Henri Grégoire - An Enquiry Concerning The Intellectual and Moral Faculties, and Literature of Negroes (1810)
Henri Grégoire - An Enquiry Concerning The Intellectual and Moral Faculties, and Literature of Negroes (1810)
Henri Grégoire - An Enquiry Concerning The Intellectual and Moral Faculties, and Literature of Negroes (1810)
OF THE
AN
ENQUIRY
CONCERNING
THE INTELLECTUAL
AND
NEGROES
FOLLOWED WITH AN ACCOUNT OF THE
LIFE
AND WORKS
OF
s?
FIFTEEN NEGROES
MULATTOES,
DISTINGUISHED IN
BY
H.
GREGOIRE,
SENATE, OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE, OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF GORTTINGUEN, ETC. ETC.
TRANSLATED
BY
D. B.
WARDEN,
BROOKLYN
PRINTED BY THOMAS KIRK, MAIN-STREEi.
1810.
Gr *
-45-^v2-^
District
of New-Tori,
ss.
Remembered, That on the twelfth day of April, in the thirty fourth Year of the Independence of 'he United States of America, Thomas Kirk, of the said District hath deposited in this Office the Title of a Book, the right whereof he claims as Proprietor, in the words following-, to wit
it
:
Be
"An
'*
Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral faculties, and Literature of Negroes, followed wit', an Account of the Life " and Works of fifteen Negroes and Mulattoes, distinguished " in Science, Literature and the Arts By H. Gregoire, for"merly Bishop of Blois, Member of the Conservative Senate, of " the National Institute, of the Royal Society of Gorttinguen, " etc. etc. Translated by D. B. Warden, Secretary to the " American Legation at Paris."
entitled,
Act of the Congress of the United States, Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies of Maps, Charts, and Books, to the Authors and PropriIn Conformity to the
"
At)
Copies during the times therein mentioned," and Act, entitled, "An Act supplementary to an Act, entitled, an Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies of Maps, Charts, and Hooks, to the Authors and Proprietors of such Copies, during the times therein mentioned ant! extending the benefits to the Arts of Designing, Engraving and Etching his?rical and other prints."
etors of such
also, to an
;
I..
S")
CHARLES CLINTON,
Clerk of the District of Nevi-Torf.
DEDICATION.
TO
toes,
all
those
the courage to
mukt
by discussions
&c,
PREJYCHMEJY.
Adanson* Antony
Pierre,
viere,
Benezet,
Bernardin
St.
Le
Dupont de NeFebrie,
Ferrand
Garran, Genty,
St
The names
are dead
11
DEDICATION.
Mirabeau, Montesquieu, Mils cent, Nec-
Lescalier,
ker,
Petion, Robin,
La Rochefoucault, Rochen,
ENGLISHMEN.
William Agutter, Anderson, David Barclay,
Richard Baxter, Mrs. Barbauld, Barrow, Beattie,
Beaufoy, Mrs. Behn, Buttler, Campbell, T. Clarkson,
Cooper, Charles
Crawford,
Thomas Day,
Thomas
Gisborne,
James
Rowland
Took,
Home
Mungo
Park,
DEDICATION.
Smeatham, William Smith, Southey,
Hi
Stanfield,
George
Wallis,
John
Whitchurch,
AMERICANS.
Joel Barlow,
James Dana,
D wight,
Franklin,
Wheatley, Julien
Raymond, Ignatius
Sa?icho,
Gustavus Vasa.
GERMANS.
Blumenbach, Augustus La Fontaine, Olden^
borg, Usteri.
DANES,
Isert, Olivarius,
Th. Thaarup,
SWEDES.
Afzelius, Nordenshiold,
Wadstrom*
IV
DEDICATION,
HOLLANDERS.
Peter Paulus, Vos, Wrede.
ITALIANS,
the
Abbe
Pierre,
TamburinL
SPANIARD.
Avendano.
name
Avendano.
None but
he, as far as I
know, has
human
fulfil all
race
and
that
consequently he ought to
exercise
all
On
whom
the
and against
are
we
no aggressor.*
It is in
* V.
Analyse sur
la justice
d'Acunha de Azerede
DEDICATION.
among
the
;
spe-
cies of domesticity
Such
been the
fate
Grabovvski,
who
country;
whilst
the
sermons f derights.
The
of humanity.
we
complexions.
who
V.
Poddanych polskich,
c'est-a-dire,
des paysans
1
Roku,
788,
V.
W.
Roz^nych
de
l'abbe
ocolicznosciach
Miane,
c'est-a-dire,
Sermons
Kaipowicz, 3
vol. in-12,
W.
vi
DEDICATION.
whose hand
is
reli-
yoke of
obedience.
have not
same reason
whom
Every person
is left
opinion in associating
men
of
letters,
un-
less valuable
DEDICATION.'
VII
The
it
list
we
offer, is
unknown
me
my
re-
any information which may repair these involuntary omissions, rectify errors, and complete the
work.
Of philanthropic
more
;
writers, a great
I
number
are no-
on their tombs
present
my
homage, and
still
I offer the
same
tribute to individuals
living,
who
Philanthropists
ty,
At
and
will
Devoured with
the de-
do
injury,
the
against
him who
human
race,
Vll
DEDICATION.
let
us oppose a wall
Let us be
active.
which
is
commission of evil
mance of
virtue.
The
The
vertheless,
when we repose
the tomb,
some
Let us leave
liberty
and misfortune
plaud their
blest
efforts,
doubtless be
by the
common
Father of
who
in
men,
>
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE,
RECOLLECT
to
observe, in
"
that the
mind
on
Every
individual, whatis
entitled to
is
freedom.
The
man
of as
has
much
No man
No
is
The
Ne-
bargain
gro slavery
10
PREFACE.
this opinion,
all
Notwithstanding
just and the
embraced by the
humane of
more
;
and
been some of
their
false
its
abettors,
that a refutation of
even necessary.
to
amass
riches, has
making him
him even
and transported as
isles.
of British
The Englishman
calculates
reflecting
and
their country.
PREFACE.
oan bestow, can never recompence the loss of
berty.
Ii
li-
This subject
that his
is
in
all
human
The
by the
and the
late de-
room to hope,
no very
will exist
no more.
The
blacks not only possess talents, but also those nobler virtues ing.
The
planter,
deavouring to render the negro as tame and submissive as the brute, creates and fosters in him
that revengeful disposition,
Why
is
the product of
own.
He
is
almost naked,
X2
PREFACE.
his aliment is scanty
and
and unwholsome.
In
small portion of
yams
By
arbitrary power.
For
him
low
there
slave.
is
no compassion except
is
He
he naturally pants
for revenge.
He
He
finds that
honour
industry no reward.
At
and sad,
after
meanness of hope
his condition,
much
loved
country.
tion
an apology
for its
I
imperdare to
The
only merit
is that
claim,
if
merit
it
can be called,
of not hav*
PREFACE.
13
As
this
production
is
man
known
ties
of different countries,
will doubtless
be read
Another recomexists.
mendation
is,
that
no similar work
May
when
the defenders of
makes
liberty
commensurate
;
which pro-
moment he
that the
upon our
native earth,
is
holy, and
No
doom may
African sun
in
may have
no matter
what disastrous
cloven
down
14
PREFACE.
have been devoted on the
altar*
may
the
of slavery
soil,
;
first
sacred
the
his
altar
in the dust
;
own
majesty
his
body
beyond
the
measure of
from around him, and he stands redeemed, regenerated and disenthralled, by the irresistible genius
of universal emancipation."*
i-
.,
'
1
...
AN ENQUIRY,
&c.
CHAPTER
I.
Ought
all
the
human
race.
UNDER
opinion
is
the
name
all
of Ethiopian,
the Greeks
comprehended
men
of a black colour.
This
named by Pliny
See Jeremiah
I. 8.
13. 25.
7-
quities
chapter
dotus, &c.
16
OF THE LITERATURE
or
Indians or Asiatics
but
Rome
name
of Africans, f
Among
ny
name of Ethiopia
be-
guese, have employed the word Ethiopian to designate the whole race of blacks.
Nearly thirty
de
servis
JEthiopibus Europeorum
in
coloniis
America. %
vails,
The denomination
of African preis
equally
black colour,
||
is
Herodo-
names them Ethiopians, with long hair, to distinguish them from those of Africa, whose hair
* Pliny B. 5.
\
l. 9.
Terence Eunuches,
act
1.
scene
1,
\ 4to.
II
Argentorati, 1778.
in Ethiopia
;
Voyage
by Poucct,
p. 99, Ike
OF NEGROES.
is
17
that
frizzled ;* because
it
continent of Asia.
and Reunion.
travellers, that
But we
find,
by the narratives of
as at
long
Such
Negro Shepherds of
Carthagenians had
the Isle
factories.:}:
of
Andaman,
gulph
of Bengal, are blacks with frizzled hair; in different parts of India, the inhabitants of the mountains
These
tute.
in
learned
Memoir
of
He
Indian
divinities,
Negroes.
to the opinion
* Herodotus.
t
Thoughts on the
political
10. 75.
$ Asiatic
Researches,
18
OF THE
LITERATURE
sway over almost aU
Asia.
The
racter
of the
human
race
been paid
to that difference
lishes
varieties
among
blacks themselves.
says, that
Camper
bens,
alludes to this,
when he
Ruin
Sebastien
Ricci and
Vander-Tempel,
denomination to those
But
is
this distinction
hair,
who
The
dis-
specific character of a
permanent as
weakens, or
Can
Gauls, be recognized
among
if
we may
There
is less
European
but
if,
on account of
OF NEGROES.
this difference,
19
and con-
in stature
formation,
we pretended
mark
same
would
it
not
excite a smile ?
We
find the
in the variety
at the
of the blacks
extremities of the
difference
which
is
weakened, or
who
The
that the
passages of authors,
we have
cited,
is
prove
slaves.
This
corrobo-
rated
by Visconti, who,
in the
Pio-Clementine
Museum,
groes
Of these
me
several engrav-
As
tion,
the
Mosaic law shielded men from mutilaaffirms, in his Biblical Arcliaology, that
Jahn
Hebrew kings purchased from other nations, many Eunuchs, and particularly blacks,! but he
the
It is
may have
fleet
possess-
ed
this description of
of Solo-
*P.
t
Ch. John
8.
Vienna, p. 389.
20
OF THE LITERATURE
sailed
mon
from Ezion-geber
to Ophir,
whence
it
much
ivory, apes
and Ethiopians ;* or they may have been obtained by means of their communication with the
Arabians,
his
that,
if it
Review of
Roman
History of Gibbon,
fact
is,
that
Egypt traded
Proofs
employed
commerce of
negroes. f
commerce of
latter
the Egyptians.^
are
of Assyrian, or
Arabian origin.
||
The
re-
more
2.
Hudson
It is
in his
in
Mancipai.
not found..
Atheneus, B.
85.
iv.
Pliny,
1. 6.
123.
JP
\\
Modern Geography,
<Uo.
London,
bCT
OF NEGROES.
tries
2l
The same writing, the same manners and The worship of animals, still existing customs. among almost ail the negro race, was that of the
:
Egyptians; their
their colour
ence of climate.
Herodotus assures
because,
hair.*
This testimony
of Browne.
The
tawny
hair,
when compared
is
To
this assertion of
Browne, nothing
The
text of Herodotus
and precise.
to give support to the sys-
tem
of Volney,
who
skin, a puffed
lip,
up
vis-
nose, thick
in a
word
the
* Herodotus,
t
B.
II.
new voyage
I.
into
"Upper and
v.
ch.
12.
and
Walkener
in the
p. 10. 8*.
&c.
22
OF THE LITERATURE
Mulatto figure.*
The same
observations induced
Ledyard
and Copts.f
panied the
The
Physician Frank,
who accom-
expedition to
cumcision and
lexcision
;$
practised
among
the
the Ethiopians.il
Blumenbach has observed in the craniums of mummies, that which characterizes the negro
race.
this
conformity
of structure.
Hindoo
Negro
;
a third, an
first
the
two
are
*
I.
edition, vol.
p. 10.
t
}
Ledyard,
page 24.
Memoir on
the
commerce of
fol.
1681.
OF NEGROES.
23
of the negro,
is
bach
This
is
contradict-
ed by Browne
sphinx
its
is
so degraded, that
impossible to
know
This opinion
is
overthrown by an
They were
last,
ex-
and since by
that
Volney and
figure
is
Olivier.^
They discover
slaves,
the
now
we
are indebted
and even
for speech.
Gregory,
refers
in his Historical
manner,
;
for
the Egyptians,
other
Greeks
in the
De
1794.
f
\
Brown,
ibid.
Voyage
into the
Persia,
&c.
by Olivier, 3
lowing.
p, 82. andfoli
Volney,
ibid*
24
opinion of
OF TH
LITERATURE
no other than negroes,
many
writers,
whose native
features
by
Romans and
Saracens.
country ?
Meiners confines himself to the support of the opinion, that we owe little to the Egyptians, and a
man
Already
the
;
it
had for
its
defender,
Edward Long,
anonymous author
in giving to ne-
who,
ancient Egyptians,
qualities, refuses
charges the
latter
with bad
disputes
taste,
in archi-
He might
that
those
by a simple
ma-
* Dissertations
to the
by
OF NEGROES.
long.
25
But without ascribing to Egypt the greatest degree of human knowledge, all antiquity decides
in favour of those
who
consider
it
as a celebrated
many of the
venera-
men of Greece.
them
far
above negroes,
degree of
intelligence.*
As
bad cause
is
always support-
by
as-
is
black.
all
This obserIn
naturalists.!
supposing the
man
race, have
some an
to disinherit negroes,
anatomy
to their aid,
and the
differ-
first
observations.
writer
named Hanneman,
Gumilla, in
re-
London, 17T4.
26
OF THE LITERATURE
time.
merman, Meckel,
ny
others.
to the consequences,
when they
disagree concern-
Meckel
groes
is
owing
but
Barrere and
Winslow
negroes
is
* Adversaria
Anatomica, decade,
3, p. 26, et
JEthiopum
caeterorum homi-
1737.
Mem.
De
Dis-
Works
I.
French Africa,
8vo.
On
De
OF NEGROES.
peatis
27
it
to
be of a
yel-
lowish green.
Shall
we
it
of their reticular
in others
membrane
*?
If in
some
it is
black,
is
This
that the
me-
membrane, are
Buffon, Camper,
his
menbach, Chardel,
race, to cli-
The
in
marks, that
birds,
black
whilst,
bears and
white.
De
i'Unite
trans-
latecl
by Chardel.
essay on the cause and variety of complexion and
An
Hgure
in the
human
species,
This work
worthy of
perusrff.
28
are
OF THE
LITERATURE
to prove that ocular
witnesses,
the
first
are
deceived,
it
is
not
enough
last
to
deny the
work of
Pallas, f
We know
human body
;
Stanhope Smith,
after
which prove the influence of climate on the complexion and figure, explains
the
why
the Africans on
western coast,
more black than those on the eastern and also, why the same latitude in America, does not produce the same
is
it
effect.
opposed by
local causes,
more
force.
found
between the
and
its
progressive shades
among
those,
by
Voyage
\ It
many owners of vessels are enriched by this traffic, pray God daily not to change the colour of negroes.
OF NEGROES.
