Walker's Appeal, with a Brief Sketch of His Life - And Also Garnet's Address to the Slaves of the United States of America by David Walker;Henry Highland Garnet
page 41 of 108 (37%)
page 41 of 108 (37%)
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for the past, and for the future. Be looking forward with thankful
hearts to higher attainments than _wielding the razor_ and _cleaning boots and shoes_. The man whose aspirations are not _above_, and even _below_ these, is indeed, ignorant and wretched enough. I advance it therefore to you, not as a _problematical_, but as an unshaken and forever immoveable _fact_, that your full glory and happiness, as well as all other colored people under heaven, shall never be fully consummated, but with the _entire emancipation of your enslaved brethren all over the world_. You may therefore, go to work and do what you can to rescue, or join in with tyrants to oppress them and yourselves, until the Lord shall come upon you all like a thief in the night. For I believe it is the will of the Lord that our greatest happiness shall consist in working for the salvation of our whole body. When this is accomplished a burst of glory will shine upon you, which will indeed astonish you and the world. Do any of you say this will never be done? I assure you that God will accomplish it--if nothing else will answer, he will hurl tyrants and devils into _atoms_ and make way for his people. But O my brethren! I say unto you again, you must go to work and _prepare the way_ of the Lord. There is a great work for you to do, as trifling as some of you may think of it. You have to prove to the Americans and the world, that we are MEN, and not _brutes_ as we have been represented, and by millions treated. Remember, to let the aim of your labours among your brethren, and particularly the youths, be the dissemination of education and religion. It is lamentable, that many of our children go to school, from four until they are eight or ten, and sometimes fifteen years of age, and leave school knowing but a little more about the grammar of their language than a horse does about handling a musket--and not a few of them are really so ignorant, that they are unable to answer a |
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