:^i^!Ht#im -1 'tPiB ^^^^I^^HH 'SmM m:;mm^ ■H mmmmismmm:'-: ^^^^^m\^ r -- ■ ■■-f^m 1 ^ •- -jajsm^^j^ University of California • Berkeley Jack Fleming Collection OF African Americana ■f^^^,.:S^M^^ "The Negro a Beast" OR. "In the Image of Cod" The Reasoner of the Age, the Revelator of the Ceotury! The Bible as it is! The Negro and His Relation to the Human Family! The Negro a beast, but created with articulate speech, and hands, that he may be of service to his master — the White man. The Negro not the Son of Ham, Neither can it be proven by the Bible, and the argu- ment of the theologian who w^ould claim such, melts to mist before the thunderous and convincing arguments of this masterful book. ...BY... CHAS. CARROLL, Who has spent fifteen years of his life, and $20,000.00 in its compilation. PUBUtSHEO BY AMERICAN BOOK AND BIBLE HOUSE, ST. LOUIS. MO. 1900. Eiitorc'd Accordins; to Act of C'onucr.'^^ in the year 1900 l)y CHAIJI.lvS (AUKOLL. in tho OftM-c of the Librarian of Congress, \A asliini-loii. 1). C PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. Ill placing this book entitled "The Negro a Beast" or ''In the Image of God" upon the Ameri- can market, we do so knowing that there will be many learned men who will take issue with us, but while we are fully convinced of this, we are also convinced that when this book is read and its contents duly weighed and considered in an intelli- gent and prayerful manner, that it will be to the minds of the American people like unto the voice of God from the clouds appealing unto Paul on his way to Damascus. We have not brought out this book hurriedly and without due thought and con- sideration, but on the other hand we have had the manuscript under advisement for considerable time, and we have read and reread it until the ponderous, sledge hammer blows of Prof. Carroll rang in our ears until the clang and din of his arguments con- viuced us that it would be a sin l)efore GckI and man to withhold from the reading public such ah array of biblical, scientific and common sense argu- ments. We are placing this book before the reading public as a witness to be questioned and cross- examined by the world, and if its pages will not stand the righteous attack of criticism, then we are willing for its arguments to be trailed in the dust of oblivion. We ask the reading public to care- fully penise its pages, and if in any particular there can be produced evidence that this lx>ok is not founded upon the bible in /ofo^ and scienti-' fically . digested, then we are ready to close our doors, and place over its portals in burning letters of fire, *' Deluded and Misguided b}^ an Array <4 Biblical Truths Scientifically Discussed/' THK PUBUvSHKRvS. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Page Adam and Eve the morning of the creation of man 8 Is the White man in the image of God? If he is can the Negro be also? 44 Does "like beget like"? If so, could White parents beget a Negro child? 74 Was Christ a Negro? If so, God is a Negro as he is the father of Christ 104 Was the first offspring of Adam and Eve a Negro, or was any of their children Negroes? 138 The Beast and the Virgin, or the Sin of the Century 164 Did Nature blunder, or was God mistaken when he said "like begets like" 196 Will your next child be a Negro? If the Negro sprung from Adam and Eve, then it may happen 226 The Egg of Creation. Can you get a Duck from a Turkey egg* or a Dove from the egg of a Crow? 268 Natural results of amalgamation, brought about by treating the Negro as a human being 338 TABLE OP CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Pack The Formatiou of the Negro and other beasts — then the Negro on the sixth day ...... 9 CHAPTER II. Biblical and scientific facts demonstrating that the Negro is not an offspring of the Adamic family ... 45 CHAPTER III. The theory of evolution exploded; man was created a man, and did not develop from an ape . ... 75 CHAPTER IV. Convincing Biblical and scientific evidence that the Negro is not of the human family • . t . 105 CHAPTER V. Cain's offspring soulless, as they were of amalgamated flesh 139 CHAPTER VI. Red, yellow and brown skin denotes amalgamation of the human family with the Beast — the Negro , . 175 CHAPTER VII. That the Beast of the Bible is a biped animal, and not a quadruped, is proven by the Bible .... 197 CHAPTER VIII. It was not God's original plan that His Son should be cru- cified, but amalgamation and disobedience of the human family made it imperative .... 227 CHAPTER IX. Ignorance of the Bible, and continued atheistic teachings have led astraj- the masses, relative to God's crea- tion of Man 269 CHAPTER X. The Bible and Divine Revelation, as well as reason, all teach that the Negro is not human . . , ♦ 339 ^ADAM AND EVE IN TtlE GARDEN Of EDEN. Where does the line of kinship between God and Adam and Eve connect witjt the Negro? Chapter I. The Formation of the Negro and other Beasts — then Man on the Sixth Day. There are just two schools of learning in the world to-day, which propose to explain the existence of the heavens and the earth, with all the phenomena which characterize each- These are (1) The Scriptural School of Divine Creation, (2) The Atheistic School of Natural Development. » In discussing this subject Mr. Haeckel says: "As is now ver}' generally acknowledged, both b}; the adherents of and the opponents of the theory- of descent, the choice in the matter of the origin of the human race, lies between two radically different assumptions: W^ must either accustom ourselves to the idea that the various species of animals and plants, man 10 MAN, AND THE NEGKO. included, originated independent!}^ of each other, by the supernatural proce.ss of a divine 'creation,' which as such is entirely removed from the sphere of scientific observation — or we are compelled to accept the theory of descent in its entiret3% and trace the human race, equally with the various animals and plant species, from an entirely simple primeval parent form. Be- tween these two assumptions there is no third course." — The Evolution of Man, -Vol. II., pp, 36, 37- The School of Creation teaches that the heaven and the earth, with all the phenomena which characterize each, is the product of divine creation. In direct opposition to this scriptural school, the School of Atheism teaches that the heaven and the earth, with all the phenomena w^hich characterize each, is the re- sult of natural causes working without design to ac- complish their formation. In our investigations, with a view to decide in- telligentl}^ whether the phenomena of the universe is the product of divine creation, or whether it is the result of natural causes, we have three reliable guides to a correct decision. These are Science, Reason and Revelation. Science teaches that the lowest element of which it has any knowledge is matter. Science also teaches that matter exists in the material universe in just three forms, the solid, liquid and gaseous. And inasmuch as all bodies, celestial and terrestial, are resolvable into matter in its gaseous state, science very properly MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 11 decides that matter in its gaseous state was the primi- tive condition of all bodies. Science also teaches that "matter is not self-existent."— G«ro/. "Creation," appendix. But to the question, from whence came matter? Science, which deals alone with second causes, gives no answer. But just at this point in our investiga- tions, to w^hich science leads us, and beyond which Science is pow'erless to guide us, reason comes to our assistance, with the assurance that, inasmuch as matter, is not self-existent, it must have been created. Hence, the ver}^ presence of matter, even in its primitive state, the gaseous, clearly demonstrates the existence of a Creator while its combination in all the varied forms, celestial and terrestial, in which we find it to-day, be- speaks the most infinite design ; and reason assures us that design can alone be formed and expressed ])y intelligence. But to the question: "When and by whom was matter created?" Reason gives no answer, But just at this point in our investigation, to w^hich Reason leads us, and beyond which Reason is powerless to guide us, and it w^ould seem that any further advance that we may attempt must be merely speculative, Revelation generously comes to our assistance with that sublime assurance that, "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." Thus Revelation, in harmony with Science, and with Reason, emphatically confirms the teachings of 12 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, each, that there is a God; a personal God; a Creator, distinct from his creation ; that there was a creation, and as clearly stated in the Mosaic Record, there was a definite plan of the *;:reation ; a creation successive — extending through *'six days." The initial step was the creation *'in the beginning" ot the lowest element — matter— as stated in the first verse ; this is followed in the second verse by a correct description of matter in its primitive, or gaseous state, and this by the production of light — cosmic light— on the first day; continuing by the formation of the heavens on the second day ; the separation of the ' 'dr\'- land" from the "waters" and the introduction of plant life on the third day ; the formation of the luminaries on the fourth day; the introduction of animal life in the fish, followed by the fowl on the fifth day ; the bringing fourth of the cattle, creeping things, and beasts; the whole terminating in the creation of Man '*in the image of God," on the sixth day. We are thus enabled to realize ' 'the necessit^^ of a direct revelation of these great fundamental truths, to which human wisdom could not attain in au}^ other way, which without the sanction of God's word were doomed to remain simple hj^potheses, incapable of proof." — Gii}'ot ''In the first verse we are taught that this universe had a beginning ; that it was created — and that God was its Creator. The central idea is creation. The Hebrew word is bara, translated bj^ create. It has been ^ doubted whether the word meant a creation, in the sense that the MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 13 world was not derived from any pre-existing material, nor from the substance of God Himself; but the manner in which it is here used does not seem to justil}' such a doubt. F'or whatever be the use of the word in other parts of the Bible, it is eraploj-ed in this chapter in a discriminating way, which is ver}' remarkable, and cannot but be intentional. Elsewhere, when only transformations are meant, as in the second and fourth days, or a continuation of the same kind of creation ; as in the land animals of the fifth daj^ the word asah (make) is used. Again, it is a significant fact that in the whole Bible where the simple form of bara is used it is always with reference to a w^ork made by God, but never by man."— //r/i^. pp. 29, 30, 31. The Mosaic Record teaches that there is just three creations. The first of these is described in connection with "the heaven and the earth, in the beginning." The second creation is described in connection with the introduction of animal life on the fifth day; and the third creation is described in connection with the first appearance of Man on the sixth daj' In order that we may properly appreciate the value of this scriptural teaching, we must first understand w-hat constitutes a creation, as described in the Mosaic Record. This we understand to be the introduction into the m^aterial universe of some element, that had no prior existence there. This leads us to decide that, in the remote past — in the beginning — w^hat is now the jUcterial universe was empty space. This condition 14 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. gave place to the creations, and formations described . in the Record. First, the creation of "the heaven and the earth," "in the beginning;'* that is, the creation of matter, the material out of which "the heaven and the earth," with most of the phenomena which characterize each, were formed- That matter was the creation described in the first verse of the Mosaic Record, is clearly proven by the correct description of matter in its primitive or gaseous state, as given in the second verse of the Record, as follows : * 'And the earth was without form and void ; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters." Mr. Guyot says: *'The matter just created was gaseous ; it was without form, for the property of gas is to expand indefinitely. It w^as void, or empty, because, apparently, homogeneous and invisible. It was dark, because as 3^et inactive, light being the result of the action of physical and chemical forces not yet awaken- ed. It was a deep, f6r its expansion in space, though indefinite, was not infinite, 'and it had dimensions. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of that vast, inert, gaseous mass, ready to impart to it motion, and to direct all its subsequent activity, according to a plan gradually revealed by the works of the great cosmic da5^s. " — Ibid, p. 38. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 15 . We are thus enabled to recognize the Inroad distinc- tion which the inspired author draws between creation and formation. A creation is the first introduction into the material universe of some element that had no prior existence there- A formation is something made out of some pre-existing material; the result of a mere change wrought in the form of the original element. "The era of progress opens with the first day's work. At God's command, movement begins, and the first result is the production of light. This was no creation, but a simple manifestation of the activit}^ of matter; for, according to modern physics, heat and light are but different intensities of the vibratory motions of matter.'' — Guy of . The production of the heavens qn the second d^y, was not a creation, and is not described as such; they w^ere simply formations out of the original creation, matter. The introduction of plant life on the third da3^ was not a creation, and is not described as such. God simply commanded the earth to bring it forth. The luminaries which made their appearance on the fourth day, were not creations and are not so dCvScribed ; they were mere formations out of the original creation — matter. From the creation of matter "in the beginning," throughout the finst four days, the work of God was confined to the handling of matter. But the fifth day is distinguished from its predecessors by the introduction, on that dav, of a new element, which made its first 16 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, appearance in the material universe in combination with matter, as presented in the physical organism of the fish, which is described as follows: "And God created the great stretched out sea monsters; and all living creatures that creep, which the waters l)reed abundantly after their kind." It is the universal opinion of theologians, and of such scientists as accept the Bible as tnie, that this creation w^as that of animal life. To this view, which is at once opposed to the teachings of scripture and of science, we are compelled to dissent. Animal life is not a creation. Life itself is not a creation; neither plant life nor animal life; and it is not so described in the Mosaic Record. Aside from the teachings of scripture and of science our personal observ^ation teaches us that there is not such difference between plant life and animal life as would justify us in deciding that plant life was merely a com.bination of the elements inherent in matter, ?.nd that animal life was a creation distinct from matter. Kach has its germ, * 'containing the same elements in the same proportions.'' (Dana.) Kach has its cir- culating fluid; each its forminative period; each its youth; each its maturity; each its decline and final dissolution. Mr. Dana says: "The vegetable and animal kingdoms are the opposite, but mutually de- pendent sides or parts of one system of life." (See Man- ual of Geolog3^ p. 115). Hence, if life was a new element in the material universe, it would have been described MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 17 as a creation, when plant life, which is merely *'one side or part" of the * 'system," made its first appearance on the globe. But inasmuch as plant life, the first ''side or part" of the * 'system," to make its appearance is not described as a creation it would be at once irrational, unscientific, and unscriptural, to decide that animal life the other "side or part" of "the system," which afterwards made its appearance, was a creation. In other words, if the '^system of life" was a creation distinct from matter, it would have been so described at its first appearance in the plant. The strength of our position is clearly demon- strated by the more detailed description of the subject given in the fourth and fifth verses of the second chapter of Genesis, as follows: "These are the generations of the heavens and the earth, when they were created, in the day that the I^ord God made the earth and the heavens ; and every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb of the field before it grew." We are thus plainly taught, that the elements of plant life are simply parts of the original creation — matter. Hence, they existed in matter prior to the for- mation of matter into the earth. Thus by creating in matter the elements of life, "the lyord God" made "every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb of the field before it grew." Inasmuch as plant life and animal life are ' *mtt« tually dependent sides or parts of one system of life,** iS M/lK ANb THE NEGkO. whose elements are' identical, it follows, that the ele- ments of animal life, like those of plant life, were a part of the original creation — matter. And that they existed in matter prior to the formation of matter into the earth. Hence the combination of these original elements into plants and animals, and the first appearance of these on the globe in obedience to God's command, were not creations, and are not described as such in the Mosaic Record. That the elements of life — both plant and animal life — were parts of the original creation — matter and that they existed in matter prior to the formation of matter into the earth, is further shown bj^ the identity of language used by God in commanding the earth and the waters to bring forth plant and animal life, as follows : *'And God said, lyet the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth; and it was so. **And God said. Let the waters bring forth abund- antly the moving creatures that hath life." **And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind; cattle, and creeping things, and beasts of the earth after his kind; and it was so. (See Gen. ii, 11, 20, 24). What *'was so"? Why, just as in deference to Divine will, the waters of the Red Sea parted, and stood mountain high on either side, while Israel passed over Man, AMD THE NEGRO, 19 **dry shod," so, in obedience to divine command did the earth and the waters combine the elements of plant and animal life, and "bring- forth" plants^ and animals "after his kind." vSince the "system of life" is not a creation, what new element described as a creation made its appearance on the fifth day, in combination with matter as present- ed in the physical organism of the fish? To answer this qnestion intelligently we must first ascertain what character pre-eminently distinguishes not only the highest but the lowest order of animals from the plant. Mr. Dana says; "Plants have no consciousness of self, or of other existences; animals are conscious of an outer world, and even the lowest show it by avoid- ing obstacles." — Ibid, p. 116. The physical organism of the fish was simply a combination of elements of matter= But consciousness, which made its first appearance in the material universe on the fifth da3^ was an element distinct from matter. It was not present in light, nor in the heavens, nor in the plants, nor in the luminaries. It was a new element. Hence it is properly described as a creation. What is consciousness? Mr. Webster defines it as **The knowledge of sensations, or of what passes in one's own mind." In support of this, he refers to Locke, Reid, and the encyclopedias. (See Unabridged Dic- tionar3\) A moment's reflection should convince us that mind is an element distinct from matter. 20 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. , Since consciousness is always associated with mind, and is never found in separation from it, we must decide that it is one of its attributes; and that its presence clearly demonstrates the existence of mind. Hence this new element, described as a creation which made its appearance in the material universe on the fifth day, in combination wnth matter as presented in the physical structure of the lowest order of animal — the fish — was mind, in its simplest form. From the introduction of the fish, God handles this combination of matter and mind on iip through the different grades of animals until the creation of man. The evidence of this is found in the fact that, though the higher orders of fowls and beasts possess more highly developed physical and mental structures than the fish, the difference between them is merel3^ one of degree. Tlie}^ present no new element, but, like the fish, are simply a combination of matter and mind. Hence, they are not described as creations. The belief is widel}^ disseminated that mind ia peculiar to man. Hence, man alone possesses tl:^ faculty of reason; and that the lower animals possess mere instinct. The fallacy of this belief has long since^ been demonstrated. Mr. Darwin says: "Of all the faculties of the human mind, it will, I presume, be ad- mitted that reason stands at the summit. Only a few persons now dispute that animals possess vSome power of reasoning. Animals may constantly be seen to riause, deliberate, and resolve. It is a significant fact MAhJ, AND THE NEGRO. 21 thai: the more the habits of any animal are studied by a naturalist, the more he attributes to reason and the less to unlearned instincts." For hither information oi the existence of mind, and the display of its various attributes in the fish and fowl and beast, see the works of Cun'ier, Darwiui Quatrefages, Hartman and others. When the fish and fowl and beast were all made alter their kind, God then said, "Let us make man in our own image after our likness. "'^ '" "'^ v^o God created man in his own image, in. the image of God created he him; male and female created he Ihem." — Gen. i, 26-27. \n the more detailed descri])tio'i of tiie creation of man given in the 2d chapter of Gencsir^, verse 7, we are taug:ht that *'The Lord God formed man out of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul." "The dust of the ground," "'out" of which ''The Lord God formed man." was a part of the original creation — matter. We are thus plainly taught that the physical structure of man was simply a formation out of matter; and like the fish and fowl and beast, man received his animal life from matter. Hence, when his physical and mental organisms were completed, man, like the lower animals, was simply a combination of matter and mind. Geological research demonstrates that death — physical death — entered the world almost simultaneously with life plant life. And that it followed closely upon the intro- duction of animal life. Since man, like the lower animals derived his animal life from matter, it follows 22 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, that his physical and mental organisms, like theirs, must be subject to accident, disease, decay, and final dissolution. Hence, the idea that Adam would have lived on indefinitely, and perhaps never have ex- perienced physical death, had he not violated Divine law, is too absurd for serious consideration. Man like the lower orders of animal life, and like the plants has his germ, his formative period, his youth, his maturity, his decline, and his physical dissolution. " The breath of life" which God "breathed into" man's "nostrils" was spiritual, immortal life; lifewdiich, like God's life, never dies; " and man became a living- soul." This spiritual, immortal life — this living- soul — was a new element in the material universe. Hence, man, with whose physical and mental structure it was combined, is properly described as a creation. Thus, the three creations — matter, mind and spirit- ual life — were combined in man ; that sublime creature whom God honored in the creation by the bestowal of his likeness and his image, and to whom he confided dominion over the works of his hands. Well might David exclaim in describing God's creation of man: "Thou mad'st him a little lower than the angels, and has crowned him with glory and honor." In obedience to Divine command, the waters and the earth brought forth the fish and fowl and beast after their kind. But God created man in his own image, upon a plan carefully matured and as carefully preserved m his "book." Well may we exclaim in the Ian- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 23 guage of the Psalmist: *'I will praise thee, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; marvelous are thy w^orks; and that my soul know^eth right well. My sub- stance was not hid from thee when I was made in secret and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. Thine eyes did see my substance, 3^et being imperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned , when as yet there was none of them." — Ps. cxxxix. Prior to the creation of man, there was no connect- ing link, no tie of kinship between the creator and his creation. But when ''the Lord God formed man out of the dust of the ground," this *'dust of the ground" being a part of the original creation — matter — and * 'breathed into his nostrils the breath of life" — spirit- ual, immortal life — man became "a living soul." This spiritual, immortal life, this living soul, was a part of the substance of God. Hence its combination with matter and with mind, as presented in Adam, formed the connecting link, the link of kinship between the creator and his creature. Thus, Adam became, literally and truly, as he is described in scripture, the son of God. (lyuke iii, 3S.) Adam was as literally and truly the son of God as was Isaac the son of Abraham. And the descendants of Adam, of pure Adamic stock, are sons and daughters of God, throughout all time, just as the descendants, of Abraham of pure Abrahamic stock are sons and daughters of Abraham throughout all time. But ia drawing this comparison we should be careful not to 24 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. confound processes with results. The combination of spiritual, immortal life — a living soul — itself a part of the substance of God, with matter and with mind as pre- sented in Adam*s physical, mental and spiritual organ- isms, was the result of a creative act of the creator; while the presence of these characteristic in Isaac, him- self a descendant of Adam, was the result of a genera- ative act of the creature. Further evidence that Adam was the son of God is found in the fact that when our Saviour was on earth he recognized the pure-blooded descendants of Adam as his brethren and sisters. (See Matt, xii, 49; also Mark iii, 35-.) The completion of the life system of man, by the creation of the female, did not immediately follow that of the male. We are taught that ''the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden ; and there he put the man w^hom he had formed." (See Gen. ii. :8.) What period of time intervened between the creation of man and that of woman we have no means of ascertaining. However, we are led to decide that it was one of considerable length ; for it was in this interval that ' ' Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field." (See Gen. ii. :20). The suc- cessful accomplishment of this great task, requiring the highest intelligence and the finest discriminating power, would have been creditable to a Cuvier or a Darwin. Hence, Adam's successful accomplishment of it clearly demonstrates his towering intellectuality. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 25 In this early dawn of Adamic history, the great Architect of the universe looked out upon his yet un- finished creation and said: *'It is not good that man should be alone ; I will make him a helpmeet for him. * -" -i^ And the Ivord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept; and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof. And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man." We of modern times are wont to boast our greater enlightenment as compared wnth that of preceding ages ; and as an evidence of it we proudly point to the sacred - ness of marriage, woman's honorable position, and her higher education. But a glimpse of very ancient history suffices to convince us that this is but a reformatory movement, indicating a disposition to return to primitive conditions. Among the Toltecs, who developed one of the great civilizations of America in ancient times, *'the position of woman was honorable.'' Among the Arj-ans, who thousands of j^ears ago developed the splendid civ- ilization of ancient India, "woman was held in respect, and marriage was sacred." And there are beautiful hymns in existence to-day which were composed and written by the ladies and queens of Arj^ans. When we trace to its fountain source this ele- vated, ennobling character in man, his respectful devotion to woman, it leads us to the creation. This noble character found its first expression in the first recorded utterance of Adam, upon his reception of 26 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. that lovely helpmeet whom God had made for him. **This is now bone of mj bones, and flesh of my flesh ; she shall be called woman, bec^ause she was taken out of man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and cleave unto his wife ; and they shall be one flesh." We would vainly search the annals of the world for a sentiment more chaste, more elevated, and more devotional than this, to the fair sex of our mother ; not one of the gallant knights who wielded a lance in the age of chivalry ever gave expression to a senti- ment more chivalrous toward the lad}- of his choice, whose feelings and whose honor he stood pledged to defend with his life. Man, the male, and woman, the female, are "the opposite but mutually dependent sides or parts" of the spiritual life system of the globe ; and the presence of each is essential to the existence and perpetuation of the system. Hence, "it is not good that man should be alone." In addition to this, the presence of woman has exerted a beneficial influence upon the man through- out the ages that have passed. All history, sacred and profane, and all tradition, ancient and modern, and all observation and experience combine to teach us: **That man is the cloud of coming storm, Darjc as the raven's murky plume, Save where the sunbeams light and warm Of woman's soul and woman's form Gleams brightly o'er the gathering gloom." A4AN, AND THE NEGRO. 27 While in all that is ang"elic, woman stands peer- less in the realm of created things. And when we'd seek some symbol of her, even in the floral king-dom, that wondrous exhibition of the most exquisite taste, displayed by the great Artist of the universe, we lind perhaps her fittest symbol in that matchless combina- tion of beauty and fragrance, the night-blooming cereus, which, while generousl}^ contributing its odors to enrich the world's wealth of fragrance, modestlv conceals its l)eauties 'neatli the veil of night. Thus it is shown that man is a creation as sep- arate and distinct from the fish and fowl and beast as he is from the plant or the planet. Hence, we might with just as much propriety consider man a member of the sidereal kingdom as to consider him simply a member of the animal kingdom. It would be no more irrational, no more unscientific, if you please, and certainly no more unscriptural, to consider uian an undeveloped planet than to consider him merely "a highly developed animal.'' In harmony with the teachings of the Mosaic Record, St. Paul says: '*A11 flesh is not the same flesh ; ]>ut there is one kind o*f flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds." (See I. Cor. xv. 39,) Since there are four different kinds of flesh, each separate and distinct from the others, it follows that even the flesh of man is a '/kind of flesh" distinct from that of the fish or 28 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. fowl or beast. Hence we are emphatically taught that there is no kinship between man and the animals ; but that the kinship is between God and man. We should also note the broad distinction in point of numbers and variety which God made in the crea- tion between the representatives of the spiritual life of the g-lobe, as presented in man, and the repre- sentatives of mere animal life, and those of plant life. The plants and the fish and fowl and beast Avere all made in great numbers and in great variety. While there are such resemblances between certain plants, and between certain animals, as justifies the naturalist in deciding that they are of the same family or species, there are such dififerences between certain members of these families or species as justi- fies the naturalist in deciding that they are different races. These, whether of plant or lish or fowl or beast, were all made after their kind. But not so with man. Man Avas not made after any kind, but was created "in the image of God." Neither w^as man made in great numbers and varieties, but was created a single pair. Hence, unlike the plants and fish and fowl and beast, man was not made in species and races, but is a distinct creation. Had God de- sired man, like the plants and animals, to be a species, divisible into races, no good reason could be advanced as to why he did not so create them. Had there been a plurality of gods, man w^ould have been created a species, comprising a greater or MAN, AND THl: NBGRO. 29 less number of men ; and this species of man would have been divided into different races of men, each of whose racial characters would have corresponded with the characters of the g-od in whose image the}- were made. But, inasmuch as there is only one God, so was there created in his image just one man, whom he called '*'Adam, the son of God." And not only is man distinguished from the mere animals by his possession of spiritual, immortal life — a living soul, itself a part of the substance of God — but even his flesh is a different kind of flesh from that of the fish or fowl or beast. (See I. Cor. xv, 39.) And when, in order that the Adamic creation should be enabled to perpetuate its existence, and increase its numbers on earth, God decided to **make a helpmeet" for Adam, it is significant that he made the female man out of the male man. Thus completed and perfected by the presence of woman, it was possible for man to beget offspring, to whom he would transmit his phy- sical, mental and spiritual characters, and be thus enabled to execute those divine laws: "Be fruitful 9nd multiply, and replenish the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fov'l of the air, and over every living thing that movcLh up(Mi the earth." (Gen. i, 28.) Inasmuch as man was created the son of (iod, was made *'a little lower than the angels," and was assigTied to dominion over the works of God's hands, it follows that he is pot a development from a lower 30 MAM, AND THfi NEGRO, form ; and it also follows that lie could never develop into a hig-her or more perfect form while lie lived on the earth. In this professedly Christian age we hear much of a ''human species" Avhich is divisible into "races ot men." In view of the plain teaching of the Bible that man is a distinct creation, it is pertinent to in- quire where the modern w^orld obtained this absurd idea tViat man is a "species" which is divisible into "races of men" — from the scriptures? We have vainly sought from Genesis to Revelation for the slightest hint of the existence of such a thing as a * 'human species'" or a "race of men." The terms "species" and "races" are scientific terms; they belong to natural science, and are used to describe what is termed "natural relations." But the terms "human species" and "races of men" belong exclusively to the atheistic school of Natural Develo?> ment, which teaches that man is a highly developed species of ape — the human species — and that this human species of ape is divisible into five or more "races of men." On the other hand^ the terms "tribes," "nations" and "empires" are political terms, and are used to describe political relations. And it is a significant fact, and one which the professed Chris- tian would do well to observe, that these political terms — tribes, nations and empires — are invariably employed by the inspired authors in describing the relations of men. The terms "human species" and M/tSf, AND THE NEGRO, n **races of men" are conspicuous in scripture bj their absence. The first reference to the ''races of men" which we find in ancient history is found in the fragment of Plato's history of the lost continent of Atlantis. Plato lived 300 years B. C, He was the descendant of Solon, the g-reat lawg-iver of Athens. Solon spent ten years of his life in Egypt. In his discussions with the Egyptian priests Solon first heard of Atlantis and of the records concerning it to be found in the sacred registers of Egypt. Permission having been granted to examine them, Solon obtained from the sacred registers the necessary data from which to write in Greek a history of Atlantis. But before completing his work, Solon died. It seems that in the course of time his data or his manuscript fell into the hands of Plato, who decided to write a history of Atlantis. But after writing a description of the con- tinent, its population, products, religion, wealth, culture, power, etc., Plato died, leaving a mere frag- ment of what, if completed, would have been one of the most invaluable contributions to the literature of the world. The sacred registers of Egypt from which the data of Plato's history of Atlantis were obtained were far more ancient than the Bible. They were so much more ancient than any historical records of the Greeks, that an Egyptian priest said to Solon, **You have no, antiquity of history, and no history of ,12 K4AhJ, AND THE NEGRO. antiquity.'' Throug-hout Plato's narrative frequent allusion is made to **tlie human race" and to the *'race of men." These atheistic terms could only have orig-inated in the atheistic school of evolution. And they are always employed by the advocates of the theory of man's descent from the ape. The presence of these terms in the sacred registers of ancient Egypt clearly indicates that * 'The Theory of Descent" was universally taught in perhaps as systematized and elaborated a form in that remote period as it is in our day. And that in the dark ages which followed the crucifixion of the Saviour, this theory, in its systematized, elaborated form, in common with all literature, art, and science, was lost amid the crash of falling empires. But unfortunately the pernicious influences of this infamous theory upon the minds of men, together with its atheistic terms, survived its literature, and was handed down in a traditional way frot^i generation to generation. Thus we find that the ''Theory of Descent," so far from being a product of the Christian era, was an old, demoralizing, degrading theory at the advent of our Saviour. And that so far from its havinsf been first outlined by Linnaeus, or Lamark, or Blumenbach, or to whomsoever belongs the discredit, and more recently systematized and elaborated by Dar\vin and his disciples, it actually antedates the Christian era thousands of years. It was the pernicious influence of this atheistic theory which was advocated bv the MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 33 idolatrous authors who lived and taught prior to the advent of the Saviour which so demoralized and de- graded man and removed him so far from his God as to necessitate the sacrifice of the Son of God to redeem him. Upon the revival of learning in modern time, the theory of evolution was again systematized, and is now as universally disseminated among men as it was in ancient time. But who are they, and to what school do they belong, who would teach us that man is merely an animal and must take his position in **the zoological S3^stem" with the rest of the animals; that man is simply a highly developed species of ape — **the human species" — and that this "human species" of ape is divisible into five *^races of men" — the Negro, the Malay, the Indian, the Mongolian, and the Caucasian? Darwin, Haeckel, Huxley, Tyndall, Spencer, Voltaire, and their disciples; that class of philosophers who w^ould teach us the existence of a universe without a God, a creation without a Creator, man without re- ligion, and the world without a Sabbath or a Bible. How do these philosophers treat God's word, which the devotees of * 'enlightened Christianity" profess to so much revere? Ordinarily, in attempting to explain the existence of **the heaven and the earth," with all the phenomena which characterize each, they make no reference to scripture, but treat it with silent con- tempt. The Bible occupies no place in their theory. 34 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. But when compelled to allude to it from SLtiy cause, they denounce it as a Semitic myth, a Hebrew leg-end, or a Jewish tradition. Further evidence of the antiquity of '*The The- ory of Descent," and of its prevalence in the days of the Apostles, is shown by the great opposing declara- tion of St. Paul that *'all flesh is not the same flesh; but there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds." A careful comparison of this teaching with that of **The Theory of Development" must convince us that this inspired declaration was a blow aimed directly at *'The Theory of Development," which teaches that the most complex organism is merely a development from the most simple. Hence, *'all flesh" is akin. What is most directly opposed to the inspired declaration of the great apostle that '*all flesh is not the same flesh?" Necessarily we must decide that it is the theory that all flesh is the same flesh. What theory is this? It is the theory which teaches that animal life originated in the monera by * 'spontaneous generation" out of simple compounds of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen." And that from this little monera, the lowest form of animal life, on up to and including man, all flesh is the same. It is the theory which teaches, in direct opposition to the Bible, that man is merely a highly developed species of ape — the **human species" — and that this ''human species" of ape is divisible into "five races of men." It is the Theory of Development. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 35 What is most directl}' opposed to the inspired declaration of the gfreat apostle that 'Hhere is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds, making* in all four different kinds of flesh, as separate and distinct from each other as if the one made its first appearance upon and inhabited the earth, the other the Moon, the other Jupiter, and the other Mars? Necessarily we must decide that it is the theory which teaches that, from the little monera on up to and including man, there is just one flesh in different stag-es of development. It is the Theory of Development. How do you professed believers in God's word — you professed followers of the Saviour — you professed admirers of St. Paul — how do you treat this atheistic theory which God did all in his power, short of phy- sical force, even to the sacrifice of his Son, to blot from the face of the earth; this infamous theory which Christ died to obliterate from the minds of men; this blasphemous theory which St. Paul, with his accustomed force and skill, dealt what will yet prove its death blow? How do you professed Chris- tians treat this ante-scriptural theory that man is merely a highly developed species of ape — the '*human species" — and that this ** human species" is divisible into five '^races of men" — the Negro, the Malay, the Indian, the Mongolian, and the Caucasian? You teach it at your fireside, you teach it in the social cir- cle, you teach it on the highways and on the by-ways. 36 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. you teach it in the kindergarten, 3'ou teach it in the Sabbath school, you teach it in your higher institu- tions of learning, you teach it through the press, you teach it from the lecture platform, and Oh! blasphem of blasphemies! 3'ou teach it at the altar! And what is the result? To say nothing of the disastrous results which must inevitably accrue to you in eternity from your adherence to and 3'our promul- gation of this infamous theory in every relation in life from the cradle to the grave, what is the result to you in time? With those Divine promises ever held out imploringly to you — **Ask and ye shall re- ceive," **and no good thing will he withhold from those who walk up rightly;" you pray for a rain, and you get a drouth; you pray for fair weather, and 3'ou get a flood; you pray for prosperity, and want stares you in the face; v^ou pray for happiness, and wretch- edness and misery and degradation and disappoint- ment and grief are your constant companions from the cradle to the grave; you pray for peace, and you get a war. Is God unable or unwilling to redeem his promises, or do you fail to walk uprightly? It cannot be disproven that the theory now uni- versally taught that man is a **species" divisible into * 'races" is an inseparable part of the theory of man's descent from the ape. Neither can it be denied that it is directly opposed to the plain teaching of the Bible that man, unlike the fish and fowl and beast, was created a single pair; hence, is not divisible into MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 37 * Species" and ''races." The effort of modern Chris- tianity to mix this atheistic theory that man is a * 'species" divisible into "races" with the scriptural teaching- that man is a distinct creation, ''in the imag"e of God," must prove disastrous both in time and in eternity. Take any two different elements and mix them, and the product is neither the one nor the other of the originals; each of the orig-inals in their purity no longer exist; and the product resulting from their mixture is merely a compound in which is blended the characters peculiar to each. So it is in this case. The teachings of the Bible that man is a distinct creation, *'in the image of God," and the the- ory that man is a "species of ape divisible into races of men" are opposites. Hence, the effort of professed Christians to mix the two has resulted in the destruc- tion of Christianity from the earth; and also the de- struction of the theory of Natural Development, to the extent to which it has been mixed with scripture. The theory of Natural Development in its purity is only found among those who reject the Bible in its entirety. And pure Christianity will never again shed its radiance upon man's pathway to the grave until the church as an organi:?ation, and each individ- ual member of it utterly repudiates the atheistic the- ory of Natural Development, with all its demoralizing teachings, its degrading influences, and its misleading- terms. 