The United States In 1841 
 
by Joseph Sturge 
1842 
BOSTON: DEXTER S. KING, NO. 1 CORNHILL. 
"'Tis liberty alone that gives the flower 
Of fleeting life its lustre and perfume; 
And we are weeds without it. All constraint, 
Except what wisdom lays on evil men, 
Is evil; hurts the faculties, impedes 
Their progress in the road of science; blinds 
The eyesight of discovery; and begets, 
In those that suffer it, a sordid mind." 
COWPER. 
 
PREFACE TO THE AMERICAN EDITION. 
Within a few years past, several of our visitors from the other side of 
the Atlantic, have published their views of our country and her 
institutions. Basil Hall, Hamilton and others, in their attempts to 
describe the working of the democratic principle in the United States,
have been unfavorably influenced by their opposite political 
predilections. On the other hand, Miss Martineau, who has strong 
republican sympathies, has not, at all times, been sufficiently careful 
and discriminating in the facts and details of her spirited and agreeable 
narrative. 
The volume of Mr. Sturge, herewith presented, is unlike any of its 
predecessors. Its author makes no literary pretensions. His style, like 
his garb, is of the plainest kind; shorn of every thing like ornament, it 
has yet a truthful, earnest simplicity, as rare as it is beautiful. The 
reader will look in vain for those glowing descriptions of American 
scenery, and graphic delineations of the peculiarities of the American 
character with which other travellers have endeavored to enliven and 
diversify their journals. Coming among us on an errand of peace and 
good will -- with a heart oppressed and burdened by the woes of 
suffering humanity -- he had no leisure for curious observations of men 
and manners, nor even for the gratification of a simple and unperverted 
taste for the beautiful in outward nature. His errand led him to the 
slave-jail of the negro-trafficker -- the abodes of the despised and 
persecuted colored man -- the close walls of prisons. His narrative, like 
his own character, is calm, clear, simple; its single and manifest aim, to 
do good. 
Although this volume is mainly devoted to the subject of emancipation, 
and to his intercourse with the religious Society of which he is a 
member, yet the friends of peace, of legal reform, and of republican 
institutions, will derive gratification from its perusal. The liberal spirit 
of Christian philanthropy breathes through it. The author's deep and 
settled detestation of our slavery, and of the hypocrisy which sustains 
and justifies it, does not render him blind to the beauty of the 
republican principle of popular control, nor repress in any degree his 
pleasure in recording its beneficent practical fruits in the free States. 
The labors of Mr. Sturge in the cause of emancipation have given him 
the appellation of the "Howard of our days." The author of the popular 
"History of Slavery," page 600, thus notices his arduous personal 
investigations of the state of things in the West India Islands, under the
apprenticeship system. "The idea originated with Joseph Sturge, of 
Birmingham, a member of that religious body, the FRIENDS, who 
have ever stood pre-eminent in noiseless but indefatigable exertions in 
the cause of the negro; and who seem to possess a more thorough 
practical understanding than is generally possessed by statesmen and 
politicians, of the axiom that the shortest communication between two 
given points, is a straight line. 
While others were speculating, and hoping that the worst reports from 
the West Indies might not be true, and that the evils would work their 
own cure, this generous and heroic philanthropist, resolved to go 
himself and ascertain the facts and the remedy required." On his return, 
Mr. Sturge, with his companion, Thomas Harvey, published a full 
account of their investigations into the working of the apprenticeship 
system; and his testimony before the Parliamentary Committee, 
occupied seven days. His disclosures sealed the fate of the 
apprenticeship system. Such a demonstration of popular sentiment was 
called forth against it, that the Colonies, one after another, felt 
themselves under the necessity of abandoning it for unconditional 
emancipation. It was a remark of Brougham, in the House of Lords, 
that the abolition of the apprenticeship was the work of one man, and 
that man was Joseph Sturge. 
Mr. Sturge's benevolent labors have not been confined to the abolition 
of slavery. He is a prominent member of the Anti-corn Law League. He 
is an active advocate of the cause of universal peace. He has given all 
his influence to the cause of the oppressed and laboring classes of his 
own countrymen: and his name is at this moment, the rallying-word of 
millions, as the author and patron of the "Suffrage Declaration," which 
is now in circulation in all parts of the United Kingdom, pledging its 
signers to the great principle    
    
		
	
	
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