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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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430 Poetry *
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"Wiiose Brissot 9 Raynal > f late , indign £ n 1 rose r-ji : ^ & rrrr < -- > ^^^ i- "oxyl ? ?'¦?* " - ~ To jg&jj Cit ; fiJ ^ ro ^^ ; rj gfi ^ , ^' ^ grde s woes . Nor is . thc nagic to virtuous praise im' known ' " " ~ "" " ' r '" . ^ . .
thpu ^ h it has sinc ^ rc ^ i ^ d in full forc ^« Yet generality , or eveauniversality is no certain testimony or infallible sanction of nature . Human wickedness prevails over every thing , puts a force on nature , gives the power of law to her owrt e ^ t ^ v ^ gant desi res * , nor is there
any cruelty or crime that she cannot rec ^ e , nca ^ yiituc and piety- It appears by a passage in B . " 1 . Ch . 34 , of the poath y caous edition of Wisdom , used by ttfe ^ finglisn translator in 1729 , that CJia ^ roji was w-ell acquainted with the Afncati SfaVe ^ Trade . He describes the
< f ? ij ^ a , ^ ajit $ of Guinea" as " made slaves hy kidnapping and force , and not oniy their , persons enslaved but ail their posSeH ^ y tox > . " ^ Brijgot ! f exertions for the inj ure ^ Africans are well known . Even Washinj ^ n j ^ whpBa he justly admired , did not Escape his censure as a slave-holder . Raynaj , fprty Y £ * rsago , declared
himsea f iuli x SfWS * t"e slave . trade , of which Jfte thus speaks , in his Histoire Phub&fitiiqiic des Deuoc Indes . " pette soif insatiatble de l ' or a donne naissance au j 3 ft ^ "iniltrne > au plus atroce de tous les commerces ,. celui . des esclaves . O n
parlg des ' . climes " contre nature ^ et Von ne cite , pa » celui-la com me le plus ex-Iscrabltf . That insatiable thirst of gold has given birth to the most infamous and atrocious of all trades , the slavetrade . We speak of crimes against nature , and forbear to instance that which is the most' execrable .
$ ,. A ^ thiojiy Benezet , bom at St . Quintin , in Picardy , in 1713 , of a Protestant family . By the persecutions , on the revocation of the Edict of , W £ B'te 0 , hia father was first driven to Holland , then settled in London wi ( jb his w ; ife and several children in 1715 . In 1731 , the whole family remoji'Mto Philadelphia , where Anthony becwuv a . school master , and joiued the society of Quakers , assisting their endeavours to annihilate the
unchristian practice of iiotding Negroes in slavery . His writings on this subject were numerous \ in 1762 be published Some Historical Account of Guinea , and
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By tyrant-powY debarrrM his native la ^ d , o 5 r . r : ^ ¦ - ' . .: . ' . ' e . ¦ •* -.. ; . ' : ? .. ' : ,- ¦ ... ¦;¦ ^ By mercy guided to Columbia ' s strand , In mercy ' s cause hiiB life ' s long labours end
Who liv'd and died , confest , the Ncgroe ' s friend . ho I Avarice ! at thy calf , the dread decree , Afric , a Slave , with Britain's guaranty . Yes , Britain , boasting her higbxfavourM
land , ' Where pow ' r submits , while equal laws command , Whose legal sage , | j renownM , could erst declare , That SlavVy breathed not in her hcahJiful air ,
in 1767 , Caution and Warning fa Gr&& Britain and her Colonies * With the same benevolent views Vie cones ponded with many persons in Europe , A merica , and the West Indies . Among the " r ^ . with Mr . Granville Sharp and Abb 6
Raynal . Though mean i n hid jiersbnal appearance } such was the covtt € &iftf his manners , aftd so evident the purity of bis intentions , that he had read y access to people of all descriptions , and obtained the respect of 44 * 6 * sfew whom he failed to ittfittence , ' - ^
Anthony Benezet zealously prorated t he cst ablishment of a ec hool to Philadelphia , for instructing the black people in common learning , ^ nd xde- ^ voted the two last years of hife life ' ^ a personal attendance on th « ecliooL By his . will ^ he . directed ^ thtt % arWf the decease of his widow , tife'Wli ^ ie
little fortune ( the savings ' of &ky ye 4 rsi industry ) should , except a few ^ &ittftU legacies , be -applied to the support < &t the Negroe school . . ^ tit ^ y * & After-a few days illnees , thi ^ e ^^ eJ ^ lent man died , .. at Phjladcl | lliiay- _ ia His funeral attended b
1784 . was y several thousands of aH •¦ i-aika , ^ pirpi fessioiiSj and parties , who a |> peari !| li sincerely to unite in deploi 4 rtg jAe ^ ii ' of this friend of mankind . The niOlirji ful procession was eloped Hy * smne hundreds of those pooi ' ^ Fegra > £ k ^ wli b had been personally bene ^ fifcfed b ^ hik labours , and whose behtiVitihr oi |*^ ei occasion arTefctiiigly eviniced tJbieir ^ rStitmle and afteclion for ^^ * h % tr ^ iri ^ efatf '
gable benefactor . See ^ Advert , prefixea to the historical Account of Guinea . London . 178 8 . || The name of the lawyer who
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1814, page 430, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2442/page/46/
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