Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Gerrit Smith.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Gerrit Smith, also spelled Gerritt Smith, was a leading American social reformer, abolitionist, politician, and philanthropist. Spouse to Ann Carroll Fitzhugh, Smith was a candidate for President of the United States in 1848, 1856, and 1860, but only won the election to a single term, 1853–1854, in the House of Representatives.
But I love honesty, and, therefore; do I make great account of facts.
There is one class of men, whom it especially behoves to be tenacious of the right of free discussion. I mean the poor.
I do not subscribe to the doctrine that the people are the slaves and property of their government. I believe that government is for the use of the people, and not the people for the use of the government.
Our political and constitutional rights, so called, are but the natural and inherent rights of man, asserted, carried out, and secured by modes of human contrivance.
The poor North has much to do with slavery. It staggers under its load and smarts under its lash.
It is not to be disguised, that a war has broken out between the North and the South. - Political and commercial men are industriously striving to restore peace: but the peace, which they would effect, is superficial, false, and temporary.
It is manifestly vital to the success of the anti-slavery cause, that the authority and influence of proslavery, especially of slaveholding, ministers should be destroyed.
God cannot approve of a system of servitude, in which the master is guilty of assuming absolute power - of assuming God's place and relation towards his fellow-men.
I welcomed the organization of the Anti-slavery Society.
To no human charter am I indebted for my rights.
We must continue to judge of slavery by what it is, and not by what you tell us it will, or may be.
I need say no more, to prove that slavery is entirely unlike the servitude in the patriarchal families.
When a good man lends himself to the advocacy of slavery, he must, at least for a time, feel himself to be any where but at home, amongst his new thoughts, doctrines, and modes of reasoning.
Let the poor man count as his enemy, and his worst enemy, every invader of the right of free discussion.
To say, that Capt. Ingraham violated the rights of Turkey, is nonsense.
Truth and mercy require the exertion - never the suppression, of man's noble rights and powers.
Let us tell our legislators in advance, that this is a right, restraints on which, we will not, cannot bear; and that every attempt to restrain it is a palpable wrong on God and man.
The only ground on which a neutral State can claim respect at the hands of belligerents is, that, so far as she is concerned, their rights are protected.
Our concern, however, is with slavery as it is, and not with any theory of it.
I trust, that your readers will not construe my words to mean, that I would not have gone to a 3 o'clock in the morning session, for the sake of defeating the Nebraska bill.
It, sometimes, suits the slaveholders to claim, that their slavery is an exclusively State concern; and that the North has, therefore, nothing to do with it.
My rights all spring front an infinitely nobler source - from favor and grace of God.
The Southern slave would obey God in respect to marriage, and also to the reading and studying of His word. But this, as we have seen, is forbidden him.
I do not object to the construction of rail roads and canals.
There is room in our ranks for the old and decrepit, as well as the young and vigorous.
I prefer, in a word, the republican system, because it comes up more nearly to God's system.
True, permanent peace can never be restored, until slavery, the occasion of the war, has ceased.
I believe that government is for the use of the people, and not the people for the use of the government.
But as well may you, when urging a man up-hill with a heavy load upon his back, and with your lash also upon his back, tell him, that be has nothing to do either with the load or the lash.
I am a plain man, and I care and know comparatively little about rhetoric.
As this is the first time I have had the floor, it may be well for me now to confess, that I am in the habit of freely imputing errors to my fellow-men.
But, although America cannot be justly charged with violating the rights of Turkey, Turkey nevertheless can be justly charged with violating the rights of America.
True liberty acknowledges and defends the equal rights of all men, and all nations.