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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69166 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69166)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A short sketch of the evidence for the
-abolition of the slave trade, delivered before a committee of the House
-of Commons, by William Bell Crafton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A short sketch of the evidence for the abolition of the slave
- trade, delivered before a committee of the House of Commons
-
-Author: William Bell Crafton
-
-Release Date: October 16, 2022 [eBook #69166]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SHORT SKETCH OF THE
-EVIDENCE FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE, DELIVERED BEFORE A
-COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ***
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
- The original text used the character ſ (long-form s); these have been
- replaced by the normal s in this etext.
-
- Footnote anchors are denoted by [number], and the footnotes have been
- placed at the end of the book.
-
- Some minor changes to the text are noted at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
- A
-
- SHORT SKETCH
-
- OF
-
- THE EVIDENCE
-
- FOR THE
-
- ABOLITION
-
- OF THE
-
- SLAVE TRADE,
-
- _Delivered before a Committee of the House of Commons_
-
- TO WHICH IS ADDED, A
-
- Recommendation of the Subject
-
- TO THE
-
- SERIOUS ATTENTION
-
- OF
-
- PEOPLE IN GENERAL.
-
- [Illustration: (decorative separator)]
-
- “ALL THINGS WHATSOEVER YE WOULD THAT
- MEN SHOULD DO TO YOU, DO YE EVEN SO TO
- THEM,” Matt. chap. vii. ver. 12.
-
- [Illustration: (decorative separator)]
-
-
- LONDON, PRINTED; PHILADELPHIA:
- RE-PRINTED BY DANIEL LAWRENCE.
- M.DCC.XCII.
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENT.
-
-
- _The Design of the following_ SHORT SKETCH _is not to supersede, in
- any Degree_, MORE IMPORTANT PUBLICATIONS, _but, on the Contrary, to
- extend their Circulation, and promote their Influence_.
-
-
-
-
-A
-
-SHORT SKETCH, _&c._
-
-
-Virtue, say moralists, is so transcendently beautiful, that she need
-but be _seen_, to be universally admired: and is not VICE so hateful,
-that the more its features are _viewed_, the more it will be avoided?
-The traffic in the human species, particularly as carried on by the
-Europeans on the coast of Africa, has so horrible an aspect, that
-nothing, one should think, but the MASK, under which it has been
-concealed, could have prevented all the civilized nations in the
-world uniting to drive the detested Monster from the face of the
-earth. This MASK is, however, at length taken away, and the traffic
-stands exposed in all its real, unalterable deformity. The PEOPLE
-are now called upon to behold, to feel, and judge for themselves.
-The representations of former writers on this subject were roundly
-denied; the facts they stated were not only contradicted, but deemed
-impossible, and the authors themselves were accused of slander.
-Now we have a body of EVIDENCE to which to appeal; of evidence,
-possessing every essential of _credibility_. The witnesses have
-declared before the Select Committee of the House of Commons, what
-they themselves saw: they had the best opportunities of observation,
-and they are disinterested. And now it appears, that one half of the
-tale of human misery hath not been told: and that every principle,
-that can bind a man of honour and conscience,[1] loudly calls for
-the prohibition of the iniquitous traffic. Hard indeed must those
-hearts be, and inaccessible those understandings,[2] which such
-evidence cannot reach!
-
-The Evidence delivered before the Select Committee of the House of
-Commons is very voluminous, occupying two thousand pages in folio.
-But a judicious Abstract and Arrangement of the Evidence, on the Part
-of the Petitioners for the Abolition of the Slave Trade,[3] has been
-published, and in a short compass, contains the evidence of well
-informed persons on that subject.
-
-In the PREFACE to this important volume of evidence we read of
-rewards offered for taking run-away negroes _alive or dead_--of
-laws being required to be made to prevent the practice of _cutting
-off ears, noses, and tongues_--of _breaking limbs_ and _putting out
-eyes_--to prevent _distempered, maimed, and worn out negroes_ from
-infesting towns--to prevent _aged_ and _infirm_ negroes being driven
-from the plantations _to starve_. We meet also with such kind of
-PREAMBLES to acts as the following, viz.
-
-‘Whereas the extreme cruelty and inhumanity of the managers,
-overseers, and book-keepers of estates, have frequently driven slaves
-into the woods, and occasioned rebellions, internal insurrections,
-&c. And whereas also it frequently happens, that slaves come
-to their deaths by hasty and severe blows and other improper
-treatment of overseers and book-keepers, in the heat of passion;
-and when such accidents do happen, the victims are entered in the
-plantation-books, as having died of convulsions, fits, or other
-causes not to be accounted for; and to conceal the real truth of
-the cause of the death of such slave or slaves, he or they is or
-are immediately put under ground, &c. Other preambles of a similar
-complexion, respecting the lodging, food, and clothes of negroes,
-are here to be met with. We also find that run-away negroes, when
-advertised, are described by the various brands upon their shoulders,
-breasts, cheeks, and foreheads. A woman is described with a wooden
-leg; a man as having both his ears cropt, and another by his nose
-and ears being cut off.’ Cornwall Chronicle, Nov. 7, 1789. Other
-instances occur within the year 1791.
-
-The FIRST CHAPTER contains an account of the Enormities committed
-by the Natives of Africa on the persons of one another, to procure
-slaves for the Europeans, proved by the testimony of such as have
-visited that continent--and confirmed by accounts from the slaves
-themselves, after their arrival in the West-Indies.
-
-Under this head, we learn that Kidnapping, or as the natives call it,
-Panyaring, is very common, that war is made on purpose to procure
-slaves. The king’s soldiers set fire to villages in the night,
-and seize the wretched inhabitants as they attempt to escape from
-the flames, and many perish, either by the fire or sword, in the
-execution of this horrid purpose. A Boy, who was carried away in the
-night from his father’s house, says, he believes both his parents
-were killed, he is sure that one was, and that many others were
-killed and some taken. Various instances are mentioned of consummate
-treachery employed in making captives. Kidnapping is professionally
-followed; large parties go up the country three hundred miles to
-drive down captives--they go a wood-ranging, and pick up every one
-they meet, and strip them naked. The purchasers generally say, they
-do not care how the sellers come by their slaves. Many are sold for
-crimes falsely imputed; the Judges participate in the profits of the
-sale, and are therefore strongly induced to condemn the innocent.
-Crimes are invented and multiplied for the purpose of traffic. The
-great men dress up and employ women, to entice young men to be
-connected with them, that they may be convicted of adultery and
-sold. The slaves are separated without the least regard to ties of
-consanguinity, or the pathetic expostulations and remonstrances of
-nature. When slave-ships are on the Coast the natives go armed, but
-are no where safe. The man, invited to drink with his neighbour, on
-rising to go, is seized by two of them and a large dog: and this mode
-of seizure is common.
-
-By the Second Chapter it appears that the Europeans, by means of the
-trade in slaves, are the occasion of the before-mentioned enormities;
-that they sometimes use additional means to excite the natives to
-practise them, often attempt themselves to steal the natives, and
-succeed, force trade as they please, and are guilty of injustice in
-their dealings. In proof of this charge, we learn from the evidence
-that Africans receive European goods in exchange for slaves--that
-they declare when ships cease to come (as in times of war) slaves
-cease to be taken. African dealers make the Princes drunk, in order
-to overcome their aversion to unprovoked war: they furnish the
-natives with arms and ammunition and excite them to pillage.
-
-The term war, in Africa, is used in general to signify pillage; and
-when many towns are seen blazing in the night, the natives say war
-is carrying on.
-
-The Traders advance goods to Chiefs to induce them to seize their
-subjects or neighbours. Capt. Patterson set two villages at variance,
-and brought prisoners from both sides. It is not uncommon to make
-the natives drunk, and then buy them. General Rooke says, that it
-was proposed to him by three English captains of ships, to kidnap
-a hundred, or a hundred and fifty men, women, and children, king
-Damel’s subjects, who had come to Goree in consequence of the
-friendly intercourse between him and Damel: He refused and was much
-shocked by the proposition. They said such things had been done by
-a former governor. Two men, black traders, were invited on board,
-intoxicated, and captured when asleep. The Gregson’s people, in
-running down the coast, kidnapped thirty-two of the natives. The
-Dobson’s boat of Liverpool had stolen a man and woman; the captain
-on the remonstrance of Capt. Briggs, who told him, there would be no
-more trade if he did not deliver up his two captives, restored them;
-upon which the natives loaded a boat with yams, goats, fowls, honey,
-and palm wine, and would take nothing for them,--a striking instance
-of forgiveness of injuries, and of unmerited kindness!
-
-We then meet with as opposite an exhibition of character as can
-possibly be conceived: three or four hundred Africans cruelly
-massacreed or carried off, by means of the treacherous contrivance
-of six English captains in Old Calabar River. But let us “turn our
-eyes for relief to some ordinary wickedness”[4]: Some consider frauds
-as a necessary part of the traffic; they put false heads into powder
-casks, cut off two or three yards from the middle of a piece of
-cloth, adulterate spirits, and steal back articles given. Besides
-these, there are others who pay in bottles, which hold but half the
-contents of the samples shewn; use false steel-yards and weights, and
-sell such guns as burst on firing; so that many of the natives of the
-windward coast, are without their fingers and thumbs on this account,
-and it has become a saying that these guns kill more out of the butt
-than the muzzle.
-
-The Third Chapter contains an account of the transactions of the
-enslaved Africans, and of the method of confining, airing, feeding,
-and exercising them; incidents on the passage, and the manner of
-selling them when arrived at their destined ports; the deplorable
-situation of the refuse or sickly slaves; separation of relations and
-friends; mortality on the passage, and frequently after sale; and the
-causes of this mortality.
-
-On being brought on board, says Dr. Trotter, they shew signs of
-extreme distress and despair, from a feeling of their situation,
-and regret at being torn from their friends and connexions. They
-sometimes dream of being in their own country, and when they awake
-shew their despair by howling and shrieking in a most dreadful
-manner. The women go into fits. In the course of the voyage, the
-slaves are chained to the deck every day from eight in the morning to
-four o’clock in the afternoon. They are fed twice a day with rice,
-yams, and horse-beans, and now and then a little beef and bread:
-after each of these two meals they are allowed half a pint of water:
-and are forced to jump in their irons, which, by the slave dealers,
-is called making them dance. This exercise frequently occasions the
-fetters to excoriate their limbs; and, when it is very painful to
-move at all, they are compelled to dance by a cat-of-nine-tails.
-The captains order them to sing, and they sing songs of sorrow, the
-subject of which are their wretched situation, and the idea of never
-returning home: the witness remembers the very words upon these
-occasions.
