows another thing, and that is that the Mon¬ roe Doctrine has never at any time since it was laid down to the present been sufficiently enforced to test the matter as to whether it would be accepted as good international law. And so another mistake and mis¬ management of the white man in the government of this country. Listen to the comments of the English press on the subject: "London, December 17—All of the morning papers to-morrow will devote more or less of their editorial space to the discussion of President Cleveland's mes¬ sage on the Venezuelan question and to the merits of that question itself. "The Daily Telegraph (Liberal) will publish an edi¬ torial contending that America has no concern in the Venezuelan dispute. The editorial goes on to say: " 'In truth, this invocation of the Monroe Doctrine seems, on this side of the water, to be irrelevant, be¬ cause there is no question of territorial greed or the imposition of an European system. It is absurd, be¬ cause a statement of an American policy can hardly claim to attain the rank of a principle of international law. By what right does the Washington government demand the arbitration of this matter when the very theory which guides their interference has absolutely from a new point of view. 265 nothing to do with the points in dispute ? What nation has ever agreed to the Monroe Doctrine? How often has the Washington government itself ventured to ad¬ vance it? "'We say nothing of the process of twisting the lion's tail, generally resorted to at times of electoral excitement. Yet, if it be true that all this zealous sup¬ port of Venezuela originated in partisan intrigues, there is still less reason why we should submit to what, from the British standpoint, is a wholly perverse and inadmissible claim.' " 'The Times says in its.editorial on the situation: " 'It is impossible to discuss the gravity of the diffi¬ culties that have arisen between Great Britain and the United States. President Cleveland's message and its reception on both sides of the Senate give additional importance to the dispatches between Washington and London. The details of the boundary dispute are in¬ significant in comparison with the far-reaching claims advanced by Mr. Olney's dispatch and emphasized in President Cleveland's message. " 'Convinced as we are that a rupture between the two great English-speaking communities would be a calamity, not only to themselves, but to the civilized world, we are nevertheless driven to the conclusion that the concessions this country is so imperiously sum¬ moned to make are such as no self-respecting nation, least of all one ruling an empire that has its roots ill every quarter of the globe could possibly submit to. The United States themselves would never for a mo¬ ment dream of yielding to this kind of dictation. We are of the same blood, and shall not be less careful of our national honor. " 'We can hardly believe that the course threatened by President Cleveland will be seriously adopted by the American government; but, if so, it will be incum¬ bent upon us, without entering upon any aggressive 266 THE NATIONS measures to protect our imperial interests and to stand up for our rights under international law.' "The Times then proceeds to argue that the Monroe Doctrine has never been recognized as international law, and it quotes Lord Salisbury's admission that, any disturbance of the existing territorial distribution in the western hemisphere by any European State would be highly inexpedient, and then continues: " 'But the recognition of this expediency does not cover the preposterous deductions which Mr. Olney's dispatch advances and which President Cleveland makes the basis of the most astounding proposal that has perhaps ever been advanced by any government in times of peace since the days of Napoleon. " 'We desire to speak with all proper reserve, but we confidently predict that Great Britain will not ad¬ mit the pretensions put forward by President Cleve¬ land. No commission appointed, by a power which is not a party to a dispute will be recognized by us as having a title of any sort to pronounce upon a bound¬ ary question. It will receive no assistance from the British authorities. Its decision will be null and void from the-outset, even if its origin did not taint it with partiality. We shall be very much astonished if there is any disagreement among the organs of public opin¬ ion in this country as to the manner in which such a claim should be confronted.' "The Times contends further that England is bound to resist the extended claim of Monroeism, and says: " 'A power which has command of the sea does not regard 3,000 miles of intervening ocean as severing it from its subjects.'" Now, let me point out a few things concerning the Monroe Doctrine that present themselves to me as worthy of more than a passing notice. In the first place, I wish to say it is well named when called the Monroe Doctrine, for that is what it justly FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 267 and truthfully is—the "Monroe Doctrine" and nothing more, for it is not a Rational doctrine, because the na¬ tion has never enacted it into a national law. It was a simple suggestion of President Monroe made to Con¬ gress, in 1823, when he presented his annual message to that body, as to what he believed to be the attitude this country should take and hold as to foreign powers acquiring territory on this continent. His opinion was that foreign nations should cease to establish colonies on the Western Continent, and that even to seek to do so would be considered a sign of unfriendliness on the part of said foreign powers towards this nation. But Congress did not by any means, or in any way whatever, enact it into a law—that is, they did not make it a national "doctrine;" and so it still remains a "Monroe Doctrine," because only those parts of the President's message become law or the rule of this government that Congress sees fit to take up and act upon, and there was no action whatever taken on this