38 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, Man alone was created "in the image of God;'' the fish and fowl and beast, like the plants, were made after their kinds. Man alone is responsible to God for his acts; the lower animals are responsible to man, under whose "dominion" they were placed in the creation, and into whose "hands" God delivered them after their preservation from the deluge. Man alone in his * 'first estate" was clothed with Divine authority to **have dominion" and he alone fell from this high "estate" by his wanton violation of Divine ,law. Hence, man alone is the subject of redemption. Man was created "in the image of God" — male and female — a single pair — distinct from the fish and fowl and beast, which, like the plants, were made after their kind. This is the teaching of the scrip- tural narrative of Divine creation. Man is a highly developed species of ape — the human species— and this human species is divisible into five races of men — the Negro, the Malay, the In- dian, the Mongolian, and the Caucasian. This is the teaching of the atheistic theory of Natural Develop- ment, which thrusts God aside and declares that man, the most complex organism, is merely a development from the most simple. Hence, according to this the- ory, man traces his pedigree back through the beast and fowl and fish to the lowest form of animal. The absolute conflict between the teachings of these opposing schools — Divine Creation and Natural Development — is apparent. Hence, if that most com- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 39 plex organism, man, is merel}' a development from the most simple; if he has descended from the ape, and is simply a hig-hly developed species of ape — the human species — and this "human species" is divisible into five "racea of. men,'' it follows that he was not created "in the image of God" — a single pair — and his flesh is not, as Paul tells us, a different kind of flesh from that of the fish and fowl and beast, but is akin to it. If, on the other hand, that most complex organ- ism, man, was created "in the image of God"— a sin- gle pair — and if, as Paul tells us, his flesh is a differ- - ent kind of flesh from that of the flsh and fowl and beast, then he is not a development from the most sim- ple organism, and there is no kinship between man and the animals. Let us now compare the teachings of the gospel with reference to the origin and mission of the Saviour and the ultimate basis of the gospel, with the teaching of the modern Christian church upon this subject, and the ultimate basis of the church. We are taught by the gospel that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, and that he came into the world and suffered and died to redeem fallen man. What is the ultimate basis of this teaching? The narrative of Divine creation, which teaches that man was "cre- ated" ^'in the image of God" — a single pair — distinct from the fish and fowl and beast, which, like the plants, were made after their kind. (St. John i.) 40 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, In apparent harmony with the teaching of the g-ospel, the modern Christian church teaches that Jesus Christ was the son of God; and that he came into the world and suffered and died to redeem fallen man. But what is the ultimate basis of this teaching- of the modern Christian church? The theory that man is a species (and of course if he is a species of anything", he is a species of ape) — the human species— and that this human species is divisible into five races of men — the Negro, the Malay, the Indian, the Mongolian, and the Caucasian. Thus it cannot be disproven that the teachings of the modern Christian church find their ultimate basis, not on the scriptural narrative of Divine creation, but upon the atheistic theory of Natural Development. Kvidently the church which Jesus Christ estab- lished on the narrative of Divine creation has been transferred to the theory of Natural Development. Surely nothing could be more absurd, nothing more blasphemous than the attempt on the part of professed Christians to confuse the teachings and terms of these opposing schools. The product resulting from the mixture of the teachings of these opposing schools is what its devo- tees are pleased to term "Enlightened Christianity.*' But a glance at its atheistic teachings, its degrading influences, and its misleading terms, suffice to convince us that it is merely a counterfeit, in which is blended and distorted the teachings peculiar to scripture with MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 41 those peculiar to atheism. Knlightened Christianity, indeed! How enlightened, and enlig-htening, is this modern Christianity which, under the influence of the atheistic theory of Natural Development, upon which it is based, ignores the broad distinction which God made in the creation between man and the ape, and places them in the same family as different races of one species of animal. CHRIST-TME: SON of,god. 4.- . » • ■• Man was created in the image of God. Is the ne|ro.ijithe ima|e of Gods son-Cfirist? Chapter H. Biblical and Scientific Facts Demonstrat- ing that the Negro is not an Offspring of the Adamic Family. The White, the highest, and the Megro the lowest of the so-called "live races of men,'' present the strong-est contrast to each other in their physical and mental characters; and in their modes of life, habits, customs, lang-uag-e, manners, g-estures, etc. White is not a color; neither is black a color; 3'et the white, colorless complexion of the white, finds its strong"est contrast in the black, colorless complexion of the Negro. The long-, line, silken hair of the White, finds its strongest contrast in the short, coarse, woolly hair of the Nei^ro. Each individual hair of the white "is cylindrical." Hence, "its section is circular." In 46 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. striking- contrast to that of the white, each individual hair of the Negro "is flattened like a tape.*' Hence, its section is oval.*' (Haeckel, Hist, of Creation, Vol. 11, pp. 414, 415.) The relatively short, broad skull of the White, finds its strongest contrast in the long, narrow skull of the Negro. This length and narrowness of the Negro's skull is a character of the a^^e. Winchell says, "A certain relative width of skull appears to be connected with energy, force, and executive ability." Hence the narrowness of the Negro's skull denotes his lack of energy, force, and executive ability. This is significant, when considered in connection with the design of God in creating man, and the great task to which he was assigned in the Creation. Winchell quoting from the measurements of Broca saj^s, (1) ' 'The face of the Negro occupies the greater portion of the total length of the head. (2) His anterior cranium is less developed than his posterior, relatively to that of the White. (3) His occipital foramen is situated more backward in relation to the total pro- jection of the head, but more forward in relation to the cranium only. In other words, the Negro has the cerebral cranium less developed than the white; but its posterior is more developed than the anterior." (Preademites, pp. 169, 170.) "In the Negro skull the sphenoid does not, generally, reach the parietals, the coronal suture joining the margin of the temporals. The skull is very thick and solid, and is often used MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 47 for butting-, as is the custom of rams. It is flattened on the top, and well adapted for carrying- burdens." Ubid, p. 171.) The cephalic index * * * among- Noachitis (^whites), ranges from 75 to 83 degrees; among negroes, from 71 to 76 degrees. {Ibid^ p. 246.) In discussing cranial capacity, Dr. Winchell says, ''Capacity of cranium is universally recognized as a criterion of psychic power. No fact is better estab- lished than the general relation of intellect to weight of brain. Welker has shown that the brains of twenty-six men of high intellectual rank surpassed the average weight by fourteen per cent. Of course quality of brain is an equally important factor; and hence not a few men with brains even below the average have distinguished themselves for scholar- ship and executive ability. The Noachites possess a mean capacity of 1,500 cubic centimeters, f^ * * Among Negroes, 1,360 cubic centimeters." (Ibid, p. 246.) "The average weight of the Kuro|)ean brain, males and females, is 1340 grammes; that of the Negro is 1178; of the Hottentot, 974, and of the Aus- tralian, 907. The significance of these comparisons appears when we learn that Broca, the most eminent of French anthropologists, states that when the European brain falls below 978 grammes (mean of males and females), the result is idiocy. In this opinion Thurman coincides. The color of the Negro 48 K4AN, AND THE NEGRO. brain is darker than that of the White, and its density and texture are inferior. The convolutions are fewer and more simple, and, Agassiz and others long ago pointed out, approximate those of the quadrumama. {Ibid, pp. 249, 251.) The atheism, which, for ages has enveloped the Avorld in darkness, erroneously teaches that all bipeds, wuth articulate speech, the erect jx>sture, a well de- veloped hand and foot, and the ability to make and handle tools, are men. Hence, no table exists, in which the average brain weight of the adult male, of pure Adamic stock is given. But, we feel assured, that this average may safely be placed at not less than 1,500 grammes. Winchell, Topinard, Quatre- fages, and other scientists give the following table of ' 'comparative weights of brains compiled from obser- vations collected by Sanford B. Hunt, made during the civil war in the United States.'' ''State of hybridisation. Wt. of Brain. Grammes. 24 Whites 1,424 25 three-parts white 1,390 47 half-white or mulattoes 1,334 51 one-quarter white 1,319 95 one-eighth white 1,308 22 one-sixteenth white 1,280 141 pure Negroes 1,331" (Anthropology) Had these estimates extended to every class of peoi)le in the United States the average of whites would doubtless have been raised to 1,500 grammes. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 49 This average is far exceeded b}' many individual whites; for example: Weight of brain, grms. oz. Cuvier— 63 years old— Naturalist 1829.96 ('64.54) Byron— 36 years old—Poet. 1807,00 (63.73) Lejisene Dirichlet — 50 years— Mathe- matician /. 1520.00 (53.61) (Quatrefages, Human Species, p. 411.) In the table from which the above weights were taken, the brain weight of several distinguished indi- viduals are given which fall below the average. This indicates that the weight and volume of the brain, is not the only factor to be considered in determining the relative intelligence of individuals. Quatrefages, while admitting "that there is a certain relation between the development of the intelligence and the volume and weight of the brain," says, ''But, at the same time, we must allow that the material element, that which is appreciable to our senses, is not the only one which we must take into account, for behind it lies hidden an unknown quantity an x, at present undetermined and only recognizable by its effects." Ubid, p. 413. ) This is a truth which is easily demon- strated by comparing the achievements of the white, with those of the Negro, and the mixed-bloods. The relatively short, narrow jaw of the White finds its strongest contrast in the long, broad jaw of the Negro. This is another character of the' ape which the Negro presents. The jaws of the Negro, like those of the lower apes, "extend forward at the 50 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. expense of the symmetry of the face, and backward at the expense of the brain cavity.*' Quartrefages, says: "It is well known that in the Negro, the entire face, and especially the lower portion, projects forward. In the living" subject it is exaggerated by the thickness of the lips. But it is also apparent in the skull, and constitutes one of its most striking characters.'' It is this trait which is opposed to the orthognathism of the White. {Ibid, p.p. 390, 391.) Dr. Winchell says, "The amount of prognathism is another marked criterion of organic rank. One method of expressing this is by means of 'auricular radii,' or distances from the opening of the ear to the roots of the teeth, and to other parts of the head. Among Europeans, the distance to the base of the upper incisors is 99, but among negroes it averages 114. On the contrary, the average distance to the top of the head is, among Europeans, 112; but among negroes, 110. The distance to the upper edge of the occipital bone is, among Europeans, 104; among ne- groes, 104. The measurements prove that the Negro possesses more face, and particularly of jaws, and less brain above. Other measurements furnish a similar result' and show% also, that the development of the posterior brain, in relation to the anterior, is greater in the Negro. Prognathism is otherwise expressed by means of the 'facial angle,' or general slope of the face from the forehead to the jaws, when compared with a horiJjontal plane. Among the Noacliites, the MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 51 facial line is nearest perpendicular, giving an angle of 77 degrees to 81 degrees. Among negroes, it averages only 67 degrees." {Preademites, p. 247.) The prominent chin of the White finds its strong- est contrast in the retreating chin of the Negro. This is another character of the ape which the Negro presents. Winchell says, "The retreating contour of the chin as compared with the European, approxi- mates the Negro to the chimpanzee and lower mam- mals." {Ibid, p. 251.) The front teeth of the White, set perpendicularly in the jaw, find their strongest contrast in the front teeth of the Negro, which set slanting in the jaw. This is another character of the ape which the Negro presents. Haeckel describes as Prognathi those '•whose jaws, like those of the animal snout, strongly project, and whose front teeth, therefore, slope in front; and men with straight teeth Orthognathi, whose jaws project but little and whose front teeth stand perpendicularly." The relatively thin lips of the White find their strongest contrast in the thick, puffed lips of the Negro. This is another character of the ape which the Negro presents. In referring to the differences ])resented by the mouth, in the so-called races of men, Quatrefages says, "The thousand differences of form and dimensions which exhibit, from the Negro of Guina with his enormous and, as it were, turned-up lips, to certain Aryan or Semitic whites can 52 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. neither be measured nor described. * * * 'It may, however, be remarked, that the thickness of the lips is very marked in all negroes, in consequence of their projection in front of the maxillary bones and the teeth. The mouth of the Negro presents another character which seems to me to have been generally neglected, and which has always struck me. It is a kind of clamminess at the outer border of the com- missures, and seems to prevent the small movements of the corner of the mouth which play such an import- ant part in the physiognomy. The dissections of M. Hamy have explained these facts. They have shown that in the negroes the muscles of this region are both more developed and less distinct than in the whites." {The Human Species, p. 367.) The prominent nose of the White finds its strong- est contrast in the flat nose of the Negro, which has the appearance of having been crushed in. This is another character of the ape which the Negro pre- sents. In contrasting the Negro skull and face with those of the White, Topinard says, '*The Norman verticalis is of an elliptical shape. The supra-iniac portion of the occipital is frequently projecting, its portions are flat and vertical, the curved temporal lines describe an arc corresponding with the mass of temporal muscles which are inserted beneath them; the temporal shell itself is longer than that of the White. The frontal is articulated frequently with the MAN, AND THt: NEGkO. 53 temporal; the greater wing's of the sphenoid are con- sequently not articulated with the parietal. The cranial sutures are more simple than in the white type, and are obliterated sooner (Gratiolet). The squamo-temporal and the spheno-parietal frequently form a horizontal straig-ht line. The forehead is nar- row at the base, sometimes receding" and rather low, sometimes straig-ht and btilg-ing- (bombe) at the sum- mit. The frontal bosses are often confluent, or re- placed by a sing-le and median protuberance. * * * 'The orbits, moreover, are microsemes, that is to say, short from above downwards. * >?= * 'The eyeballs are close to the head, and the palpebral apertures are nevertheless small and are on the same horizontal line. * * * 'The nose is developed in width at the expense of its projection; its base is larg-er and crushed in, owing" to the softness of the cartilag"es, and spreads out into two divergent alae, with elliptical nostrils more or less exposed. This extremity is some- times tri-lobed. The skeleton of the nose is platyrr- hinian (54-78); the two bones proper are occasionally united, as in apes. ^= * * ^he prog-nathism of the Negro extends within certain limits to the entire face. All the parts of the superior maxilla contribute to it, and even the pteryg"oid processes, which are drawn forward by the development of the jaw; but it is only characteristic and considerable in the subnasal reg'ion and in the teeth. It frequently exists also in the lower jaw; that is to say, the chin recedes, and 54 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. the teeth project obliquely forward. The teeth are wider apart than in the white races, beautifully white, very firm and sound. Lastly, the ears are small, round, their border not well curUd, the lobule short and scarcely detached, and the auditory opening- wide. The neck is short." {Anthropology, p.p. 488, 489, 490.) The long, slender neck of the White finds its strongest contrast in the short, thick neck of the Negro. In this, the Negro presents another character of the ape. Burmeister, quoted by Hartman, sa3^s, *'The Negro's thick neck is the more striking, since it is generally allied with a short throat. In measur- ing negroes from the crown of the head to the shoul- der, I found the interval to be from nine and a quarter to nine and three-quarters inches. In Europeans of normal height this interval is seldom less than ten inches, and is more commonly eleven inches in women and twelve in men. The shortness of the neck, as well as the relatively small size of the brain-pan, and the large size of the face, may the more readily be taken as an approximation to the Simian type, since all apes are short-necked. * * * This shortness of the neck of the Negro explains his greater carrying power, and his preference for carrying burdens on his head, which is much more fatiguing to the European on account of his longer and weaker neck." (Anthro- poid Apes, p.p. 100, 101.) **The clavicle is longer in proportion to the hu- merus than in the White. His radius is perceptibly MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 55 long'er in proportion to the liunierus — thus approxi- mating- to that of the ape. The scapular is shorter and broader. (Preadimites, p. 171.) "Among- ne- groes the forearm is longer, in proportion to the arm, than is the case with whites. The same is true of anthropoid apes. The Negro's arm, when suspended bj the side, reaches the knee-pan within a distance of only four and three-eig-hths per cent of the whole leng-th of the body. The white man*s arm reaches the knee-pan within a distance which is seven and one- half per cent of the whole leng-th of the body. This leng-th of the arm is a quadrumanous characteristic. (Ibid,y p.p. 248, 249.) Topinard says, ''The arm * * * is shortest in whites, longfest in neg-roes. * * * Frequently, in the latter, the extremity of the middle iing-er touched the patella; once it was twelve millimeters below its upper border, as in the gorilla." (Anthropology J p. 335.) Quatrefages says, "I have already observed that the upper limb is a little longer in the Negro than in the White. The essen- tial cause of this difference is the relative elongation of the forearm." M. Broca, after comparing the radius and humerus of the two races, gives 79.43 for the Negro, and 73.82 for the Europeans. ( The Human Species, p. 399.) Mr. Hartman says, '*In the case of an adult male gorilla the first glance at this member reminds us of the knotty fist of a black laborer or lighterman, like those who, at Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, or La Gua^-ra, ^6 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. lift the heavy bags of coffee and place them on their heads or on their herculean shoulders," (Anthropoid Apes, p. 102.) Winchell says, "Among the Negroes the capacity of the lungs is less than among the Whites; and the cir- cumference of the chest is less.'* (Preadimites, p. 173.) Quatref ages says, "The thoracici^age presents some interesting facts sufficient!}^ well proved. In consequence of the form of the sternum, the greater or less curv-ation of the ribs, it is generally broad and flattened in the White, narrow and prominent in the Negro." {The Human Species, p. 397.) Topinard says, "M. Pruner-Bey speaks of two im- portant characters which remind one of the ape. The three curvatures of the spine are less pronounced in the Negro than in the White; his thorax is relatively flat from side to side, and slightly cylindrical. The shoulders, he adds, are less powerful than in the Euro- pean. The umbilicus is nearer the pubis; the iliac bones in the male are thicker and more vertical. The neck of the femur is less oblique." {Anthropology, p. 490.) Topinard says, "The pelvis, fonued by the two iliac bones and the sacrum, is divided into two parts — the great pelvis, or wide upper portion, and the small pelvis, or pelvic cavity, through which the foetus passes at birth. Camper and Soemmering observed that the pelvis of the Negro in its ensemble is narrower than that of the White. — 'in 1826 Vrolik came to the conclusion KfAN, AND THE NEGkO, Si that the pelvis of the male negro — from its strength and thickness — from the want of transparency in its iliac fossce — from the higher projection of its superior extrem - ity, and from the spinous processes of the iliac bones being less projecting and less separated from the cotyloid cavities, approximates to that of animals, while the pel- vis of the negress maintains a certain slenderness. In 1864 Joulin asserted that the transverse diameter of the inlet is always greater antero- posteriorly in the female. * * ^ In the negress, he says, the iliac bones are more vertical, the transparency of the fossce, the capac- ity and depth of the cavity less, the pubic arch, as well as its angle greater." Ubidy pp.305, 306.) "Weber found that in each of the races which he had studied, the pelvis presented a predominant form, which, on that account alone, became characteristic. He regarded the inlet as being generally oval and of large transverse diameter in the White. ''' '•' * Cuneiform and of large antero -posterior diameter in negroes. * * =i^ M. Verneau confirms the assertions of the greater num- ber of his predecessors, as to the reality of the charac- ters of race to be found in the pelvis. Amongst these characters, there are some which have been pointed out in the negro as indications of animalism. * * "^^ In fact the verticality of the ilia, and the increase of the antero -posterior diameter of the pelvis in the Negro, have been chiefly insisted upon as recalling characters which may be observ^ed in mammalia generally, and particularly in apes." {The Human Species, pp. 397, 398.) 58 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Winchell says, ''The Negro pelvis averages but 26/i inches in circumference ; that of the White race is 33 inches. In the Negro it is more inclined, which is another quadrumanous character. It is also more nar- row and elongated." (Preadamites, p. 249.) In the greater length and slenderness of the pelvis, the Negro presents another character of the ape. Topinard gives the relative length of the femur to the tibia as 67.22 in the Negro and 69.73 in the White. {Anthropology-) The highly developed calves of the White, find their strongest contrast in the thin calves of the Negro. This slenderness of the Negroe's calves is another char- acter of the ape. The calves of the White, situated low on the leg, find their strongest contrast in the calves of the Negro, set relatively high on the leg. The elevated position which the calves of the Negro occup}^ in the leg, is another character of the ape. The short, narrow heel of the White, finds its strongest contrast in the long, broad heel of the Negro. The latter is another character of the ape. The short, highly arched foot of the Wliite, finds its {Strongest contrast in the long, flat foot of the Nesrro. The latter is another character of the ape. Topinard in contrasting the following characters of the Negro with those of the White, says: "The femur is less oblique, the tibia more curved, the calf ot the leg high and but little developed, the heel broad and projecting, the foot long, but slightly arched, flat, and MAN, AND THE NHGKO. 59 the great toe rather shorter than in the White. Negresses age rapidly, their breasts elongate after the first preg- nancy, and become flabby and pendulous." (An/hro- pology. p. 490.) In discussing the differences presented by the muscles, viscera, vessels, and nerves of the so-called "races of men." Topinard says, ''Their study, equally with that of the bones, forms part of the comparative anatomy of man. * * ^ 'The anatomy in ordinary use with physicians has been acquired in our dis- secting rooms, on white subjects, of which there is always a plentiful supply. Some few Negroes and Mon- golians have also been submitted to dissection, but with- out much attention being paid to the subject. It is only now that this branch of anthropology is beginning to spring into life. We begin to find that there are as many reasons why we should search into the differences which exist in internal organs as into the features of the countenance. Some splendid works on the anatomj^ of foreign races have already appeared; anatomical varia- tions, supposed anomolies, are no longer passed b}^ as matters of no interest. ^' '^' "^^ 'One fact has been al- ready ascertained — namely, that the muscular system is the seat of differences: some as to the nature of the characters which we have termed unimportant; others produced by arrangements which are found normally in various classes of the Mammalia. The variations ex- hibited by the cutaneous muscle, the muscles of the face or of the ears, the adductors of the arm, the rectus ab- ^0 MAN, AND THB NBGkO, dominus muscle ^ the muscles of the hand and foot, the glutaei, and the triceps of the calf of the leg are in this category. * ♦ ^ ' p^\i ^\-^q. internal parts of the body are subject to variety in different races : the peritoneum, the ilso-coecal appendix, the liver, the larynx; and if the small number of cases observed did not lead us to fear pronouncing as an individual variation one of an ethnic character, we might mention many examples of them. No doubt special peculiarities in the internal generative organs will be discovered. The nerv^ous sys- tem has been the subject of closer study. Soemmering, and after him Jacquart, demonstrated that the nerv^es of the Negro, particularly those of the base of the brain, are larger than those of the European. It has been ascertained that his cerebral substance is not so white. {Anthropology, pp. 307, 308, 309.) Quatrefages says: ** Relatively to the white, the Negro presents a marked predominance of peripheral nei*vous expansians. The truneks are thicker, and the fibres more numerous, or perhaps merely easier to isolate and to preser\'e on account of their volums alone. On the other hand, the cerebral centres, or at least the brain appear to be inferior in development. ''{The Human Species, p. 401.) **There are also some slight variations between the respiration, circulation, animal temperature secretions, etc., of the White man and the Negro; the muscular energy and the manner in which it is employed, some- times vary considerably in different races; general I MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 61 sensibility* and consequently aptitude for feeling pain, are very unequally developed." {Ibid p^ 409. Dr. Mosely quoted by Winchell says, Negroes are void of sensibility to a surprising degree. They are not subject to nervous diseases. They sleep vSoundly in every disease, nor does any mental disturbance keep them awake. They bear chirurgical operations much better than white people; and what would be the cause of insupportable pain to a white man, a negro would almost disregard." (Preadimites, p, 178.) Dr. J. Hendree, of Aniston, Alabama, writing to Dr. Winchell says; "lyct me mention one fact especially, drawn from my own experience of forty years. The coarseness of their (the negroes) organization makes them require about double the dose of ordinary medicine used for the whites." Dr. M. ly. Barrow, of Drayton, Georgia, writing to Dr. Winchell sa3^: "I have practic- ed among the negroes over fortj^ years * * *Your informa- tion in respect to the doses of medicine for the colored people corresponds with my experience — except as re- gards opiates ; and perhaps they will bear large quanti- ties of these, as I have known some to take very large doses with impunity." (Ibid, p. 177.) The highly developed pilious system of the white, finds its strongest contrast in the deficient pilious S3^s- tem of the negro. Of the latter Topinard says, ''The beard is scant and developed late. The body is desti- tute of hair, except on the pubis and armpits." Anthro- pology, p, 483.) Winchell says, **As to the pilious sy 5- 62 M.1N, AND THE MICRO. tern it is deficient in the Negro. The hairs of the head are black and crispy, with a transverse section, and qre inserted vertically in the scalp. The skin is 'jlack, velvety and comparatively cool. (Ibid, p, 174.) '*In the Negro, the development of the body is gen- erally in advance of the white. His wisdon teeth are cut sooner; and in estimating the age of his skull, we must reckon it as at least five years in advance of the white." Ubid, p, l75) "The temperament of the Negro is more sluggish than that of the White man." -In Africa, the Negroes are extremely indolent, and use little exertion for their well-being. Kver}^ person who has resided in the midst of a Negro population in our Southern States has been compelled to remark their incapability of intense effort, and their constitutional sleepiness and slowness. This inability to make great exertions secures them from fatigue, and diminishes the demand for regular periods for total repose and invig- orating sleep. "In a true sense, they are in a state of partial sleep during the da3^ and hence are able to pass night after night without a total suspension of their usual activity." (/^/^, pp. 175, 176.) The person of the White exhales an order which is scarcely perceptable, and not especially offensive. In striking contrast to this, the Negro is characterized by a very strong offensive odor. Topinard says, "The characteristic effluvium from the hold of a slave-ship can never be got rid of." — Ubid.) MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 63 Dr. Wincliell says, "The exemption of the Negro from malarial diseases, and sundry other pathological affections of the White race is another significant di- agnostic. "If the population of New England, Germ- any, France, England, or other northern climates, should come to Mobile, "or to New Orleans, a large proportion die of j^ellow fever, and if one hundred such individuals landed in the latter city, at the commencement of an epidemic of j^ellow fever, probably half would fall victims to it. On the contrary, Negroes, under all circumstances, enjoy an almost perfect exemp- tion from this disease, even though brought in from our northern states,''— PreadimiteSy p, 180.) Quatre- ages says, "Of all human races the White is the most sensitive to marsh fevers, and the Black the least so. On the other hand the Negro race suffers more than any other from phthisis." — (The Human Species, p. 426.) Dr. Winchell says, "The mental indolence of Negroes is further shown in the comparative records of insanit3^ and idiocy. While among Whites, mania occurs in the proportion of 0.76 per thousand, among Negroes it is only 0.10 per thousand. While idiocy, among the former, is 0.7v3 per thousand, among the latter it is 0.37 per thousand." — Preadimites, p. 182. Dr. -Winchell quotes Mr. William Morrow, Chester- ville, Ohio, (The Transcript, published by the students of the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, Oct. 1878), who says: 64 man; and the negro. "'In early life I had conceived a horror of slavery in all its forms, and had long held to the opinion that the Negro, once free, and having a fair opportunity, would surely make rapid progress toward becoming a good and honorable citizen. I expected a good deal more than I have found.'" ''After narrating the extent and variety of his experiences in New Orleans, Hunts - ville [Alabama] , and Nashville, he gives his conclusions lead as follows : " ' " As a rule, the Negro does not learn as well as do children of this state [Ohio] . Some things they seem to master readily; but when they come to any reasoning they usually fail. They read well if they have a good teacher, and nearly all write well. In arithmetic, grammer, geography and the high- er branches, they are mostly deficient. They learn definitions tolerable well, but fail in the application. In arithmetic, a class may learn a method of solving examples, and will work them with wonderful facility. You pass on a week or so with the class, come to a place requiring the use of the principle formerly learned, and it is gone. I had in my charge a class in arithmetic that had been half way through the book; upon ex- amination, I found that not a single one of them could work an example in long division. * * *Some of those who are teaching, of course, are more intellgent, many be- ing able to teach arithmetic as far as decimals and in- terest. I meet very few who know anything about grammar. * '^^ *'Fear is usually the only thing that con- trols them. Very few of the finer feelings find any M.LW .t\n nil: XllGRO. 65 ludgnicnt in their natures. Having' been once taught to obey, they do moderatel}' well. The coarse nature is easily aroused, and the}' have never heard tell of such a thin;^- as self-control. Their anger knows no bounds, oftc.Mi altackitig- a teacher in open school ''^ "''' ''' A Negro knows no bashfulness; no feeling of diffidence in the presence of superior ever troul^les him. If accused of anything, they assume a look of injured innocence that Vv'ould credit the veriest saint in the calendar. They never plead guilty% and have an excuse for any and all occurrences. "—[//? /if, pp. 183, 184.] The doctrine was once universally taught, and is still entertained by many that, the dark complexion of tlie Negro, and that of the other so-called "colored races of men" is due to climatic influence. Scientific research has long since demonstrated the fallacy of this absurd hypothesis. In discussing this subject, Dr. Winchell says : "The yellow-tawny Hottentots live side by side with the black Kaffirs. The ancient Indians of Califor- nia, in the latitude of 42 degrees, were as black as the Negroes of Guinea, while in Mexico were tribes of an olive or reddish complexion, relatively light. So in Africa, the darkest Negroes are 12 or 15 degree north latitude; while their color becomes lighter the nearer tliey approach the equator." "The Yoloffs," says Goldberry, "are a proof tliat the black color does not depend entirely on solar heat, nor on the fact that they are more exposed to a vertical sun, but arises from other '^1 66 MAJV, AND THE NEGRO. causes ; for the further we go from the influence of its rays, the more the black color is increased in intensity. ' ' So we may contrast the dark-skinned Eskimo with the fair Kelts of temperate Europe. If it be thought that extreme cold exerts upon color an influence similar to that of extreme heat, we may compare the dark Eskimo with the fair Finns of similar latitudes. Among the black races of tropical regions we find generally some light colored tribes interspersed. These sometimes have light hair and blue eyes. This is the case with the Tuareg of' the Sahara, the Affghans of India, and the aborigines of the banks of the Orinoco and the Amazon. The Abyssinians of the plains are lighter colored than those of the heights; and upon the low plains of Peru, the Antisians are of fairer complexion than the Aymaras and Quichuas of the high table -lands. Humboldt says: *'The Indians of the Torrid Zone, who inhabit the most elevated plains of the Cordillera of the Andes, and those who are engaged in fishing at the 45tli degree of south latitude, in the islands of the Clionos Archipelago, have the same copper color as those who, under a scorching climate, cultivate the banana in the deepest and narrow- est valleys of the Equinoctial region." (Ibid, pp. 185, 186. See also Topinard's //////;r(?/)(?/o0% pp. 386,387.) In explaining the real cause of the differences in Complexion y w^hich we observe among the so-called **racesof men," Topinard says: "The color of the skin, hair and eyes is the result of a general phenomenon in the organism, namely, the MA.V, AND THE NEGRO. 67 production and distribution of the coloring matter. The skin of the Scandinavian is white, ahnost without color, or rather rosy and florid, owing to the transparency of the epidermis allowing the red coloring matter of the blood to be sun circulating through the capillaries. * >;' -'^ "The skin of the Negro of Guinea, and espec- ially of Yoloff, the darkest of all, is, on the contrary, jet black, which is caused b}- the presence in the minute cellules on the deep surface of the epidermis of black granulus, known by the name of pigment. The black layer thus formed b}^ these cellules, Avhich used to be called rete mucositm of Malpighi, remains adherent some- times to the dermis and sometimes to the epidermis on removing the latter, after previously submitting the skin to maceration. This pigment is found in all races, whether black, yellow or white, but in ver}^ different quantity; hence their various tones of color, from the lightest to the darkest whites, who readily become brown on exposure to light, are undoubtedl}^ provided with it. It is always more abundant in the scrotum and round the nipple. It is very visible on the mucous membrane of negroes, which are frequentl}' surrounded by masses of it, notaVjly on the vault of the palate, the gums, and the conjunctiva, which we have also met with in \oung orangs. (Anthropology^ pp. 342, 34vS.) In discussing this subject Quatrefages says: "With all anthropologists I recognize the high value of the color of the skin as a character. ''^ ''' -'' We know that it does not result from the existence or disappear- 68 MAN, AND THE NHGRO. ance of special layers. Black or Wliite> the skin always comprises a white dermis, penetrated by man}- capillar- ies, and epidermis, more or less transparent and color- less. Between the two is placed the mucous layer, of which the pigment alone in reality varies in quantity and color according to the race. All the colors presented by the human skin have two common elements, the white of the dermis and the red of the blood. Moreover, each has its own proper element, resulting from the colorings of the pigment. The rays reflected from these different tissues combine into a resultant w^hich produces the different tints and traverses the epidermis. The latter plays the part of roughened glass. The more delicate and the finer it is, the more perceptible is the color of the subjacent parts. " ''^ '^ From the preceding, we can also understand wdiy the White alone can be said to turn pale or to blush. The reason is, that in him the pigment allows the slightest differences in the aflflux of blood to the dermis to be perceived. With the Negro as wnth us, the blood has its share in the coloring, the tint of vvhich it deepens or modifies. When the blood is wanting, the Negro turns gray from the blending of the white of the dermis w4th the black of the pigment." (^The Human Species, pp. v356, 357-) Thus, it is shown by the highest scientific authorities, that the black, colorless complexion of the Negro, is not the result of climatic influence ; but it is due solel}^ to the black pigment, which intervenes between fhe dermis and the epidermis. This pigment, like every other part MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 69 of the organism, is sui:)iect to disease. One of the diseases to which the pigment is liable is known as albinism. The victims of this disease are termed albinos. In discussing albinism, and albinos, Dr. Top- inard says: "Albinos are individuals in whom the pigmentary matter is so far deficient that the skin and hair are color- less, the iris is transparent, and the choriod coat desti- tute of the dark pigment for the absorption of redund - ant rays of liglit. In consequence of this, they are un- able to bear sunlight, and see better at night than during the day, Their e\xballs are affected with a perpetual oscillating movement, their skin and hair are colorless, or of a dull white, the ej-es reddish, the transparency of the tissues sliowing the ])lood circulatin.g through tiie capillaries. They are often indolent, and without mus- cular vigor. There are partial aibinos, in whom the above s^nnptoms are observed, but in a less degree. They easily pass unnoticed among tlie white races, Init are very observable among the black; tiieir liair is ilaxen red, their skin coffee -colored or speckled, their eyes are light blue or reddish. B he frankly admits that science can give no explanation as to why the hair of the white is long, smooth, fine and round, and is inserted obliquely in the scalp; while in striking contrast to these charac- ters, the hair of the Negro, is short, coarse, woolly, and flat; and is inserted vertically in the scalp. [2] He calls attention to the fact that, iu these opposite characters, "lies the most serious objection to the theory of the derivation of characters from one another, ' ' or, in other words in these opposing characters, lies the most serious oljjection to the theory that either the Negro or the White, is the result of development, the one from the other; and also presents the most serious objection to the theory that the White and the Negro, are the descendants of one primitive pair. Thus it is shown b}- comparative anatomy tha^. the Negro, from the crown of his woollj^ head, to the sole of his flat foot, differs iu his physical and mental organisms from the White; and that ''just in proportion as he differs from the White, he approx- imates the lower animals,'' DOES LIKE BEGET LfKE? Could that negro child be the child of pure Adamic parents? If the negro is an 9ffspring of Adam and Eve, then it is PQSsi^Je^ Chapter III. The Theory of Evolution Exploded; Man was Created a Man, and did not Develop from an Ape. When we approach the modern Christian with the inquiry, "If the results of comparative anatomy, which indicates that the negfro is an ape, are of no A'alue; and if he is a man — a descendant of Adam — from what branch of the iVdamic family did he de- scend; and how do you account for his structural inferiority to the white, and his approximation to the ape?" he naively replies: "The neg-ro is the son of Ham, and his inferiority to his white brother is the result of a curse which Noah put upon Ham for his disrespectful conduct toward him." This monstrous theory was conceived in, and has been handed down to us from, the dark ag-es of ig-nor- (75) 76 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. ance, superstition and criinc; and because the Church g-avc it to VIS, the devotees of Enlig-htened Christianity accepted it as ''both sound and sacred." But fortu- natel}', this blind acceptance of church theories is rapidly g-iving* place to intellig-ent, systematic investi- gation, which must inevitably lead to the happiest* results. Since the Ilamitic orig^in of the negTo, as ex- plained by the church, is at once opposed to the re- sults of all scientific research, iind to all observation and experience, it is proper, even at this late day, to inquire, Does it harmonize with scripture? We are taug-ht by the Bible that, after the Delugfe, **Noah beg-an to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard: And he drank of the wine and was drunken; and he was uncovered in his tent. And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his brethren without. And Sheni and Japheth took a garment and laid it upon their shoulders, and went backward, and covered tlie naked- ness of their father; and their faces were V>ackward, and they saw not their father's nakedness. And Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his voung-er son had done vmto him. And he said, cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall be unto his brethren. And he said, blessed be the Lord God of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. God shall enlarg-e Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant.'' (Gen. ix. : 20, etc.) MAN, AND THE NHGKO. 77 Thus, the Bible clearly teaches that thoug-h Ham offended Noah, there was no curse put upon Ham in consequence of it. Forced b}" the plain teaching* of the Bible to abandon his original position, the modern Christian hastily seeks shelter for his ''l)rother in black'' in the theory that it was Canaan whom Noah cursed and chang-ed into a negro. Now, let us investig-ate and see what we are called upon to be- lieve, in order to accept this absurd proposition. 1. We must believe in direct opposition to the plain teaching- of the Bible, that Noah had any authority, or any power, to visit such a calamity upon Canaan or anj'one else. 2. We must believe that a just, merciful, loving Ood would approve the drunken desire of Noah to visit so dire a calamity upon Canaan, an unoffending individual; and would consent that it sliould be x)er- petuated in his descendants throughout all time. 3. We must believe that Noah's curse deprived Canaan of the exalted physical and mental characters which distinguish the white from the negro, and gave him the degraded physical and mental characters which approximates the negro to the organisms below; that it changed his complexion from the colorless white to the colorless black; that it changed his long, smooth, silken hair, to the short, coarse, woolly hair of the negro; that it changed each individual hair of h_>> head from the cylindrical to the flat; that it changed the manner in which his hair was inserted 78 h4AN, AND THE NEGRO. into the scalp from the oblique to the ver tidal; that it leng-thened and narrowed his cranium; that it thick- ened his skull and discolored his brain; that it reduced the number and increased the sijje of the convolutions of his brain, thus simplifying- and approximating- it to that of the lower animals; that it leng-thened and broadened his jaw; that it extended his jaws forward at the expense of the symmetr}^ of the face, and back- ward at the expense of the brain cavity; that it thickened his lips, sloped his front teeth, and flattened his nose; that it shortened and thickened his neck; that it rendered his "cla^vicle longer in proportion to the humerus;" that it rendered his "radius perceptibly longer in proportion to the humerus;" that it reduced his muscular system; reduced his chest measurement; that it reduced his lung- capacity; that it wroug-ht other radical chang-es in the viscera, vessels, etc.; that it leng-thened and narrowed his pelvis, and set it more obliquely to the spinal column; that it rendered his "tibia long-er as compared with the femur;" that it reduced the size of his calves, and placed them at a hig-her elevation on the leg-s; that it leng-thened and broadened his heel, and flattened his foot. Having- consented to believe all this absurdity, in order to accept the best explanation which the modern clerg-y has offered us as to the orig-in of the neg-ro, we should be excused for indulg-ing- the hope that our credulity had been sufficienth^ taxed, and that no further draft would be made upon it; but this fond MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 79 hope, however comforting, was but born to be blig-hted; a g-lance at the scriptural narrative reveals the fact that Noah manifested no disposition to visit this dire calamity upon any other individual than Canaan; there was no female cursed and changed into a negress to mate with Canaan, and thus enable him to produce a progeny of negroes. Hence, he had no alternative than to take a wife from among the whites, for he was the father of the Canaanites; the offspring re- sulting from this union w^ould not have been negroes, but half castes—mulattoes. These, upon reaching maturity, w^ould not have taken husbands and wives from among their brothers and sisters, but would have intermarried with the whites; the offspring- resulting from these unions w^ould not have been negroes, but three-quarter white. Thus, throug'h their intermar- riage with the whites, each succeeding generation of the descendants of Canaan would have grown whiter, and their hair straighter, until, in the course of time, it w^ould have been difficult, if not impossible, for the ordinary observer to distinguish them from pure whites; and when Canaan had lived out his days and died, he would have been the last, as the clergy would have us believe he was the first negro, and the presence of the negro in subsequent ages would remain unex- plained. Hence, whether we view this most import- ant subject from a scriptural, or from a scientific standpoint, it at once becomes plain that the negro is not the son of Ham. so M.LY, ./A79 7/ in NEGRO. When Nuah awoke from his wine, and knew what his younger son h^ad done unto him, 'Mie was offended;" and evidentl}' supposing" that it woukl 1)e more hurtful to Ham's feeling's to sa}^ something- offensive to Canaan, tli.