LESSON XI.
In the introductory part of Mr. Barnes’s book, he makes some remarks in the nature of an apology for his undertaking to examine the subject of slavery. Page 20, he says—
“Belonging to the sameracewith those who are held in bondage. We have a right,nay, we are bound to express the sympathies of brotherhood, and ‘to remember those who are in bonds as bound with them.’”
We were not aware of any fact relating to Mr. Barnes’s descent; nor did we before know from what race he was descended.
We were truly much surprised at this avowal, and endeavoured to imagine that he had used the word in some general and indefinite sense, as some do when they say animalrace, and humanrace. But on examining his use of the word, page 20: “How is a foreignrace, with so different a complexion, and in reference to which, so deep-seated prejudices and aversions exist, in every part of the land, to be disposed of if they become free?”—and page 27: “And the struggles which gave liberty to millions of the Anglo-saxonracedid not loosen one rivet from the fetter of an African;” page 83: “The Hebrews were not essentially distinguished from the Egyptians, as the Africans are from their masters in this land, by colour;” and page 86: “They were a foreignrace, as the Africanraceis with us;” and page 96: “There are in the United States now, according to the census of 1840, 2,486,465 of a foreignraceheld in bondage;” and page 97: “It would have been as just for the Egyptians to retain the Hebrews in bondage as it is for white Americans to retain the African race;”—we were forced to conclude that the author understood his language and its meaning.
Such, then, being the fact, we cannot find it in our heart to blame him for “expressing the sympathies of brotherhood.” But we feel disposed with kindness to relieve his mind from the burthen of such portion of sympathy for those of hisracewho are in slavery, as he may conceive to be a duty imposed by the injunction, “Remember those who are in bond, as bound with them.” We will quote the passage,Heb.xiii. 3: “Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them.” It is translated from the Greek—Μιμνήσκεσθε τῶν δεσμίων ὡς συνδεδεμένοι,Mimnēsicĕsthe tōn dĕsmiōn hōs sundĕdĕmĕnoi. The words translated “bonds,” “bound with,” &c. are derived from the rootδέω,deo, and signifies to bind, to bring together, to chain, to fetter, to hinder, to restrain, &c., which meaning falls into all its derivations. When one was accused of some offence, and was, on that account, restrained, so that he might be surely had at a trial for the same, such restraint would be expressed, as the case required, by some of its derivations. Hence we haveδέσις,dĕsis, the act of binding;δέσμα,desma, a bond, a chain;δέσμιος,desmios, chained, fettered, imprisoned, &c.;δεσμός,desmos, a bond, chain, knots, cords, cables;δεσμόω,desmŏō, to enchain, to imprison;δεσμοφύλαξ,desmophulax, a jailer, &c.
The word is used, differently varied, inMatt.xvi. 19; xviii. 18;Actsviii. 23; xx. 23; xxiii. 21; xxvi. 29;Rom.vii. 2; 1Cor.vii. 39;Eph.iv. 3;Philip.i. 16;Col.iv. 18; 2Tim.ii. 9;Philem.10;Heb.x. 34; xi. 36; and never used, in any sense whatever, to express any condition of slavery. St. Paul was under therestraintof the law upon a charge of heresy. All the Christians of his day were very liable to like danger. His only meaning was that all such should be remembered, as though they themselves were suffering a like misfortune. Suppose he had expressed the idea more diffusely and said, “Remember all Christians who, for teaching Christ crucified, are persecuted on the charge of teaching a false religion, as though you yourselves were persecuted with them.”
Such was the fact. Surely no one, by any course of rational deduction, could construe it into an injunction to remember or do any thing else, in regard to slavery or its subjects, unless upon the condition that the slave was, by some means, under restraint upon a similar charge. St. Paul was never married; cannot be said to have looked with very ardent eyes upon the institution of marriage; by many is thought to have been unfavourably disposed towards it. We have among us, to this day, some who pretend that they think it a great evil, are its bitter enemies, and give evidence that, if in their power, they would totally abolish it. Suppose such a man should say that, because he belonged to the sameracewith those who were bound in the bonds of wedlock, it was his privilege to express the sympathies of brotherhood, and expostulate against that evil institution; nay, that he was enjoined by St. Paul to do so, in this passage, “Remember those who are in bonds,as bound with them,”—what would be the value of this appeal to St. Paul? But the very word he uses, in the passage quoted, is also used, almost invariably, in the gospels, to express the restraint imposed by matrimony; yet it is never used to express any condition, or quality, or station, in regard to slavery.
The naked, unadorned proposition presented by Dr. Barnes is, that, because St. Paul enjoined the Hebrew Christians to sympathize with, to remember all those who were labouring under persecution on the account of their faith in Christ, they were also bound to remember, to sympathize with the slaves, on the account of their being in slavery, as though they were slaves themselves. We feel that such argument must ever be abortive.
From the delicacy of Dr. Barnes’s situation, as “belonging to the sameracewith those held in bondage,” we feel it a duty to treat the position with great forbearance. Had it come from one of the more favoured race of Shem, or the still more loftyraceof Japheth, we should have felt it an equal duty to have animadverted with some severity.
It would have appeared like a design to impose on those ignorant of the original; and might have put us in mind of the cunning huckster, with his basket of addled eggs,—although unexpectedly broken in the act of their delivery to the hungry traveller; yet the incident was remembered by the recorder of propriety.
Antioch is said to have been the birthplace of St. Margaret,—of which there are many legends, to one of which we allude. It brings to mind some early views of Christianity; besides, at her time, a large portion of the population of Antioch were slaves, and are alluded to in the legend.
She was the daughter of the priest of Apollo, and was herself a priestess to the same god. She is said to have lived in the time and under the authority of the Præfect Olybius, who became devoted to her mental and personal accomplishments and very great beauty. He is said to have sought her in marriage, and, after great labour and exertion, to have brought about such a state of affairs as toinsure her approval and consent. But, although thus the affianced bride of Olybius, by some means she had held intercommunion with the private teachers of Christianity, and was converted to its faith; a fact known only to her and them.
Upon such a state of things, arrives from Probus, Rome’s imperial lord, Vopiscus, charged to admonish the præfect how fame bore tidings of the frequent apostasy from the true religion of the gods, and the increase of the unholy faith of the Galileans at Antioch; and that the laws were made to be executed upon the godless, whose wicked and incestuous rites offend the thousand deities of Rome.
