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ointed to the above employment by warrant from that
 board;

 That he accordingly proceeded to the execution of his duty
 on board of the Vernon, being one of the ships appointed to
 proceed to Africa with the above poor;

 That your memorialist, to his great grief and astonishment,
 received a letter of dismission from the Honourable
 Commissioners of the Navy, by your Lordships' orders;

 That, conscious of having acted with the most perfect
 fidelity and the greatest assiduity in discharging the trust
 reposed in him, he is altogether at a loss to conceive the
 reasons of your Lordships' having altered the favourable
 opinion you were pleased to conceive of him, sensible that
 your Lordships would not proceed to so severe a measure
 without some apparent good cause; he therefore has every
 reason to believe that his conduct has been grossly
 misrepresented to your Lordships; and he is the more
 confirmed in his opinion, because, by opposing measures of
 others concerned in the same expedition, which tended to
 defeat your Lordships' humane intentions, and to put the
 government to a very considerable additional expense, he
 created a number of enemies, whose misrepresentations, he
 has too much reason to believe, laid the foundation of his
 dismission. Unsupported by friends, and unaided by the
 advantages of a liberal education, he can only hope for
 redress from the justice of his cause, in addition to the
 mortification of having been removed from his employment,
 and the advantage which he reasonably might have expected to
 have derived therefrom. He has had the misfortune to have
 sunk a considerable part of his little property in fitting
 himself out, and in other expenses arising out of his
 situation, an account of which he here annexes. Your
 memorialist will not trouble your Lordships with a
 vindication of any part of his conduct, because he knows not
 of what crimes he is accused; he, however, earnestly
 entreats that you will be pleased to direct an inquiry into
 his behaviour during the time he acted in the public
 service; and, if it be found that his dismission arose from
 false representations, he is confident that in your
 Lordships' justice he shall find redress.

 Your petitioner therefore humbly prays that your Lordships
 will take his case into consideration, and that you will be
 pleased to order payment of the above referred-to account,
 amounting to 32l. 4s. and also the wages intended, which is
 most humbly submitted.

 _London, May 12, 1787._

The above petition was delivered into the hands of their Lordships,
who were kind enough, in the space of some few months afterwards,
without hearing, to order me 50l. sterling--that is, 18l. wages for
the time (upwards of four months) I acted a faithful part in their
service. Certainly the sum is more than a free negro would have had in
the western colonies!!!

 * * * * *

March the 21st, 1788, I had the honour of presenting the Queen with a
petition on behalf of my African brethren, which was received most
graciously by her Majesty[Y]:

 _To the_ QUEEN's _most Excellent Majesty_.

 Madam,

 Your Majesty's well known benevolence and humanity emboldens
 me to approach your royal presence, trusting that the
 obscurity of my situation will not prevent your Majesty from
 attending to the sufferings for which I plead.

 Yet I do not solicit your royal pity for my own distress; my
 sufferings, although numerous, are in a measure forgotten. I
 supplicate your Majesty's compassion for millions of my
 African countrymen, who groan under the lash of tyranny in
 the West Indies.

 The oppression and cruelty exercised to the unhappy negroes
 there, have at length reached the British legislature, and
 they are now deliberating on its redress; even several
 persons of property in slaves in the West Indies, have
 petitioned parliament against its continuance, sensible that
 it is as impolitic as it is unjust--and what is inhuman must
 ever be unwise.

 Your Majesty's reign has been hitherto distinguished by
 private acts of benevolence and bounty; surely the more
 extended the misery is, the greater claim it has to your
 Majesty's compassion, and the greater must be your Majesty's
 pleasure in administering to its relief.

 I presume, therefore, gracious Queen, to implore your
 interposition with your royal consort, in favour of the
 wretched Africans; that, by your Majesty's benevolent
 influence, a period may now be put to their misery; and that
 they may be raised from the condition of brutes, to which
 they are at present degraded, to the rights and situation of
 freemen, and admitted to partake of the blessings of your
 Majesty's happy government; so shall your Majesty enjoy the
 heartfelt pleasure of procuring happiness to millions, and
 be rewarded in the grateful prayers of themselves, and of
 their posterity.

 And may the all-bountiful Creator shower on your Majesty,
 and the Royal Family, every blessing that this world can
 afford, and every fulness of joy which divine revelation has
 promised us in the next.

 I am your Majesty's most dutiful and devoted servant to
 command,

 Gustavus Vassa,
 The Oppressed Ethiopean.

 No. 53, Baldwin's Gardens.

 * * * * *

The negro consolidated act, made by the assembly of Jamaica last year,
and the new act of amendment now in agitation there, contain a proof
of the existence of those charges that have been made against the
planters relative to the treatment of their slaves.

I hope to have the satisfaction of seeing the renovation of liberty
and justice resting on the British government, to vindicate the honour
of our common nature. These are concerns which do not perhaps belong
to any particular office: but, to speak more seriously to every man of
sentiment, actions like these are the just and sure foundation of
future fame; a reversion, though remote, is coveted by some noble
minds as a substantial good. It is upon these grounds that I hope and
expect the attention of gentlemen in power. These are designs
consonant to the elevation of their rank, and the dignity of their
stations: they are ends suitable to the nature of a free and generous
government; and, connected with views of empire and dominion, suited
to the benevolence and solid merit of the legislature. It is a pursuit
of substantial greatness.--May the time come--at least the speculation
to me is pleasing--when the sable people shall gratefully commemorate
the auspicious æra of extensive freedom. Then shall those persons[Z]
particularly be named with praise and honour, who generously proposed
and stood forth in the cause of humanity, liberty, and good policy;
and brought to the ear of the legislature designs worthy of royal
patronage and adoption. May Heaven make the British senators the
dispersers of light, liberty, and science, to the uttermost parts of
the earth: then will be glory to God on the highest, on earth peace,
and goodwill to men:--Glory, honour, peace, &c. to every soul of man
that worke

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