-ni it would be to say the same thing" of Ham himself, Noeih said: ''Cursed be Canaan, a ser- vant of servants shall he be unto his brethren." By way of further manifesting- his displeasure toward Ham, and his appreciation of the service his other sons had rendered him, Noah said: "God shall enlarg"e Japheth, and he shall dwell in the tents of Sheni; and Canaan shall be his servant." That this curse was merely the spiteful babble of an old man just "coming" out of his cups," and Avas not sanctioned by God, and had no effect upon Canaan and his descendants is shown by the fact that it was never fulfilled. It is amatterof scriptural record that while the Israelites, who were a branch of the family of Shem, were in bondage to the Kg"yptians, who Vvcre a branch of the family of Ham, the descendants of Canaan, whom Noah cursed, were the masters of one of the finest countries in the world; a country which God described as "a goodly land;" "a laud flow- ing- willi milk and hone}'." Further evidence that Noah's drunken spite toward Ham had no effect upon the relations of Canaan and his descendants to Shem and Japheth and their descendants, is shown bj- the language of Moses in explaining to Israel why God dispossessed the Canaanites of their MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 21 country, and g-ave it to Israel. It was not in fulfill- ment of Noah's curse upon Canaan; neither was it be- cause of the "rig-hteousness*' of Israel, "but for the wickedness of those nations." (Deut. ix.:4.) And when the land of Canaan was g^iven to the Israelites, they were not commanded to enslave the Canaanites, but to "utterl}' destroy them,"' and "save alive nothing* that breatheth." [Deut. xx.:16-l7.] This absurd church theory of the Hamitic origin of the Neg-ro is at once irrational, unscientific and anti-scriptural, and should be repudiated. With the rejection of this ridiculous theory, we have absolutely no explanation of the origin of the Negro which makes any claim to a scriptural basis. On the con- trary, our present social, political and relig"ious vsys- tems, so far as our relations to the Negro are con- cerned, are based solely on the atheistic theor^^ of evolution. When we approach the atheist with the inquiry, From whence came the Neg-ro, and what are his rela- tions to the Whites? he proceeds to inform us "that the most ancient ancestors of man, as of all other or- g-anisms, were living- creatures of the simplest kind imag-inable, organisms without organs, like the still living- monera. The}' consisted of simple, homogene- ous, structureless and formless little lumps of mucous or albuminous matter [plasson], like the still living- protamoeba primiiiva. The form value of these most ancient ancestors of niau was not even equal to that 82 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. of a cell, but merely that of a cytod; for, as iti the case of all monera, the little lump of protoplasm did not as yet possess a cell-kernel. The first of these monera orig-inated in the beg-inning- of the Laurentian period, by spontaneous generation, or archiog^eny, out of so-called 'inorganic combinations,' namely, out of simple combinations of carbon, oxyg-en, hydrogen and nitrog-en/' iHneckel.] xVccording- to Ilaeckel, from this "first ancestral stage" the progenitors of man evolved througdi the hsh and finvl and beast, to reach the "twenty-third ancestreil stage" in the anthropoids, or man-like apes, the g-ibbon, ourang-, chimpanzee and gorilla. De- scribing what he terms the "twenty-fourth .jiicestral stag-e," Mr. Haeckel says: "Althoug-h the preceding- ancestral stage is already so nearly akin to genuine men that we scaicely require to assume an intermediate connecting- stage, still we can look upon the speechless primanal men [alali] as this intermediate link. These ape-like men, or Pithecanthropi, very probably existed toward the end of the tertiary period. They originated out of the man-like apes, or anthropoids., by becoming com- pletely habituated to an uprij^ht walk and 1>v the cor- responding stronger dilTerentiation of 1)otli pairs of legs. The lore hand of the anthropoids became the human hand; their hinder hand became a foot for Vvalking. We may, therefore, (listing*uis1i a special [24th J stage iu the series of our human ancestors, MAN, AND THE NEGRO. S3 namely, speechless man [Alalus], or ape-man [Pithe- canthropus], whose body was indeed formed exactly like that of man in all essential characteristics, but who did not, as yet, possess articulate speech. The orig-in of articulate languag-e, and the higher differ- entiation and perfecting- of the lariiyx connected with it, must.be looked upon as a later and the most im- portant stage in the process in the development of man. It was doubtless this process which, above all others, helped to create the deep chasm between man and animals, and which also first caused the most im- portant prog-ress in the mental activity- and the per- fecting of the brain connected with it." While admitting that geological research, which has discovered some remains of about everything that ever existed on the earth, has failed to discover the slightest vestige of such a creature, Mr. Haeckel pro- ceeds, with his accustomed audacity, to describe it. He says: "We as yet know of no fossil remains of the hy- pothetical primieval man [Protanthropos atavus — Homo primigenius]. But considering the extraor- dinary resemblance between the lowest woolly-haiied men and the highest man-like apes, which still exist at the present day, it requires but a slight stretch of the imagination to conceive an intermediate form con- necting the two, and to see in it an approximate like- ness to the supposed primeval men, or ape-like men. The form of their skull was probably very long, with 84 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. slanting teeth ; their hair woolly ; the color of their skin dark, of a brownish tint ; the hair covering the whole of the body was probably thicker than in any of the still living human species ; their arms comparatively longer and stronger; their legs, on the other hand, knock- kneed, shorter and thinner, with entirely undeveloped calves; their walk but half erect." According to the opinion most generally entertained by the leading advocates of this theory, this purel}^ hy- pothetical creature, speechless, ape-like man, differen- tiated into the Negro with articulate speech. The great bulk of the Negros developed no higher; and thus present a case of ''arrCvSted development;" but at some period in the remote past, a branch of the Negros dif- ferentiated into Malays. The great bulk of the Malays developed no higher ; and thus prCvSent another case of **arrested development;" but in the course of time a branch of the Malays differentiated into Indians. The great bulk of Indians developed no higher; and thus present another case of "arrested development." But in the course of time a branch of the Indians differentiated into Mongolians. The great bulk of the Mongolians developed no higher: and thus present another case of "arrested development." But in the course of time a branch of the Mongolians differentiated into Caucasians (Whites.) Thus, according to this theory, the colorless black, in violation of that well established principle that like produces like, emerged through the various shades of MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 85 colors, brown, red, and 3^ellow, ta emerge — again color- less — but white. The advocates of this theory would have us believe that these ' 'differentiations" w^ere accom- plished with the aids of "natural selection," "the sur- vival of the fittest," etc. Mr. Haeckel says: ''A great many reasons might be advanced in favor of the opinion that the primaeval men of the Lissotrichous species (the primary forms of straight -haired men) were derived from South Asiatic anthropoids, whereas the primaeval men of the Ulotrich- ous species (as the primary forms of the four wooly- haired tribes) were derived from Central African man- like apes.'' Thus, according to this atheistic theory, man is not a distinct creation in the image of God, but is merely a highly developed species of ape — the "human species" — and this human species of ape is divisable into five or more "races of men," dependent upon the whim of the naturalist who makes the classification. That of Bla- menbach, who divides the "human species" of ape into five "races of men," is universally accepted and taught by enlightened Christians, perhaps in deference to the scriptural injunction: "Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old he will not de- part from it.'' The classification of other naturalists var>^ from that of Blumenbach on up to that of Haeckel, who divides the "human species'' into thirty-six "races of men." S6 MAIW AXD THE KEGRO, The atheistic theory of man's descent from the ape, which seeks to establish a blood relationship between man and the lowest orders of animal life, though no more anti- scriptural, is really as irrational, and as unscientific as that of the church, that the Negro is the son of Ham. However, a comparison of its teachings with those of the Bible enables us to realize that it was not through the scriptural teaching that man is a distinct creation in the image of God, that the Negro obtained his present un- natural position in the family of man : but through the pernicious influence of this atheistic tlieoiy, that man is merely a highly developed "species'' of ape — the "human species" — of which the Negro is the lowest race lience, our social, political, and religious rela- tions with the Negro are not based upon scripture, but upon atheism. But modern Christians should pause to consider that in their vain, criminal attempt to establish a blood relationship between the flesh of man and that of the ape, they have, to all intents and purposes, repu- diated the declaration of Paul, that the flesh of man is a different kind of fiesh from that of the beast, and have accepted this atheist theory, that all flesh is akin ; that they have repudiated the scriptural teaching that man is a distinct creation, in the image of God, to accept this atheistic theory that man is a highly developed species of ape — the "human species'' — of which the White is the highest, and the Negro the lowest race, vvith the browns, reds and yellows as intermediate races, in dif- erent stages of development. They should bear in mind MAN. AND THE NEGRO, SJ that in yielding to the degrading influence of this atheis- tic theon', they practically renounced their kinship with God to claim kin with the ape. All scientific investigation of the sul)ject proves the Negro to be an ape ; and that lie sinipl}^ stands at the head of the ape famil3^ as the lion stands at the head of the cat family. When Gad's plan of creation, and the drift of Bible histor>^ are properlj^ understood, it will be found that the teachings of scripture upon this, as upon every other subject, harmonize with those of science- This being true, it follows that the Negro is the only anthropoid, or man-like ape; and that the gibbon, ourang, chimpanzee and gorilla are merely negro -like apes. Hence, to recognize the Negro as a "man and a brother,'' the\^ were compelled to declare man an ape. Thus the modern Christian, like the atheist, takes man, whom God created "in his own image," and takes the Negro, whom God made "after his kind" — the ape kind —and places them in the same family, as different "races'' of one ''species" of animal. The only differ- ence between them is, that the atheist perpetuates this enormity in supreme contempt of God's plan of creation, and in open defiance of his law, while the modern Chris- tian commits tliis infamous crime in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. While there are a few who claim to be "Christian evolutionists, " whatever that may mean, w^e are happy to state, in simple justice to them, tliat the great majority of the modern Christian priesthood who teach this in- 88 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, famous theory, which degrades man to the level of the brute, do so in ignorance of its infidelity, and of its de- structive results, both in time and eternit}^. Thus, the history of the ancient Jewish church and its priesthood repeats itself in that of the modern Chris- tian church and its priesthood, as shown by the follow- ing: God looked down from heaven upon the children of men, to see if there were 2i\\y that did understand, that did seek God. Kverj^one of them is gone back ; they are altogether become filthy; there is none that doethgood, no, not one." T^s. liii. :2-3.] "Mj^ people hath been lost sheep ; their shepherds have caused them to astray; they have turned them away on the moun- tains; they have gone from mountain to hill; they have forgotten their resting place." [Jer. l.:6] "Many pastors have destroyed my vineyard ; they have trodden my portion under foot; they have made my pleasant' por- tion a desolate wilderness. The whole land is made desolate because no man laj^eth it to heart." [Jer. xii.:10-ll.] "Woe be unto the pastors that destroy the sheep of my pasture! saith the Lord." [Jer. xxiii. :1.) The scriptures abound with assurances that there will come a time v*^hen all men shall "w^orship God in the beauty of holiness.'' But fully appreciating the strength of man's blind attachment to the Negro, in dis- regard of the most positive evidence of his inferiorit}^ we refrain from speculating upon the course which will be pursued by the modern Christian priesthood when MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 89 brought face to face with the fact that they must either absoluteij' renounce God, and the Bible, and all preten- tions to religious worship, or utterl}'- repudiate this athe- istic theorvi that man is a species, divivSible into races, together with their present social, political and religious relations with the Negro and his offspring b3' man- Let us bear in mind that men ma}' legitimate!}^ divide themselves into as man}^ tribes, nations, or em- pires, as suits their pleasure, their convenience, or their interest; but that God alone can make a species or a race. And that in creating man God made first the male; and it is significant, that with the whole earth out of which to make the female, without drawing upon the male, he made woman out of man. Thus, Adam truth- fully said of her, "This is now bone of ni}' bones, and flesh of my flesh." This single pair were of one flesh, or, as Paul terms it, were one kind of flesh ; a kind of flesh distinct from that of the fish, or fowl, or beast. To twist the narrative of Creation into any sem- blance of harmony with The Theory of Descent, we must suppose that, when Adam was the sole representa- tive of man on tlie earth, lie, a single individual, was divisible into "species and races. ' ' The whole proposition is absurd. No amount of reasoning can ever narmonize the scriptural teaching of Divine Creation vrith this atheistic theory of Natural Development. They are op- posites. Hence, when the scriptural teaching of Divuie Creation is accepted in its entirety, and the atheistic Theory of Development, which first introduced the 90 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Negro into the family of man, and which keeps him there, as one of the lower "races of men," is repudi- ated, the Negro will make his exit from the Adamic family with it, and will resume his proper position with the apes. The Bible plainly teaches that man was created a single pair, "in the image of God. ' ' And we feel assured that a careful consideration of this subject must lead any rational mind to decide that the White, with his exalted physical and mental characters, and the Negro with his ape-like physical and mental characters, are not the progen}^ of one primitive pair. This is admitted by the great thinkers of the earth. Mr. Haeckel says: /'The excellent paleontologist Quenstedt is right in maintaining that, "if Negroes and Caucasians were snails, zoologists w^ould universally agree that the}- represented two very distinct species, which could never have originated from one pair by gradual divergence. — tlistoiy of Creaiioiu This being true, it follows that, if the While was created "in the image of God,'' then the Negro was made after some other model. And a glance at the Negro indicates the model ; his very appearance suggests the ape. Mr. Darwin says, "The resemblance to a Negro in miniature of Pithecia satanus with his jet-black skin, his white rolling eyeballs and his hair parted on the top of the head, is almost ludicrous." Prof. Wyman says: "It cannot be denied, however wide the separation, that the Negro andourangdo afford the points where man and brute, when the tolality of MAN, AND THE NEGfiO, 91 their organizations is considered, most nearly approach each other." Mr. Haeckel quotes "a great English traveler, who lived a considerable time on the west coast of Africa," as saying : "I consider the Negro as a lower species of man, and cannot make up my mind to look upon him as a man and a brother, for the gorilla would then also have to be admitted into the family." Prof. Winchell says: "The inferiority of the Negro is fundamentally structural. I have enumerated the points in his anatomy in which he diverges from the White race, and have indicated that, in all these particu- lars, he approximates the organisms below. It follows that what the Negro is structurally, at the present time, is the best he has ever been. It follows that he has not descended from Adam." (Preademiles.) When we turn upon the statement of this distinguished American scientist the light of Paul's declaration, that "there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds, we find that the Negro, who "has not descended from Adam," and is consequently not of the "flesh of men," belongs to one of the other three "kinds of flesh," and that being a land animal — an ape — he belongs to the "flesh of beasts." vSuch is the striking contrast between the Negro and the White, that even the poet has made it his theme. A distinguislied American poet has very forcibh" said: 92 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. *'When I am told the human racd Are all from Adam seed, That kinky-headed coons and I, Are from one common breed ; I think that apes and darned baboons, Must be my brothers too ; But then I don't believe the tale, I cant! O, can you?"* DoziKR. The Bible teaches us that when the fish, and fowl, and beast, w^ere all made after his kind, *'The I^ord God said, I^et us make man in our own image, after our like- ness ; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over creeping things that creepeth upon the earth. Thus the Bible teaches that the work for which iiuui was dcvsigned was a mental vvork. We are also taught that in the execution of Divine proposition to 'make man,' God created man in His own image, in tlie image of God created He them, and (Uod 1 blessed them, and God said unto them. Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and sub- due it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over everj' living thing tliat r.ioveth upon tlie earth." (Gen. 1.) To ''sul)dne" tlie earth means to develop its re- sources; for, just in .proportion as rcan subdues the earth from its v/iid, uiicultivated state he necessarily de- velops it into a cultivated state. Hence the biljlical 'Wote- -I)r. Dozier will knidl^- excuse the changes made \n the piinciualion of our qnotatiy I/abbock, vchile admitting- that monkeys use stones to crack nuts, says: "Between these rudiments of intellectual perception and the next step [that of fashioning an instrument for a particular purpose] there is a gulf in which lies the whole immeasurable distance between man and brutes." [Origin of civilization.] This modern idea that the ability to fashion an "instrument for a par- ticular purpose" is peculiar to man, is one of the re- sults of placing man and the ape in the same family. This mass of scriptural and scientific evidence clearly indicates that the pure-blooded White is the creature whom God designed should perform the men- tal labor necessary to subdue the earth; and that the Negro is the creature whom God designed to perform the manual labor. The Negro, in common with the rest of the animals, made his appearance upon the earth j^rior to the creation of man. With the Negro and the animals of draught, burthen and food, it was possible for man to develop all the resources of the earth and not personally till the ground. With the Negro as a servant, it would have been easy for man to have accomplished this great task with only such physical labor as is inseparable from mental labor. Chapter IV. Convincing Biblical and Scientific Evi* dence that tlie Negro is not of the Human Family. The followitiof measurements of brain weis'hts collected by Sanford B. Hunt, in the Federal army during- the late war in the United States, demonstrates that the White blood is the lever which elevates; and that the Negro blood is the lever which lowers the mental grade of individuals, tri])es, nations, conti- nents, and the world at largfc Weig-ht of brain Grammes. ^' 24 Whites 1424 25 Three parts white 1390 47 Half-white, or mulattoes 1334 51 One-quarter white 1319 95 One-eig-hth white 1308 22 A sixteenth white 1280 141 Pure negroes 1331" [Topinard's Anthropology y p. 312.] (105) 106 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. These estimates are accepted bj the scientiiic world, are quoted bj^Topinard, Quatrefag-es, Winch ell, and others. Thoug-h these measurements are fair to the Neg"ro, and to the classes of mixed bloods to which they refer, they are obviously unfair to the pure Whites, for the following- reasons: (1) They were evidently taken from the common soldiers of the Fed- eral army; the hig-her g-rades of army officers and the more intellig-ent classes in the various peaceful voca- tions in the United States were not represented. Had they been, the average brain weight of the Whites would have been raised to the average of the Noa- cliites — 1500 grammes. (2) More or less of the sol- diers whom Dr. Hunt recogniised as pure whites may have had some admixture of negro blood; and this, as shown by his table, would have reduced the brain weight of such individuals; and would, of course, have reduced the average to this extent. Hence, in the present amalgamated condition of the world, it is evi- dent that it would be unjust to take the average of brain weights in almost any assemblage of individuals, or in any nation, or continent, as representing that of the x>ure whites. Topinard, in discussing Hunt's measurements, says, ' 'This would lead us to believe that the mixed breeds assimilate the bad more readily than the good." {Ibidy p. 312.) These measurements are invaluable in that they prove that man is a distinct creation. They also MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 107 demonstrate that the whites and the negroes are not different races of the same species. One of the g^reat difficulties which breeders experience in their attempt to produce new varieties ])y crossing- is the strong- disposition of the offspring- to resort to one or the other of its parent stocks. But not so with the off- spring" of whites and neg-roes. As has been shown, the offspring- of man and the neg-ro, if bred continu- ously to pure whites for ag-es, could never become pure white; you could never ]>reed the ape out, nor breed the spiritual creation in. Hence, they would remain simply mixed bloods, without reference to what their physical and mental characters mlg-ht be. These measurements demonstrate that if the offspring" of whites and negroes were lired continuously to ne- groes for ages they would never become negroes, but would remain mixed bloods. If whites and negroes were different races of the same species, their immediate offspring should take a position, in point of brain weight, midway between the two; thus presenting a brain w^eight of at least 1377^2 grammes. But, instead of this, the half- whites present an average of 1334 grammes, only three grammes in excess of the Negro, and 90 grammes less than that of the common white soldier of the Federal army. Then mate the half- w^hite with pure negroes and you would reduce the white blood from one-half to one-quarter, and increase the negro blood from one-half to three-quarters; and the off- 108 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. spring- presents a brain weig-ht of 1319 grammes, which is 12 g^rammes less than that of the pure neg"ro. Then mate the one-quarter white with pure neg-roes and you reduce the white blood in their offspring- from one-quarter to one-eig-hth, and increase the negro blood from three-quarters to seven-eig-hths; and the offspring- presents a brain weight of 1308 grammes, which is 23 grammes less than that of the pure negro. Then mate the one-eighth white with pure negroes, and you reduce the white blood in the offspring from one-eighth to one-sixteenth, and increase the negro blood from seven-eighths to fifteen-sixteenths, and the offspring presents a brain weight of only 1280 grammes, which is 51 grammes less than that of the pure negro. ' This is as far as Dr. Hunt's measurements extended. But, it is evident that, with this rapid fall of brain weight in each succeeding generation , if the process were continued, their offspring would finally descend in point of brain weight to the level of the gorilla, whose brain weight is placed by Huxley at 600 grammes. When we compare the brain weight of whites with that of ''the Hottentot, 974," and with that of ''the Aus- tralian, 907 grammes," we find that, as Winchell sa^'s, "The significance of these comparisons appears when we learn that Broca, the most eminent of French anthro- pologists, states that when the European brain falls be- low 978 grammes [mean of males and females] , the result is idiocy. In this opinion Thurman coincides." MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 109 [Preademiles, pp. 249. 259j Dr. Schaaffhaiisen, quoted by Huxley, says the brain weight of "the diminutive Hindoos falls to as little as 27 ounces.*' iMan's Place in Nature, p. 160. J These diminutive brain weights, carrying with them a corresponding dimunition of intelligence, would, in a civilized community, place the individuals in the lowest grades of society ; at the same time they might never suffer for the want of food. Hence, their ])h^^sical de- velopment might not be impaired. But, if driven into the forest and compelled to battle with adverse condi- tions, of climate, etc., they would suffer long periods of w^ant, and this repeated at frequent intervals for many centuries would necessarily impair their physical devel- opment; and finally their physical organisms would be- come as degraded as their mental. Thus, it becomes evident that the mixed bloods in whom the blood of the Negro largel}^ predominates over that of the White, are more degraded and ape -like in their ph5^sical and mental organisms; and consequently are more depraved in their modes of life, customs, habits, language, manners, gestures, etc., than the pure Negro. This alone can ex- plain the following facts cited by Winchell, who says: "The measurements already given show the Aus- tralians to possess an organism quite inferior to that of the Negro. In intelligence he is said to be so low as to be unable to count over four or five. Of the Aetas of tlie Philli])pines, De la Geronniere says that thej- gave him the impression of being a great tribe of monkeys; 110 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. their voices recalled the short cry of these animals, and their movements strengthened the analog3^ Buchner says that the toes of these savages, who live partly in grottoes, partly on trees, are 'very mobile,' and more separated than ours, especially the great toe. They use them in maintaining themselves on branches and cords, as with fingers. According to Buchner, 'the language of the savages of Borneo is rather a kind of warb- ling, or croaking, than a trul}^ human mode of ex- pression.' 'The Veddahs of Ceylon,' says vSir Kmerson Tennant, 'communicate among themselves almost entir- ely by means of signs, grimaces, gutteral sounds, resem- bling very little true words, or true language.' 'The Dokes of Abyssinia,' according to Krapt, 'are human pigmies ; they are not more than four feet high ; their skin is of an olive brown. Wanderers in the w^oods, they live like animals, without habitations, without sacred trees, etc. They go naked, nourishing themselves by roots, fruit, mice, serpents, ants, honey; thej^ climb trees like monkeys. Without chief, without law, with- out arms, without marriage, they have no family, and mate by chance like animals ; the}^ also multipl}- rapidly. The mother after a short lactation, abandons her child to itself. They neither hunt nor cultivate, nor sow, and have never known the use of fire. Thej- have thick lips, a flattened nose, little e3^es, long hair, hands and feet w^tli great nails, with which Xh^y dig the soil.' Some of the American tribes remain at the lowest point of degrada- tion. This is the case with the Fucgians, and the Bote- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Ill cudos of Brazil have often been cited. Of the latter lyallimand says, 'I am sadl}^ convinced that they are monkeys with two hands.' " [PreademifeSy pp. 267, 268.] The following is Ciivier's description of the '* Hot- tentot Venus," a female Bojesman, *Svho died in Paris on the 29th of December, 1815:" ''She had away of pouting her lips exactty like that we have observed in the Orang-Outang. Her movements had something abrupt and fantastical about them, reminding one of those of the ape. Her lips were monstrously large ; her ear was like that of man}^ apes, being small, the tragus weak and the external border almost obliterated behind- These are animal characters. Again, I have never seen a human head more like an ape than that of this woman. ' ' Referring to the "fatty proturberances" of the haunches, he sa^'s : ' 'They offer a striking resemblance to those which exivSts in the females of the mandritts, the papions, etc., and which assume, at certain epochs of their life, an enlargement truly monstrous.'' "in the dissection of a Bojesman by M. L. Testut [Acad., des vSci., Paris, 7 July, 1884; Science, xxx., 284] a muscular system in a more or less rudimentary state was revealed — such as exists in a normal condition, in various anthropoid and other apes, and in some in- stances even in the mammals of other orders." [Pre- ade mites.'] These facts taken in connection with Hunt's measurement of brain weights, showing the effects 112 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. of amalgamation on cerebral development, fully co*.^ firm the following- conclusions. (1) When whites and negroes are mated the brain weight of their offspring is neither that of the \vhite nor that of the negro; the same is true of his physical characters, he is neither white nor black, but colored. You would thus produce a new, so-called race of men, with an average brain weight of 1,334 grammes. Let us suppose that there are 1,500 of these half-breeds, and that 500 of them find mates among themselves; their offspring would be half-breeds with a brain weight of 1,334 grammes. Then suppose that we mate another 500 of the half-breeds wnth pure whites, this off- sprihg would be three-quarter white; and would present a brain weight of 1,390 grammes. You would thus produce ne, was remarked by Cuvior, which approximates tJie Bush- men to ruotikeys, dogs and other carnivores, as well MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 115 as to the wild boar, chevrotian and the daman. It was the non-ossification of the wall separating" the anterior cubital fossa from the posterior fossa of the humerus — something- which will be intellig"ible to per- sons versed in anatomy." {Preadimites.) Such also is '*tablier" and "steatopyg^ia." Of these Topinard sa^^s, "Plitherto we have met with many opposite characters in the human groups, but few so remark- able as these. We have seen the marked difference between woolly and straight hair, betw^een the prog- nathous and the orthognathous, the jet black of the Yoloff and the pale complexion of the Scandinavian, between the ultra-dolichocephalic Esquimau or New Caledonian and the ultra-brachycepalic Mongolian. But the line of separation betw^een the European and the Bosjesman as regards these tw^o characters is, in a morphological point of view, still wider, as much so as between each of the anthropoid apes, or between the dog and the v/olf, the goat and the sheep." { Anthropology s p. 363.) The Bushman, or Bosjesman, and the Hottentots are classed by Win- chell as one race. Topinard describes the Hottentots as **an agglomeration of ancient races.'' These, and other animal characters in the mixed breeds, have been seized upon by the advocates of the Theory of Development as proof that man developed from a lower form ; and that these animal characters were transmitted from his ''animal ancestors." The very re- verse is true. The creatures possessing these characters 116 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. are the result of amalgamation between two different kinds of flesh ; the flesh of men and the flesh of beasts. The mere fact that these creatures frequently develop characters which are common to the *' flesh of beasts," should occasion no surprise when viewed in the light of Paul's declaration as to the different kinds of flesh. The wonder is that they don't develop a tail ; and if one or more individuals of these so-called "lower races of men" is found either alive or in a fossil state, with such an appendage, an intelligent examination of his anatomy will reveal the evidences of crossing. Let us bear in mind that the Negro, the lower apes and the quadru- peds, all belong to *' one kind of flesh," the * 'flesh of beasts." Hence it should rather be surprising, than otherwise, if the Negro did not transmit to the offspring resulting from his unnatural union with man, characters which are not only common to the lower apes, but even those which are common to quadrupeds. The mixed - bloods are* 'an unnatural production," and being alto- gether ' 'out of the common order of nature,'' ' they are sim- ply monstrosities, no odds what their social, political, or religious standing may be. Even the atheist, who denies the existence of a God and the inspiration of the scrip - tures, will insist that amalgamation between Whites and Negroes is "a violation of the natural law." For thou- sands of years these base-born creatures have been found in every position in life, from the jungle to the throne. In thousands of cases they live sumptuously, and are arrayed in ''purple and fine linen," and be- MAN, AND THE MBGRO, 117 decked with jewels and all the paraphenalia of their in- herited wealth and rank. In other cases, like that of many of our newly acquired "brothers and sisters of the Phillipines," they obtain a bare subsistence from the spontaneous products of the earth, and the proceeds of the chase, and are simply attired **in atmosphere and smiles." For further evidence of the frequent appearance of '^animal characters" in the so-called "lower races of men," see the works of Cuvier, Winchell, Darwin, Huxlej, Haeckel, etc. The existence of a tool-makingf animal should oc- casion us no surprise, when we consider the fact that lower g-rades of ape than the Negro handle tools for a particular purpose. Mr. Darwin says, **It has often been said that no animal uses any tool, but the chimpanzee in a state of nature cracks a native fruit, somewhat like a walnut, with a stone. Reng-er easily taug-ht an American monkey thus to break open hard palmnuts, and afterward of its own accord it used stones to open other kinds of nuts, as well as boxes. It thus also removed the soft rind of fruit that had a disagreeable flavor. Another monkey was taug-ht to open the lid of a large box with a stick, and afterward it used the stick as a lever to move heavy bodies; and F Ikivo myself seen a young- ourang" put a stick into a crevice, slip his hand to the other end, and use it in the ])n>per manner as a lever. * ''• '^ In these sev(M-:d rases, st«)nes and sticks were 118 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. employed as implements; but they are likewise used as weapons. Brehm states, on the authority of the well-known traveler, Schimper, that in Abyssinia when the baboons belong-ing- to one species (C. gelada) descend in troops from the mountains to plunder the fields they sometimes encounter troops of another species (C. hamadoyas), and then a fig-ht ensues. The Geledas roll down g-reat stones, which the Hamado3^as try to avoid, and then both species, making- a great uproar, rush furiously ag-ainst each other. Brehm, when accompanying- the Duke of Coburg--Gotha, aided in an attack with firearms on a troop of baboons in the pass of Mensa in Abyssinia. The baboons in re- turn rolled so many stones down the mountains, some as large as a man's head, that the attackers had to beat a hasty retreat, and the pass was actualh^ closed for a time ag-ainst the caravan. It deserves notice that these baboons thus acted in concert." {Descent of Man, pp. 91, 92.) Mr. Hartman says, "Bufi'on's Chimpanze offered people his arm, walked with them in orderly manner, sat down to table like a man, opened his napkin and wiped his lips with it, made use of his spoon and fork, poured out wine and clinked g-lasses, fetched a cup and saucer and put in sugar, i)oured out tea, let it g-et cold before drinking- it. ^^' -'' ''• He ate all the ordi- nary food of men, but preferred fruit. * * * He was friendly with every one, coming close to them, and taking- pleasure in their caresses. He took such A'/./zV, AhiD THE NEGRO. li9 a fancy to one lady, that when other people approached her he seized a stick and beg-an flourishing- it about, until Buifon intimated his displeasure at such con- duct." ( All fhropoid Apes. p. 267.) According- to the account of Captain Grandpre, a female chimpanzee on board his vessel would heat the oven, taking care that no coals fell out, and care- fullj watching- until it was of the right heat, of which she would inform the baker. She fulfilled all the duties of a sailor, such as drawing* up the anchor, furling- and making- fast the sails. She patiently endured maltreatment by a brutal mate, stretching- out her hands imploringiy toward off the blows. But after this she refused all food, and died in live days of grief and hunger." {Ibidy p. 268.) Mr. Darwin says. "Monkeys seize thin branches or ropes, with the thumb on one side and the tingfers and palm on the other, in the same manner as we do. * * * They seize nuts, insects, or other small objects with the thumb in opposition to the fing-ers. * *■ -Nronkeys o]>en mussel shells with two thumbs. * '^'' With their fing-ers they pull out thorns and burrs, and himt for each other's parasites. They roll down stones, or throw them at their enemies; nevertheless, they are clumsy in these various actions, and, as I have myself seen, are quite unable to throw a stone with precision." Ubid^ pp. 56, 57.) "A male chimpanzee, which was kept in the Ber- lin Aquarium in 1876 * * '•' was on particularly 120 S4^N, AND THE NEGRO. friendly terms with Dr. Hermes' two-jear-old-boy. When the child entered the room, the chimpanzee ran to meet him, embraced and kissed him, seized his hands and drew him to the sofa, that the}' might play tog-ether. The child was often rough with his play- fellow, pulling him by the mouth, pinching his ears, or lying on him, yet the chimpanzee was never known to lose his temper. He behaved very differently to boys from six to twelve years old. When a number of school- boys visited the office, he ran towards them, went from one to the other, shook one of them, bit the leg of another, seized the jacket of a third with the right hand, jumped up, and with the left gave him a sound box on the ear; in short he played the wildest pranks. * >^ =:= Que day when Hermes gave his nine-year-old son a slight rap on the head, on account of some miscalculation in his arithmetic, the chimpanzee, who was also sitting at the table, gaA^e the boy a smart box on the ear. '• ^' * When he saw that Hermes was writing, he often seized a pen, dipped it in the inkstand, and scrawled upon the paper. He displayed a special talent for cleaning the window-panes of the aquarium. It was amusing to see him squeezing up the cloth, moistening the pane with his lips, and then rubbing it hard, passing quickly from one place to another. ■' (Anthropoid Apes, pp. 270, 271.) "An ourang brought l)y Montgomery to Calcutta in 1827 * '■' "^ tried to scour his tin vessel with a cloth, throwing one end over his shoulder. MylA', .LVD THE XHGRO, 121 as he had seen the servants of the house do.'' ilbid^ p. 279.;) Mr. Hartmaii says, "Mafuca was a remarkable creature, not only in her external habits, but in her disposition. At one moment she would sit still vrith a brooding* air, only occasionally dartino- a mischievous, flashing- glance at the spectators, at another she took pleasure in feats of streng-th, or she seemed to roam to and fro in her spacious enclosure like an angTy beast of prey. She would insert the index fmg-er of her rig-ht hand in the opening" of a vessel that Aveig-hed thirty pounds, climb up the pole with it, and let it fall with a crash and clatter from a height of six feet. * * -^ She hardly obeyed any one except Mr. Schopi, the director of the Dresden Zoolog^ical (rar- dens, and when in a g"ood humor she would sit on his knee and put her muscular arms around his neck with a caressing: f^esture. In spite of this, Schopf v/iis never secure from Mafuca's rog^uish tricks, since her g-ood humor w^as of short duration. She was rather fond of the keeper, but not always obedient to him. * * * Mafuca was able to use a spoon, althoug-h somewhat awkwardly, and she could pour from larg-er vessels into smaller ones without spilling- the liquor. She took tea and cocoa in the morning- and evening-, and a mixed diet betw^een whiles, such as fruit, svreet- meats, red wine and w^arter, and sug-ar. * * * If she was left alone for any time, she tried to open the lock of her cag-e without having- the key, and she 122 h4AhJ, AND THE NEGRO. once succeeded in doing so. On that occasion she stole the key, which was hang-ing" on the wall, hid it in her axilla, and crept quietly back to the cag-e. With the key she easily -opened the lock, and she also knew how to use a gimlet. She would draw off her keeper's boots, scramble up to some place out of reach with them and throw them at his head when he asked lor them. She could wring- out a wet cloth and blow her nose with a^handerkerchief. * * * Just before her death from consumption, she put her arms around Schopf 's neck when he came to visit her, looked at him placidly, kissed him three times, stretched out her hand to him and died. The last moments of anthro- poids have their trag-ic side!" (fbid, pp. 271, 72, 73.) Mr. Darwin says, "Sir Andrew Smith, a zoologist whose scrupulous accuracy was known to many per- sons, told me the following story, of which he himself was an eye-witness: At the Cape of Good Hope an of- ficer had often plagued a certain baboon, and the ani- mal, seeing him approach on Sunday for parade, poured water into a hole and hastih^ made some thick mud which he skillfully dashed over the officer as he passed by, to the amusement of many bystanders. For a long time afterward the baboon rejoiced and triumphed whenever he saw his victim." (/bid, p. 78.) Mr. Darwin says, '*Mr. Wallace on three occa- sions saw female ourangs, accompanied by their MAN. AhJD THE NEGRO. 125 young", breaking" off branches and the great, spicev fruit of the Durian tree with every appearance of rage, causing- such a shower of missiles as effectually kept us from approaching- too near the tree.'' As I have repeatedly seen, a chimpanzee will throw any object at hand at a person who offends him; and the before-mentioned baboon at the Cape of Good Hope prepared mud for the purpose. In the zoolog-ical gar- dens a monkey, which had weak teeth, used to break open nuts with a stone; and I was assured by the keei)ers that after using- the stone he hid it in the straw and would not let any other monkey touch it." Vbid. p. 92.) Mr. Topinard says: ' 'Many species of monkeys, like Man, select a chief, who directs their o[>crations and to whom the}- submit. The howlers, or m3xites, belonging to the Cebin family, hold meetings in which one of them speaks for hours at a time in the midst of a general silence, succeeded by great excitement, which ceases as soon as the speaker gives the word of command. Other monkeys combine tog-ether to plan an excursion; divided into detachments, some plunder and tear up roots, others make a chain for the purpose of carrying them from hand to hand; others are placed as sentinels to keep watch. In unexpected danger, the sentinel gives the alarm and all decamp. It has been remarked that if the troop is surprised, owing to the fault of the sentinel, there is a grand hub-bub in the neighboring forest during the night, and on the 124 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. morrow the body of one of ttie plunderers is found, t« all appearance having been put to death by his com- panions.'' {Anthropology y p. 151.) These, and many other proofs which mig-lit be adduced, enable us to see how closely the lower apes approach the Negro, in their ability to handle tools. Yet we must admit that, the lower apes, and even the so-called anthropoids, are unfit for general domestic purposes. They could never handle domestic animals, vv'ork metals, level forests, break the soil, plant, culti- vate, and harvest crops, and erect mechanical struc- tures; in short perform the multitudinous duties of servants. Besides, no one of the so-called anthropoids, can be said to be "most absolutely like man. The (lorilla approaches nearest to Man in the structure of the hand and foot, the Chimpanzee in important structural details in the skull, the^Ourangin the devel- opment of the brain, and the Gibbon in that of the thorax." (Haeckel, The Evolution of Man, p. 181.) Darsvin says, "One call hardly doubt that a man- like animal who possessed a hand and arm sufficiently [)erfoct to til row a stone with precision or to form a flint into a rude tool could, with sufficient practice, as far as mechanical skill alone is concerned, make al- most anything which a civilized man can make." (//;/V/, p. 56.) 