Olybius well knows that the least faltering on his part would probably be followed by his being shown the mandate for Vopiscus to supersede him in the government; for which he determines to not give him the least pretence: hence he orders the immediate arrest of all suspected; convenes his council in the halls of justice, and announces thus his views:
“Hear me, ye priests on earth, ye gods in heaven!By Vesta, and her virgin-guarded fires;By Mars, the sire and guardian god of Rome;By Antioch’s bright Apollo; by the throneOf him whose thunder shakes the vaulted skies;And that dread oath I add, that binds the immortals,The unblessed waters of Tartarean Styx;Last, by the avenger of despised vows,The inevitable, serpent-haired Eumenides,Olybius swears, thus mounting on the throneOf justice, to exhaust heaven’s wrath on allThat have cast off their fathers’ gods for ritesNew and unholy. From my heart, I blotPartial affection and the love of kindred;Even if my father’s blood flowed in their veins,I would obey the emperor and the gods!”Millman.
“Hear me, ye priests on earth, ye gods in heaven!By Vesta, and her virgin-guarded fires;By Mars, the sire and guardian god of Rome;By Antioch’s bright Apollo; by the throneOf him whose thunder shakes the vaulted skies;And that dread oath I add, that binds the immortals,The unblessed waters of Tartarean Styx;Last, by the avenger of despised vows,The inevitable, serpent-haired Eumenides,Olybius swears, thus mounting on the throneOf justice, to exhaust heaven’s wrath on allThat have cast off their fathers’ gods for ritesNew and unholy. From my heart, I blotPartial affection and the love of kindred;Even if my father’s blood flowed in their veins,I would obey the emperor and the gods!”Millman.
“Hear me, ye priests on earth, ye gods in heaven!By Vesta, and her virgin-guarded fires;By Mars, the sire and guardian god of Rome;By Antioch’s bright Apollo; by the throneOf him whose thunder shakes the vaulted skies;And that dread oath I add, that binds the immortals,The unblessed waters of Tartarean Styx;Last, by the avenger of despised vows,The inevitable, serpent-haired Eumenides,Olybius swears, thus mounting on the throneOf justice, to exhaust heaven’s wrath on allThat have cast off their fathers’ gods for ritesNew and unholy. From my heart, I blotPartial affection and the love of kindred;Even if my father’s blood flowed in their veins,I would obey the emperor and the gods!”
“Hear me, ye priests on earth, ye gods in heaven!
By Vesta, and her virgin-guarded fires;
By Mars, the sire and guardian god of Rome;
By Antioch’s bright Apollo; by the throne
Of him whose thunder shakes the vaulted skies;
And that dread oath I add, that binds the immortals,
The unblessed waters of Tartarean Styx;
Last, by the avenger of despised vows,
The inevitable, serpent-haired Eumenides,
Olybius swears, thus mounting on the throne
Of justice, to exhaust heaven’s wrath on all
That have cast off their fathers’ gods for rites
New and unholy. From my heart, I blot
Partial affection and the love of kindred;
Even if my father’s blood flowed in their veins,
I would obey the emperor and the gods!”
Millman.
Millman.
* * * The prisoners are ushered in, heard, and ordered to death; among whom a female veiled, as if Phœbus-chosen!
“What! dare they rend our dedicated maids,Even from our altars? Haste! withdraw the veil,In which her guilty face is shrouded close.Ha! their magic mocks my sight! I seem to seeWhat cannot be——Margarita!Answer, if thou art she!”
“What! dare they rend our dedicated maids,Even from our altars? Haste! withdraw the veil,In which her guilty face is shrouded close.Ha! their magic mocks my sight! I seem to seeWhat cannot be——Margarita!Answer, if thou art she!”
“What! dare they rend our dedicated maids,Even from our altars? Haste! withdraw the veil,In which her guilty face is shrouded close.Ha! their magic mocks my sight! I seem to seeWhat cannot be——Margarita!Answer, if thou art she!”
“What! dare they rend our dedicated maids,
Even from our altars? Haste! withdraw the veil,
In which her guilty face is shrouded close.
Ha! their magic mocks my sight! I seem to see
What cannot be——Margarita!
Answer, if thou art she!”
His mind was agonized at the thoughts of her position: silently, to himself, he says—
“————————This pale and false VopiscusHath from great Probus wrung his easy mandate;Him Asia owns her præfect, if OlybiusObey not this fell edict.” * * *
“————————This pale and false VopiscusHath from great Probus wrung his easy mandate;Him Asia owns her præfect, if OlybiusObey not this fell edict.” * * *
“————————This pale and false VopiscusHath from great Probus wrung his easy mandate;Him Asia owns her præfect, if OlybiusObey not this fell edict.” * * *
“————————This pale and false Vopiscus
Hath from great Probus wrung his easy mandate;
Him Asia owns her præfect, if Olybius
Obey not this fell edict.” * * *
Much art and great argument were privately used to produce her recantation; to which she calmly answers—
—————————“Who disown their LordOn earth, will He disown in heaven!”
—————————“Who disown their LordOn earth, will He disown in heaven!”
—————————“Who disown their LordOn earth, will He disown in heaven!”
—————————“Who disown their Lord
On earth, will He disown in heaven!”
* * * Sent to the arena; the torture and execution of the prisoners proceed, according to the order of their arraignment. The populace become enraged, and loudly demand the blood of the apostate priestess; while the præfect, in his palace, digests a plan tosurelysave her life. The high-priest of Apollo, her father, in his robes of office and with his official attendants, must boldly enter the arena, and offer pardon, in the name of his god, to any one who utters the cabalistic word signifying “I recant;” must hastily apply to each in person; at Margarita, one instructed must imitate her voice; instantly the priest is to throw the mantle of the god upon her; and the attendants, by force, to carry her to the palace of Olybius, where, instead of her execution, her marriage with Olybius is to take place.
The procession of priests (of whom none but her father, and her sister in disguise as a proxy for the act of recantation, knew the secret) are urged instantly to action: “For,” says Olybius, “my very soul is famished in every moment of delay!”
The procession moves in all pomp and splendour, with a view to produce an alterative effect on the mind of the maddened populace. Its approach to the arena is proclaimed by a sentinel there; on hearing which, Margarita falls at the feet of theheadsman, and successfully implores instant death, that her father may be spared the misery of witnessing it. She breathes a prayer in forgiveness of Olybius, and receives the stroke of death as the procession enters. The father rages, demands torture to make the Christians say how they enthralled her: a Christian teacher explains, as with “a still, small voice;” the priests of Apollo listen!
Rage and excitement had reached the utmost bound. There was a pause, as the recess between two raging storms. The stillness reached even the palace, and reason did feel as if
“There was darkness over all the land. Olybius, then:—What means this deathlike stillness? Not a soundOr murmur, from yon countless multitudes;A pale, contagious horror seems to creepEven to our palace. Men gaze mutely round,As in their neighbour’s face to read a secretThey dare not speak themselves:Even thus, along his vast domains of silence,Dark Pluto gazes, when the sullen spiritsSpeak only with fixed look and voiceless motion.'Tis misery! Speak; Olybius orders; speak to me,Nor let mine own voice, like an evil omen,Load this hot air unanswered.”
