Papers of John Adams, volume 21
Inclosed is the Letter of Dr
Tucker.—1 If I should
agree with him in his Maxim Fiat Justitia ruat Cælum2 the question would Still remain
what is Justice. Justice to the Negroes would require that they should not
be abandoned by their Masters and turned loose upon a World in which they
have no Capacity to procure even a Subsistance. What would become of the
old,? the young? the infirm? Justice to the World too would forbid that Such
Numbers should be turn’d out to live by Violence or Theft or fraud.
I believe no better Expedient will be found than to prohibit the Importation of new Negroes, and Soften the Severity of the Condition of old ones, as much as possible, untill the increasing Population of the Country shall have multiplied the Whites to such a Superiority of Numbers, that the Blacks may be liberated by Degrees, with the Consent both of Master and Servant
your sincere
RC (MHi:Jeremy Belknap Papers); internal address: “Dr Belknap”; endorsed: “V P. Adams Oct 22 / 1795.”
For St. George Tucker’s queries on slavery in colonial Massachusetts, see Belknap’s 2 March letter, and note 1, above.
Let justice be done, though the heavens should fall
(John Bouvier, A Law Dictionary Adapted to the
Constitution and Laws of the United States of America, 2 vols.,
Phila., 1868, 2:127).