Thank you, my massas! have you laugh your
fill?
Then let me speak, nor take that freedom
ill.
E’en from my tongue some
heart-felt truths may fall,
And outraged Nature claims the care of
all.
My tale in any place would force
a tear,
But calls for stronger, deeper feelings
here;
For whilst I tread the free-born British
land,
Whilst now before me crowded Britons stand,—
Vain, vain that glorious privilege to
me,
I am a slave, where all things else are
free.
Yet was I born, as you are, no man’s
slave,
An heir to all that liberal Nature gave;
My mind can reason, and my limbs can move
The same as yours; like yours my heart
can love;
Alike my body food and sleep sustain;
And e’en like yours—feels
pleasure, want, and pain.
One sun rolls o’er us, common skies
surround;
One globe supports us, and one grave must
bound.
Why then am I devoid of all to live
That manly comforts to a man can give?
To live—untaught religion’s
soothing balm,
Or life’s choice arts; to live—unknown
the calm,
Of soft domestic ease; those sweets of
life,
The duteous offspring, and th’ endearing
wife?
To live—to property and rights
unknown,
Not e’en the common benefits my
own!
No arm to guard me from Oppression’s
rod,
My will subservient to a tyrant’s
nod!
No gentle hand, when life is in decay,
To soothe my pains, and charm my cares
away;
But helpless left to quit the horrid stage,
Harassed in youth, and desolate in age!
But I was born in Afric’s tawny
strand,
And you in fair Britannia’s fairer
land;
Comes freedom, then, from colour?—Blush
with shame!
And let strong Nature’s crimson
mark your blame.
I speak to Britons.—Britons—then
behold
A man by, Britons snared, and seized,
and sold!
And yet no British statute damns the deed,
Nor do the more than murderous villains
bleed.
O sons of Freedom! equalize your laws,
Be all consistent, plead the negro’s
cause;
That all the nations in your code may
see
The British negro, like the Briton, free.
But, should he supplicate your laws in
vain,
To break, for ever, this disgraceful chain,
At least, let gentle usage so abate
The galling terrors of its passing state,
That he may share kind Heaven’s
all social plan;
For, though no Briton, Mungo is—a
man.
I may now add, that few theatrical pieces had a greater run than the Padlock; and that this epilogue, which was attached to it soon after it came out, procured a good deal of feeling for the unfortunate sufferers, whose cause it was intended to serve.