“There was darkness over all the land. Olybius, then:—What means this deathlike stillness? Not a soundOr murmur, from yon countless multitudes;A pale, contagious horror seems to creepEven to our palace. Men gaze mutely round,As in their neighbour’s face to read a secretThey dare not speak themselves:Even thus, along his vast domains of silence,Dark Pluto gazes, when the sullen spiritsSpeak only with fixed look and voiceless motion.'Tis misery! Speak; Olybius orders; speak to me,Nor let mine own voice, like an evil omen,Load this hot air unanswered.”
“There was darkness over all the land. Olybius, then:—What means this deathlike stillness? Not a soundOr murmur, from yon countless multitudes;A pale, contagious horror seems to creepEven to our palace. Men gaze mutely round,As in their neighbour’s face to read a secretThey dare not speak themselves:Even thus, along his vast domains of silence,Dark Pluto gazes, when the sullen spiritsSpeak only with fixed look and voiceless motion.'Tis misery! Speak; Olybius orders; speak to me,Nor let mine own voice, like an evil omen,Load this hot air unanswered.”
“There was darkness over all the land. Olybius, then:—
What means this deathlike stillness? Not a sound
Or murmur, from yon countless multitudes;
A pale, contagious horror seems to creep
Even to our palace. Men gaze mutely round,
As in their neighbour’s face to read a secret
They dare not speak themselves:
Even thus, along his vast domains of silence,
Dark Pluto gazes, when the sullen spirits
Speak only with fixed look and voiceless motion.
'Tis misery! Speak; Olybius orders; speak to me,
Nor let mine own voice, like an evil omen,
Load this hot air unanswered.”
A messenger announces the death of Margarita; Olybius rushes to kill him; but, recovering self-command—
——————————“Oh, I’m sickOf this accursed pomp: I will not useIts privilege of revenge. Fatal trappingsOf proud authority! That * * * * ** * * shine and burn into the very entrails!Supremacy!! the great prerogativeOf being blasted by superior misery!”
——————————“Oh, I’m sickOf this accursed pomp: I will not useIts privilege of revenge. Fatal trappingsOf proud authority! That * * * * ** * * shine and burn into the very entrails!Supremacy!! the great prerogativeOf being blasted by superior misery!”
——————————“Oh, I’m sickOf this accursed pomp: I will not useIts privilege of revenge. Fatal trappingsOf proud authority! That * * * * ** * * shine and burn into the very entrails!Supremacy!! the great prerogativeOf being blasted by superior misery!”
——————————“Oh, I’m sick
Of this accursed pomp: I will not use
Its privilege of revenge. Fatal trappings
Of proud authority! That * * * * *
* * * shine and burn into the very entrails!
Supremacy!! the great prerogative
Of being blasted by superior misery!”
A second messenger announces that
“The enchantress Margarita, by her death,Hath wrought upon the changeful populace.That they cry loudly on the Christian’s God:Emboldened multitudes, from every quarter,Throng forth, and in the face of day proclaimTheir lawless faith. They have taken up the body,And hither, as in proud ovation, bear it,With clamour and with song. All Antioch crowdsApplauding round them.”
“The enchantress Margarita, by her death,Hath wrought upon the changeful populace.That they cry loudly on the Christian’s God:Emboldened multitudes, from every quarter,Throng forth, and in the face of day proclaimTheir lawless faith. They have taken up the body,And hither, as in proud ovation, bear it,With clamour and with song. All Antioch crowdsApplauding round them.”
“The enchantress Margarita, by her death,Hath wrought upon the changeful populace.That they cry loudly on the Christian’s God:Emboldened multitudes, from every quarter,Throng forth, and in the face of day proclaimTheir lawless faith. They have taken up the body,And hither, as in proud ovation, bear it,With clamour and with song. All Antioch crowdsApplauding round them.”
“The enchantress Margarita, by her death,
Hath wrought upon the changeful populace.
That they cry loudly on the Christian’s God:
Emboldened multitudes, from every quarter,
Throng forth, and in the face of day proclaim
Their lawless faith. They have taken up the body,
And hither, as in proud ovation, bear it,
With clamour and with song. All Antioch crowds
Applauding round them.”
We are favoured only with the song of the slaves, who, upon that holiday, intermingled in the throng about the palace of Olybius, to which the body of Margarita has been borne; by which we may perceive how Christianity has elevated them above thoughts of their condition:
SONG OF THE SLAVES.
SONG OF THE SLAVES.
SONG OF THE SLAVES.
Sing to the Lord! Oh, let us shout his praise!More lofty pæans let our masters raise.Midst clouds of golden light, a pathway clear,With soaring soul, these martyred saints have trodTo Him, the only true Almighty God!Earth’s tumults wild and pagan darkness drear,To bonds of peace and songs of joy give way:Behold! we bring you light—one everlasting day!Sing to the Lord! No more shall frantic Sibyl’s yell,Watchful Augurs, or those of magic spell,No, not Isis, nor yet Apollo’s throne,No, nor even Death, with Lethean bands,Shall longer bind the soul; before us standsHim of the Cross of Calvary:—His groanOf death burst forth from its eternal womb,While angel spirits shout, and open wide the tomb!Sing to the Lord! The Temple’s veil is rent!From Moab’s plains, the Slave, an outcast, sentFrom this cold world shall, soaring, fly to heaven,From depths of Darkness, Night, and Orcus dread.Each spirit woke at the Eternal’s treadOn the head of Death! a promise givenTo all Earth’s houseless, homeless, and forlorn,Before the Ages were—or His Eldest Son was born!Sing to the Lord! Lo! while God’s rebels rave,He plunges down, and renovates the slave—Vengeance and love at once bestowed on man.See! crushed is Baal’s, proud Moloch’s temple falls;Shout to the Lord! No more shall blood-stained walls,Nor mountain grove, nor all the gods of Ham,Dispel a Saviour’s love! Correction’s rodHath won the world,—for Heaven and Thee, O God!
Sing to the Lord! Oh, let us shout his praise!More lofty pæans let our masters raise.Midst clouds of golden light, a pathway clear,With soaring soul, these martyred saints have trodTo Him, the only true Almighty God!Earth’s tumults wild and pagan darkness drear,To bonds of peace and songs of joy give way:Behold! we bring you light—one everlasting day!Sing to the Lord! No more shall frantic Sibyl’s yell,Watchful Augurs, or those of magic spell,No, not Isis, nor yet Apollo’s throne,No, nor even Death, with Lethean bands,Shall longer bind the soul; before us standsHim of the Cross of Calvary:—His groanOf death burst forth from its eternal womb,While angel spirits shout, and open wide the tomb!Sing to the Lord! The Temple’s veil is rent!From Moab’s plains, the Slave, an outcast, sentFrom this cold world shall, soaring, fly to heaven,From depths of Darkness, Night, and Orcus dread.Each spirit woke at the Eternal’s treadOn the head of Death! a promise givenTo all Earth’s houseless, homeless, and forlorn,Before the Ages were—or His Eldest Son was born!Sing to the Lord! Lo! while God’s rebels rave,He plunges down, and renovates the slave—Vengeance and love at once bestowed on man.See! crushed is Baal’s, proud Moloch’s temple falls;Shout to the Lord! No more shall blood-stained walls,Nor mountain grove, nor all the gods of Ham,Dispel a Saviour’s love! Correction’s rodHath won the world,—for Heaven and Thee, O God!
