[The Sable Cloud by Nehemiah Adams]@TWC D-Link bookThe Sable Cloud CHAPTER VII 18/33
We gain the ascendency; we can do as we please.
Now, as all sin must be repented of at once, it is the duty of the passengers and crew to put the ship about, and deliver it to the owners in Glasgow! Perhaps we should not think it best to put in force the '_ruat coelum_' doctrine, especially if we had had some '_ruat coelum_' storms, and it was late in the season.
But then we should actually be enjoying the stolen property--the ship and its comforts--for several days, with the belief that benevolence and justice to all concerned required us to reach the end of the voyage before we took measures to perform that justice, which, before, would have been practical folly. "Now, please, do not require this illustration to go on all fours.
All that I mean is this: A right thing may be wrong, if done unseasonably, or in disregard of circumstances which have supervened. "But to go a little further, and beyond mere expediency: Can you see no difference between buying slaves, and making men slaves? While it would be wicked for you to reduce people to slavery, is that the same as becoming owners to those who are already in slavery? In one case, you could not apply the golden rule; in the other, the golden rule would absolutely compel you, in many instances, to buy slaves.
Go to almost any place where slaves are sold, and they will come to you, if they like your looks, and, by all the arts of persuasion, entreat you to become their master.
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