special suggestion of the President, nor has there been up to the present time. But there is a move now on foot, I believe, in Congress, looking to the making of the "Monroe Doctrine" a national "doctrine;" but this is January, 1896, and the suggestion was made by President Monroe in 1823, just seventy-three years ago—quite a late day. is it not, to just begin to look after a matter so vitally important to the nation as now seems this one. And yet the "most superior" govern¬ ing race on earth has suffered this neglect to go on for seventy-three years. In the second place, I wish to call attention to the fact that not only^did this same superior race that is so cautious and painstaking in looking after the nation's affairs, neglect to see that President Monroe's sugges¬ tion be acted upon and somehow put into practical force, but they also totally failed to look after the in¬ ternational part; for they should have without delay 268 THE NATIONS submitted the matter to all of those foreign nations to whom the "doctrine" was to apply to see if they would be willing to accept it as good international polity. But this was not done; nor was anything else looking to the establishment of this matter as a principle upon which operations might proceed with reference to this grave question. Just here let me insert the sentences that include the "Monroe Doctrine:" "President Monroe's annual messag'e to Congress in 1823 contained the following sentences: 'We owe it to candor and tc the amicable relations existing between the United States and the-allied powers to declare that we should consider any attempt on their part to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as dan¬ gerous to our peace and safety. With the existing colonies or dependencies of any European, power we have not interfered, and shall not interfere; but with the governments which have declared their independ¬ ence and maintained it, and whose independence we have on great consideration and just principles ac¬ knowledged, we could not view an interposition for oppressing them or controlling' in any other manner their destiny by any European power in any other light than as a manifestation of an: unfriendly disposi¬ tion towards the United States.' Also, 'The Ameri¬ can continents should no longer be subjects for any new European colonial settlement.'" But the Monroe Doctrine does not Say that Euro¬ pean powers which already have relationship with other governments and colonies on this continent shall not make other and further treaties and relationships with them, nor does it say how far these relations may g-o. Not only so, but "foreign powers" can acquire every foot of land on this continent that is not owned by this government. This can be done by purchase through the individuals who own it, or by syndicate FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 269 combination, and there is nothing in the Constitution to prevent it, much less the "Monroe Doctrine." Aeain I ask, Is the white man a safe custodian of the rights of the people? We constantly hear the white mail saying: "We want no Negro rule in this country," and "No Negro domination." But I ask, in all earnestness and sin¬ cerity, could he possibly rule worse than tihe white man has, or could he dominate to greater disadvantage of the nation? For the nation is almost bankrupt, and the country is almost, if not quite, mortgaged and bonded and syndicated out to other nations, with mil¬ lions of the inhabitants, without a means .of making a living-, and the natural producers without a foreign market for their products, and with what commerce that remains stagnant and almost at a standstill both at home and abroad, and with other nations in com¬ mand of the seas and turning from this country to oth¬ ers for their staple supplies. And now, with all these things a livinsr, sterling fact, in what sense could we, as a race, if in rule, do> it with less success than the "greatest" and "most superior" race on earth has done? That the nations are turning from us to oth¬ ers for their grain and other supplies, you have only to read the following report. We hear much in these days about the bad legislation of the days of "carpet-bag rule;" but let me ask was there a worse ruling at that time than we now have? If so, when and where? "England increased her imports of wheat in 1894 bv 9.800,000 bushels ov°r her 1802 imoorts, but bought 17,000.000 bushels less from the United States, and in¬ creased her purchases from Russia by 23,000,000 bushels, from Argentine by 18,000,coo bushels, ?>nd from Australasia by 3,500,000 bushels. In 1894 she bought less wheat from Chili, Turkey, Roumania, Egypt, India and Canada. 270 THE NATIONS "France grew more of her own wheat supply in 1894 than in 1892, buying less from all countries ex¬ cept Russia and Northern Africa. She bought upward of 2,500,000 bushels less from the United States, prac¬ tically the total amount of her diminished imports. Germany also bought about 8,000,000 bushels less wheat in 1894 than in 1892, taking 12,000,000 bushels less from the United States, but buying considerably more from Roumania, Russia and Argentina, her pur¬ chases from Argentina increasing by nearly the same quantity that her purchases from the United States de¬ creased." Just here I want to give an illustration of the com¬ plicated character and the contradictory nature of the working of or carrying out the provisions of the na¬ tional and State Constitutions—the one is the basis of the other; that is to say, the State Constitutions are modeled after the order of the National Constitution. The example is this: In the city of New York the Court of Appeals ren¬ dered a decision that "no saloon should be established within two hundred feet of any church or school- house," which in itself was nothing but a farce and child's plav, for what protection to the character of the youth of the country in any school is the space of "two hundred" feet? This two hundred feet, it will be re¬ membered are to> protect the morals of