are bred there.” He adds, “That the
capacities of their minds in common affairs of life
are but little inferior, if at all, to those of the
Europeans. If they fail in some arts, he says,
it may be owing more to their want of education, and
the depression of their spirits by slavery, than to
any want of natural abilities.” This destruction
of the human species, thro’ unnatural hardships,
and want of necessary supplies, in the case of the
Negroes, is farther confirmed in
an account of
the European settlements in America, printed London,
1757, where it is said, par. 6. chap. 11th, “The
Negroes in our colonies endure a slavery more compleat,
and attended with far worse circumstances, than what
any people in their condition suffer in any other
part of the world, or have suffered in any other period
of time: Proofs of this are not wanting.
The prodigious waste which we experience in this unhappy
part of our species, is a full and melancholy evidence
of this truth. The island of Barbadoes, (the Negroes
upon which do not amount to eighty thousand) notwithstanding
all the means which they use to increase them by propagation,
and that the climate is in every respect (except that
of being more wholesome) exactly resembling the climate
from whence they come; notwithstanding all this, Barbadoes
lies under a necessity of an annual recruit of five
thousand slaves, to keep up the stock at the number
I have mentioned. This prodigious failure, which
is at least in the same proportion in all our islands,
shews demonstratively that some uncommon and unsupportable
hardship lies upon the Negroes, which wears them down
in such a surprising manner.”
In an account of part of North America, published
by Thomas Jeffery, 1761, the author, speaking of the
usage the Negroes receive in the West India islands,
says, “It is impossible for a human heart to
reflect upon the servitude of these dregs of mankind,
without in some measure feeling for their misery,
which ends but with their lives.—Nothing
can be more wretched than the condition of this people.
One would imagine, they were framed to be the disgrace
of the human species; banished from their country,
and deprived of that blessing, liberty, on which all
other nations set the greatest value, they are in
a measure reduced to the condition of beasts of burden.
In general, a few roots, potatoes especially, are
their food, and two rags, which neither screen them
from the heat of the day, nor the extraordinary coolness
of the night, all their covering; their sleep very
short; their labour almost continual; they receive
no wages, but have twenty lashes for the smallest fault.”
A thoughtful person, who had an opportunity
of observing the miserable condition of the Negroes
in one of our West India islands, writes thus, “I
met with daily exercise to see the treatment which
those miserable wretches met with from their masters;
with but few exceptions. They whip them most
unmercifully on small occasions: you will see