The varied tragedy of human life furnishes few more pathetic spectacles than that of the educated mulatto…

The varied tragedy of human life furnishes few more pathetic spectacles than that of the educated mulatto who is honestly seeking the welfare of a race with which a baleful commingling of blood has inexorably identified him, — who is striving to uplift to his own level a people between whose ideals and ambitions and capabilities and his own a great gulf has been fixed by nature’s laws. Frequently inheriting from the superior race talents and aspirations the full play of which is denied him by his kinship to the inferior, — through no fault of his own he is doomed to be an anachronism in American political and social life.

Alfred Holt Stone, “The Mulatto Factor in the Race Problem,” The Atlantic Monthly, May 1903, 662.

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