-
-The slaves are so crouded below, that it is impossible to walk among
-them without treading upon them. Dr. Trotter has seen the slaves
-drawing their breath with all those laborious and anxious efforts for
-life, which are observed in expiring animals, subjected by experiment
-to foul air, or in the exhausted receiver of an air pump: they cry
-out--‘we are dying,’ and many are irrecoverably lost by suffocation,
-having had no previous signs of indisposition. They are closely
-wedged together, and have not so much room as a man in his coffin,
-either in length or breadth. They sometimes go down well at night,
-and are found dead in the morning. Alexander Falconbridge was never
-among them for ten minutes together below, but his shirt was as
-wet as if dipped in water. Sometimes the dead and living are found
-shackled together. They lie on the bare blanks, and the prominent
-parts of their bones, about the shoulder-blade and knees, have
-frequently been seen bare. No situation can be conceived so dreadful
-and disgusting as that of slaves when ill of the flux. In the
-Alexander (A. Falconbridge says) the deck was covered with blood and
-mucus, and resembled a slaughter-house; the stench and foul air were
-intolerable. The slaves, shackled together, frequently quarrel, and
-make a great disturbance. Some refuse food and medicine, and declare
-they want to die. In such cases compulsion is used. The ships are so
-fitted up as to prevent, by net-work, the slaves jumping overboard;
-notwithstanding which they often attempt it, and sometimes succeed,
-shewing signs of exultation in the very jaws of death. Some employ
-other means to destroy themselves, and others go mad: Some resolve
-to starve, and means are ineffectually used to wrench open their
-teeth: they persist in their resolution, and effect their purpose,
-in spite of the utmost pains to prevent it. When severely chastised
-for not taking their food they have looked up with a smile and said,
-“presently we shall be no more.” The thumbscrew is an instrument of
-torture, the application of it sometimes occasions mortifications,
-of which the negroes die. An instance occurs of the cruelty of a
-captain to an infant only nine months old, which one would suppose
-too shocking to be true, were it not corroborated by other specimens
-of as great cruelty in various parts of the evidence. After a series
-of tortures the infant expired, and its savage murderer, not yet
-satiated, would suffer none of the people on deck to throw the body
-overboard, but called the Mother, the wretched Mother, to perform
-this last sad office to her murdered child. Unwilling as it might
-naturally be supposed she was, to comply, “he beat her,” regardless
-of the indignant murmurs of her fettered countrymen, whom in the
-barbarous plenitude of secure tyranny, he permitted to be spectators
-of this horrible scene--“he beat her, until he made her take up the
-child and carry it to the side of the vessel, and then she dropped it
-into the sea, turning her head another way, that she might not see
-it!”[5] Another instance occurs in this chapter, not perhaps of more
-cruelty, though of greater magnitude.
-
-A ship from Africa, with about four hundred slaves on board, struck
-upon some shoals, called the Morant Keys, distant eleven leagues, S.
-S. E. off the east end of Jamaica. The officers and seamen of the
-ship landed in their boats, carrying with them arms and provisions.
-The slaves were left on board in their irons and shackles. This
-happened in the night time. When morning came, it was discovered that
-the negroes had got out of their irons, and were busy making rafts,
-upon which they placed the women and children; the men, who were
-capable of swimming, attended upon the rafts, whilst they drifted
-before the wind towards the island where the seamen had landed.
-From an apprehension that the negroes would consume the water and
-provisions which the seamen had landed, they came to the resolution
-of destroying them, by means of their fire-arms and other weapons.
-As the poor wretches approached the shore they actually destroyed
-between three and four hundred of them. Out of the whole cargo only
-thirty three or thirty four were saved and brought to Kingston, where
-they were sold at public vendue.
-
-When the ships arrive at their destined ports, the cargo of slaves
-is sold, either by scramble or vendue. The sale by scramble is
-described:--“A great number of people come on board with tallies in
-their hands (the ship being first darkened with sails and covered
-round; the men slaves placed on the main deck, and the women on the
-quarter deck), and rush through the barricado door with the ferocity
-of brutes. Some have three or four handkerchiefs tied together, to
-encircle as many as they think fit for their purpose.” This is a very
-general mode of sale, and so terrifies the poor negroes, that forty
-or fifty at a time have leaped into the sea; these, however, the
-witness believes, have been taken up again: the women have got away
-and run about the town as if they were mad. The slaves sold by public
-auction or vendue, are generally the refuse, or sickly slaves. These
-are in such a state of health, that they sell greatly under price.
-They have been known to be sold for five dollars, a guinea, and even
-a single dollar each. Some that are deemed not worth buying are left
-to expire in the place of sale, for nobody gives them any thing to
-eat or drink, and some of them live three days in that situation! In
-the sale no care is taken to prevent the reparation of relations;
-they are separated (says the evidence) like sheep and lambs by
-the butcher. Making the slaves walk the plank, is a term used for
-throwing them overboard when provisions are scarce. Sometimes the
-ships lose more than half their cargoes by the small-pox; at others
-they bury a quarter or one-third on the passage, owing to various
-other causes of mortality: and it is confessed by the planters,[6]
-that half the slaves die in the seasoning, after arrival in the
-West-Indies. Surgeon Wilson says, that of the death of two thirds of
-those who died in his ship, the primary cause was melancholy. The
-disorders which carry off the slaves in such numbers, are ascribed
-by Falconbridge to a diseased mind, sudden transitions from heat to
-cold, a putrid atmosphere, wallowing in their own excrements, and
-being shackled together.
-
-The captains, surgeons, &c. who have quitted the African slave-trade,
-uniformly declare the reason to have been, that they could not
-conscientiously continue in it: they say, that it is an unnatural,
-iniquitous, and villainous trade, founded on injustice and treachery;
-manifestly carried on by oppression and cruelty, and not unfrequently
-terminating in murder. Capt. Hall says, he quitted it (in opposition
-to lucrative offers) from a conviction that it was perfectly illegal,
-and founded in blood.
-
-The Fourth Chapter gives an account of the general estimation and
-treatment of the slaves in the West-Indies. Dr. Jackson says, that
-the negroes are generally esteemed a species of inferior beings, whom
-the right of purchase gives the owner a power of using at his will.
-T. Woolrich says, he never knew the best master in the West-Indies
-use his slaves so well, as the worst master his servants in England:
-that their state is inconceivable--that a sight of a gang would
-convince more than all words.
-
-Slaves are either Field Slaves, or in or out Door Slaves.
-
-The field-slaves begin their work at break of day. They work in
-rows, without exception under the whip of drivers, and the weak are
-made to keep up with the strong. They continue their labour (with
-two intermissions, half an hour during the morning, and two hours at
-noon) till sun set. In the intervals they are made to pick grass for
-the cattle. Cook has known pregnant women worked and flogged a few
-days before their delivery. Some, however, are a little indulged when
-in that state. After the month they work with the children on their
-backs. In the crop-season the labour is of much longer duration[7].
-The slaves sometimes work so long that they cannot help sleeping,
-and then it not unfrequently happens, that their arms are caught in
-the mill and torn off. They are said to be allowed one day in seven
-for rest, but this time is necessarily employed in raising food for
-the other days, and gathering grass for their master’s cattle. The
-best allowance of food is at Barbadoes, which is a pint of grain
-for twenty four hours, and half a rotten herring when to be had.
-When the herrings are unfit for the whites, they are bought up
-by planters for the slaves. Some allow nine pints of corn a week,
-and about one pound of salt fish, which is the greatest allowance
-mentioned in the whole course of the evidence. Some have no provision
-but what they raise themselves, and they are frequently so fatigued
-by the labour of the rest of the week, as scarcely to be able to
-work for their own support on the Sunday. And the land allotted them
-for this purpose is often at the distance of three miles from their
-houses; it would, however, be quite ample for their support, were
-they allowed time sufficient for its cultivation. Sometimes when they
-have been at the pains of clearing their land, their masters take
-it for canes, and give them wood land instead of it. This hardship
-some have so taken to heart as to die. Putrid carcases are burnt; if
-they were buried, the slaves would dig them up and eat them, which
-would breed distempers among them. They are sometimes driven by
-extreme hunger to steal at the hazard of their lives. They are badly
-clothed; one half of them go almost naked. The slaves in general have
-no bed or bedding at all. Their houses are built with four poles and
-thatched. They have little or no property. All the evidence (to whom
-the question has been proposed) agree in answering, that they never
-knew or heard of a field-slave ever amassing such a sum, as enabled
-him to purchase his own freedom. The artificers, such as house
-carpenters, coopers, masons, the drivers and head slaves, are better
-off. The owners of women let them out for prostitution, and flog
-them, if they do not bring home full wages.
-
-The negroes, when whipped, are suspended by the arms, with weights
-at their feet. They are first whipped with a whip made of cow-skin
-(which cuts out the flesh, whereas the military whips cut only the
-skin) and afterwards with ebony bushes (which are more prickly than
-thorn bushes in this country) in order to let out the congealed
-blood. Dr. Harrison thinks the whipping too severe to be inflicted
-on any human being: he could lay two or three fingers into the
-wounds of a man whipped for not coming when he was called. Many
-receive from one hundred and fifty to two hundred lashes at a time;
-and in two or three days this is repeated: they wash the raw parts
-with pickle; this appears from the convulsions it occasions, more
-cruel than whipping; but it is done to prevent mortification. After
-severe whipping, they are worked all day without food, except what
-their friends may give them out of their own poor pittance. They are
-returned to their stocks at night, and worked next day as before.
-This cruel treatment his made many commit suicide. Cook has known
-fourteen slaves, who, in consequence thereof, ran into the woods and
-cut their throats together. These severe punishments are frequent.
-The scars made by whipping last to old age. T. Woolrich has seen
-their backs one undistinguished mass of lumps, holes, and furrows.
-They sometimes die of mortification of the wounds. A planter flogged
-his driver to death, and boasted of having so done.
-
-Under the head of Extraordinary Punishments, (for those already named
-are reckoned only ordinary), mention is made of iron collars with
-hooks[8], heavy cattle chains, and a half hundred weight fastened to
-them, which the negroes are forced to drag after them, when working
-in the field, suspending by the hands ’till the fingers mortify;
-flogging with ebony bushes ’till they are forced to go on all fours,
-unable to get up, being tied up to the branch of a tree, with a heavy
-weight round the neck, exposed to the noon-day sun--thumb-screws; a
-man was put on the picket, so long as to occasion a mortification
-of his foot and hand, on suspicion of robbing his master, a public
-officer, of a sum of money, which it afterwards appeared, the master
-had taken himself. Yet the master was privy to the punishment, and
-the slave had no compensation. He was punished by order of the
-master, who did not then chuse to make it known that he himself
-had made use of the money. A girl’s ears were nailed to a post,
-afterwards torn away, and clipt off close to her head, with a pair of
-large scissors; besides this, she was unmercifully flogged, and all
-for--BREAKING A PLATE, OR SPILLING A CUP OF TEA! A negro, impelled by
-hunger, had stolen part of a turkey, his master caused him to be held
-down, and, with his own hands, took a hammer and punch and knocked
-out four of his teeth. The hand is cut off if lifted up against a
-white man, and the leg for running away. A planter sent for a surgeon
-to cut off the leg of a negro who had run away. On the surgeon’s
-refusing to do it, the planter took an iron bar, and broke the leg in
-pieces, and then the surgeon took it off. This planter did many such
-acts of cruelty, and all with impunity. The practice of dropping hot
-lead upon the negroes, is here mentioned. H. Ross saw a young female
-suspended by her wrists to a tree, swinging to and fro, while her
-master applied a lighted torch to the different parts of her writhing
-body. It was notorious that Ruthie tortured so many of his negroes
-to death, that he was obliged to sell his estate. Another planter,
-in the same Island[9], destroyed forty slaves out of sixty (in three
-years) by severity. The rest of the conduct of this infamous wretch
-was cancelled by the Committee of the House of Commons, as containing
-circumstances too horrible to be given to the world. We, however,
-go on to read of knocking on the head and stabbing, of a hot iron
-forced between the teeth, of a slave thrown into the boiling juice,
-and killed, of a negro shot and his head cut off. And it appears,
-that the women, deemed of respectability and rank, not only order
-and superintend, but sometimes actually inflict with their own hands
-severe punishments on their slaves.
