that any other, who had not yet been engaged in it,
would not begin it when our countrymen should give
it up. The consideration of these circumstances
occupied the attention of the committee; and as Dr.
Spaarman, who was said to have been examined by the
privy council, was returning home, it was thought
advisable to consider whether it would not be proper
for the committee to select certain of their own books
on the subject of the Slave Trade, and send them by
him, accompanied by a letter, to the King of Sweden,
in which they should entreat his consideration of
this powerful argument which now stood in the way
of the cause of humanity, with a view that, as one
of the princes of Europe, he might contribute to obviate
it, by preventing his own subjects, in case of the
dereliction of this commerce by ourselves, from embarking
in it. The matter having been fully considered,
it was resolved that the proposed measure would be
proper, and it was accordingly adapted. By a
letter received afterwards from Dr. Spaarman, it appeared
that both the letter and the books had been delivered,
and received graciously; and that he was authorized
to say, that, unfortunately, in consequence of those
hereditary possessions which had devolved upon His
Majesty, he was obliged to confess that he was the
sovereign of an island which had been principally peopled
by African slaves, but that he had been frequently
mindful of their hard case. With respect to the
Slave Trade, he never heard of an instance in which
the merchants of his own native realm had embarked
in it; and as they had preserved their character pure
in this respect, he would do all he could that it
should not be sullied in the eyes of the generous
English nation, by taking up, in the case which had
been pointed out to him, such an odious concern.
By this time I had finished my Essay on the Impolicy
of the Slave Trade, which I composed from materials
collected chiefly during my journey to Bristol, Liverpool,
and Lancaster. These materials I had admitted
with great caution and circumspection; indeed I admitted
none for which I could not bring official and other
authentic documents, or living evidences if necessary,
whose testimony could not reasonably be denied; and
when I gave them to the world, I did it under the impression
that I ought to give them as scrupulously as if I were
to be called upon to substantiate them upon oath.
It was of peculiar moment that this book should make
its appearance at this time. First, Because it
would give the lords of the council, who were then
sitting, an opportunity of seeing many important facts,
and of inquiring into their authenticity; and it might
suggest to them, also, some new points, or such as
had not fallen within the limits of the arrangement
they had agreed upon for their examinations on this
subject: and secondly, Because, as the members
of the House of Commons were to take the question into
consideration early in the next sessions, it would