our youth— that is, to keep them from having access to the saloons. But the conflict is this: Just after the aforesaid deci¬ sion was passed an act was introduced in the State Legislature of New York thlat all widows or the chil¬ dren of deceased fathers, or the agents of the same, be exempt from the operation of the law. Now, the con¬ flict' is that the highest court of the State makes a de¬ cision of general and universal operation, but the leg¬ islature has a risrht to step in and vitiate and nullify the decision to the extent of a quarter or one-half. But FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 271 the conflict does not stop here, for another case can come into the courts on the constitutionality of the act of the legislature, or on some other, and most any other technicality, constitutional or otherwise, until the whole matter may come into the Congress of the United States, and stay there, and be tangled more and more; but finally some action of some sort may be had. No one knows what it may be or what kind it may be, and it does not matter much, for the whole thing must finally go to the Supreme Court of the land, which, af¬ ter all is said and done, is the real governing and legis¬ lative body of the country, for they can enlarge, dimin¬ ish or destroy altogether all that has been done up to this point, or they need not make any decision at all if they do not want to do so, and there is nothing in the original constitution itself nor the amendments thereto to compel them to do otherwise; and yet the white man declares that document (the Constitution) to be the most profound piece of brain work that it was ever the function, duty and privilege for the cogitating human briain to bring forth for the use of mankind. But have I not shown a mixture, a conflict, a tangle, a jumble of affairs ? And yet this is a part of the work, and only a p^irt of the work, of the "greatest" nation and race on the earth, for he, the white man, himself says so. And now as to the Constitution itself, if I am at liber¬ ty to speak of th&t instrument, and I know of no reason why I may not, because it is that by which the citizens are supposed to be governed, whether it is so in fact .or not—now, the Constitution, when carefullv examined, presents more the aopearance of the patchwork on a crazy-quilt than anything else I can now think of, for it has already had fifteen oatches put on to it, by way of amendments, and all of different kinds and for dif¬ ferent objects, and it now looks as if it will take about fifteen more to make anything like a proper, safe in- 272 the; nations strument for the national government, for the Supreme Court, with its ruthless and heartless hand, at whose mercy the Constitution and its construing—and, yes, destroying, too,—has been so wisely or otherwise placed, has laid hold of a number of the most impor¬ tant of the fifteen patches and torn them off, and so leaves the already weak and unfinished Constitution looking worse and in a worse condition than it was before. And the patches, or amendments, that have been so violently torn away are the ones that gave pro¬ tection to the ten millions of the citizens of the United States in the unmolested enjoyment of their citizen rights; and so I said that the act that did this was both ruthless and heartless, and is it not? If not, why not? Since reading the morning papers of January 29, 1896, I now have a good illustration of the white man's own self-confession to the charge I make against him of bad, loose and reckless legislation, for, in the open¬ ing of this chapter, I use the following words: "He— the white man—is not deliberate, nor careful and painstaking. So true is this of him that it seems he goes into the halls of State and makes laws simply to have them broken or overruled by the courts and con¬ strued to be defective, unconstitutional, or otherwise inappropriate and out of order." The quotations I here make are from an address of Senator Randall, State Senator of Maryland, giving his reasons for offering a bill in1 the Senate for relief from this loose, reckless and ruinous white man's legislation. Who clamors and strives so ardently for white man's rule in government, white supremacy, and who has such aw¬ ful fears of what he is pleased to call "Negro domi¬ nation ?" The address asserts that six hundred and sixty-five new laws were passed at the meeting of the legislature in 1894, which was only one-half of those introduced, which was 1,330. Think of it, citizens, and colored cit- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 273 izens especially, for it is you whom the white man bends all of his energies to prove incompetent to man¬ age the affairs of state. The address confesses that the legislation was had—part of it, to delude the public —the white public, of course—and that the fact of their becoming laws shows that the white public were and are easy dupes to be deluded. It also shows that part of these useless laws , were passed for private pur¬ poses, under the head and title of "general laws," which shows the rascality and unfitness of the white man for a proper and safe legislator of the people; and to make the matter worse, it says that a large portion of this miserable, trashy and harmful legislation is done under cover, without the people who sent them there to do business for them knowing anything whatever about it. Ah, does this not present and make known an awful state of affairs in the white man's boasted republic? The address also states that a good part of this vile and corrupt legislation is for the express purpose of plugging or blocking the way of certain corporations. This is another bold and open confession that nothing virtually is done on the ground of principle and states¬ manship, but all on the basis of tricks, bargains and sharp dealings. Again I ask, in all earnestness and sincerity, is the white man fit to govern , a people, a nation, a State, a district, county, city, town, ward, precinct, his own home or individual self. If he