A Treatise Upon the Trade from Great-Britain to Africa: Humbly Recommended to the Attention of GovernmentR. Baldwin, 1772 - 188 páginas |
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Página 5
... last affording a most prodi- gious employment to our people , both by fea and land : without whom our plantations could not be improved or carried on , nor should we have any fhipping paffing between the colonies , and mother country ...
... last affording a most prodi- gious employment to our people , both by fea and land : without whom our plantations could not be improved or carried on , nor should we have any fhipping paffing between the colonies , and mother country ...
Página 7
... again in two or three years at fartheft . The last step we should be wife enough to follow : the firft our Gracious King can never take , as it implies a manifest abfurdity . to those laws , were it even cruel or inhuman [ 7 ]
... again in two or three years at fartheft . The last step we should be wife enough to follow : the firft our Gracious King can never take , as it implies a manifest abfurdity . to those laws , were it even cruel or inhuman [ 7 ]
Página 11
... last but one encourages his sub- jects in general to purchase them . If therefore there is faith in a British act of parliament , this trade must be legal ; though to quiet weak minds , and filence the licentious noisy declaimers about ...
... last but one encourages his sub- jects in general to purchase them . If therefore there is faith in a British act of parliament , this trade must be legal ; though to quiet weak minds , and filence the licentious noisy declaimers about ...
Página 13
... last of these lights , perhaps , we may look upon " An argument in the cafe of James Sommerset , a negro , endeavouring to prove the unlawfulness of slavery in England . By Mr. Hargrave counfellor for the negro in that cause . " This I ...
... last of these lights , perhaps , we may look upon " An argument in the cafe of James Sommerset , a negro , endeavouring to prove the unlawfulness of slavery in England . By Mr. Hargrave counfellor for the negro in that cause . " This I ...
Página 36
... last August , and he will doubtless be true to his benefactor's intereft , and act as he did before . This is the way indeed to encrease the spirit of trade in the governors * This fort itself was not only unneceffary , but ...
... last August , and he will doubtless be true to his benefactor's intereft , and act as he did before . This is the way indeed to encrease the spirit of trade in the governors * This fort itself was not only unneceffary , but ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Treatise Upon the Trade from Great-Britain to Africa; Humbly Recommended ... AFRICAN MERCHANT. Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Términos y frases comunes
Accra act of parliament affert African trade againſt alfo alſo Annamaboe anſwer Appolonia authority aforefaid Briſtol Britiſh cafe Cape Coaſt Cape Coaſt Caſtle Cape Lopez Captain Captain Darling cauſe chief Coaft colonies committee committee-men committee's fervants confequence confiderable Cooma cuſtom Ditto Dutch enacted England Engliſh eſtabliſhed expence faid company fame fecurity fend fent fervants ferve fervice fettle fettlement feven fhall fhillings fhips fince firſt fituation flavery flaves foldiers fome foon forts fterling fubjects fuch fufficient fupply fuppofed fupport gentlemen Gold Coaſt governor of Cape greateſt himſelf houſe hundred intereft juftice laft laſt laws leaſt Liverpool London majeſty's maſter merchants Mill moſt muſt natives neceffary negroes notwithſtanding obferve perfons pleaſe poffibly Portugueze prefent private traders purchaſed purpoſe reaſonable refpectable river river Gambia Royal African company ſaid ſeveral ſhall ſhip ſhould ſlaves ſtate ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand trading to Africa uſe veffels Weft whatſoever Winnebah