-
-The offences for which the before-mentioned punishments are inflicted
-are, not coming into the field in time, not picking a sufficient
-quantity of grass, not appearing willing to work, when in fact sick
-and not able; for staying too long on an errand, for not coming
-immediately when called, for not bringing home (the women) the full
-weekly sum enjoined by their owners; for running away, and for theft,
-to which they are often driven by hunger.
-
-Under the head of “Extraordinary Punishments,” some appear to have
-suffered for running away, or for lifting up a hand against a white
-man, or for breaking a plate, or spilling a cup of tea, or to extort
-confession. Others again, in the moments of sudden resentment, and
-one on a diabolical pretext, which the master held out to the world
-to conceal his own villainy, and which he _knew_ to be _false_.
-
-The slaves have little or no redress against ill-usage of any sort;
-the laws to restrict punishment are a mere farce, and universally
-disregarded, or when pretended to be observed they are in divers ways
-effectually evaded: besides, the evidence of a Black is in no case
-whatever admitted against a White Man; which circumstance alone is
-enough to deprive the negroes of all legal protection whatever, were
-the laws, in other respects, ever so just and salutary. Lieutenant
-Davidson was so hurt at the severe and frequent whippings of one of
-the women, that he complained to a magistrate, who said, “he had
-nothing to do with it.”
-
-The particular instances mentioned in the evidence, of slaves dying
-in consequence of severe and cruel treatment from their masters, were
-not punished, though generally known; nor do the perpetrators of
-these barbarities appear to have suffered any disgrace!
-
-If you speak to a negro of future punishments, he says,----“Why
-should a poor negro be punished? he does no wrong? fiery cauldrons,
-and such things, are reserved for white people, as punishments for
-the oppression of slaves.”
-
-In the Fifth Chapter, it is proved, by such as have seen them in
-their own country, that the natives of Africa are equal to the
-Europeans in their natural capacities, feelings, affections, and
-moral character. They manufacture gold and iron, in some respects,
-equal to the European Artists--also cloth and leather with uncommon
-neatness; the former they die blue, yellow, brown and orange. They
-are skilled in making indigo and soap, and pottery wares, and prepare
-salt for their own use from the sea water. They also make ropes with
-aloes. With respect to their moral character, they are very honest
-and hospitable: grateful and affectionate, harmless and innocent;
-punctual in their dealings, and as capable of virtue as the Whites.
-They are susceptible of all the social virtues: generosity, fidelity,
-and gratitude, are allowed them by Dr. Stuart. These virtues Dr.
-Jackson enumerates, and adds charity to all in distress, and a strong
-attachment on the part of parents to their children. T. Woolrich
-says, he never knew of an African, who could express himself, that
-did not believe in the existence of a supreme Being.
-
-In the Sixth and Seventh Chapters it appears that the natives possess
-industry and a spirit of commerce, sufficient for carrying on a new
-trade; that their country abounds with, and might easily be made
-still more productive of, many and various articles of commerce; but
-that the traffic in slaves is an insuperable impediment to opening a
-new trade.
-
-In the Eighth Chapter it is inquired, whether the slave trade be not
-a grave (instead of a nursery) of the seamen employed in it.
-
-It appears by the muster-rolls of Liverpool and Bristol, that in 350
-vessels, 12,263 men were employed, out of whom 2643 were lost, that
-is to say, more than a fifth of the whole number employed, or more
-than seven in every single voyage, besides nearly one half of those
-who go out with the ships are constantly left behind.
-
-Capt. Hall (of the merchant’s service) says that the crews of the
-African ships, when they arrive in the West-Indies, are the most
-miserable objects he ever met with in any country in his life: he
-does not know a single instance to the contrary. He has frequently
-seen them with their toes rotted off, their legs swelled to the size
-of their thighs, and in an ulcerated state all over &c. &c. This
-account is confirmed by Capt. Hall of the navy. Sir W. Young is of
-opinion, that a trade to Africa in the natural productions of the
-country, would not be attended with more inconvenience to the health
-of the seamen employed in it, than the present West-India Trade.
-
-In the Ninth Chapter we find that the seamen employed in the slave
-trade are in general barbarously used. They are worse fed both in
-quantity and quality of food than the seamen in other trades. They
-have little or no shelter night or day from the inclemency of the
-weather during the whole of the middle passage. They are inhumanly
-treated when ill, and subjected to the fury of the impassioned
-officers for very trifles. A boy, to avoid the cruel treatment of
-his officer, jump’d overboard, and was drowned. A man was killed
-with a hand spike for being very ill and unable to work. Six men
-were chained together by their necks, legs, and hands, for making
-their escape from the vessel; they were allowed only a plantain a
-day; they all died in their chains; one of them (Thomas Jones a very
-good seaman) raving mad! The evidence proves that instances of wanton
-cruelty, and inhuman treatment in general, are numerous, various
-and frequent. One man, with both his legs in irons and his neck in
-an iron collar, was chained to the boat for three months, and very
-often most inhumanly beaten for complaining of his situation, both by
-the captain and other officers. His allowance of provisions was so
-small that (after his release from the boat, on account of extreme
-weakness) he begged something to eat, saying that if it were not
-given him he should die:--the captain reproached him, beat him, and
-bid him die and be damned. The man died in the night. This was in the
-Ship Sally, on board of which ill-treatment was common. Another man
-was deliberately, by a series of shocking barbarities, murdered.
-
-Sir Geo. Young remarks that a ship of the line might be presently
-manned by the sailors who wish to escape from the miseries of African
-ships. One poor young man, when dying in consequence of the ill
-treatment he had received from the captain, said (which were the last
-words A. Falconbridge heard him speak) “I cannot punish him (meaning
-the captain) but God will.” The sailors when sick are beaten for
-being lazy, till they die under the blows!
-
-“If this be the real situation of things, how happens it (the reader
-may perhaps ask) that the objects of such tyranny and oppression
-should not obtain redress, and that our courts of law should not have
-to decide upon more cases of this kind, than they have at present?”
-It is answered, “these objects are generally without friends and
-money, without which the injured will seek for justice but in vain;
-and because the peculiarity of their situation is an impediment to
-their endeavours for redress.” Whoever wishes for a more particular
-answer to this question, may meet with it in “Clarkson’s Essay on
-the Impolicy of the African Slave-Trade,” (page 52) from which the
-question and the above general reply are quoted.
-
-If it should still be asked, “how it happens that seamen enter
-for slave vessels, when such general ill usage on board of them
-can hardly fail of being known?” the reply must be taken from the
-evidence, “that whereas some of them enter voluntarily, the greater
-part of them are trepanned; for that it is the business of certain
-landlords to make them intoxicated, and get them into debt, after
-which _their only alternative is a Guineaman or a Gaol_.”
-
-In the Tenth Chapter it is proved not to be true, what some say,
-that the natives of Africa are happier in the European colonies
-than in their own country. They love their own country, but destroy
-themselves in the colonies, &c. &c. But any comparison between the
-two situations is as (H. Ross says, tho’ on another occasion) “_an
-insult to common sense_.”
-
-The Eleventh, Twelfth, and Thirteenth Chapters are on the subjects
-of negro population in the colonies, and plainly shew that the
-importation of fresh Africans might immediately be superceded, by
-the introduction of general good treatment, and of certain salutary
-regulations therein suggested.
-
-The Fourteenth Chapter is employed to demonstrate, from the evidence
-before the committee, that the colonists would be able to carry on
-the necessary cultivation of their lands, without a fresh importation
-of slaves while the generation immediately succeeding the regulations
-proposed, were growing up to supply the vacancies occasioned by the
-natural deaths of the slaves of all ages, now in their possession.
-
-The Fifteenth Chapter inquires, whether there be not a prevailing
-opinion in the colonies, that it is cheaper to buy or import
-slaves than thus to increase them by population. And whether the
-very reverse of this opinion be not true: namely, that it is more
-profitable to breed than to import. The result of this inquiry is
-clearly in favour of the _immediate_ Abolition of the African Slave
-Trade. The same may be said of the sixteenth _and last_ chapter, in
-which it is considered. Whether it be more political to extend the
-cultivation of the colonies by the continuance of the slave-trade, or
-wait till the rising generation shall be capable of performing it.
-
-Having thus taken a general view of the most striking features of
-the evidence for the abolition of the traffic in the human species,
-as carried on by the English on the coast of Africa, it might not
-be improper to close it with the declaration of a virtuous and wise
-Senator, whose indefatigable labours on behalf of the oppressed
-Africans, cannot fail to insure him the unfeigned respect of every
-lover of freedom and humanity:
-
-“THE ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE (_says he_) IS INDISPENSIBLY
-REQUIRED OF US, NOT ONLY BY RELIGION AND MORALITY, BUT BY EVERY
-PRINCIPLE OF SOUND POLICY[10].”
-
-The noble exordium of another able advocate of the same righteous
-cause, must not however be omitted in this place: The House of
-Commons being now apprized of the nature of this trade, having
-received evidence, having had the facts undeniably established,
-knowing, in short, _what the Slave-Trade was_, he declared, that
-if they did not, by the vote of that night, mark to all mankind
-their abhorrence of a practice so enormous, so savage, so repugnant
-to all laws, human and divine, it would be more scandalous, and
-more defaming, in the eyes of the country, and of the world, than
-any vote which any House of Commons had ever given. He desired
-them seriously to reflect, before they gave their votes, what they
-were about to do that evening. If they voted that the Slave Trade
-should not be abolished, they would, by their vote that night, give
-a _Parliamentary sanction_ to RAPINE, ROBBERY and MURDER; for a
-system of rapine, robbery, and murder, the Slave Trade had now _most
-clearly_ been proved to be[11].
-
-It remains now to recommend, as earnestly and as strongly as
-possible, to the inhabitants of this Land of Freedom individually,
-a particular and serious attention to THE ABSOLUTE NECESSITY, ON
-EVERY CONSIDERATION OF MORALITY AND JUSTICE, OF PUTTING AN END TO A
-PRACTICE SO PREGNANT WITH CIRCUMSTANCES OF TERROR AND ALARM TO THIS
-COUNTRY.
