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New York, Tribune [Republican]
(23 May 1856)
By the news from Washington it will be seen
that Senator Sumner has been savagely and brutally
assaulted, while sitting in his seat in the Senate
chamber, by the Hon. Mr. Brooks of South
Carolina, the reason assigned therefore being that
the
Senator's remarks on Mr. Butler of South Carolina,
who is uncle to the man who made the attack. The
particulars show that Mr. Sumner was struck
unawares over the head by a loaded cane and stunned,
and then the ruffianly attack was continued with
many blows, the Hon. Mr. Keitt of South Carolina
keeping any of those around, who might be so
disposed, from attempting a rescue. No meaner
exhibition of Southern cowardice -- generally miscalled
Southern chivalry -- was ever witnessed.
It is not in the least a cause for wonder that
a member of the national House of Representatives,
assisted by another as a fender-off, should
attack a member of the national Senate,
because, in the course of a constitutional argument,
the last had uttered words which the
first chose to consider distasteful. The reasons
for the absence of collision between North and
South -- collision of sentiment and person -- which
existed a few years back, have ceased; and as the
South has taken the oligarchic ground that Slavery
ought to exist, irrespective of color -- that there
must be a governing class and a class governed --
that Democracy is a delusion and a lie -- we must
expect that Northern men in Washington, whether
members or not, will be assaulted, wounded or
killed, as the case may be, so long as the
North will bear it. The acts of violence during
this session -- including one murder -- are simply
overtures to the drama of which the persecutions,
murders, robberies and war upon the Free-State
men in Kansas, constitute the first act. We are
either to have Liberty or Slavery. Failing to
silence the North by threats, notwithstanding
the doughfaced creatures who so long
misrepresented the spirit of the Republic and of the
age, the South now resorts to actual
violence. It is reduced to a question whether
there is to be any more liberty of speech south
of Mason and Dixon's line, even in the ten
miles square of the District of Columbia. South
of that, liberty has long since departed; but whether
the common ground where the national representatives
meet is to be turned into a slave plantation
where Northern members act under the lash, the
bowie-knife and the pistol, is a question to be
settled. That Congress will take any action in view
of this new event, we shall not be rash enough to
surmise; but if the Northern people are not
generally the poltroons they are taken for by the
hostile slavebreeders and slavedrivers of the South,
they will be heard from. As a beginning, they
should express their sentiments upon this brutal
and dastardly outrage in their popular assemblies.
The Pulpit should not be silent.
If, indeed, we go on quietly to submit to such
outrages, we deserve to have our names flattened,
our skins blacked, and to be placed at work under
task-masters; for we have lost the noblest
attributes of freemen, and are virtually slaves.
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