The following is the conclusion to last Friday's post. Tomorrow, I shall begin my Turkey reportage, which I, at this writing, I do not know if it'll be any good. I hope it's not "eighteen days of 'Nothing happened'" or "Our tiny sailboat were boarded by pirates." Something in the middle would be nice. With a Pomerantzian slant.
And now, back to our story.
At the Eleventh Hour of History, two high-ranking representatives, one from the North, the other from the South, have come together to negotiate a way to avert the Civil War. As a nod towards compromise, they Representative from the South has proposed what he views as a breakthrough concerning the insurmountable issue of slavery - The South will free the slaves for one day a week. Upon hearing this proposal, the Representative from the North was reported to have snorted Bourbon out of his nose.
We return now to their deliberations, in a colloquy only recently discovered in the remote recesses of a writer's imagination.
At the Eleventh Hour of History, two high-ranking representatives, one from the North, the other from the South, have come together to negotiate a way to avert the Civil War. As a nod towards compromise, they Representative from the South has proposed what he views as a breakthrough concerning the insurmountable issue of slavery - The South will free the slaves for one day a week. Upon hearing this proposal, the Representative from the North was reported to have snorted Bourbon out of his nose.
We return now to their deliberations, in a colloquy only recently discovered in the remote recesses of a writer's imagination.
NORTHERN
REPRESENTATIVE: This is totally
outrageous!
SOUTHERN REPRESENTATIVE: “A reasonable proposal”, outrageous? I am not following you, suh.
N: You are suggesting as an effort to turn the
heat down on the most contentious issue dividing the two regions of our country
that you will free your slaves for one day a week?
S: Precisely.
A good faith proposal to help defuse our current difficulties. And may I say, this was no easily surrendered
concession. Our discussions opened with
the suggestion of “an extended lunch
break” and gradually, through a debate process that was frankly not always
civil in nature, advanced to our current position – a full day of emanicipation,
one day a week.
N: And then
what?
S: (WITH A SHRUG) Back to business as usual.
N: And how exactly would that work?
S: The slaves would rise on that day, and rather
than heading out to the fields or working in the house, they could instead do
whatever they wanted.
N: Including running away?
S: If they came back the next morning. Emancipation has its limits.
N: No, it doesn’t.
S: It does in this proposal.
N: That’s not exactly “freedom.”
S: For one day
it is. We are not offering to abandon
indentured servitude, just the “full time” version
of it, which I suggest is a major adjustment in our position. Till now, and for centuries past, our slavery
arrangement has been “wall-to-wall.” You
must acknowledge, from the way you
view things, this is unquestionably a step in the right direction.
N: And this is your side’s idea for averting a civil
war?
S: Partly.
N: You mean there is more to your proposal?
S: No, that’s all there is.
N: Then what are we talking about?
S: What we are talking about is not only a
demonstration on the willingness of our side to bend, but also a one-day-per-week
“Laboratory of Adjustment.” Our unpaid
employees get their feet wet concerning what this “freedom thing” is all about,
and the people of my station get a preliminary
taste of a future in which we’d be entirely without them.
N: Which would be when?
S: We’ll get back to you on that point. The point here
is, our proposal comes in the service of not just compromise, but also practice.
N: Mr. Southern Representative, acknowledging
our side’s appreciation of an accommodation I am sure was not easy for you to
arrive at, your proposal, with respect, sir, is eminently ridiculous.
S: Not to the people most directly
involved. I canvassed my workforce, and
to a man, they overwhelmingly preferred six
days or backbreaking effort to seven.
N: Did you canvas them about backbreaking effort
for which they’d be paid?
S: Why is it always “all or nothing” with you
people?
N: Because slavery, an institution that you are
currently not offering to abandon, is an indelible blot on this nation’s
history, and an unholy abomination.
S: On that point, I shall respectfully and
understandably, considering my circumstances, abstain. However, following your argument, would it not be a decidedly positive move to have
one day less of that “unholy abomination”
per week? I mean, who exactly is being
inflexible on this matter – us or you?
N: Compromise is not always an option.
S: It is if we want it to be. Did we not once
hammer out an agreement by which the Negro was deemed to be three-fifths of a
person?
N: I voted against that.
S: Point taken, but it passed.
N: It’s still crazy. You insist on a slave being considered property. And then, in an argument for a greater
Southern representation in Congress, that “property” is suddenly a person.
S: Not a
whole person.
N: No, three-fifth’s
of a person. Which is even crazier!
S: It was a compromise.
N: An unfathomable
one! How can a slave in one context, be property, and in another – when it suits your side’s purposes
– a human being? In what way does that
make any sense?
S: Legislatively.
N: Let me be clear on the matter. Our position is that slavery is
unacceptable. And a “One-day furlough”
is nowhere close to the answer.
S: I have been authorized to go “a day-and-a-half.” Though not consecutively.
N: The institution of slavery must be abolished
in its entirety.
S: But, suh, you are being unreasonable.
N: There are limits to reason. And, when it comes to deeply held principles,
limits to compromise.
S: Does that cut both ways? Or is it exclusively your deeply held principles?
N: In all fairness, I would have to admit it’s
both.
S: Then, suh, I have just one thing to say to
you.
N: What’s that?
That's it! But you probably knew that. How about this: the 2 reps sign a treaty avoiding war, but allow Custer to steal the furniture at Appomattox thus keeping that part of history accurate.
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