for immediate employment till they get ready to settle
permanently in their homes. If you take colonists
where there is no good landing, there is a bad show;
and so where there is nothing to cultivate and of
which to make a farm. But if something is started
so that you can get your daily bread as soon as reach
you there, it is a great advantage. Coal land
is the best thing I know of with which to commence
an enterprise. To return—you have
been talked to upon this subject, and told that a speculation
is intended by gentlemen who have an interest in the
country, including the coal-mines. We have been
mistaken all our lives if we do not know whites, as
well as blacks, look to their self-interest. Unless
among those deficient of intellect, everybody you trade
with makes something. You meet with these things
here and everywhere. If such persons have what
will be an advantage to them, the question is whether
it cannot be made of advantage to you. You are
intelligent, and know that success does not so much
depend on external help as on self-reliance.
Much, therefore, depends upon yourselves. As to
the coal-mines, I think I see the means available
for your self-reliance. I shall, if I get a sufficient
number of you engaged, have provision made that you
shall not be wronged. If you will engage in the
enterprise, I will spend some of the money intrusted
to me. I am not sure you will succeed. The
government may lose the money; but we cannot succeed
unless we try, and we think with care we can succeed.
The political affairs in Central America are not in
quite as satisfactory a condition as I wish.
There are contending factions in that quarter, but
it is true all the factions are agreed alike on the
subject of colonization, and want it, and are more
generous than we are here.
To your colored race they have no objection I would
endeavor to have you made the equals, and have the
best assurance that you should be the equals, of the
best.
The practical thing I want to ascertain is whether
I can get a number of able-bodied men, with their
wives and children, who are willing to go when I present
evidence of encouragement and protection. Could
I get a hundred tolerably intelligent men, with their
wives and children, and able to “cut their own
fodder,” so to speak? Can I have fifty?
If I could find twenty-five able-bodied men, with a
mixture of women and children—good things
in the family relation, I think,—I could
make a successful commencement. I want you to
let me know whether this can be done or not.
This is the practical part of my wish to see you.
These are subjects of very great importance, worthy
of a month’s study, instead of a speech delivered
in an hour. I ask you, then, to consider seriously,
not pertaining to yourselves merely, nor for your
race and ours for the present time, but as one of
the things, if successfully managed, the good of mankind—not
confined to the present generation, but as
“From age to age descends the lay
To millions yet to be,
Till far its echoes roll away
Into eternity.”