Sing to the Lord! Oh, let us shout his praise!More lofty pæans let our masters raise.Midst clouds of golden light, a pathway clear,With soaring soul, these martyred saints have trodTo Him, the only true Almighty God!Earth’s tumults wild and pagan darkness drear,To bonds of peace and songs of joy give way:Behold! we bring you light—one everlasting day!
Sing to the Lord! Oh, let us shout his praise!
More lofty pæans let our masters raise.
Midst clouds of golden light, a pathway clear,
With soaring soul, these martyred saints have trod
To Him, the only true Almighty God!
Earth’s tumults wild and pagan darkness drear,
To bonds of peace and songs of joy give way:
Behold! we bring you light—one everlasting day!
Sing to the Lord! No more shall frantic Sibyl’s yell,Watchful Augurs, or those of magic spell,No, not Isis, nor yet Apollo’s throne,No, nor even Death, with Lethean bands,Shall longer bind the soul; before us standsHim of the Cross of Calvary:—His groanOf death burst forth from its eternal womb,While angel spirits shout, and open wide the tomb!
Sing to the Lord! No more shall frantic Sibyl’s yell,
Watchful Augurs, or those of magic spell,
No, not Isis, nor yet Apollo’s throne,
No, nor even Death, with Lethean bands,
Shall longer bind the soul; before us stands
Him of the Cross of Calvary:—His groan
Of death burst forth from its eternal womb,
While angel spirits shout, and open wide the tomb!
Sing to the Lord! The Temple’s veil is rent!From Moab’s plains, the Slave, an outcast, sentFrom this cold world shall, soaring, fly to heaven,From depths of Darkness, Night, and Orcus dread.Each spirit woke at the Eternal’s treadOn the head of Death! a promise givenTo all Earth’s houseless, homeless, and forlorn,Before the Ages were—or His Eldest Son was born!
Sing to the Lord! The Temple’s veil is rent!
From Moab’s plains, the Slave, an outcast, sent
From this cold world shall, soaring, fly to heaven,
From depths of Darkness, Night, and Orcus dread.
Each spirit woke at the Eternal’s tread
On the head of Death! a promise given
To all Earth’s houseless, homeless, and forlorn,
Before the Ages were—or His Eldest Son was born!
Sing to the Lord! Lo! while God’s rebels rave,He plunges down, and renovates the slave—Vengeance and love at once bestowed on man.See! crushed is Baal’s, proud Moloch’s temple falls;Shout to the Lord! No more shall blood-stained walls,Nor mountain grove, nor all the gods of Ham,Dispel a Saviour’s love! Correction’s rodHath won the world,—for Heaven and Thee, O God!
Sing to the Lord! Lo! while God’s rebels rave,
He plunges down, and renovates the slave—
Vengeance and love at once bestowed on man.
See! crushed is Baal’s, proud Moloch’s temple falls;
Shout to the Lord! No more shall blood-stained walls,
Nor mountain grove, nor all the gods of Ham,
Dispel a Saviour’s love! Correction’s rod
Hath won the world,—for Heaven and Thee, O God!
It is one of the providences of Jehovah, that the very wretched forget their wrath, and the broken in spirit their violence. And it may be well for those who examine moral conduct by the evidences of the providences of God, to notice how wrath conduces to wretchedness, and violence to a breaking down of the spirit.
Olybius was by no means prepared to adopt the humiliating doctrines of the new faith; but he perceived it to be well adapted to the condition of those in the extremely low walks of life. By it the slave was taught to become “the freeman of the Lord,” and the wretched, destitute, and miserable, to become “heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ.” These doctrines, and the whole system, being founded upon the pillars of Humility, Faith, Hope, and Charity, were an arrangement to make the most humble as happy as the most exalted; as to happiness and hopes of heaven, it made all men equal; nor is it surprising that the low classes more readily become its converts.
Olybius may have seen some beautiful features in this system; but his philosophy forbid his faith. He calmly decided that it was a superstition too low to combat—worthy only of contempt. But he perceived that the blood of a hundred made a thousand Christians,and was convinced the only remedy was to improve and elevate the mind,—to imbue it with deep religious feeling and principle, a reverence and veneration for the gods.
He deeply felt the wound inflicted by the presence of Vopiscus, and would gladly have proved to the emperor that change of government, either as to ruler or its general system, could not affect the condition of this new doctrine. But he had no knowledge of the Christian’s God, nor of his attributes as a distinct Being; and hence, although he may be regarded as a most deadly enemy, yet, since the providences of Jehovah, through the mild light of the gospel, begin to develop themselves to the human understanding, we may deem his report to the emperor, on the Christian superstition, to beONE OF ITS MOST UNDYING PANEGYRICS; as an extract from which, we may well imagine, he wrote thus:—
Olybius to the Emperor Probus.
Olybius to the Emperor Probus.
Olybius to the Emperor Probus.
* * * “Great reforms on moral subjects do not occur, except under the influence of religious principle. Political revolutions and changes of policy and administration do indeed occur from other causes, and secure the ends which are desired. But, on subjects pertaining to right and wrong; on those questions where the rights of an inferior and down-trodden class are concerned, we can look for little advance, except from the operation of religious principle.
“Unless the inferior classes have power to assert their rights by arms, those rights will be conceded only by the operations of conscience and the principles of religion. There is no great wrong in any community which we can hope to rectify by new considerations of policy, or by a mere revolution. The relations ofChristianityare not reached by political revolutions, or by changes of policy or administration.
“Political revolutions occur in a higher region, and the condition of theChristianis no more affected by a mere change of government, than that of the vapours of a low, marshy vale is affected by the tempest and storm in the higher regions of the air. The storm sweeps along the Apennines, the lightnings play, and the thunders utter their voice, but the malaria of the Campagna is unaffected, and the pestilence breathes desolation there still. So it is with Christianity. Political revolutions occur in higher places, but the malaria ofChristianityremains settled down on the low plains of life, and not even the surface of the pestilentialvapour is agitated by all the storms and tempests of political changes; it remains the same deadly, pervading pestilence still. Under all the forms of despotism; in the government of aristocracy, or an oligarchy; under the administration of a pure democracy, or the forms of a republican government; and in all the changes from one to the other,Christianityremains still the same. Whether theprinceis hurled from the throne, or rides into power on the tempest of revolution, the down-trodden Christian is the same still:—and it makes no difference to him whether theprincewears a crown, or appears in a plain, republican garb,—'whether Cæsar is on the throne, or slain in the senate-house.'”