'I 'he force of Mr. Darwin's reasoning* upon this subject is plain. It is easy to see that an animal who could realize his need of a weapon and was pos- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 125 sessed of mechanical skill sufficient to enable liiiii to fashion for himself a rudely-chipped weapon of stone, which he could handle with precision, could, if prop- erly trained, make and handle any implement that a man could make and handle. Add to this the fact that the Negro is the highest grade of ape and that the disposition of this family of animals to imitate the actions of man are more highly developed in the Ne- gro than in any other ape, and his ability to discharge all the duties of servant, for which God designed him is fully explained, Desor, quoted by Darwin, "has remarked that no animal voluntarily imitates an action performed b}' man, until, in the ascending scale, we come to monkeys, which are known to be ridiculous mockers." (Ibidy p. 82.) The great intellectual qualities which the men of this and preceeding ages have displayed, are the result of inheritance from Adam, upon whom they were a Divine bestowal. Hence, they are transmittible. The low order of the Negro's mentality — liis lack of inventive skill — is demonstrated by his meager accom- plishments in his undomesticated state, which, as has been shown, are confined to the fashioning of ;i few rude weapons of stone; while the greater achieve- ments of the domesticated Negro are due solely to tlie influence of man. Hence, if from any cause he is re- lieved of this influence and is thrown upon his own resources in the forest, he soon relapses into savagery and descends to the use of stones for weaxxms. 126 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Amotig" the older naturalists the opiuiou prevailed that the apes were quadrumaua,or four-handed animals. But this delusion has long- since been dispelled. There is no four-handed animal. But for the existence of the lower apes we, at this hitc day, would have no alternative than to decide that the Negro is the sole representative of his species or that he i^s a man. But with this family, shading" up from tlie Lemur to the Neg-ro, we are enabled, with the aids of Scripture and the sciences, to deter- mine that the Neg-ro is a member of it. Thus this interesting- family of animals, thoug*li unlit for g-eneral domestic purposes, are invaluable to man in that they enable him to determine the NegTo's proper position in the universe — that he is simply an ape. But, says the Enlightened Christian, the Negro possesses the moral faculty. Is not this the most posi- tive evidence that he is a man — that he has a soul? Not the least evidence! In discussing this question it is es- sential, that we bear in mind that there were just three Creations — Matter, Mind and Soul, and that these made their appearance in the Universe in the order stated. When we accept the teachings of the Bible, we must admit that everything belongs to, and is a part of one or the other of these three creations and necessarily made its appearance in the material universe simultaneously with the Creation of which it is a part. Hence, the question is, which of these three creations is the moral faculty a part of? MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 127 Evidently it is not a part of matter, since it does not exist in the plant. Hence, it belongs either to the mind creation, or to the spiritual creation. If it is a part of the latter creation it is peculiar to man. If it is a part of the former creation it is common to man and the animals. It is this faculty — the moral faculty — which enables man to distinguish between right and wrong ; and that it is right to obey, and wrong to disobey God. But for the existence of this faculty in man, he could not in justice, be held responsible to God for his acts This leads us to realize that it is the moral facult}" in the animals which makes it possible for man to teach them that it is right to obey, and wrong to disobey their master. But for their possession of this faculty the animals would be un- fit for domestic purposes. Hence, inasmuch as the moral facultj^ does not exist in the plant, in which the matter creation is alone represented, and inasmuch as it is not peculiar to man, in whom the soul creation is alone represented, we have no alternative than to decide that it is a part of the mind creation. Further evidence of this is found in the fact that this faculty, like an\' ph^'- sical or mental character, is subject to accident or divSease. If from accident or from disease, the mitid creation of man, or woman is impaired, the moral faculty is corresponding!}" impaired. If, as in the case of an insane person, the mind is so impaired as to temporarily, or perniMiieiilly, destroy the reasoning faculty, the moral faculty is temporarily or permanently destroyed as the case mav be. The soul creation of the individual cannot be 128 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. impaired, and the matter creation as presented in the physical structure may not be impaired bj^ its combina- tion with mind that has been injured or become diseased. Tlie individual may live long after his reasoninc^ faculties have been destroyed.- Ihit the very moment he ceases to be a rational beini>-, he ceases to be a moral being. Tlien, if his mind is restored his moral facult}' is re- slorevl. The same argument liolds good with the ani- mals. The moral, like any faculty of the mind, maybe cuitivated and developed, or it may be n.eglected and (hvarfed. This can be demonstrated by comparing the cultivated with the uncultivated man ; the domesticated with the undomesticated Negro; or our domesticated quadrupeds with the same class of animals in their un- domesticated state. When the world of mankind is freed from the thralldom of atheism, and its great intel- lects are turned upon the r^Iosaic Record, and the char- acters peculiar to each of the three Creations are already ascertained (as they will be), our ]:>resent opinions as to tlie characters ])eculiar to ir.aii will be very materially modified- Under tlie influence of The Theor>^ of Nat- ural Development, the Negro has been taken into the family of man; the result is, tliat we have been led to believe th.at mind, with its intellectual and moral facul- ties, articulate speech, the erect posture, a well devel- oped hand and foot, the ability to fashion and handle implements, are characters pecidiar to man. This is a sad mistake. It will yet be aset-rtained that man has just two cliaracters peculiar to him. (l.) His flesh is MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 129 a different kind of flesh from that of the lower animals (2.) Man possesses immortality, while the animals artf mere creatures of time. **But,'* says the enlig-htened Christian, *'If a man is married to a negress, will not their offspring- have a soul?" No; it is simply the product resulting- from God's violated law, and inherits none of the Divine nature of the man, but, like its parent, the ape, it is merely a combination of matter and mind. *'Then, if the half-breed marries a man, will not their offspring- have a soul?" No! '*Then if the three-quarter white marries a man will not their offspring- have a soul?** No. **If the offspring- of man and the Negro was mated with pure whites for generations, would not their ultimate offspring- have a soul?" No! In dis- cussing this question we must bear in mind that there were just three Creations — matter, mind and soul. That these three creations made their appearance in the order stated. That matter is the basis of all formations in the material universe; whether it exists alone as in the plant, or in combination with mind as in the animal, and with soul as in man. Let us also bear in mind that, the reproduction of these Cre- ations as they exist in the plants, in the animals, and in man, was not left to chance, but is governed by laws which God established in the Creation, and which are unerring and positive in their operations and results. 130 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, In order to acquaint ourselves with the operations and results of these laws, let us first discuss the repro- duction of plants, in which the matter creation is alone represented; and, since the manner of their reproduction is more g-enerallj understood, let us take as an illustration, the flowering- plants, in which the sexes are represented in the male, and in the female flower. As is well known reproduction results from the union of the pollen, or fecundating- dust, of the stamen of the male flower with the pollen of the pistil of the female flower. This indicates that one side or part of the matter creation, exists in the male flower; and that its corresponding- side or part exists in the female flower. These opposite sides or parts, each act as a magnet which attracts its corresponding- sid^ or part in the opposite sex; and, when united, the matter creation is perfected and reproduced in the youn^ plant. But if, from any cause, the matter creation, as it exists in its imperfect state in the respective g-erms of the male and the female flower^f are not united and perfected in the female flower, these vital elements are wasted, and the reproduction of the matter creation in the 3'oung- plant is not: accomplished. The same law holds gfood with the animal, in which the two Creations- Matter and Mind, exist in the respective g-erms of the male, and the female. One side or part of the Matter Creation, and one side or part of the Mind Creation, exists in an imperfect state in the male germ; the corresponds MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 131 ing" sides or parts of these imperfect Creations exists in the female g-erm. By uniting- these imperfect creations in the female, they are perfected and repro- duced in the young animal. This indicates that each of these creations maintains its individuality in their respective male and female germs; and that each side or part of these creations, act as a magnet, which attracts its corresponding side or part in the opposite sex. When sexual union takes place, each side or part of these two creations — Matter and Mind — are united and perfected in the female, conception and birth, ensues, and the combination of matter and mind is reproduced in the offspring. But, if from any cause these imperfect matter and mind creations, as they exist in the respective germs of the male and the female animal, are not united and perfected in the female, these vital elements are wasted, conception does not ensue, and the reproduc- tion of these two creations in a young animal is not accomplished. The strength of our position on this subject is demonstrated by the actions of our domestic fowls; it frequently occurs that the female fowl, when not associated with the male fowl, will lay eggs. But only one part of the two creations — matter and mind— as they existed in an imperfect state in the germ of the female were represented in the egg; their corresponding side or part in the male, which was necessary to perfect the creations, was absent. The result, of the effort of the female to reproduce these 132 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. two creations without their corresponding* side or part in the male, was abortion — the egg would not **hatch." The same law holds good with man, in whom the three creations — matter, mind and soul — exist. As in the plant and in the animal, so it must be in man; one side or part of the matter creation, and one side or part of the mind creation, and one side or part of the soul creation exists in the male germ; the correspond- ing side or part of each of these creations exists in the female germ. Each side or part of these three creations maintains its individuality in their respec- tive male and female germs; and each side or part of these three creations acts as a magnet which attracts its corresponding side or part in the opposite sex. When sexual union takes place, each side or part of these three creations unite and are perfected in the female germ; conception ensues and the three crea- tions — matter, mind and soul — are reproduced in the offspring. But when no corresponding side or part of one of these creations exists in ^the opposite sex, this creation finds no attraction and is passive. Hence, if the sexual act results in conception, this passive crea- tion is not perfected and forms no part of the off- spring. For example: In the Negro, as in any other animal, but two creations — matter and mind — are combined. On* side or part of each of these creations exists in the male germ; their corresponding side or part exists in the female germ, as mutually dependent MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 133 sides or parts of the life system of the animal. In the sexual act each of these creations acts as a magnet, which attracts its corresponding- side or part in the opposite sex, and, if united, these two creations are perfected; conception ensues and the combination of matter and mind is transmitted to the offspring". Thus, while but two creations — matter and mind- combine to perfect the Negro, three creations — matter, mind and soul — combine to perfect man. While these two creations — matter and mind — exist in an imperfect state in the germs of the male and female Negro, as mutually dependent sides or parts of the life system of the animal, three creations — matter, mind and spiritual life — exist in an imperfect state in the germs of the male and female man, as mutually dependent sides or parts of the life system of man; and such is the attraction be- tween matter and mind as they exist in their imperfect state in the germs of man and the Negro that sexual in- tercourse between the two will unite and perfect these two creations. But the soul creation in its imperfect and dependent state in the germ of the man, finds no corresponding side or part in the negress. Hence, this creation having no attraction remains passive, and if conception ensues from the union of the germs and the consequent perfecting of the matter and mind creations of man and the Negro, this passive creation forms no part of the offspring of this unnatural union. Thus, it is impossible for either side or part of the life system of man — the male or the female— to transmit these three 134 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. creations — matter, mind and soul to their offspring by the Negro, in whom matter and mind alone exists. In other words, the male and the female can only transmit to their offspring such creations as are common to both. lyCt us bear in mind that prior to the creation of man there was no connecting link — no tie of kinship between the Creator and His creatures. All things in the mater-, ial universe were material, there was nothing spiritual; all was mortal, there was no immortality ; but when the lyord God formed man out of *'the dust of the ground,'' this "dust of the ground" being a part of the original creation — matter — ''and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life," spiritual, immortal life, **man became a living soul." This spiritual, immortal life, "this living soul," was apart of the substance of God. Hence, its combination with matter and with mind, as presented in man's physical, mental and spiritual organisms, formed the connecting link — the link of kinship — between the Creator and creature. Thus, man' became "the Son of God." His failure to form this link of kinship between Himself and the fish, or fowl, or beast, clearly demon- strates the design of God that no kinship should exist between them. Hence, when man becomes so degener- ated as to associate himself carnally with the Negro, the very act brings into operation the law which governs the reproduction of the creations, which makes it impossible for man to transmit to his offspring by the beast the slightest vestige of kinship with God. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 135 This law becomes active and operates with the same result when man associates himself carnally with the mixed Breeds ; without reference to what their propor- tions of white and black blood ma}^ be. The immediate offspring of man and the Negro — the half breed — like the Negro, is merely a combination of two creations — matter and mind. Hence, but two — matter and mind — of the three creatures — matter, mind and soul — as they exist in their imperfect state in the germ of the man find. their corresponding sides or portion in the opposite sex of the half breed. The result is, that the one side or part of the soul creation, as it exists in its imperfect state in the germ of the man, finding no corresponding side or part in the opposite sex of the half breed , with which it may be united and perfected, is not attracted and remains pas- sive. Hence, if the matter creation and the mind crea- tion as they exist in their imperfect state in the respec- tive genris of man and the half breed , are united and perfected, and conception ensues, this passive creation forms no part of the offspring. This unvarying law would hold good through millions of generations. Man, in associating himself carnally with the mixed -breeds, would continually oppose three creations — matter, mind and soul — as they exist in their imperfect state in his germ, to only two creations — matter and mind — as they exist in their imperfect state in the germ of the mixed bloods. As a result it could only be possible to unite and perfect the matter and mind creations as they exist in their imperfect state in the respective germs of man 136 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. and the mixed bloods, and thus reproduce and transmit them to the offspring. But the soul creation as it exists in its imperfect state in the germ of man, finding no cor- responding side or part in the opposite sex of the mixed bloods with which it might be united and perfected, is not affected in the sexual act and remains passive, hence it is not represented in the offspring. /At^AM and EVEin thg^ARDERof EDEN. bttha negr^ an offspring of Adam and Eve? Can the rose produce a th ist le? Chapter V. Cain's Offspring Souless, as they were of Amalgamated Flesh. The atheist takes the negro which God made aa ape and thrusts him violently into the family of man as **a lower race of the human species/' and enlight- ened Christianity receives him with open arms; the atheist then points to the remnant of the animals and tells us with much the appeaeance of truth that there is no beast with which man may associate himself carnally and produce offspring-; and enlig-htened Chris- tianity responds with a hearty Amen! This theory may be g'ood modern philosophy, but it is not scrip- ure, as shown by the following: "And Adam knew Eve his wife, and she con- ceived and bare Cain, and said, I have g-otten a man from the Lord. And she again bare his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller (139) 140 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. of the ground. And in process of time it came to pass that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his off- erring. But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect. And Cain was very wroth, and his counte- nance fell." (Gen. iv, 3-4-5.) It will be observed that these brothers were not rivals in business; they were engaged in different pursuits; each offered the products of his labor and skill; and had each of them walked uprightly before God, there could have been no reason why their offer- ings would not have been alike acceptable to God. But such was not the case. Abel was a good man; he had faith in God (Heb. ii, 4) and respected and obeyed his laws. Hence, '*the Lord had respect unto Abel" as a man, and consequently, to his offering. But Cain was a bad man; the little faith which he had in God, was not expressed in obedience to his laws; he had no respect for the laws of God. Hence, God had no respect for his offering. Cain was a violater of the laws of God, as shown by the following: **And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art thou wroth, and why is thy countenance fallen? If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? And if thou doest not well, sin lieth at thy door; and unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him." (Gen. iv, 6-7.) MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 141 This indicates that Cain had not only violated the law of God, but that he had an associate in the crime. To have desire requires life, and also requires intellig'ence; no inanimate object can have desire. In view of the fact that individuals of the same sex have no desire for each other, it would seem natural to decide that this creature which had desire for this fine young man, Cain, was a female; and the mere fact that the inspired writer refers to it in the masculine g^ender is no evidence that it was not a female. In describing" the animals, it is common in the scriptures tovfind both sexes referred to in the masculine gender. For example: God made * 'every winged fowl after his kind." *'Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind," etc. (Gen. i.: 22-24.) David refers to the Sun, which is without sex, in the masculine, as follows: ''His going forth is from the end of the heaven, and his circuit from the ends of it. (Ps. xix, 6.) We should observe (1) that God charged Cain with sin; (2) that "Unto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule over him," was a sentence which God imposed upon Cain and his partner in crime. We should also note the striking similarity of God's lan- guage in imposing this sentence to that which he em- ployed in imposing his sentence upon Eve. To the woman who had committed sin, God said, "Thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee." (Gen. iii, 16.) To the man Cain, who had 142 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, committed sin, God said, *'Utito thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him." Thus it is shown that the sentence which God imposed upon Eve was identical with that which he imposed upon Cain's partner in sin. In this identity of sentence we find the most positive evidence that Cain's accomplice in the crime which cost him the respect of God was a female. In each case God decreed that the desire qf the female should be to a particular male, and that the male should "rule over" the female which had desire for him. In the epistle of Jude we find not only the. most positive proof that Cain's partner in sin was a female, but that she was not of Adamic flesh. It will be observed that Jude at once arraigns the men of his day on the charg-e of amalgamation — "giving- them- selves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh.'' And appeals to the followers of the Saviour to "keep" themselves "in the love of God." Jude says: "Beloved, when I gave all dili- gence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to write unto you and exhort you that j'e should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered to the saints. For there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained to this condemnation; ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into las- civiousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ. I will therefore put you in remeni- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 143 brance, thoug-h 3-e once knew tbis, how that the Lord, having- saved the people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed them that believed not. ^^nd the ang-els which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the grqat day. Even as Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities about them, in like manner, giving themselves over to for- nication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire. Likewise these filthy dreamers defile tlje flesh, despise dominion, and speak evil of dignitaries. Yet Michael, Vvhen contending with the devil, he disputed about the body of Moses, durst not bring |Lgainst him a railing accusation, but said, The Lord rebuke thee. But these speak evil of those things which they know not; but what they knew naturally as brute beasts, in those things they corrupt themselves. Woe unto them, for they have gone in the way of Cain, and ran greedily after the error of Balaam for re- ward, and perished in the gainsaying of Core." Thus Jude, after stating various events, which occurred in the past, distinctly charges the people of S(>dom and Gomorrah with giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh. And says that they are set for an example, suffering the ven- genance of eternal fire. Continuing, Jude. says: *'These filthy dreamers defile the .flesh .(thi$. is pre- cisely the offense with which God charg-ed tjie aatg- 144 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. diluvians and the Canaanites), despise dominioH (pre- ferring- social equality with the negro to that dominion which God designed them to have and commanded them' to exercise), and speak evil of dignitaries." In closing his charges against **these filthy dream- ers, who defile the flesh by giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh," Jude says: "Woe unto them! for they have gone in the way of Cain." Thus the inspired apostle Jude, a New Testa- ment writer, specifically charges that Cain was one of these filthy dreamers, who despise dominion, defile the flesh, by giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh. By comparing the sentence which God imposed upon Eve, and in which Adam was made a partici- pant, with the sentence which he imposed upon Cain's paramour, and to which Cain was made a participant, we find that in each case the result to the parties in- terested was identical. The relation of husband and wife, which existed between Adam and Eve, was es- tablished in the days of their innocence, and was sanc- tioned by the law given man in the creation, *'Be fruitful and multiply." But in their fallen state God saw fit, by special edict, to bind and confine them in their sexual relations to each other, changing their former relations only so far as to place the offending woman in subjection to her husband, whom she had misled. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 145' Lest we should be misunderstood upon this most important subject, we desire to state most emphatic- ally that there is not a sing-le passage of Scripture which warrants the slig-hest suspicion that either Adam or Eve ever descended to amalg-amation. On the contrary, we are plainly taught that Cain led off in this wicked course. Hence, Jude describes it as "the way of Cain." When Cain committed iornication with this fe- male of strange flesh, he at once outraged the design of God in creating man and violated that Divine law given man in the Creation — * *Have dominion * * * over every living thing that moveth upon the earth." * 'Dominion" means control, and control is the very opposite of social equality; and social equality, to a greater or less extent, is inseparable from sexual inter- course. And God in his wrath and disgust deter- mined that he would visit upon Cain for his wanton, shameless, loathsome crime, the most degrading penalty. Thus, as in the case of Adam and Eve, God bound Cain and his paramour of strange flesh in the relation of husband and wife and confined them, in their sexual relations, to each other; and at the same time placed Cain's wife of strange flesh in subjection to him. In the ordinary course of events, the first female born to the Adamic family, upon reaching maturity, would have been given in marriage to Cain, the first born son. But Cain's shameless crime in cultivating ?46 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. sexual relations with a beast had rendered him unfit for the companionship of a pure woman. Besides, God's decree bound Cain in the relation of husband all his life long to this beast, and forever debarred him from hold- ing sexual relations with women. Hence, the beautiful Adamic woman, who, in all her virgin lovelinessi would have been the wife of Cain, would now become the wife of his brother, Abel. In his jealous rage upon realizing this, we might find an explanation of why ''Cain rose up against Abel his brother and slew him. ' ' The correctness of our interpretation of God's sen- tence upon Cain and his accomplice in sin — that it bound them together in the relation of husband and wife — is fully sustained by the scriptural record, which shows that subsequent to this event Cain is accredited with a wife, while prior to this event he is merely ac- credited with a paramour of strange flesh, with whom he committed fornication. The record is as follows: "And Cain went out from the presence of the I^ord, and dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of Kden. And Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bare Enoch." (Gen. iv, 16-17.) This scriptural record forms a part of a genealogical table, which shows the line of descent for five genera- tions, and gives the name, occupation, etc., of the most prominent character in each generation of his descend- ants during that period of time. We desire to call special attention to the fact that there is absolutely nothing in this record which indicates MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 147 that Cain obtained his wife in the land of Nod. On the other hand, his previous history, as above shown, proves that she was formerly his paramour, and sustained that relation to him at the time when he and his brother Abel brought their offerings unto the Lord. And that, im- mediately after that event, God, by special decree, and as a punishment upon Cain for his criminal relations with her, bound them to each other in the relation of husband and wife. After their arrival in the land of Nod, '*Cain knew his wife," in the sense that she conceived and bare Enoch; just as, after their expulsion from the garden of Eden, *'Adam knew Eve his wife," in the sense that she conceived and bare Cain. (See also lyuke i, 36.) Cain and his wife disappear from the records, and all trace of them is lost after the birth of Enoch and the building of the city which Cain named after his son Enoch. If, as many suppose, Cain had taken his sister to wife, sin would not have lain at his door as the result of his act. He would simply have obeyed the law given man in the creation: "Be fruitful and multiply.*' The only way the sons of Adam could have preserved and in- creased the pure Adamic flesh was by taking their sisters to wife. This course was evidently pursued by Seth and his younger brothers, and they were never censured for it. On the contrary, Seth, the third son of Adam, was very highly honored in that his taking his sister to wife placed his name in the line of descent from Adam to •Jesus Christ. Hence, he stands in the genealogical tables of tbs Bible as one of the ancestors of the Messiah. 148 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, Thus, the testimony of the inspired writers, Moses, Jude and St. Paul, sweeps away the veil of mystery which for so many centuries, has enveloped the marital relations o^ Cain, and lays bare the most important and instructive events in his history, as follows: 1. That it was the sin which lay at Cain's door, which cost him the respect of God, and led to the rejec- tion of his offering. The nature of his offering had no bearing on the result ; any offering which he might have made would have shared the same fate. God had no respect for Cain as a man; hence, for his offering he had not respect. * 2. That Cain had an associate in his crime. 3. That his associate in crime was a female. 4. That this female was not of the flesh of man ; she was not a woman, but was a creature of strange flesh with which he was committing fornication. Just here, as in many other portions of the Biblci Paul's declaration that "There is one kind of flesh of men; another flesh of beast, another of fishes, and another of birds," proves invaluable, in that it enables us to fathom many of the so-called mysteries of the Bible. When we turn it upon the statement of Jude that Cain was of those filthy dreamers who were guilty of giving themselves to fornication, and going after strange flesh, we can see at a glance that this creature with which Cain committed fornication was not of the flesh of man ; that she was not a woman, but that she belonged to one of the three other kinds of flesh; and being a land animali she nee- A/^iV, AND THE NEGRO. 149 essarily belonged to the flesh of beasts. Hence, Cain's paramour was a beast. 5. That God in His wrath and disgust at the depravity thus displayed by Cain, in descending to sexual relations with a beast, bound Cain and his para- mour of strange flesh in the relation of husband and wife, and confined their sexual relations to each other, thus forever debarring Cain from holding sexual relations with woman. 6. That Cain's wife of strange flesh conceived by him and bore him Enoch. 7. That Cain's son Enoch, begotten of his wife of strange flesh, was indefinitiely fertile; and that he had numerous descendants, children, grandchildren, great- grandchildren, etc. 8. That the descendants of Cain by his wife of strange flesh raised domestic animals, mined and worked metals and fashioned them into implements, and were skillful musicians, and for generations retained a knowl- edge of God and his dealings with Cain ; and all circum- stances indicate that they cultivated domestic plants, es- pecially the food plants. When called upon to identify this creature of strange flesh which bore Cain offspring as above described, science promptly invades the so-called human species, and points to the negro, the lowest of the so-called races of men, as the only creature among the lower kind of flesh with which man may associate himself carnally and produce offspring which will at once be indefinitely fer- iSO hi AN, AND THE NECRd, tile and capable of being taught a knowledge of God and the arts of civilization. Man's strong disposition to abandon himself to this loathsome, destructive crime, as shown by his whole past history, is made even more conspicuous by the fact that Cain, the first child born to the Adamic creation, fell the victim of amalgamation. The history of Cain and his descendants presents little to interest, and is practically of no value when viewed from the atheistic standpoint that man is a species divisible into races. But when viewed in the lights of revelation and the sciences, it is at once transformed into a subject of the most absorbing interest and import- ance. In the disasters which resulted to Cain from his association with his paramour of strange flesh, we find the most positive evidence of God's utter abhorrence of amalgamation ; while in his formation and preservation of the genealogical table of Cain's descendants we find additional evidence of his unerring wisdom, his infinite mercy, and of his wondrous love for man in thus making it a matter of scriptural record that there is a beast with which man may associate himself carnally and produce offspring, which will at once be indefinitely fertile and capable of acquiring a knowledge of God and of the arts of civilization. Cain's wife being a negress, it follows that her off- spring by Cain were mixed -bloods. This explains why Cain and his descendants were thrust out of the line of descent from Adam to the Saviour. Cain was the sole MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 151 representative of the Adamic creation in his famiiy.. Hence, the only living soul, the last vestige of immor- tality in his family, disappeared when the spirit of Cain, whose crimes of murder and amalgamation made him a fugitive and a vagabond in time, took its flight from earth to receive the doom of the outcast in eternity. The value of Paul's teaching that there are four dif- ferent kinds of flesh is thus shown, in enabling us to see what Adam meant when he said : ' 'Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and shall cleave unto his wife, and they shall be one flesh." In their ignor- ance of the true value of Paul's teaching, modern theo- logians have been led to believe that what Adam meant was, that when a couple were joined in marriage, their respective individualities were merged to a certain extent and they became one in aspiration, interest, etc, or, as the Bible terms it, one flesh. But when viewed in the light of Paul's teaching as to flesh, and in the general teaching of the Bible that there is a beast with which man may associate himself carnally and produce offspring, we find that what Adam meant was, that the husband should not be of one "kind of flesh," and the wife of another "kind of flesh;" they shall be one flesh; or, as Paul terms it, one "kind of flesh." And Cain and his wife were not of one flesh ; they were of different kinds of flesh. Further evidence that Cain's wife was not of the flesh of man — that she was not a woman — is found in the fact that Seth was the third child born to Adam, and 152 MAN, AMD THE NEGRO, took the place of Abel, whom Cain slew (Gen. iv, 25), and there were no daughters born to Adam until after the birth of Seth (Gen. iv, 4). Yet Cain had a wife be- fore Seth was born. Thus, it is shown that Cain had a wife before there was a female child born to the Adamic family. The degrading punishment which God visited upon Cain for his loathsome crime failed to deter other men from "going after strange flesh," as shown by the state- ment of Jude, as follows : ' 'The angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation '^ ^ * giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh '^ * * These filthy dreamers defile the flesh, despise dominion, and speak evil of dignitaries ^ >:< ^ Woe unto them, for thej^ have gone in the way of Cain."' These *' angels" were not celestial beings, but w^ere creatures of flesh. They were the early descendants of Adam who went in the way of Cain. They "left their own habitation" — the Adamic flesh — * 'going after strange flesh;" that is, flesh that was of a different "kind of flesh" from their flesh. They "despised dominion," preferring social equality with the Negro to that ' 'domin- ion" which God designed them to have, and commanded them to exercise, Such was the prevalence of amalga- mation in the da3'S of Enoch, the seventh from Adam, that he warned the people that God would "execute judgment" upon them for their shameless violation of his law. (Jude.) Further evidence of the prevalence of MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 153 • this crime in antediluvian time is found in God's charge that ' 'The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took of them wives of all which the}^ chose." (Gen. vi, 2.) The punishment — a uni- versal deluge — which God visited upon the ''sons ot God" and "the daughters of men" and their progeny, proves that their relations were criminal. Hence, this text has been the subject of endless speculation. Men have even gone so far as to suppose that the "sons of God" were celestial beings — angels — who became enam- ored of the charms of the women of the earth — "the daughters of men" — and had intercourse with them, which resulted in producing offspring (see Lenormant's "Beginnings of Histor>^" chap, vii.) But when we lay aside our atheism, and accept the teachings of scripture that man (the white) is a distinct creation, "in the image or God,'' and that the Negro is an ape, the mys- tery with which atheism has enveloped this text disap- pears, and, it becomes plain that "the sons of God" were the white males who traced their pedigree through a line of pure-blooded ancestors to Adam ; and that "the daughters of men" were mixed -blooded females who traced their pedigree to men, on the paternal side, and to negresses, on tlie maternal side. Their fathers were men, but their mothers were negresses — apes — beasts. Hence, tlie unions between the male descendants of Adam and these mixed- blooded females resulted in fur- ther corrupting the flesh of the earth, and finall}' led God in His wrath and disgust to destro3^tliem with the deluge as shown by tlie following: 1^4 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. *'And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And it repented the lyord that he had made inan on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart. And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man and beast, and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them.'' (Gen. vi, 5-6-7.) ' But just at this critical juncture, the most critical that man has ever known, when the hand of Almighty God was raised in his just wrath to destroy from the earth which their shameless crime had corrupted the last vestige of the seed of man, ''Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.'' (Gen. vi, 8.) Why? "Noah was a just man and perfect in his generations, and Noah walked with God." (Gen. vi, 9.) It will be observed that there are three characteris- tics here recorded of Noah, which are assigned as so many reasons why "Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord:" (l) "Noah was a just man;'' (2) he was ''perfect in his generations;" (3) "Noah walked with God." The first and third characteristics are happily not uncommon, for in sacred history various individuals are accredited with similar characteristics. The second characteristic is common to every pure-blooded descend- ant of Adam. But the record of it, unlike the chorac- istic itself, is peculiar to Noah. It is not significant that in all sacred history there is just this one individual of Man, and the negro. isS whom it is recorded in just so many words that he was "perfect in his generations?" No such record is found of Abraham, the father of all Isarel; nor of Moses, the great law-giver of Isarel ; nor of David, the sweet singer of Israel ; nor even of the Messiah. This characteristic in Noah, that he was "perfect in his generations,'* was not the result of any act upon his part ; and all credit for his possession of it is due solely to his ancestors, who transmitted to him from Adam in uncorrupted line of descent the pure Adamic stock. This characteristic as- signed as one of the reasons why ' 'Noah found grace in the eyes of the lyord," with its attendant circumstances, necessarily carries with it the implication that there were others in Noah's day who were not perfect in their gen- erations. Now, if Noah was "perfect in his genera- tions'' because his ancestors transmitted to him from Adam in uncorrupted line of descent the pure Adamic stock, and there were others in Noah's day who were not perfect in their generations, by association with whom did their ancestors transmit to them a corrupted line of descent from Adam? The morals of man may be cor- rupted by illicit intercourse between the sexes, but the offspring will be of pure Adamic stock, whether the rela- tions of its parents are legitimate or otherwise. Hence, as long as man's sexual relations are confined to the Adamic family — to the "flesh of men" — their genealogy will be "perfect," and the line of descent uncorrupted. This being true, it follows that the genealogy or the ante- diluvians — their line of descent from Adam— could only 156 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. have been corrupted by their sexual relations with some other "kind of flesh." which resulted in the production of offspring that was indefinitely fertile. While the most depraved conditions of their morals is implied in his arraignment of them, the sole charge of the Almighty against the descendants of Adam in Noah's day, is, that under their administration the flesh of the earth was corrupted." ''The earth also was corrupt be- fore. God, and the earth was filled with violence, ,And God looked upon the earth, and behold it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way on the earth. " (Gen. vi, 11-12.) This term **all flesh" suggests to our mind the in- quiry as to how many kinds of flesh there are on the earth, and what in God's eye would constitute the differ- ence between them. An intelligent reply demands that we turn upon this record the inspired light of Paul's declaration that ''there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds," making in all four distinct kinds of flesh; and then turn upon it the inspired light of the Mosaic Rec- ord, which teaches that the fish were made to inhabit the waters ; that the fowl w^ere made to fly above the earth in the open expanse of heaven, and that man and the beasts were made to inhabit the dry land. We are thus taught that there are just two kinds of flesh on the earth, which belong strictly to the earth — the flesh of man and the flesh of beasts. As has been shown, no form of lust which man can indulge within the pale of the Adamic MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 157 family can corrupt the flesh of man. However illicit the unions, the offspring is of pure Adamic flesh, unadulter- ated by any foreign element. The same rule holds good with the beasts. No hybridization which may occur be- tween the different species or races of beasts can corrupt the flesh of beasts. The offspring resulting from these unions is the pure flesh of beasts, unadulterated by any foreign element. To corrupt the flesh there must be sexual contact between two different kinds of flesh ; and the "corrupted" flesh must express itself in the offspring. Hence, in discussing this question we should bear in mind that however loathsome the lust, no corruption of the flesh can result to the participants in it. To illus- trate : The flesh of man is a kind of flesh distinct from that of beasts, while the Negro, being merely a race of the ape species, belongs to the flesh of beasts. Now, let a man associate himself carnally with a negress; the flesh of that man is not corrupted by his con- tact with that beast, neither is the flesh of the beast corrupted by her contact with the man; the flesh of each is as pure after the contact as it was before. But when the contact results in con- ception and birth, the corrupted flesh which is the sole charge of the Almighty against the antediluvians, ex- presses itself in the offspring— in the mulatto- which is not born the pure flesh of man, as was its Adamic parent, neither is it the pure flesh of beast, as was its parent the negress ; it is what God so fitly describes it as being corrupted flesh, resulting from amalgamation between 158 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. the flesh of man and the flesh of beast. Further evidence that there is a beast with which man may associate him- self carnally, and produce offspring, is found in God's law to Israel, in which is assigned his reasons for the destruction of the Canaanites. After enumerating and forbidding every form of illicit sexual intercourse which it is possible for man to indulge within the pale of the Adamic family, God closes his law on the subject as fol- lows : ' ' Neither shalt thou lie with any beast to defile thyself therewith ; neither shall any woman stand before a beast to lie down thereto; it is confusion. (lycv. xviii.:23.) Confusion, mixing, mingling, are synony- mous terms. Hence, there should be no mixing, no mingling, no confusion of man's blood with that of a beast. Continuing, God said: ''Defile not 3^e ^^ourselves in any of these things ; for in all these the nations are de- filed which I cast out before you ; and the land is defiled ; therefore I do visit the iniquity thereof upon it; and the land itself vomiteth out its inhabitants. Ye shall there- fore keep my statutes and my judgments, and not com- mit any of these abomination. * * * That the land spue not you out also when ye: defile it, as -it spued out the nations that were before 3^ou." (lycv. xviii, 24, 25i 26, 28.) A careful investigation of the laws of God will demonstrate that the violation of this statute forbidding man to lie with a beast is the only crime that man can commit that will have the three results described in the MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 159 narrative of the deluge and that of the Canaanites: (l) The corruption of flesh; (2) the corruption of the earth itself in the eyes of God; (3) the penalty of death un- der the law of God. Prior to the deluge, God looked upon the earth and said it was corrupt ; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth. God thus describes a condition of the flesh of the earth, which could only have resulted from amalgamation. Prior to the arrival of the Israelites in Canaan, God said of the land of Canaan, "The land is defiled.'' Defile and corrupt are synonymous terms. He specifically charges the Canaan - ites with lying with beasts, which, as shown in the case of the antediluvians, would result in corrupting the flesh of Canaan. In each case the penalty of death was visited upon this corrupted flesh and those who were in- strumental in corrupting it. In the case of the antedi- luvians by a universal deluge ; in that of the Canaanites by a war of extermination. Thus, to accept the teachings of the Bible, we must admit that there is a beast with which man may associate himself carnally and produce a fertile offspring. As we have shown, the teachings of science prove the Negro an ape ; and all history and all scientific research and all observation combine to teach us that the Negro is the only one of the lower animals with which man may as- sociate himself carnally and produce a fertile offspring. Hence, we have no alternative than to decide that it was their criminal relations with the Negro which brought the curses of God upon the antediluvians and the Canaanites and led to their destruction by Divine edict. 