is, what, when and how has he shown it to be so? The following is the address to which I have re¬ ferred * "Senator Randall to-day introduced a bill designed to simplify and expedite future legislation. In speak¬ ing of the measure, Senator Randall said: 18 274 THE NATIONS " 'The object of the bill is to introduce improvements into the methods of legislation. It is in line with simi¬ lar attempts that have been made in other States of the Union. Maryland is far behind many of her sister States in this respect, for nothing has been done since the Constitution of 1867, and that Constitution added very few safeguards, if any, to those imposed by pre¬ vious constitutions on legislative methods of proce¬ dure. As matters are at present, a flood of bills is poured into the legislature at each session, many of them so carelessly drawn and ill-considered as to be almost unintelligible. If they are intended to become general laws they are either killed or somewhat mould¬ ed into shape by the standing committees and in their passage through the two houses. If they are bills amending the local codes of the city of Baltimore or of the counties they are referred to special committees, the members of which take .the word of the member who introduced them th^t 'it is all right,' and unite in the favorable report which shoves them along. If it is a private bill, creating or amending the charter of a corporation, for example, very little notice is taken of it, unless some antagonistic interest happens to hear of it, or the newspaper correspondents call attention to it. " 'There is an immense amount of really unnecessary legislation. There are a great many bills introduced under the garb of a general law, but really meant to meet some special case or to further some private end. In years gone by there were a great many bills intro¬ duced for the simple purpose of blackmailing or 'plug¬ ging^ corporations. I have known the sime section of the code to be amended three times at one session' of the general assembly, and repeals by implication are frequent. It is impossible for any committee or for any member to carry in memory th£ subjects of all bills in¬ troduced at a session, to say nothing of their contents. People and communities injuriously affected by gen- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 275 eral measures, local measures .and private measures introduced frequently hear nothing of them until they have become laws and it is too late to protest. " 'It is to meet all such cases that this bill was pre¬ pared. It is baised upon the recommendations of the report made to the New York legislature a few days ago by the Saxton Committee, appointed a year ago to investigate this very subject. The States of Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri and Louisiana have constitutional provisions on the subject of publishing notice of intention to apply for certain bills before they can be considered by the legis¬ lature. That is one of the requirements of this particu¬ lar bill as to proposed local or private laws. It would be better if we would get those provisions into the Con¬ stitution as the States mentioned have done, but as that is a protracted mode of accomplishing the object, this bill undertakes to deail with it as Massachusetts, Maine and Vermont have done—that is, by statute. Virginia attains somewhat similar ends by the rules of its house of delegates, which require petitions and published notice where the proposed law relates to a local interest or to a private interest or corporation. " 'This bill requires copies of such proposed laws to be filed with the Secretary of State at least thirty days before they are introduced; that a petition, signed by twenty persons, shall be filed at the same time, setting forth the object and need of the law proposed; that such laws shall be printed at the expense of the pro¬ moters, and that certain notices by publication shall be given of them and direct service of notice also on cor¬ porations or officials affected by them. " 'It also provides for committees of revision in the two houses to point out inaccuracies in the text and references contained in all laws and other considera¬ tions affecting the form of or necessity for the law. 276 THE NATIONS Those committees and the members generally are to have the assistance of a law clerk, who is to be a counr- selor of at least ten years' standing, and who is to assist members and committees in drafting and perfecting statutes, examining and in passing upon the proposed laws, petitions for laws, affidavits of notices, etc., filed with the Secretary of State. " 'Another advantage to be secured by the bill will be the saving of expense to the State in the matter of en¬ grossing and printing; the expenses of those matters will be refunded to the State by the promoters of bills of that class, and thousands of dollars will be covered into the treasury at every session in consequence of its passage. " 'One of the consequences of the present system of legislation is that the first month of the session is usu¬ ally barren of actual laws. The first month, or one- third of the present session, has nearly expired, and yet not a single bill has been passed by both houses. This is because bills, with very few exceptions, are prepared, engrossed and printed after the legislature convenes, and those processes take time. The result is frequent long recesses during the first month of the session, and a feverish rush and tumble on the part of the members to get their measures advanced as finial adjournment approaches. Now, if this bill becomes a law, the legis¬ lature will find a. month's work already cut out for it When it convenes, as many bills are already engrossed and on their printed files, with their pros and cons set forth in their accompanying petitions and answers. " 'I think the bill will be found to be in the right directionrat any rate. At the session of 1894 there were six hundred and sixty-five laws passed bv the legisla¬ ture of Maryland. This was about