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ue account given of these people by Kolben, 102. Love of liberty and sloth their prevailing passions, 102. Distinguished by several virtues, 103. Firm in alliances, _ibid._ Offended at the vices predominant amongst christians, 104. Make nor keep no slaves, _ibid._ _Hughes (Griffith)_ his account of the number of Negroes in Barbadoes, 85. Speaks well of their natural capacities, 86. Husbandry of the Negroes carried on in common, 28. _Hutcheson (Francis)_ his declaration against slavery, 184. I _Jalof_ Negroes, their government, 9. _Indians_ grievously oppressed by the Spaniards, 47. Their cause pleaded by Bartholomew De la Casa, 48. Inland people, good account of them, 25. _Ivory Coast_ fertile, &c. 18. Natives falsely represented to be a treacherous people, _ibid._ Kind when well used, 19. Have no European factories amongst them, 21. And but few wars; therefore few slaves to be had there, 22. J Jury, Negroes tried and condemned without the solemnity of a jury, 174. Highly repugnant to the English constitution, 176. Dangerous to those concerned therein, _ibid._ L Laws in Guinea severe against man-stealing, and other crimes, 106. M _Mandingoe_ Negroes a numerous nation, 11. Great traders, _ibid._ Laborious, 11. Their government, 13. Their worship, _ibid_. Manner of tillage, _ibid._ At Galem they suffer none to be made slaves but criminals, 20. _Maloyans_ (a black people) sometimes sold amongst Negroes brought from very distant parts, 27. Markets regularly kept on the Gold and Slave Coasts, 30. _Montesquieu's_ sentiments on slavery, 72. _Moor (Francis)_ factor to the African company, his account of the slave-trade on the river Gambia, 111. Mosaic law merciful in its chastisements, 73. Has respect to human nature, _ibid._ N National wars disapproved by the most considerate amongst the Negroes, 110. _Negroes_ (in Guinea) generally a humane, sociable people, 2. Simplicity of their way of living, 5. Agreeable in conversation, 16. Sensible of the damage accruing to them from the slave-trade, 61. Misrepresented by most authors, 98. Offended at the brutality of the European factors, 116. Shocking cruelties exercised on them by masters of vessels, 124. How many are yearly brought from Guinea by the English, 129. The numbers who die on the passage and in the seasoning, 120. _Negroe_ slaves (in the colonies) allowed to cohabit and separate at pleasur
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