An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African.

An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African.

But as the notions of men in the less barbarous ages, which followed, became more corrected and refined, the practice of piracy began gradually to disappear.  It had hitherto been supported on the grand columns of emolument and honour.  When the latter therefore was removed, it received a considerable shock; but, alas! it had still a pillar for its support! avarice, which exists in all states, and which is ready to turn every invention to its own ends, strained hard for its preservation.  It had been produced in the ages of barbarism; it had been pointed out in those ages as lucrative, and under this notion it was continued.  People were still stolen; many were intercepted (some, in their pursuits of pleasure, others, in the discharge of their several occupations) by their own countrymen; who previously laid in wait for them, and sold them afterwards for slaves; while others seized by merchants, who traded on the different coasts, were torn from their friends and connections, and carried into slavery.  The merchants of Thessaly, if we can credit Aristophanes[014] who never spared the vices of the times, were particularly infamous for the latter kind of depredation; the Athenians were notorious for the former; for they had practised these robberies to such an alarming degree of danger to individuals, that it was found necessary to enact a law[015], which punished kidnappers with death.—­But this is sufficient for our present purpose; it will enable us to assert, that there were two classes of involuntary slaves among the ancients, “of those who were taken publickly in a state of war, and of those who were privately stolen in a state of innocence and peace.”  We may now add, that the children and descendents of these composed a third.

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FOOTNOTES

[Footnote 009:  Thucydides.  L. 1. sub initio.]

[Footnote 010:  Idem.—­“the strongest,” says he, “engaging in these adventures, Kerdous tou spheterou auton eneka kai tois asthenesi trophes.”]

[Footnote 011:  Homer.  Odyss.  L. 15. 385.]

[Footnote 012:  Xenoph.  Kyrou Anab.  L. 6. sub initio.]

[Footnote 013:  ouk echontos po Aischynen toutou tou ergou pherontos de ti kai Doxes mallon.  Thucydides, L. 1. sub initio. kai euklees touto oi Kilikes enomizon.  Sextus Empiricus. ouk adoxon all’endoxon touto.  Schol. &c. &c.]

[Footnote 014:  Aristoph.  Plut.  Act. 2.  Scene 5.]

[Footnote 015:  Zenoph.  Apomnemon, L. 1.]

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CHAP.  IV.

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An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.