one-half of the num¬ ber introduced, and yet only four hundred and seventy- two were printed before their passage. This alone shows the impossibility of carefully considering the PROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 277 twelve hundred and more introduced. The cacoettus leges ferendi, against which Lord Coke inveighed, is being treated and controlled in all civilized commu¬ nities, and the time, labor and brain of legislators con¬ centrated on matters of real importance." But there is still another department of the white man's greatest and best system of government, on earth to which I caill your attention, and that is the jury sys¬ tem, or the much-boasted-of idea of trial by jury. Now, I wish to say that the said jury system is sim¬ ply a sure and easy means for certain rich and other¬ wise influential parties to escape the justice of the law when confronted and charged with the committal of any crime. Yes, I say, other influential persons, for there are any number of persons who are very far from being rich, or even in comfortable circumstances of life, who, for other obvious reasons, are greatly influen¬ tial with the powers that be, for political, social and fi¬ nancial reasons, etc. These and other reasons without number make the system an awfully dangerous one for the proper and just and rightful government of a peo¬ ple, because under it, almost invariably, the innocent are punished and the guilty go out free. It is also a most effectual system for the covering of crime. First, beginning with the coroner's jury; then the grand in¬ quest ; then the petit jury. They are places of refuge for the criminal classes of any city, county or State in this country. But oh! when one comes to consider the real origin of the custom of trial by jury, of the origin of the jury as a mode of trial, what a jumble mixture, mire and muck, there is of idea and no idea, thought and no thought, as to when, where and how the system ever came into use, for there are over twenty different sources of origin and circumstances given as to how it came about. But there is some evidence that it might have arisen in the more dark, ignorant and inexpe¬ rienced age of the white man's effort of trying to gov- 278 THE NATIONS ern and to be the governor of everything but himself; and so the present system may have arisen out of his custom of trying the beasts and animals of the field and the insects of the ground, such as flies, mice, snails, etc. Now, I do think those wise and judicious solons might have let the poor snail off, on the ground that he could hardly have traveled fast enough to have gotten to the place of his alleged crime; but it seems that noth¬ ing in time passed the great and mighty white man's ignorance and hate, and it is not much better in many respects,to-day. But do not lose sight of the thought which suggested that the system of trial by jury might have grown out of the custom of trial, conviction and punishment of the lesser animals. The following quotation will serve as evidence to point out its possibility: "In the Middle Ages the lower animals were fre¬ quently tried, convicted and punished for various of¬ fenses. Mr. Baring-Gould has collected some curious cases of this kind. In 1266 a pig was burnt at Fon- taney-aux-Roses, near Paris, for having eaten a child. In 1386 a judge of Falaise condemned a sow to be miu- tiliated and hanged for a similar offense. Three years later a horse was similarly tried before the magistrate and condemned to death for having killed a man. Dur¬ ing the fourteenth century oxen and cows might be legally killed whenever taken in the act of marauding: and asses, for a first offense, had one ear cropped; for a second offense, the other ear, and if after this they were asses enough to commit a third offense their lives became forfeit to the Crown. " 'Criminal' animals frequently expiated their of¬ fenses like other malefactors on the gallows, but sub¬ sequently. they were summarily killed without trial and their owner mulcted in heavy damages. In the fif¬ teenth century it w'as popularly believed that cocks FROM A NEW POINT OF VlW. 279 were intimately associated with witches, and they were somewhat credited with the power of laying accursed egg's from which sprang winged serpents. In 1474, at Bale, a cock was publicly accused of having laid one of these dreadful eggs. He was tried, sentenced to death, and, together with the egg, was burned by the execu¬ tioner in the market-place amid a greiat concourse of peopfe. In 1694, during the witch prosecution in New Eneland, a dog exhibited such strange symptoms of affliction that he was believed to have been ridden by a warlock, and he was accordingly hanged. "Snails, flies, mice, ants, caterpillars and other ob¬ noxious creatures have been similarly proceeded against and condemned to various punishments, mostlv in ecclesiastical courts. And, stranger still, in¬ animate objects have suffered the same fate. In 1685, when the Protestant chapel at Rochelle Was condemned to be demolished, the bell thereof was publicly whipped for having assisted heretics with its tongue. After be¬ ing whipped it was catechised, compelled to recant and then baptized and hung up in a Roman Catholic place of worship, "Probably similar absurdities may have been perpe¬ trated in our own country, for it must be remembered that only in the present reign was the law repealed which made a dartwheel, a tree or a beast which had killed a man forfeit to the State for the benefit of the poor. It had been said that punishment is not likely to be efficacious unless it swiftly follows the offense. This was improved on by a Barblary Turk, who, when¬ ever he bought a fresh Christian slave, had him hung up by the heels and bastinadoed, on the principle, it is supposed—though the application is decidely singular —that prevention is better than cure." * * This quotation is from "All the Year Round." 