Pagina-afbeeldingen
PDF
ePub

1

322

196

437

In the present edition of the first and second volumes of this work, a
number of articles of Literary Intelligence and other matter of but tempo-
rary interest, have been omitted, and official accounts of the naval actions
from the commencement of the late war to end of the year 1813, have been
inserted in their stead. Accounts of those of a later date will be found in
the subsequent volumes. The division of the work into numbers was thought
unnecessary in this edition, and has therefore not been adhered to.

[blocks in formation]

ADDRESS by Ld. Byron, on open-
ing of Drury Lane Theatre, 141
African Institution, Sixth Re.
port of the Directors of the
Alderman's Funeral, The
American State Papers, Review
of, .

Apollo of Belvidere, (prize poem,) 236
Apologue, Oriental, Observations
on the,

Page.

Clarke's Travels in Asia and A-
frica, Part second, Review of, 144
Comedies of Aristophanes, Re-
view of the,
Confucius, Anecdotes of,
Memoirs of the Life

[ocr errors]

413

383

[blocks in formation]

Aristophanes, Review of the Co-

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

D

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Rodgers, commodore, letter-cruise of the American squadron and

action with the Belvidera,

Hull's Letter relating to the above

Escape of the Constitution,

Capture of the Guerriere

Porter's

Capture of the Alert, .

Crane's

Loss of the Nautilus,

Jones's

Capture of the Frolic,

Decatur's -, Capture of the Macedonian,

Elliott's, Capture of the Caledonia and the Detroit,

Bainbridge's

Drayton's

Lawrence's

-, Capture of the Java,

[ocr errors]

Loss of the Vixen, by capture and shipwreck,
Capture of the Peacock,

4.99

504

505

509

511

512

514

515

517

520

524

525

ANALECTIC MAGAZINE.

Vol. I.-From January to June, 1813, inclusive.

SECOND EDITION.

Sixth Report of the Directors of the African Institution; read at the Annual General Meeting on the 25th of March, 1812. To which are added, an Appendix and a List of Subscribers. 8vo. pp. 178. London. 1812.

[From the Edinburgh Review, for July, 1812.]

IT gives us sincere pleasure to resume, from time to time, our notices of the proceedings of this excellent and useful institution; both because we thereby obtain fit opportunities of keeping the attention of our readers directed towards the important subjects of Africa and the West Indies, and because we always find materials for extending our knowledge of that unexplored continent. The latter reason will be found peculiarly applicable to the present publication, which is inferior, in importance and originality, to none of those that preceded it.

Before proceeding to the proper subject of this article, we must remark, that a change appears to have taken place in the office of secretary of the institution. We regret to find that Mr. Macaulay is no longer able to continue the discharge of those duties, which he had with distinguished ability performed, at great personal loss and inconvenience, since the beginning of the institution. Any praise of ours, however, would be unavailing, after that honourable testimony borne to his merits in the unanimous resolution passed at the general meeting, which is inserted at p. iv. of the volume before us. Mr. Macaulay had formerly refused a similar testimony of regard, voted at the general meeting of 1810; about which time, he also, with a disinterestedness rare indeed, abandoned to the actual captors his VOL. I. 2D ED.

1

share of a large pecuniary penalty incurred by a slave trader. He is succeeded in the office of secretary by Mr. Harrison of Queen's College; a gentleman of distinguished reputation at the university, and who having recently quitted the bar, is enabled to bestow an undivided attention upon the duties of his new employment.

Our attention is, as usual, first directed to the execution of the abolition laws-the great pillar of African civilization-indeed, the point from which the course of improvement in that vast continent may be said to spring. That the English traders are at last checked, we believe, cannot be doubted. They will not risk a conviction of felony, and sentence of transportation to Botany Bay. The American government, too, having abolished the traffic, and the decision in the noted case of the Amedie having shown British cruisers in what manner they may enforce the American prohibition,-few vessels bearing that flag are now engaged in it, compared with the former amount. But, on the other hand, a prodigious slave trade is still carried on by those famous allies of ours, the Portuguese and Spaniards. Cuba is daily extending her cultivation-the Brazils are more and more crowded with miserable victims. In short, so thriving is this enormity, that the directors do not hesitate to state, from their own information, that between 70,000 and 80,000 negroes were carried over in the year 1810. This dreadful commerce was confined chiefly to the coast between Cape Palmas and Benguela. The Portuguese treaty confines the trade in vessels of that nation to places actually in possession of the Portuguese crown; and had it not been for the small island of Bissao, (a place of no earthly value, except for the purposes of the slave trade,) this traffic must have been wholly destroyed to the northward of the equator. This islet, however, has become an entrepot for all the slave merchants whom the vigilance of our cruiers has driven from the other parts of the coast; and though the treaty nominally excludes the Portuguese from every part of the coast north of the equator, except Bissao, this denunciation is of little avail, while they can smuggle over negroes from all parts of the coast, in canoes, to Bissao; from whence they have a right to transport them in open day to the Brazils. Mark the baneful effects of this exception. Bissao is situated at the mouth of the Rio Grande. An intelligent naval officer lately visited its banks; and he describes the devastation which prevails there, as exceeding all belief. He distinctly states, that the country, on both banks, is quite unpeopled by the slave trade.'

Now, there is nothing like putting the case home to ourselves. Suppose the French had got possession of the little island called the Bugio, at the mouth of the Tagus; and, without any pre

text even of a quarrel with Portugal, were to assemble an immense force in that river, sufficient to overpower all resistance, and every night were to send some hundreds of boats to scour the shores, and carry off two hundred of the stoutest and healthiest and happiest of the people in Lisbon and its neighbourhood; and suppose this were to last, without interruption, for two years, so that those banks which used to swarm with Portuguese, became a perfect desert, the few whom the French left having perished helplessly by famine and disease. Suppose, moreover, that instead of carrying off all the captives to fight or serve in France and Germany, the spoilers hurried them away in the most crowded vessels, where they were laid in chains on their backs, and scourged or screwed every time they made a noise; till, after eight weeks of such misery, they arrived in the worst of climates, and there, were lashed to pieces under a burning sun until they died, or only survived to suffer and labour more, and curse the strength of constitution which kept them from a speedier release by death.

If such a case as this were brought distinctly before us, should we not awaken all Europe with cries against France, and for the liberation of Portugal? Should we not say, that all the other oppressions of the French-all their common invasions-their spoliations and conscriptions, were a mere trifle compared with this; that human nature had put on a new shape; and that iniquity now visited us in a form which completely obliterated the recollection of every previous enormity? We will not stop to inquire what the Spaniards and Portuguese would themselves say to the matter; but certain it is, that the case we have been putting is exactly that which they are at this moment exhibiting to the world, with aggravations which each circumstance of the fact, that we might add to our own enumeration, would accumulate. All that we have supposed themselves to suffer, from the French, they are at this moment daily and hourly making a people endure, to the full as virtuous and deserving as they are. Every horror that we have fancied the enemy to enrage all Europe, by exhibiting in the Tagus, our faithful allies-the friends of Spanish and Portuguese liberty, whom we are supporting with all our treasures and forces, in a struggle with comparatively insignificant evils, are hourly perpetrating in Africa, against the most innocent and peaceful creatures in the world, without ever exciting one moment's indignation in any part of Europe. So inconsistent are the feelings of statesmen: so ignorant or unobservant are nations of all that passes at a little distance; and so important are the mistakes of names, by which men are led, and the sanctions of use and habit by which they are restrained!

« VorigeDoorgaan »