The staple productions of the island, it was vainly
surmised, could never be cultivated without the
name of slavery; rebellions, massacres, starvation,
rapine and bloodshed, danced through the columns
of the liberty-hating papers, in mazes of metaphorical
confusion. In short, the name of freedom
was, according to their assertions, directly calculated
to overthrow our beautiful island, and involve it in
one mass of ruin, unequalled in the annals of
history!! But what has been the result?
All their fearful forebodings and horrible predictions
have been entirely disproved, and instead of liberty
proving a curse, she has, on the contrary, unfolded
her banners, and, ere long, is likely to reign
triumphant in our land. Banks, steam companies,
railroads, charity schools, etc., seem all to have
remained dormant until the time arrived when Jamaica
was to be enveloped in smoke! No man
thought of hazarding his capital in an extensive
banking establishment until Jamaica’s
ruin, by the introduction of freedom, had
been accomplished!! No person was found
possessed of sufficient energy to speak of navigation
companies in Jamaica’s brightest days of
slavery; but now that ruin stares every one in
the face—now that we have no longer the
power to treat out peasantry as we please, they
have taken it into their heads to establish so
excellent an undertaking. Railroads were not
dreamt of until darling slavery had (in
a great measure) departed, and now, when we
thought of throwing up our estates, and flying
from the dangers of emancipation, the best projects
are being set on foot, and what is worst,
are likely to succeed! This is the
way that our Jamaica folks, no doubt, reason with
themselves. But the reasons for the delay
which have taken place in the establishment of
all these valuable undertakings, are too evident
to require elucidation. We behold the Despatch
and Chronicle, asserting the ruin of our
island; the overthrow of all order and society;
and with the knowledge of all this, they speak of
the profits likely to result from steam navigation,
banking establishments, and railroads! What
in the name of conscience, can be the use of steam-vessels
when Jamaica’s ruin is so fast approaching?
What are the planters and merchants to ship in steamers
when the apprentices will not work, and there is
nothing doing? How is the bank expected to
advance money to the planters, when their total
destruction has been accomplished by the abolition
of slavery? What, in the name of reason,
can be the use of railroads, when commerce and
agriculture have been nipped in the bud, by that baneful
weed, Freedom? Let the unjust panderers of
discord, the haters of liberty, answer. Let
them consider what has all this time retarded
the development of Jamaica’s resources, and they
will find that it was slavery; yes, it
was its very name which prevented the idea of
undertakings such as are being brought about.