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Isaac, sending him with a tempting dowry into a distant land.

As to the "seed of Ham," our Sabbath schools have made this generation sufficiently familiar with the Bible to know that Noah's curse was definitively pronounced upon Canaan, Ham's youngest son, and was accomplished when the Israelites subdued the Canaanites. But if any still insist upon applying it perpetually to the whole posterity of Ham, I must remind them that the grand old empires of Egypt, Chaldea, and Assyria, were all founded by immediate descendants of Ham, and that these Hamitic nations successively enslaved the Israelites, the posterity of Shem. I must remind such, also, that the descent of the negro race from Ham has never been satisfactorily established, upon grounds either of physiology, of history, or of philology. Indeed, the evidence rather preponderates in the opposite scale. Moreover, Aben Ezra and Mendelssohn, two of the greatest names in Hebrew philology, maintain that the expression "servant of servants" in Genesis ix. 25, does not describe the abjectness of the condition, but simply the relative condition in the family, whether of the individual or of nations. The Hebrew idiom is literally servant, servants, which, according to these philologers, merely designates the class without stigmatizing or aggravating the condition: "He shall be [not the slave of slaves, but] a servant-belonging to the class of servants." The learned authors of the Septuagint version point the verse differently, and come at the same

meaning: "Cursed be Canaan the servant (Taïs); a house-servant (oikéτns) shall he be to his brethren":— i. e., he shall be in a menial condition.

Some would interpret this prophetic imprecation by the relative position of the Hamitic, the Japhetic, and the Shemitic nations, in the march of civilization. "To the nations of the race of Ham was accorded an inferior and subservient position in the great programme of the world's progress: that of pioneers subserving the material wealth and secular advancement of mankind."* There is a general historic truth in this view, and yet Rawlinson justly assigns to the earlier Hamitic nations a higher role in the world's drama. "Egypt and Babylon-Mizraim and Nimrod-both descendants of Ham-led the way, and acted as the pioneers of mankind in the various untrodden fields of art, literature, and science. Alphabetic writing, astronomy, history, chronology, architecture, plastic art, sculpture, navigation, agriculture, textile industry, seem, all of them, to have had their origin in one or other of these two countries."+

This author furnishes many cogent arguments for the Hamitic origin of the primitive people of Babylon, which, indeed, is distinctly asserted in Genesis x. 8. But he gives special prominence to the discovery, in the most ancient remains of Chaldea, of a form of speech older than the known Babylonian language, "whose vocabulary is

* Dr. Leonard Bacon, New Englander, 1862, pp. 853, 354.
+ History of the Five Great Monarchies, I., p. 75.

decidedly Cushite, or Ethiopian." The seed of Ham were the progenitors of the mightiest empires of the old world.*

The great orientalist of the College of France takes a middle ground between these two views of the relation of the Hamitic nations to human progress. According to Ernest Renan, the Chinese in eastern Asia, the Cushites and Hamites in western Asia, and in Africa, were the earliest civilized races; but their civilization was stamped with a materialistic character-the religious and poetic instincts but little developed, with little artistic feeling, but a great aptitude for the manual arts, and for the exact and practical sciences. These Cushite and Hamitic civilizations disappeared before the advance of the Shemitic and the Arian types, which, though at first greatly inferior to the former in external civilization, in material works, and in the science of organization which makes great empires, yet infinitely surpassed them in vigor, courage, and the genius of poetry and religion. Yet Renan concedes to the Hamitic nations, for a long period, "the monopoly of commerce, navigation, and industrial arts."+

In a word, then, the curse of Noah was not pronounced upon "the seed of Ham," but only upon Canaan; or if intended for "the seed of Ham," it was not in any sense, and never has proved to be in fact, a curse of personal slavery. It cannot, with logical or historical fairness, be applied to the existing negro races.

* History of the Five Great Monarchies, I., pp. 64, 65.

+ Histoire Générale et Système Comparé des Langues Sémitiques. Vol. I., pp. 500-503. Third edition, Paris, 1863.

VI.

THE STATUTES OF MOSES IN REGARD TO SERVANTS.

EVERY competent scholar, be he Jew or Christian, knows that the idea of property in man, of a human chattel, is entirely unknown to the Mosaic code. Among the Jews, a price was sometimes paid in advance for the use and control of a servant, and such a servant was said to be "bought with money ;" and so, too, money was paid to the father in consideration of the hand of a daughter. Yet neither wife or servant thus "bought with money," became the legal property of the possessor, but the servant, as well as the wife, was a person still, with rights guarded by religion and by law. Among the Hebrews, involuntary servitude, whether a penalty for debt or a misfortune of war, had nothing in common with the chattelism of more recent times. Under the Mosaic code, the relation of master and servant was so hedged round by laws in the interest of the servant, and was so often broken up by the periodical manumission of the bondman, that chattel slavery, or

* This custom prevails among eastern nations at this day. Dr. Perkins states that "wives are purchased among the Nestorians, as they were in the days of Jacob-the price ranging from five to fifty or one hundred dollars, according to the standing and charms of the person. It is not considered proper for the father of the bride, who receives the purchase money, to appropriate it to his private purposes, but to expend it in furnishing her with wedding garments. -Residence in Persia, p. 236.

the permanent and unmitigated ownership of man in man, was clearly impossible.

The ablest writers upon the Hebrew economy, such as the learned Jew, Dr. Mielziner, of Copenhagen, Heinrich Ewald, of Göttingen, a great authority in Hebrew antiquities, Prof. Joseph L. Saalschütz, of Königsberg, whose works on the Mosaic polity are of the highest standing, Joseph Salvador, the Rabbinical scholar of Paris-men versed in the Hebrew language and in Jewish customsagree in this that the laws of Moses nowhere recognize the right of property in man, nor concede to the master an absolute proprietorship over the person of his servant.

The term generally used in the Mosaic code to designate one in a servile condition, was "a common name for all who stood in a dependent or subordinate relation. It had not the degrading sense which we connect with the words slave or bondman; but it often had the mild significancy which we associate, in certain relations, with the word servant."* Nor was there any other term in use among the Hebrews which would correspond with our use of the term slave, to denote one held in the possession of another as his property. "The Mosaic law knows nothing of slavery in the sense of considering freeman and slave as beings holding an opposite relation to each other in respect to their dignity as men, and on a scale of civil and social rights. The Hebrew language has no word for stigmatizing by a degrading appellation

* Mielziner, Die Verhältnisse, p. 11; or Am. Theo. Review, Vol. III., p. 231. The term here referred to (Ebed) is derived from a verb which signifies to labor; S. g., "six days mayst thou labor;" or to serve; e. g., servants of the king.

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