-
-Much has been lately done, by the united friends of equitable
-freedom, in circulating throughout the kingdom important information
-on this interesting subject: but much remains yet to be done. The
-minds of many have been informed, and their indignation justly
-kindled by the history of a commerce “_written throughout in
-characters of blood_[12].” But the understandings it is to be
-fear’d, of a great majority of the people of England, are still
-unenlightened. Should the foregoing Short Sketch of the Evidence,
-awaken the feelings, or quicken the attention, of any, in favour of
-their greatly injured fellow-creatures, the oppressed Africans, it
-is much to be wished, that they will not hastily dismiss the subject
-from their recollection, or suffer its painful impressions to be
-made in vain: but seek a further acquaintance with the evidence,
-which the more they examine, the stronger will be their inducements
-to exert every power and faculty they possess, for the purpose of
-procuring the Abolition of the Slave-Trade. Let no one say, “my
-situation of privacy and obscurity, precludes all possibility of
-serving the cause”--for the greatest numbers consist of units, and
-the most mighty exertions of states and empires are but aggregates of
-individual ability. Next to Members of Parliament, all who have any
-just influence in the election of them, are particularly concerned
-to consider, how far the attainment of the great end we have in
-view may depend upon their conduct. We may certainly conclude, that
-whoever is not a friend to the liberty of the meanest subject, is
-not fit to be entrusted with that of the state: and even those who
-have no vote, are nevertheless comprehended in our idea of the public
-mind,--nor is any man of sense and virtue, let his situation in a
-free country be what it may, to be deemed of _no account_. Upon his
-judgment, his voice (if not his vote,) his example, much may depend.
-The discovery of truth, the communication of useful knowledge, and
-the exemplary recommendation of virtuous conduct, may dignify a
-plebeian, as well as add lustre to a crown. Even a negro slave,
-amidst the horrors of a middle passage, and debased by every external
-circumstance of degradation and misery that the imagination can
-conceive, shall divide his meagre morsel[13] with the inhuman monster
-in distress, who stole him from his native country, and his nearest
-connexions, thereby returning all the GOOD in his power, for all the
-EVIL his merciless enemy could inflict, and giving an example of true
-benevolence of heart and real greatness of mind, unsurpassed in the
-history of civilized nations, and worthy of the best and purest of
-all religions:--“_if thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give
-him drink_[14].” Let no one, therefore, think too meanly of himself
-when called upon to assist in a good cause, seeing, that from the
-most abject state of human wretchedness a lesson may sometimes be
-learnt, and an influence imparted which the proudest philosophy need
-not blush to own. The abolition of the slave trade is an object of
-such high importance, and so nearly concerns every one who has a
-mind to comprehend, and a heart to feel, that no communication or
-assistance is too _small_, nor any too _great_, to be exerted upon
-this occasion.
-
-Some people seem inclined to lend an ear to tales of human woe, and
-feel a certain gratification in beholding the exhibitions of tragedy,
-or in the perusal of pathetic poetry, and the like. Even the case of
-the oppressed Africans, when represented by their favourite bards,
-or appearing in the form of the “_Dying Slave_,” or the “_Negro’s
-Complaint_,” seem to possess, if not charms to please, at least
-powers forcibly to attract their willing attention, and to win their
-sympathetic regard. Yet the evidence delivered before the House of
-Commons, containing a true and faithful account of the miseries and
-wickedness attendant upon the traffic in their fellow-creatures,
-unembellished by flourishes of rhetoric, undecorated with the
-splendid habiliments of poetry, is almost in vain recommended to
-their notice. Should they be prevailed upon to cast their eye over
-a few pages of the shocking history, they presently shut up the
-book--it makes them shudder--they have read enough--such horrid
-barbarities, such complicated sufferings, are not to be endured even
-in imagination! But let such remember--“that humanity consists not in
-a squeamish ear--it consists not in a starting or shrinking at such
-tales as these, but in a disposition of heart to relieve misery, and
-to prevent the repetition of cruelty:--Humanity appertains rather to
-the mind than to the nerves, and prompts men to real, disinterested
-endeavours to give happiness to their fellow-creatures[15].” It is
-therefore to be wished that no affection of extreme sensibility, or
-real effeminacy of manners, may disincline, or disqualify, for the
-service of humanity. That extreme DELICACY which deprives us, if not
-of the disposition, yet of the ability to encounter suffering for
-the sake of, and in order to help our brethren in affliction, and
-under the severest oppression, is detrimental to its possessor, and
-injurious to the community; it renders compassion a painful, useless
-thing, and makes beneficence fruitless.
-
-To the busy and the gay “_a great book is a great evil_.” TWO
-THOUSAND PAGES IN FOLIO, written (like Ezekiel’s roll) within and
-without,--lamentations, mourning and woe, stand but little chance of
-obtaining _their_ notice--even THE ABSTRACT OF THE EVIDENCE, would
-detain some of them too long from their eager pursuits of business,
-or their favourite schemes of pleasure. This HASTY SKETCH will not,
-however, it may be presumed, encroach too much upon their time;
-and well rewarded will the compiler of it be, if it should prove a
-stimulus to further investigation of the Evidence. No one knows what
-opportunities he may have, or how far his influence may extend, to
-assist the endeavours now using for the abolition of a trade, the
-continued carrying on of which, after being so fully apprized of its
-dreadful enormity, may be expected (without the smallest tincture of
-superstitious fear) to expose this nation to the just punishment of
-PROVIDENCE.
-
-Three nations, Juvan, Tubal, and Meshech, are mentioned in
-Scripture[16] as having their principal trade at Tyre in the _selling
-of men_. This circumstance has been appealed to in vindication of the
-African Slave-Trade:--but mark the sequel. In the following chapter,
-verse 18, the Prophet addresses the Prince of Tyre thus:--“Thou hast
-defiled thy sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities, by the
-iniquity of thy traffic: _therefore_ will I bring forth a fire from
-the midst of thee, it shall devour thee, and I will bring thee to
-ashes upon the earth.” A prophecy which has been remarkably fulfilled.
-
-The great leader in the Debates of the House of Commons on this
-momentous subject has declared--“That interested as he may
-be supposed to be in the final event of the question, he was
-comparatively indifferent as to the then decision of the House.
-Whatever they might do, the people of Great Britain, he was
-confident, would abolish the slave-trade, when, as would now soon
-happen, its injustice and cruelty should be fairly laid before them.
-It was (said he) a nest of serpents, which would never have endured
-so long, but for the darkness in which they lay hid. The light of day
-would now be let in upon them, and they would vanish from the sight.”
-
- _W. B. C._
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Speech of the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the House of Commons.
-
-[2] Fox’s ditto.
-
-[3] Printed by J. Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard Street.
-
-[4] Wilberforce’s Speech in the House of Commons.
-
-[5] Speech by W. Smith in the House of Commons.
-
-[6] See Stanley’s Speech in the House of Commons.
-
-[7] In some estates it is usual to dig a hole in the ground, which
-they put the bellies of pregnant women, while they whip them, that
-they may not excuse punishment, nor yet endanger the life of the
-woman or child.
-
-[8] General Tottenham saw a youth, about nineteen, walking in the
-streets, in a most deplorable situation, entirely naked, and with
-an iron collar about his neck, with five long projecting spikes.
-His body, before and behind, his breech, belly and thighs, were
-almost cut to pieces, and with running soars all over them, and
-you might put your finger in some of the wheals. He could not sit
-down, owing to his breech being in a state of mortification, and
-it was impossible for him to lie down, from the projection of the
-prongs. The boy came to the general to ask relief. He was shocked
-at his appearance, and asked him what he had done to suffer such a
-punishment, and who inflicted it. He said it was his master, who
-lived about two miles from town, and that as he could not work, he
-would give him nothing to eat.
-
-[9] Jamaica.
-
-[10] Speech of W. Wilberforce, in the House of Commons.
-
-[11] Speech of C. J. Fox in the House of Commons. Reported by
-Woodfall.
-
-[12] Speech of W. Wilberforce, Esq. in the House of Commons.
-
-[13] In one of the ships we find the slaves privately and voluntarily
-feeding the hungry sailors with a part of their own scanty allowance.
-
-[14] Rom. xii. chap. 20 ver.
-
-[15] Fox’s Speech in the House of Commons.
-
-[16] Ezek. xxvii. 13.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
- corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
- the text and consultation of external sources.
-
- Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
- and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.
-
- Pg 2: ‘important Puplications’ replaced by ‘important Publications’.
- Pg 3: ‘SHOTR SKETCH’ replaced by ‘SHORT SKETCH’.
- Pg 6: ‘participate the profits’ replaced by
- ‘participate in the profits’.
- Pg 10: ‘The thumscrew is’ replaced by ‘The thumbscrew is’.
- Pg 11: ‘capable of swiming’ replaced by ‘capable of swimming’.
- Pg 11: ‘with the ferociety’ replaced by ‘with the ferocity’.
- Pg 15: ‘They are retured’ replaced by ‘They are returned’.
- Pg 16: ‘large scissars’ replaced by ‘large scissors’.
- Pg 16: ‘took a hammar’ replaced by ‘took a hammer’.
- Pg 17: ‘his own villany’ replaced by ‘his own villainy’.
- Pg 18: ‘these barbaraties’ replaced by ‘these barbarities’.
- Pg 21: ‘or a Goal’ replaced by ‘or a Gaol’.
- Pg 27: ‘real effiminacy’ replaced by ‘real effeminacy’.
- Pg 27: ‘severest oppession’ replaced by ‘severest oppression’.
- Pg 27: ‘superstious fear’ replaced by ‘superstitious fear’.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SHORT SKETCH OF THE EVIDENCE
-FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE, DELIVERED BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF
-THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ***
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A short sketch of the evidence for the abolition of the slave trade, delivered before a committee of the House of Commons, by William Bell Crafton</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A short sketch of the evidence for the abolition of the slave trade, delivered before a committee of the House of Commons</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: William Bell Crafton</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 16, 2022 [eBook #69166]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SHORT SKETCH OF THE EVIDENCE FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE, DELIVERED BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>The original text used the character ſ (long-form s); these have been
-replaced by the normal s in this etext.</p>
-
-<p>Footnote anchors are denoted by <span class="fnanchor">[number]</span>, and the footnotes have been
-placed at the <a href="#FOOTNOTES">end of the book</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="customcover">The cover image was created by the transcriber
-and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>Some minor changes to the text are noted at the <a href="#TN">end of the book.</a>
-<span class="screenonly">These are indicated by a <ins class="corr">dashed blue</ins> underline.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h1>
-<span class="fs50">A</span><br />
-SHORT SKETCH<br />
-<span class="fs50">OF</span><br />
-<span class="fs60">THE EVIDENCE</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">FOR THE</span><br />
-ABOLITION<br />
-<span class="fs50">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="fs120">SLAVE TRADE,</span>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="pfs100"><em>Delivered before a Committee of the House of Commons</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs60">TO WHICH IS ADDED, A</p>
-
-<p class="pfs150">Recommendation of the Subject</p>
-
-<p class="pfs60">TO THE</p>
-
-<p class="pfs120">SERIOUS ATTENTION</p>
-
-<p class="pfs60">OF</p>
-
-<p class="pfs150 lsp2">PEOPLE IN GENERAL.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="sep1" style="max-width: 15em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/sep1.jpg" alt="decorative separator" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1">“ALL THINGS WHATSOEVER YE WOULD THAT
-MEN SHOULD DO TO YOU, DO YE EVEN SO TO
-THEM,” <span class="lsp">Matt. chap. vii. ver. 12.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="sep2" style="max-width: 15em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/sep2.jpg" alt="decorative separator" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs60 lsp2">LONDON, PRINTED; PHILADELPHIA:<br />
-RE-PRINTED BY DANIEL LAWRENCE.<br />
-M.DCC.XCII.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h2 class="p4 nobreak">ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="sep3" style="max-width: 15em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/sep3.jpg" alt="decorative separator" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin2 p4b">
-<em>The Design of the following</em> SHORT
-SKETCH <em>is not to supersede, in
-any Degree</em>, <span class="smcap">more <ins class="corr" id="tn-2" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'important PUPLICATIONS'">
-important Publications</ins></span>,
-<em>but, on the Contrary, to
-extend their Circulation, and promote
-their Influence</em>.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">A</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><ins class="corr" id="tn-3" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'SHOTR SKETCH'">
-SHORT SKETCH</ins>, <em>&amp;c.</em></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp30" id="sep3a" style="max-width: 10em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/sep3.jpg" alt="decorative separator" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">VIRTUE, say moralists, is so transcendently beautiful,
-that she need but be <em>seen</em>, to be universally
-admired: and is not <span class="allsmcap">VICE</span> so hateful, that the
-more its features are <em>viewed</em>, the more it will be avoided?
