people, in their credulity, hailed the apparent enfranchisement,
and had a public rejoicing in the occasion. But
the delusion could not escape the discrimination of
Mr. P. He detected it at once, and exposed it, and
incurred the displeasure of the credulous people of
color by refusing to participate in their premature
rejoicings. He soon succeeded however in convincing
his brethren that the new provision was a mockery of
their wrongs, and that the assembly had only added
insult to past injuries. Mr. P. now urged the
colored people to be patient, as the great changes
which were working in the colony must bring to them
all the rights of which they had been so cruelly deprived.
On the subject of prejudice he spoke just as a man
of keen sensibilities and manly spirit might be expected
to speak, who had himself been its victim. He
was accustomed to being flouted, scorned and condemned
by those whom he could not but regard as his interiors
both in native talents and education. He had
submitted to be forever debarred from offices which
were filled by men far less worthy except in the single
qualification of a
white skin, which however
was paramount to all other virtues and acquirements!
He had seen himself and his accomplished wife excluded
from the society of whites, though keenly conscious
of their capacity to move and shine in the most elevated
social circles. After all this, it may readily
be conceived how Mr. P. would speak of prejudice.
But while he spoke bitterly of the past, he was inspired
with buoyancy of hope as he cast his eye to the future.
He was confident that prejudice would disappear.
It had already diminished very much, and it would ere
long be wholly exterminated.
Mr. P. gave a sprightly picture of the industry of
the negroes. It was common, he said, to hear
them called lazy, but this was not true. That
they often appeared to be indolent, especially those
about the town, was true; but it was either because
they had no work to do, or were asked to work without
reasonable wages. He had often been amused at
their conduct, when solicited to do small jobs—such
as carrying baggage, loading of unloading a vessel,
or the like. If offered a very small compensation,
as was generally the case at first, they would stretch
themselves on the ground, and with a sleepy look, and
lazy tone, would say, “O, I can’t do it,
sir.” Sometimes the applicants would turn
away at once, thinking that they were unwilling to
work, and cursing “the lazy devils;” but
occasionally they would try the efficacy of offering
a larger compensation, when instantly the negroes
would spring to their feet, and the lounging inert
mass would appear all activity.
We are very willing to hold up Mr. P as a specimen
of what colored people generally may become with proper
cultivation, or to use the language of one of their
own number,[A] “with free minds and space to
rise.”
[Footnote A: Thomas C. Brown, who renounced colonization,
returned from a disastrous and almost fatal expedition
to Liberia, and afterwards went to the West Indies,
in quest of a free country.]