280 THE NATIONS I will be more than glad to have the white man point out any branch of the. colored race whose ignorance w&s ever so dense as that, and it will be remembered that some of these things, according to this author, happened as late as the fourteenth and sixteenth cen¬ turies. But just think of it! Why, twenty persons were put to death on the simple—yes, foolish—super¬ stitious charge of witchcraft in Massachusetts as late as the year 1692. (See Emery E. Child's "History of United States," page 18.) You see that was only 204 years ago. And not only so, but there was a time when the white man taught it as a science, which the following words of J. Richardson will show: "It is not a hundred years since the conjuration of witches, demons and fairies was commonly practiced and taught in London by Lilly and others." But stop! The white man of to-day would have the world believe that it is only the colored race that ever believed in any of the above named things, when the facts are they have been transmitted by them as a precious legacy from generation to generation, down to the present time. But let us go back to the Monroe Doctrine and that Venezuelan and arbitration matter again, for I want to make some further quotations and statements that will go to show that the white man on this side of the water is not nearly so shrewd, wise and sagacious as he has thought and proclaimed himself to be, for we repeat that in State and interstate, national and international affairs he has let things run at fear¬ fully loose and odd ends, and the whites of this country have not yet gotten their eyes fully open to those facts, for if they had they would not be perpetually boast¬ ing of the independence of this nation to all oth¬ ers, but would remember that there is an interdepend¬ ence to which the whole human race is heir. To show more clearly that the United States has no good and reasonable ground for continuously crying in that silly, from a new point of view. 281 selfish and meaningless phrase, "America for Ameri¬ cans," I will simply call attention to the fact that five other nations own 3,455,396 more square miles of ter¬ ritory on this continent than the United States do, for the holdings of the five nations are the enormous stim of 7,058,386 and according to an editorial in the Baltimore Evening World of Saturday, February 22, 1896, the United States owns only 3,602,990 square miles of this continent. See editorial of the World, which I shall quote. The fivfe countries to which I have reference are England, Brazil, France, Spain and Holland. I here quote the editorial: "The scheme proposed in the London Times for the settlement of the Venezuelan boundary question has many good points. It seems, however, that the plan originated in Washington, and is not an English idea. Mr. Smalley's dispatch suggested that two United States and two English arbitrators should determinate the Venezuelan frontier, and if these four were unable to agree, a fifth neutral member should be called in. Considering the territorial possessions of England on the American continent, she has a right to a voice in settling the boundary dispute by arbitration. Her pos¬ sessions cover 3,634,782 square miles. The United States have 3,602,990 square miles, and Brazil comes next with 3,218,166 square miles. No other state on this continent has one-quarter as much ground as any one of these. Viewing the arbitration question from the above standpoint, there is some reasonableness in the proposal made at Washington." But take the white man in any branch of life's affairs, and he will be found not disposed to co-operate on a fair and even way with his fellow-man, but his disposi¬ tion is to compete and contest, and he does not even do that on rational, racial and humane principles, but rather on that low, groveling, animal basis, which, far better befits the animal than the man. Just take him 282 THE NATIONS in a business point of view and study him in a mercan¬ tile light, and the most that can be said of him in truth and fairness is that he is a regular gambler in the staples and means of human life and livelihood. And not only so, but the very terms he uses to designate his stock-gambling tricks are barbarous in the extreme. Take, for example, the terms "bulls" and "bears"—two of the most greedy and ferocious beasts of the field and forest. And then' the office to be filled by the piarties representing these terms is low and degrading in the extreme, for one is to represent the bear in nature, to pull man down and destroy him by squeezing him. to death, and the other is to represent the maddened bull whose nature it is to toss man up on his horns and then gore him to death. Now, when we think of the fact that these practices have been the food that the white mian's nature has fed on since 1775, can it be any wonder that we find the business world in the state it is to-day—all demoralized, panic-stricken and un¬ trustworthy ? But, in order to substantiate what I have been say¬ ing, I now quote from the American Cyclopaedia" as follows: "Bears and bulls, terms first applied in the London Exchange to speculators in stocks. Two parties hav¬ ing contracted, the one to deliver, and the other to take stocks, at a future time, at a specified price, it is the interest of the delivering party, in the intervening time, to depress stocks, and of the receiving party to raise them. The former is called a bear, in allusion to the habit of that animal to pull down with his paws, and the latter a bull, from the custom of that beast to throw up his horns. There is ordinlarily no exchange of stocks, but when the time of delivery arrives the losing partv pays the difference between the price of stocks then and at the time the contract was made. The FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 283 terms are now recognized in the exchanges of the largest cities of England and America." Now just read the following dispatch from New York to the Baltimore Evening World (December 21, 1896), for the great Master has said, "Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee." Yes, read it, and read it again, and then ponder over it, and think over it as an object-lesson of the true principles upon which the business of this country is carried on. And, again, it will be seen on examination that while at Washington the District of Columbia is the proper place for the government center, according to constitu¬ tional enactment, nevertheless, it seems that New York is the real place after all. I will just here insert the dispatch; it is as follows—but notice how very striking are the headlines to this most significant dis¬ patch : WALL STREET ROBBERY. THE PANIC A MALICIOUS DESIGN UNPARALLELED IN HISTORY. Collision Between Bears and Foreign Trading Houses. How It Was Worked. "New York, December 21.