29
extremi-
at the other
a deeper
people
who
live near
the isthmus of
this
Panama,
to resort
ought we in explaining
phenomenon
Vermont, supports
system by observations
data,
he
conjectures that to render the black race, by intermarriage, of a white colour, five generations are
computed
at
twenthe
make
4000 years
are necessa-
and 600
coloured Indians.*
These
effects are
more
are
sensible
among
;
slaves in
domestic service,
who
accustomed to a milder
not
only
proved, f
K An Essay,
&c.
58, 77, 8f
30
OF THE
LITERATURE
fact that there are
AK
assumed
and
become of
In white
women
Angola.
membrane someverified by
This phenomenon
-j-
is
Cat,
;
as an ocular witness
that
when
the race
a proof of degeneration*
But does
it
human
? or is
species, the
it
necessary
Rush,
groes
is
become hereditary*
He
made
in
oxygenated muriatic
companies
of bleachers to Africa.
*
t
la
An
Essay, &c.
p. 48.
Camper
in
4to.
J
H
Monthly Review,
vol.
XXXVIII.
p. 20.
Op NEGROES.
throws no light on the subject,
applied to so distinguished a
is
SI
improper when
as
man
Dr. Rush.
to
be considered
Descartes,
Hartley,
Buffon,
has>
each
his
system.
As
thought
the brain,
endowed with
is
and
former.
This opinion
is
servations.
Mo^t
the
birds,
and
different
quadrupeds
and
fishes,
mouse,
squirrel,
marmoret, dol-
more voluminous
Cuvier
is
intelli-
by
that of a portion of
it,
named hemis-
intellectual faculties
of
all
compose
dom.
moral
To draw
know
state,
this inference,
would
not be ne-
cessary to
man,
his
perhaps
32
OF THE
LITERATURE
u All the difference among nations," says Cam" consists in a line drawn from the conduits of per,
the ears to the base of the nose, and another right
line
coronal
bone above the nose, and extends to the most prominent part of the jaw bone,
the head
is
it
viewed
in profile.
and
it
may be
some
employed
and
this angle to
varieties,
to
advance them, as
by degrees,
This
in pro-
angle
is
it
augments
the
portion as
figure.
animal approaches
human
" I
example,
(it is
Camper who
The head
that of the
the
of antique heads.
OF NEGROES,
33
to all
others in beauty."*
This
angle
facial line
of
different anatomists.
and
as,
of ob-
of
made
it is
conthe
tained in the
in
He might
* Opuscules, vol.
I,
p.
16
human
Descriptio
thesauri
ossium Morbosoa.
Iloviij
17S-;,
133
o4
negroes, and
the talents of
OF THE
LITEKATURE
and
reci-
conforma-
mage
to the talents
tor Gall
guished
may be
led astray
by hypothesis, or may
draw just observations from exaggerated conseFor example, no one will deny that quences.
the president of the
a great painter, but
is
how
are
we
to consider
West's
physiognomy of
Is
all
it
the
Jews ap-
easy to deter-
mine
countries
we
see
remarked
this particularly in
the
Voge,
saw
at
as
in
Persia.
Lopez
hair.
Admitting
racter,
which
reproduced until
it
is altered,
or
effaced
fix the
P.
SPO
of Chardel.
in
t
|
Epigrammala
complures.
di
Congo,
p. 6.
35
to
effect
of climate, of education, of
regimen, or of habit.
Nature
is
so diver-
often
tempted to
class
congenerous
plants
doms
the fruitful
power of
ed to shoot forth an
infinite variety
Blumenbach believes, that the Europeans degenerate by a long residence in the two Indies, or in Africa. Somering dare not decide whether the
primitive race of man, which once inhabited
some
be perfected in Europe.
in Nigritia, seeing, that
Whether
it
be adulterated
in point of force
and
so,
comEuro-
peans.
The negro
more
is
particular-
This advantage
common to whom
Such
are
North America
36
OF THE
LITERATURE
woods
that are
imper-
their bold
they
that they
summon
each other
at
name.*
Somering
perfection of
farther
observes,
plants
is
that
the essential
many
injured by culture.
The
Something analais
gous
often
to this is
improved
he
more
the
more
is
fitted for
manual labour, f
negroes have great cor-
we may ask
* History of the
to the esta-
Sierra Leone, by B, C
Somering, 74.
OF NEGROES.
'37
whence does
founded
it
result ?
but on what
is
Is
clusively into
principle
is
nature ?
On
his prejudices,
and we know
most unfavora-
him
white.
As
to regularity of features,
ideas,
it
is
one of those
still
complex
whose elements
are perhaps
unknown, and concerning which, notwithstanding the efforts Crouzas, Hutcheson, and father Andre,
principles are yet to be established.
In the
Manto
chester
memoirs,
shew
proved among
contested,
is
then a
is
a deviation of judgment.*
This
ask-
problem.
Bosman
of India. f
of the negresses
* Vol
f
V. second
part.
Bosnian's
Voyage
to
letter .
38
of Jalof.*
OF
THE LITERATURE
Lobo
men
of Nigritia
is
and there
Roman
features.
Ligon
isle
of St. Jago,
who
plies this
eulogium
to the negresses
and mulat-
toes of
all
the isles of
Cape Vert. IT
Jedediah
After such
testimonies,
Morse
will
difficulty in
explaining that
*
t
1726,
p. 22.
il
i.hc
collection of voyages
made
in
f)\\
v
Quesne,
*
3 vol. 12 mo.
p. 182.
Rouen, 1721,
vol. 1. p. 202.
Vol.
T.
OF NEGROES.
39
essential dif-
By
others,
who,
human
race, seek
for an
of Moses.
nial
By men, who
interested in colo-
culture,
seek, in the
den.
One
of those
of mani-
warmth.
some
regulations
colonial assembly, and printed at the Cape, he insists that there are
that
Domingo
It is
corresponding
member
By
6.
and 26.
Report on the
troubles of St.
Domingo, by Garran,
8vo. Paris.
40
ces
Of THE LITERATURE.
now member
this epoch,
same
whom we
The
implied.
From
A
St.
Mery.
The
declaration
of this judgment
places
2d,
The
in the
middle of the
street.
For the honor of learned men who have investigated this subject, we hasten to acknowledge that
they have not committed outrage against reason in
Even
Laws and
vol.
Moreau
St.
Mery,
t
1
VI, p. 144.
to
Voyage
QB NEGROES.
those
4l
faculties
ries of Kaims
the inductions
to
which material-
ism, or cupidity
may wish
Bonn of Amsterdam, who has the finest collection known of human skins with Blumenbach, who perhaps has the richest of human skulls, with
;
Gall,
and
my
ac-
knowledgments
All,
with
who did
Zimmerrace, the
human
Thus physiology
we
are
which are
re-
of
man
42
sidered as a proof of
human
species.*
that of the
more
difference than
between the
:
that of a white
man
but, adds
immense.
Negroes being
as they to exercise
to
These
rights
But
is
the enjoyment
and
talents,
on which many of
De
generis
humani
varietate nativa.
Nevertheless, ac-
43
CHAPTER
II.
Opinions relative
groes.
to the
moral
inferiority
subject.
of Ne-
Discussio?is on this
Of
the
ment of
their faculties.
batted by the
christian
Of
bishops
THE
new.
is
not
is
The
defended by interested judges of the same colour, whose competency might be questioned, before
their decision is
attacked.
This reminds us of
picture repreto the
who on seeing a
that lions
44
OF THE LITERATURE
Hume, who
that the white
in his essay
on national character,
five
races,
;
aft.
ms
man
only
is
improved
that
no black
by his
oi
knowledge,
his translator
if
hich
them deep
not pronounced
amongst
or
us,
but
re-
merited
we mean
Jefferson in his
his opinion
ginia. "J
To support
it
was necessary
multitude of
to establish
if
by argument and by a
cir-
facts, that
*
t
cause, by Estwick.
torrid zone, particularly
ihat of
1302. chap.
}
OF NEGROES.
45
arising
With
the
regard to
the difficulty
from
and
circumstance
of
Epictetus,
Terence
&.c.)
since
opposed by Imlay, his countryman, with considerable warmth, especially concerning Phillis
ley.
Wheat-
Of
affecting
Terence
aukward, seeing
a
Numidian,
what
and
Negro.*
It
Carthaginian.
Numidia corresponds
Mauritania,
now named
whose
inhabitants,
of
the
middle age.
When we
country of
letter 9th.
46
fore they
or THE
LITERATURE
nishment.
We
may
in
like
astothat
when
men
as
Alston, Vanderlyn,
Copely,
is
a total absence of
genius.
Alas
how
" How of America. can the genius of invention spring up from the boinfluence of the discovery
som
of disgrace
in
and misery
recompence
view
no hope of
where
there
is
no
relief."*
civiliza-
and the
arts
If
it is,
cause,
why
men of
other
North
by G. Imlay, p. 167
OF NEGROES.
47
man
eaters?
Why
improvement
is
not
contested
it
is
readily
acknowledged by those
who
traffic
with them.
We
may
consider
it
as a
The
arts originate
facti-
tious wants
unknown
in Af-
The
:
first,
the re-
modifilit-
more than
unfruitful
deserts.
entitled
James Field
Guinea,
is
Poem,
no
Poem
1789.
in 3 books,
I
by James
to
cite the
beg leave
High where primeval forests shade the And in majestic solemn order stand,
land,
48
OF THE LITERATURE
The
mean
was by
of
Such has
its
It
ceased
to
be barbarians,
and
sacred
man
sacrifices.
It
When
religion
forsook
The
historian
that the
we
him-
many
passages
among
were a
:
others concerning
the negroes
unknown
in
Europe
he
as if Europe
was
free
from
this infection,
and par-
We may
now
its seat,
at its
feet
Of Niger rushing
Long
To
Long,
vol. 2. p.
420.
OF NEGROES*
see in Grose a long and ridiculous
49
enumeration
If the superstitious
least
man
is
to
be
pitied,
he
is at
False
lights
We
may disappear before the splendour of truth. may be compared to the earth, whose fertility,
is
as the soil
whereas a
of
soil
is
comas a
emblem
him who
void of
religious principles.
The
belief in a
God,
These
is
reflections
may
worse, Superstition
individuals, passion
Atheism
Altho' in
many
stifles
can
we
be virtuous thinks
sufficient to
A Provincial
50
OF THE
LITERATURE
who,
that he
may
not be
To the
slave trade,
Barrow
The Eu-
ropeans, to procure slaves there, create and perpetuate a state of constant warfare.
Those regions
by every sper
not dailv reun-
which
newed
to
country
We have
negroes
an example
in those
who
are brought
I
am
native
and
talents)
the following
words,
a
"
would
rather
introduce
.them
at
rattle
London."*
is
not
are taught
every species of
* African
memoranda,
rattle
OF NEGROES.
depravation, without opposing a single
51
check to
overcome
its
cruel consequences.
that
when
Jupiter
condemns a
mind.
is
takes from
him
half his
sublime in
all.
What
sentiments of dignity or
of respect,
can
who
are consitheir
dered as
masters,
cattle,
at cards or billiards,
barin-
merchandize.
What can
dividuals perform
the con-
fault torn
Sibire,
who
of
after
having
and
Europe,
has met
the
fate
many worthy
priests,
Clergy.
we
hap
to be a slave. a similar
52
piness,
OF THE
LITERATURE
Whom
nal
will you persuade, (says he,) that the eterwisdom can contradict itself, and that the com-
mon
If,
father of
it
men
were
upon earth
would
man
an
it
afford
argument against Providence. "f We have not seen one of those white impostors change
his
situation for
that of
If
slaves be so happy,
why
they
transport,
fill
annually
from
Africa,
80,000
blacks to
despair
for planters
ac-
knowledge
them
die after
their arrival in
America.
The
colonists endeavour,
by every means, to
The
Whom must
we believe ?
Why are
their looks
and recollections
Ibid. p. 27.
treat-
ment of negro
by a profes-
London, 1805,
OF NEGROES.
constantly turned towards their country ?
arise
53
Whence
disgust of
Why
that
whom
shall
from bondage
Whence
in
this
consoling tradition
dying
be to return to
these fre-
land?
Whence
to
originate
deny that
this opinion is
negroes.*
He
is
contradicted
others,
by
negro author. $
The
two
inhabitants of
Low -point
and of Carbet
for
districts of Martinique,
more distinguished
and they
*
t
Magazin Encyclop.
8vo.
London, 1805.
p. 470*
Voyage
oa,
by Hans Sloane, 2
788, Baltimore
54
Of THE LITERATURE.
who
At
mass
salt
it
is
nounces the
cival,
fact.f
Dutch
colonies to the
hope
human
race, in
those homicidal
are
courses
in
named Mocks,
which
more frequent
:|:
elsewhere.
Volumes might be
crimes, of which
filled
with the
recital
of
they
have been
the victims.
When
* Letter of his
an inhabitant of Martinique
to
Mr.
Petit,
on
work
entitled,
The
public right of
French
t
%
Voyage
Voyage a
ed by P. F. Henry, 1803.
OF NEGROES.
$5
lately, to sully
There
are doubtless
of cruelty, and as
we
power of shewing
any should comshall
that he
Erasmus, we
answer,
by
this
is
The
be-
anecdote
modern
who
into
fact
is
who
from
;
its
mothers' bo-
it
into the
waves
still
more, and
it
she
fate,
was because
sale.
am
mothers
lament her
fate.
The
having
* t
ton,
Qui
suam
prodet.
slave-trade,
p. 17
by John New-
London, 1788,
and
18.
56
In 1789,
OF THE
LITERATURE
we have
Kingston, in Jamaica.
lash of the
muzzle them
them from
watered
sucking those
sugar-canes, which
are
is
compressed,
stifles
their cries
when
His proposition
is re-
He
departs, arrives at
Cuthe
him by
He
returns to Jamai:
fortunately
made with
and voted
the Maroons.
But
ought
to
be known,
who payed
largely,
Mazentius
but truth
is
and
Nero.
say
this
with pain,
In truth
American Museum,
8vo. Philadelphia,
179, v. VI. p.
407.
QF NEGROES,
the evidence
is
57
measure
There
war?
among
the nations of
Europe? would he
And who
in
are
mad
hu-
man and
It is
from Africa,
them
in
another region.
renders
men
ferocious,
them
to
Colonists
if
hearths, to
undergo the
?
ered prisoners,
women
5S
OF
THE HTE1UTURE
false
reasonings
Oh
that
it
had pleased
God to
to swallow
fellow
man.
dogs
at St.
Domingo, they
the
delivered to
them by
way of experiment,
first
The
unfortunate
the
dogs'
reward
rejoiced
those
white tygers in
human
form.
Domingo
mark
to
the hour.
He
speaks of a
woman who
p. 4,
Voyage
dam, 1769,
p. 14-
UF NEGROES.
Innumerable depositions made
crimes of planters.
ded,
if possible, to
59
at the bar
of the
New
this evidence,
by the publica-
more
recently
by
the
and of Robin. $
In reading the
last,
we
find that
many
Creole
women
their sex.
visit the
and modesty which are the patrimonial heritage of With what singular effrontery do they
markets to buy naked negroes,
whom
make
To
they
girdles of moss.
Robin reproaches
men
for
exceeding the
men
in cruelty.
Negroes
condemned
without emotion
these unfortunates.
The
docu-
to the
Voyage dans
1'interieur
de
la
Louisiane, de
la Floridc.,
60
OF THE LITERATURE
this
exempt from
lege
punishment. them,
is is
The
only privi-
granted to
their
where
abdomen
to be placed.
