Thoughts Upon Slavery
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | 1774 |
| Passage ID | jw-thoughts-slavery-004 |
| Words | 374 |
7. The _Mandingos_, says Mons. _Brue_, are right _Mahometans_, drinking
neither wine nor brandy. They are industrious and laborious, keeping
their ground well cultivated, and breeding a good stock of cattle.
Every town has a Governor, and he appoints the labour of the people.
The men work the ground designed for corn; the women and girls, the
rice-ground. He afterwards divides the corn and rice, among them:
and decides all quarrels, if any arise. All the Mahometan Negroes
constantly go to public prayers thrice a day: there being a Priest in
every village, who regularly calls them together: and it is surprising
to see the modesty, attention and reverence which they observe during
their worship--These three nations practise several trades; they have
Smiths, Sadlers, Potters and Weavers. And they are very ingenious
at their several occupations. Their Smiths not only make all the
instruments of iron, which they have occasion to use, but likewise work
many things neatly in gold and silver. It is chiefly the women and
children who weave fine cotton cloth, which they dye blue and black.
8. It was of these parts of _Guinea_, that Mons. _Adanson_,
Correspondent of the Royal Academy of Sciences at _Paris_, from
1749, to 1753, gives the following account, both as to the country
and people, “Which way soever I turned my eyes, I beheld a perfect
image of pure nature: an agreeable solitude, bounded on every side by
a charming landscape; the rural situation of cottages, in the midst
of trees; the ease and quietness of the Negroes, reclined under the
shade of the spreading foliage, with the simplicity of their dress and
manners: the whole revived in my mind the idea of our first parents,
and I seemed to contemplate the world in its primitive state. They are,
generally speaking, very good natured, sociable and obliging. I was
not a little pleased with my first reception, and it fully convinced
me, that there ought to be a considerable abatement made, in the
accounts we have of the savage character of the _Africans_.” He adds,
“It is amazing that an illiterate people should reason so pertinently
concerning the heavenly bodies. There is no doubt, but that with proper
instruments, they would become excellent astronomers.”