Zulick Home | COM225 | COM341 | All Primary Texts | All References
Coatesville Address
John Jay Chapman
Delivered in Coatesville, PA, 18 August
1912,
on the occasion of the first anniversary of the lynching
and murder of a black man in the same town.
And the
LORD said to Moses, When you go back to Egypt,
see that you perform before Pharaoh all the wonders that I have put
in your power; but I will harden his heart, so that he will not let
the people go. |
Exodus
4:21 |
|
Make
the heart of this people dull, and stop their ears, and shut their eyes,
so that they may not look with their eyes, and listen with their ears,
and comprehend with their hearts, and turn and be hearled. |
Isaiah
6:10 |
|
I will
give them a new heart, and put a new spirit within them; I will remove
the heart of stone from their flesh and give them a heart of flesh,
so that they may follow my statutes and keep my ordinances and obey
them. Then they shall be my people, and I will be their God. |
Ezekiel
11:19-20 |
1.1 |
We are met to commemorate
the anniversary of one of the most dreadful crimes in history— |
|||||
1.2 |
We do not start any agitation with regard to that particular crime. |
|||||
1.3 |
I understand that
an attempt to prosecute the chief criminals has been made, and has entirely
failed; |
|||||
1.4 |
The failure of
the prosecution in this case, in all such cases, |
|||||
2.1 |
I will tell you
why I am here; |
|||||
3.1 |
When I read in
the newspapers of August 14, a year ago, about the burning alive of
a human being, |
|||||
3.2 |
As I read the newspaper
accounts of the scene enacted here in Coatesville a year ago, |
|||||
3.3 |
I saw a seldom revealed picture of the American heart and of the American nature. |
|||||
3.4 |
I seemed to be
looking into the heart of the criminal—a cold thing, an awful thing. |
|||||
3.5 |
What I have seen is not an illusion. |
|||||
3.6 |
It is the truth. |
|||||
3.7 |
I have seen death in the heart of this people." |
|||||
4.1 |
For to look at the agony of a fellow-being and remain aloof means death in the heart of the onlooker. |
|||||
4.2 |
Religious fanaticism has sometimes lifted men to the frenzy of such cruelty, political passion has sometimes done it, personal hatred might do it, the excitement of the ampitheater in the degenerate days of Roman luxury could do it. |
|||||
4.3 |
But here an audience chosen by chance in America has stood spellbound through an improvised auto-da-fé, irregular, illegal, having no religious significance, not sanctioned by custom, having no immediate provocation, the audience standing by merely in cold dislike. |
|||||
5.1 |
I saw during one moment something beyond all argument in the depth of its significance. |
|||||
5.2 |
No theories about the race problem, no statistics, legislation, or mere educational endeavor, can quite meet the lack which that day revealed in the American people. |
|||||
5.3 |
For what we saw was death. |
|||||
5.4 |
The people stood
like blighted things, like ghosts about Acheron, |
|||||
6.1 |
Whatever life itself is, that thing must be replenished in us. |
|||||
6.2 |
The
opposite of hate is love, the opposite of cold is heat; |
|||||
6.3 |
For
one moment I knew that I had seen our true need; |
|||||
6.4 |
And I became filled
with one idea, that I must not forget what I had seen, |
|||||
6.5 |
And I am here today chiefly that I may remember that vision. |
|||||
6.6 |
It
seems fitting to come to this town where the crime occurred and hold a
prayer-meeting, |
|||||
7.1 The locus of responsibility |
Let me say something more about the whole matter. |
|||||
8.1 |
The subject we are dealing with is not local. |
|||||
8.2 |
The
act, to be sure, took place at Coatesville |
|||||
8.3 |
Some months ago
I asked a friend who lives not far from here something about this case,
and about the expected prosecutions, |
|||||
8.4 |
And it seemed to be in my county. |
|||||
8.5 |
I
live on the Hudson River; |
|||||
8.6 |
It
is the wickedness of all America and of three hundred years— |
|||||
8.7 |
All of us are tinctured by it. |
|||||
8.8 |
No special place, no special persons, are to blame. |
|||||
8.9 |
A
nation cannot practice a course of inhuman crime for three hundred years |
|||||
8.10 |
Less
than fifty years ago domestic slavery was abolished among us; |
|||||
9.1 |
There is no country in Europe where the Coatesville tragedy or anything remotely like it could have been enacted, probably no country in the world. |
|||||
9.2 |
On
the day of the calamity, those people in the automobiles came by the hundred |
|||||
9.3 |
On
the next morning the newspapers spread the news and spread the paralysis
until the whole country seemed to be helplessly watching this awful murder,
as awful as anything ever done on this earth; |
|||||
9.4 |
That spectacle has been in my mind. |
|||||
10.1 |
The trouble has come down to us out of the past. |
|||||
10.2 |
The
only reason slavery is wrong is that it is cruel |
|||||
10.3 |
Someone
may say that you and I cannot repent |
|||||
10.4 |
But we are involved in it. |
|||||
10.5 |
We are still looking on. |
|||||
11.1 |
Do
you not see that this whole event is merely the last parable, |
|||||
11.2 |
This
whole matter has been an historic episode; |
|||||
11.3 |
With the great
disease (slavery) came the climax (the war), |
|||||
12.1 |
I
say that our need is new life, |
|||||
12.2 |
This
is the discovery that each man must make for himself— |
|||||
12.3 Summation |
I have felt the impulse today to testify to this truth. |
|||||
12.4 |
The
occasion is not small; |
|||||
12.5 |
Yet the occasion is small compared with the truth it leads us to. |
|||||
12.6 |
For this truth touches all ages and affects every soul in the world. |
|||||
Further Reading |
||||||
|