The
by
white
an
apprenticeship to
inhumanity,
amusing
themselves in
And
humanity has
all
Denmark,
traffic
;
England and
disown the
among
who
and these words of the proclamation of the first magistrate to the region of St. Domingo, " you
are
all
God and
the republic.
Those pamphleteers speak without ceasing of unhappy colonists, and never of unhappy negroes.
The
a
planters
word concerning
The Doto a
vengeance,
* Vol.
I,
p. 175..
and following.
them
dev<>u:ed by dogs.
is
The
erudition of the
colonists
N -me
are
with the
tactics of despotism.
in
Vinnius,
in
Fermin, that
slavery
is
Hilliard
D'Auberteuil,
whom
the
ungrateful
dungeon, because
and free
"
interest
and safety
prompt us
who
ed "J Barre
St.
Venant regrets
* Dissertation
it is
permitted to
p.
382.
$
H. D. L.
following.
62
OP THE
LITERATURE
Bermadie nnes,
white race
or Evenings in
Bermuda, admits
the palla-
this pre
eminence which
is
dium of our
species.*
He
Domingo,
to the
to the pride
and immodeauthor of a
last
The
voyage
ry, is
of the
centu-
happy prejudice
is
negro because he
destined to be a slave. f
Armed
new
fetters
may be
The
au-
and particularly of
;
appears to believe
life,
do not receive
their
but upon
Evenings
in
Domingo,
p. 60.
by F. C. one of
r.nd G6.
its
former
colonists,
Bordeaux, 1802,
Voyage
in Louisiana,
OP NEGHOES.
63
they themselves
would vote
for slavery.*
He
dow
is
of the white
man made
is
negroes run.
Preacher of ignorance, he
Belu,
who
wish-
ed
to restore this
whip.
tion,
The bad
effects,
fact
we
But nothing
Lozie-
ings of negrophilism.
res,
An individual named
**
whom,
we can
that the
of heaven and of
earth."$
He
at
..
Domingo, 2
t
See p. 22.
J Ibid. p. 11.
64
OF THE LITERATURE
they have slaves attacked with cutaneous
when
disorders,
their
sale,
give
them drugs
of their masters.
latter,
The
laws have d ne
doomed to legal
to
even be admitted
whites.
If a black
give
man endeavours
condemn him
to death, f
ferocious, sub-
code of
that
this island,
prove
;
how
horri-
ble
were those
and never-
which
an outrage against
them, acknowledges
ration remains to be
that in practice
made
any thing
* Ibid. p. 102.
t
%
Ibid. p. 102.
Long, Vol.
2. p.
489,
OF NEGROES.
to silence
for the
65
whites always
all
make
common
cause
against
those
who
This
is
of mer-
chant
Guineamen
at
them
who
always ready
to
denounce
to
magistrates,
At Barbadoes and
rily
at
Surinam, he
who
volunta-
and cruelly
kills a slave is
acquitted of the
sum
:
In South Carolina
there
the forfeit
is
greater
;
it
is
fixed at
fifty
pounds
sterling
we
with
crime
absolutely committed
is
impunity, as the
sum
never paid.f
Remarks on
American Register,
8vo. Phila-
66
OF THE
LITERATURE
is
so precarious, their
all
modesty
is
the
John Newton,
in
after
the slave-
divine,
of modesty
tween individuals of
those
who
as
degraded by their
To
this prejudice
and
in their colonies,
a
It
catholic
is
marriage
is
shield against
censure.
not
surprising,
that
Barre
Saint
Venant
inveighs
Constantine facilitated
slaves. f
enfranchisement
of
What
*
t
[
Thoughts upon
Barre
St.
Venant,
Ibid. p. 120
and
121.
OF NEGROES,
'tive
67
which
relate
laws,
more
will
particularly those
to marriage ?
them.
This
men
act
in contradiction to nature.
I leave to
with regard
gy of the moral
land of St.
faculties,
exemplified
it
at
the a
is-
Helena, where
has
p.
oduced
to
mag.
from
leave
to moralstart
and
politicians,
the
same
principles,
often in direct
dishonour to
no disgrace.
premiums
negroes
white
cast,
Neither the
or
mulattoes can
whilst the latter
ever
augment
the
augments
daily that
of the mulattoes*
The
Reasoning from
and that
this
masters.
believes,
scourge of colostill
Domingo would be
in its
08
splendour,
OE THE LITERATURE
if it
The
sition.
What
men
possess,
who
are
voked to vengeance.
thousand proofs
;
Of
shall,
this
we could
cite a
we
brought to Suri-
nam in
freedom
Holland,
him
is
his
at his return.
Notwithstanding
this pro-
mise, when he
sold
he
is
lashed at the
far
By
To
Vol.
I.
p. 281.
or NEGROES.
69
that the Africans
men
his
life.
He demanded,
and he supported
demand by
the
first
of rights.
The
argu-
reply.
refutation is impossible,
whom
formerly
The negro
suffered
on the gallows.
silences rea-
"
Is
it
make
fine discour-
actual oppression.
legislative
a political
maxim
this
that the
Does
harmo-
ny exist
Thus,
in
1789,
which sound
70
reasoning
is
OF THE LITERATURE
honour to his
mind.*
of executioners
The employment
was always
make
a pa
who ought
are saved,
to felicitate
and
refuted
bv many John Newton, who resided a long time in Africa. He adds, " that the respectable author of the Spectacle de
in
la
children,
and
OF NEGROES.
that this practice exists there."*
71
When
the re-
most
negro
is
be-
tween
brute.
According
this
hypothesis,
we may
ask,
in labour with
life
is
no-
more than
a continued
punishment
Strong
maxims on
books which Christians and Jews equally revere. A bird pursued by a sparrow-hawk seeks refuge
in the
bosom of
the child by
it
whom
it is
killed.
The
areopagus condemns
to death.
moment
ever arrive
when
who
daily,
more
and blows
* Ibid. p. 31.
r
Deut.
:;xvi. 6.
Tim.
13.
Non
alligabis,
kc.
72
the
OF THE
LITERATURE
all
most useful of
domestic animals
finest
the
of
calls the
conquest
man.
it,
It is
at
London,
which imposes a
wantonly.
This discussion
is
not foreign to
my subject,
if
though deprived of
ercise
;
but
if
notwithstanding the different shades of the colour of the skin, whether yellow,
white, the organization
is
copper, black
:
or
the
same
if
the virtues
and
talents of
different
how much
more
ed,
guilty
by
Christianity,
civiliza-
tion,
OP NEGROES.
Twenty
what reply
flesh.
years
is
me
to
sla-
made by
human
and
To
as
ty varied
When
have
we
of men who
and calumny.
They would
by slandering
Page, who
tion,
after
The
planters ob-
as
Europeans are
is
opinion
contradicted by
that a colony of Germans was established by Estaing, in 1764, at Bombade, near the mole St. Ni-
cholas,
* Treatise
on the
political
economy of the
7.
colonies,
10.
by
2d part, year
]Q
74
OF THE LITERATURE
and successful^
own
labours.
made by
Were
it
would
inve-
Do we
observa-
They answer by
They
merce.
Do we
:
say that
we
declaim
guments,
all
the
common
Do
and
we appeal
They
sneer,
fixing
them on those
whom
avarice
if
the
intei
What
idea then
do the
planters
They
OF NEGROES..
llian
75
race,
we
we cannot
number
dif-
we raise
ferent
complexion,
is
in
distant
countries.
-
Such
As
lot
long as an individual
Europe
in
surfers,
these
whom they
feel
torment
Africa and
A-
merica.
They
indignant that
we
trouble the
:
enjoyment of
tigers
they
philanthropist ,
is
to
honour
:
a stain
all
the friends of
The
author
Jews,
was
more
for constituting
It
need not
be enquired,
why our
em-
is, I
76
Of
THE LITERATURE
lumny.
at
It is said that a
subscription
was opened
Nantz,
for the
lanthropist t
Cape
and
this affords
an index of
what we are
justice
to gain
when we
and misfortune.
if the
plague
had rewards and pensions to bestow, it would find apologists but in defending the poor and the op:
pressed, as
we must struggle against power, riches and frensy, we may expect nothing but calumny,
The
since
is
Let us
reli-
good
him wbu
persecuted.
negroes,
;
first,
in or
after-
and
themselves,
because
wards them.
The
themselves christians
Ol'
NEGROES.
77
Re-
in the
churches
of the colonies,
those of
from those of the whites, and even separately admitted to the eucharistical participation, the pastors
so
opposed to the
ly in the
of religion.
It is
particular-
man
re-
It is
reminds no
his
God who
him
there
is
re-
spect of persons.*
There
to
claims that
we ought
do
which we
wish to be done
for us.f
II. Paral.
19.7. Eccles.
25.
20.24. Rom.
1.
2.
U. Ephcs.
6. 9. Coloss. 3.
t
James
2.
1st
Peter
1.
3$
Matthew
7. 12.
78
OF THE
LITERATURE
due
To
By
was established
in the
West**
unhap-
to console the
py, whatever be their country, their colour or religion. The parable of the Samaritan imprints on
It is
son,
from the
circle of
human
race.
Memoir on
1780, p.
by Monges,
religio
Paris,
ami Commentatio de
vi
quam
Christiana habuit,
f
by Paetz,
The
colonists
manner
no reply
thus Dupont,
30b,
I. p.
menIt
now
my
in a
We
refer
Dupont
to
The
same im-
and following.
OF NEGROES.
7.S
friends of despo-
and
irreligion,
all
testimony of protestant
is
au-
negroes,
and
this
inculpation
applies to
the bi-
shops of London,
colonies un-
whom
the love of
All have
and
to freedom.
Schools for
by the
society of Friends.
to a convention,
80
OF THE
LITERATURE
is
same.*
The Quakers,
ings
at
composed of
of the
by
At
the
close
they never
fail
to
terminate
their labours
by addressing to
all
those of their
be combated,
virtues to
ob-
To
Dallas's eulogiums on
archbishop of Tours
this
their duties
I seize
my
gratitude,
1st,
To
many
;
me
the mi-
and 2d,
To Mr.
Philips, a
Qua-
and a Bookseller
at
my
stay in
England, procured
me many
works on the
OF NEGROES.
-the sick,
81
and
visits
to
families.*
other,
The
catholic religion,
established various
An
which
the
soul.
who
are not
The
first
conquerors of America,
that
they
might have
men.
A bull of
the
Pope destroyed this doubt, and the councils of Mexico present, in this respect, a monument highhonourable to the clergy of those countries.
I
ly
In
propose to publish,
we
at
the settings of
JPI
OE
THE LITERATURE
made
names of many
blacks.
The
ne-
have adopted
Under the
life
we may
read his
known
we
shall
give some
whom
he
St
Benoit the
Moor
slave,
Roccho
Pirro, author
words
sed candore
pleased
God
to testify
of his
soul.jt
II,
p. 154,
auctore don.
Roccho
Pirro,
3d
edit
OF NEGROES.
Historians praise in
b.
him
that
assemblage of
God
only,
man
sy
:
noi-
a great
Some-
by
curiosity,
men endeavour
to
owing
to
escaped oblivion.
He
died at Palermo, in
589,
where
ed.
his
This
and more
in Joseph
particularly, in
congregation of church
rites,
Mary Ancona,
the continuator of
if,
Wadhad
more solemnity,
as
been announced
commenceArthur,
ment of this
year, they
canonization.
Roccho
* Annales
fol.
minorum,
Sec.
continuati
p.
.Maria
202.
di
Ancona,
May
XIX,
201
Sc
1-638, p. 32.
Vox
84
OF
THE LITERATURE
gy concerning the venerable negro, Benoit of Pa= lermo but in our libraries, altho' very extensive,
;
life,
neither in
Italian,
by Tognoletti, nor
in Spanish,
by Meta-
plana.
Among
ed
general have
more
and
Religion con-
who
with their
gers.
own
At
slaves have
Among
habits of
the Spaniards
manumissions cannot be
fixed by the laws.
refused, on paying a
sum
By
economy, the
them complete
liberty.
In
by Doctor
OF NEGROES.,
Keppel, bishop of Exeter.*
niards,
85
Among
the Spait is
and
still
common occurrence.
an account of a
Rome.f
The
many young
people of
at the
to
the priesthood
4 Du
Near
Quesne saw,
vol. I
Journal of a
squadron of
p. 193,
Du
Quesne, 2
vol.
I.
De
Quesne,
12mo. Paris,
p. GO.
86
OF THE
LITERATURE
same establishment
still
in force.*
Philadelphia, an
is also
African church,
of
a negro, f
When we
genders
all its
supposes
all
commonly en-
consideration,
who
are
honourdepiived
ranks in society,
where
it
is
ledge,
or
struggling
which
we
shall find
room
for
surprize,
that
so
many
are signalized
by estimable
qualities.
we would have been less than the virtuous among them, and more
Barrow.
Voyage
in the
to
Cochin China,
vol. p. 87.
Voyage
year
8. vol.
VI.
p. 334.
OF NEGROES.
vicious than their
87
worst characters.
The same
Jews of
all
by the other
casts
to
is
condemned,
like the
negroes,
by
black
code, the
popery laws.
Thus
resemblance
of Afri-
ca and of Ireland,
brutes,
who
The
lat-
submit irrevocably
so many
them
This
infernal ty-
when
cans
an appeal
to the justice
of Heaven.
Irish-
* In Pieces of Irish
lished by
M'Neven,
8vo.
New-York, 1807.
There
is a
pre*
eious narrative by
r*xsny
Emmet,
Part of an
(89)
CHAPTER
III.
Moral
their love
of
in-
we have
my
subject.
The
to ing,
Bosman,
have you
that
it
prove
not,
How
do you do
? but,
How
is,
reposed f*
The maxim
with them
:
is
better to be seated
Voyage
in
12
90
OB THE LITERATURE
Since
we made them
ded
death
is
preferable to
all this.
The
It is
is
not with-
often
exaggerated.
who
are
accustomed
to
conduct
sit-
it is
uation
dustry,
men
either,
even that
when they have no property, not of their own person, and when the fruits
;
master
or,
when
in countries favoured
by
all
are laborious
utili-
when
ty,
or by pleasure.
Such
negal,
who work
enjoyments.
inroads
upon
them
thus
and repeopled.*
Memoirs on
OF NEGROES.
9l
Such
cribe.*
Axiam on
whom
all travellers
love to des-
The
whom
tivity
which enriches
Ca-
bomonte and of Fido or Juido, are infatigable cultivators, says Bosman, who certainly is not
prejudiced in their favour
soil,
;
economical of their
sow
the
same
without allowing
They
they
know however,
how
History
is full
of traits
of their intrepidity.
Can
life
itself is a
perpetual
many days
HT.
t
f
Beaver, p. 333.
Ledyard,
U.abaVvol. IV.
p. 183.
92
OF THE
LITERATURE
among
themselves,
and even
to smile at torture.*"
negro
at
have
:
in his
mouth
he
fire.
Tucky
as their chief:
their tyrants
remaining confire,
querors
condemned many
gaily to
his limbs
to
;
the
and
all
marched
tion
punishment
saw
reduced to ashes
one
hand
command
They
increased in
* Labat, vol.
t
IV.
p. 183.
OF NEGROES.