-The traffic in the human species, particularly
-as carried on by the Europeans on the coast
-of Africa, has so horrible an aspect, that nothing,
-one should think, but the <span class="smcap">Mask</span>, under which it
-has been concealed, could have prevented all the civilized
-nations in the world uniting to drive the detested
-Monster from the face of the earth. This
-<span class="smcap">Mask</span> is, however, at length taken away, and the
-traffic stands exposed in all its real, unalterable deformity.
-The <span class="smcap">People</span> are now called upon to behold,
-to feel, and judge for themselves. The representations
-of former writers on this subject were
-roundly denied; the facts they stated were not only
-contradicted, but deemed impossible, and the authors
-themselves were accused of slander. Now we have
-a body of <span class="allsmcap">EVIDENCE</span> to which to appeal; of evidence,
-possessing every essential of <em>credibility</em>. The
-witnesses have declared before the Select Committee
-of the House of Commons, what they themselves
-saw: they had the best opportunities of observation,
-and they are disinterested. And now it appears, that
-one half of the tale of human misery hath not been
-told: and that every principle, that can bind a man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-of honour and conscience,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> loudly calls for the prohibition
-of the iniquitous traffic. Hard indeed must
-those hearts be, and inaccessible those understandings,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-which such evidence cannot reach!</p>
-
-<p>The Evidence delivered before the Select Committee
-of the House of Commons is very voluminous,
-occupying two thousand pages in folio. But a judicious
-Abstract and Arrangement of the Evidence,
-on the Part of the Petitioners for the Abolition of
-the Slave Trade,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> has been published, and in a short
-compass, contains the evidence of well informed persons
-on that subject.</p>
-
-<p>In the <span class="smcap">Preface</span> to this important volume of evidence
-we read of rewards offered for taking run-away
-negroes <em>alive or dead</em>—of laws being required to be
-made to prevent the practice of <em>cutting off ears, noses,
-and tongues</em>—of <em>breaking limbs</em> and <em>putting out
-eyes</em>—to prevent <em>distempered, maimed, and worn out
-negroes</em> from infesting towns—to prevent <em>aged</em> and
-<em>infirm</em> negroes being driven from the plantations <em>to
-starve</em>. We meet also with such kind of <span class="allsmcap">PREAMBLES</span>
-to acts as the following, viz.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whereas the extreme cruelty and inhumanity of
-the managers, overseers, and book-keepers of estates,
-have frequently driven slaves into the woods, and occasioned
-rebellions, internal insurrections, &amp;c. And
-whereas also it frequently happens, that slaves come
-to their deaths by hasty and severe blows and other
-improper treatment of overseers and book-keepers,
-in the heat of passion; and when such accidents do
-happen, the victims are entered in the plantation-books,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-as having died of convulsions, fits, or other
-causes not to be accounted for; and to conceal the
-real truth of the cause of the death of such slave or
-slaves, he or they is or are immediately put under
-ground, &amp;c. Other preambles of a similar complexion,
-respecting the lodging, food, and clothes of negroes,
-are here to be met with. We also find that
-run-away negroes, when advertised, are described by
-the various brands upon their shoulders, breasts,
-cheeks, and foreheads. A woman is described with
-a wooden leg; a man as having both his ears cropt,
-and another by his nose and ears being cut off.’
-Cornwall Chronicle, Nov. 7, 1789. Other instances
-occur within the year 1791.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="allsmcap">FIRST CHAPTER</span> contains an account of the
-Enormities committed by the Natives of Africa on
-the persons of one another, to procure slaves for the
-Europeans, proved by the testimony of such as have
-visited that continent—and confirmed by accounts
-from the slaves themselves, after their arrival in the
-West-Indies.</p>
-
-<p>Under this head, we learn that Kidnapping, or as
-the natives call it, Panyaring, is very common, that
-war is made on purpose to procure slaves. The
-king’s soldiers set fire to villages in the night, and
-seize the wretched inhabitants as they attempt to
-escape from the flames, and many perish, either by the
-fire or sword, in the execution of this horrid purpose.
-A Boy, who was carried away in the night
-from his father’s house, says, he believes both his
-parents were killed, he is sure that one was, and that
-many others were killed and some taken. Various
-instances are mentioned of consummate treachery employed
-in making captives. Kidnapping is professionally
-followed; large parties go up the country three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-hundred miles to drive down captives—they go a
-wood-ranging, and pick up every one they meet, and
-strip them naked. The purchasers generally say,
-they do not care how the sellers come by their
-slaves. Many are sold for crimes falsely imputed;
-the Judges <ins class="corr" id="tn-6" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'participate the profits'">
-participate in the profits</ins> of the sale, and are
-therefore strongly induced to condemn the innocent.
-Crimes are invented and multiplied for the purpose
-of traffic. The great men dress up and employ women,
-to entice young men to be connected with them,
-that they may be convicted of adultery and sold. The
-slaves are separated without the least regard to ties of
-consanguinity, or the pathetic expostulations and remonstrances
-of nature. When slave-ships are on the
-Coast the natives go armed, but are no where safe.
-The man, invited to drink with his neighbour, on rising
-to go, is seized by two of them and a large dog:
-and this mode of seizure is common.</p>
-
-<p>By the Second Chapter it appears that the Europeans,
-by means of the trade in slaves, are the occasion
-of the before-mentioned enormities; that they
-sometimes use additional means to excite the natives
-to practise them, often attempt themselves to steal
-the natives, and succeed, force trade as they please,
-and are guilty of injustice in their dealings. In proof
-of this charge, we learn from the evidence that Africans
-receive European goods in exchange for slaves—that
-they declare when ships cease to come (as in
-times of war) slaves cease to be taken. African
-dealers make the Princes drunk, in order to overcome
-their aversion to unprovoked war: they furnish the
-natives with arms and ammunition and excite them
-to pillage.</p>
-
-<p>The term war, in Africa, is used in general to
-signify pillage; and when many towns are seen blazing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-in the night, the natives say war is carrying on.</p>
-
-<p>The Traders advance goods to Chiefs to induce
-them to seize their subjects or neighbours. Capt.
-Patterson set two villages at variance, and brought
-prisoners from both sides. It is not uncommon to
-make the natives drunk, and then buy them. General
-Rooke says, that it was proposed to him by three
-English captains of ships, to kidnap a hundred, or a
-hundred and fifty men, women, and children, king
-Damel’s subjects, who had come to Goree in consequence
-of the friendly intercourse between him and
-Damel: He refused and was much shocked by the
-proposition. They said such things had been done
-by a former governor. Two men, black traders,
-were invited on board, intoxicated, and captured
-when asleep. The Gregson’s people, in running down
-the coast, kidnapped thirty-two of the natives. The
-Dobson’s boat of Liverpool had stolen a man and woman;
-the captain on the remonstrance of Capt.
-Briggs, who told him, there would be no more trade
-if he did not deliver up his two captives, restored
-them; upon which the natives loaded a boat with
-yams, goats, fowls, honey, and palm wine, and would
-take nothing for them,—a striking instance of forgiveness
-of injuries, and of unmerited kindness!</p>
-
-<p>We then meet with as opposite an exhibition of
-character as can possibly be conceived: three or four
-hundred Africans cruelly massacreed or carried off,
-by means of the treacherous contrivance of six English
-captains in Old Calabar River. But let us “turn
-our eyes for relief to some ordinary wickedness”<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>:
-Some consider frauds as a necessary part of the traffic;
-they put false heads into powder casks, cut off
-two or three yards from the middle of a piece of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-cloth, adulterate spirits, and steal back articles given.
-Besides these, there are others who pay in bottles,
-which hold but half the contents of the samples
-shewn; use false steel-yards and weights, and sell
-such guns as burst on firing; so that many of the
-natives of the windward coast, are without their fingers
-and thumbs on this account, and it has become
-a saying that these guns kill more out of the butt
-than the muzzle.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Chapter contains an account of the
-transactions of the enslaved Africans, and of the method
-of confining, airing, feeding, and exercising
-them; incidents on the passage, and the manner of
-selling them when arrived at their destined ports; the
-deplorable situation of the refuse or sickly slaves; separation
-of relations and friends; mortality on the
-passage, and frequently after sale; and the causes of
-this mortality.</p>
-
-<p>On being brought on board, says Dr. Trotter,
-they shew signs of extreme distress and despair, from
-a feeling of their situation, and regret at being torn
-from their friends and connexions. They sometimes
-dream of being in their own country, and when they
-awake shew their despair by howling and shrieking in
-a most dreadful manner. The women go into fits.
-In the course of the voyage, the slaves are chained to
-the deck every day from eight in the morning to four
-o’clock in the afternoon. They are fed twice a day
-with rice, yams, and horse-beans, and now and then
-a little beef and bread: after each of these two meals
-they are allowed half a pint of water: and are forced
-to jump in their irons, which, by the slave dealers,
-is called making them dance. This exercise frequently
-occasions the fetters to excoriate their limbs; and,
-when it is very painful to move at all, they are compelled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-to dance by a cat-of-nine-tails. The captains
-order them to sing, and they sing songs of sorrow,
-the subject of which are their wretched situation, and
-the idea of never returning home: the witness remembers
-the very words upon these occasions.</p>
-
-<p>The slaves are so crouded below, that it is impossible
-to walk among them without treading upon them.
-Dr. Trotter has seen the slaves drawing their breath
-with all those laborious and anxious efforts for life,
-which are observed in expiring animals, subjected by
-experiment to foul air, or in the exhausted receiver
-of an air pump: they cry out—‘we are dying,’ and
-many are irrecoverably lost by suffocation, having had
-no previous signs of indisposition. They are closely
-wedged together, and have not so much room as a
-man in his coffin, either in length or breadth. They
-sometimes go down well at night, and are found dead
-in the morning. Alexander Falconbridge was never
-among them for ten minutes together below, but his
-shirt was as wet as if dipped in water. Sometimes
-the dead and living are found shackled together.
