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THE GENERAL CHIARACTER, AND MORAL AND POLITICAL EFFECTS,

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6381.14 U.S.5258,12

HA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY

4261 54-25

THE

African Observer.

FOURTH MONTH, 1827.

PROSPECTUS.

It is our privilege to live in an age of surpassing improvement. The sciences and the arts are deeply indebted to the genius and enterprise of our cotemporaries; and schemes, of extensive utility, are now in successful operation, which, half a century ago, would have been considered as fit only to supply a void in the brain of a maniac, or to exercise the idle ingenuity of a visionary projector. By new and efficacious experiments, principles in natural science, unknown to our fathers, have been developed, and new avenues opened to the enjoyment of man.

we must subscribe to the sentiment, that no people have greater cause reverently to commemorate the goodness of a beneficent Creator than the people of these United States. No where have the choicest blessings of the all-bountiful Parent been spread with a more unsparing hand. To no other people, ancient or modern, has the cup of felicity been presented, with fewer bitter ingredients, or more completely purified from the lees of political thraldom.

If, judging of the future from the past, we endeavour to delineate our course through ages yet to come, a Of those improvements in physical series of pleasing anticipations warms and political science, which have the reflecting mind. With a fertile stamped their character on the last soil, extending through every desiraand the passing age, the inhabitants of ble variety of climate, and capable of the western world claim a distinguish- || affording all that luxury could deed share-There ingenuity has dis- mand to supply the wants, or promote played its inventions to the gaze and the comfort of man; with a populaimitation of the world, and there the tion enlightened and free; with a goprinciples of government have been vernment over which the laws are sutraced to their source, and the laws of preme, and the people the arbiters of immutable justice solemnly proclaim- the law; the way appears open to that ed as the proper basis and support of national greatness which ambition political institutions. I could not wish to enhance, and to individual prosperity, in which discontent might blush to complain.

If we review the periods of our national growth, and mark our unparalleled progress in the march of nations, VOL. I.-1

Are these the delusive prospects of

a feverish patriotism, the visions of poetry; or are they the anticipations of sober reflection? Is there no ill boding omen to dim the light that glitters on our future course? Alas! one portentous cloud is impending over some of the fairest portions of our favoured land. One dire disease, deeply infixed in our national system, has "grown with our growth, and strengthened with our strength." The light of freedom, which we so highly prize, shines on a part of our population only by reflection, and to them is rather "darkness visible" than light.

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But, however we may commiserate the condition of those who are doomed to hereditary servitude, the zeal which this feeling excites may sometimes warm without enlightening the philanthropic mind. The slave, sunk and degraded below the proper level of humanity, may find, in the lethargic insensibility resulting from his situation, a retreat from mental suffering; yet, though bent to the yoke, he still possesses the stamina of the human character-the aspiring tendency of his nature, though suppressed and concealed, is not destroyed-his dormant passions are not extinct. The tranquillity which prevails, may be sudden

This appalling subject is forced upon us, however reluctant we may feel to investigate its character, or contemplate its rugged and forbidding aspect. A population of more than a million and a half, familiar with all the privacies of our domestic life; accustomed to hear liberty extolled as the highest and noblest of enjoyments; and yet, finding the bitter draught of hereditary servitude its own hopelessly disturbed-for the slumbering volportion; incapable, from its degraded condition, of appreciating the blessings of the government under which we live, and having little to dread from any change or convulsions of the political world-presents to our view a prospect too awful to be contemplated with stoic indifference. The cloud is thickening with the progress of time; and prudence admonishes, that, if it cannot be dissipated, it should, if possible, be disarmed of its lightning.

Whether slavery is, or is not, a political evil; or whether a free or a slave population is most conducive to national prosperity, can scarcely, in this age, and in this country, require a serious discussion.

If slavery has, in all ages, and among all nations, been considered as among

cano retains its fires, and those who occupy its smoking verge may themselves become the victims of the devouring element.

The slave is not the only object that demands our consideration. The introduction of negro slavery into the United States was not the work of the present generation. The system was entailed upon them by their ancestors: and justice demands the ́admission, that evils, both moral and po litical, are more easily discovered than removed; and that those who are subjected, by the circumstances of their birth, to the hard alternative, either to new model the habits which have grown with their years, or to maintain a system which their sober judgments cannot approve, are objects

of sympathy with the truly christian mind.

The jealousies and antipathies which the distinction between slaveholding and non slave-holding states has engendered and fed, may be safely classed among the disastrous concomitants of the system; especially as they oppose a stubborn obstacle to any general effort for the removal of the other acknowledged evils of slavery. Unhappily for the cause of humanity, the advocate of the slave has been too often identified with the antagonist of his owner. The interests of these opposite classes have been considered as incompatible, and friendship for the one as synonymous with enmity for the other.

To soften or remove those antipathies, and promote, between the inhabitants of the different sections of our country, a community of feeling on this momentous subject, is an object of vital importance, worthy of the efforts of those who seek alike the good of all. This cause, though critical and arduous, is not desperate. Happily the purblind philosophy, which taught mankind to believe that one part of the community could rise only by the depression of another, has passed away with the ages that are gone, and a more enlightened era has dawned. Man is a social being, and finds his own particular advantage in the promotion of the general good. Party strifes and sectional jealousies result from erroneous and limited views of private interest; and often from imperfect acquaintance with the motives by which others are actuated: The people of the United States are bound together by one great federal interest; and however the inhabitants of the north may disapprove and ab

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hor the system of servitude which prevails in the south, and however they may compassionate its victims, there must, from their common interests, as well as common origin, always exist, in the prejudices and sympathies of the former, a strong preponderance in favour of the superior class.

There is probably no subject more deeply interesting to every section of the Union than negro slavery, and none which has stronger claims on the clearest heads and purest hearts among us. To open a way, equally safe and salutary, for the master and the slave to escape from the evils in which they are involved, and thus to clear ourselves from the reproach of having disavowed, by our practice, the noble principles on which we assumed a rank among the nations of the earth, is the great political problem, which this or some succeeding generation

must solve.

Animated by a desire to contribute towards the attainment of this momentous object, and supported by the encouragement of his friends, the subscriber has concluded to offer to public acceptance, a monthly periodical journal, with the title prefixed to this article, designed to include an extensive range of inquiries connected with this subject. To combat the prejudices which this system has produced, and which have varied their shades according to the points from which the condition has been viewed-to trace the moral influence of slavery on those who breathe its atmosphere -and to point out the best means for its peaceful extinction, will be among the prominent objects of discussion.

The work will comprise the following general divisions.

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