93
numbers and became formidable after they had elected Cudjoe, as chief, whose portrait is seen in
Dallas's work.
skilful
and
enterprising,
in
among
all
the
Maroon
tribes,
them
to
made make
the English
a treaty, in
freedom of the
for ever a portion
them
The Portuguese
part
some
his
in
To
heigh-
was
made
ry
Among the
at the
traits of
bravere:
markable happened
all
seige of Carthagena
The
negroes, brought
from
St.
the
*
t
Dallas, vol.
I.
94
rest of the
OP THE
LITERATURE
at the
French troops,
The
Savannah,
;
taking of Pen-
secola, is well
tion,
known
French troops,
The
was a negro.
Madam
Behjj' had
been a witness
fidelity
of his misfortunes.
and
courage of the negroes contrasted with the baseness and perfidy of their tyrants.
Having returnIt is
ed
to
to be regretted that
painted a romance.
misfortunes of this
interest the reader.
extolled in
all
the histories
Once
a slave, he
became
own
certainly not
Memoir
hi
OF NEGROES.
city.
95
still
Portuguese America, under the name of Henry Diaz. The Hollanders, then possessors of
exists in
Brasil, disturbed
its
inhabitants.
to
This circumreflect
stance gives
La Clede occasion
on the
In
The
former,
made
a sally,
loss,
by a
negro general.
He
some
distance
To
courage.
riority
In a
battle,
his soldiers
began
to give
Henry Diaz
his
itself
which
obliges
it
fall
Henry Diaz
96
OF THE
to surrender,
LITERATURE
bon
and
an army.
hand
to be amputated, say-
hand in
combat.
It is
to be regretted, that
history does
this general
how who
Mcnezes
praises
his
consummate expeall
of a sud-
The
was
a
fate,
man
of colour.
He
sacrificed himself to
all
Nova
p 610
Istoria delle
4to.
guerre di Portogallo,
8cc.
Brandano,
Venezia,
1689, p. 181,329,
364,393,
Sec.
Istoria delle
Sec. dal
P.
G. Jioseppe,
1698, parte
I,
di
Theresa Carmelitano,
;
folio,
Uoma,
p. 133
and 183
part II, p.
Historiarum Lusitanarum
libri, Sec.
autore Fernando de
2 vols.
4to.
Ulyssippone, 1734,
See.
La Clede,
Passim.
OF NEGROES.
the
7
anticipate,
5
might
of
May;
decree
whi
h,
duced
into
the
colonies, an
order of things
at the
conformable to justice.
sity
Enraged
perver-
of the colonists
who
the
to induce
government
to prevent the
barkation
the
he
cause.
advice,
Oge
found means
Domingo.
decrees.
He demands
rejected-
The
sues.
Oge
well
;
is
perfidiously delivered
up by the
Spanish government.
secret
known
in the
quisition
is
he demands a defender
:
refused
thirteen of his
13
98
OF THE LIIERATURL
to the galleys,
demned
to the
gibbet, and
are destined to
mosity so
far as to
make
a distinction between
and
the
whites.
facts are
after
examined with
Garran,
words
"
We
man
of colour.
By
cises he
was placed
the
first
rank, and
by
of
Some
held in estimation.
in
Alit is
gymnastics, yet
fire at,
and strike a
ball pro-
According to the
traveller
Arndt,
this
new
most
strongest, and
Domingo, by Garran>
p. 7?.
year
6, vol. II, p.
5Z and following,
;
OF NEGROES.
amiable of his cotemporaries
99
and besides, he
was generous,
ed man.
eties.
He was
When
it
was almost an
state
was nothing
for
When
St.
man
newspaper announced
His
it
of the capital.
Paris in motion.
set all
when
which
for
proces-
evolutions, f
durch Frankreich
im
sommer,
36 and 37.
made
100
I
OF THE LITERATURE.
do not
think, as Malherbes,that
is
agood
play-
er at nine pins
of as great importance as a
good
all
worth one
What
pity that
George had not been directed towards pursuits which would have procured him the esteem and gratitude of his
fellow citizens ?
We
may however
recollect,
Alexander
Dumas was
a mulatto,
who, with
fifty
made
sixteen prisonle-
who were
he ascended
by a num-
enemy.
of which
is
expected.
The work
will justify
the hope*
*f the public.
OF NEGROES.
ploits
101
in
Europe
and
in Africa, for
;
of Egypt
to
fall
into the
vernment,
years in
who kept him and Dolomieu two irons. Alexander Dumas, General
named by Bonapaite,
in 1807.
of Division,
the Horatius
John Kina, of
St.
Domingo, was
a negro,
him
the
most
tish
flattering reception at
London.
to
government confided
him
the
The Bricommand
of a company of
tect the
men
nam.
tilles
:
him
that
he
is free
He
brethren
employing the
them
free
to mis-
to
expose
negroes
to
sale.
He
is
soon
in
apprehended, sent
Newgate.*
XXXI, p.
405, Sec.
Work
102
OF THE LITERATURE
at
Mentor, born
negro.
was
made
ant,
prisoner.
To
a noble
physiognomy he united
by
culture.
We
Tocon-
many.
latter
brilliant qualities.
He was
Domingo.
been a herdsman
at the plan-
which, he
mulatto,
associate of
for St.
Doa
of Rigaud,
entitcola-
led, Reflections
of negroes.
103
The
the portrait
gro general.
" Toussaint,
at the
is
the
most
he
active
whom we
we may
The
particular
which he employs
in his
march, of always
he has need, and
he gives to
ex-
deceiving the
men
of
whom
who
that he is daily
pected in
all
with
af-
affairs
of the cabinet
daily
certain that
no man,
in
the
such an influence
Domin-
go,'"
104
Of THE LITEUATURE
endowed with
good
a prodigious
memory
that he
that his
is
is a
father, a
Toussaint
at St.
re-established religious
worship
Domingo, and on account of his zeal in this respect he was named the capucliine> by a class of men who certainly merited the name of
persecutors.
a curious cor-
Mauviel Sac>e,
for
St.
Toussaint,
his arrival, by a
after-
monks,
and
the
bishop experienced
difficulties.
cruel, hypocriti-
negroes and
mulattoes
who accompanied
his operations, I
;
do
for
we
Some
some
OF NEGROES.
white
is
105
may be guided by
Whilst
truth.
Recent
facts, it
or of satire.
ral is
among
us
Whit-
has
made him
a hero.*
Though Toussaint
is
dead,
posterity,
rectifies the
Hispaniola, a
London, 1805.
\A
107
CHAPTER
IV.
NOBLENESS
are
of character
is
the inseparable
facts this
The
which
now
to
be narrated, will in
respect,
The
17S 5, was by them obliged to capitulate. There were not more than one hundred and
108
twenty-five
OF THE
LITERATURE
men on
is
the Spanish. It
has
the
it
men
violated
like
capitulation
although
they
were,
In 1718,
when we were
St.
red Caribs of
Vincent,
who
are
to rashness, and
known to who
more
active
acquiesced in a peace
velin, are not
Chau-
nations.
whom the
Do
me-
he colonies.
t
Voyage
in
following,
CF NEGROES.
rit
109
to negotiate
:
the
same
praise ?
They, willing
this
it is
stipulated,
that
with
many
Two Dutch
pear in the
ton, their
camp
commander, perceives
bring only
trifles,
com-
missaries
scissars,
combs
powder; with a voice of thunder he addresses " Do Europeans think that negroes them
:
One
of
such
articles
is sufficient for
us
all
one barrel
of powder would have testified that the Hollanders have confidence in us."
The
negroes, however,
instead of yielding
its
engagements, give a
They honor
and
in parting,
colonists of Surinam,
by
their
inhumanity to
110
their
their
slaves,
QF
THE LITERATURE
of
own misfortunes.*
whom we
maize,
owe
of ne-
do justice
and
virtues.
Some even
of slavery,
to
of those,
tizans
are occasionally
compelled
by truth
are, 1st,
make avowals
in their favour.
Such
Long, the
historian of Jamaica,
who
filial
good and
and
of
and remarkable
2d,
for paternal
tenderness. f
Duvallon, whose
recital
to
move
reader,
of
whom
* t
I
Stedman, vol.
I.
p. 88,
and following.
Long,
vol.
II, p.
416.
View
" Let us
says
woman, who has seen her hundredth year, some one of the company and we advanced to the
the old
;
door of a
little
hut,
OF NEGROE.S.
HI
are conspicuous,
narrative,
by
Ram-
my
as Wilberforce, is immortalized
works
company assembled
still
at the
door
she was
also
deaf,
lively.
Every thing
to
sufficient to give
felt
warmth,
old,
at a
season
when
occu-
as sensibly
by the
We found her
pied in boiling a
The
know
services, this
woman, now
whom whom
sent.
and
The
old
woman
him by
his
name, and
ttitagant
him (according
to
the custom
"
112
OF THE LITERATURE
his
and
zeal
in
the
defence
of Africans.
belonging to his
isle
of St. John,
The
ne-
An anonymous pamfact,
who
endeavours
of the
negroes
of Guinea) with an
air
of kindness
truly affecting,
wilt
roof of
my
hut
It
poured
it
freely.
The master
Thee
is
it
I shall
think
me
so,
but nothing
ever done.
the hut
and thee,
mas-
and
my son Come,
;
ing
him by the arm, and introducing him into the Cabin, come and see thyself these openings have pity then,
on the old Irrouba, and repair
is
my son,
of
above
my
bed,
it
is
ask,
and the
?
good Being
Alas
The
is
almost unco-
vered, the sleet and the rain beat against thy miserable
bed
all this,
for the
poor Irrouba.
OF NEGROES.
113
George Roberts would have moved a tygert> pity.* Durand extols the modesty and
tion of
Wadstrom, who
much
sensibility
the whites.
Captain Wilson,
who
lived
anmng
Some
who
fact,
at-
them
there.
slave
had runaway
the
master
dollars to
him who
he
is
by
a negro,
who refuses
for
the deserter,
mas-
sum
he offered,
*
t
Of slavery
Voyage
in
in general,
p. ISO.
180?,
p. 36*.
15
114
OF THE
LITERATURE
remarks, that the
The
Doctor Newton
cused
a
relates that
negro
The
latter,
me
for a white ?f
He
of
men
that exists.^
the Foulahs,
whose government
paternal.
negroes,
who
who as-
This eulogium
is
repeated by Golberry
among whom we
* t
j
find
men
203.
of probity, models of
See Robin,
vol. II, p.
slave trade,
An
'^9,
and following
p. T:>,
OF NEGROES.
filial,
115
who know
virtue,
all
the
and
refinements of
among whom
dictates
of nature,
berry furnishes
many
The anonymous
Eclogues, \ owes his
it,
to a negro,
who, to save
not this poet,
sacrificed his
own.
Why has
preserver
!
who,
men
tioned the
name of his
Adanson, who
and
who
describes this
country as an
Elysium,
mane and
hospitable
me
the
idea
They
are distinguish-
Fragments of a voyage
In 4to. London, 1787.
in Africa,
by Golberry, 2
vol,
and following.
116
OF THE LITERATURE
tenderness for their parents, and great
by
their
almost unknown.*
contract a particu-
with
those who
Those who
are
These
words
recal to
mind
sublime institution of
which philosophy
in latter times
might envy
adoption
and
often,
Robin speaks of a
having gained n:oney
slave of
Martinico,
who
ran-
own
his mother's
freedom.
The most
commit-
* t
Dcmanet,p. Long,
1.
vol. II, p.
416
OF NEGROES.
117
not
mj mother.*
It is
from
Mungo
Park,
fact.
lie.t
Casaux
father, said,
that
it
may
The
in
who
are
no more.
Frenchman
to
he could
France
a nation which
The blacks,
man,
Voyage
Ibid. p.
by tylungo Park,
vol. II, p.
8 and 10,
1 1
118
yourself.*
OF THE
Slaves,
LITERATURE
particularly those of
the
each other.
Alas
it
the wretched
condemned
life,
to the
gallows
offer
of his
provided
:
he
he prefers death.
to
The master
this office.
orders
perform
Wait,
takes a
hatchet,
his master,
and sajs
him
order
me now
to
be the executioner of
my
comrade.
We are indebted to Dickson for the following fact. A negro had killed a white man ano:
was about
to suffer
death.
his crime,
must
The
innocent
*
f
Stedman,
OF NEGROES.
119
man is released
days.
the negro
alive
is
where he remained
The same Dickson has informed us among one hundred and twenty thousand
ders have been
that
ne-
known
to be
committed by
-
them
The gratitude
is
to save that
of their benefactor, f
Cowry relates,
trial for
that a Portu-
fled to the
of
of his
though judiciary
fol-
lowing.
t
t
Stedman,
vol. Ill, p.
70 and 70.
Cowry,
p. 27,
120
0* THE
LITERATURE
The anecdote
he
left
known.
Atter
Nantes, he lived
at the
Cape, where he
negro trade,
great
riches to France,
where he was
at last ruined.
He returns to St. Domingo. Those who, when he was rich, called themselves his friends, now scarcely recognized him. L. Desrouleaux, who had acquired a fortune, supplies their place. Hi iearns the misfortune of his old master, hastens to find him, gives him lodging a*. nourish!
that he
will
should
not he
where
his feelings
mortified
by the
sight cf ungrateful
men.
But
an
France
will
annual revenue of
sufficient
fifteen
thousand francs be
The
colonist
The
the death of
Louis Desrou-
If
to
it
were permitted
to insert a
cite the
fact foreign
my
subject, I
would
conduct of the
who was
at
Guyanne.
tenderly, seeing-
qF NEGROES,
121
at the
Pastors,
:
we
will
hunt and
when they
are gener-
The
blacks in
the negro
those
who remained
:
the
ar-
suf-
themselves to be sold.f
The
sure in
who,
* +
Stedman,
vol. I, p. 270,
Ibid. vol. I, p.
270,
122
O*
THE LITERATURE
and beneficence*
his colour,
The
unfortunate, whatever
was
had
a
a claim
upon
his affections.
He
gave
to the in-
who
could not
make
prisoners, gave
vice
to virtue.
He
died,
at
Bridgetown, in 1758 ?
equally lamented
to bless the
memory
of
in Africa, in in 1736.
1714
He
the
was sold at
St.
Domingo,
Having
Golden
coast, and, in
1756, established a
hospital, at the
lattoes.
Cape,
for
mu=
and
his wife,
in giving
them comfort,
in the
and rendering
wants.
The
felt,
midst
their
of those unfortunates,
charity, arose
from
be abandoned.
The
Dickson, p. 1*0
OF NEGROES.
cultural society at Paris, decreed
123
medals to
Jas-
min,* who
Moreau
St.
writers
the
pub-
merits.
Mungo
Park, in the
bosom of
by hunger.
good negress meets him, conducts him to her hut, treats him in the most hospitable manner, assembles the women of the family, who passed
a part of the night spinning cotton, and singing extemporary songs to amuse the white man,
whose appearance
ticing novelty.
in that
He
mind
the idea 6f
Hervey
in his meditations.
It is
the rain
Domingo.
praises
by Moreau
t St.
St.
6,
and following.
Mery,
124
fell
OF THE
the poor white
1
LITERATURE
fatigue,
sits
down under
other
our tree
he has no mother to
to giind his corn ;"
woman
in
women
sang
chorus
"
pity
the
woman to
are the
in
Such
les,
men
calumniated by Descroizil-
who,
To those
and
to the
traits
do-
made
at
the bar oi
the Parliament
of
England-}
will suf-
Voyage
of discovery in the
Interior of Africa, by
p. 130.
isles
Among
-ve
may
consult an abstract
house of commons,
in
Londom
OF NEGROES.
lice to
125
manity.
among
:
blacks
we
find
qualities
but we whites,
we can but
rare-
integrity of
men,
of any colour,
is
It is
call
I
those
so
individuals virtuous,
who have
only, if
may
Their cha-
not decided
they
are incapable of
;
they have
boldness
of vice
borrowed
mildness
what
in
them
is
called
goodness and
is really
and dulness.