In these imputed sentiments of Olybius, the indications of the will of Jehovah, in establishing and protecting theinstitutionsofChristianity, by his providences towards it, is vividly portrayed to the Christian eye. Jehovah would not suffer “the gates of hell to prevail against it.” Of the very materials intended by its enemies for its destruction, he made them build its throne.
The scene, by which we have introduced this imaginary report of Olybius to the emperor, has been merely to remove from the mind any bias tending to a partial conception of the indications of the will of God, as evinced by his providences therein described, that we may more readily discover the fact, that, instead of showing Christianity to be worthy only of contempt, Olybius did pronounce its eulogium.
Change the wordsChristianandChristianityintoslaveandslavery;princeintomaster, and it then is what Mr. Barnes did say, and has said, (pages 25, 26, 27,) word for word, about the institution of slavery; and, as if desirous to portray the providences of God towards it down to the present time, continuously says. See pages 27 and 28—
“Slavery among the Romans remained substantially the same under the Tarquins, the consuls, and the Cæsars; when the tribunes gained the ascendency, and when the patricians crushed them to the earth. It lived in Europe when the northern hordes poured down on the Roman Empire; and when the caliphs set up the standard of Islam in the Peninsula. It lived in all the revolutions of the Middle Ages,—alike, when spiritual despotism swayed its sceptre over the nations, and when they began to emerge into freedom. In the British realms, it has lived in the time of the Stuarts, under the Protectorate, and for a long time under the administration of the house of Hanover. With some temporaryinterruptions, it lived in the provinces of France through the revolution. It lived through our own glorious Revolution; and the struggles which gave liberty to millions of the Anglo-Saxon race did not loosen one rivet from the fetters of an African, nor was there a slave who was any nearer to the enjoyment of freedom after the surrender of Yorktown, than when Patrick Henry taught the notes of liberty to echo along the hills and vales of Virginia. So in all changes of political administration in our own land, the condition of the slave remains unaffected. Alike whether the Federalists or Republicans have the rule; whether the star of the Whig or the Democrat is in the ascendant; the condition of the slave is still the same. The pæans of victory, when the hero of New Orleans was raised to the presidential chair, or when the hero of Tippecanoe was inaugurated, conveyed no * * * intimation of a change to the slave; nor had he any more hope, nor was his condition any more affected, when the one gave place to his successor, or the other was borne to the grave. And so it is now. In all the fierce contests for rule in the land; in the questions about changes in the administration, there are nearly three millions of our fellow-beings, who have no interest in these contests and questions, and whose condition will be affected no more, whatever the result may be, than the vapour that lies in the valley is by the changes from sunshine to storm on the summits of the Alps or the Andes.”
This may be all true, but what is the indication of God’s will, as taught by these, his providences towards it? “And now I say unto you refrain from these men, and let them alone; for if this counsel or this work be of men, it will come to nought; but if it be of God, ye cannot overthrow it; lest haply ye be found even to fight against God.”Actsv. 38, 39.
LESSON XIII.
Thus, it has pleased God, at an early age of the world, to reveal to the mind of man this mode of learning his will by the indications of Providence.
But Mr. Barnes has given us further data, whereby we may be enabled to examine more deeply into the indications of God’s will touching the institution of slavery, by reference to his providences concerning it, growing out of the universality and ancientness of the institution. Thus, page 112, he says—“That slavery had an existence when Moses undertook the task of legislating for the Hebrews, there can be no doubt. We have seen that servitude of some kind prevailed among the patriarchs; that the traffic in slaves was carried on between the Midianites and the Egyptians, * * * and that it existed among the Egyptians. It was undoubtedly practised by all the surrounding nations, for history does not point us to a time when slavery did not exist. * * * There is even evidence that slavery was practised by the Hebrews themselves, when in a state of bondage and that though they were as a nation ‘bondmen to Pharaoh,’ yet they had servants in their families who had been ‘bought with money.’ * * * At the very time that the law was given respecting the observance of the passover, and before the exode from Egypt, this statute appears among others: ‘This is the ordinance of the passover: there shall no stranger eat thereof: but every man-servant,that is bought for money, when thou hast circumcised him, then shall he eat thereof.’ It is clear, from this, that the institution was always in existence, and that Moses did not originate it.” Again, page 117: “A Hebrew might be sold to his brethren if he had been detected in the act of theft, and had no means of making restitution according to the provisions of the law.Exod.xxii. 3. ‘He shall make full restitution; if he have nothing, then he shall be sold for his theft.’” “This is in accordance with the common legal maxim,Luat in corpore, qui non habet in aere. The same law prevailed among the Egyptians, and among the Greeks also till the time of Solon. * * * By the laws of the twelve tables, the same thing was enacted at Rome. A native-born Hebrewmight be a servant in a single case in virtue of his birth. If the master had given to a Hebrew, whom he had purchased, a wife, and she had borne him children; the children were to remain in servitude.” SeeExod.xxi. 4. Again, page 250: “It is unnecessary to enter into proof that slavery abounded in the Roman Empire, or that the conditions of servitude were very severe and oppressive. This is conceded on all hands.” And page 251: “Slavery existed generally throughout the Roman Empire was very great.” * * * Page 252: “Of course, according to this, the number of slaves could not have been less than sixty millions in the Roman Empire, at about the time when the apostles went forth to preach the gospel.” And again, page 253: “The slave-trade in Africa is as old as history reaches back. Among the ruling nations of the north coast, the Egyptians, Cyrenians, and Carthaginians, slavery was not only established, but they imported whole armies of slaves, partly for home use, and partly, at least by the Carthaginians, to be shipped for foreign markets.”
“They were chiefly drawn from the interior, where kidnapping was just as much carried on then as now. Black male and female slaves were even an article of luxury, not only among the above-named nations, but in Greece and Italy.”
Mr. Barnes has quoted and adopted the foregoing, and many other passages, from the Biblical Repository. (See Bib. Rep. pp. 413, 414.) And again, page 259 of Barnes: * * * “And it is a rare thing, perhaps a thing that never has occurred, that slavery did not prevail in a country which furnished slaves for another country.”
Many of the foregoing statements are facts as well established asanypart of history. But these truths, honestly admitted by Mr. Barnes, are pregnant with important considerations touching the institution of slavery and the providence of God towards it.
LESSON XIV.
