large huts of a square shape to stow these stolen
ones in; they are well fed, but aired by night only.
The frequent kidnapping from outlying hamlets explains
the stockades we saw around them; the parents have
no redress, for even Shinte himself seems fond of
working in the dark. One night he sent for me,
though I always stated I liked all my dealings to be
aboveboard. When I came he presented me with
a slave girl about ten years old; he said he had always
been in the habit of presenting his visitors with a
child. On my thanking him, and saying that I thought
it wrong to take away children from their parents,
that I wished him to give up this system altogether,
and trade in cattle, ivory, and bees’-wax, he
urged that she was “to be a child” to
bring me water, and that a great man ought to have
a child for the purpose, yet I had none. As I
replied that I had four children, and should be very
sorry if my chief were to take my little girl and
give her away, and that I would prefer this child to
remain and carry water for her own mother, he thought
I was dissatisfied with her size, and sent for one
a head taller; after many explanations of our abhorrence
of slavery, and how displeasing it must be to God
to see his children selling one another, and giving
each other so much grief as this child’s mother
must feel, I declined her also. If I could have
taken her into my family for the purpose of instruction,
and then returned her as a free woman, according to
a promise I should have made to the parents, I might
have done so; but to take her away, and probably never
be able to secure her return, would have produced no
good effect on the minds of the Balonda; they would
not then have seen evidence of our hatred to slavery,
and the kind attentions of my friends would, as it
almost always does in similar cases, have turned the
poor thing’s head. The difference in position
between them and us is as great as between the lowest
and highest in England, and we know the effects of
sudden elevation on wiser heads than hers, whose owners
had not been born to it.
Shinte was most anxious to see the pictures of the
magic lantern; but fever had so weakening an effect,
and I had such violent action of the heart, with buzzing
in the ears, that I could not go for several days;
when I did go for the purpose, he had his principal
men and the same crowd of court beauties near him
as at the reception. The first picture exhibited
was Abraham about to slaughter his son Isaac; it was
shown as large as life, and the uplifted knife was
in the act of striking the lad; the Balonda men remarked
that the picture was much more like a god than the
things of wood or clay they worshiped. I explained
that this man was the first of a race to whom God
had given the Bible we now held, and that among his
children our Savior appeared. The ladies listened
with silent awe; but, when I moved the slide, the uplifted
dagger moving toward them, they thought it was to
be sheathed in their bodies instead of Isaac’s.