It is this
There are
indi-
12$
In the picture of important facts here presented, we, on the contrary, find
virtus
which makes
and obliges
good of
others,
men
to act conformably to
This
practical rea-
ma-
among most
are
still
in their infancy.
12T
CHAPTER
V,
and
trades,
groes.
man,
Mungo
Horneman,*
of
whom
* Abstract of the
evidence, &c. p. 89
,
Clarkson, p.
125
Stedman, ch. 26
Durand,
p. 368,
;
and following-;
H, p.
128
the
OF THE
LITERATURE
among them
thinks
in
Africa,
dustry.
Moreau
St.
Mery
in the
they are
li-
capable of succeeding
beral arts.*
mechanical and
Examine
the authors
we havd
cit-
ed
Prevot, and the Universal History, the production of an English author, and the narrative of
depositions
made
at
all
dye
make
arms
they
cordage,
tissue,
curious
works
in
One of the
method of constructing an
anclior for a
vessel. |
At
Juida, they
make combs
of a single
Topographical description of
St.
Domingo,
vol. I.p.
90.
t
Prevot, vol.
I, p. 3, 4,
;
edit.
\
Beaver, p. 327.
Description
de
la
Negritic, par P.
D. P. Pruneau de
Pommc
OF NEGUOfiS,
129
and
skilful
tion of a
sage
"
It is difficult to
This however
practised
of Africa, f"
Golberry,
travellers,
who
is
more
in his
details
concerning African
stuffs
made by them
and
of a rare beauty.
The most
Bambou-
their jars
much
make
taste=
With
:
the grossest
elegant in gold
* Dickson, p. 74.
t
Le Majaz, Encycloped.
vol. II,
Brum,
aru
7. p,
17
130
OF THE LITERATURE
it
ner as to render
as flexible as paper
and
the,
workmanship,
is
The same
They send
Sandoval,
who was
there,
for
assures us,
that aft
music.
Their
women
work, f
Lcscalier, in travelling in
the
continent of
manufacture
this
fine
mus-
country to Europe.
is
full
of stuffs
made by negro
slaves.
Fragments of a voyage
I,
in Africa,
by Golberry, 2
;
voj.
|>.
p. 413,
and following
vol. II,
380,
See.
Quesne,
vol. II, p.
OF NEGROES.
l3l
Houghton,
Mango
of wool, leather,
wood and
metals
in
weaving,
Horneman,
are the
most
intelligent
people of
edge
These
think,
what we must
when
to
ized.
not insoluble,
intellectual
faculties
suffer that
corruption to germinate,
tend fashionable
amusements,
do not
say
Mungo
Park,
The
Journal of
3
p. 33,
i32
OP TIfE LITERATURE
that as
it
Be
may,
the acceptation
with
men
in
a relation to
commerit
to
many
black people
Is
they,
of
whom Leon
who on
the
culti-
In a narrative, found
as
na-
tions.*
number of towns,
dustry.
recital
More
Bosman,
4 vote. p. 283*
B PSCROX&,
135'
Pomme
ability
Gouje,
who
life
The
particulars of their
more ceremonies
Superi-
and
civilities
proud pretensions
similar
in
other. f
situations, kneel and bless each Without approving these minute cere-
monies,
we must
fea*.
who
resided thir-
in
cunning diplomacy
ed
pernicious
find in the
art.
do we
life
in her
to the
* Description dc
la
1
Nigriue,par P. P.
8.va.
Paris,
178$
X Bosnian,
lettrr
8,
134
OF THE
LITERATURE
she had
unhappy individuals
death.
whom
doomed
to
According
among
us, a nation
it
have
to
historians
and annals.
We
ages,
do not pretend
add
their
be inferred
from
coming partners
human
know ledge ?
If,
barbarians
for
was
of the Scandinavians.
sess ?
What
all
figurative traditions of
negro tribes
all
and
of
like
the
Celts,
a portion,
name,
political
more
especially, freedom.
We
that
some
cL
OF NEGROES.
vilization
for
135
his country,
we might
repealed
sell
law,
which authorizes
husband
to
his wife, be a
vilization ?
to these
constitution,
we cannot den)
that
it is
one
security of the
less
individual libeity
under forms
among many
to
whom Long
supposes not
In
are
many
of Africa,
there
is
without whose
peace. i.
Long,
vol. II, p.
t
\
Beaver, p. 328.
Mungo
Park, p.
I2t>,
136
OF THK Ll'iEtATlfRfc
industrious race of Accas,
The
who occupy
ganized republic
When
the king
whom he no
longer received
toll,
and when he
they should aid
lately treated
him in subjugating this people and to stimulate them to this project, he alleged that the people of Acca were not like the
:
This
trait
of African
me by
Brous-
knowledge of politics,
because
it
was
as also in the
government of Kachmi.
When the
chief
dies,,
or potables j the
OF NEGROES,.
fight of
137
chil-
primo-
He who
is
elected
is
conducted by
pronounc-
reminded
that he shall be
happy or miserable,
evil
among
neigh-
bouring tribes.*
self.
The following anecdote naturally presents itThe commandant of a Portuguese fort, who
arrival of the
expected the
envoy of an African
the glare of opulence.
The envoy
he
is
introduced to a richly
ornamented saloon.
ed under a canopy.
not invited to
instantly
sit
The commandant is seatThe negro ambassador was down. He makes a sign, and
two of
on the
seat.
is
floor, the
Thy
king,
commander
to
?
him,
My
'
18
138
OF THE
LITERATURE
one like
me
and he
is
instantly departs.*
Civilization
in se-
speak to a
little
than a
may dine The king of Kakongo is no more barbarian, who uniting all power in his
all
own
person, judges
causes, swallows a
at
cup of
would be
illegal,
processes at a sin-
But
whites were also barbarians. Compare the situation of Russia in the fifteenth century to that of
the present. It
is
now known
St. Pierre.
The
au-
thor of African
Zingha.
He
in the
adds,
when she
arose,
mained
same posture.
Being reminded of
sits
twice on the
same
scat.
t History of Loango,
&c
OF NEGROES.
139
New
is
about six-
length,
and thirty-nine in
seven thouits
Temboo,
:
the
capital, has
sand inhabitants
books
chiefly
on religion
al-
and jurisprudence.
In
empire
According to
:
Mungo
they
are
who
is
un-
slavery is mild.
This
It
became necessary
the present time
we have
till
vol.
I,
p.
p. 136.
Mungo
140
OF THE LITERATURE
these African nations,
With
ciate the
we ought to
asso-
they manners, and the happiness they enjoj have stepped be\ond those bounds which separate the savage
their
meal improvement
try, the zeal
usefully exercised.
thousand souls,
is sit-
The
government
to
patriarchal
name
things he acts
is
communicated
for
by a council of old
men
thority, are,
as
among
the ancients,
words
al-
most synonimous.*
unpleasant
gives the
It
was unfortunate
of which
that
circumstances,
detail,
Barrow
the Barrolons,
more
civilized in civilization,
of slavery,
who were described to him as who have no idea and among whom are found great
different arts flourish.!
I
towns where
forgot
* Voyage a
ing.
f Ibid.
la
Cochinclrine, vol.
I, p.
OF NEGROES.
to mention
141
what we
Gol-
who
sing
airs,
or recite passages
of the Koran.*
The
Maroons, so
organized
objection
a civilized society.
is
anticipated
Besides, can
will
we suppose
ways concealed
marshes
always"
who
are
It will
own hands
but during
efforts
fait
en Afrique, 2
vols, 890.
142
OF THE
LITERATURE
its
results
have
we
cruelty ?
Was
many
generations ? Besides,
if
at St.
them-
of St.
Those
them
state
independence.*
Every thing
that
told of
by
travellers,
announces
their social
if
they
which
During
struggled
century,
they
have
constantly
The
rica,
Ame-
negroes,
whom
Malte-Brun
still
very improper-
De
Finflucnce dc
la
le
bonheufr
p.
OF NEC roe a.
Iy calls
143
curious me-
rebels
and revolters,
in a
to
the authority of
and the other a Portuguese, and which is ed in the translation of Barrow's work.
insert-
Between the years 1620 and 1630, some fugitive negroes, united with some Brasilians, had
formed two
free states, the
little
In 1644, the
And a
known
1650,
commencement.
At
neighbourhood of Fernanbouc,
accustomed
to sufferings
and
to combat, resolv-
Forty of them
laid
the
dable to
all
their neighbours,
144
OF THE LITERATURE
if
we may
so
a
was
a parody
on
Christianity.
They form d
constitution, laws,
chief,
signifies powerful,
for
jife.
elective,
They
on eminen-
tion consisted of
20,000 souls
much poultry.
Barloeus des-
Almost
fifty
as stated
The
latter
having their
Zombi
or chief at their
valor.
head,
performed prodigies of
At
last
overcome by a superior
force,
some sought
to the rage of
others, delivered
up
conquerors,
Thus
was extinguished
revolutionized the
new world
a republic wor-
At
the
At
the
or NEGROES.
'J ;Iose
145
tice
at Sierra- Leone,
of
which we
some account.
From
ed
it
man
a slave.
N<
the
citizen,
published in
He
therein
first
disclosed
slave trade,
bosom of
Africa, by forming
upon the
human
race.
By
Pelletan,
means of changing
19
146
OF THE
LITERATURE
4th.
By WadBut
with Span-man*
it
Dr.
Isert,
at
Aqualetters
pin, on the
but with
its
present situation
am
totally
unacquainted.
This attempt
Cayenne
plan, a
in 1763,
bad
foresight.
lation of this
means of success.
who
questions
Leone.
for the
Leone,
whose
soil is fertile
OF NEGROES.
rate.
14,7
was obtained
of which Jonas
dent,
poor blacks.
Smeatham, who,
He
died in 1786.
He
did not
was a model of
practical
and
to
is
him we
max:
im, which
better than
"
If
would
blest."
own
the
that of others,
human
Thornton had formed the project of transporting emancipated negroes from America to Africa.
5th.
Afzelius,
the la^t of
whom
died in
Africa
the other
is
actually in
Europe.
6th.
in 178S, at his
own expence,
148
0/ THE
LITERATURE
He
and of
legisla-
the colonies.*
To
these respectable
indefa-
ed the
bill for
The
tor its
measures
is
de-
monstrated by Wilberforce, in a
constituents in Yorkshire. t
for ever recall the
letter to his
This abolition
will
public
life.
It
most honourable trait of his would be worthy of him to turn which has been marIreland,
tyred for so
many
ages
towards
where
and abused as
catholics,,
much
boasted of
its
liberty
and
its
tolerance,
A A
letter
W.
OF NEGROES."
\A>9
One
The
embarkation
in
400 negroes.
little
This experiment
it
success until
was aided
and
principles,
The
England.
Many
Leone ;
native
was
sometimes
visited
by the neighbouring
tribes,
The
natives
themselves to those
Nova-Scotia.
Some
of
is far
and intelligence in
agricultural
The
dy new
streets,
garden to each.
Not
far
distant
is
Qrandville*
150
OF THE
LITEEATURE
that estimable
they
counted in
their
300
scholars, of
all
whom 40
were
and almost
ready conception.
writing
They were taught reading, and arithmetic. The girls were besides
in those branches
instructed
their sex,
which belong
to
Most of
the negroes
of
five or six
preachers
The among
negroes exercise
civil
functions, and
by jury
is
esta-
nor, by his
own
punishments to be
clared that they
their peers.
must be judged by
correct,
They
OF NEGROES.
151
vaged
there enjoy
all
the ad-
vantages of a social
These
facts are
ex-
company
tion
at Sierra-Leone, f
was presented
to
me
berforce.
Jamaica,
to the faith
made with
general
Walpole, and
This
fact
In January
180G, I read a
memoir
at
was the
result of error.
He
believed that
it
was a mer-
in the
Decade
Philosojihique^
di-
rection of the
152
OF THE LITERATURE
things otherwise equal, the
find least
countries where
try, are those
we
to indolence
gratified in the
It
abundance of consumeablc
also
commodities.
be confined to
poli-
or
civil,
cles
between the
:
But who would not smile at the gravity with which Barre St. Venant assures us, " that
tudes
the negroes, incapable of advancing a single step
towards civilization,
ries, that
shall
be
after
20,000 centu-
20,000 thousand
human
Accumulated
planter, so well
who
be
so prothe
what they
will
after
Long
a state
of
the
there
had
been destined
part,
purpose, a
hundrcth
of the
of the
money and
OF NEGROES*
time, which have been employed in
flesh,
153
tearing the
vengeance against
20
155
CHAPTER
VI.
Literature of Negroes.
WlLBERFORCE, in
members of
conjunction with
many
them a
placed
kind of college
at
Clapham, which
is
about four
first
The
I
young negroes,
sdnt
by
vibited this
establishment
in
1st, at Paris, in
156
OF THE
LITERATURE
number of negro
examined
children.
Many members
of
who
the scholars in
their particular
will give
the circumstances of
in
classes,
a true republi-
who
3rd.
The same
fact has
been established
at
400 negro
children,
who
are educated
their
owing
effaced, they
Sound reason
Free Ma-
disgraceful to the
to the
whites only,
and particularly so
who
fraternize
among them*
but
who
His
OF NEGROES.
African lodge.
157
nours when
ington,
it
at the
ceremony
for
Wash-
Among
the
number of
authofs,
who
believe
ceptible of the
I forgot to cite Ramsay,* Hawker, f and Beckford.J The honest Wadstrom pretendwhites.
ed, that in this respect, the blacks have a superiority ;
is
Clenard counted
negroes than whites
at
;
Lisbon, more
Moors and
Academy
at
Sermon,
4to. in 1789.
Remarks upon
Varietes
and 88.
156
ers,
OF THE
LITERATURE
at
and professors
and
Lisbon,
Rio-Janei-
ro,
In
1717, the
lan-
Don
guage
at Seville.
He
117.*
The
which Clenard
speaks,
and
oppression
besides,
for
he himself acknowledges
'*
their capacity
improvement.
in
instruct,
says he,
|
my
negro slaves
;
literature,
at
and
in
manumitting them
day, like Crassus,
I shall
have
some
future
my
my
Tyro
me
in
in
Gui-
and penetrating
and
delicacy.:}:
taste,
* Fact communicated by
t
\
Mr. Lasteyrie.
fran-
Ibid. p. 88.
Durand,
p. 58.
chise, 2 vol.
p.
3.
de 1'Abyssinie.
OF NEGROES.
tees and answers
truly philosophical
159
made by
Bryan
his
blacks.
Such
:
is
Edwards
master,
ter
a slave
said,
who
calls
nho
thee f
his
eyes, and
immediately
them,
saying,
With
it is
well
known
in
the Levant.
Michaud, the
in differ-
elder, told
me
Michaud had purchased at Philadelphia, and brought into France, a young negro from the interior of Africa, at an age when his memory had already acquired some geographical
ideas of the country where he
was born.
This
education,
it
was
finished, to
send him
plain regions
died on
sold.