Mr. Barnes says, page 381—
“If slavery is to be defended, it is not to be by arguments drawn from the Bible, but by arguments drawn from its happy influences on agriculture, commerce, and the arts; * * * on its elevating the black man, and making him more intelligent and happy than he would be in his own land; on its whole benevolent bearing on the welfare of the slave, in this world and the world to come.”
It must give every good man the deepest grief to discover this growing disposition among religious teachers to thrust aside the teachings of the Bible, and to place in its stead the worldly advantages and personal considerations of individual benefit. What shall we think of the religious feeling and orthodoxy of him who places “agriculture, commerce, and the arts” in higher authority than the books of Divine revelation. Thus, this teacher says, “If the Bible teaches slavery, then the Bible is the greatest curse that could happen toour race;” yet allows, that if slavery shall have a beneficial and happy influence on “agriculture, commerce, and the arts,” it may be sustained and defended. Such is the obvious deduction from the proposition! Mistaken man! But, since we say that slavery is most triumphantly sustained and defended by the Bible, let us take a view of it agreeably to Mr. Barnes’s direction. So far as we have means, it may be well to examine the negro in his native ranges.
About thirty years ago, we had a knowledge of an African slave, the property of Mr. Bookter, of St. Helena Parish, La. Sedgjo was apparently about sixty years of age—was esteemed to be unusually intelligent for an African. We propose to give the substance of his narrative, without regard to his language or manner. For a length of time we made it an object to draw out his knowledge and notions; and on the subject of the Deity, his idea was that the power which made him wasprocreation; and that, as far as regarded his existence, he needed not to care for any other god. This deity was to be worshipped by whatever act would represent him asprocreator. It need not be remarked that this worship was the extreme of indecency; but the more the act of worshipwas wounding to the feelings or sense of delicacy, the more acceptable it was to the god. The displays of this worship could not well be described.
Sedgjo’s account put us in mind of Maachah, the mother of Asa. In this worship, it was not uncommon to kill, roast, and eat young children, with the view to propitiate the god, and make its parents prolific. So also the first-born of a mother was sometimes killed and eaten, in thankfulness to the god for making them the instruments of itsprocreation. The king was the owner and master of the whole tribe. He might kill and do what else he pleased with them. The whole tribe was essentially his slaves. But he usually made use of them as a sort of soldiers. Those who were put to death at feasts and sacrifices were generally persons captured from other tribes. Persons captured were also slaves, might be killed and eaten on days of sacrifice, or sold and carried away to unknown countries. If one was killed in battle, and fell into the hands of those who slew him, they feasted on him at night. If they captured one alive who had done the tribe great injury, a day was set apart for all the tribe to revenge themselves and feast on him. The feet and palms of the hands were the most delicious parts. When the king or master died, some of his favourite wives and other slaves were put to death, so that he yet should have their company and services. The king and the men of the tribe seldom cultivated the land; but the women and captured slaves are the cultivators. They never whip a slave, but strike him with a club; sometimes break his bones or kill him: if they kill him, they eat him.
Sedgjo belonged to the king’s family; sometimes commanded as head man; consequently, had he not been sold, would have been killed and eaten. The idea of being killed and eaten was not very dreadful to him; he had rather be eaten by men than to have the flies eat him.
He once thought white men bought slaves to eat, as they did goats. When he first saw the white man, he was afraid of his red lips; he thought they were raw flesh and sore. It was more frightful to be eaten by red than by black lips.
On shipboard, many try to starve, or jump into the sea, to keep themselves from being eaten by the red-lips. Did they but know what was wanted of them, the most would be glad to come. He cannot tell how long he was on the way to the ships, nor did he know where he was going; thinks he was sold many times beforehe got there; never saw the white man till he was near the sea; all the latter part of his journey to the coast the people did not kill or eat their slaves, but sold them. Their clothing is a small cloth about the loins. The king and some others have a large cloth about the shoulders. Many are entirely naked all their lives. Sedgjo has no wish to go back; has better clothing here than the kings have there; if he does more work, he has more meat. If he is whipped here, he is struck with a club there. There, always afraid of being killed; jumped like a deer, if, out of the village, he saw or met a stranger; is very glad he came here; here he is afraid of nobody.
Such is the substance of what came from the negro’s own lips. It was impossible to learn from him his distinct nation or tribe. Mr. Bookter thought him an Eboe, which was probably a mistake.
The Periplus, or voyage of Hanno, was made 570 years before the Christian era. Its account was written in Punic, and deposited in the temple of Moloch, at Carthage. It was afterwards translated into Greek; and thence into English, by Dr. Faulkner, a sketch of which may be found in the “Phœnix of Rare Fragments,” from which we quote, pp. 208–210:
“Beyond the Lixitiæ dwell the inhospitable Ethiopians, who pasture a wild country, intersected by large mountains, from which they say the river Lixus flows. In the neighbourhood of the mountains lived the ‘Troglodytæ,’ (people who burrowed in the earth,) men of various appearance, whom the Lixitiæ described as swifter in running than horses. * * * Thence we proceeded towards the east the course of a day, * * * from which proceeding a day’s sail, we came to the extremity of the lake, that was overhung by large mountains, inhabited by savage men clothed in skins of wild beasts, who drove us away by throwing stones, and hindered us from landing. * * * Thence we sailed towards the south twelve days, * * * the whole of which is inhabited by Ethiopians, who would not wait our approach, but fled from us. Their language was not intelligible, even to the Lixitiæ who were with us. * * * When we had landed, we could discover nothing in the daytime except trees; in the night we saw many fires burning, and heard the sound of pipes, cymbals, drums, and confused shouts. We were then afraid, and our diviners ordered us to abandon the island; * * * at the bottom of which lay an island like the other, having a lake, and in this lake another island, fullof savage people, the greater part of whom were women, whose bodies were hairy, and whom our interpreters calledGorillæ. Though we pursued the men, we could not seize any of them; all fled from us, escaping over the precipices, and defending themselves with stones. Three women were however taken; but they attacked their conductors with their teeth and hands, and could not be prevailed on to accompany us. Having killed them, we flayed them, and brought their skins with us to Carthage.”
See also King Humpsal’s History of African Settlements, translated from the Punic books, by Sallust and into English by H. Stewart, page 221:
“The Gætuli and the Libyans, as it appears, were the first nations that peopled Africa; a rude and savage race, subsisting partly on the flesh of wild beasts, and partly, like cattle, on the herbs of the field. Among these tribes social intercourse was unknown; and they were utter strangers to laws, or to civil government; wandering during the day from place to place, as inclination prompted; at night, wherever chance conducted them they took up their transient habitation.” See page 224, same book: “At the back of Numidia, the Gætuli are reported to inhabit, a savage tribe, of which a part only made use of huts; while the rest, less civilized, lead a roving life, without restraint or fixed habitation. Beyond the Gætuli is the country of the Ethiopians.”
