Treatise Serious Address To People Of England
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-serious-address-to-people-of-england-005 |
| Words | 379 |
or fewer for distant
voyages? Nay, have we fewer ship-carpenters, or fewer sail
makers at work? And do we build fewer or smaller ships
for merchants’ service than formerly?” The more particu
larly you inquire, the more clearly you will see how
immensely the nation has improved in this article. But it is objected, “We have lost eight hundred of our
ships since the beginning of the war.” Perhaps so;
although you have no proof of this; for Lloyd's Catalogue is
no sufficient evidence. But how many have we taken? This it is absolutely needful you should know, or you cannot
know whether we have lost or gained upon the whole. We
have taken above nine hundred. And the evidence of our
gain is at least as good as that of our loss. “Nay, but we have also lost our Negro trade.” I would
to God it may never be found more ! that we may never
more steal and sell our brethren like beasts; never murder
them by thousands and tens of thousands ! O may this
worse than Mahometan, worse than Pagan, abomination, be
removed from us for ever ! Never was anything such a
reproach to England since it was a nation, as the having any
hand in this execrable traffic. 6. “The state of our fisheries at home and abroad forms
another important article of comparison. For as our ships of
war are our bulwarks, and our sailors are the proper guards
for defending such works, so it is of the utmost importance to
have always ready, for manning our fleets, a number of able
seamen. Now, these are most readily supplied by our fisheries. And when were these in their most flourishing state? in
1759, or 1777? Were more British ships employed in the
fisheries on the banks of Newfoundland, or in the gulf of St. Lawrence, or on the coasts of Labrador, then, than there are
now 7 Were there half as many? Again: Were there more
employed in the fisheries for whales, and fish to make oil? Were there even half as many? As to the fisheries on our
own coasts, and on the coasts of Scotland and Ireland, can
any man deny that they have hugely increased during these
eighteen years?