Michaud made
160
OF THE
LITERATURE
the negroes sometimes aroffices.
most eminent
Different wri-
who,
him as possessing
Adanson, astonished
and
them, believes
become good
On
groes
interpreters.^
tentive
Villaut, and
by other
Stedman knew
Job Ben
a negro,
Alcoran.
told of
moeurs,dc
M.
B. Londres, 1769, p.
Voyage au Senegal,
Clarkson, p. 125.
Prevot, vol.
p. 149.
4
\
IV, p.
l!>,
6b negroes.
161
Solomon taken
in
in 1730,
was
Maryland.
A
may
Eng
where
amenity of charac-
and
talents,
among
others,
Hans
whom
he trans-
lated several
Arabic manuscripts.
After being
received
One
of
the
He
in
Europe, and
new
rused with
At
became
states.*
his successor,
The
who came
to
England
had learnt
different sciences
Le More-lack, par
p.
1c Cpinte-Marsjllac,
8?o. Pari*,
r?89,
xv,
ax
162
OF THE LITEKATURE
Hebrew
as to be able
in the original.
This young
time
Ramsa}-,
who
rival
our mo-
dern Garricks.
naturally eloquent.
Madeasin
his
may be
Stedman, who thinks them capable of great Improvement, and who praises more particularly
their poetical
and musical
talents,
enumerates
their
which famous
amounts
theless,
number
;| and, never-
we do not
find in tire
list,
the
Voyage
Madagascar
ct
Stedman,
c.
xw'h
OF NEGROES.
%
luw
T
balafoii,*
by the negroes, on which they play airs, which inspire a sweet and sentimental melancholy,
the
music of
happy.
afflicted
hearts.
The
passion of
This
is
observed by Benjamin
Rush,
in
negroes the
When, on
the
first
the most distinguishing characters of the negroes, is their invincible taste for music, he ac-
knowledged the
fact,
But
is
not
its
companion
if
The Sugar-Cane,
poem
vol.
in four books,
by Jame*
American Museum,
IV,
p. 82.
164
OF THE
LITERATURE
by experience that men which they were aliured
proof of talent ?
It is
succeed in studies to
by
Who
can say
art,
how
the
far
the negroes
may
excel in this
when
in their reach ?
have their
Glucks and
an
air
Piccinis.
Camp
de
Grand Pre,
Domingo.
Germany, her
in-
Singer,
and
Negroes have
theirs,
named
Griots,
who
lie
others, praise
and
with wit.
Their women,
named
as the
India.
Almees
in
of resemblance
But
these Trouveres,
in- Sin-
Malherbe,
Corneille,
Shakespeare,
In
all
genius
flint,
is
bosom of a
of the steek
which bursts
Of NEGROES.
In the 16th century, appeared Louisa
1C5
Labbe
Adam,
a simple
workman
in Holland.
Beronicius,
same
poetic
phenomenon of a
mind
the nicest
place in
Parnassus,
first.
though
The
fa-
with laurels.f
and his
poem
in
two books,
entitled
166
F THE LITERATURE
servant
of"
A
cited
by
his
romances.*
at
Maidstone, and
Anne
maid of
of poets.
The
subject of the
overcome
their situation,
of mind.
thors.
of au-
In
1787,
three
volumes on the
individuals
Turks,! many
learned person
who doubted whether there was one among them, were surprised to
*
t
La Prusse
by de
la
litterairc,
Tales and Rural Songs, by Robert Bloomfield, transVaissc, 8vo. Paris, 1N02.
lated
F NEGROES.
167
pub-
Hnd
Kc
libraries.
less in France,
when works
composed
by-
Among
the latter, I
who
edi-
tions of poetry.
who announces
;
himself as belonging to
St.
Domingo.
to,
Raymond,
likewise a mulatclass of
was
moral
and
of legisla-
tion.
Without being
Raymond, we may
has published
praise
and
free negroes.
He
many
may
serve as an
by the co-
ought not
to
M.
C. Sang-mele, 8vo.
Especially a
work
entitled,
Origine
tie's
troubles de
t6&
or THE
LITERATURE
at
America.
have
la:
my
me
any comfort
remain-
my
For her
is
and
for
mvself
the
The
Museum,
art,
have
but
and therefore
I
more
fit
to
move
could also
make mention
Carolina,
of the negro
Cesar, of North-
become popular,
like those of
Bloomfield.
The number
shewn more
patriots.
of negro writers
is
greater than
that of mulattoes,
zeal to
avenge
their African
comarti-
We
of this in the
cles Othello,
Whcatlev.
cated to
Blumcnbach
the
oblisfmsrlv
communiresearches-
me
works of two
or three negroes,
which
My
OF NEGROES.
have made
169
some of
entitle
me whom
them
to a place in history.
In this
num-
ber
we
find only
hair.
who
published
Fables,*
at,
an edition of Logman's
be-
from the
interior of Africa,
to
a keeper of flocks in
PalesA<s-ax.s,
The
is
which
word Al&f^,
might be Log-
man
the
himself.f
this
We
do not
is
what proof
Fables
relate to
assertion
corroborated
17th
of
attributed
to him, the
and
23d
negroes
gro ? This
is
doubtful.
might have
the Ethio^
my
list
all
* Fables cle
t
Logman,
La
1,
22
170
The works
of Lu-
me
I
per to
times,
slavery,
one concerning
whom
ad
Moenum.
La Haye.
171. )
CHAPTER
VII.
Of
and
their works.
SONNERAT
clair-obscure,
finish to their
painters
although,
they
give a
perfect
works.
Nevertheless Higiemon?ie-
de,
or
although, his
art,
than of na-
Such
is
by Joachim de
Sandrart, in his
work
entitled
Academia nobillis*
them very
cele-
He
calls
* Joacliim
.orioe, in fol.
artis pic-
15, p. 34.
172
brated
O* THE
clarissimus.
at
LITERATURE
Without mentioning
the
in
epoch
which he
nigrum,
would be
insufficient
Higiemonde was
a negro.
How
name
of black.
Higiemonde, engraved by
and
,
and
viz.
inserted in the
hib
German
treati-
in three
volumes, folio
d'Academia
rede sea
Architectural
But
wok
find nothing
concerning Higiemonde.
ly to
men.
We
have seen
is
at
Paris,
first
Calmuck,
the
painter of the
At Rome,
to slaves.
was interdicted
h) Pliny the El-
This
the reason
v\
* In 3 vols.
fol.
Nuremberg, 1675,
is
copy
as the first.
t
17, et
memoires de L'Academic
des Inscription^
3j, p. 345.
OF NEGROES.
der says, that he
individual
is
173
who
is
or in torentique.
HANNIBAL.
The
rican
tion
;
first,
during his
travels,
who had
Russia,
tillery.
He
La Harpe, knew
mulatto,
who had
It
In 1784, he
artillery.
corps of
menced
at
AMO.
Antony
princess
in
Guinea, was
Wolfenbuttle,
took
174
OF
THE LITERATURE
He embraced
the
Lu-
Saxony, and
at
ed
of
also
tors,
was an African
that
many
martyrs, doc-
again
A mo,
skilled in the
praised in the
lished
it is
same
letter.
In a syllabus, pub-
that
quam novorum
placitis, opti-
ma
talus est.
OF NEGROES*
175
Amo became
ed a Thesis
dissertation
soul,
at
a doctor.
In 1744, he support-
and
their presence in
human body.*
This
proves,
he
is
named
may
colour in the
human
many
others
who
He
declares that
Amo
underwent no change,
because
cates a
it
mind exercised
a stone
* Dissertatio
inauguralis philosophies
de humanae
mentis
An A0EIA.
humana
autor,
sue sensionis ac
facilitates sentiendi in
mente
absentia et
earum
in
corpore nostro
quam
G. Amo, Guinea-afer.
etc.
Philosophice,
C. magister,
1734, 4to.
:
Wittenbergoe
At
Con*
The
letters of
176
OF THE
LITERATURE
life.
exists,
hut
it
is
without
It
appears that
for
ab-
for
same
prove,
that
the
first,
was
The
blacks, if
we
If
it
of these
Cairer.
his
isles,
work
composed of good
materials,
and
is
ac-
organico,
quam
consentiente amplissimorum
sophorum
ordine, praeside
M.
Ant. Guil.
Amo, Guinea
V,
Theod. Muiner,
Philos. et J.
OF NEGROES.
knowledged
frizzled hair,
177
blacks with
still
as
correct.
Many
enamoured of freedom,
given their
inhaisles.
isle
name
to the
of
is
made up of
Chinese,
general colour
upon
art to
when it is not suffiwomen, who in all countries assist nature, and who arrive at
different
the
same end by
Among
larly
the
varieties
distinguished,
who resemble
Malays
in stature, colour,
and language.
If this obsershall
whom we
give
some account, it may be doubted whether he was black. I must acknowledge my own uncertainty
on
this
subject.
Ta-
traduit
de L'ltelien dc
Gcmelli Carreri, in
mo.
V, p.
64, and
aho. L'Encyclopedie
23
178
gal
OF THE LITEUATURE
language
at the
He
cites a
Tagal
is
dictionary
made by
a Cordelier.*
There
A third
was published
at
Vienna,
in
1803.f
little
known.
posed
from Europe,
globe, where
numerous
clergy.
We have
much
es-
a Jesuit,
la
engraved
by Nicholas de
It
is this
Indian
Tagal.
we
the arts
of design.
The productions
of Bagay
may be
Ueber
ters, See.
OF NEGROES,
presented
as a
179
This
map
berg.
by
Nurem-
would be ungrateful
if
terminated
this article
who
me
these
V ISLET
artillery,
GEOFFROY.
a mulatto, is an officer of
L'Tslet Geoffroy,
The
twenty-third
named correspondent
academy of
in the
sciences.
He
is
acknow-
ledged as such
ed society,
to
whom
The
class of
physical
insti-
thought
it
their
By what
fatality
is
it
it
that
Lislet
owing
to his co-
ISO
OF THE LITERATURE
be an outrage against
tainly Lislet,
my
colleagues.
Cer*
years
during
new
Isles of
operations of
in
La
Caille,
1797, year
new
by
it is
was published
map
Isle of
France, which I
among
others the
description
of Pitrebot,
isle.
one of
fact
the
highest
mountains of the
cated to
This
was communi-
me
who
has
become
the Legatee,
will doubtless
OF NEGROES.
moirs,
181
We
find
Bay of
Coast.
St.
it is
He
comand
presents,
which would
an advantageous commerce.
The
They
this
description
discover a
man versed
geonever
and yet
man
improve
his taste
and ac-
quire knowledge.
He
learned, he
and
Some
182
OF THE LITERATURE
at the Isle
of
merely because
its
Have
JAMES DERHAM.
James Derh am,
phia,
cian,
was transferred by
a subaltern employment, as
a preparer of drugs.
During
the
American war,
and
to doctor
Robert Dove, of
Newre-
baptiz-
in
facility,
English,
New*Orleans.
"
con-
thought
could
the treatment
OF NEGROES.
of diseases, but
T
185
learned
The
Pennsylvania so-
thought
facts,
their duty,
in
which are
also related
rat-
snake.
know
not whether
Derham was
who
receiv-
it is
we
who
also decreed
him an annuity of
100/. sterling.
THOMAS FULLER.
Thomas Fuller, born in Africa, and residing
at the distance of four miles
from Alexandria,
in
*P.
t
184.
Buchan.
vol. Ill,
p. 518.
\
vol. 8vo.
184
OF THE LITERATURE
Virginia, not
or write, ex-
which he per-
difficult calculations.
Of
the
methods employed
the proof,
we
One day he
was asked,
of time have
days? In
question.
One
deceived
that the
number he men^
replied the negro,
forgotten,
great.
No,
on your
side, for
you have
is
His answer
found
to
be cor-
We
Europe
voyage
His
letter is
found
fifth
in the
volume of the
ed negroes of Surinam,
See.
by
capt. J.
c.
G. Stedman,
In
work,
and following.
is
forgotten'
absurd.
OF NEGROES.
185
several
years old.
Thomas Fuller was then seventyBrissot, who had known him in Virsame testimony of
the
his talents. -j-
memory performed
tions,
most
difficult
calcula-
and
for the
OTHELLO.
In 1788, Othello published European powers,
they
(said he,)
at
Baltimore,
an,
u The
ought to unite in
:
tion.
giers,
commerce of slaves it who have covered Africa with desolaThey declaim against the people of Aland they vilify, as barbarians, those who
American Museum,
Clarkson, p, 125.
vol.
V,
p. 2.
t Brissot. $
Ses voyages,
vol. II, p. 2 ;
24
136
Of THE LITERATURE
where ferocious Europeans go to buy and carry away men, for the purpose of torture and these
;
who
your conduct,
When you
dare to
talk of civilization
of power produces nothing but a superiority of brutality and barbarism. Weakness, which calls
for protection, appears to
manity.
Your
fine political
by the outrages committed against human nature and the divine majesty.
When America
rights.
men have
the
same
hatred
her principles ?
We
who
have
lately
ing to read.
To whom
these unfortu-
The law
either
OF NEGROES.
Othello paints in
187
a d sighs of children,
bands,
and hus-
them
heart,
birth
impressions.
them
is it,
that
one of
is
to
America
the evils of
life
ac-
He
may
may
can
be propitious to be compared
Few works
;
reasoning, and
of eloquence
when opposed by
BANNAKER,
Benjamin Bannaker,
a negro of
Maryany
18S
OF THE LITERATURE
He
published
in
al-
manacs
8vo.
at Philadelphia, in
hibited the different aspects of the planets, a table of the motions of the sun and
risings
moon,
their
and
settings,
Bannaker has
re-
New-
astronomy,
does not
it
ephemerides.
If
it
He
If
it
be Bannaker,
is
ano-
be some
is
groes.
CUGOANO.
Ottobah Cugoano,
was dragged from
bers,
his
who
OF NEGROES.
threatened to
cape.
kill
189
them
if
They
confined them
I
my
fellow-prisoners.
He was
a slave
liberty, to
the generosity of
to
England.
He was
Piatoli,
of Cos^av, the
first
Wales.
at the
request
Piatoli,
ofDalemwho, durparticularly
forty years
London, was
ith
of those unfortunates,
who
are cor-
Africans,
who
190
OF THE
LITERATURE
soil to
fathers,
;
thers
and children
each
from
all
At Grenada, he had
He
Of many
of the
:
contained
in the
registers
when
in distress,
his sick
iping.
He
hoped
company
<jf
negroes.
for his loss
;
li
and
in the
process to which this crime gave birth, he observed, that " the negroes cannot be considered
in any other light than as beasts of burden, to lighten a vessel
it is
and
board the
Some
who
tied them,
and precipisav-
One was
was thrown
vessel.
to
him by
The barbarous
but, whether
him
as his pro-
perty
owing
to justice, or to a
sense of shame,
mand.*
Most
authors,
this
com-
abroad the
spirit
and
in a state
and
this
192
OF THE LITERATURE
who
published his
the
French
His work
repetitions,
is
There arc
because grief
verbose.
An
indi-
is
having said
understood.
tion,
enough of
We
see
and
to
man
wear a black or
whose
state
work of
and
colonists, for in
of freedom,
profiting
that is
imperscriptible
OF NEGROES.
193
the seas to
like
white
men
if their
that of other
European
quarters have
They complain of
epithets be-
horribly barbarous.
