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-- Frederick Douglass
(1817?-1895)
Douglass, Frederick. "A Plea for Free Speech in Boston," 1860.
Boston is a great city - and Music Hall has a fame almost as extensive as
that of Boston. Nowhere more than here have the principles of human freedom been
expounded. But for the circumstances already mentioned, it would seem almost
presumption for me to say anything here about those principles. And yet, even
here, in Boston, the moral atmosphere is dark and heavy. The principles of human
liberty, even I correctly apprehended, find but limited support in this hour a
trial. The world moves slowly, and Boston is much like the world. We thought the
principle of free speech was an accomplished fact. Here, if nowhere else, we
thought the right of the people to assemble and to express their opinion was
secure. Dr. Channing had defended the right, Mr. Garrison had practically
asserted the right, and Theodore Parker had maintained it with steadiness and
fidelity to the last.
But here we are to-day contending for what we thought we gained years ago.
The mortifying and disgraceful fact stares us in the face, that though Faneuil
Hall and Bunker Hill Monument stand, freedom of speech is struck down. No
lengthy detail of facts is needed. They are already notorious; far more so than
will be wished ten years hence.
The world knows that last Monday a meeting assembled to discuss the
question: "How Shall Slavery Be Abolished?" The world also knows that
that meeting was invaded, insulted, captured by a mob of gentlemen, and
thereafter broken up and dispersed by the order of the mayor, who refused to
protect it, though called upon to do so. If this had been a mere outbreak of
passion and prejudice among the baser sort, maddened by rum and hounded on by
some wily politician to serve some immediate purpose, - a mere exceptional
affair, - it might be allowed to rest with what has already been said. But the
leaders of the mob were gentlemen. They were men who pride themselves upon their
respect for law and order.
These gentlemen brought their respect for the law with them and proclaimed it
loudly while in the very act of breaking the law. Theirs was the law of slavery.
The law of free speech and the law for the protection of public meetings they
trampled under foot, while they greatly magnified the law of slavery.
The scene was an instructive one. Men seldom see such a blending of the
gentleman with the rowdy, as was shown on that occasion. It proved that human
nature is very much the same, whether in tarpaulin or broadcloth. Nevertheless,
when gentlemen approach us in the character of lawless and abandoned loafers, -
assuming for the moment their manners and tempers, - they have themselves to
blame if they are estimated below their quality.
No right was deemed by the fathers of the Government more sacred than the
right of speech. It was in their eyes, as in the eyes of all thoughtful men, the
great moral renovator of society and government. Daniel Webster called it a
homebred right, a fireside privilege. Liberty is meaningless where the right to
utter one's thoughts and opinions has ceased to exist. That, of all rights, is
the dread of tyrants. It is the right which they first of all strike down. They
know its power. Thrones, dominions, principalities, and powers, founded in
injustice and wrong, are sure to tremble, if men are allowed to reason of
righteousness, temperance, and of a judgment to come in their presence. Slavery
cannot tolerate free speech. Five years of its exercise would banish the auction
block and break every chain in the South. They will have none of it there, for
they have the power. But shall it be so here?
Even here in Boston, and among the friends of freedom, we hear two voices:
one denouncing the mob that broke up our meeting on Monday as a base and
cowardly outrage; and another, deprecating and regretting the holding of such a
meeting, by such men, at such a time. We are told that the meeting was
ill-timed, and the parties to it unwise.
Why, what is the matter with us? Are we going to palliate and excuse a
palpable and flagrant outrage on the right of speech, by implying that only a
particular description of persons should exercise that right? Are we, at such a
time, when a great principle has been struck down, to quench the moral
indignation which the deed excites, by casting reflections upon those on whose
persons the outrage has been committed? After all the arguments for liberty to
which Boston has listened for more than a quarter of a century, has she yet to
learn that the time to assert a right is the time when the right itself is
called in question, and that the men of all others to assert it are the men to
whom the right has been denied?
It would be no vindication of the right of speech to prove that certain
gentlemen of great distinction, eminent for their learning and ability, are
allowed to freely express their opinions on all subjects - including the subject
of slavery. Such a vindication would need, itself, to be vindicated. It would
add insult to injury. Not even an old-fashioned abolition meeting could
vindicate that right in Boston just now. There can be no right of speech where
any man, however lifted up, or however humble, however young, or however old, is
overawed by force, and compelled to suppress his honest sentiments.
Equally clear is the right to hear. To suppress free speech is a double
wrong. It violates the rights of the hearer as well as those of the speaker. It
is just as criminal to rob a man of his right to speak and hear as it would be
to rob him of his money. I have no doubt that Boston will vindicate this right.
But in order to do so, there must be no concessions to the enemy. When a man is
allowed to speak because he is rich and powerful, it aggravates the crime of
denying the right to the poor and humble.
The principle must rest upon its own proper basis. And until the right is
accorded to the humblest as freely as to the most exalted citizen, the
government of Boston is but an empty name, and its freedom a mockery. A man's
right to speak does not depend upon where he was born or upon his color. The
simple quality of manhood is the solid basis of the right - and there let it
rest forever.
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