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49.24% men women people kinds remember mode children make drink natives eaten offerings made places employed form looked variety colour round wives nation living complexions taste employment celebrated occasion language marriage english animals wise meat indian unacquainted relations top favourite ceremony manners george learn faces ways suffer snakes larger fond
18.94% wood houses woods principal family slaves country tree home earth eat food neighbours size red ground mouth neighbour ate district apples mother nuts delicious head articles chief father countries war slept resembled beaten grown sister bows sticks vast uncommonly sold gunpowder neighbourhood walls plastered accommodate ornament guard separate flesh
12.88% majesty nature honour humanity attention virtue surely general true royal benevolence african minds mind blessings millions desire misery africans earth situation heaven sufferings worthy afflicted office manumission generous iniquity brutes address queen interposition measure commit presence confined brethren sable sentiment practised planters greater power fully written european degree substantial
18.95% other topics

Our land is uncommonly rich and fruitful, and produces all kinds of vegetables in great abundance. We have plenty of Indian corn, and vast quantities of cotton and tobacco. Our pine apples grow without culture; they are about the size of the largest sugar-loaf, and finely flavoured. We have also spices of different kinds, particularly pepper; and a variety of delicious fruits which I have never seen in Europe; together with gums of various kinds, and honey in abundance. All our industry is exerted to improve those blessings of nature. Agriculture is our chief employment; and every one, even the children and women, are engaged in it. Thus we are all habituated to labour from our earliest years. Every one contributes something to the common stock; and as we are unacquainted with idleness, we have no beggars. The benefits of such a mode of living are obvious. The West India planters prefer the slaves of Benin or Eboe to those of any other part of Guinea, for their hardiness, intelligence, integrity, and zeal. Those benefits are felt by us in the general healthiness of the people, and in their vigour and activity; I might have added too in their comeliness. Deformity is indeed unknown amongst us, I mean that of shape. Numbers of the natives of Eboe now in London might be brought in support of this assertion: for, in regard to complexion, ideas of beauty are wholly relative. I remember while in Africa to have seen three negro children, who were tawny, and another quite white, who were universally regarded by myself, and the natives in general, as far as related to their complexions, as deformed. Our women too were in my eyes at least uncommonly graceful, alert, and modest to a degree of bashfulness; nor do I remember to have ever heard of an instance of incontinence amongst them before marriage. They are also remarkably cheerful. Indeed cheerfulness and affability are two of the leading characteristics of our nation.