Lydia Maria Childs

THE RIGHT WAY THE SAFE WAY,

PROVED BY EMANCIPATION IN THE BRITISH WEST INDIES, AND ELSEWHERE

1863

 

 

Chapter VII.

Concluding Remarks.

 

      . . . Free labor has so obviously the advantage, in all respects, over slave labor, that posterity will marvel to find in the history of the nineteenth century any record of a system so barbarous, so clumsy, and so wasteful.  Let us make a very brief comparison.  The slave is bought, sometimes at a very high price; in free labor there is no such investment of capital.  The slave does not care how slowly or carelessly he works; it is the freeman's interest to do his work well and quickly.  The slave is indifferent how many tools he spoils; the freeman has a motive to be careful.  The slave's clothing is indeed very cheap, but it is provided to him by his master, and it is of no consequence to him how fast it is destroyed; the hired laborer pays more for his garments, but he has a motive for making them last six times as long.  The slave contrives to spend as much time as he can in the hospital; the free laborer has no time to spare to be sick.  Hopeless poverty and a sense of being unjustly dealt by, impels the slave to steal from his master, and he has no social standing to lose by indulging the impulse; with the freeman pride of character is a powerful inducement to be honest.  A salary must be paid to an overseer to compel the slave to work; the freeman is impelled by a desire to increase his property, and add to the comforts of himself and family.  We should question the sanity of a man who took the main-spring out of his watch, and hired a boy to turn the hands round.  Yet he who takes from laborers the natural and healthy stimulus of wages, and attempts to supply its place by the driver's whip, pursues a course quite as irrational.

      When immediate emancipation is proposed, those who think loosely are apt to say, "But would you turn the slaves loose upon society?"  There is no sense in such a question.  Emancipated slaves are restrained from crime by the same laws that restrain other men; and experience proves that a consciousness of being protected by legislation inspires them with respect for the laws.  

      But of all common questions, it seems to me the most absurd one is, "What would you do with the slaves, if they were emancipated?"  There would be no occasion for doing any thing with them.  Their labor is needed where they are; and if white people can get along with them, under all the disadvantages and dangers of slavery, what should hinder their getting along under a system that would make them work better and faster, while it took from them all motive to rebellion?

      It is often asked, "What is your plan?"  It is a very simple one; but it would prove as curative as the prophet's direction, "Go wash, and be clean."  It is merely to stimulate laborers by wages, instead of driving them by the whip.  When that plan is once adopted, education and religious teaching, and agricultural improvements will soon follow, as matters of course.

      It is not to be supposed that the transition from slavery to freedom would be unattended with inconveniences.  All changes in society involve some disadvantages, either to classes or individuals.  Even the introduction of a valuable machine disturbs for a while the relations of labor and capital  But it is important to bear in mind that whatever difficulties might attend emancipation would be slight and temporary; while the difficulties and dangers involved in the continuance of slavery are permanent, and constantly increasing. . . .

 

 

 

 

From:  The Right Way The Safe Way, Proved by Emancipation in the British West Indies, and Elsewhere (New York, 1862).