—Wall Street witnessed another exciting scene this- morning when the stock exchange opened. Long before the hour large crowds had massed themselves in the circular galleries, stand¬ ing- in rows of two and three deep. The operating brokers, looking grim and worried, were about early discussing with much Animation the critical situation. Hopes for a brighter outlook to-day were numerously expressed. The bulls and bears were common in their declaration to try and steady the market. 284 THE NATIONS "Immediately after the chairman's gavel announced the opening of the market there was a repetition of yes¬ terday's wild scenes. The various posts were at once surrounded by tumultuous crowds, and operations be¬ gun with an exciting scramble. The confidence antici¬ pated did not manifest itself. There was a smashing of stock all around, and as price after price went lower a feverish feeling began quickly to spread among the operators. Call money opened at 25 to 50 per cent., but there was no business at these rates. "As the morning wore along commission houses were in the receipt of investment orders, and under this buying the strictly gilt-edged issues took on a steadier tone. Money on call was also offered down to 10 per cent., and this had some influence on the market. When the hands of the big clock in the board pointed to the noon hour and the chairman announced the close of business a great shout of relief went up from the floor which almost shook the famous build¬ ing. "New York, December 21.—The failure of Hatch Bros., was announced at the New York Stock Ex¬ change at 11 :i5 a. m., and at 1130 the failure of H. K. Burras & Co. was announced. Mr. Burras has been a member since December, 1876. "New York, December 21.—The Times prints the- following about the day in Wall Street: 'Collisions be¬ tween bear operators in stock and foreign trading houses smashed prices in Wall Street, ran money rates up to 90 per cent., withdrew $3,400,000 from the gold reserve and caused several financial failures. Declines affected the entire trading list. Losses ran as high as ten points at one time in several substantial securities. " 'Accustomed as is the financial district to wicked work in the security market, yesterday's performance surpassed in malicious design and manipulative cun¬ ning and boldness anything ever before attempted. Its FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 285 success was complete, and that it should have been so, was amazing, since those Well informed knew how it had been brought about. Men who engineered the de¬ cline used the Venezuela incident as a pretext. They had been in high feather since the President's fnessage came out, and issued from the beginning the most gloomy predictions of its financial results. The worst apprehensions had not expressed fear of anything ap¬ proaching the happenings in intensity or scope. Since operators usually read London quotations the first thing in the morning, in the last few days special significance has attached to them because of rumors of English intention regarding American securities. Casual observers might have supposed that yesterday's London quotations reflected a wholesale overthrow of American securities there. From best available sources of information it appeared that London sales did not exceed 50,000 shares of stock. " 'Since there was danger of a failure of the bear plot through this inadequate agency alone, even with Lon¬ don a present source of financial anxiety, plans were laid to supplement attack through London quotations by pushing up rates for money here. Houses that handle foreign loans became tools in this scheme. They called loans rapidly at the opening of business and money jumped from 2 per cent to 7 per cent at once. The combined influence of London quotations and high money caused the sale of 240,000 shares of stock in the first hour. Money advanced by leaps. The leaders apparently hlaid been frightened and refused to put it out again. An excited demand for it resulted, and before two o'clock the rate touched 90 per cent. The sudden withdrawal of $5,000,000 of loans by for¬ eign houses, including Canadian banking agencies, did the business, especially as that money was kept out of the market." 286 THE NATIONS "London, December 21.—Stock-exchange market opened panicky. American railroad stocks were de¬ moralized, notwithstanding the fact in the first hours of the session the prices were better than at the close yesterday. The fluctuations were rapid and some- wh'at violent. Many stocks were unsalable. "Philadelphia, December 21.—L. H. Taylor & Co., bankers and brokers, failed this morning—one of the oldest firms on the street. "Boston, December 21.