Remarks on the Country Extending from Cape Palmas to the River Congo: Including Observations on the Manners and Customs of the Inhabitants ... |
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Page iv
... many as embarking for the next world ; it is therefore much to be apprehended , that one of the benevolent purposes for which that settlement was originally founded , will 1 be frustrated . Hence , in the course of these iv INTRODUCTION .
... many as embarking for the next world ; it is therefore much to be apprehended , that one of the benevolent purposes for which that settlement was originally founded , will 1 be frustrated . Hence , in the course of these iv INTRODUCTION .
Page v
... course of these remarks I have endeavoured to point out a place suitable for esta- blishing a colony of the negroes cap- tured on board of contraband slave ships . In fact , there is not along the whole line of coast , extending from ...
... course of these remarks I have endeavoured to point out a place suitable for esta- blishing a colony of the negroes cap- tured on board of contraband slave ships . In fact , there is not along the whole line of coast , extending from ...
Page 4
... course from the north to the back of the town , runs to the eastward a few hundred yards , parallel to the sea- shore , and then joins the sea . Its mouth is narrow , and choked with hard sand , on which the sea breaks with great ...
... course from the north to the back of the town , runs to the eastward a few hundred yards , parallel to the sea- shore , and then joins the sea . Its mouth is narrow , and choked with hard sand , on which the sea breaks with great ...
Page 10
... course of trade between the natives and the captains ; and they are also re- sponsible for the quality of the gold received in barter , which is weighed and examined minutely by persons deputed by them , and who constantly reside on ...
... course of trade between the natives and the captains ; and they are also re- sponsible for the quality of the gold received in barter , which is weighed and examined minutely by persons deputed by them , and who constantly reside on ...
Page 62
... houses between it and the Eng- lish one , galloped off into the woods , and eluded his pursuers , who , in the course of the chace , had often fired at it without effect . The monarch of Dahomy is a most ra- pacious fellow 62 GREWHE .
... houses between it and the Eng- lish one , galloped off into the woods , and eluded his pursuers , who , in the course of the chace , had often fired at it without effect . The monarch of Dahomy is a most ra- pacious fellow 62 GREWHE .
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Common terms and phrases
Abomey Accra Africa anchor Angola Annamaboo Appolonia Ardrah Asshantee Badagry Bafts beach Benin best Ditto bight of Benin black monarch blue boats Bonny brandy burthen Cabenda calavancies called Camaroons canoes Cape Coast Cape Palmas captain Chelloes climate coast of Angola colour consequence considerable Cost Trade Cradoo lake creek crew Dahomy demand distance Drewin eastward embouchure European extremely Fantee fetiche fish Formosa French Gatto Gold Coast gold-takers Grewhe Gunpowder Guns harmattan Heebos Housa India inhabitants interior island ivory Jaboo John Africa king Lagos Lahoo land latter place maize Malemba manufacture miles nation natives Niger night obtained Old Calabar palm-oil persons piece Pinins places of trade Popo price in value puncheons quantity Remarks RIVER CONGO Romals salt season ship shore tons town trade in slaves value in England voyage Warré wind wood Wydah yams yards
Popular passages
Page 14 - Wilt thou upon the high and giddy mast Seal up the ship-boy's eyes, and rock his brains In cradle of the rude imperious surge ; And in the visitation of the winds, Who take the ruffian billows by the top, Curling their monstrous heads, and hanging them With deafning clamours in the slippery clouds, That, with the hurly, death itself awakes ? Canst thou, O partial sleep!
Page 14 - Who take the ruffian billows by the top, Curling their monstrous heads, and hanging them With deaf'ning clamours in the slippery clouds, That, with the hurly, death itself awakes ? Canst thou, O partial sleep! give thy repose To the wet sea-boy in an hour so rude; And, in the calmest and most stillest night, With all appliances and means to boot, Deny it to a king ? Then, happy low, lie down ! Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
Page 144 - Many of the natives write English; an art first acquired by some of the traders' sons, who had visited England, and which they have had the sagacity to retain up to the present period. They have established schools and schoolmasters, for the purpose of instructing in this art the youths belonging to families of...
Page 182 - ... and is so shallow, that it is dangerous for boats drawing more than six or seven feet water to pass it. Formosa, or Benin river, is two miles wide at its entrance from the sea, and has across it a bank of mud, extending to seaward three-quarters of a mile, on which there are only twelve feet of water at spring tides. Vessels, whose draft of water does not exceed nine or ten feet, may generally pass it in safety, by taking the proper time of tide for doing so. A few miles from the sea, this river...
Page 247 - ... sterling per ton. Salt being very cheap in Liverpool, and always in demand at Calabar, the vessels going there generally take, of that article, the amount of their register tonnage, beside a well assorted cargo of the other enumerated articles. A house on shore, for the storage of oil as it is purchased, is therefore requisite, until a quantity of salt is disposed of, so that the oil can be received Names of the various Goods.
Page 152 - ... from St. Thomas thirty-two leagues, bearing south-west southerly. It is a beautiful little island, and inhabited wholly by blacks, who call themselves subjects of the crown of Portugal. There is an open bay on the north-east side where vessels may anchor in twentyfive fathoms water, about a quarter of a mile from the shore. Vessels from the bight of Benin call here sometimes, and obtain a few goats, poultry, and cocoa-nuts. Water is difficult to get, in consequence of the heavy surf, and that...
Page 98 - D impaled while I was at Lagos, but of course I did not witness the ceremony. I passed by where her lifeless body still remained on the stake a few days afterwards. Male dogs are banished to the towns opposite to Lagos, for if any are caught there, they are immediately strangled, split, and trimmed like sheep, and hung up at some great man's door, where rows of the putrid carcasses of their canine...
Page 81 - Wells have, therefore, been made in different parts of the town, which is a very unusual thing in this part of Africa. The natives of Ardrah are industrious, and have acquired some proficiency in the arts, particularly in manufacturing cotton and iron. Cloths of various patterns, though simple, are made by them, both of cotton and grass, but chiefly of the former, into which they frequently weave threads taken from the red India silk taffity, having no red dye which they can render permanent. The...
Page 158 - The superior healthiness of the castle itself may be accounted for, by its southern rampart wall being built on a ledge of rocks which project a little way into the sea, and against which rocks the sea beats with great violence, thereby creating at all times a cool and refreshing current of air within the castle. The...
Page 231 - Rains, when the sea-breeze blows both in the day and night, and at a few leagues from the shore, from very near the south point of the compass, stand off shore for twenty-four hours, when the wind will mostly be found to blow at SSW or S. by W. and often at the South...