160 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Nothing could place God in a more ridiculous light than to suppose that He enacted a statute forbidding man to commit an act which it was impossible for him to commit, and then, as if to emphasize the absurdity, to affix the death penalty to the violation of the law. Hence, if we accept the Bible as the expression of God's will to man, we have no alternative than to decide that the very presence of this Divine law forbidding man to *'lie with a beast," or a woman "to lie down thereto," proves the existence of a beast which a man may lie with just as he would wnth a woman ; or to which a woman, if she desired carnal association with, might lie down to just as she would to a man. Had this great law of God's been obeyed, no mulatto would ever have ' 'defiled" this beau- tiful earth with his presence; a presence at once degrad- ing to man and loathsome to God; or had the just pen- alty which God attached to the violation of his law been enforced, no mulatto would have lived to seethe light of day: "And if a man lie with a beast, he shall surely be put to death, and ye shall slay the beast. And if a woman approach unto any beast and lie down thereto, thou shalt kill the woman and the beast ; they shall surely be put to death ; their blood shall be upon them. ' ' (Lev. XX, 15-16.) Which is equivalent to God's saying to man, "Have no superstitious fears that their blood will be upon your hands, no conscientious scruples that their blood will be upon your head; kill them for their shame- less violation of Divine law ; slay them in obedience to Divine command— their blood shall be upon them. ' '. L MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 161 Thus, the immediate offspring of maitandthe Negro — the mulatto — was doomed by Divine edict to instant death in the very moment of conception. Hence, neither the mulatto nor his ultimate offspring can ac- quire the right to live. This being true, it follows that these monstrosities have no rights social, financial, polit- ical or religious that man need respect; they have no rights that man dare respect — not even the right to live. We find an illustration of this in God's command to Israel to "utterly destroy" the Canaanites of all ages and sexes, and "leave nothing alive that breatheth," and take their country with its accumulated wealth of ages. The offspring of Man and the Negro is not upon the earth in deference to Divine will, but in violation of Di- vine law. Hence, it is not a part of God's creation. And there can never be any peace between God and man so long as this corrupted flesh is permitted to "defile'* the earth with its presence. Inasmuch as the immediate offspring of Man and the Negro is corrupted flesh, it fol- lows that its ultimate offspring could never become pure. If mated continuously with pure whites for millions of generations, you could never breed the ape out, nor breed the spiritual creation in, the offspring of Man and the Negro. It was not a part of God's creation to begin with, and could never become so. Surely the great Architect of the universe has not become so im- becile, His creative power so far waned, that he must needs accept and appropriate to himself this loathsome product of His creatures' crime. UiJ THE BEAST AND THE VIRGIN. Can you find a white preacher who would unite in holy wedlock, a burly negro to a white lady? Ahl parents, you would rather see your daughter^ / burniBd^arid ner ashes scattered to the winds of -^ heaven. Chapter VL Red, Yellow and Brown Skin Denotes Amalgamation of the Human Family with the Beast, the Negro. The mere fact that, under the influence of the law of heredity, the ultimate offspring" of whites and negroes, when mated continuously with whites, present to a greater or less extent the elevated physical and mental characters of the white, does not make them men and women. They lack the spiritual creation, which forms the link of kinship between God and man, and is only transmitable to his offspring through pure Adamic channels. Nothing could be more absurd, nothing more blasphemous, than to suppose that God, who declined to establish any kinship be- tween himself and the animals, would make it possible for man to do so, by an act, which of itself, is a (165) 166* MAN, AND THE NEGRO, violation of that divine law, *'Thou slialt not lie with any beast.*' Hence, the mixed-bloods, the corrupted flesh, inherit none of the immortality of their Adamic parent — they have no soul. But, like the negro, and the rest of the animals, tliej' are merely combinations of matter and mind. They were not in existence at the time of Adam's transgression; and are not included in the Plan of Salvation. Man alone fell, and he alone is the subject of redemption. Hence, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." (Mark xvi.:15.) Remem- bering that God "hath made of one blood all nations of men." (Acts xvii.:26. ) But, "Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you." (Matt. vii.:6.) The existence of this prohibitory statute demon- strates the existence of an animal which man, in his criminal ignorance of God's plan of creation, might mistake for a man, and thus be misled into giving him the Bible with the view of conferring upon him the blessings of Christianity, which were intended txlone for man. When wx view this statute in the light of the sciences, and in that of Paul's declaration that "there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts," etc., it becomes plain that the dog, the swine and the negro all belong to one kind of flesh — the flesh of beasts. The scriptures are described as "holy" (Rom. i, 2, etc.) The kingdom of heaven is MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 167 compared to **goodly pearls" (Matt, xiii, 45-46). Hence, we are led to decide that *'tbat which is holy," and which man is forbidden to **give unto dogs," is the Bible. And that the pearls which man is forbid- den to cast before swine is the kingdom of heaven. This statute was evidently designed to confine the use of the Bible and religious worship to man, and exclude the lower kinds of flesh, which embrace the negro. Hence, if it is criminal to give the Bible to dogs, it is criminal to give it to the negro; if it is criminal to undertake to Christianize swine, it is criminal to undertake to Christianize the negro. In these respects man can make no distinction between one animal and another. This prohibitory law applies with equal force to the mixed-bloods; they possess none of the spiritual creation, but are wholly animal. The "heathen" to whom the Saviour com- manded that the gospel should be preached were the pure-blooded descendants of Adam, who had lost their knowledge of the true God, and of all religious worship, or had descended to idolatry. The Saviour's decree, **Go ye into the world, and preach the gospel to every creature;" that is, to every creature for whom it was designed, was fully exe- cuted. Paul says that in his day the gospel **was preached to every creature which is under heaven." [Col. i, 23] . This sweeping statement of the learned apostle was either true or false. We accept it^as un- questionably true. The gospel reached all for whom 168 MAN, AND WE NEGRO, it was intended. Yet it was not preached to tlie wild tribes of negroes and mixed-bloods of Africa; nor to the Laplanders, Finns, and Basques of Europe; nor to the Hindoos, Coreans, Chinese, Japanese, etc., of Asia; nor to the Australians, Malays, etc., of Oceanica; nor to the wild, hunting tribes of North and South America; nor to the Mexicans, Peruvians, etc. And no well-informed man or woman will assert that it was. This being" true, it follows that Paul either misrepresented the facts when he said that in his day the gfospel '*was preached to every creature which is under heaven," or the Negroes, Hindoos, Chinese, Malays, Indians, Basques, etc., are not included in the Plan of Salvation. If the gospel, as * 'published" by the primitive church, was confined to the pure white, and was not preached to the negro and the so-called "brown, red and yellow races" of the earth, where does the modern church obtain its authority to extend it to them? The explanation is simple. The primitive church which our Saviour established found its ultimate basis on the scriptural narrative of Divine creation, which teaches that man [the white] is a distinct creation "in the image of God." The modern church finds its ultimate basis on the atheistic theory of Natural Development, which teaches that man is a highly developed species of ape — the human species — of which the white is the highest, and the Negro, Malay, Indian and Mongolian are lower races of men. ^ MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 169 Thus, it is clear that the modern Christian church derives its authority for recognizing- the negro, the Indian, Malay, Chinese, etc., as- lower races of men and for extending the gospel to them, not from scrip- ture, but from atheism. The idea that the church can "present" these base-born mixed-bloods, "perfect in Christ Jesus," when their very existence is alone traceable to the most shameless violation of Divine law! This modern church theory that the negro and the mixed-bloods are included in the Plan of Salvation is another result of putting man and the ape in the same family. When, in antediluvian times, amalgamation had corrupted the flesh of earth, God decided to destroy '*all flesh," save Noah, "and they that were with him in the ark." Thus, the flesh of the earth was restored to its original purity. This illustrious family brought with them from their antediluvtan home, and transmitted to their descendants a knowledge of the arts and sciences which had been accumulating in the Adamic family for ages. This explains why the most ancient artisans were the most skillful and accomplished, as shown by the fact that their architectural remains are invariably the most superb. Mr. Taylor says: "Among the ancient cultured nations of Egypt and Assyria, handicrafts had already come to a stage which could onl}^ have been reached by thousands of years of progress. In museums still may be examined the work of their joiners, stonecutters, gold- smiths, wonderful in skill and finish, and often putting 170 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. to shame the modern artificer. * * '^ To see gold jewelry of the highest order, the student should examine that of the ancients, such as the Egyptian, Greek and Etruscan . ' ' ( Anthropology . ) At the close of the deluge, Noah and his family set- tled upon one of the continents, and, with their negroes, proceeded to build for themselves homes, and in the course of time developed a great civilization. Having grown rich and populous, their descendants threw off colonies onto other continents. These colonists carried with them their negroes and other domestic animals, domestic plants, metallic implements, and all the appli- ances of civilized life, and in the course of time devel- oped the splendid civilizations, the remains of which are found upon every continent of the earth, and which even in their ruins command the admiration of the modern world. When we turn upon these ancient civilizations the light of modern science, we find that they were the work of the white — that ' 'no negro civilization has ever appeared; no Mongolian one has been highly devel- oped." The white "is pre-eminently the man of civili- zation." The extent and splendor of their architectural remains indicate that those ancient whites who, with their negroes, developed those great civilizations, must have numbered their populatioris. by the hundreds of millions. What became of them? What became of all those hundreds of millions of w^hite- skinned, silken - haired whites? They have long since disappeared from three of the five continents, leaving no progeny of white- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 171 skinned, silken -haired whites. The remnant of their white descendants are practically confined to portions of Europe and America. What became of all those hun- dreds of millions of black-skinned, wooly -haired ne- groes? They have long since disappeared from four of the five continents, leaving no progeny of black-skinned, wooly -haired negroes. The remnant of their puine- blooded descendants have dwindled down to a few tribes in Africa. And where did all those so-called ''brown, red and yellow races of men" come from, which we find in possession of these ancient civilizations, and which, in the sum of their physical and mental characters, are identical with the known offspring of whites and negroes in our midst? These degraded, worthless creatures never developed the civilizations which they possess, and as a rule they have no knowledge of who their builders were. Many of the ruins of the most magnifi- cent civilizations are found in districts which are now occupied by wild, hunting tribes of savages. The so-called ''brown, red and yellow races" have no characters peculiar to them. No anthropologist will assert that the classification of the so-called "human species" into "five races of men" was based upon what the atheist would term "racial purity," but that it was based solely on geographical divisions. In Europe, the complexions range from pure white to brown; in Africa, we find the complexions to be nearly white, brown, red, yellow and pure black ; in Asia, they range from light yellow to black ; the same is true of Oceanica, the home 172 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. of the so-called "Malay race;" in America, previous to its discovery by Columbus, the complexions were nearly pure white, brown, red, yellow and black. Fontaine says: *'If a congregation of twelve representatives from Malacca, China, Japan. Mongolia, Sandwich Islands, Chili, Peru, Brazil, Chickasaws, Comanches, etc., were dressed alike, or undressed and unshaven, the most skill- ful anatomist could not, from their appearance, separate them." [How the World Was Peopled.] Prof. Winchell says: "The ancient Indians of Cali- fornia, in the latitude of 42 degrees, were as black as the negroes of Guinea, while in Mexico were tribes of an olive or reddish complexion, relatively light. Among the black races of tropical regions we find, generally, some light -colored tribes interspersed. These sometimes have light hair and blue eyes. This is the case with the Tuareg of the Sahara, the Afghans of India, and the aborigines of the banks of the Orinoco and the Ama- zon." [Preademites.] It will be observed that these characters are identical with those presented by the off- spring resulting from amalgamation between whites and blacks in our midst. We have demonstrated here in the United States that the way to produce these so-called "brown, red or yellow races" is to mingle the blood of the white with that of the negro. lyct us take a hasty glance at the conditions pre- sented by the continent of America upon its discovery by Columbus! There existed here the remains of an an- cient civilization which extended from New York to Chili J MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 173 and from ocean to ocean. While some of its cities and villages were preserved and occupied, its greatest and most ancient cities were abandoned and in ruins. Mr. Donnelly says of Gran-Chimu: ''Its remains exist today, the wonder of the southern continent, cov- ering not less than twenty square miles, Tombs, tem- ples and palaces arise on every hand, ruined but still traceable. Immense pyramidal structures, some of them half a mile in circuit; vast areas shut in by massive walls, each containing its water- tank, its shops, munici- pal edifices, and the dwellings of its inhabitants, and each a branch of a larger organization ; prisons, furnaces for smelting metals, and almost every concomitant of civilization existed in the ancient Chimu capital. One of the pyramids, called the 'Temple of the Sun,' is 812 feet long by 470 wide and 150 high. These vast structures have been in ruins for centuries." lAtlan- Such competent judges as Stevens, Dupaix, and Charnay pronounce the architectural remains of Central America to be equal, in point of solidity, beauty and finish, to those of Egypt, Rome or Greece in their best days. "The Peruvians made large use of aqueducts, which they built with notable skill, using hewn stone and cement, and making them very substantial. One extended four hundred and fifty miles across sierras and over rivers. * * * The public roads of the Peruvians were most remarkable; they were built of m^||lnry. One of these roads ran along the mountains through the 174 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. » whole length of the empire, from Quito to Chili; another, starting from this at Cuzco, went down to the coast, and extended northward to the equator. These roads were from twenty to twenty -five feet wide, were macadamized with pulverized stone mixed with lime and bituminous cement, and were walled in by strong walls more than a fathom in thickness. In many places these roads were cut for leagues through the rock; great ravines were filled up with solid masonry; rivers were crossed b}' sus- pension bridges, used here ages before their introduction in Europe." [^Ibid-'] The ancient x\mericans, like their brethren of other continents, built great mounds and truncated pyramids of earth, upon which to erect their magnificent palaces and temples ; these were frequently from 50 to 100 feet high, and sometimes covered several acres. ''The P3^- ramid of Cholula is one of the greatest constructions ever erected b}^ human hands. It is, even now, in its ruined condition, 160 feet high, 1,400 feet square at the base, and covers forty -five acres; we have onl}' to remember that the greatest pyramid of Egypt — Cheops — covers but twelve or thirteen acres, to form some conception of the magnitude of this American structure." (Ibid.) Our limited space forbids the mention of inauy other evidences "of the enlightenment of the ancient Americans. But we have the most positive evidence that it was the work of whites, who, with their ne- groes, occupied this continent in the remote past. (1) **Of the predecessors of the Toltecs in Mex- ico, the Olmecs and Xicalancans were the most im- I MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 175 portant. Thej were the forerunners of the g-reat races that followed. According to Ixtilxochitl, 'they came from the east in ships and barks.' " Ubid-) (2) "On the monuments of Central America there are representations of bearded men. How^ could the beardless American Indians have imagined a bearded race?" {Ibid.) (3) Quelyatcoatl, the leader of the Nahuas, and who was deified, is described as having been a white man, with strong formation of body, broad forehead, large eyes and flowing beard. (Ibid.) [4] ''Very ancient ruins, showing* remains of large and remarkable edifices, were found near Hua- manga, and described by Cieca de Leon. The native traditions said this city was built by bearded white men, who came there long before the time of the Incas and established a settlement." [Ibid.^ "Prof. Wilson describes the hair of the ancient Peruvians, as found upon their mummies, as 'a light- ish brown and of a fineness of texture which equals that of the Anglo-Saxon race.'" [Ibid.] Short says: "The ancient Peruvians appear, from numerous examples of hair found in their tombs, to have been an auburn-haired race." [iVorfh Americans of Antiquity.'] Haywood says that in the early part of the cen- tury three mummies were found in a cave on the south side of the Cumberland river (Tennessee) who were buried in baskets as the Peruvians generally buried; 176 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, their skin was white and their hair auburn and of a fine texture. {Natural and Aboriginal History of Tennes- see, ) [5] Desare Charnaj has published in the North American Review for December, 1880, photographs of a number of idols exhumed at San Juan de Trotihau- can, "which show striking- neg^roid faces." [Atlan- The Popol Vuh, the ancient book of the Quiches, refers to a period of g-reat peace in the remote past, when the whites and blacks **lived tog^ether" and ''all seem to have spoken one languag-e." [Bancroft's Native ^aces.] This harmonizes with the teaching; of Scripture that there was a period in the remote past when "the whole earth was of one language and one speech," During this period the black servant spoke the lan- guage of his white master. This statement of the Popol Vuh indicates that during this period of great peace, the whites and the blacks were the only inhab- itants of the earth; no browns, reds or yellows are mentioned, which they certainly would have been had they then existed. It 'also indicates that the Popol Vuh was written by some ancient white. How could the so-called "red men" know anything of whites and bljicks? The history of every nationality of ancient time, sustained by our experience with the Negro in the United States, demonstrates that the White must be the master of the Negro, else they can never live I MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 177 tog-ether in peace. This is the law of God. And it has cost every nationality of ancient times its exist- ence to violate it. That, during" this period of * 'great peace," the ancient whites, who, with their negroes, developed the splendid civilization of America, re- spected the law of God and maintained the relation of master and servant which God established between Man and the Negro in the Creation, is shown by the following: Dr. Le Plongeon says: * 'Besides the sculptures of long-bearded men seen b}- the explorer at Chichen Itza, there were tall figures of people with small heads, thick lips and curly, short hair or wool, regarded as negroes. * * * We always see them as standard or parasol bearers, but never engaged in actual war- fare . " iMaya Archaeology.'] Thus, it is shown that, in that remote age, the Negro was simply a menial. When America was dis- covered b}^ Europeans in modern times, these ancient whites and their negroes had disappeared from the earth; their civilization was in ruins; their once fertile fields were transformed into a wilderness — a "desola- lation" — the abode of colored barbarians and savages. Upon the discovery of these creatures, the atheist pronounced them a new and "lower race of men," which had descended from the ape, and attributed their degraded condition to arrested development. The Christians of the world promptly proceeded to hasten the development of this new-found "race of [121 178 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. men" bj civilizing-, educating and Christianizing them. In this violation of Divine law they lost many a scalp, but never saved a soul. Dr. Morton, an earl >' writer upon the subject, misled the world into believing that the so-called ** Indian race" possessed certain peculiar characteristics; that they were red or copper -colored men, with high cheek- bones, prominent noses, small black eyes, thin lips, with hair straight, coarse and black. The **Mortonian The- ory" has long since been exploded, yet it is persistently taught to the youth of the country. The Indian has no character peculiar to him ; even the red or copper color is found in Africa. [Anthropology.] And it is signifi- cant that it is occasionally found among our mulattoes. Catlinsays: "A stranger in the Maudan village is first struck with the different shades of complexion and various colors of hair which he sees in a crowd about him, and is at once disposed to exclaim, 'These are not Indians. ' There are a great many of these people whose complexions appear as light as half-breeds; and among the w^omen particularly there are many whose skins are almost white, with the most pleasing S3'mmetr3" and pro- portion of feature; \\\W\ hazel, with gray, and with bUie eyes. '•"' * ''^ Among the females may be seen every shade and color of hair that can be seen in our country, except red or auburn. ^ ^ * There are very many of both sexes, and of every age, from infancy to man- hood and old age, with hair of a bright, silvery gray, and in some instances perfectly white. * -^ * And MANy AND THE NEGRO. 179 by passing this hair through 1113^ hands I have found it uniformly to be as coarse and harsh as a horse's mane, differing materially from the hair of other colors, which, among the Mendans, isgencTallyas fine and soft as silk. ' * [Indians of North America.] Prichard sa3^s: *'It will be easy to show that the American races show nearly as great a variety in this respect as the nations of the old continent; there are among them white races with florid complexions, and tribes black or of a very dark hue; that their stature, figure and countenance are almost equally diversified." [Researches into the Physical History of Mankind.] Short says: "The Menominees, sometimes called the 'White Indians,' formerly occupied the region bor- dering on Lake Michigan, Green Ba^^ The whiteness of these Indians, which is compared to that of white mulattoes, early attracted the attention of the Jesuit mis- sionaries, and has often been commented on by travelers. Almost ever}^ ahade, from the ash-color of the Menomi- nees, through the cinnamon red, copper, and bronze tints, may be found among the tribes formerly occupy- ing the territory'' east of the Mississippi, until we reach the dark-skinned KavvS 'of Kansas, who are nearly as black as tlie negro. The variet}^ of complexion is as great in South America as among the tribes of the northern part of the continent. ' ' [N'orth Americans of Antiquity.'] Thus, we find that in the remote past, this con- tinent was settled by whites, who, with their negroes, developed a great civilization; then both whites and I 180 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. negTces /lisappeared; their civilization crumbled into ruinp, and their country became a wilderness — the abode of barbarians and savages, which, in their physical and mental characters, are identical with the *)ff spring- of whites and negroes in our midst. Let us bear in mind that there are just two schools of learning- which propose to explain the phenomena of the universe, of which these so-called ''Mala}^., Indian, and Mong-olian races," are a part; and that these are the schools of Divine Creation, and Natural Development, respectively. Hence, we have no alter- native than to decide that these so-called "Brown, Red, and Yellow races," have developed from the ape, and present so many cases of "arrested development;" or we must decide that, they are the result of amalga- mation between the whites and the negroes of ancient time, just as the browns, reds, and yellows in our midst, are the result of amalgamation between the whites and negroes of modern times. How many waj^s are there of producing these creatures? Are we to under- stand that, in the remote past, the same class of creatures were produced b}^ development from the ape, that we now produce by amalgamation between whites and negroes? Many of these mixed-blooded nations, such as these Chinese, Hindoos, Egyptians, etc., have pre- served more or less of the literature of their white ancestors. A careful investigation of their literature reveals the fact that their remote ancestors were MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 181 mono the is ts (see the works of Reuouf, Wilkerson, Rawliuson, Legge, Clark, Max Muler.) This should occasion us no surprise. Monotheism was the religion of Noah; and was handed down to his descendants. Yet, in every instance, their mixed-blooded descend- ants, when found far removed from the influence of the whites, have either lost all knowledge of a God, and of religious worship, or they have descended to idolatry. Previous to the creation of man, the negro had no more idea of a God, or of religious worship, than any other animal. But God established between him- self and man, the tie of kinship, which forms a bond of love and sympathy between them, and enables man to respect, confide in, and worship an all-wise, all- powerful, but invisible God. But no kinship exists between God and the mixed-bloods. Hence, though these creatures may inherit from their Adamic ances- tors a knowledge of God, when relieved of the influence of the white, they soon lose all confidence in, and all respect for, an invisible God. They must have a god which they can see; and in the absence of such an one, they fashion for themselves gods of wood, stone, or metal; or deify some animate, or inanimate object, as their whim suggests. Thus, amalgamation becomes the parent of idolatry Hayti furnishes an illustration of this. In 1793, the negroes were eman- cipated. In 1825, England formally acknowledged the republic of Hayti. Thus, this fine country was 182 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. turned over to the negroes and mixed bloods. They were g-iven an organized system of political govern- ment, and an organized system of religion; with churches, schools, and all the appliances of civiliza- tion; yet despite the most persistent efforts of Catho- lics and Protestants, to hold them up to a civilized life, they have descended to fetish worship and canni- balism, in the shadow of scores of churches. They sacrifice their own offspring to snakes, and then eat the sacrifice; the ceremonies ending in a drunken debauch, which is characterized by the most indis- criminate intercourse between the sexes. (Sir Spencer St. John, Havti; or the Black Republic.) This reveals the startling truth that, underlying all of God's arraignments, and punishments of Israel, and her surrounding nations, for their idolatry, was this loathsome crime, amalgamation. It is not the idol, nor his confidence in it, but the obscene rites, and the indiscriminate intercourse between the sexes, which usually characterizes the worship of idols that induces man to renounce God, abandon his worship, and embrace idolatry. Their children are reared in a cess-pool of amalgamation, and trained to worship idols. Hence, in the course of time, they lose all knowledge of the true God, and of his worship, and become "heathen." Man's social, political, and religious equality with the negro, inevitably leads to amalgamation; and this, in its turn, gives birth to idolatry; then, in order to MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 183 get the negro and his amalg-amated prog-enj into the famil}'- of man, the truth of Divine Creation is re- pudiated; and the Theory of Evolution is substituted in its stead. It was his desire to counteract the results of these destructive crimes, which led God to "raise up" for himself "a chosen people," iu the Israelites, who would be "peculiar,'' in that they they would not descend to amalgamation and idolatry; and in order to disabuse their minds of, and counteract the degrading influences of the Theory of Evolution, which was universally taught in that day, God gave to Israel the Narrative of Creation, together with a history of the events which led up to the Israelitish occupancy of Canaan. It was God's desire that Israel would lead all men to renounce atheism, and abandon amalgamation and idolatry. But instead of respecting and executing the will of God, the Israelites abandoned themselves to the crimes they were designed to eradi- cate. Then God sent prophets to warn them of the results of their wicked course, and visited upon them war, pestilence, famine, etc., to induce them to return to their allegiance to him. Then, as a last resort, he sent the Savior, who established the Christian church on the Narrative of Creation. But evidently the primitive Christian church, which eliminated the negro and the mixed-bloods, did not long- survive the Savior. For many centuries the modern church has found its ultimate basis on the Theory of Development; the negro and the mixed-bloods are recognized as 184 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, * 'lower races of men/' and the gpospel extended to them; and Jboth thd clerg-y and laity of to-day, are doing- all in their power, socially, politcally, and relig-iously, to perpetuate on this earth a condition of affairs, which our Savior died to put an end to. All the facts indicate that, for a long- period, the descendants of Noah respected the design of God, in creating man; lived in obedience to his laws, and maintained the relation of master and servant, which God established between man and the neg-ro, in the Creation. During this period, described in the "Popol Vuh" as one of * 'great peace," they prospered and were happy in the approving smile of heaven; and developed upon the various continents, the most superb civilizations. But, in an evil hour, they violated the law of God, by descending to amalgamation with their negroes; and the smiles of heaven were exchanged for its frowns; the blessings of God were withdrawn, and his curses were showered upon them in the forms of war, famine, pestilence, etc., to induce them to abandon their wicked course, and return to their duties. But, like the antediluvians, they persisted in their evil way; nation after nation was destroyed from the face of the earth, their civilizations laid in ruins, and their country turned over to the barbarians and savages their crime had produced. These ancient people left in their great cities, sumptuous palaces, magnificent temples, gigantic pyramids, etc., the most enduring evidences of their MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 185 erilightenment. But, when amalgamation has ab- sorbed, and destroyed us, as it absorbed and destroj^ed them, what evidence will we leave to the explorers of thirty or forty centuries hence, that we were a great agricultural, commercial, and maritime people; that in eager quest of other avenues of trade, our ships had rode the billows of every ocean, and touched the shores of every continent of the earth? Absolutely none. Our frail civilization, of which we, so highly boast, will disappear under the destructive influences of a few centuries, aided by the vandal hand of the savages we are producing, like mist before the morn- ing sun; scarcely a vestige will remain. Hence, when we make monotheism, a knowledge of the arts and sciences, the number and magnitude of mechanical structures, the skill displayed in their construction, and their durability, the test of enlightened civiliza- tions, we must admit that the great architects of these ancient civilizations were at least our peers. In discussing the subject, we should carefully consider the stealthfulness with which amalgamation accomplishes its destructive results. This crime al- ways begins between the white males and the black females. Quatref ages says: ' 'In the crossings between unequal human races, the father almost always belongs to the superior race. In every case, and especially in transient amours, woman refuses to lower herself; man is less delicate." {The Human Species.) Thus, it is evident that the mixed-bloods must rapidly in- 1S6 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. crease at the expense of both the pure whites, and the pure negroes. Upon reaching: maturity, a very con- siderable percentage of the mixed-bloods, males and females, will take mates from among- the negroes; again, many Adamic males will take concubines from among both negroes and mixed-bloods. Thus, the negro becomes the prey, not only of the white males, but also of the mixed-bloods of both male and female. Hence, it is easy to see that it is simply a question of time, when the negro will be absorbed and destroyed, and their descendants will all be mixed-bloods. This has been demonstrated in the United States. The first negroes from Africa, were imported here in A. D., 1619. Amalgamation at once began, to-day there is not a pure-blooded negro on this continent. Not one. Now it only remains for the mixed-bloods to complete the absorption and destruction of the pure whites, and we will leave this continent as we found i , populated with mixed-bloods. Hence, when we dis- abuse our minds of the atheism, which teaches that the white and the negro are but different races of the same species of animal, and accept the scriptural teaching, that they are different kinds of flesh, the progeny resulting from their unions appears in a very different light. Woman, the female side, or part of man, is the great stronghold, the vital point, of the Adamic Crea- tion. Hence, as long as the marriage relations of the pure Adamic females of a nation, or continent, is con- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 187 fined to pure Adamic males, the pure Adaniic stock of that nation, or continent, cannot be absorbed and de- stroyed bv amalgamation. In addition to their Adamic wives, the Adamic males will, here and there, have negro concubines. From their wives they will produce pure Adamic offspring; from their negro con- cubines, they will produce mixed-bloods. The progeny of the latter, are always mixed-bloods, without refer- ence to whether their mates are whites, mixed-bloods, or negroes. While the absorbtion and destruction of the Ne- gro, and the consequent increase of the mixed-bloods, is progressing, the Adamic females declining to lower themselves by association with their inferiors, the Negro and mixed-bloods, are confining their married relations to pure Adamic males; and are producing pure Adamic stock to very nearly the same extent as if there was no amalgamation going on between the Adamic males and the negroes and mixed-bloods. The mixed-blooded females, for obvious reasons, pre- fer the Adamic males, either in transient amours or as permanent mates. Under the influence of the law of heredity, the offspring resulting from these unhal- lowed luiions, present more and more the phj^sical and mental characters of the White, with each succeeding generation, until, in the course of time, it would never occur to the ordinary observer that they were not of pure Adamic stock. When this occurs, the mixed- Iblooded males, by a change of residence to a distant part 188 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. of the country, find it easy to impose themselv^es on the whites as pure-bloods, and are thus enabled to form marriag-e alliances with Adamic females. When this lamentable result ensues, the Adamic Creation is successfully assaulted at its vital point — the female. The base-born products of God's violated law, result- ing- from these unions, will marry indiscriminately with pure whites. Then the doom of that nation is sealed. Nothing- short of a direct intervention of Di- vine providence can save it. When amalg-amation beg-ins in a nation, the rela- tion of master and servant always exists between the whites and negroes. As this crime increases, no rec- ord is kept of the pure white, nor of the pure neg-roes, nor of the mixed-bloods. As in our own country, every individual whose skin is white, or relatively so, is recognized as pure white, unless he is known to be of negro extraction, or his antecedents are unknown. On the other hand, without reference to their complexion, all are recognized as negroes who are known to be taint- ed with negro blood. The result is, that at no time is it possible to discover that the mixed-bloods are rapidly increasing at the expense of both the pure whites and the pure negroes. Hence, each succeeding generation supposes that the conditions by which it is surrounded are such as always existed. In the meantime, God may visit his curses upon them in the form of war, famine, pestilence, etc., to compel them to abandon their crime and return to their allegiance to Him. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 189 Failing in this, God, in his wrath and disg-ust, may destro}' them from the face of the earth and lay their civilization in ruins. On the other hand, He may abandon them to the natural result of their shameless crime. In this case, as has been shown, the negroes will iirst be absorbed bv their associations with the white males and the mixed-bloods. Then in their turn the whites will be absorbed through their associations with the mixed-bloods. This accom- plished, the relation of that nation to God and its re- lation to the earth and the rest of created things, has undergone the most radical change. Its original population of whites and negroes, were parts of God's creation; while their amalgamated progen}- is merely the j)roduct of His violated law. This change was so gradual, requiring many centuries for its completion, that it attracted no attention at the time. Hence, the cause which led to it is never investigated and under- stood. When the whites are finally destroyed, their country, with its civilization, wealth and national name, together with their religion, their knowledge of the arts, sciences, etc., is inherited b}^ their mixed- blooded descendants. In many cases they are dispos- sessed of their civilization and driven into the forest where, with no capacity to develop a civilization for themselves, they descend to savagery. We find an il- lustration of this in the case of the Nav^ajoes. At the time of the Spanish conquest, they were an agricult- ural community. Compelled by the Spaniards to 190 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. abandon their inherited possessions, thej sought shelter in the mountains. They never made the least effort to develop a civilization, but became a wander- ing- band of as wild, blood-thirsty savages as ever in- fested the border, and are such today. (Baldwin's Ancient America.) On the other hand, these mixed-bloods, in which the white blood largely predominates, may, under favorable conditions, retain more or less of their in- herited possessions for an indefinite period. From among the numerous examples of this kind which are furnished by the various continents, we shall select Greece as an illustration, since her history, both ancient and modern, is more generally understood. There was a period in the history of Greece when her people were famed throughout the world for their white skins, their fair hair and their possession of all the exalted physical and mental characters which are peculiar to that sublime creature whom God honored in the Creation by the bestowal of His "likeness" and His * 'image." In that remote age of her history, Greece gave to posterity a galaxy of intellects, Avhose names and whose achievements adorn the brightest pages in the world's history. But alas! alas! Their towering intellectuality, their boundless enterprise, their restless energy, their dauntless courage, com- bined with their forgetfulness of God, paved the way to their ruin. During their various wars, thousands of negroes were captured and imported into Greece as MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 191 slaves, together with thousands of captives taken from the mixed-blooded tribes and nations agfainst which Greece waged war. These were never exported, jet thev have long- since disappeared, leaving no progeny of negroes in their stead. And it is a significant fact, and one which no anthropologist, no historian and no traveler will deny, that the white-skinned, fair-haired Greek of ancient times has also disappeared, leaving no progeny of white-skinned, fair-haired Greeks. What became of them? A glance at our surroundings should convince us that, in an evil hour, amalgama- tion laid its blighting touch upon the vitals of Greece; and, in the course of centuries, under its destructive influences, the white-skinned, fair-haired Greek and the black-skinned, woolly-haired Negro disappeared, and were replaced by the dark-skinned, black-haired Greek of modern times. This radical change in the physical characters of her population was accompanied by a corresponding change in their mentality, and, consequently, in the status of Greece among the na- tions of the earth; and that fair land, once the home of the highest culture, became the abode of ignorance .and superstition. Many a long century has dragged its weary length into eternity since Greece produced a Homer, an Aristides, a Herodotus, a Pericles, a Solon, a Plato or a Demosthenes. Pausing amid the busy scenes of daily life to view the routes which man has trodden from the Creation to the Crucifixion, or even down to the fall of the 192 MANy AND THE NEGRO. Roman empire,' or down to our day, if ^-ou will, we ob- serve that, however divergent these routes may be in the ultimate, they all converge upon the Noachian Deluge. Scattered thickly along these various routes, we note the wrecks of principalities, kingdoms and empires, with here and there one which, in the zenith of its wealth and power, ruled the world. But alas! Their glory has departed; their once intellectual, cul- tured and pow^erful populations no longer grace the earth — their name is history; in many instances even their national boundaries are stricken from the maps of the world; their once fertile fields, that bloomed and fruited in the smiles of heaven, and yielded an abund- ant harvest as the reward of intelligent, industrious culture, are now barren wastes, which bear the unmis- takable impress of the curse of God and are properly described in Scripture as desolations; their former cities, once the flourishing marts of the world's com- merce, are now buried beneath the earth; or, if any vestige of them remains upon its surface still, a mass of ruins alone mark their sites; their once splendid capitals, within the palaces of which the royalty, the nobility, the intellect, the culture, the beauty, the chivalry, the wealth and fashion of those ancient realms held high revel, are now swept from the earth; or, if any vestige of them remains, they are in ruins and, like Petra, Idumea's once proud capital, they are degraded to a fold for herds and flocks; or, like Nineveh, that city "that dwelt carelessly," they MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 193 have ^^become a desolation; a place for beasts to lie down in;" or, like Palenque, the ruins of their former beauties and g-randeurs are now buried in the gloom and solitude of the jungle. Their histories or their traditions, if any, have descended to us; or their monuments, or their inscriptions, if any remain, all teach us that, in their prosperous days, tne White and the Black — Man and the Neg'ro — were represented in their populations. But, strange as it may seem, it is nevertheless true, that any remnant of their descend- ants which can be identified, are colored — some shade of brown, red or yellow. If neither history, nor tra- dition, nor monument, nor inscription, nor any rem- nant of their descendants can be found, an investiga- tion of the ruins of their civilization reveals the idol —the most infallible evidence that amalgfamation de- stroyed them. [13] DID NATURE BLUNDER? Would you believe that the above negro was the daughter of pure vA\\ies? Never, though it was written in letters of fire upon the fece o^ the heavens. 7 Chapter VII. That the Beast is a Biped Animal, and not a Quadruped, is Proven by the Bible. We observe that God treats the land animals, with which man was to be more closely associated in his ef- forts to "subdue" the earth, very differently from the manner in which he treats the "fowl of the air," or the "fish of the sea,'' in that he divides them into three classes, as shown by the following: "And God said, I^et the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind; and it was so." (Gen. i:24.) This division of the land animals into the three classes named, "cattle," "creeping things, " and "beast" is observed throughout the scriptures. (197) 198 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Theologians who have noted this classification, and have attempted to interpret it, base the distinction which God makes between *' cattle" and * 'beast" upon the nature of the food upon which they subsist; that is, they consider the "cattle" to be herbiverous animals; and the ''beasts" to be carniverous animals. (See Guyot's Creation y Kinn's Moses and Geology, etc.) This inter- pretation not only brings the Narrative of Creation in conflict with Bible history, as we shall hereafter show, but also brings it in conflict with the teachings of modern science. The first land animal to make its appearance on earth was a carniverous creature — an insect -eating marsupial. (DsLtia's Manual of Geology.) The distinc- tion which God makes between "cattle" and "beast" is based upon the differences in their physical structure. The "cattle" are quadrupeds; the "beasts" are bipeds — apes. Blumenbach, Cuvier and the older naturalists, regarded the apes as quadrumana, or four-handed ani- mals. But more recent and carefnl investigation shows there is no four-handed animal. Prof. Huxley has shown, by comparative anatomy, that the fore, or upper extremity of every ape, from the lyemur up, is an arm, which terminates in a hand ; and that the hinder or lower extremity of every ape, from the Lemur up, is a leg, which terminates in a foot. {Man's Place in Nature.) Hence, the apes, like man, are bipeds. Our interpreta- tion of God's division of the land animals, into the three classes named, harmonizes with the teachings of modem science. Geological researches show that these MANy AND THE NEGRO. 