-They lie on the bare blanks, and the prominent parts
-of their bones, about the shoulder-blade and knees,
-have frequently been seen bare. No situation can be
-conceived so dreadful and disgusting as that of slaves
-when ill of the flux. In the Alexander (A. Falconbridge
-says) the deck was covered with blood and mucus,
-and resembled a slaughter-house; the stench and
-foul air were intolerable. The slaves, shackled together,
-frequently quarrel, and make a great disturbance.
-Some refuse food and medicine, and declare
-they want to die. In such cases compulsion is used.
-The ships are so fitted up as to prevent, by net-work,
-the slaves jumping overboard; notwithstanding which
-they often attempt it, and sometimes succeed, shewing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-signs of exultation in the very jaws of death.
-Some employ other means to destroy themselves, and
-others go mad: Some resolve to starve, and means
-are ineffectually used to wrench open their teeth: they
-persist in their resolution, and effect their purpose,
-in spite of the utmost pains to prevent it. When
-severely chastised for not taking their food they have
-looked up with a smile and said, “presently we shall
-be no more.” <ins class="corr" id="tn-10" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'The thumscrew is'">
-The thumbscrew is</ins> an instrument of
-torture, the application of it sometimes occasions
-mortifications, of which the negroes die. An instance
-occurs of the cruelty of a captain to an infant
-only nine months old, which one would suppose too
-shocking to be true, were it not corroborated by other
-specimens of as great cruelty in various parts of the
-evidence. After a series of tortures the infant expired,
-and its savage murderer, not yet satiated, would
-suffer none of the people on deck to throw the body
-overboard, but called the Mother, the wretched Mother,
-to perform this last sad office to her murdered
-child. Unwilling as it might naturally be supposed
-she was, to comply, “he beat her,” regardless of the
-indignant murmurs of her fettered countrymen, whom
-in the barbarous plenitude of secure tyranny, he permitted
-to be spectators of this horrible scene—“he
-beat her, until he made her take up the child and carry
-it to the side of the vessel, and then she dropped it
-into the sea, turning her head another way, that she
-might not see it!”<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> Another instance occurs in this
-chapter, not perhaps of more cruelty, though of
-greater magnitude.</p>
-
-<p>A ship from Africa, with about four hundred
-slaves on board, struck upon some shoals, called the
-Morant Keys, distant eleven leagues, S. S. E. off the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-east end of Jamaica. The officers and seamen of the
-ship landed in their boats, carrying with them arms
-and provisions. The slaves were left on board in their
-irons and shackles. This happened in the night
-time. When morning came, it was discovered that
-the negroes had got out of their irons, and were busy
-making rafts, upon which they placed the women
-and children; the men, who were <ins class="corr" id="tn-11" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'capable of swiming'">
-capable of swimming</ins>, attended upon the rafts, whilst they drifted before
-the wind towards the island where the seamen
-had landed. From an apprehension that the negroes
-would consume the water and provisions which the
-seamen had landed, they came to the resolution of
-destroying them, by means of their fire-arms and other
-weapons. As the poor wretches approached the
-shore they actually destroyed between three and four
-hundred of them. Out of the whole cargo only thirty
-three or thirty four were saved and brought to
-Kingston, where they were sold at public vendue.</p>
-
-<p>When the ships arrive at their destined ports, the
-cargo of slaves is sold, either by scramble or vendue.
-The sale by scramble is described:—“A great
-number of people come on board with tallies in their
-hands (the ship being first darkened with sails and covered
-round; the men slaves placed on the main
-deck, and the women on the quarter deck), and rush
-through the barricado door <ins class="corr" id="tn-11a" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'with the ferociety'">
-with the ferocity</ins> of brutes. Some have three or four handkerchiefs tied
-together, to encircle as many as they think fit for
-their purpose.” This is a very general mode of sale,
-and so terrifies the poor negroes, that forty or fifty at
-a time have leaped into the sea; these, however, the
-witness believes, have been taken up again: the women
-have got away and run about the town as if they
-were mad. The slaves sold by public auction or vendue,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-are generally the refuse, or sickly slaves. These
-are in such a state of health, that they sell greatly under
-price. They have been known to be sold for five
-dollars, a guinea, and even a single dollar each. Some
-that are deemed not worth buying are left to expire
-in the place of sale, for nobody gives them any thing
-to eat or drink, and some of them live three days in
-that situation! In the sale no care is taken to prevent
-the reparation of relations; they are separated (says
-the evidence) like sheep and lambs by the butcher.
-Making the slaves walk the plank, is a term used for
-throwing them overboard when provisions are scarce.
-Sometimes the ships lose more than half their cargoes
-by the small-pox; at others they bury a quarter or
-one-third on the passage, owing to various other causes
-of mortality: and it is confessed by the planters,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-that half the slaves die in the seasoning, after arrival
-in the West-Indies. Surgeon Wilson says, that of the
-death of two thirds of those who died in his ship, the
-primary cause was melancholy. The disorders which
-carry off the slaves in such numbers, are ascribed by
-Falconbridge to a diseased mind, sudden transitions
-from heat to cold, a putrid atmosphere, wallowing
-in their own excrements, and being shackled together.</p>
-
-<p>The captains, surgeons, &amp;c. who have quitted the
-African slave-trade, uniformly declare the reason to
-have been, that they could not conscientiously continue
-in it: they say, that it is an unnatural, iniquitous,
-and villainous trade, founded on injustice
-and treachery; manifestly carried on by oppression
-and cruelty, and not unfrequently terminating in
-murder. Capt. Hall says, he quitted it (in opposition
-to lucrative offers) from a conviction that it
-was perfectly illegal, and founded in blood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Fourth Chapter gives an account of the general
-estimation and treatment of the slaves in the
-West-Indies. Dr. Jackson says, that the negroes
-are generally esteemed a species of inferior beings,
-whom the right of purchase gives the owner a power
-of using at his will. T. Woolrich says, he never
-knew the best master in the West-Indies use his slaves
-so well, as the worst master his servants in England:
-that their state is inconceivable—that a sight of a
-gang would convince more than all words.</p>
-
-<p>Slaves are either Field Slaves, or in or out Door Slaves.</p>
-
-<p>The field-slaves begin their work at break of day.
-They work in rows, without exception under the
-whip of drivers, and the weak are made to keep up
-with the strong. They continue their labour (with
-two intermissions, half an hour during the morning,
-and two hours at noon) till sun set. In the intervals
-they are made to pick grass for the cattle. Cook has
-known pregnant women worked and flogged a few
-days before their delivery. Some, however, are a little
-indulged when in that state. After the month they
-work with the children on their backs. In the crop-season
-the labour is of much longer duration<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>. The
-slaves sometimes work so long that they cannot help
-sleeping, and then it not unfrequently happens, that
-their arms are caught in the mill and torn off. They
-are said to be allowed one day in seven for rest, but
-this time is necessarily employed in raising food for
-the other days, and gathering grass for their master’s
-cattle. The best allowance of food is at Barbadoes,
-which is a pint of grain for twenty four hours, and
-half a rotten herring when to be had. When the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-herrings are unfit for the whites, they are bought up
-by planters for the slaves. Some allow nine pints of
-corn a week, and about one pound of salt fish, which
-is the greatest allowance mentioned in the whole course
-of the evidence. Some have no provision but what
-they raise themselves, and they are frequently so fatigued
-by the labour of the rest of the week, as
-scarcely to be able to work for their own support on
-the Sunday. And the land allotted them for this
-purpose is often at the distance of three miles from
-their houses; it would, however, be quite ample for
-their support, were they allowed time sufficient for
-its cultivation. Sometimes when they have been at
-the pains of clearing their land, their masters take it
-for canes, and give them wood land instead of it.
-This hardship some have so taken to heart as to die.
-Putrid carcases are burnt; if they were buried, the
-slaves would dig them up and eat them, which would
-breed distempers among them. They are sometimes
-driven by extreme hunger to steal at the hazard of
-their lives. They are badly clothed; one half of
-them go almost naked. The slaves in general have
-no bed or bedding at all. Their houses are built with
-four poles and thatched. They have little or no property.
-All the evidence (to whom the question has
-been proposed) agree in answering, that they never
-knew or heard of a field-slave ever amassing such a
-sum, as enabled him to purchase his own freedom.
-The artificers, such as house carpenters, coopers, masons,
-the drivers and head slaves, are better off. The
-owners of women let them out for prostitution, and
-flog them, if they do not bring home full wages.</p>
-
-<p>The negroes, when whipped, are suspended by the
-arms, with weights at their feet. They are first
-whipped with a whip made of cow-skin (which cuts<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-out the flesh, whereas the military whips cut only
-the skin) and afterwards with ebony bushes (which
-are more prickly than thorn bushes in this country)
-in order to let out the congealed blood. Dr. Harrison
-thinks the whipping too severe to be inflicted
-on any human being: he could lay two or three fingers
-into the wounds of a man whipped for not coming
-when he was called. Many receive from one
-hundred and fifty to two hundred lashes at a time;
-and in two or three days this is repeated: they wash
-the raw parts with pickle; this appears from the convulsions
-it occasions, more cruel than whipping; but
-it is done to prevent mortification. After severe
-whipping, they are worked all day without food, except
-what their friends may give them out of their
-own poor pittance. <ins class="corr" id="tn-15" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'They are retured'">
-They are returned</ins> to their stocks
-at night, and worked next day as before. This
-cruel treatment his made many commit suicide. Cook
-has known fourteen slaves, who, in consequence
-thereof, ran into the woods and cut their throats
-together. These severe punishments are frequent.
-The scars made by whipping last to old age. T. Woolrich
-has seen their backs one undistinguished mass of
-lumps, holes, and furrows. They sometimes die of
-mortification of the wounds. A planter flogged
-his driver to death, and boasted of having so done.</p>
-
-<p>Under the head of Extraordinary Punishments, (for
-those already named are reckoned only ordinary), mention
-is made of iron collars with hooks<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>, heavy cattle
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-chains, and a half hundred weight fastened to
-them, which the negroes are forced to drag after
-them, when working in the field, suspending by the
-hands ’till the fingers mortify; flogging with ebony
-bushes ’till they are forced to go on all fours, unable
-to get up, being tied up to the branch of a tree, with
-a heavy weight round the neck, exposed to the noon-day
-sun—thumb-screws; a man was put on the picket,
-so long as to occasion a mortification of his foot
-and hand, on suspicion of robbing his master, a public
-officer, of a sum of money, which it afterwards
-appeared, the master had taken himself. Yet the
-master was privy to the punishment, and the slave had
-no compensation. He was punished by order of the
-master, who did not then chuse to make it known that
-he himself had made use of the money. A girl’s ears
-were nailed to a post, afterwards torn away, and clipt
-off close to her head, with a pair of <ins class="corr" id="tn-16" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'large scissars'">
-large scissors</ins>; besides this, she was unmercifully flogged, and all
-for—<span class="allsmcap">BREAKING A PLATE, OR SPILLING A CUP
-OF TEA</span>! A negro, impelled by hunger, had stolen
-part of a turkey, his master caused him to be held down,
-and, with his own hands, <ins class="corr" id="tn-16a" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'took a hammar'">
-took a hammer</ins> and punch and knocked out four of his teeth. The hand is cut
-off if lifted up against a white man, and the leg for
-running away. A planter sent for a surgeon to cut
-off the leg of a negro who had run away. On the
-surgeon’s refusing to do it, the planter took an iron
-bar, and broke the leg in pieces, and then the surgeon
-took it off. This planter did many such acts of
-cruelty, and all with impunity. The practice of dropping
-hot lead upon the negroes, is here mentioned.
