[My Bondage and My Freedom by Frederick Douglass]@TWC D-Link bookMy Bondage and My Freedom CHAPTER XXIV 23/41
In a letter to Mr.Greeley, of the New York Tribune, written while abroad, I said: I am, nevertheless aware that the wisdom of exposing the sins of one nation in the ear of another, has been seriously questioned by good and clear-sighted people, both on this and on your side of the Atlantic.
And the{294} thought is not without weight on my own mind.
I am satisfied that there are many evils which can be best removed by confining our efforts to the immediate locality where such evils exist.
This, however, is by no means the case with the system of slavery.
It is such a giant sin--such a monstrous aggregation of iniquity--so hardening to the human heart--so destructive to the moral sense, and so well calculated to beget a character, in every one around it, favorable to its own continuance,--that I feel not only at liberty, but abundantly justified, in appealing to the whole world to aid in its removal. But, even if I had--as has been often charged--labored to bring American institutions generally into disrepute, and had not confined my labors strictly within the limits of humanity and morality, I should not have been without illustrious examples to support me.
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