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"On Cinques," The Colored American, Oct. 19, 1839, p. 1. CINGUES. We are inclined to call the noble African by this name, although he is called
by as many different titles as our republicanism offers reasons for enslaving his
people. We have seen a wood-cut representation of the royal fellow. It looks as we
think it would. It answers well to his lion-like character.-- The head has the towering
front of Webster, and though some shades darker than our great country-man, we are
struck at first sight, with his resemblance to him. He has Webster’s lion aspect.
-- his majestic, quiet, uninterested cast of expression, looking, when at rest, as
if there was nobody and nothing about him to care about or look at. His eye is deep,
heavy - the cloudy iris extending up behind the brow almost inexpressive, and yet
as if volcanoes of action might be asleep behind it. It looks like the black sea
or the ocean in a calm - an unenlightened eye, as Webster’s would have looked, had
he been bred in the desert, among the lions, as Cinguea [sic] was, and if instead
of pouring upon Homer and Shakespeare, and Coke and the Bible (for Webster read the
Bible when he was young, and got his regal style there) it had rested, from
savage boyhood, on the sands and sky of Africa. It looks like a wilderness, a grand,
but uninhabited land, or, if peopled, the abode of aboriginal man. Webster’s eye
like a civilized and cultivated country - country rather than city - more
on the whole like woods and wilderness than fields or villages. For after all, nature
predominates greatly in the eye of our majestic countryman.
By the way, Webster ought to come home to defend Cingues. He ought to have no counsel short of his twin spirit. His defence were a nobler subject for Webster's giant intellect, than the Foote resolutions or Calhoun's nullification. There is indeed no defence to make. It would give Webster occasion to strike at the slave trade and at our people for imprisoning and trying a man admitted to have risen only against the worst of pirates, and for more than life - for liberty, for country and for home.
"Weep beside the cocoa tree --" And we wait to see the bearings of this providential event upon American Slavery. -- Herald of Freedom | ||
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