InJudg.iii. 7, 8, we have as follows: “And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the Lord, and forgot the Lord their God. * * * Therefore the anger of the Lord was hot against Israel, and he sold them into the hand ofChusan Rishathaim," (כּוּשָׁן רִשְׁעֲתַיִםkûšān rišʿătayim) which, means the “wicked Ethiopians.” Let us notice its similarity of sentiment with a record in hieroglyphics, in the temple of Karnac, whereCushis used as the general term to mean the negro tribes: thus, “Kush,barbarian,perverse race;” and there inscribed over the figures of negro captives, two thousand years before our Christian era. See Gliddon’s Lectures, page 42.
We quote from Horne’s “Introduction to the Study of the Scriptures,” thus: “It is a notorious fact that these latter” (the Canaanites) “were an abominably wicked people.”
“It is needless to enter into any proof of the depraved state of their morals; they were a wicked people in the time of Abraham; and even then were devoted to destruction by God. But their iniquity was not yet full. In the time of Moses, they were idolaters;sacrificers of their own crying and smiling infants; devourers of human flesh; addicted to unnatural lusts; immersed in the filthiness of all manner of vice.” SeeChristian Observerof 1819, p. 732.
But let us look at the negro tribes in more modern days. We quote from Lander, p. 58: “What makes us more desirous to leave this abominable place, is the fact (as we have been told) that a sacrifice of no less thanthree hundredhuman beings, of both sexes and all ages, is shortly to take place. We often hear the cries of many of these poor wretches; and the heart sickens with horror at the bare contemplation of such a scene as awaits us should we remain here much longer.”
And page 74: “We have longed to discover a solitary virtue lingering among the natives of this place, (Badagry,) but as yet our search has been ineffectual.”
And page 77: “We have met with nothing but selfishness and rapacity, from the chief to the meanest of his people. The religion of Badagry is Mohammedanism, and the worst species of paganism; that which sanctions and enjoins the sacrifice of human beings, and other abominable practices, and the worship of imaginary demons and fiends.”
Page 110: “It is the custom here, when a governor dies, for two of his favourite wives to quit the world on the same day, in order that he may have a little pleasant, social company in a future state.”
Page 111: “The reason of our not meeting with a better reception at Loatoo, when we slept there, was the want of a chief to that town, the last having followed the old governor to the eternal shades, for he was his slave. Widows are burned in India, just as they are poisoned orclubbedhere; but in the former country, I believe no male victims are destroyed on such occasions.”
“At Paoya, (page 124,) several chiefs in the road have asked us the reason why the Portuguese do not purchase as many slaves as formerly; and make very sad complaints of the stagnation in this branch of traffic.”
Page 158: “At Leograda, a man thinks as little of taking a wife as cutting an ear of corn. Affection is altogether out of the question.”
Page 160: “At Eitcho, it will scarcely be believed, that not less than one hundred and sixty governors of towns and villages between this place and the seacoast, all belonging to Yariba, have died fromnatural causes, or have been slain in war, since I was last here; and that of the inhabited places through which we have passed, not more than a half-dozen chiefs are alive at this moment, who received and entertained me on my return to Badagry, three years ago.”
Page 176: “They seem to have no social tenderness; very few of those amiable private virtues which would win our affection, and none of those public qualities that claim respect or command admiration. Their love of country is not strong enough in their bosoms to incite them to defend it against the irregular incursions of a despicable foe. * * * Regardless of the past as reckless of the future; the present alone influences their actions. In this respect they approach nearer to the brute creation than perhaps any other people on the face of the globe.”
Page 181: “In so large a place as this, where two-thirds of the population are slaves.” * * *
Page 192: “The cause of it was soon explained by his informing us that he would be doomed to die with two companions, (slaves,) as soon as their governor’s dissolution should take place.”
Page 227: “In the forenoon we passed near a spot where our guides informed us a party of Falatahs, a short time ago, murdered twenty of their slaves, because they had not food sufficient,” &c.
Page 232: “At Coobly, he would rather have given us a boy (slave) instead of the horse.”
Page 233: “Monday, June 14th.—The governor’s old wife returned from Boossa this morning, whither she had gone in quest of three female slaves who had fled from her about a fortnight since. She has brought her fugitives back with her, and they are now confined in irons.”
Page 272: “Both these days the men have been entering the city; and they have brought with them only between forty and fifty slaves.”
Page 278: “The chief benefits resulting to Bello from the success of the rebels, were a half-yearly tribute, which the magia agreed to pay him in slaves.”
Page 282: “At Yaooris.—And many thousands of his men, fearing no law, and having no ostensible employment, are scattered over the face of the whole country. They commit all sorts of crimes; they plunder, they burn, they destroy, and even murder, and are not accountable to any earthly tribunal for their actions.”
Page 312: “At Boossa.—The manners of the Africans too, arehostile to the interest and advancement of woman, and she is very rarely placed on an equality with her husband.”
Page 228: “A man is at liberty to return his wife to her parents at any time, and without adducing any reason.”
Page 345: “The Sheikh of Bornou has recently issued a proclamation, that no slaves from the interior countries are to be sent for sale farther west than Wowow,—so that none will be sent in future from thence to the seaside. The greatest and most profitable market for slaves is said to be at Timbuctoo, whither their owners at present transport them to sell to the Arabs, who take them over the deserts of Tahara and Libya to sell in the Barbary States. An Arab has informed us that many of his countrymen trade as far as Turkey, in Europe, with their slaves, where they dispose of them for two hundred and fifty dollars each. * * * Perhaps it would be speaking within compass to say that four-fifths of the whole population of this country, (the Eboe,) likewise every other hereabouts, are slaves.”
Vol. ii. page 208: “It may appear strange that I should dwell so long on this subject, for it seems quite natural that every one, even the most thoughtless barbarian, would feel at least some slight emotion on being exiled from his native land and enslaved; but so far is this from being the case, that Africans, generally speaking, betray the most perfect indifference on losing their liberty and being deprived of their relatives; while love of country is seemingly as great a stranger to their breasts as social tenderness and domestic affection. We have seen many thousands of slaves; some of them more intelligent than others; but the poor little fat woman whom I have mentioned,—the associate of beasts and wallowing in filth,—whose countenance would seem to indicate only listnessness, stupidity, and perhaps idiotism, without the smallest symptom of intelligence—she alone has shown any thing like regret on gazing on her native land for the last time.”
Page 218: “It has been told us by many that the Eboe people are confirmned Anthropophagi; and this opinion is more prevalent among the tribes bordering on that kingdom than with the nations of more remote districts.”
We shall close our extracts from Lander’s work, by the following, showing that the Africans made slaves of the two Landers themselves.