—Price & Co., Congress street stock brokers have failed. The announcement made on the stock exchange this morning." "The White Mian in Government" is the subject of this chapter, and my purpose is to review his manage¬ ment of the affairs of the people under the different aspects in which he is called upon to act for them, and we are now asking the very important question, How has he managed and dealt with their interests? Has he guarded, protected and improved them to the peo¬ ple's advantage and betterment? But the sad answer must emphatically be, "No, not by any means." But, on the contrary, it must be said that the people's means and moneys have been woefully wasted, their interests shamefully slighted and neglected and the profits turned to the personal gains and ends of those who have had them in charge. And, indeed, it seems that everything the white man puts his hand to flies up, like a skvrccket does, into the air, then quivers, sparkles, solntters, and makes a great display, then ex¬ plodes, and the shattered; torn and wasted remains fall lifelessly to the ground again. But there is a case just now before the public that pre-eminently goes to show the white man's unfitness and inability to properly and economically manage the people's matters, whether it be private, State or na¬ tional concerns. It is the failure of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, which is the very first railroad enter- FROM A NEW POINT OF VIEW. 287 prise the white man ever undertook to construct and manage in this country, and now that has largely- proved a failure, so far as the largest part of the share¬ holders are concerned. Of course the holders of pre¬ ferred stock are not at all injured by the failure, but it is the common holder, the common people—yes, the many—who have shares of stock that will suffer. Then, again, there were five years that the road, on account of bad management, reckless expenditure, wasteful and useless changes, falsely called "improvements," only 3 per cent dividends were declared; two years 2^ ; one yeiar only 2, and for nine years none at all. Neither have the common stockholders received a dollar on their investment since 1894, and I wish to say that it does not help the matter any to state that the affairs of the company have only "gone into the hands of re¬ ceivers," for I consider that only a more pleasant way of announcing a failure, and it also means that the common stockholders are to> be deprived of their divi¬ dends in order that the receivers may be paid, and that the preferred stocks may earn dividends. Not only so, but in the case now before us the white man has had every advantage to show himself a success, for he not only had the aid of the State, but of the national government also; and the aid was important and mate¬ rial by way of government and State investments and legislative enactments, judicial decisions, the exemp¬ tion of the entire property from taxation; etc. Yet the white man, under such favorable circumstances as these, could not keep that important enterprise afloat. And now I ask again, Where are the grounds for his much-boasted superior .business capacity? In what has it shown itself? But if I were in need_ of other evidence to prove the white man's unfitness and incapacity to legislate for the people I have it here before me now in the form of a "special" to the Baltimore American of the present 288 THE NATIONS date (March 5, 1896) under the caption, "Legislators in a Row," and the "row" was in the Virginia legisla¬ ture a,t Richmond, and the quotation will show why it arose; and the incident will also give us an insight into the white man's modern' and improved methods" of legislation, and that is, when he finds his opponent's head so hard that "it will not or cannot quite take in his arguments, takes a big club and uses that on it a while and see if he cannot soften it a little and make it more susceptible to a proper conception of such weighty and ponderous matters and arguments as he is advancing and advocating. The special dispatch also says a plot has been dis¬ covered that was on foot to steal the bill that is before the legislature, and the author of it had to take it from the senate chamber and carry it to the governor's man¬ sion and get him to lock it up in his combination safe to keep it from being stolen before it could be massed upon by the legislature. Then' may it not well be seri¬ ously and earnestly asked, What is this government of ours, with such a condition of affairs, coming to? And what may we expect will.be the end? "A eood deal of excitement exists here in regard to a personal attack in the senate chamber this morning on Senator W. M. Flannagan, the Republican member from Powhatan county, by Senator H. D. Flood, the Democratic member of Appomattox. The weapon used was a walking-stick, and the blow was above the ear, and made a cut several inches long, down to the bone, and had to be sewed up. Flannagan's friends claim, that Flood struck him without warning, and Flood's friends indignantly deny this. Delegate Coles, the Republican member from Northumberland, swore out a warrant for Flood, but before it was served Flood surrendered himself to the police, and was bailed for $2500 to await developments in Flannagan's con¬ dition. Flannagan was the leader of the minority THE NATIONS. 289 party in the senate, and his aggressive contests over election matters brought forth many personalities in debate, and at different times Flood was very cutting in his remarks. These, Flannagan returned in kind, and last Thursday characterized one of Flood's state¬ ments as being not true.- One newspaper quoted the words used as "entirely untrue," and another quoted him as saying "utterly false." These last words Flanna¬ gan acknowledged in an interview yesterday as being his words, and the fight this morning was the result. Flannagan was badly nauseated all day from the effects of the blow. He was reported worse to-night, and his mind is said to be flighty. * * * "Mr. Maupin, the author of the anti-race track gam¬ bling bill, this evening confirmed the rumor that there was a plot on hand to steal the Maupin bill while it was pending in the senate, the idea being to duplicate the Indiana coup worked by the gamblers on the legisla¬ ture of thiat State, and prevent it reaching Governor O'Ferrall's hands until it was too late to put through another bill. Mr. Maupin was warned of the plot by a person whose identity he will not disclose. He noti¬ fied the clerk of the senate of the plot, and with his own hands took the bill to the governor, and it was locked in the safe of the executive office until needed in the senate." 19