-H. Ross saw a young female suspended by her wrists<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-to a tree, swinging to and fro, while her master applied
-a lighted torch to the different parts of her writhing
-body. It was notorious that Ruthie tortured so
-many of his negroes to death, that he was obliged to
-sell his estate. Another planter, in the same Island<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>,
-destroyed forty slaves out of sixty (in three years) by
-severity. The rest of the conduct of this infamous
-wretch was cancelled by the Committee of the House
-of Commons, as containing circumstances too horrible
-to be given to the world. We, however, go on
-to read of knocking on the head and stabbing, of a hot
-iron forced between the teeth, of a slave thrown into
-the boiling juice, and killed, of a negro shot and his
-head cut off. And it appears, that the women, deemed
-of respectability and rank, not only order and
-superintend, but sometimes actually inflict with their
-own hands severe punishments on their slaves.</p>
-
-<p>The offences for which the before-mentioned punishments
-are inflicted are, not coming into the field
-in time, not picking a sufficient quantity of grass,
-not appearing willing to work, when in fact sick and
-not able; for staying too long on an errand, for not
-coming immediately when called, for not bringing
-home (the women) the full weekly sum enjoined by
-their owners; for running away, and for theft, to
-which they are often driven by hunger.</p>
-
-<p>Under the head of “Extraordinary Punishments,”
-some appear to have suffered for running away, or
-for lifting up a hand against a white man, or for breaking
-a plate, or spilling a cup of tea, or to extort confession.
-Others again, in the moments of sudden resentment,
-and one on a diabolical pretext, which the
-master held out to the world to conceal <ins class="corr" id="tn-17" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'his own villany'">
-his own villainy</ins>, and which he <em>knew</em> to be <em>false</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<p>The slaves have little or no redress against ill-usage
-of any sort; the laws to restrict punishment are a
-mere farce, and universally disregarded, or when pretended
-to be observed they are in divers ways effectually
-evaded: besides, the evidence of a Black is
-in no case whatever admitted against a White Man;
-which circumstance alone is enough to deprive the
-negroes of all legal protection whatever, were the
-laws, in other respects, ever so just and salutary.
-Lieutenant Davidson was so hurt at the severe and
-frequent whippings of one of the women, that he complained
-to a magistrate, who said, “he had nothing
-to do with it.”</p>
-
-<p>The particular instances mentioned in the evidence,
-of slaves dying in consequence of severe and
-cruel treatment from their masters, were not punished,
-though generally known; nor do the perpetrators
-of <ins class="corr" id="tn-18" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'these barbaraties'">
-these barbarities</ins> appear to have suffered any
-disgrace!</p>
-
-<p>If you speak to a negro of future punishments, he
-says,——“Why should a poor negro be punished?
-he does no wrong? fiery cauldrons, and such things,
-are reserved for white people, as punishments for the
-oppression of slaves.”</p>
-
-<p>In the Fifth Chapter, it is proved, by such as have
-seen them in their own country, that the natives of
-Africa are equal to the Europeans in their natural capacities,
-feelings, affections, and moral character.
-They manufacture gold and iron, in some respects,
-equal to the European Artists—also cloth and leather
-with uncommon neatness; the former they die blue,
-yellow, brown and orange. They are skilled in making
-indigo and soap, and pottery wares, and prepare salt
-for their own use from the sea water. They also
-make ropes with aloes. With respect to their moral<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-character, they are very honest and hospitable: grateful
-and affectionate, harmless and innocent; punctual
-in their dealings, and as capable of virtue as the
-Whites. They are susceptible of all the social virtues:
-generosity, fidelity, and gratitude, are allowed them
-by Dr. Stuart. These virtues Dr. Jackson enumerates,
-and adds charity to all in distress, and a strong
-attachment on the part of parents to their children.
-T. Woolrich says, he never knew of an African, who
-could express himself, that did not believe in the existence
-of a supreme Being.</p>
-
-<p>In the Sixth and Seventh Chapters it appears that
-the natives possess industry and a spirit of commerce,
-sufficient for carrying on a new trade; that their country
-abounds with, and might easily be made still more
-productive of, many and various articles of commerce;
-but that the traffic in slaves is an insuperable impediment
-to opening a new trade.</p>
-
-<p>In the Eighth Chapter it is inquired, whether the
-slave trade be not a grave (instead of a nursery) of
-the seamen employed in it.</p>
-
-<p>It appears by the muster-rolls of Liverpool and
-Bristol, that in 350 vessels, 12,263 men were employed,
-out of whom 2643 were lost, that is to say,
-more than a fifth of the whole number employed, or
-more than seven in every single voyage, besides nearly
-one half of those who go out with the ships are constantly
-left behind.</p>
-
-<p>Capt. Hall (of the merchant’s service) says that
-the crews of the African ships, when they arrive in
-the West-Indies, are the most miserable objects he ever
-met with in any country in his life: he does not know
-a single instance to the contrary. He has frequently
-seen them with their toes rotted off, their legs swelled
-to the size of their thighs, and in an ulcerated state all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-over &amp;c. &amp;c. This account is confirmed by Capt.
-Hall of the navy. Sir W. Young is of opinion, that
-a trade to Africa in the natural productions of the
-country, would not be attended with more inconvenience
-to the health of the seamen employed in it, than
-the present West-India Trade.</p>
-
-<p>In the Ninth Chapter we find that the seamen employed
-in the slave trade are in general barbarously
-used. They are worse fed both in quantity and quality
-of food than the seamen in other trades. They
-have little or no shelter night or day from the inclemency
-of the weather during the whole of the middle
-passage. They are inhumanly treated when ill, and
-subjected to the fury of the impassioned officers for
-very trifles. A boy, to avoid the cruel treatment of
-his officer, jump’d overboard, and was drowned. A
-man was killed with a hand spike for being very ill
-and unable to work. Six men were chained together
-by their necks, legs, and hands, for making their
-escape from the vessel; they were allowed only a plantain
-a day; they all died in their chains; one of
-them (Thomas Jones a very good seaman) raving
-mad! The evidence proves that instances of wanton
-cruelty, and inhuman treatment in general, are numerous,
-various and frequent. One man, with both
-his legs in irons and his neck in an iron collar, was
-chained to the boat for three months, and very often
-most inhumanly beaten for complaining of his situation,
-both by the captain and other officers. His allowance
-of provisions was so small that (after his release
-from the boat, on account of extreme weakness)
-he begged something to eat, saying that if it were not
-given him he should die:—the captain reproached
-him, beat him, and bid him die and be damned. The
-man died in the night. This was in the Ship Sally,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-on board of which ill-treatment was common. Another
-man was deliberately, by a series of shocking barbarities,
-murdered.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Geo. Young remarks that a ship of the line
-might be presently manned by the sailors who wish
-to escape from the miseries of African ships. One
-poor young man, when dying in consequence of the
-ill treatment he had received from the captain, said
-(which were the last words A. Falconbridge heard
-him speak) “I cannot punish him (meaning the captain)
-but God will.” The sailors when sick are beaten
-for being lazy, till they die under the blows!</p>
-
-<p>“If this be the real situation of things, how happens
-it (the reader may perhaps ask) that the objects
-of such tyranny and oppression should not obtain redress,
-and that our courts of law should not have to
-decide upon more cases of this kind, than they have
-at present?” It is answered, “these objects are generally
-without friends and money, without which the
-injured will seek for justice but in vain; and because
-the peculiarity of their situation is an impediment to
-their endeavours for redress.” Whoever wishes for
-a more particular answer to this question, may meet
-with it in “Clarkson’s Essay on the Impolicy of the
-African Slave-Trade,” (page 52) from which the
-question and the above general reply are quoted.</p>
-
-<p>If it should still be asked, “how it happens that
-seamen enter for slave vessels, when such general ill
-usage on board of them can hardly fail of being
-known?” the reply must be taken from the evidence,
-“that whereas some of them enter voluntarily, the
-greater part of them are trepanned; for that it is the
-business of certain landlords to make them intoxicated,
-and get them into debt, after which <em>their only alternative
-is a Guineaman <ins class="corr" id="tn-21" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'or a Goal'">
-or a Gaol</ins></em>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Tenth Chapter it is proved not to be true,
-what some say, that the natives of Africa are happier
-in the European colonies than in their own country.
-They love their own country, but destroy themselves
-in the colonies, &amp;c. &amp;c. But any comparison
-between the two situations is as (H. Ross says, tho’ on
-another occasion) “<em>an insult to common sense</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Eleventh, Twelfth, and Thirteenth Chapters
-are on the subjects of negro population in the colonies,
-and plainly shew that the importation of fresh Africans
-might immediately be superceded, by the introduction
-of general good treatment, and of certain salutary
-regulations therein suggested.</p>
-
-<p>The Fourteenth Chapter is employed to demonstrate,
-from the evidence before the committee, that
-the colonists would be able to carry on the necessary
-cultivation of their lands, without a fresh importation
-of slaves while the generation immediately succeeding
-the regulations proposed, were growing up to supply
-the vacancies occasioned by the natural deaths of the
-slaves of all ages, now in their possession.</p>
-
-<p>The Fifteenth Chapter inquires, whether there be
-not a prevailing opinion in the colonies, that it is
-cheaper to buy or import slaves than thus to increase
-them by population. And whether the very reverse
-of this opinion be not true: namely, that it is more
-profitable to breed than to import. The result of
-this inquiry is clearly in favour of the <em>immediate</em> Abolition
-of the African Slave Trade. The same may
-be said of the sixteenth <em>and last</em> chapter, in which it
-is considered. Whether it be more political to extend
-the cultivation of the colonies by the continuance
-of the slave-trade, or wait till the rising generation
-shall be capable of performing it.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus taken a general view of the most<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-striking features of the evidence for the abolition of
-the traffic in the human species, as carried on by the
-English on the coast of Africa, it might not be improper
-to close it with the declaration of a virtuous
-and wise Senator, whose indefatigable labours on behalf
-of the oppressed Africans, cannot fail to insure
-him the unfeigned respect of every lover of freedom
-and humanity:</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">The abolition of the slave trade</span>
-(<em>says he</em>) <span class="allsmcap">IS INDISPENSIBLY REQUIRED OF US,
-NOT ONLY BY RELIGION AND MORALITY, BUT
-BY EVERY PRINCIPLE OF SOUND POLICY</span><a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>.”</p>
-
-<p>The noble exordium of another able advocate of
-the same righteous cause, must not however be omitted
-in this place: The House of Commons being now
-apprized of the nature of this trade, having received
-evidence, having had the facts undeniably established,
-knowing, in short, <em>what the Slave-Trade was</em>, he declared,
-that if they did not, by the vote of that night,
-mark to all mankind their abhorrence of a practice so
-enormous, so savage, so repugnant to all laws, human
-and divine, it would be more scandalous, and more defaming,
-in the eyes of the country, and of the world,
-than any vote which any House of Commons had
-ever given. He desired them seriously to reflect, before
-they gave their votes, what they were about to
-do that evening. If they voted that the Slave Trade
-should not be abolished, they would, by their vote that
-night, give a <em>Parliamentary sanction</em> to <span class="smcap">Rapine</span>, <span class="smcap">Robbery</span>
-and <span class="smcap">Murder</span>; for a system of rapine, robbery,
-and murder, the Slave Trade had now <em>most clearly</em>
-been proved to be<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span></p>
-
-<p>It remains now to recommend, as earnestly and as
-strongly as possible, to the inhabitants of this Land of
-Freedom individually, a particular and serious attention
-to <span class="allsmcap">THE ABSOLUTE NECESSITY, ON EVERY
-CONSIDERATION OF MORALITY AND JUSTICE, OF
-PUTTING AN END TO A PRACTICE SO PREGNANT
-WITH CIRCUMSTANCES OF TERROR AND ALARM
-TO THIS COUNTRY</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Much has been lately done, by the united friends of
-equitable freedom, in circulating throughout the kingdom
-important information on this interesting subject:
-but much remains yet to be done. The minds of
-many have been informed, and their indignation justly
-kindled by the history of a commerce “<em>written
-throughout in characters of blood</em><a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>.” But the understandings
-it is to be fear’d, of a great majority of the
-people of England, are still unenlightened. Should
-the foregoing Short Sketch of the Evidence, awaken
-the feelings, or quicken the attention, of any, in favour
-of their greatly injured fellow-creatures, the oppressed
-Africans, it is much to be wished, that they
-will not hastily dismiss the subject from their recollection,
-or suffer its painful impressions to be made
-in vain: but seek a further acquaintance with the
-evidence, which the more they examine, the stronger
-will be their inducements to exert every power and
-faculty they possess, for the purpose of procuring the
-Abolition of the Slave-Trade. Let no one say, “my
-situation of privacy and obscurity, precludes all possibility
-of serving the cause”—for the greatest numbers
-consist of units, and the most mighty exertions of
-states and empires are but aggregates of individual
-ability. Next to Members of Parliament, all who have
-any just influence in the election of them, are particularly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-concerned to consider, how far the attainment
-of the great end we have in view may depend upon
-their conduct. We may certainly conclude, that whoever
-is not a friend to the liberty of the meanest subject,
-is not fit to be entrusted with that of the state:
-and even those who have no vote, are nevertheless
-comprehended in our idea of the public mind,—nor
-is any man of sense and virtue, let his situation in a
-free country be what it may, to be deemed of <em>no account</em>.