199 three classes of creatures made their appearance on the earth, in the order stated in the Narrative of Creation: (l) Marsupials — quadrupeds (cattle). (2) A variety of animal forms, consisting of insects, worms, snakes, etc. (creeping things). (3) Apes — bipeds (beasts). [See Dana's Manual of Geology.] Inasmuch as the physical and mental organisms of the ape are in nearer approach to those of man, than are those of the quadrupeds, it follows that he is a higher grade of animal. Hence, while .'the * 'cattle" and the whole of the land animals are sometimes referred to in scripture as "beasts," this higher grade of animal, the * 'beast," is never referred to as "cattle.'' The quadru- peds are frequently referred to in the Bible as "cattle," "herds," or "flocks," and individual species of quadru- peds, or "cattle," are frequently referred to as the horse, ox, swine, dog, lion, etc. On the other hand, the ape is specially named, or referred to as "beasts;" but never as "cattle," or "herds," or "flocks." The careful ob- servance of this unvarying rule will prove invaluable in our search of the scriptures. We must carefully observe the distinction which God makes between the "cattle," or quadrupeds, and the "beast," or ape. We observe that, in addition to commanding the earth to "bring forth cattle and creeping things," God commanded it to bring forth the beast of the earth after his kind; that is, after the beast or ape kind. Theolo- gians pay no attention to this command, supposing it to be a general term, which is applied to the carniverous 200 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. animals. This is a mistake ; it is the name which God applied to a particular ape, as shown by the following: ' *And the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth and upon every fowl of the air, upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the sea; intoj'our hand are they delivered." [Gen. ix. :2.] God thus names (l) the beast of the earth, (2) the fowl of the air, {Z) "all that moveth upon the earth," [4] the fish of the sea. Thus we see that in this statement, the **beast of the earth" is separated from the rest of the land animals by the "fowl of the air." Thus it is shown that the term "beast of the earth," is not a general term applied to the camivora, but is the name of a particular race of the "beast," or ape species. The importance and value of the "beast of the earth," in the execution of God's plan for the develop- ment of the resources of the earth, is indicated by the fact that he is the only animal specifically named in the Creation. No special mention is made of the horse, ox!, etc. They are merely included with the rest of the quad- rupeds under the general term cattle. In this respect he is on a par with man. Bearing in mind the distinction which God makes between the ''cattle," or quadrupeds, and the "beast," or ape, the following, in common with other punishments which God said he would inflict upon the Israelites if they violated His law, is significant: "And thy carcass shall be meat unto all fowls of the air and unto the beasts of the earth, and no man shall fray them awa5\" [Deut. xxviii. :26.] MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 201 *'*"Then," said David to the Philistine, "This day will the Lord deliver thee into my hand. ^ ^ * ^nd I will give the carcasses of the host of the Philistines this day unto the fowls of the air, and to the wild beasts of the earth." [l. Sam. xvii. :45-46.J This indicates that there were ''wild beasts of the earth*' in that region in that day. They had doubtless been emancipated. And it is significant that every on€ of the great nations of that region, with the exception of a scattered remnant of the Israelites, are destroyed from off the earth and their civilizations are in ruins. Later on, we shall have occasion to refer to the Philistine's challenge to David, with its accompanying threat. Thus, the Bib^e plainly teaches that there is a "beast," or ape, that is a man eater. Yet, not one of the recognized apes of to-day, are man eaters. What became of this great man-eating ape? When we appeal to science to solve this problem, she promptl}^ invades the so-called "human species," and points us to the Negro, as the highest grade of ape, and the only ape that is a man eater. The Negro is not only a man eater, but he feeds upon the flesh of his own kindred, and -even upon his own off- spring, as v/ell as upon that of otlier apes. Tliough the Negro made his appearance upon the earth as the ''beast of the earth," and is sometimes referred to by that name, it is not the only name, nor the one most frequentl}^ ap- plied to him in scripture. This was simply the name which God applied to the Negro previous to the creation of man. The task of naming the animals devolved upon 202 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Adam. We are taught that, **Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field." [Gen. ii. :20.] Observe the distinction made between the "cattle" and the "beast of the field:" and that, in this statement, the fowl are placed be- tween the "cattle" and the "beast of the field." Theologians pay little or no attention to the "beast of the field," and seem to take it for granted that the "beast of the field" are that class of animals which were de- signed to be harnessed to the beam and draw the plow. But a careful investigation of this subject reveals the startling truth that this w^as the creature whom God de- .signed should grasp the handles and direct the team. When we approach the modern Christian, either priest or layman, with the inquiry, "What is the * beast of the field?' " he promptly replies: "These are our domestic animals of draught and burthen, the horse, the ox, and the ass, with which we cultivate the fields, and use for other domestic purposes." As is well known, our domestic animals of draught and burthen with Avhich we cultivate the fields, subsist on grass, hay and the ce- reals; not one of them is a flesh eating animal. But the biblical "beast of the field" is a flesh eating creature ; he is the worst form of flesh eating animal ; he is a man eater, as shown by the following: "And the Philistine said to David, Come to me and I will give thy flesh unto the fowls of the air, and to the beast of the field." [I.Sam, xvii. :44.] Among the ^'cattle," or quad- rupeds, are numerous camiverous animals that will feed MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 203 upoa the flesh of man; but, as has been shown, the Negro is the only * 'beast," or ape that will feed upon the flesh of man. Hence, the** 'beast of the field" to which the Philistine said he would give the flesh of David, and the "beast of the earth" to which David said he wouid give the flesh of the Philistine were identical. Thisi ndicates (l) that when Adam named the animals, he named the Negro the "beast of the field;" (2) that both the Philistines and the Israelites recognized the Negro as a beasl . The Negro made his appearance upon the earth as the "beast of the earth" and is sometimes referred to by that name. When Adam named the ani- mals he named the Negro "the beast of the field:" and this name is generally applied to him in scripture, though he is frequently referred to simply as "beast." Further evidence that the "beast of the field" is a man eater, is furnished by Rizpah's touching exhibition of mother love and devotion in guarding the bodies of her sons who were hanged by David's order. Rizpah * 'took sackcloth and spread it for her upon the rock from the beginning of harvest until water dropped upon them out of heaven, and suffered neither the birds of the air to rest upon them by day, nor the beasts of the field by night." (II. Sam. xxi.:10.) Further evidence of the broad distinction which God makes between the * 'cattle" and the '*beast," is shown in the narrative of the plagues with which God afflicted the Egyptians, to compel them to let Israel go. After afflicting them with frogs, lice, flies, etc., 204 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. God said to Moses, *'Go unto Pharaoh, and tell him, Behold, the hand of the Lord is upon thy cattle, which is in the field, upon the horses, upon the asses, upon the camels, upon the oxen, and upon the sheep; there shall be a very grievous murrian. And the Lord shall sever between the cattle of Israel and the cattle of Kg"ypt; and there shall nothing* die of all that is the children's of Israel. And the Lord did that thing on the morrow, and all the cattle of Egypt died; but of the cattle of the children of Israel died not one. And the heart of Pharoah was hardened, and he did not let the people go. And the Lord said unto Aaron, Take to you handfuls of ashes of the furnace, and let Moses sprinkle it toward the heaven in the sight of Pharoah. And it shall become small dust in all the land of Kgypt, and shall be a boil breaking forth with blains upon man and upon beast, throughout all the land of Egypt. And they took the ashes of the fur- nace, and stood before Pharaoh; and Moses sprinkled it toward heaven; and it became a boil breaking forth with blains upon man and upon beast." (Ex. ix, i, 3, 4, etc.) We are thus taught (1) that the '^cattle" are qiiadrupeds, horses, camels, etc. And that the **beasts" were a very different class of animals, as shown by the fact that the "cattle" were first afflicted; then afterwards the "beasts" were afflicted. This is signigcant, when we consider that each succeeding plague was more injurious to the Egyptians than its MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 205 predecessor. This indicates the relative value of the **cattle" and "beasts;" and that the "beasts" were far more valuable than the "cattle." We can readily understand that this would be so, when we realize that the "cattle" were their domestic quadrupeds, and that their "beasts" were negroes. Previous to the late sectional war in the United States, the neg-roes in the Southern States were far more valuable than the domestic quadrupeds in those States. A sheep was worth say $2.00; a cow or an ox $25.00; a horse $100.00. But an adult neg-ro was worth from $1,000.00 to $1,500.00. Hence, it was far more injurious to the peo- ple of the South to be deprived of their neg-roes than it would have been to deprive them of their domestic quadrupeds. The same was doubtless true of the Eg'yptians of Pharaoh's day. Profane history and science teach that the Eg'yptians owned immense numbers of neg-roes. The neg-ro is fig-ured on the Eg-yptian monuments of 4,000 years ag-o. (2) The "cattle" of the Eg'yptians were afflicted with "a very grievous murrain," while the "beasts" were afflicted with "boils breaking forth into blains," just as the men of Egypt were. This is significant. (3) The Egyptians, who were masters of the country, are accredited with owning both "cattle" and "beasts," while the Israelites, who were in bondage to -the Egyptians, are accredited with owning "cattle" but uot "beasts." (See Ex. x, 9, 24, 25; Ex. xii, 38.) 206 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. The Canaanites, whom the Israelites were com- manded to destroy, and possess themselves of their country, were the owners of g-reat numbers of negroes, as shown by the following: '*And the Lord thy God will put out those nations before thee by little and by little; thou mayest not consume them at once, lest the beasts of the field increase upon thee." (Deut. vii, 22.) Observe that there was no fear expressed lest the **cattle" or the ''creeping* thing-" increase upon the Israelites! But not so with the "beasts of the field" — the neg-roes. Let us bear in mind that the country of the Canaanites was a rich, productive country, "a goodl}^ land;" and that it was in the hig-hest state of cultivation — "a land flowing- with milk and honey;" that it abounded with cities,, towns, villages, farms, vineyards, orchards, etc. And that it was occupied by "seven nations greater and mightier" than Israel. And it would have been impossible for this compara- tively small number of Israelites to have occupied the numerous fine cities, towns, villages, farms, etc., and maintain this splendid civilization which had required ages to develop. It was the expressed desire of God that the land of Canaan, v/ith its wealth of every description, should become the property of the Israel- ites; and if the Canaanites v/ere all destroyed "at once," much of their civilization would crumble into ruins for the want of being cared for; and it would require centuries for the Israelites to increase to such an extent as would enable them to occupy the entire MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 207 land. Hence, it was the part of wisdom for the Israel- ites to first possess themselves of only so much of the land as they could successfully handle; leaving the remainder with its wealth and civilization in the hands of the Canaanites to care for and preserve. In addi- tion to this, it seems that there was a g-reater number of negroes in the land of Canaan than the Israelites could at first profitably handle; so if the Canaanites were all destroyed at once, much of the civilization and wealth of these seven nations would fall into the hands of the negroes and be wasted and destroyed. The negro is as prolific as the white, and would in- crease as rapidly; they would prove very troublesome neighbors; as the freed negro never fails to prove. Besides, it would have been a violation of the law of God to release the negro from the control of their former owners and give them no new ones. Hence, **The Lord thy God will put these nations out before thee by little and by little; thou may est not consume them at once, lest the beasts of the field increase upon thee." The evidence that the Israelites possessed negroes is found in the following command: '*And six years shalt thou sow thy land, and shalt gather in the fruits thereof. But the seventh year thou shalt let it rest and lie still; that the poor of thy people may eat; and what they leave the beasts of the field shall eat. In like manner thou shalt deal with thy vineyard, and with thy olive yard." (Ex. xxiii, 10, 11.) 208 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, Here we have additional and positive proof that the "beast of the field" is not our domestic quadru- peds of draug-ht and burthen; these animals will not eat grapes and olives. Besides, it is not supposable tha% God would require the Israelites to turn their oxen, horses, etc., into their vineyards and olive 3^ards to browse, trample down, and destroy them every seventh year. The negro would gather the grapes and olives and not injure the vineyard or olive yards. Besides, the negro will eat the products of the fields, gardens, orchards and vineyards, or anything that a man will eat, and then eat the man. God's love and wisdom is displayed in this command restraining the Israelites from abandoning themselves to a mad, ceaseless strug- gle for the accumulation of wealth. Every seventh year the land was not to be cultivated; it should "rest and lie still;" and any spontaneous crops which it might produce should be for the poor people; and what they left should be for the neg-roes. The latter were cared for by their m^asters, so that they could dispose of their part, and thus realize more or less cash for their own use. So it was with the vineyards and olive yards. These would, of course, produce as abundantly as in any other year. The land-owners were allowed to reserve such parts of the crops of these as were necessary for their own use, but the surplus was not to be sold; this should belong to the poor people, and what they left should be for the ne- groes. Thus, under God's wise, beneficent law, all MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 209 were cared for — the land-owners, the poor and the ne- groes. Thus, the neg-roes were not compelled to labor incessantly, year after year, without compensation; but in addition to such 'Hips" as they mig-ht receive from time to time, they were allowed to share in the products of the land every seventh year. The following- charg-e of the Almig-hty is one of the many with which the Scriptures abound, which go to prove that the Israelites violated the law of God and descended to amalgamation with the negroes and with the mixed-bloods: "For mine eyes are upon all their ways. * * * And first I will recompense their iniquity and their sin double; because they have defiled my land, they have filled mine inheritance with the carcasses of their detestable and abominable things." (Jer. xvi, 17, 18.) Thus, the Israelites, like the antedeluvians and the Canaanites, defiled the land. What is God's "inheritance?" Israel was God's inheritance. (See I. Kings viii, 51; Isaiah xix, 25, etc.) Then, by their amalgamation, they had defiled the land and had "filled" Israel — the nation of Israel — with the "carcasses" of "things" that were "detesta- ble and abominable" in the sight of God. Observe that in producing those "detestable and abominable things" they had defiled the land, just as the Canaan- ites had done. Observe also that the Creator of the heaven and the earth, the Maker of man and beast, lie who fashioned the fowl of the air and the fish of the sea — God, the Author of all language and all [14] 210 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. speech — declined to give a name to this loathsome offspring of Man and the Negro; and the nearest ap- proach that he would make to naming them is found in his declination recorded in our text, when, in the absence of all name (for these monstrosities are nameless) he bestows upon them the descriptive epi- thet, "detestable and abominable things." The above text throws a flood of light upon God's command to Jeremiah: "Thou shalt not take thee a wife, neither shalt thou have sons or daughters in this place. For thus saith the Lord concerning the sons and concerning the daughters that are born in this place, and concerning their mothers that bare them, and concerning their fathers that begat them in this land: They shall die grievous deaths; they shall not be lamented, neither shall they be buried; but they shall be as dung upon the face of. the earth; and they shall be consumed by, the sword, and by famine; and their carcasses shall be meat for the fowl of heaven and for the beasts of the earth." (Jer. xvi, 2, 3.) We are thus taught: (1) That the men of Israel had persisted in amalgamation so long that their male progeny of mixed-bloods were not distinguishable from pure whites; and that in this way many of the women of Israel had been led into amalgamation. Hence, it was dangerous for a man to take a wife from among them, and Jeremiah was forbidden to do so. (2) That, in the eyes of God, the offspring of Man and the Negro is only fit for dung on the face of the earth. MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 211 It will be observed that the Bible describes two offenses which result from illicit intercourse between the sexes. The one is termed "adultery," the other "fornication." The modern world has been taug-ht to believe that "adultery" is "the unfaithful- ness of any married person to the marriage bed." (Webster, Dictionary.) And that "fornication" is "the incontinence or lewdness of unmarried persons, male or female." [fbid.] This is opposed to the teaching's of scripture. Our Saviour said, "It hath been said, whosoever shall put away his wife, saring" for the cause of fornication, causes her to commit adultery; and whosoever shall marry her committeth adultery." (Matt, xix, 9.) Here we observe the dis- tinction made between fornication and adultery; and that a married person may commit fornication. But if for any other cause save fornication a man put away his wife, and another man marries her, both the woman and the man whom she marries commit adul- tery, but not fornication. As has been shown, Cain, and other antediluvians, and the people of Sodom and Gomorrha, and the Israelites, were all charg-ed by Jude with committing" fornication and ' 'going after strange flesh." Adultery is that offense which men and v/omen commit by illicit intercourse with their own kind of flesh. But forni- cation is that offense which men and women commit when they associate themselves carnally with the negro, or with the mixed-bloods; that is, with strange 212 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. flesh. The New Testament abounds with denuncia- tions of fornication and fornicators, which indicates that fornication was prevalent in the days of the Savior; and that, like the prophets who preceded him, his mission was to break up this wicked, destructive practice, and the social, political and religious equality with the negro which inevitably leads to it; and to restore the relation of master and servant which God established between man and the negro in the creation. God charges that the people of Jerusalem and Samaria committed fornication with the Egyptians, Assyrians, etc., whose * 'flesh is as the flesh of asses, and whose issue is as the issue of horses." (Ezek. xxiii, 20.) When we turn upon this statement the light of Paul's declaration that ''there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts/' etc., it becomes plain that the horse and the ass and the negro all belong to one kind of flesh — the flesh of beasts; and that the Egyptians, Assyrians, etc., had descended to amalgamation. Hence, their flesh was corrupted, and was strange flesh to that of the people of Jerusalem and Samaria. Bearing this in mind, the following is instructive: "Son of man, set thy face against Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and prophesy against him, and against all ^&ypt- * * * Therefore thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I will bring a sword upon thee, and cut off man and beast out of thee. And the land of Egypt shall be desolate and waste. No foot of man shall KiAJv, AND THE NBGHO. 213 pass through it, nor foot of beast shall pass through it neither shall it be inhabited forty years. And I will make the land of Egypt desolate in the midst of the countries that are desolate, and her cities among the cities that are laid waste, shall be desolate forty years; and I will scatter the Egyptians among the nations, and will disperse them through the countries. Yet thus saith the Lord God: At the end of forty years will I gather the Egyptians whither they were scat- tered. And I will bring again the captivity of Egypt, and will cause them to return into the land of Pathros, into the land of their habitation; and they shall become a base kingdom. * =* * Therefore thus saith the Lord God: Behold, I will give the land of Egypt unto Nebuchadrezzar, king of Babylon; and he shall take her multitude, and take her spoil, and take her prey; and it shall be the wages of his army." [Ezek. xxix, 2, 8, 9, etc.] ^ Thus, we are plainly taught by the Bible that, act- ing under Divine influence, Nebuchadrezzar invaded Egypt and took the Egyptians captive, and scattered them through the countries over which Babylon held sway ; and that neither foot of man nor foot of beast passed through Egypt for forty years ; that the land of Egypt was utterly waste and desolate, and was not in- habited for forty years. In direct conflict with this Bible teaching, profane history, sustained by scientific re- search, teaches that from the first settlement after the deluge Egypt has always been inhabited in the sense that we understand the term. ^14 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, Now, if we accept the teachings of atheism and those of the modern church that the whites, blacks, browns, reds and yellows are all *' races of men" in dif- ferent stages of development, how are we to reconcile the teachings of profane history and of science with the Bible, as to this forty years ol Egyptian history? Shall we decide that Nebuchadrezzar entered Egypt and car- ried away ever^^ white, black, brown, red and yellow of the so-called ''races of men," and that in addition to this he removed every animal, wild and tame, great and small, and thus left Egypt ' ^utterly waste and desolate," and that she remained in this condition forty years? This w^ould be absurd. But when we disabuse our minds of this atheistic theory that man is a "species" w^hich is divisible into ** races of men," and accept the teachings of scripture and the sciences- that the white is the onl3' man, and that the negro is an ape, and that the reds, browns and yellows are the result of amalgamation between whites and negroes, and are not a part of God^s creation, this subject becomes plain. We can under- stand that Nebuchadrezzar entered Egypt and removed every pure-blooded white and ever>' pure-blooded negro, leaving the lower animals and the mixed -bloods; and that God declined to recognize these base-born products of his violated law as inhabitants. And that neither **the foot of man" nor "the foot" of beavSt (negro) passed through Egypt for fort^^ years. When the whites were all removed, and the mixed -bloods left, then, in the eyes of God Egypt was "waste and desolate" and was not MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 215 ^'inhabited," and so remained for forty years- This shows that a country which is occupied solely by mixed - bloods is in the eyes of God * 'waste and desolate" and not "inhabited." Yet the modern church is expending millions of dollars annually in the vain, criminal effort to Christianize these degraded creatures which God has declared to be only fit for dung on the face of the earth. The attitude of the modern clergy toward the negro is in striking contrast to that of David, who, in discuss- ing God's creation of man, says: "Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands ; thou has put all things under his feet. All sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field." (Ps. viii, 6, 7-) David realized that he had no **brother in black;" on the con- trary, he recognized the negro as a beast, "the beast of the field." But then David also realized that man was a distinct creation **in the image of God" and that he was not a highly developed species of ape — the * 'human species" — of which the White is the highest and the Negro the lowest race. This, of course, would explain the dffference. Further evidence that our views as to the characters peculiar to man must be materially modified is shown by the narrative of the Fall, as follows: "Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which the I^ord God had made. And he said to the woman. Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden? And the woman said unto the serpent, We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the 216 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. garden, but of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it lest ye die. And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die : For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil. And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her hus- band with her and he did eat. And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked, and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons. And they heard the voice of the lyord God walk- ing in the garden in the cool of the day. And Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden. And the I^ord God called unto Adam and said unto him, Where art thou? And he said, I heard thy voice in the garden and I was afraid because I was naked, and I hid myself. And he said, Who told thee that thou was naked? Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee thou shouldst not eat? And the man said, The woman thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat. And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? And the woman said, The serpent be- guiled me and I did eat. And the Lord said unto the serpent. Because thou hast done this thou art cursed above all cattle and above every beast of the field; Man, and the negro. 211 upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life." (Gen. iii.) We observe (1) that the tempter of Eve was a beast of the field. This would scarcely have been more clearly indicated had the text read, *'Now the serpent was more subtle than any other beast of the field which the Irord God had made." (2) It is evident that when Adam gave names "to every beast of the field" with which he was to be associated in the garden of Eden, in his efforts "to dress it and to keep it,'' the characteris- tics displayed by this individual led Adam to name it the serpent. This was simply a name given it to distin- guish it from others of its kind. Hence, the name Ser- pent no more indicates that it was a snake than does the name of the late Indian chief. Sitting Bull, indicate that he was a bull which habitually assumed the sitting pos- ture. (3) Observe the adroitness with which this beast approached Eve with the inquiry, "Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree in the garden?" The lan- guage employed clearly indicates that this creature was perfectly familiar with the subject of which, in pretended ignorance, he was seeking information. And* when viewed in the light of subsequent events, it becomes plain that this question was a part of a well-conceived and skillfully -executed plan to deceive the woman into violating the law of God. Just here Eve made the mis- take of her life; she should have rebuked this creature^ and sent him about his business. But instead of doing this the unsuspecting woman in the simplicity of her 218 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, nature frankly replied: "We may eat of the fruits of the garden. But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it lest ye die." "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die. For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your e3^es shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil." Then, embold- ened by his success in gaining the confidence of the woman, the serpent proceeds (l) to assail the word of God; (2) to instil into the woman's heart distrust of God ; [3] to engender in her mind discontent with her lot ; [4] to arouse in her the unhallowed ambition that she and her husband ''be as gods." As shown by the narrative, the serpent accomplished his iniquitous design. The woman, accompanied by Adam, and perhaps by the serpent, approached the forbidden tree, and "took of the fruit thereof, and did eat and gave also unto her husband with her, and he did eat." The modern clergy teach that the first sin which Adam and Eve committed was their eating of the forbid- den fruit. This, as shown by the record, is in direct conflict with the plain teaching of the Bible. When they accepted as their councilor this creature over which they were designed to "have dominion," they violated those original statutes given man in the creation, and thus * brought sin into the world. Instead of controlling this * 'beast of the field," or negro — the serpent— they al- lowed him to control them, and he led them to MAK and the negro. 219 their ruin. Their acceptance of this beast as their councilor necessarily preceded their acting upon his advice. Hence, their eating of the forbidden fruit was a second and later offense. This reveals the startling fact that it was man's {social equality with the negro which brought sin into the world; and it is man's social equality with the negro and the evils which inevit- ably grows out of it that keeps sin in the world. We observe that the first curses which God visited upon the serpent were directed solely at his posture. Had the tempter of Eve been a snake, God's sentence, ''Upon thy belly shalt thou go," would have been of no effect ; it would not have wrought the slightest change in the posture of the snake; neither would it have occa- sioned him the least inconvenience. On the other hand, it would have placed God in the most ridiculous light, since the only way the snake could go was upon his belly. But when we come to understand that the tempter of Eve was a beast — a negro — this whole subject appears in a very different light. The habitual posture of the negro is the erect. Hence, God's sentence, ''Upon thy belly shalt thou go, ' ' wrought the most radical change in this negro's posture, and was a most terrible punish- ment. When God cursed him "above every beast of the field," it deprived him of his erect posture. When God cursed him ''above all cattle," he was prevented from going upon all fours, like the quadrupeds. "Upon thy belly shalt thou go" degraded him, in point of posture, to the level of the lowest of the "creeping things." 220 MAN, AND THE NEGHO, God's other curse upon the serpent, *'I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel," shows that the tempter of Eve was a material creature; a creature of flesh and blood: and that he begat offspring-. And it is highly proba- ble that he was the parent of Cain's paramour of strange flesh; and that this curse was fulfilled in Cain's ultimate banishment from the Adamic family to be- come "a fugitive and a vagabond in the earth," and an outcast in eternity. It should be unnecessary to state that God's curses upon the tempter of Eve ^ere confined to this offending beast, and did not extend to the rest of the negroes, since they were not parties to his crime. We also observe that this * 'beast of the field" which tempted Kve possessed articulate speech; and that his mental capacity was such as enabled him to fully understand Adam's relations to the Garden of Eden and its plants, and the laws governing his con- duct. And that he was sufficiently subtle to deceive man into violating the laws of God. Thus, the Bible describes (1) a beast whose habitual posture is the erect; this necessitates a well- formed leg and foot; (2) a beast with a hand. God said of the mountain at Sinai, "There shall not a hand touch it * * * whether it be beast or man." (Ex. xix, 13;) (3) a beast with articulate speech; (4) a beast with mental capacity sufficient to enable him MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 221 to understand the laws of God, and to deceive man into violating" them; (5) a beast with which man may associate himself carnally and produce offspring which will at once be indefinitely fertile and capable of ap- preciating- and utilizing all the arts of civilization. It seems plain that in addition to his general plan of salvation God devised a great labor plan for de- velopment of the resources of the earth. That the execution of this plan was entrusted to man, who was designed to perform the mental labor. That the beasts or apes should furnish in the negro the creature which, in the capacity of servant, should per- form the manual labor. And that the **cattle" or quadrupeds should furnish the animals of draught and burthen; and together with the fish and fowl, would furnish man and the negro their supply of animal food. The Bible is simply a history of the long conflict which has raged between God and man, as the result of man's criminal relations with the negro. Hence, when we recognize the negro as a man, we can make no more sense out of the Bible than we could make out of the history of the American Revolution and recognize the Tories as a part of Washington's army. But when we accept the teachings of scripture that man is a distinct creation **in the image of God;'' and that the negro is an ape; and that man's criminal relations with the negro have been the prolific source of all the trouble between God and man since the Creation, the mystery with which atheism has enveloped the Bible disappears; and that 222 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. sublime current of inspired truth — the Sacred Narrative — from Genesis to Revelations glides as smoothly as a stream of oil ; not the slightest ripple of discord mars its majestic flow. Already science has sounded the note of warning. M. Reclus, and M. ly'abbe de Bonbourg, quoted by Quatrefages, say that '*at the end of a given time, what- ever be their origin, all the descendants of whites or of negroes who have emigrated to America will become red- skins." (The Human Species.) What is the redskin? Simply a savage. Then under the leadership of En- lightened Cl^'Stianity, and modern Materialism, wnth their miserable theory that man is a ''species which \B divisible into races," w^e are descending to savagery; t3 ruin in time, and to hades in eternity. While we agree with the distinguished authors above quoted that the whites and the blacks will disappear from America, we do not agree with them that their descendants will all become redskins. We admit that redskins will be found here and there ; but, in tribes where the blood of the white largely predominates, we shall have our Mandans, Decotas, Tuscaroras, Zunians, Menominees, etc. In other tribes, where the blood of the negro largely pre- dominates, we shall have our Kaws, Carabces, Charuas, Jamassi, etc. When, through the factional strifes of our mixed -blooded descendants, our government is broken up into so many hostile tribes, as was that of our ancient predecessors, the marriage relations of each will be con- fined to their own tribe. The white and black blood MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 223 will be equally distributed to every member of it; the^'r physical and mental characters will in the course of time become fixed. Our descendants will then present every shade of complexion intermediate between that of the pure White and that of the pure Negro- The negro, like man, made his appearance upon the earth without weapons either offensive or defensive. But soon realizing the necessity for weapons, his mech- anical skill, an essential characteristic of the .servant, enabled him to fashion for himself rudely chipped imple- ments of stone. These chipped flints are the earliest evidences of art to be found on the globe. They abound in what is termed the Paleolithic, or Age of Rough Stone. Man was created a metalurgist. How could man subdue the earth without a knowledge of metals? The mixed bloods, Vv^ho had lost their knowledge of metals, v»^ere the artisans of the finely- wrought and polished implements of the Molithic or Age of Polished Stone. Quatrefages compares the so-called **Cro- magnon Race" of Europe to the Algonquin Indian. ( The Human Species- ) WILL YOUR NEXT CHILD BE A NEGRO? Your children are "bone of your bone" and"flesh of your flesh" then who can believe that the negro is an offspring of Adam and Eve. without fearing that their next child may be a n§gro. Chapter VIII. It was not Qod's Original Plan that His Son Should be Crucified, but Amal- gamation and Disobedience of the Human Family made it Imperative, The Bible teaches that the design of God in creat- ing man, was that he should "have dominion over all the earth" and the animals. And when created he was commanded to * 'subdue" the earth and ''have dominion" over fish and fowl and beast. It also teaches that man disregarded the design of God in creating him ; and vio - lated the law of God by descending to social eqality with a beast — a beast of the field — and accepting as his coun- sellor this creature over which he was commanded to *'have dominion." In a previous chapter we have C227) 228 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. shown the distinction which the Bible makes between ''cattle" and "beasts;" that the "cattle" are quadru- peds and the "beasts" are bipeds — apes; we have also shown that the tempter of Eve was a "beast of the field;" that he was fully aware of the law of God forbidding man to eat of the fruit of a certain tree in the Garden of Eden, and that he was possessed of intelligence sufi&c- ient to enable him to seduce man into violating the law of God; that he had the erect posture and possessed articulate speech ; we have also shown that though the beast of the field is carnivorous, he is a man-eater. Dr. Adam Clark in commenting on this subject, combats the absurd idea that the tempter of Eve was of the serpent species. He says, "None of them ever did or ever can walk erect. The very name serpent comes from serpo to creep, and therefore to such it could be neither curse nor punishment to go on their bellies. * ^ ^ They have no organs for speech, or any kind of articulate sound ; they can only hiss. ' ' He says the tempter of Eve, "whatever it was," stood at the head of all inferior animals for wisdom and understanding. * * * "That he walked erect" and possessed "artic- ulate speech." He also notes that the woman mani- fested no surprise that this animal should "walk erect," reason and dispute with her, which indicates that these things were "common," and that it was an "ape." (See Clark's Commentary, vol. I.) The Bible plainly teaches that there was in the Gar- den of Eden a beast that could reason, dispute and walk MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 229 erect. And when 'we appeal to science to identify this creature, she points lis to the Negro, as the highest grade of ape and the only creature among the lower kinds of flesh that possesses these characteristics. This social equality on the part of the parents with this beast, led to carnal association in their offspring; and Cain, the first child born to the Adamic creation, led off in this evil course. Hence, Jude describes amal- gamation as *'The Way of Cain." The degrading pun- ishment which God visited upon Cain for his loathsome crime failed to deter others from following his example; and in the course of time this destructive practice be- came almost universal and led God in His wrath and disgust to regret that He had made man. Enoch, the seventh from Adam, one of the ancient '^preachers of righteousness" strove to eradicate this destructive crime, and warned the people that "God would execute judg- ment upon all" for ''their ungodly deeds." (Jude, 15.) And doubtless there were thousands of other ' 'preachers of righteousness" like Enoch and Noah, who labored to induce the people to abandon this wicked course and respect the design of God in creating man, by living in obedience to His laws; but it was all to no purpose. They persisted in their wicked way for ages until the whole earth was populated with mixed-blooded tribes and nations. The presence of this immense, absorbing ele- ment threatened the extinction of both man and the negro. In the destruction of these most important fac- tors, God's Plan of Creation would have been destroyed. 230 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. The efforts of the good people of th*e world having failed to avert this impending catastrophe, God Himself was compelled to come to the rescue and devise a plan for the preservation of His Creation and the destruction of the mixed -bloods whose further continuance would have annihilated it. "And God looked upon the earth and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way on the earth. And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me; for the earth is filled with violence through them; and behold, I will destroy them with the earth. Make thee an ark of gopher wood ; rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shall pitch it within and with- out with pitch. * * * And, behold, I, even I, do bring a flood of waters upon the earth to destroy all flesh, wherein is the breath of life, from under heaven;, and everything that is in the earth shall die. But with thee will I establish my covenant, and thou shalt come into the ark, thou and thy sons, and thy wife, and thy sons' wife with thee- And of every living thing of all flesh two of every sort shalt thou bring into the ark to keep them alive with thee; they shall be male and female. * * * Thus did Noah; according to all that God commanded him, so did he- * * * And they went unto Noah into the ark, two and two of all flesh. * * * And the I^ord shut him in. And the flood was forty days upon the earth. * * * And all the high hills, that were under the whole heaven, were covered. Fifteen cubits upward did the waters prevail; MAjV, and the negro, 23i and the mountains were covered. And all flesh died that moved upon the earth, both of fowl, and of cattle, and of beast, and of every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth, and every man. * * * And Noah only remaified alive, and they that were with him in the ark. And the waters prevailed upon the earth an hun- dred and fifty days." (Gen. vi and vii.) The Theory of Development could not vSurvive the scriptural teaching as to the universality of theNoachian deluge. This theory "assumes" that the "different races** of * 'speaking men" evolved out of "speechless man," about two hundred thousand j^ears ago, accord- ing to Haeckel; and that it has required all this immense period of time for the various "races" of the "human species'' of ape to attain their respective stages of devel- ment. Hence, it is easy to see that the realit}^ of a deluge covering the whole earth for a period of one hun- dred and fifty days, and dating back only a few thousand years, would sweep their theory out of existence. No sane person could be induced to believe that these so- called "races of men" have developed out of the ape in this brief period of time. The modern clergy too, seem to have a dim con- sciousness that the real it}' of a universal deluge as described in scripture might have a disastrous eiTect on some of their long-cherished family relationships. But if the language of the Bible as above quoted, does not describe a universal deluge, then language would fail to do so. We have had a great many 232 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. professed Christians inform us in all seriousness that, the deluge was merely a local flood, which the Lord sent to destroy some rebellious Hebrews, who lived somewhere in Asia. If this be true, the Lord was certainly not running- his affairs on schedule time; and that the * 'local flood" was a trifle premature to say the least of it; for the Bible plainly teaches that the Deluge came and went long before Eber, the father of the Hebrews was born. Thus, through the agency of a universal deluge, the most terrific catachism the world has ever known, God swept from the earth all its corrupted flesh, and those who at the time were instrumental in corrupting it; and restored the flesh of the earth to its original purity. For a very considerable time after the Deluge, the seed of the Negro was born * 'after his kind, " an4 the seed of man was born "in the image of God." The conditions which prevailed in the Creation were restored by the Deluge. "And God blessed Noah and his sons, and said unto them. Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth. And the fear of you and th^ dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth, and upon every fowl of the air, upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the segt; into your hand are they delivered." (G^w., ix, Ij. 2,}) God thus placed Noah and his sons in the sam€5 -rela- tion to the earth and to the animals, as Adam held in the Creation. The mixed-bloods had all been de- stroyed; and only the white and the black remained. MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 233 On one side of an immeasurable gulf stood man, the * 'thinker," with his elevated physical and mental characters; on the other stood the Negro, the * 'worker," with his ape-like physical and mental characters. And such was the striking- contrast between them, that the idea that they were merely different races of one species, would have seemed ridiculous. But since that remote period amalgama- tion has about closed the gulf. The mixed-bloods now shade on up from black, brown, red, and yellow to white; thus giving plausibility to the theory that they are different races of our species. The Bible teaches that after the Deluge, Noah and his family settled on one of the continents, and that their descendants spread to other continents: •'And the sons of Noah that went forth of the ark, were Shem, Ham and Japheth. * * * These are three sons of Noah: and of them was the whole earth overspread." {Gen^ ix, 18, 19.) The Negro, being an ape, entered the ark with the rest of the animals ; and as the descendants of Noah spread out over the earth they carried with them their negroes and other domestic animals, domestic plants, metallic implements, etc., and developed those superb civilizations the remains of which are found on every continent of the earth. The extent and grandeur of these old civilizations indicate that for a long period after the Deluge these people respected the design of God in creating man, lived in obedience to his law and main- 234 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, tained the relation of master and servant between them- selves and the Negro, and were happy and prosperous. But in the course of ages they forgot God, descended to amalgamation, and this, in its turn, gave birth to idola- try. "Then was war in the gates." God in his wrath and disgust showered his curses upon them in the form of war, famine, pestilence and disease, and destroyed them from the earth, laid their civilizations in ruins, and transformed their once prosperous country into the abode of savages ; or left them to be absorbed and de - stroyed, and their civilization to descend to their mixed - blooded descendants, as in the case of the Mexicans, Peruvians, Malays, Hindoos, Chinese, Japanese, Kore- ans, etc., and these barbarous creatures possess them today. The strength of our position is shown as fol- lows : 1. When we turn upon these ancient civilizations the light of the sciences, we find they were the work of the Whites. "No Negro civilization has ever appeared. No Mongolian one has ever greatly developed." The White is pre-eminently the man of civilization. This is just what God created him to be. The mixed-bloods may inherit from their Adamic ancestors their knowledge of the arts and sciences, but they are almost certain to lose it; and, when lost, it is lost to them forever; they have no ability to replace it. Many valuable arts which these ancient whites possessed were inherited by their mixed -blooded descendants and lost; such as the art of tempering copper to the hardness of steel, etc. I MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 235 2. In every case we find the remains of tlievSe ancient civilizations in the hands of red, brown and yel- low populations, which, in the sum of their characters, are identical with the known offspring of Whites and Negroes in our midst. In addition to this our personal observation, sustained by the most intelligent scientific research, teaches that the only way to produce a brown, red or yellow -complexioned individual is to mingle the blood of the White with that of the Negro. Yet it is astonishing that we disregard the teachings of scripture, the sciences and our personal observation, and accept the undemonstrated and undemonstratable theory of athe- ism, that in the remote past the same class of creatures were produced by development from the ape that we now produce by amalgamation between Whites and Negroes ; and that the Malays, Indians, Chinese, etc., are ''lower races of men" who have descended from the ape, and who in their various stages of barbarism and savagery present so many cases of ''arrested development." Monoism, the belief in one God only — the Creator of the heaven and the earth ; he who made the animal **after his kind" aud who created man in His "image;** the rewarder of the good and the punisher of the wicked was the religion of Noah ; and was handed down to his descendants. But when they descended to amalgamation with their negroes and persisted in this crime, perhaps for centuries, they became demoralized and degraded. The amalgamationists among them were doubtless often denounced, perhaps punished for their criminal relation 236 MAN, AND WE NEGRO, with the Negro. It is probable that they were ostracised from the society of decent people who respected God and insisted on the observance of His law. The amalgamationists of modern times in this coun- try have received just such treatment at the hands of de- cent people. In this we find another illustration of the truth that history repeats itself. The history of these ancient amalgamationists is repeated in that of the amal- gamationists of our day. More than two hundred and fifty years ago, when the first Negroes were imported into this country, the clergy took their position on the religious level of the Negro, and for centuries their effort has been to drag the Ameri- can people and the world at large down to the base plane of the "brother in black." They have not only succeeded in this, but they have dragged the people down to the political level of the Negro, and in many sections of the country to the social -level of the Negro. But these infamous crimes, and the amalgamation to which they inevitably lead, was only accomplished by centuries of the most persistent effort. The man who would de- grade himself so far as to take a negress to wife was looked upon with scorn and contempt. And many of the states enacted laws making amalgamation a punishable offense. And in many of these states these laws are in force to-day, though in the southern states these laws were generally repealed after the late war. In many sec- tions of the country amalgamation through transient amours is tolerated; yet if a man were to openly marry MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 237 a negress his neighbors would feel themselves outraged, and the community scandalized and the offenders would be compelled to seek safety in flight. Many a degraded wretch who had thus offended has suffered violence at the hands of an indignant populace. Hence, when viewed in the light of these comparatively recent events, it is easy to see that the first amalgamationists in the re- mote past w^ould fare badly at the hands of his neighbors who knew that amalgamation was a violation of the law of God and that its indulgence had led to the deluge. Under such circumstances it would seem natural that these ancient amalgamationists, who were determined to pursue their wicked course, would desire that some sem- blance of respectability should be given to their acts, and this could only be accomplished by devising some scheme by which the Negro and his amalgamated progeny would be admitted into the family of man; for at that period, and for long afterwards, as shown by the history of Is - rael, the Negro was recognized as a beast — the "beast of the field." Let us bear in mind that when these people violated the law of God and descended to amalgamation, His blessings, under whtch they had grown rich, powerful and happy, were withdrawn, and his curses visited upon them instead; the blessings of peace, with its elevating, educational advantages and its agricultural, mechanical and commercial vocations, all tending to the building up of happy, prosperous homes, were exchanged for the horrors of war; the men of the land, and especially the 238 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, young men, were torn from home and loved ones, and deprived of the softening, elevating influences of woman's sweet companionship ; the advantages of a fixed place of abode, the society of the family, and the peace and safety of the home, were abandoned for the expos- ure of the camp, the long, tiresome march and the dan- gers of the battle-field; the vocations of peace were ex- changed for the profession of war, and demoralization was the inevitable result. The burthen and expense of these wars, with all their train of evils, fell upon the masses of the people. As a result, the masses gradually became less prosperous and more illiterate ; and as they became more ignorant and poverty-stricken they became more demoralized and degraded. This condition of affairs gave the amalgamationist his opportunity and he took advantage of it by openly renouncing God and the doctrine of Creation with God as the Creator. He took advantage of the existence of various tribes and nations of mixed-bloods and combined them with Man and the Negro to form the *' species — Man." Thus, the Negro and his amalgamated progeny were thrust into the family of Man, where they have since remained in utter disre- gard of God's Plan of Creation and in shameless viola- tion of his law. In the course of time this theory was broadened out and gradually crystallized into the general theory of atheism, which teaches that the existence of the universe is the result of natural causes; that the whole world is composed of matter and mind; that there is no immortality; that man is merely an animal — a MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 239 highly developed species of ape — the human species, and that this human species of ape is composed of races of men , who trace their line of descent through a series of "animal ancestors" to the lowest form of animal, it- self the result of spontaneous generation. The literature of that remote period, like its authors and their civilizations, has long since crumbled into dust. Hence, we have no means of ascertaing the exact date upon which this crime was consummated. However, we have, in the Bible and profane history, reliable records which enable us by comparison to locate the period in which this catastrophe occurred. 1. The Bible teaches that monotheism was the religion of Noah and his family. The Theor}^ of Development may have, and doubtless did exist, to- gether with idolatory among the antediluvians; but if so, the evolutionist, the amalgamationist, and the mixed-bloods were all swept from the earth by the Deluge. 2. As has been shown, the existence of the theory that there are * 'races'* of men, which is an inseparable part of the theory of atheism, was a matter of record in the sacred registers of Ancient Egypt, from which the data for Plato's narrative of Atlantis was ob- tained. This indicates that this theory had existed from a period so remote, that it is questionable, w^hether the Egyi)tians of Solon's day, had any knowledge of the date or place of its origin. How- ever, we are enabled to determine that the Theory of 240 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, Development, made its appearance on the earth in post-deluvian times, at some period intervening be- tween the Delug'e, and the time when its existence was made a matter of record in the sacred reg-isters of Ancient Egypt. In the course of time, the spread of this theory, and the demoralizing conditions out of which it originated, again covered the greater part of the earth with mixed-blooded tribes and nations; thus placing it in much the same condition as it was before the Deluge. Scattered over several continents, with no or- ganized system of religion, with no concert of action, the God-loving, God-serving people of the earth, were powerless to beat back this ever-increasing tide of atheism and amalgamation; and the extinction of Man and the Negro, and the consequent destruction of the Plan of Creation, was again seriously threat- ened. In this emergency, God again came to the rescue. But he was restrained from the employment of any agency of universal destruction. In his con- venant with Noah and his sons, immediately after the Deluge God had said: **I will tfot again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I destroy everything living as I have done." {Getu, viii, 21.) Bound by this covenant God decided to make it possible for man to rectify the evils he had engendered MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 241 and sweep from the earth the products of his own shameless crime. To accomplish this purpose^ he se- lected Abraham from whom he would raise up for him- self a *' chosen people," whom he desired should be peculiar in that they would not embrace atheism, nor descend to amalgamation and idolatry, but would love and worship God and live in obedience to his laws. ''Now the Lord had said unto Abrani, Get thee out of th}^ country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee. And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name g'reat; and thou shalt be a blessing-. And I will bless them that bless thee and curse them that curseth thee; and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." (Gen. xii, 1, 2, 3.) "And the Lord said unto Abrani, * * * Lift up now thine eyes. * * * j^or all the land which thou seest, to thee will I g-ive it and to thy seed forever. And I \\\\\ make thy seed as the dust of the earth: so that if a man can number the dust of the earth, then shall thy seed also be numbered." (Gen. xiii, 14, 15, 16.) "And he said unto Abram, Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a strangef in a land that is not theirs, and thc}^ shall serve them; and they shall afflict them four hundred years; and also that nation, whom they shall serve, will I judg-e: and afterward shall they come out with great substance." (Gen. xv, 13, 14.) [16] 242 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. *'And when Abram was ninety and nine years old the Lord appeared unto Abram and said unto him, I am Almighty God; walk before me and be thou per- fect. And I will make my covenant between me and thee, and will multiply thee exceedini^ly. Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be called Abraham; for a father of many nations have I made thee. * * * And king-s shall come out of thee. * * * And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after the, the land wherein thou art a strang-cr, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting- possession; and I will be their God." (Gen, xvii. 1, etc.) God kept His covenant with Abraham, and made of them a great nation — the nation of Israel. He gave them an organized system of political government and an organized system of religion. And in order to coun- teract the teachings of the Theory of Development, which was universally taught in that day, God gave them the Narrative of Creation, together wfth the history of the most important events which occurred from the Crea- tion to the arrival of Israel in Canaan. God then led Israel to the land of Canaan, and commanded them to destroy its population of mixed-bloods — male and fe- male — "thou vShalt save nothing alive that breatheth." [Gen., XX, 16. J And take possession of their country and its immeiise wealth of every description, and this, as has been shown, included a great many Negroes. Previous to the days of Israel there was no organi- zation among the worshippers of God; every man wor- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 243 shipped God according to the dictates of his own con- science; they usually followed the example of Noah, and erected an altar upon which they offered sacrifices. But this disorganized condition of religious affairs under- went the most radical change when God established the Jewish Church and gave to the world an organized sys- tem of religion ; and made Jerusalem the center of the religious world; its doors stood open to all of pure Adamic stock; every pure-blooded descendant of Adam could become a member of the Jewish Church and participate in its benefit by complying with the law on the subject. It was the desire of God that Israel should be the leaven that would leaven to God the whole lump of humanity, as shown by His promise to Abraham: * *In thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed. ' ' It was God's desire that the Plan of Creation as set forth in the Mosaic Record should be disseminated throughout the world, in opposition to the theory of atheism; and that all men should learn from the Israelites that man had not developed out of "fish-like ancestors," them- selves the result of ''spontaneous generation;" but that man was created "in the image of God;" that there is no kinship between man and the animals, but that the kinship is between God and man ; that man is not a species of ape, which is divisible into "races of men," but that he is a distinct Creation. But instead of accomplishing this great mission, and thus fulfilling the just expectations of God the Is- raelites "were full of the evil doings that were common 244 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. among the Canaanites. " [Josephus.] They disre- garded the teachings of scripture, and lived out in their daily lives the teachings of atheism ; they forgot the warnings of God and violated His law by descending to amalgamation with the Negro and with the mixed - blooded nations by whom they were surrounded and with whom God forbid them to intermarry ; and in the course of time the mulattoes were as plentiful in Judea as they are in any of our southern states. They "de- filed" "the land" and "filled" Israel, God's ''inherit- ance," **with the carcasses of their detestable and abom- inable things." Not only this, but captivated by the obscene rites, and the more or less promiscuous inter- course bstween the sexes, which usually characterises the worship of idols, they renounced God, abandoned His worship and embraced idolatry. God then visited his curses upon them in the form of war, famine, pestilence and disease, in order to force them to abandon their criminal course and return to their duties and to their allegiance to Him. God even devas- tated their country, laid their magnificent temples in ruins and sent them captives to a foreign land and en- slaved them. He sent prophet after prophet among them to warn them of their danger and of the terrible judgments that would be visited upon them; but these at best pnly achieved a temporary success, while in many instances they were maltreated and even killed. God then determined to make a final effort to redeem man from the clutches of atheism, amalgamation and idolatry, MAN, AND THE NBGRO, 245 that triplet of crimes that has destroyed and damned na- tions and even continents, and He sent Jesus Christ, His only begotten son, and he shared the fate of many of the prophets who preceded him. Adam and Jesus Christ are two of the most promi- nent characters in the Bible, and each is described as the "Son of God." (See I^uke, iii, 38, John, iii, 18.) As has been shown, Adam was merely a combination of matter and mind until God breathed into his nostrils the * 'breath of life" — immortal life — and Adam became '*a living soul." The language of the text will bear no other construction than that [l] this "breath of life" was a new element in the material universe. Hence, a creation. [2] That it was a part of the substance of God. * [3] That this "breath of life"— this "living soul" — was incorporated with matter and with mind, as pre- sented in Adam's physical and mental organisms, and es- tablished between God and Adam the relationship of father and son. Thus Adam was the created "son of God." These three creations, matter, mind and soul, combine to form man ; but man himself consists of a male side or part, and a female side or part ; and one side or part of these three creations exists in the male man, their corresponding side or part exists in the female man. Through the sexual act these three creations are united and perfected in the female, and the relationship of father and child, which existed between God and the parents is transmitted to the offspring. Immediately before the Savior v/as conceived one side or part of these three creations constituting the 246 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. female side or part of a child, lay in the womb of the Virgin Mary; and God, not by the sexual act, but by the exercise of His creative power, supplied, and united with it, its male side or part; Mary conceived, and at the proper time Jesus Christ, whom God designed should redeem man from atheism, amalgamation and idolatry, was born. Thus, Jesus Christ, born of a woman, was the begotten ^'son of God." Thus it is shown that the birth of Jesus Christ was as legitimate as that of any child that was ever born of a woman; He was not only the son of the author of mar- riage, but he w^as the son of the Creator of the heaven and the earth. Hence, the blasphemy of the oft-repeated charge that Jesus Christ was a bastard is only^ equaled by its absurdity. The product of across between differ- ent species of plant or animal, is sometimes called a bas- tard, but properly speaking, it is a hybrid, while the product of a cross between different races of the same species of plant or animal is a mongrel. A bastard is the offspring of pure Adamic parents that is bom out of wedlock. Rather than abandon their criminal relations with the Negro, and the mixed-bloods they killed the Savior as they did the prophets. Thus it is shown that sin entered the world through man's sociality with the Negro, and that this led to amalgamation, atheism and idolatry; and that God has made every effort even to the sacrifice of his son, to eradicate these evils. It is also shown that MAN, AND THB NEGRO. 24? every prophet of antediluvian, as well as those of postdiluvian times came to induce man to renounce these destructive crimes, and return to their allegiance to God; and that this was the mission of the Savior. If further evidence of this is necessary the Savior furnishes it in his parable: ^ 'There was a certain householder, which planted a vineyard, and hedged it round about, and digged a winepress in it, and built a tower, and let it out to husbandmen, and went into a far country; And when the time of the fruit drew near, he sent his servants to the husbandmen, that they might receive the fruits of it. And the husbandmen took his ser- vants, and beat one, and killed another, and stoned another. Again he sent other servants more than the first: And they did unto them likewise. But last of all he sent unto them his son, saying. They will reverence my son. But when the husbandmen saw the son, they said among themselves. This is the heir; come, let us kill him, and let us seize on his inheri- tance. And they cast him out of the vineyard, and slew him." {Matt., xxi, 33, 34, 35, etc.) In this parable, with God as the "householder," the earth, the "vineyard," souls, the "fruit,'' the prophets, the * 'servants," Jesus Christ the "son and heir," we have an exact illustration of Bible history from the Creation to the Crucifixion. This parable teaches: 1. That the earth is the Lord's; that "God let it out" to man whom he desired should be "fruitful and 248 Man, and the negro. multiply," and by a life of obedience to God, would fit their souls for the companionship of the blest, and thus increase the population of heaven. But man violated the law of God by descending- to social equality with the Neg-ro, and this led to amalgama- tion; and, as we have shown the amalgamated progeny of Man and the Negro produces no souls. And when God sent his prophets to insist that they abandon their wicked course, and confine their marriag^e rela- tions to the Adamic family, and thus be able to g-ive the Lord his dues, they "beat," and "stoned," and "killed" them. God then sent other prophets, time and again, "and they did unto them likewise." 2. It teaches, that the second prophet, and each succeeding prophet, came for the same purpose as did the first; and that the mission of the "Son" was identically the same as that of the prophets who pre- ceded him, and that it shared the same fate. 3. It teaches, that if the first prophet had suc- ceeded in his mission, there would have been no necessity for sending^ a second, nor any subsequent prophet; neither would it have been necessary to send the Son. Had the Lord received his dues he would have been satisfied. 4. It teaches, that the doctrine, that it was a part of a general plan that the Savior should come and be sacrificed, and that everything pointed to his coming" and sacrifice, is a mistake, growing out of our failure to understand the nature of His mission; and that of MAK AUD the negro, 249 the prophets who preceded him. On the contrary, every effort was made to do away with the necessity for His coming- and sacrifice — it was the last resort. And when he realized that his end was near, he was still unwilling that the powers opposed to him should triumph, and that he should be sacrificed, as shown by his prayer on the Mount of Olives: "Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me: Neverthe- less, not my will, but thine, be done." He was will- ing to live on and suffer in his labor of love. He was aware that when God g^ave the land of Canaan to Israel, that he had enumerated and forbid every form of illicit lust, -which man may indulge within the Adamic family, and had also said: "Neither slialt thou lie with any beast to defile thyself therewith. * * * Defile not ye yourselves in any of these things. * * * That the land spue not you out also when ye defile it, as it spued out the nations that were before you." He realized that his death would hasten the hour when the "land," a second time defiled by amalgamation, would, a second time spue out its inhabitants; and that Israel would be scattered to the "four winds of heaven." He loved the Jews, his mother's people; and he loved their country. No purer expression of patriotism ever fell from patriot lips than fell from the Savior's, when he gave utter- ance to that agonized cry: O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have g-athered 250 MAhf, AND THE NEGkO. thy children tog-ether, even as a hen g-athereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!" {Matt, xxiii, 37.) When the earth had been transformed into a cess-pool of amalgamation; when idolatry was uni- versally practiced; when the last flickering- ray from the torch of Judaism had been extinguished, and the world was enveloped in a night of atheism, the Savior made his appearance with the announcement: *'I am the light of the world; he that foUowetli me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of life." He formulated and introduced upon the earth a relig- ious system that stands peerless among the religions of the world for the breadth and purity of its charity, the loftiness of its aims, and the simplicity of its cere- monies. He formed a religious organization and re- placed Judaism with Christianity. In opposition to the atheism and negroism and idolatry of the age, he established his Church on the Narrative of Creation. He attempted to restore the relations between man and the animals which God designed. He attempted to rebuild the barriers between Man and the Negro which God established in the Creation, and which man, in his criminal folly, had trampled down. In the Crea- tion, the position of the Negro at the head of the ape family marked the limit of the animals. But man's unhallowed lust prompted him to take the Negro out of the ape family and thrust him into the family of Man as a "lower race" of the "human species," thus MA^r, AND THE NEGRO, 251 making- the so-called anthropoids the limit of the animals. Between these opposing- lines, and over the question of their leg^itimacj, the great battle between God and Man has raged with varying- success for ages; in this prolonged conflict, of which the Bible is largely a history, every nation of whites of ancient times has been swept from the earth; the greater part of their splendid civilization has been laid in ruins, and their once prosperous, happy homes have been transformed into the abode of the barbarians and savages their crime produced. Between these opposing lines, the one which God established in the Creation and the one that Man has since established, is the ground upon which the great battle of the world. is yet to be fought to a finish, and untold millions will bite the dust on that field of carnage. But we who believe that there is a God; that there was a Creation; that man was created in the "image of God;'' that the animal was made ''after his kind;" that ''all flesh is not the sama flesh;" that the Bible is God's revealed will to man, need have no fear of the result. God and the right will triumph. The spurious Christianity of today based, as it is, on the Theory of Development, will be repudiated by man; atheism will be eradicated from the minds of men; the Negro will be thrust out of the family of Man and forced to resume his proper posi- tion among the apes; the mixed-bloods will be de- stroyed from the earth their presence defiles; and Man, in obedience to the laws given him in the Creation, 252 A//^M AhJD THE mCRO. will proceed to develop the resources of the earth and exert that control over the animals which God de- signed him to have and commanded him to exercise. These grand accomplishments will usher in the Mil- lennium. In the Savior's day Judea, suffering under the curses of God for her crimes, had become a province of Rome. His blameless life and the purity of His teachings was a constant rebuke to the corruptions of Judaism. This offended the Jewish officials and they heaped every indignity upon Him; He was scorned, persecuted and slandered; a false charge was brought against him and he was arraigned and tried before the Roman governor, who admitted that the charge was not sustained by the evidence. Yet in response to the demand of the Jews, he ordered Him to be crucified. But even while suffering an ignominious death upon the cross, the innocent victim of atheism, negroism and idolatry, yielding up his life for the sins of a lost world. His wondrous love for man found expression in his dying prayer: * 'Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." After the death of the Savior, his disciples did all in their power to preserve the organization He had formed and to disseminate among men the lofty prin- ciples which He taught; but one by one they fell; many of them met violent deaths at the hands of the enemies of the Church. With their great leader and his chief apostles gone, discord entered the Church MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 253 anfl His followers became disorganized, and the teachings of atheism gradually crept in and was ac- cepted and taught in the Church, as we find them be- ing taught today. * This acceptance of the teachings of atheism was practically a repudiation of the teachings of Scripture, and the destruction of the Church was the necessary result. Then God, in his wrath and disgust, turned nation upon nation in war; civilizations that had re- quired ages to develop were laid in ruins, and the whole world of mankind was plunged into the dark ages of ignorance, superstition and crime, through which they have thus far blundered without a church, and must ever remain in this deplorable condition so long as the}^ allow atheism to impose the Negro and his amalgamated progeny upon them as "lower races of men," who may be civilized, educated and Chris- tianized. The Savior was slain ; the organization which He formed was disrupted ; and the factions into which it divided gradually accepted more or less of the teachings of atheism and confused them with those of scripture, thus corrupting and destroying Christianity ; a spurious Christianity in which the teachings of atheism, confused with those of scripture, is now universally accepted by those who express belief in God and the truth of the Bible. Yet in the face of all these disasters we need not despair. If Christianity, as established by our Savior, had any basis, in fact its ultimate basis was the Mosaic 254 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Record. In opposition to the prevailing atheism of the age, He established His church on the Narrative of Creation. It was the Mosaic Record to which He re- ferred when He said: ''On this rock I will build my church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.'^ He thus fitly describes atheism and negroism as the gates of hell. We have the Mosaic Record, the basis of Chris- tianity; we have the principles of Christianity clearly set forth in the writings of the apostles; the cleansing blood of Christ, is still sufficient for the remission of sin. These are the essential elements of Christianity. To destroy the religious organization among men, which the Savior formed, and into which he sought to instill the principles of Christianity, is one thing, and atheism accomplished that, but to destroy the Mosaic Record, the basis of Christianity, to destroy the princi- ples of Christianity as set forth in the inspired writ- ings, to destroy the effacacy of Christ's atoning blood, is another, and quite a different thing, and this atheism Ccin never do. The people of this or any subsequent period, can renounce their atheism and negroism, and take these elements of Christianity and re-establish the Church of Christ in all its original purity; and their worship will be as acceptable to God, as was that of the primitive Christians. A world-wide religious organi- zation is not essential to salvation, neither is a sumptu- uous and costly church edifice; neither is a rich, fash- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 255 ionable and aristocratic congreg-ation, and a liig-h salaried preacher. The Savior has said: *'For where two or three are g-athered tog-ether in mj name, there am I in the midst of them." We have traced the atheistic theory of develop- ment to the sacred reg-isters of ancient Egypt; and have shown that the acceptance of this d^rading- theory broug-ht the negro and his amalgamated prog- eny into the Adamic family as "lower races of men," and precipitated that long-continued conflict between God and Man that has swept nation after nation from the face of the earth, laid their civilizations in ruins, denuded continents of its Adamic stock, and trans- ferred them into the abodes of barbarians and savages. Man's unhallowed lust, to which this theory owes its origin, insured its continued existence; and that it survived, and was universally taught in the centuries immediately preceding the coming of Christ, and at later periods, as it is taught to-day is shown by the utterances of Mr. Haeckel, who says: "We will here mention only that as early as the seventh century before Christ, the representatives of the Ionian philosophy of nature, Thales, Anaximenes, and Anaximander, of Meletius, and more especially Anaximander, established important principles of our modern monism. Their teaching pointed to a uniform law of nature as the basis of the various phenomena, a unity of all nature and a continual change of forms. 256 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Anaximander considered that the anemalcules in water came into existence through the influence of the warmtn of the sun, and assumed that man had developed out of fish — like ancestors. At a later date also, we find in the natural philosophy of Heraclitus and Empedocles, as well as in the writing's of Demo- critus and Aristotle, many allusions to conceptions which we reg^ard as the fundamental supports of our modern theory of development. Empedocles points out that thing-s which appear to have been made for a definite purpose may have arisen out of what had no purpose whatever. Aristotle assumes spontaneous generation as the natural manner in which the lower organisms came into existence." {Hist- of Creation, Vol. I, pp. 78, 79.) This theory which assumes "that man developed out of fish-like ancestors" — themselves the result of "spontaneous generation" — necessarily assumes that all flesh is akin. This theory which had come surging down through the ages and had become almost irresistable from the strength it had acquired by its universal ac- ceptance, threatened in Paul's day to sweep the Church of Christ from the Mosaic record and land it, a wreck, on the quicksands of atheism, where we find it today. It was in the heat of his great battle with this overwhelming tide of atheism, in v/hich he after- wards lost his life, that Paul was inspired to give ut- terance to that sublime declaration: "All flesh is not MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 257 the satne flesh: but there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds." Hence, there is no kinship between man and the animals. The universal acceptance of this teaching- of the inspired apostle would crush atheism into atoms and would eradicate the theory of development with all its deg^rading" influences from the minds of men. It dis- proves the theory of atheism that the invertebrate developed into the vertebrate; that the skulless de- veloped into the skulled; that the fish has developed into the fowl on the one side and into the land ani- mal on the other; that the quadruped developed into the biped (ape); that the ape developed into speechless man (Homo primig-enius) ; and that speechless man developed into man with articulate speech. The acceptance of Paul's teaching- would crush the theory of development at every point from the monera to man. If the flesh of the birds is a differ- ent "kind of flesh" from that of the fish, then the birds never developed out of the fish. If the flesh of the beasts is a different "kind of flesh" from that of the fish, then the beasts never developed out of the fish. If the "flesh of man" is a different "kind of flesh" from that of the beasts, then man never devel- oped out of the beast. God made the flesh of the fish, and that of the fowl, and that of the beast separate and distinct from each other; and he made the flesh ot man separate and distinct from that of the animals, 258 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Hence, man has no animal ancestors. In liis teaching" as above quoted, that grand old "Hebrew of the Hebrews'* struck atheism at its vital points. To accept this teaching- necessitates our rejection of the theory that man is a species which is divisible into races, and that the Neg-ro, the Malay, the Indian and the Mongolian are "lower races of men" in different stag-es of devel- opment. As has been shown, atheism, which teaches that all flesh is akin, and of which the theory that man is a ''species," which is divisible into five or more "races of men," is an inseparable part, was not accepted and taught by the church of Christ in Paul's day; on the contrary, this learned apostle assailed it; yet we find the modern church teaching this theory that the Whites, Blacks, Browns, Reds and Yellows are all "races" of the ''species — Man," and that they should associate to- gether on terms of social, political and religious equality; and this, as we know, inevitably leads to amalgamation, and has been shown, amalgamation leads to idolatry. When did this radical change in the teachings of the church take place? It evidently occurred at some period between our day and the da^'s of Paul ; and the most charitable and correct view is, that it did not occur in modern times, but that it took place in the remote past. Historj^ teaches that very soon after the death of the Savior; His followers split up into a number of opposing sects, each of which maintained a religious organization which termed the "church," and insisted that its MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 259 church was the true church, and that its creed embodied the teachings of the Savior aud should be universally accepted. In these factional strifes which continued for generations, the teachings of scripture and especially those of the Mosaic Record, were lost sight of and for- gotten, and as a result they fell an eas}^ prey to atheism, that most uncompromising foe to God and religious wor- ship. Gradually the teachings of atheism were accepted and taught by the various sects. This event marks the death of Christianity as taught by the Savior, and also marks the birth of the spurious Christianity of modern times. These sects continued to maintain their religious organizations ; but their teachings merely consisted of a mixture of the teachings peculiar to atheism with those peculiar to scripture. This was one of the results of that **f ailing away'* of which Paul warned them. The condition of these sects when the teachings of atheism replaced the teachings of scripture and their subsequent history, is clearly foretold by Paul as follows : Now we beseech you brethren * ''' * That ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand. Let no man deceive you by any means : for that day shall not come except ther** come a falling away first, and that man of sin be re- vealed, the son of perdition; who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is wor- shipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God. Remember ye not that 260 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. when I was yet with you I told you of these things? And now 5^e know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time. For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the waJ^ And then shall the wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His mouth and shall destroy with the brightness of His com- ing: Even him whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders. And all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that per- ish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie : That they all might be damned who believed not the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness." n Thes., ii, 1, 2, 3, etc. Finally, these various sects, with their mixture of the teachings of Scripture w^ith those of atheism, were combined into an organization which is known as the Catholic church. The Catholic church and the Prot- estant church, which split off from it, have been the vehicles by which this ancient blending of the teach- ings of atheism with those of Scripture have been handed down to us. The theory that man is a "spec- ies" which is divisible into "races of men," is to man the most ruinous part of the teachings of atheism. This theory, which thrusts the Negro and his amal- gamated progeny into the Adamic family as "lower races of men," has been universally accepted bj the MANy AND THE NEGRO. 