Those odious
long to them.
rica, says
The European
factories in
Af-
thieves
and murderers.
their liberty, is
To
steal
men,
to rob
them of
them of
their goods.
is called civilized,
and
if
the
exempt from
trial,
On
national crimes
heaven sometimes
Besides, injustice
authors.
inflicts national
is
punishments.
sooner or
is
conformable to the
author.
He
in the
will particularly
which,
25
194
It
is
OF THE
said that in
all
LITERATURE
all
slaves, but in
and
w retches.
last,
worse than
not steal
sell
among
the
men
to enslave
them without
their consent,
fine
it
on the head of fugitives. In Deuteronomy, is formally said, " Thou shalt not deliver up
At
a right to freedom.
among
the
ry vassalage.
From
is
evident
which
his
that celestial
morality, that
commands
which we wish he would do to us. I could wish, says he, for the honour of Christianity,
OF NEGROES.
that the odious art of stealing
195
known
to
Pagans,*
;
He
ought to say,
honour of christians
for their
crimes attach no
more blame
of judges to justice.
Then
his
arguments are
The
ciety,
clergy,
by
mes-
expose
its
errors,
wicked
to truth
and virtue
if their
fall
conduct be
do
and
not
know
it,
He might have added, that adulation and baseness, are vices concerning
St.
to
The-
odorus of Basil,
at
Valens
The English
is
nap
its
derivations.
196
OF THE LITERATURE
is,
that
tion of
perhaps shewed a
how could he
be-
book
which
is
He
this error
to his heart, is to
them another
CAPITEIN.
Jamf.s
was bought
trader,
on
who made
a present of
him
to
one of his
OF NEGROES.
friends.
397
structed,
land,
The
Country.
He
menced
his
studies at the
Hague.
who,
lady,
much
oc-
him the Latin, the elements of the Greek, Hebrew and Chaldaen tongues. From the Hague
he went to the university of Leyden, and found
every where zealous protectors.
He
devoted
Having studied
In
thority of
at
that Capitein,
31.
August,
198
OF THE LITERATURE
Christianity and
his
country.
me, by
at
Amsterdam, the
He
who
and
whose engraved
on
his return to
circulated through;
that
was spread concerning the immorality of his conduct it is asserted, says he, that he was not
:
far
If the
;
first ar-
ticle
probable
as, like
so
many
that he
But are
his reat-
De Voss
himself
to
* Letter of
Mr. de Vos
to
Mr. Gregoire,
27, 1801.
OF NEGROES.
itein,
199
whose
portrait
ed
in his
work on
human
fi-
gure.*
work of Capitein is an elegy in Latin verse, on the death of Manger, minister at the Hague, his preceptor and his friend It is
first
The
as follows.-
Hac autem
in
Eram
Virum
Interea tempore
obitum (cum
deum
smgularis
Fatis.
Cum Ecclesior
Elegiam
Letter of
Mr, Blumenbacb
to
Mr. Gregoire.
:200
OF THE LIlERATl/Rg
ELEGIA.
Ixyida mors lotum
Et
gestit
orbem
quemvis succubuisse
Ilia,
Imperiique
manu ponere
sceptra jubet.
:
Non
sinit ilia
Linquere sed
omnes,
ilia sibi.
simul.
Hie
fuit ilia
Limiua Mangeri
Hujus ut ante
domum
Ilunc lacrymis
Dum
Non
Naomi, cum
le viduata marito,
Profudit
gemebunda
mariti,
;
decus immortale
Non cquidem
Sc<] quaties
invideo, consors,
ocyor aura*
mando
placid se
mea membra
quieti,
PF NEGROES*
Sive dies veniat,
201
tui.
Te thalamus
En
Te propter,
Quod
Dant lacrymas
Dentibus ut misere
Aeraque horrendis,
Dum
tuum.
vatum
et
mea
gloria cessat,
piae
!
amorque
fonte rigatum
Fonte
meam possum
I
quo relevare
sitim
Hei mihi
quam
mihi melle
frui.
202
OF THE LITERATURE
of the
Gentiles,*
divided
into three
He
all
manner, he proposes,
ith the
whom
known and
;
among
would gain
their affections,
The
slaves.
Spaniards, and
still
more
the Portuguese,
conduct towards
religion
Amongst them
the christian
inspires a paternal
character,
They
ru.ve
not es-
tablished
and they
do not disdain
freedom.
De
vocations Ethnicorum.
OF NEGROES.
203
In other colonies
it
of
men
all
mon
men,
stock
is
all
participating
of
creation,
their
number
it is
Of
er,
Roustan,
Ryan, translated
in
French by
Boulard.
Turgot,
an excellent discourse,
me, and which he proposes to publish, entitled, Political tyranny and slavery, are an outrage
against Christianity.
great
The low
adulation of a
introduce other
priests,
could not
those in opposi-
tion to religion.
The Butch
planters,
is
persuaded
that
the
Christian religion
spirit
of Christianity, a
sermon preached
8vo. 1738.
at
He
affirms,
were
the
first
204
but
OF THE
LITERATURE
stifiing the
stigated Capitein to
become
the apologist of a
bad cause.
to believe,
by the support of
slavery,
we
This scandalous assertion has been revived in America within a few years. A minister, named John Beck, in 1801, dared to preach and
print
to
two sermons
to justify slavery. f
Thanks
the
name
of
The
difficulty of his
christians non
contraria,
quam
sub praeside
J. J.
Van den
Capitein,
T.
The
God
nati of Connecticut,
1804, at the
8vo. Bostpn.
by
1).
Humphrey,
OF NEGROES.
205 you
larly in
be slaves to no person.*
He
made with
become
Romans.
gladiators,, and
the custom
among
He
cites,
and
particularly
From
all
quarters
we hear
the formalities of
;
which
lawfulness of slavery.
This
is evi-
He takes
* l.Cor.
vii.
fieri
servi
hominum.
t P. 27.
4 S. Gregory, de HySse.
ii06
OF THE LITERATURE
had continued, we would not
many crimes committed, nor so many scaffolds erected for individuals who have nothsee so
and of
Busbec
is
nothing
This Latin
lated into
portrait
All that
we can
from
the so-
phisims of
whom
his
countrymen
is,
that a people
under an
to
ought
to
be resigned
their
unhappy
lot,
when they
* Epislola turcica,
161.
t
p.
160,
dc
1742,
OF NEGROES.
Capitein also published a small
4tc>.
207
volume
in
Sermons
in
the
Dutch Language,
and printed
at
preached in
different
in
towns,
Amsterdam,
the
memoirs of
judgment
Academy
of Flushing, has
in
praising thp
*
work of Capi*
tein.f
FRANCIS WILLIAMS.
The information concerning
has
this
negro poet,
been
taken
partly
not be suspected of
apostel der
vit. II.
Timotheus,
Muider-
spit
sprenken VIII,
v. 18,
twee predicatien
in
J.E
dam.
t
t. I.
J.
George,
_
4to. te
Amster*
208
OF THE LITERATURE
negroes
itself
partiality to
them shews
was born
in Jamaica,
For he
774.
in
young negro,
nor of the
the
isle,
proposed to
whether by an
to a
menced his
university of Cambridge,
mathematics.
During
his
a Song, which
much
in
vogue
in
Engsee
individuals,
irritated to
such merit
in a black, attempted,
it
but without
success, to claim
as their
own,
OP IfEGROES.
209
duke of Montaigne,
tried
him
in
opened a school,
mathematics.
cessor, a
in
He was
Long
came deranged.
monstrative proof that African heads are incapable of abstruse researches, such as problems in
high geometry
a particular fact
would
men
letters,
than
among
capable of
profound meditation.
But Long
knowledge
in Francis
Williams a
talent for
ma-
much
justice have-
drawn a conclusion
directly contrary.
The
Williams had no
that be
27
210
OF THE LITERATURE
He
He described
thief.
himself to be a white
for
man
he despised
men
shew
me
a negro,
and
shew you a
He
was
also of
op inion
that a
may be
t v ue,
but
we
must
recollect that
it
friendly hand.
It appears that
He
composition, and he was in the habit of presenting addresses of this kind to the
vernor.
serted in
severely.
new
is
it
goin-
to
Holdane
criticises
too
Long
indulges in low
new personage
ters,
and he
calls
her
madam
JEthiopissa*
He
not in
OF NEGROES,
poets of antiquity, and also in dictionaries,
211
it is
words.
He
reproaches
him
for
comparing
he-
roes of antiquity
ed.
foundpoets.
Unfortunately
applies to almost
all
flattered
men
Rome
to
is
such a
become classical among the English themselves, if we except Akenside, Pope, and some other poets,
name of Mecenas
all
Wallers ?
dignant against
the
colonists for
comparing
never
exclaimed
/ have
ode.*
"
Among
we
do not
find, (says
literary
from the Rev- Robert Bouche Nickolls, Dean of Middle.ham, 8vo. London, 1788, p. 46.
212
That
OF THE LITERATURE
the reader
appreciate
Latin proarid
one
in
an
Long thought
his
duty to execute,
not-
Cui, omnes,
morum, virtutumque
acccsserunt.*
dotes bellicarum,
In
cumulum
CARMEN.
Denique venlurum
fatis
volventibus annum,f
lseta
videnda diem,
The
cient and
modern
state of that
Island,
&c. in three
Vo-
E. 4 52.
to imavo.
OF NEGROES.'
*Tc
duce,f quae fuerant malesuada
213
mente peracta
Irrita
Haesurum
collo
te^:
relegasse
jugum,
cruciatibus, insons
Et mala, quze
Insula passa
diris
;
quondam
fuit
condoluisset onus,
inclyta, nostris
Ni
vixtrix tua
velit.
Optimus
Dum
ruinam
dum
* Te dnce,
Irrita,
si
f Alluding perhaps to the contest, about removing the seat of government and public Qffices from S/mnish Town
Hor. B.
||
ode
2.
Britain*
%
B.
ruinam. Lucan,
28.
more than
ante-
dress
214
OF THE LITERATURE
te Guadaloufia, suorura
Victorem agnoscet
Aurea
Crede,
Cumque
Denegat
gemet.
meum
non
est, vir
ducum.
parem,
Carmine
Ille poeta,
decus
Vivimus
eloquium
deficit
omne
focis.
Hoc demum
Ore
sonaturo
fusum
valet.
Pollenti stabilita
Omnigenis animam,
prohibente dedit.
;
honest
in arte color.
Cur
1.
ode
12.
Phabus volentem
prcelia
me
art
.
Hor. de
poet.
~
altisoni,
OF NEGROES.
Cessans occiduU scandere*
215
?t
Musa domum
JVade
saiutatum, nee
sit tibi
causa pudoris,
!
ornatj et ardor
* This
is
fietitio
firincifiii,
or begging the
question?
unless with
Mr. Pope,
is,
and
God
the soul
Far
as Creation's
The
scale of sensual
a black
muse
to the
Pierian
hoir;
name upon
title
we may
of Ethiopissa.
litterra.
ovid.
Maurus,
is
a negro.
fl
Mollis in ore
decorinceit.
216
Eximit
t Insula
OF THE LITEKATUKE
e sociis, conspicuumque
facit,
me
Insula, te salvo
Hoc
FRANCISCUS WILLIAMS.
The same
translated.
TO
GEORGE HOLDANE,
GOVERNOR OF THE
all
ISLAND OF
UPON WHOM
ESQ.
JAMAICA
:
are
AN
AT lengih
Advance, and joy the
ODE.
long day shall cheer
;
Beneath the
dawn
Me
secemunt populo:
t
\
Hor.
lib.
ode
Mantua me genuit, calabri rapuere. Virg. Hie ames dici jiatcr atque principi. Hor.
calum rcdeds, duigue Lcctus
intersis ftojiitta.
Serus in
Hor.
OF NEGROES.
217
New
With
Rash
Each
hour began,
;
At your approach, are in confusion fled Nor while you rule, shall raise their dastard
Alike the master and the slave shall see
head.
Their neck
Till
reliev'd, the
now, our
Had wept, and groan'd beneath the oppressive weight Of cruel woes, save thy victorious hand, Long form'd in war, from Gallia's hostile land And wreaths of fresh renown, with generous zeal Had freely turn'd, to prop our sinking weal.
:
-Form'd
crown
;
While
Oh
falling people,
isle
age, thy
fame
never sleep.
shall
victor,
Guadaloupe
own,
bemoan
View
their
proud tents
all
And while she grieves, confess the cause was just. The golden iris the sad scene will share, And mourn her banners scatter'din the air
*
viz.
lar
Lawn
is
it
by Johnson^
218
OF THE LITEttATURE
Lament her vanquish'd troops with many a sigh? Nor less to see her towns in ruins lie. Favorite of Mars ! believe the attempt were vain,
It is not
!
mine
to try the
arduous
strain.
What shall an ^Ethiop touch the martial string Of battles, leaders, great achievements sing Ah no Minerva, with the indignant nine,
!
To
arms
And
That
ornament and
pride,
:
with
Mars might
We live, alas
fires,
eloquence expires.
to accept this
Yet
humble song,
falt'ring
tongue
tribute flows.
it
Not from
rose.
To all
of
human
common
'stablish'd
Nor
prudence are
To
colour,
OF NEGROES.
219
To science none belongs, and none to art Oh muse of blackest tint, why shrinks thy
!
breast,
I
The regal dome, and hail him for thy friend Nor blush, altho' in garb funereal drest
Thy
body's white, tho* clad in sable vest.
unsullied, and the radiant
Manners
glow
;
Of And
know
A heart with wisdom fraught, a patriot flame, A love of virtuethese shall his name
lift
drew my breath
And
Britain nurs'd
isle,
This my lov'd
shall grieve
Then this my
prayer "
common friend, our father live. May earth and heaven * urvey
thy sway."
FRANCIS WILLIAMS.
VASSA.
Olandad
name of Gustavus Vassa, was born in 1746, This is the name of a beautiful and at Essaka.
charming
valley, far distant
capital of Benin, of
which
is
considered as
220
forming a
OF THE LITERATURE
although
part,
its
government
is al-
which
his father
was one.
At
from
to
was carried
off
with
torn
his sister,
when
children,
by
robbers,
whom
they
owed
their existence.
The
barba-
rians
mingling
For-
Guinea
vessel,
he accompa-
bourg,
1758,
in
and
to the
in
new
irons.
sometimes
free,
sometimes a
slave, or domestic,
made
and
several voyages to
most of the
Antilles,
American
continent*
He
OF NEGROES.
'221
Spain, Portugal,
land.
felt in
Italy,
Turkey,
his
and Greenfirst
The
infancy,
tormented
mind, and
this
He had
vain-
advantage
another
rice
it
was
motive
closer.
With men devoured by an insatiable thirst for gold, he saw that he must have recourse to other means. Then commencing the most
rigid
economy, with three pence he began a small trade which gave him a tolerable profit,
notwithstanding the
injuries
he
sustained
by
times
the
cruelty
one of whom,
;
at
after
30
life,
Vassa,
222
OF THE LITERATURE
new
edition in
1794.
proven by the
that he
was the
This precaution
is
necessary for a
class of individuals
who
The work
His manner
is
man
of nature.
that
:
Robinson Crusoe
mits,
it
that of Jameira
Duval,
to
her-
first,
and
publi-
We
share the
feelings
at the
of surprise which
Vassa experienced
shock of an earth-
The
9th
life
,
of Olando Equi-
written by him-
edit. 8vo.
Author.
OF NEGROES.
225
those instruments.
