which have decreased,” gentle reader, according
to the despatch, “in an accelerated ratio within
the last few years, till in the year 1836, when they
do not average one half the returns of former years
preceding that of 1823, the year that Mr. Canning’s
resolutions for the ultimate abolition of slavery
in the British colonies passed the House of Commons,”
still it is a matter of sincere gratification to know,
that the sugar planters are better off now than they
have been for the last fourteen or fifteen years.
With the compensation money a great many of them have
been enabled to pay off their English debts, and the
remainder very considerably to reduce them, whilst
the reduction in the quantity of sugar produced, has
occasioned such a rise in the price of that article
as will place the former in easy circumstances, and
enable the latter entirely to free themselves from
the trammels of English mortgagees, and the tender
mercies of English mortgagees before the 1st August,
1840, arrives. And ought these parties not to
be thankful? Unquestionably they ought.
Ingratitude, we are told, is as the sin of witchcraft,
and although the table of exports exhibits our fair
island as hastening to a state of ruin, and the despatch
tells us that “by the united influence of mock
philanthropy, religious cant, and humbug,” a
reformed parliament was forced “to precipitate
the slavery spoliation act under the specious
pretext of promoting the industry and improving the
condition of the manumitted slaves,” still we
maintain, and the reasonable will agree with us, that
we are much better off now than we have been for a
long time, and that Jamaica’s brightest and happiest
days have not yet dawned. Let the croakers remember
the remarkable words of the Tory Lord, Belmore, the
planter’s friend, and be silent—“The
resources of this fine island will never be fully
developed until slavery ceases.” The happiness
and prosperity of the inhabitants of Jamaica are not
contingent, nor need they be, upon the number of hogsheads
of sugar annually exported from her shores.
* * * * *
To the foregoing we add the remarks of the editor of the “Spanishtown Telegraph,” on the present state of the colony, made in his paper of May 9, 1837:—
“When it was understood that the island of Jamaica and the other British West Indian colonies were to undergo the blessed transition from slavery to freedom, it was the hourly cry of the pro-slavery party and press, that the ruin of Jamaica would, as a natural consequence, follow liberty! Commerce, said they, will cease; hordes of barbarians will come upon us and drive us from our own properties; agriculture will be completely paralyzed; and Jamaica, in the space of a few short months, will be seen buried in ashes—irretrievably ruined. Such were the awful predictions of an unjust, illiberal faction!! Such the first fruits that were to follow the incomparable blessings of liberty!