261 modern world because of its antiquity, and the fact that the church g-ave it to us; no inquiry as to its orig-in or its nature has ever been made, thoug'h its demoralizing, degrading- results confront us on every hand. The universal acceptance of this atheism in- sured it from assault. Hence, no effort has ever been made to eradicate it from the church. On the con- trary, it is assiduously taught in every relation in life from the cradle to the grave. Hence, the man who would attempt to prove that this teaching of the church is all wrong would be denounced as a fit sub- ject for the **fool-kiiler," a traitor to his "species," a disgrace to his "race." In this work, the theory that man is a "species" which is divisible into "races" is assailed for the first time in ages; its origin is investigated and laid bare; its opposition to the teachings of Scripture is-exposed and its destructive results to Christianity clearly shown. While the church has been active in dissemi- nating this theory from generation to generation for ages, Paul's terrific assault upon atheism, of which this theory is an inseparable part, has, as might have been expected, lain as silent in the Bible as the re- mains of its great author have lain in the grave. In this work, for the first time in ages, an investi- gation is made as to the cause of which Paul's teaching was but the effect. He was battling with some oppos- ing teaching, and we find that he was assailing* the theory of atheism which threatened in his day to de- 262 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. stroy the Church of Christ, as it afterward did. We find that *'A11 flesh is not the same flesh" was an assault on the theory that all flesh is the same flesh, and that from the monera to man all flesh is akin. His teaching- that there are four distinct kinds of flesh was an assault upon the theory that from the monera to man there is just one flesh in different stag-es of development. The acceptance of this teaching of the great apostle will prove invaluable to man in determining his proper relation to the animals ; it places in his hands the most effective weapon in his battle with atheism ; it will do much toward enabling him to re-establish Christianity and thus give to the world a religious system whose teachings and worship will at once prove beneficial to man and acceptable to God. In our day, thousands of the brightest youths are placed in theological institutions, not to be taught the word of God, but to be systematically drilled in the nar- row creed of some religious sect; in the course of time, these young men are graduated, as ignorant of the teach- ings of the Mosaic Record and the drift of Bible history as they were on the day they entered the kindergarten. The consequence is, that if they read any scientific works they accept more or less of the atheism with which they abound, and this finds expression in their sermons and serves to still further corrupt the minds of their hear- ers. The laity as a class have too many social, financial, political and religious affairs to look after to read the Man, and the negro, 26i Bible, and they know little about it. The same causes prevent their reading upon atheism, and they know noth- ing of its teachings. Hence, they are unable to distin- guish between the teachings of atheism and those of scripture. The fact that many of the most distinguished writers on modern science are atheists has led people to think that atheism and science are synonymous terms. This is a sad mistake. Modern atheism bears no closer rela- tionship to modern science than alchemy bears to chemistry. The atheist takes the truths which scientific research has discovered the existence of and makes them the basis of his absurd theories. Hence, a superficial read- ing of the works of modern scientists gives us merely the atheism whtch floats as a scum upon the surface, and leaves the great truths beneath, unnoticed and unappre- ciated. The stream of literature which flows out from the modern press carries with it the most refined atheism, which permeates and corrupts every circle of society. The demoralizing conditions by which we are surrounded are largely due to the atheism which flows into our homes through the daily and weekly press and the various magazines. Thousands of articles reeking with the most disgusting atheism enter our homes daily and are read and accepted without question; no effort is made by professed Christians to counteract their pernicious influ- ences. From the innumerable articles from which we might quote to sustain our position, we shall select one 264 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. from the pen of Charles Dudley Warner, which appeared in the ** Chicago American" of September 9th. Mr. Warner, in his article, ** Failure of Negro Educa- tion," says: '*In the United States a great mass of negroes — possibly over nine millions of many shades of colors — is for the first time brought into contact v/ith Christian civilization. This mass is here to make or mar our national life, and the problem of its destiny has to be met with our own. What can we do, what ought we to do for his own good and for our peace and national welfare? In the first place it is impossible to escape the profound impression that we have made a mistake in our estimate of his evolution as a race, in attempting to apply to him the same treatment for the develop- ment of character that we would apply to a race more highly organized. Has he developed the race con- sciousness, the race soul, a collective soul, which so strongly marks other races more or less civilized according to our standards? * * *'* Observe the pure atheism contained in this article! "His evolu- tion as a race." What has the negro "race'' evolved from? If the negro is the result of "evolution" he has necessarily "differentiated" from a lower animal. Hence, God never made the negro at all; he has merely evolved through a series of animal ancestors from the lowest form of animal, itself the result of spontaneous generation. And Mr. Warner expresses a doubt as to MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 265 whether the negro has evolved sufficiently far from his "animal ancestors" as to have developed a "soul." What an idea? Besides, this teaching* carried to its legitimate conclusions necessarily implies that "a race more highly organized (like the white) has evolved so far from their "animal ancestors" as to develop a "soul." What good can result from sending our children to the Sunday school one hour on the Sabbath, and feeding their minds on such filth as this seven days in every week? The acceptance of this teaching that the negro is the result of "evolution," means the -rejection of the scriptural teaching that there is a God — a Creator. How can we allow our children taught this atheism from infancy to maturity and expect that .they will be anything else than practical atheists and infidels? We not only place the political party to which we belong, above our country, but we place it above the welfare of our families; if the editor will only teach our children the principles of our political party, he has our consent to instill into their minds all the atheism they can absorb. It is not membership in this or that religious organiza- tian that makes Christians of us; it is not our failure to" belong to any religious organization that makes atheists and infidels of us, it is the sentiments we enter- tain, and live out and teach in our daily lives, that makes Christians or atheists of us as the case may be. For ages this atheism has been poured into our families and into the church, and as a result, modern 266 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Christianity bears no closer relationship to primitive Christianity than astrology bears to astronomy. What the world wants is primitive Christianity; it wants a relig"ious system based squarely on the narrative of Divine Creation, and not on the atheistic theory of Natural Development; it wants a church or org'anization that will enable us to recog*nize and teach us to respect the broad distinction which God made in the Creation between man and the animals; and any religious system which fails to do this, is simply a delusion and a snare. THE EGG OF CREATION. Were they both hatched from the same egg ? If so, are they both in the image of their father? If they are both from the same egg, and both in the image of their father, then like does not beget like! and it is possible for the Dove to produce an Ostrich. Chapter IX. Ignorance of the Bible, and Continued Atlieistic Teachings Have Led Astray the Masses, Relative to Qod's Creation of Man, Tbe drift of Bible history from the Creation to the birth of the Savior clearly indicates that he came to destroy man's social, political andrelig-ious equality with the Negfro and mixed-bloods and the amalgama- tion to which these crimes inevitably lead, and to re- build the barriers which God erected in the Creation between man and the ape, and to reinstate man in his **dominion over every living- thing" that moveth upon the earth." The modern church, under the influence of atheism, has torn down the barriers which the Savior re-established between man and the ape, and hrs again degraded man to social, political and (269) 270 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. religious equality with the Negro and the mixed- bloods; has extinguished the light of the gospel; has hurled the Adamic family back into the darkness and gloom and hopelessness of atheism and into the cess- pool of amalgamation. As a result, Christianity has long since fled the earth and the gospel of Christ has been superceded by the gospel of atheism. The rela- tion of the modern church to Christ is fitly described by Paul as follows: **But if, while we seek to be justified by Christ, we ourselves are found sinners, is therefore Christ the minister of sin? God forbid. For if I build again the things again which I destroyed, I make myself a transgressor." (Gal. ii, 17, 18.) Man's social, political and religious equality with the Negro and the mixed-bloods, which the Savior destroyed to a certain extent, and which he desired to utterly destroy, the modern church, with its clergy and laity and by every means in its power, proceeded to * 'build again." As a result, the gospel of Christ, which was based upon the scriptural teaching that man is a distinct creation *'in the image of God," is never heard. And the atheistic gospel that man is a ''species" divisible into **races" is universally taught. The modern clergy might find it profitable to con- sider the emphatic declaration of Paul: "But though we, as an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed." (Gal. 1, 8.) Though this MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 271 curse was pronounced ag-ainst a certain class of Jews, who desired to mix Judaism with Christianity, it is strictly applicable to the modern Christian who mixes atheism wnth Christianity. The inspired apostle in- sisted that the g-ospel of Christ, based squarely on the Narrative of Divine Creation, should be preached in its purity. This modern gospel, based squarely on the Theory of Natural Development, is certainly an- other gospel than that of Jesus Christ which Paul preached. The most unprecedented effort is being- made by the professedly Christian world to extend the g'ospel of Christ to the neg^roes and mixed-bloods of the earth. Each relig-ious sect wants all of these degraded creat- ures in its fold. The most openly avowed effort in this direction was made by "Bishop Nelson of the Episcopal diocese of Georgia * ***** j^^ St. Paul's church (New Orleans) to a \cry large con- gregation on the subject: 'Our Relations and Duty to the Colored Keice.' * * * Bishop Nelson took as his text Isaieih xliii, 6, 7. * "' * Bishop Nelson announced as his first proposition that Christ was the Savior of all races. Although the head of a diocese containing over 1,000,000 whites he would be recreant to his duty if he did not consider himself the bishop of the blacks as well, and to the extent of his power as far as limitations permitted, strive for the welfare of the 900,000 blacks as well as the welfare of the whites in the state of Georgia. The race prob- ?n MAN, AND THE NEGRO. lem he considered the greatest that had ever con- fronted the people of America, and probably the greatest that ever would be presented to the nation for solution. * * =5-- Many absurdities had been ad- vanced as possible solutions of the race problem. First was that of extermination, an absolutely impos- sible remedy, and one which none ever seriously ad- vocated, and it deserved only a passing mention." In antediluvian time, God very seriously advocated extermination as a possible remedy for the very class of creatures which, in America, Bishop Nelson is pleased to term Negroes. And the very effectual manner in which he applied the remedy — a universal deluge — de- serves more than a passing mention. The fact that since the deluge and at various times, upon every continent of the earth, God has seriously advocated and applied ex- termination to this class of creatures, indicates that the remedy deserves more than a passing mention. Continu- ing, Bishop Nelson says : ** Miscegenation was utterly abhorrent, unreasonable and impossible. As a serious remedy it was so abso- lutely improbable that it deserved little attention." What an idea! When amalgamation has destroyed every nationality of Whites of ancient time, and is mak- ing the most frightful ravages upon ever^^one of modern time, and after ''twenty -five years" of study of the Negro problem, this pious (?) bishop decides that it de- served little attention. ^*A third suggestion was deportation. * -i^ ^ it was not feasible, * * * Finally the bishop spoke of MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 273 segregation, which he considered the only proposed solu- tion of the Negro question worth consideration. He be- lieved in giving the Negro equal advantages in the line of schools, churches, lyceums, amusements. He advo- cated separate churches, not because the Whites objected to the presence of the Negro in the White church. In many churches portions of the church were set apart for the colored communicants. The Negroes themselves wanted their own churches. ^"^ ^ ^^ Bishop Nelson ridiculed the idea of territorial segregation. * * * The solution of the Negro problem seemed to rest upon segregation and Christian education, and the duty of the Episcopal Church was too clear to be denied, too mani- fest to be shirked. The Episcopal Church or none must solve the question. Education without Christianity and education without true Christian doctrine was worse than ignorance, for it was a source of knavery and the pet in- strument of the devil. ^ * * l^j^g tiji-ig j^^d come for the Episcopal Church to take a firm stand and as a church to provide the educational facilities which, together with the teachings of the church, could and would uplift the Negro as a race. The work was not a hopeless one. Wliereas the White race had had 1,500 years of civiliza- tion through which to climb to its present position of knowledge and refinement, the Negro had been in con- tact with civilization but about 150 years, and nearly all of that time as a slave.*' (See The Times Democrat, Feb. 28, 1898.) [18j 274 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, As lias been shown, tlie negro has been in contact with the modern civilization of America since A. D. 1619. This, in itself is a period nearly double that named by the Bishop, "150 years." In addition to this, the evidence of the negro's contact with ancient Adamic civilizations, is presented by every continent of the earth. The neg-ro was broug-ht in contact with the splendid civilization of the Kg"yptians. We find him fig-ured, black and colorless, on their monuments of more than 4,000 years ag-o. In all this immense period of time, he has not lost a sing-le one of his ape-like characters, nor developed the slig-htest shade of color. The neg"ro of forty centuries ag-o is the negro of to-day. Dr. Winchell says, "Negro portraits exist which date from the Eleventh Dynasty, B. C. 2006 (Str.) 2400 (Leps.). Hundreds of negro portraits occur from the Eighteenth Dynasty down, B.C. 1492 (Str.), l550(Eeps.). Monumental evidences of the existence of negroes occur in the Twelfth Dynasty, B. C. 1963 (Str.) 2300 (Leps.). Monumental evidences of the existence of negroes are even found under the Sixth Dynasty, B. C. 2081) (Str.), 2190 (VVilk.), 2967 (Leps.). {Preadamites, pp. 209, 10.) The astonishing ignorance displayed by Bishop Nelson, as to the period of time in which the negro has "been in contact with civilization," presents the most striking contrasts to the utterances of the scholarly Winchell, who, after discussing the great MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 275 natural wealth, and almost unlimited resources of Africa says: "It is pertinent to inquire if such a continent, so Ofcttfitted with resources for food, clothing*, transporta- tion, intercommunication and commerce,^ is a situation suited to cramp the manhood of an indig-inous race. Are these the conditions under which the grade of humanity would sink from the level of Adai^ and Noah to that of a naked black skin, driveling- in filth and wretchedness on the banks of the Congo or the Zambesi; while under the climatic vicissitudes of Western Asia and Europe, the same type has risen perpetual 1}^ through all grades of advancing* civiliza- tion? * * * Our wonder at the stationary savag-e- ism of virgin Africa is greatly enhanced when we reflect on the relations of civilized peoples to that continent. Ever since the dawn of Accadian civiliza- tion in western Asia an open highway of communica- tion has existed between the continents — not to speak of actual communication across the strait of Babel- Mandeb. More than this, Asiatic civilization entered Africa and spread itself over the valley of the Nile and the Mediterranean border, at a period so remote as to be obscured in the twilight of human history. It brought with it the cereals and finally the domesti- cated animals of Asia. It introduced the arts of industry and the rudiments of the sciences. It estab- lished a religious cult which was monotheistic, and remarkably pure and elevated. It opened commercial 276 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. intercourse, not only with Arabia, Palestine, and Babylonia, but with the tribes of the upper Nile and the Libyan reg^ion. It engfag^ed in extensive mining- operations, not only in the Sinaic peninsula, but in the far southern countries of Nahsi (negroes). It worked quarries of limestone and g-ranite on an enormous scale. It tilled the soil in the presence of the most forbidding- obstacles to be found in the habit- able Africa. It sent warlike expeditions not only into Asia Minor and Assyro-Babylonia, but into Nubian Kthopia, and even the armies of a civilized people in- evitably ^ow the g-erms of civilization among^ barba- rians. The neg-roes have been in contact with these people for 4,000 years, and save throug-h infusion of blood they have not yet learned the first lesson in civilization. Are these the people whom adverse cir- cumstances have crushed from the grade of Adamic civilizability, and forbidden to rise even while the hands of Eg-ypt and Libyia, and Assyria were out- stretched to lift them up? The thoug-ht is admissible. Constitutional, aboriginal, deep-seated incapacity is the only explanation of the amazing- phenomena." {Preadamites, pp. 261, 62, 63, 64.) Bishop Nelson says: **The White race had had 1,500 years of civilization through which to climb to its present position of knowledge and refinement. ' ' Let us see! 1,500 years would not take us back to the creation of man by thousands of years. What was **Adam, the 3on of God" — a savage? Was a savage, the best sped- MAN, AND THE NEGRO, ill men of man, whom the great Creator of the heavens and the earth could make? If Adam, whom God honored in the creation, by the befetowal of His a' 'likeness" and His "image,'' and to whom He confided ''dominion" over the works of His hands, was a savage whose de- scendants have had only "1,500 j^ears of civilization through which to climb to their present position of knowledge and refinement," what kind of a God have we anyway? But perhaps his ecclesiastical position has led us unwittingly to do violence to the sentiments of this eminent Divine. His frequent use of the atheistic terms, **white race" and "negro race" and "racial problem," indicates that he regards the whites and ne- groes as so many races of the human species of ape, in different stages of development. And that, perhaps, like the late Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, he regards the Bibli- cal story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Kden as a myth; "1,500 years" would not take us back to the antediluvian patriarchs, one of whom, like Elijah, was translated. Were these all savages? *' 1,500 years" would not take us back to the days of Noah, who walked with God. Was this just man a savage? "1,500 years" would not take us back to those ancient archi- tects, the remains of whose splendid civilizations are to be found upon ever^'- continent of the earth, and which, even in their ruins command the admiration of the modern world. Were these peerless architects savages? "1,500 years" would not take us back to the days of Abraham, the father of God's chosen people. Was this grand old I 2^ MAk, AND THE NEGkO. patriarch a savage? *' 1,500 years" would not take uS back^to the days of Moses, the great "law-giver" of Israel ; nor to Aaron, the first priest of Israel ; nor to Joshua, the great military captain of Israel. Were these all savages? "1,500 years" would not take us back to the days of Israel's great king, David. Was the sweet psalmist, whom God described as, '*A man after my own heart," a savage? *' 1,500 years" would not take us back^to the days of Solomon. Was "Solomon in all his glory" a savage? "1,500 years" would not take us back to the days of the prophets, whom God sent to Israel to warn them of "the evil of their way" and the disastrous results to which it would lead. Were the prophets all savages? ** 1,500 years" would not take us back to the "Golden Age" of Greece; nor to the time when, amid one of the most superb civilizations that ever graced the earth, "Rome sat upon her seven hills and ruled the world.'' Were the Greeks and Romans of those days savages? "1,500 years" would not take us back to the days of our Savior. Was Jesus Christ, the Son of God, a savage? But we are reminded that in attempting to discuss his views upon this vSubject from a scriptural standpoint, we have again unwillingly placed Bishop Nelson in apparent conflict with the Theory which he so warmly advocates, that the Whites and Negroes are merely different races of the human species. For our thoughtlessness we humbly crave the indulgence of His Reverence. According to this Theory'-, Jesus Christ was simply an ape, v/hose "animal ancestors" in the remote MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 279 past, according to Haeckel, shed their tails, assumed the erect posture, through the differentiation of two pairs of limbs, developed articulate speech through the differen- tiation of the larynx, and became man, whose ultimate descendants, with the invaluable aids of natural selec- tion, the survival of the fittest, transmutation, etc., have been enabled ''to climb" to their present position of knowledge and refinement. What reply could a Bible -believing man, or one versed in ancient profane history, or one at all familiar with monumental evidence make to the combination of ignorance, scripture and atheism presented in this "ser- mon" by Bishop Nelson? The Times Democrat says: "The sermon was a ver^^ able one and won the manifest approval of the con- gregation, many of those present seeking an introduction to the bishop after services." The press, of which The Times-Democrat is a part, prides itself upon being the moulder of public sentiment. When we pause to reflect upon the de- moralizing, degrading conditions which confront us on every hand and which are the direct result of this sentiment, v/e can but exclaim: What a sentiment is the output of the mold I The sentiment of the church upon this subject, as expressed by Bishop Nelson, and its indorsement by the press as expressed by The Times-Democrat, lived out in every day life by our ancestors and by ourselves has transformed our country into a cess-pool of amal- 280 KiAN, AMD THE NEGRO. g-amation, and has broug-lit upon us tlie curse of God. Ordinarily, as has been shown, amalgamation be- tween Man and the Negro or the mixed-bloods, always begins between the white males and the black or col- ored females. Woman declines to lower herself so far as to contract a marriage alliance with a Negro or one in whom she is aware of the presence of Negro blood. But two hundred and fifty years of enlightened Chris- tianity is rapidly reducing the women of the north to this base level. Under the pernicious influences of the church and the press, systematic amalgamation has already begun. In the city of Chicago there is an organization known as the **Manasseh Society." Membership in this society requires that each man shall have a negro wife and that each woman shall have a negro husband. Three or four years ago, ac- cording to The Chicago Blade, this society had a membership of 480. In addition to this, it is not un- common for the white females of the northern states to marry those whom they recognize as negroes. The fine sensibilities of woman prompts her to shrink in horror from the thought of contracting a marriage alliance with such inferior creatures as negroes and mixed-bloods. But, as has been demon- strated in the north, the demoralizing influences of social, political and religious equality with negroes and mixed-bloods, persisted in for centuries, will eventually impair the native instincts of woman and reduce her to the low level of marriage alliances with MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 28t these degraded creatures. Further evidence of this is found in the marriages which the women of Europe are contracting* with these so-called "lower races of men." The women of the northern states and of Europe have been subjected to the deg-rading influ- ences of social, political and relig-ious equality with the Negro and his amalg"amated offspring", whom they recog-nize as neg^roes, for a g-reater length of time than have the women of the southern states. This is shown by the fact that, as long as the Negro in the south was held as a slave, his social ostracism pre- sented another barrier to the southern woman's mar- riage with him. In discussing this question we should bear in mind that the disposition of woman to be influenced by the social, political and religious edu- cation to which she is subjected, is the same the world over. Hence, we have no alternative than to decide that the demoralizing social, political and religious influences which degraded the women of the north and of Europe to the social level of the Negro, will, if persisted in, result as disastrously to the women of the south. It may be argued that the marriages be- tween women and negroes or between the women and the mixed-bloods will be confined to the most ignorant and degraded class of whites. But a moment's reflec- tion must convince us that this position is untenable. It has been demonstrated upon every continent of the earth that this evil practice, like every other which may originate among the lower classes of whites, will 282 MANy AND THE NEGRO. ultimately find its way into the highest circles of society. Scientific research will sustain us in the as- sertion that the mixed-bloods resulting from amalga- mation between whites and negroes are to be found in every position in life, from the jungle to the throne. Prior to the late sectional war between the North- ern and the Southern States, a certain amount of religious equality, and such amount of social equality as is inseparable from it, existed be- tween the whites and negroes of the south. To this was added political equality, as one of the results of the war. Consequently the onl}^ barrier which separates between the whites and blacks of the south, is that of social caste. The rapidity with which this frail barrier is disappearing under the combined assaults of the Church and the Press, is absolutely appalling. The effort of the Church to degrade the whites of America to the social, political and religious level of the negro, received its first allies from the American press, in the abolition journais of the north. But since the war, and especially of late j^ears, the press of the south, both religious and secular in its fanatical efforts to pander to the ncgroized sentiment of the north, is "out-herroding Herod." From the innumerable evidences of this v/hich are furnished us daily, we quote the recent utterances of a leading southern journal, whose editor in an article captioned * 'Negro Gentlemen," sa^^s: * 'There is nothing in the color of a man's skin to hinder his being a gentleman, even from the Anglo- MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 283 < Saxon point of view. If he has self-respect, veracity, and gentle manners, the most necessary ingredients of a gentleman would seem to be in him, and the chances are that expert observers will recognize their presence. * * * There is no incongruity in terms about the expression ''a negro gentleman." It conveys an idea of good manners and personal dignity, which is clear and easily understood. The editor of the Sunny South is pleased to note in this connection that we have here in Atlanta a goodly number of colored citizens to each of whom the word "gentlemen" applies with full and correct force." {The Sunny South, Oct. 2, 1897.) Had a southern editor of forty 3^ears ago made such a statement through his paper, it v/ould have fired the southern heart from the Atlantic to the Rio Grande, and from the Ohio to the Gulf. From every quarter in the south, the most indignant pro- tests would have been heard. Think how far we have descended toward social equality with the negro, in the brief period of thirt}'- three years, as indicated by the fact that such sentiments are received with acquiescence. Not a w^ord of protest is heard. Had any comment been made upon this statement of the editor of the Snnny South, he would have been applauded for his broad-minded liberality. His utter- ances would have been pointed to as an evidence of the disappearance of race prejudice, and the oblitera- tion of color lines in the south. If, under the com- 284 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, bined assaults of the Church, the State and the Press, the frail barrier of social caste, which alone intervenes between the whites and neg-roes of the south has been thus impaired in less than half a century, what basis have we for the hope that, at the end of the next fifty years it will not be utterly annihilated. When this is accomplished, why should not the male de- scendants of these '^neg-ro g-entlemen" take wives from among- the white ladies of Georg-ia? It is folly to insist that the female descendants of the former **slave owners" of the south, will never descend to marriage alliances with those whom they recog^nize as negroes. The weakness of this argument is demon- strated by the fact that, in the north, the female descendants of the northern **slave owners" of less than a century ago, are now intermarrying with those whom they recognize as negroes. However distaste- ful they may be, it is worse than folly to close our eyes to the fact. This most frightful issue stares us in the face, and it must be squarely met. The women of the north and those of the south are made of the same material; they belong to one family; they are sisters, the progeny of a single pair. Hence, the social, political and religious influences which ele- vates or degrades the one, must elevate or degrade the other. Like causes produce like results. From the utterances of this editor, we might be led to suppose that "self-respect, veracity and gentle man- ners, the most necessary ingredients of a gentleman,'* MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 285 were found only in the Negro in his free state. The freed negro in America is certainly not more free than his wild brother in the jungles of Africa; yet we never heard that * 'self-respect, veracity and gentle manners" were characteristic of the Negro of Africa. We are opposed to the views of the editor of the Sunny South that these characteristics, especially those of "self-respect and veracity," ever exsted in the Negro at all. But if they did they were engrafted upon the nature of the Negro by his master and mispress of former time. Certainly these *'most necessary ingredients of a gentleman*' have not been developed by emancipation. The Negro is merely an ape; hence, the more he is relieved by man of the re- straints which God imposed upon him in the Creation, the more vicious, unreliable and brutal he becomes. If it be true, as stated by the editor of the Sunny South, that they are now producing ''Negro gentlemen" in Atlanta, Georgia, we feel free to confess that he has clearly demonstrated the correctness of his assertion that "gentleman is a loose and comprehensive word," since it ' 'applies" equally well to man, to the ape, and to his amalgamated progeny," with full and correct force." From this editor's standpoint, "gentleman" is certainly a very latitudinous term, to say the least of it. When the atheistic theory of natural development has been discarded by man, and the scriptural teaching of Divtne Creation is accepted in its stead, expert ob- servers will promptly decide that * 'the most necessary ingredients of a gentleman" are that he be bom in the 286 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, ** likeness" and *' image" of God — that he be a man. And that the absence of these essential characteristics in an individual prevents him from being a "gentleman," without reference to his "self-respect, veracity and gen- tle manners." Hence, before pronouncing the Negro a "gentleman," the editor ot the Sunny South should have proved him a man. An article entitled, "Must the Negro," which ap- peared in the December number of the Globe Review, from the pen of its able editor, Mr. William H. Thorne. presents a pleasing contrasfto the negroism of the great bulk of the American press. Mr. Thorne says : "During the spring of the year 1895, and after more than thirty years of sincere and old-fashioned abolition sympathy with the Negro race, I made two visits to sev- eral of our southern states with results as follows: First — All my old abolition S3mipathies which had been weakening for over ten years in view of the insufferable self-assertion of our Negroes since the day of their eman- cipation, vanisned like so many scattered sophistries, for which I had no further use. Second— On returning to New York I published in the next issue of the Globe Review my conviction that, spite of emancipation and our so-called education of the Negro, and perhaps aided by these absurdities — the Negroes of this country were more than ever a shiftless, unteachable, immoral race, incapable of any true civilization in our land and un- worthy of American citizenship. Third — That without mincing matters, or any longer writing or thinking on MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 287 the basis of sympathy with the Negro, I was convinced that inside the next thirty years the South would be obliged to "re-enslave, kill or export the bulk of its Negro population." (See The Atlanta Constitution, Jan. 10, 1898.) In the midst of the debasing negroism to which the American people as a class have descended in the last thirty 5^ears, such sentiments from the pen of an original abolitionist, affords us the most agreeable surprise. Prior to the late sectional war, we were told by the abolition- ists of the North and of Europe that if given the oppor- tunity the Negro would demonstrate that he was the full equal of his "white brother." Our country, already laboring under the curse of God for its social and relig- ious equality with the Negro, was further cursed for its amalgamation by being plunged in a civil war, which, for its expenditure of blood and treasure has no parallel in modern time. This sanguinary struggle ended in the emancipation of the Negro and in his elevation to all the rights, privileges and responsibilities of American citi- zenship. Since the war the Whites of the South who contribute the great bulk of the school fund, have yielded to the popular demand for the education of these so- called ** Negroes" and have shared with these degraded creatures their educational facilities to the prejudice of their own children. Now, after all the injury, the de- moralization and the degradation to which the people of the South have been subjected in the last thirty -five years, one of the ablest of the former admirers of the 288 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. Negro, asserts that all his **old abolition sympathies which had been weakening for over ten years in view of the insufferable self-assertion of our Negroes since the day of their emancipation, had vanished like so many scattered sophistries for which he had no further use.'* And "that without mincing matters or any longer think- ing or writing on the basis of sj^mpathy with the Negro, he was convinced that inside the next thirty years the South would be obliged to re -enslave, kill or export the bulk of its Negro population." Who would have dreamed that in less than thirty - five years after emancipation one of the foremost cham- pions of Negro suffrage would denounce the Negro as ''more than ever a shiftless, unteachable, immoral race, incapable of any true civilization and unworthy of American citizenship?" And would speak of '*emanci- pation and the so-called education of the Negro" as "absurdities." It is needless to say that we honor this fearless man, admire his candor and hold in high esteem his loft}^ patri- otism. At the same time we must beg leave to respect- fully suggest that his use of the term "re-enslave" in connection with our future relations with the Negro, in- dicates that he fails to grasp the situation. As a matter of fact, the Negro was never a slave. To conceive the design of enslaving an individual we must presuppose that he is free; the first act of en- slavement is to deprive him of his liberty. This the Negro never had since the creation of man. The MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 289 Negro is an ape; hence, his status in the universe, his relation to Man, like that of every other animal, was fixed irrevocably by God in the Creation, and no act upon man's part, whether legislative, executive or judicial, can change it. The will of God upon this most important subject, as expresesd in those original statutes given man in the Creation, "Have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth," is the supreme law of the universe; and in the eyes of this great law there is not today, there never was and there can never be on this earth, such a thing as a free Negro. To illustrate: Suppose a man com- mits a felony and is arraigned, convicted and sen- tenced to prison for a term of years, but makes his escape, flees to some foreign country, where he lives out his days without being apprehended. Did that man in his exile live out his days and die a free man? No jurist would so decide. From the hour of his con- viction that man lived and died the property of the state. So it is in this case; under the law of God the Negro, like every other animal, is the property of man, without reference to whether he is ever brought in contact with him or not. The mere fact that man in his blind, criminal folly, declines to exert that con- trol over the Negro, in common with the rest of the animals, which God designed him to have and com- manded him to exercise, does not free the Negro, it can only damn man, for his shameless contempt for [X9] - 290 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, God's plan of Creation, and for his wanton violation of Divine law. Man was created free. His personal liberty was implied in his assig-nment to dominion over all the earth, and over the animals. Hence, man can be enslaved; but since you cannot enslave the horse or the dog", how can you enslave the ape? They all belong" to *'one kind of flesh," and were placed under man's dominion in the Creation. This absurd idea that is optional with man to enslave, or to emancipate the Negro, is another result of placing- man and the ape in the same family. Had the Neg-ro been imported here as ah ape, as God made him, and had we maintained only such relations with him as were leg^itimate, the combined world would have been powerless to have taken a Negro from the south; God would have stood by the south to defend and maintain the relation of master and servant which he established between man and the negro in Creation. But instead of this, under the influence of the theory of dei^lopment, combined to a certain extent with the equally anti-scriptural church theory that the Negro is the son of Ham, he was brought here as a * 'lower race of man" — the Ham race — whom it was legitimate to enslave as a means of civilizing, educating and Christianizing; as might have been expected, an amalgamation at once began; and soon it transformed every farm, and many a home in the southland into a harem; it debauched the youth MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 291 and manhood of the land; it sent many a fond, de- voted wife and mother broken-hearted to the grave; it corrupted the flesh and defiled the earth, and brought our country under the curse of heaven, until God in His wrath and disg-ust, decreed that the so-called **slaverj system," which was conceived in crime, broug-ht forth in iniquity, and was based solely on his violated law, should be blotted from the face of the earth; then "ang-els wept and devils laughed" at the spectacle presented here by a continent drenched in the blood of its sons, hemispheres in mourning", the civilized world in tears. And just so long as we allow the negro and his amalgamated progeny imposed upon us as * 'lower races of men," with whom we may associate on terms of social, political and religious equality, just so long will we labor under the curses of God, just so long will these degraded creatures have more or less political dominion over us, just so long will the youth and manhood of the land be debauched by amalgamation, just so long will the chastity of our wives and the virginity of our daugh- ters be subjected to their brutal assaults. The emancipation of the Negro in the United States was not the work of an anti-slavery party, nor of a pro- slavery party, nor of a I^incoln, nor of a Davis, nor of a Grant, nor of a Lee, nor of "the boys in blue,'* nor of **the boys in gray." These, one and all, were mere instruments, wielded by our out- raged God, to compel us to recognize and respect His 292 MAN, AND THE NEGRO. plan of Creation, and to live in obedience to His law. Realizing that even the horrors of a four year's war had failed to dissipate our mad dream of forming man, the ape and their amalgamated progeny into **one universal brotherhood," God determined that our depraved lust for social, political and religious equality with the Negro and the mixed -bloods should be fully satisfied. As a result, these degraded creatures were promptly declared free; were at once clothed with the suffrage and reck- lessly thrust into the legislative, executive and judicial departments of our national and State governments. In the last thirty years the Whites of the South have spent about one hundred millions of dollars on the public schools for the education of the so-called Negroes — these mixed -bloods, to say nothing of the millions of dollars that have been spent on colleges, churches, etc. And what is the result? To-day our wives and our daughters are not safe from their brutal assaults beyond the range of our shot-guns. They degrade our religion, demoralize our politics, debauch our youths, plunder our citizens, murder our officials, rape our women, and con- duct themselves generally as the curse they are and will always be so long as they are allowed to defile our land with their presence. Speaking of the mixed -bloods of South America, Von Tschudi says: **As a general rule, it may be fairly said that they unite in themselves all the faults, without any of the virtues of their progenetors. * * * As members of society they are the worst class of citi- MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 293 Dr. Barthold Seeman says: *'The character of the half castes is, if possible, worse than that of negroes." iPreadamites y pp. 85, 178.) In the face of such statements from these high au- thorities, the following from the Vicksburg Daily Herald of April 19th, should afford food for grave reflection: "in presenting an application to Congress for a larger appropriation for the Washington police, Commis- sioner Wright, of the District Board, asserted that the 90,000 colored population of that city included a crimi- nal contingent equal in vice and desperate crime to those of any city in the world — that they * regard life of no value whatever.' " This statement was made with every excusatory exception of its application to the uncriminal mass of the race. But it was resented by an indignation meeting in the Second Baptist church, when, with much Inflammatory circumstance"^ the commissioner's removal was asked in the name of the 90,000. The resolutions adopted raise no question of the truth of the commissioner's statement — it was in fact the truth resented. Writing of the commissioner's report and the Negro meeting, the Baltimore Sun correspondent thus affirms what is charged by the former : "There is a class of Washington Negroes danger- ous, vicious and obnoxious in the extreme. When these do not commit violations of the law they delight in in- dulging in all sorts of petty annoyances and exhibitions towards the Whites. Instances of pretentious rudeness and incivility toward white people, he goes on, are of 294 MAN, AND THE NEGRO, common occurrence in the street cars, in public places and on the sidewalks. More than twice as many Ne- groes as Whites were arrested for carrying concealed weapons, more than twice as many for disorderly conduct, more than twice as many for assault and battery, more than twice as many for petty larceny, and thirteen more for grand larceny; twice as many for profanity, seven times as many for criminal assault, and more than five times as many for house-breaking at night. Seven murders were committed by Negroes to two by Whites. **In all the most heinous offenses known to crimi- nology the Negroes were largely in the excess. A very large proportion of all crimes are committed by young Negro toughs under 25 years of age, Tke discouraging, even appalling, nature of these figures, their profound significance, is only to be rightly measured when joined with the reflection that for years past the District has been a veritable Negro eleemosynary. Here he has been cuddled and courted politically, protected in all his equality of rights by the law — his aspirations and efforts for social elevation encouraged and assisted as nowhere else. And such is the harvest — with a third of the pepulation, more than half of the greater crimes, and a far larger proportion of the lesser, are committed by the Negroes. ** But the worst feature of the incident is the rally of the law-abiding Negroes to the defense of their crimi- nals — sheltering and encouraging color line law -breaking at the woeful sacrifice of reputation. This is a revela- MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 29^ tion of racial trait that will repel and dishearten every well-wisher of the Negro — cool faith in his ever attain- ing a reputable social status. The picture has one lumi- nous merit alone — it will serve to dispel delusions. Dis- played at Washington, it is like a light set on a hill, im- printing its lessons on every Congressman with more convincing and impressive force than all the speeches and writings in vindication of the South 's racial policies." "We may allow ourselves deceived by religious fanatics, and by designing politicians — we may close our eyes to the truth — but the fact remains; a very considerable proportion of these mixed-bloods have actually descended to a savagery in the midst of a high civilization in which they were born and reared, and this too, despite the most persistent efforts of the Press, the Church and the State, to educate, elevate and Christianize them. And the worst feature is, that what is termed the "better class" are in full sympathy with the criminal class. For years the misguided philanthropy of the people of the North has prompted them to shower their favors upon the negro with the most lavish hand, and now the base born ingrate turns like a mad dog upon his benefactors and bites the hand that fed him. When the great bulk of these so-called negroes were in the South the crimes of murder and rape w^iich they delight to perpetrate were confined to that sec- tion, and when the outraged communities would rise and wreak summary vengeance upon some black 296 . MAN, AND THE NEGRO, murderer or rape fiend, they were denounced by the press of the North as savages. But for some years there has been a steady flow of negroes from the South into the North, and as their numbers increase, the crimes which are common among them in the South are committed here, and we observe that the people of the North have adopted the Southern mode of suppressing them. A few weeks ago the telegraph brought the news that a desperate mulatto after attempting to induce a general uprising against the whites, had murdered the officials sent to arrest him, and that 20,000 indignant whites were hunting and killing the negroes in New Orleans. Scarcely had the public recovered from the shock when the news was flashed to us that for a similar offense ^5,000 indignant whites were hunting and killing negros in New York, and almost simultaneously came the news of a "race riot" at Liberty, Ga. The foUov/ing from the St. Louis Republic of Sept. 14, is a specimen of the results of social equality with these degraded creatures: "Deleware, Ohio, Sept. 13. A colored barber, who, it is alleged, has insulted several white girls, is to-night under the protection of about 100 colored men, assembled in South Delaware. About 200 armed white men are scattered in the vicinity of the college grounds, w^aiting for developments. The negroes have threat- ened to shoot if any attempt is made to harm Beck, Intense feeling prevails." MAN, AND THE NEGRO. 297 Not only tlie unprotected woman, but tlie little helpless child, is assaulted and outrag-ed by these brutes. If a correct list was obtained of all the cases which the defenseless women and helpless children had been outraged by the black fiends in the last thirty years, it would recall hundreds of scenes of horror which are not alone sufficient to "g-ive the blush to shame," but would make the *^cheek of terror pale." Think of such creatures as active participants in the social, political and religious affairs of a great nation like ours! Think of thefact that amalgamation, the crime to which these base-born creatures owe their existence, is rapidly on the increase in this country, as shown by the fact that each succeeding generation of them becomes whiter and whiter. Think of the fact that many of our most distinguished clergymen are open advocates of this loathsome crime, and that they have become so demoral- ized as to attempt to defend it on Bible grounds. Dr. T. Dewit Talmage, in a recent sermon, addressed more especially to sisters, says of Miriam, the sister of Moses: **She had possessed unlimited influence over Moses, and now he marries, and not only so, but marries a black woman from Ethiopia; and Miriam is so dis- gusted and outraged at Moses, first, because he had married at all, and next, because he had practiced mis- cegenation, that she is drawn into a frenzy and then^be- gins to turn white and gets white as a corpse. Her com- plexion is like chalk; the fact is, she has the Egyptian 298 MANy AND THE NEGRO, leprosy." (See Weekly Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 8, 1898.) This blasphemous statement is the most pitable dis- play of that gross ignorance of the teachings of scrip- ture which characterizes the modern clergy, that has ever attracted our observation. And its utterances clearly indicates that Dr. Talmage has no more conception of the Plan of Creation, that he has no more knowledge of man's relation to God and to the earth and to the rest of created things, and that he is as grossly ignorant of the Plan of Redemption, which he proposes to teach, as a Hottentot. At the same time, his intellectual ability, his literary attainments and his eloquence, leads the press to scatter his utterances broadcast throughout the world to demoralize, degrade and damn every man and woman who reads and accepts them. Who but a thoroughly demoralized pulpit advocate of amalgamation, could conceive the absurd idea that God selected a degraded amalgamationist with a "black" wife to lead to the I^and of Promise the descendents of Abraham, whom he had chosen for no other purpose than that they should presei-ve in its purity and increase the Adamic flesh of the earth, execute his designs with ref- erence to the development of the resources of the earth, and the control of the animals and ultimately destroy the mixed -bloods from the globe. The Egyptians had descended to amalgamation as is shown by the fact that we find depicted on their monu- ments not only the white and the black, but the so- MAN, AND THE NEGRO, 299 called **colored races." In addition to this we find them described in scripture as a "mingled people," and the curses of God were showered upon them. The Canaanites were specifically charged with lying with beastS) and thus defiling their land; and God ordered their extermination. Now, if it be true, as Dr. Talmage asserts, that Moses **had practiced miscegenation" by marrying a **black woman," what did God mean when He said to Moses: ** Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, I am the I