Page 225: “The king then said, with a serious countenance, that there was no necessity for further discussion respecting thewhite men, (the two brothers Lander,) his mind was already made up on the subject; and for the first time, he briefly explained himself, to this effect: That circumstances having thrown us in the way of his subjects, by the laws and usages of the country he was not only entitled to our own persons, but had equal rights to those of our attendants. That he should take no further advantage of his good fortune than by exchanging us for as much English goods as would amount in value to twenty slaves.”
The following we transcribe from Stedman’s Narrative, vol. ii. page 267: “I should not forget to mention that the Gingo negroes are supposed to be Anthropophagi, or cannibals, like the Caribbee Indians, instigated by habitual and implacable revenge. Among the rebels of this tribe, after the taking of Boucore, some pots were found on the fire, with human flesh, which one of the officers had the curiosity to taste; and declared that it was not inferior to some kinds of beef or pork. I have since been informed, by a Mr. Vaugils, an American, who, having travelled a great number of miles inland in Africa, at last came to a place where human arms, legs, and thighs hung upon wooden shambles, and were exposed to sale like butcher’s meat. And Captain John Keen, formerly of the Dolphin, but late of the Vianbana schooner, in the Sierra Leone Company’s service, positively assured me that, a few years since, when he was on the coast of Africa, in the brig Fame, from Bristol, Mr. Samuel Briggs, owner, trading for wool, ivory, and gold-dust, a Captain Dunningen, with the whole crew belonging to the Nassau schooner, were cut in pieces, salted, and eaten by the negroes of Great Drewin.”
But this is nothing to what is related, on good authority, respecting the Giagas, a race of cannibals who are said to have overrun a great part of Africa. These monsters, it is said, are descended from the Agows and Galia, who dwell in the southern extremity of Abyssinia, near the sources of the Nile. Impelled by necessity or the love of plunder, they left their original settlements, and extended their ravages through the heart of Africa, till they were stopped by the Western Ocean. They seized on the kingdom of Benguela, laying to the south of Angola; and in this situation they were found by the Romish missionaries, and by our countryman, Andrew Battel, whose adventures may be found in Purchas’s Pilgrim. Both he, and the Capuchin Cavozzi, who resided long among them and converted several of them to Christianity, gave such an account of their manners as is enough to chill the bloodwith horror. We shall spare our readers the horrid detail, only observing that human flesh is one of their delicacies, and that they devour it, not from a spirit of revenge, or from any want of other food, but as the most agreeable dainty. Some of their commanders, when they went on an expedition, carried numbers of young women along with them, some of whom were slain almost every day, to gratify this unnatural appetite.” See Modern Universal History, vol. xvi. p. 321; also Anzito; also Edin. Encyc. vol. ii. p. 185.
In continuation of this subject, permit us to take a view of these tribes, at a time just before the slave-trade commenced among them with Christian nations. The Portuguese were first to attempt to colonize portions of Africa, with the double view of extending commerce and of spreading the Christian faith. They commenced a settlement of that kind in the regions of Congo, as early as 1578; shortly after which, the Angolas, an adjoining nation, being at war with each other, one party applied to Congo and the Portuguese for aid, which was lent them. Soon a battle took place, in which 120,000 of the Angolas and Giagas were slain. See Lopez’s Hist. of Congo.
About the same time, we find inDappus de l'Afrique, the following data:
“The natives of Angola are tall and strong but, like the rest of the Ethiopians, they are so very lazy and indolent, that although their soil is admirably adapted to the raising of cattle and the production of grain, they allow both to be destroyed by the wild beasts with which the country abounds. The advantages which they enjoy from climate and soil are thus neglected. * * * We are told that the people in some of the idolatrous provinces still feed on human flesh, and prefer it to all other; so that a dead slave gives a higher price in market than a living one. The cannibals are in all probability descended from the barbarous race of the Giagas, by whom the greater part of the eastern and south-eastern provinces were peopled. One most inhuman custom still prevails in this part of the kingdom, and that is, the sacrificing of a number of human victims at the burial of their dead, in testimony of the respect in which their memory is held. The number of these unhappy victims is therefore always in proportion to the rank and wealth of the deceased; and their bodies are afterwards piled up in a heap upon their tombs. * * * This prince (Angola Chilvagni) became a great warrior, enlarged the Angolicdominions, and died much regretted; and was succeeded by his son, Dambi Angola. Unlike his father, he is described as a monster of cruelty, and, happily for his subjects, his reign was of short duration. Nevertheless, he was buried with great magnificence; and, according to the barbarous custom of the country, a mound was erected over his grave, filled with the bones of human victims, who had been sacrificed to his manes.”
“He was succeeded by Ngola Chilvagni, a warlike and cruel prince, who carried his victorious arms within a few leagues of Loando. * * * Intoxicated with success, he fancied himself a God, and claimed divine honours. * * * Ngingha was elected his successor, a prince of so cruel a disposition that all his subjects wished his death; which, happily for them, soon arrived. Nevertheless, he was buried with the usual pomp, with the usual number of sacrifices. His son and successor, Bandi Angola, discovered a disposition still more cruel than his father’s. * * * To counteract these and other idolatrous rites, and to soften that barbarity of manners which so generally prevailed, the Portuguese, when they established themselves in the country, (1578,) were at great pains to introduce the invaluable blessings of Christianity. * * * so that from the year 1580 to 1590, we are informed, no less a number than 20,000 were converted and publicly professed Christianity.” * *
“Her remains were no sooner deposited beside her sisters, in the church which she had built, than Mona Zingha declared his abhorrence to Christianity, and revived the horrid Giagan rites. Five women, of the first rank, were by his orders buried in the queen’s grave, and upwards of forty persons of distinction were next sacrificed. * * * He wrote the viceroy at Loando, that he had abjured the Christian religion, which he said he had formerly embraced merely out of respect * * * to his queen, and that he now returned to the ancient sect of the Giagas. That there might remain no doubt of his sincerity in that declaration, he followed it with the sacrifice of a great number of victims, in honour of their bloody and idolatrous rites, with the destruction of all Christian churches and chapels, and with the persecution of the Christians in all parts of his kingdom.”
And we may here remark that even the nations of the coast could never be persuaded to abolish human sacrifice, nor to the introduction of Christianity, to any extent, until after the introduction of the slave-trade with christian nations. See also Osborn’sCollection of Travels, vol. ii. p. 537; Mod. Universal Hist. vol. 43; and Edin. Encyc. vol. ii. pp. 107, 109, 110, 113.
Over two hundred years ago, and during the reign of Charles I. of England, Sir Thomas Herbert, (not Lord Edward Herbert, who wrote a deistical book, entitled, “Truth,”) a gentleman of most elevated connection, and a scholar devoted to science and general literature, with a mind adorned by poetry and influenced by the strongest impulses of human sympathy; and one, of whom Lord Fairfax said,