To him
charm ; for in this saw the means of one day escaping from he He made an agreement with the capslavery.
tain
of a vessel to
give
him
lessons,
which
weie often
Docseaafter-
whom
Some
time
to an expedition, the
moment of
distress,
he employed
the process of the Doctor, and furnished a potable water to the crew.
his
country
when
and a good
memory preserved
lections.
him a rich
store of recol-
We read
has been
is
of her bounties.
Agriculture
inhabitants,
who
224
OF THE
LITERATURE
Music
and Dancing.
Vassa
of Benin
glasses
;
recollects
of poisons.
He
tions
trasts
and habits of
his country,
which he con*
the Greeks,
:
travelled.
at
Thus he
finds
among
Smyrna, the dances common at Benin he between the customs discovers a resemblance
of Jews, and those of his fellow countrymen,
among whom
ted.
circumcision
is
generally admitis
To
there consider-
women
as the
are
accustomed
brews.
to the
same ablutions
He-
The
effect
of adversity often
is
to give
more
aban-
Man
doned by
his fellow
Such was
Vassa
OF NEGROES.
225
Like Pluchc,
with
evils
penetrated
of
life,
towards a
new
all
shall cease y
where
be wiped
away.
A
all
long time
uncertain
concerning
his
number of
the
individuals
whose actions
principles
;
who blaspheme
name of
that
God, of
adorers.
whom
For example, he
He
sees
some
a
how
man
by
the doctrine.
uncertainty,
he was baptized
English
as missionary to
Taught by
adversity,
Vassa became
29
226
OF THE LITERATURE
more
propri-
maxim
of Terence.
He
who
are
treated
in the
same man-
He
whom
been transgressed.
He
posed to
the punishments
which cupidity
contrasts
their
He
which
He
proposes a plan
of
commerce
at least
which
Vassa
still
which was
his heart
to
lately
would be consoling to
That individual
is
and his
be pitied, who,
not
feel for
and esteem.
is
also
secretary to the
OF NEGROES.
227
committee
ed
for Vaccination.
I shall terminate,
poem
containing 112
in
verses,
which he
composed
arising
from a choice of a
SANCHO.
The mother
a
of Ignatius Sancho, thrown into
vessel on the coast of Guinea,
employed
in
Arrived
at
Cartha-
nam-
soon confather,
mo-
ment of
his
own hand.
when he England by his master, who of him to three young ladies,
Greenwich.
was carried
to
made
a present
sisters, residing at
His character,
that of the
to resemble
Don
228
OF THE
LITERATURE
Sancho was far
him
this
name.
Thejyoung
who
Duke
Heath.
of Montague,
resided at Black-
This gentleman
admired
in
him
ser-
He
him
to him, lent
is
promoted, and he
emancipate negroes.
The
was
love of
increas-
his heart,
He
harboured a
young
female, which
drew
He
But
(it
the
Duke,
all
was no more.
San-
was
pistol,
had done.
at first receiv-
ed him mained
coldly, but
He
re-
OF NEGROES.
229
roness.
By
this
him by
70 pounds
sterling,
and
thirty of an annuity.
With
sometimes
conse-
of
women, and
in
He
renounced
cards
all
his clothes.
He
He
in Othello
which he considered
versity.
He
engaged
the service
of the
chaplain
West
Indies.
been plunged
him
the
his
By
a
own and
numerous
family.
The
230
OF THE LITERATURE
He
died the
15th of December,
fiae edition
1780.
volumes 8vo. which were well received by the public, and of which there was a second edition
in 1783, with the
trait,
life
Gainsborough.
Some
in
articles
are
inserted,
Jefferson reproaches
him
for yielding
too
much
to
his
imagination,
is like
whose excentric
He never-
Imlay declares that he has not had an opportunity of reading them, but observes, that the error
* Letters of the
late Ignatius
Sancho, an African,
his
life.
2 toI. 8vo
+ Imlay, p. 315.
OF NEGROES.
231
is
seldom susceptible of
anal) sis,
whether
it
it
be
owing
ing
embraces, or
in
to the liberty
groupof exa-
same
letter,
We
of
madam
tempted
to analyse
them.
We
certainly cannot
to her,
except in
vigne
are
is
so distinguished
but
The
after
her there
still
honorable places.
epistolary style
third
volume of the
fine
letters
of Sterne contain a
in
very
tells
which ho
hu-
him
man
species
consanguinity
and he expresses
his
indigna-
men wish
to class a portion of
may
Lawrence Sterne,
to bis^ intimate
London, 1775-
232
OF THE
LITERATURE
Sometimes he
is
trivial
is
sometimes
;
heated
general
poetical
but
in
He
is
playfully witty,
when between
;
the
he places the
man
He
ty as
is
grave
when he exposes
the motives
by
to genius pover-
companion
pompous when
interro-
him
',*'
merce
all
it
ought to render
common
to
;
the globe
ought to unite nations by the sentiment of regeneral diffusion of the benefits of the
:
gospel
lias
whom Heaven
soil,
are
the
horrible
slaves
and
this is
perform-
ed by christians."
We
condemned
OF NEGROES.
of whose former
233
life
dom.
We
when we
rea-
par-
don.
Some
puted,
if his
a repeated
homage
He
inspires this
the great chancellor tormented by conscience of the soul. " Act then always in such a man-
We
for
our
conscience as
recompense.'*
In the same
letter,
endeavouring to drive
away
bring
recollections,
virtue to a
to
my
past years,
my
career ?
Have
not
heaven,
where
art
thou
You
see that
it is
much more
30
234
OF THE
LITERATURE
we know how
good from
evil
let
us arm ourselves
who
ascertains
us
act
so even
lift- ;
in
the ordinary
course of
human
my
im
a tc
is
more deserving of
is
we have
the
is,
more
the
re-
more
important
is it
to
combat
his
judgment, which
PHILLIS WHEATLEY.
Phillis
Wheatiey
was
stolen
from Af-
Paxtim.
vol. letter 7*
OF NEGROES.
America, and sold
235
in
Of amiable manners,
was so cherished by the family, that they not only freed her from those painful labours reserved
for slaves,
household.
guage.
lis
little
volume
in
mo-
ral poetry,
which contains
in the
pieces.
England and
take away
all
United States
and to
ing that she was not the author, the genuineness of the publication
first
was established
in the
nor of the
state,
persons in Boston,
who knew
life.
freedom.
a
Two
man
of colour, who,
of
hh
236
OF THE LITERATURE
to that of other negroes,
understanding,
also a kind of
was
less
phenomenon.
We
are
no
come
ter,
name
of Doctor Peof
the
blacks.
The
him a
fortune.
The
sentimental Phillis,
expression,
who according
to
the trivial
was brought up as a
of domestic affairs,
spoiled child,
knew nothing
art.
He began
with reproaches,
broken heart.
Her husthree
band, by
whom
when
very young,
years.*
Jefferson,
who
even those of
or NEGROES.
237
the
Dunciad
this
are
divinities,
when compared
were disposed
it is
with
African muse.*
If we
to cavil,
we might
sufficient to
Ave
blight appeal to
which
is
the poetry of
Wheatley
direct refutation
may
be made, by selecting
some
an idea of her
was doubtless her acquaintance with the works of Horace, that induced her to comIt
mence whose
by
the
like
to
Macenas,$
by
flattery.
Augustus,
oblivion the
* Notes on Virginia.
t Clarkson, p. 131.
\
9, p.
200
and following.
\
Poems on
Phillis
238
OF THE LITERATURE
but
we
hasten to sub-
jects
Almost
all
moral
all
melancholy.
friends.
Twelve
to
the
death of
We
humanity, to Neptune to
her
young
painter, of
own
color.
On
May
The
him
some of
On
the death
of
J.
C. an infant.
NO
more
Nor charming
No more
with joy
we
The
What sudden pangs shot thro' each aching heart. When, Death, thy messenger disp^tch'd his dart
OF NEGROES.
Thy
dread attendants,
destroying Po<tv*r }
259
all
Or
beauties to surprize
Could not
Thy
thy soul
No more
But
shall smile,
no more
head
like a
torn,
" Where flies my Jamzs," 'tis The parent ask, Some angel
thus
tell
seem
to hear
me where
air
?''
He
Methinka
And
Let Faith
to heav'n's refulgent
domes
repair,
:
There
numbers
flow.
and
fills
*40
OF THE LITERATURE
Since to the port of happiness unknown
He
call
your own*
The
Not
Chearful resign
at
the divine
command
An hymn
to the
Morning.
ATTEND my
Assist
lays,
my
labours, and
my
strains refine
my
song.
and
all
Which deck thy progress through the vaulted The morn awakes, and wide extends her rays,
On
Harmonious
Ye shady
gloom
display:
To
CaUiofic,
While thy
the pleasing
The
In
all
my bosom
rise.
See
king of day
away
But
Oh
beams
too strong,
And
OF NEGROES.
24i
To
Willi am-
carl of
Dartmovjh,
Ame-
HAIL, happy
Long
Soon
Sick
lost to
The owl
in
No No
more, America,
mournful
strain
Of wrongs, and
Which wanton Tyranny with lawless hand Had made, and with it meant t' enslave the
Should you,
land.
my
lord, while
you peruse
my
song,
Wonder from whence my love of Freedom sprung} Whence flow the wishes for the common good* By feeling hearts alone best understood
:
I,
young
in life
by seeming cruel
Afric's fancy'd
fate
Was snatch'd
from
happy
seat
What pangs excruciating must molest, What sorrows labour in my parents' breast
Steel'd
was
that soul,
That from
Such, such
my
case
And
31
can
Others
may
never
feel tyrannic
sway
etc. etc*
243
CHAPTER
VIII.
CONCLUSION.
UF
ed,
all
I
We
menthan
a
made
rical dictionaries,
which are
little
else
financiering
speculations.
They
contain
pompous
list
atrical pieces
long forgotten.
place
is
giv-
Sunday
Schools,
is
forgotten.
No
notice is
Humane
Tubero,
Jerusalem
244
OP THE LITERATURE
name
of
Suhm,
many
national writers
who
han de Brie, John de Lois, and the good Quaker Benizet, born
all
at St.
religion
and example.
He
established,
Philadelphia, a
who were
taught by himself.
During those
his
in-
tervals of leisure
em-
them comfort. At
his funeral,
which was
colonel,
who had
dom, exclaimed, " I would rather be Benizet in his coffin, than George Washington with all his
celebrity.
"An
to his heart.
Yvan
is
for
?
whom
This
then do they
crowns
Frenchman,
of
who
so powerfully
excited
the attention
in France."
known
His
OF NEGR0E8.
245
name
is
not mentioned
;
dictionaries
Men, who have consulted only sense, and who have not attended
relative
their
common
to discussions
to
lieve
that
many have
and
intellectual capacity.
it is
This doctrine,
is
however, as absurd as
abominable,
It
in-
cannot be
all
spe-
cies
and
all
Frenchmen, Englishmen
if
I
maintain,
among
errors the
made slaves of whites. Can we otherwise characterize the impressment of men in England, the conduct of lady sellers in
rious forms, have
246
OF THE LITERATURE
who vend
But,
if
ever
European
from them
if
coast, to
;
their families
to Africa,
health,
where
at
the
tomb
no
all
to suffer
and
to die in
if
devoted to misery
the privileges of society, and declared legally incapable of judicial action, their testimony
against the
if
driven
from the
to mingle
walks,
they were
compelled
the
middle
of the
to have
street
if
subscription were
in a ma^ss,
made
them lashed
and
their backs,
or NEGROES.
to prevent gangrene, covered
247
with pepper and
with
salt
if
them were
but a
trifling
nam
those
who
if
those
who
ed
the
to carnage
if,
blacks
pretended,
by
their
origin
this
may be exercised
and that white
whites,
bosom of Africa
in a word, if
all
all
all
of cunning
and calumny,
the
the inventions
To
a
express
new
epithets
would be sought
writers,
ing nothing to
gain.
fear,
there
was something
this hypothesis,
Europeans, reverse
and
see what
you
are
248
OF THE LITERATURE
the three last centuries, tvgers-and
which
calls herself
pity,
whom
and barba-
To procure
and a forgetfulness of
Africa
is
all
the
senti-
ments of nature.
breathe
when
the powers of
Europe
Yes,
are
comit,
I repeat
species of wickedness,
of which Europe
and
atro-
and
this I
and
still
more by
these
works are
I
OF NECROES.
249
all
individu-
and
tion
that
:
man
is
own
educageneral
though
is
sense,
true in
many
respects.
union of
Newton
if
Each coun-
but we
virtue
and
vice,
countries,
and complexions*
To
same
ferent countries,
situation
we must
place
them
;
in the
and circumstances
and what
others) enriched
all
by
the discove-
and information of
by every species of encouragement, and blacks, deprived of all those advantages, and devoted
to oppression and misery ? If
32
250
that so
OF THE LITERATURE
is,
many
What would
they
then be,
if
restored to the
refuse
ed?
Revolutions,
in the
political
world, on ac-
may be
compared
The
planters
posture,
of the
dom
It is
would accomplish
Such was
when
in
muthat
he announced (and he
announces
it)
on
free
men
only, and
its
beams no
the
But
all
French
thedecreesby
to in-
their
-world,
which
OF NEGROES,
251
horrible
traffic
The
which
mm
there
will
to a state of things,
be
all
common
to
whose course
the combin-
ed powers
reinstated
will
be unable to arrest.
rights,
Negroes,
irresistible
in their
will
by the
force of events,
colonists,
owe no
gratitude towards
whose affections might have been won by means equally easy and useful.
Manual
utility
of which
acknowledged
in Brazil
and
the Bahamas, and the successful introduction of the plough in Jamaica,* are sufficient to the order
shew
colonial system.
This revolution
will
have an
accelerated motion
and
Venant
?.!so
proposes
tfee
colonies.
252
0* THE
LITERATURE
which abridge
;
other mechanical
inventions,
labour and
facilitate
manipulations
when an
every
whom
destiny,
stretching
Pacific
her
arms
across
the
Atlantic and
Oceans,
shall dart
by cutting
and of empires
come
a colony of the
new world ?
is
There
there
is
is
just
indi-
vidual dependent on
and
all
these
force.
no
freedom.*
its
circumscribed
use, but
limits
ought to
Lc Gent*.
OF NEGROES.
be the same for
ty,
253
of a
all
the
members
communireli-
gion.
another
man
slave
slave,
if
he has a right
ro
make make
you a
and
we have no
right, says
Ramsay,
to sell him,
to pur-
chase him.*
May
European nations
May
Africans, raisall
and
talents
and
fits
and effusions of
fraternal
kindness, at last
Although these
at least
tomb
the
conviction, that
thing in
Fum.
CONTENTS.
Page
Dedication
Translator's Preface
.......
I.
CHAPTER
Concerning the
signification of the
all
word
Negro.
Ought
this
blacks to be includDiffer-
ed under
denomination?
man
race
->.*--.-..
CHAPTER
II.
ft
Opinions
relative to the
moral inferiority
of Negroes.
ject.
Of
by the
christian religion.
Of
bishops
45
CHAPTER
Moral
qualities of the
HI.
rage
Negroes
their love
generosity, &c.
89
CHAPTER
IV.
-
107
CHAPTER
Political societies
V.
organized
among
the
Negroes
127
CHAPTER
Literature of Negroes
VI.
155
VII.
CHAPTER
Of Negroes and
by
their talents
Mulattoes distinguished
and
their
works
VIII.
171
CHAPTER
Conclusion
245
Date Due
DATE^
L.