-Upon his judgment, his voice (if not his
-vote,) his example, much may depend. The discovery
-of truth, the communication of useful knowledge,
-and the exemplary recommendation of virtuous conduct,
-may dignify a plebeian, as well as add lustre to
-a crown. Even a negro slave, amidst the horrors of
-a middle passage, and debased by every external circumstance
-of degradation and misery that the imagination
-can conceive, shall divide his meagre morsel<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-with the inhuman monster in distress, who stole him
-from his native country, and his nearest connexions,
-thereby returning all the <span class="allsmcap">GOOD</span> in his power, for all
-the <span class="allsmcap">EVIL</span> his merciless enemy could inflict, and giving
-an example of true benevolence of heart and real
-greatness of mind, unsurpassed in the history of civilized
-nations, and worthy of the best and purest of
-all religions:—“<em>if thine enemy hunger, feed him; if
-he thirst, give him drink</em><a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>.” Let no one, therefore,
-think too meanly of himself when called upon to assist
-in a good cause, seeing, that from the most abject
-state of human wretchedness a lesson may sometimes
-be learnt, and an influence imparted which the proudest
-philosophy need not blush to own. The abolition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-of the slave trade is an object of such high importance,
-and so nearly concerns every one who has a mind to
-comprehend, and a heart to feel, that no communication
-or assistance is too <em>small</em>, nor any too <em>great</em>, to
-be exerted upon this occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Some people seem inclined to lend an ear to tales
-of human woe, and feel a certain gratification in beholding
-the exhibitions of tragedy, or in the perusal
-of pathetic poetry, and the like. Even the case of
-the oppressed Africans, when represented by their favourite
-bards, or appearing in the form of the “<em>Dying
-Slave</em>,” or the “<em>Negro’s Complaint</em>,” seem to possess,
-if not charms to please, at least powers forcibly
-to attract their willing attention, and to win their
-sympathetic regard. Yet the evidence delivered before
-the House of Commons, containing a true and
-faithful account of the miseries and wickedness attendant
-upon the traffic in their fellow-creatures, unembellished
-by flourishes of rhetoric, undecorated with
-the splendid habiliments of poetry, is almost in vain
-recommended to their notice. Should they be prevailed
-upon to cast their eye over a few pages of the
-shocking history, they presently shut up the book—it
-makes them shudder—they have read enough—such
-horrid barbarities, such complicated sufferings,
-are not to be endured even in imagination! But let
-such remember—“that humanity consists not in a
-squeamish ear—it consists not in a starting or shrinking
-at such tales as these, but in a disposition of heart
-to relieve misery, and to prevent the repetition of cruelty:—Humanity
-appertains rather to the mind than
-to the nerves, and prompts men to real, disinterested
-endeavours to give happiness to their fellow-creatures<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>.”
-It is therefore to be wished that no affection<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-of extreme sensibility, or <ins class="corr" id="tn-27" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'real effiminacy'">
-real effeminacy</ins> of manners,
-may disincline, or disqualify, for the service of humanity.
-That extreme <span class="allsmcap">DELICACY</span> which deprives us,
-if not of the disposition, yet of the ability to encounter
-suffering for the sake of, and in order to help our
-brethren in affliction, and under the <ins class="corr" id="tn-27a" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'severest oppession'">
-severest oppression</ins>, is detrimental to its possessor, and injurious to
-the community; it renders compassion a painful,
-useless thing, and makes beneficence fruitless.</p>
-
-<p>To the busy and the gay “<em>a great book is a great
-evil</em>.” <span class="smcap">Two thousand pages in folio</span>, written
-(like Ezekiel’s roll) within and without,—lamentations,
-mourning and woe, stand but little chance of obtaining
-<em>their</em> notice—even <span class="smcap">the Abstract of the
-Evidence</span>, would detain some of them too long
-from their eager pursuits of business, or their favourite
-schemes of pleasure. This <span class="allsmcap">HASTY SKETCH</span> will
-not, however, it may be presumed, encroach too
-much upon their time; and well rewarded will the
-compiler of it be, if it should prove a stimulus to
-further investigation of the Evidence. No one knows
-what opportunities he may have, or how far his influence
-may extend, to assist the endeavours now using
-for the abolition of a trade, the continued carrying
-on of which, after being so fully apprized of its
-dreadful enormity, may be expected (without the smallest
-tincture of <ins class="corr" id="tn-27b" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'superstious fear'">
-superstitious fear</ins>) to expose this nation
-to the just punishment of <span class="smcap">Providence</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Three nations, Juvan, Tubal, and Meshech, are
-mentioned in Scripture<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> as having their principal
-trade at Tyre in the <em>selling of men</em>. This circumstance
-has been appealed to in vindication of the
-African Slave-Trade:—but mark the sequel. In the
-following chapter, verse 18, the Prophet addresses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-the Prince of Tyre thus:—“Thou hast defiled thy
-sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities, by the
-iniquity of thy traffic: <em>therefore</em> will I bring forth a
-fire from the midst of thee, it shall devour thee, and
-I will bring thee to ashes upon the earth.” A prophecy
-which has been remarkably fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>The great leader in the Debates of the House of
-Commons on this momentous subject has declared—“That
-interested as he may be supposed to be in the
-final event of the question, he was comparatively indifferent
-as to the then decision of the House. Whatever
-they might do, the people of Great Britain, he
-was confident, would abolish the slave-trade, when,
-as would now soon happen, its injustice and cruelty
-should be fairly laid before them. It was (said he) a
-nest of serpents, which would never have endured so
-long, but for the darkness in which they lay hid. The
-light of day would now be let in upon them, and they
-would vanish from the sight.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<em>W. B. C.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<div class="footnotes"><h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Speech of the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Fox’s ditto.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Printed by J. Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard Street.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Wilberforce’s Speech in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Speech by W. Smith in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> See Stanley’s Speech in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> In some estates it is usual to dig a hole in the ground, which they
-put the bellies of pregnant women, while they whip them, that they
-may not excuse punishment, nor yet endanger the life of the woman or
-child.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> General Tottenham saw a youth, about nineteen, walking in the
-streets, in a most deplorable situation, entirely naked, and with an iron
-collar about his neck, with five long projecting spikes. His body, before
-and behind, his breech, belly and thighs, were almost cut to pieces, and
-with running soars all over them, and you might put your finger in some
-of the wheals. He could not sit down, owing to his breech being in a
-state of mortification, and it was impossible for him to lie down, from the
-projection of the prongs. The boy came to the general to ask relief.
-He was shocked at his appearance, and asked him what he had done to
-suffer such a punishment, and who inflicted it. He said it was his master,
-who lived about two miles from town, and that as he could not work, he
-would give him nothing to eat.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Jamaica.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> Speech of W. Wilberforce, in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Speech of C. J. Fox in the House of Commons. Reported by
-Woodfall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> Speech of W. Wilberforce, Esq. in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> In one of the ships we find the slaves privately and voluntarily feeding
-the hungry sailors with a part of their own scanty allowance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Rom. xii. chap. 20 ver.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Fox’s Speech in the House of Commons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> Ezek. xxvii. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<div class="p4 transnote">
-<a id="TN"></a>
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
-corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
-the text and consultation of external sources.</p>
-
-<p>Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
-and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#tn-2">Pg 2</a>: ‘important Puplications’ replaced by ‘important Publications’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-3">Pg 3</a>: ‘SHOTR SKETCH’ replaced by ‘SHORT SKETCH’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-6">Pg 6</a>: ‘participate the profits’ replaced by ‘participate in the profits’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-10">Pg 10</a>: ‘The thumscrew is’ replaced by ‘The thumbscrew is’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-11">Pg 11</a>: ‘capable of swiming’ replaced by ‘capable of swimming’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-11a">Pg 11</a>: ‘with the ferociety’ replaced by ‘with the ferocity’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-15">Pg 15</a>: ‘They are retured’ replaced by ‘They are returned’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-16">Pg 16</a>: ‘large scissars’ replaced by ‘large scissors’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-16a">Pg 16</a>: ‘took a hammar’ replaced by ‘took a hammer’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-17">Pg 17</a>: ‘his own villany’ replaced by ‘his own villainy’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-18">Pg 18</a>: ‘these barbaraties’ replaced by ‘these barbarities’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-21">Pg 21</a>: ‘or a Goal’ replaced by ‘or a Gaol’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-27">Pg 27</a>: ‘real effiminacy’ replaced by ‘real effeminacy’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-27a">Pg 27</a>: ‘severest oppession’ replaced by ‘severest oppression’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-27b">Pg 27</a>: ‘superstious fear’ replaced by ‘superstitious fear’.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SHORT SKETCH OF THE EVIDENCE FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE, DELIVERED BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ***</div>
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