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vage and inhuman as the people in Africa, and whether the ancient Britons themselves of our country were not once upon a level with the Africans?

2d. "Whether therefore, there is not a probability that those people might in time, by proper management in the Europeans, become as wise, as industrious, as humane, and as good Christians, as the people of any other country?

3d. "Whether their rational faculties are not in general equal to those of any other of the human species; and whether they are not, from experience, as capable for mechanical and manufactural arts and trades, as even the Bulk of the Europeans?

4th. "Whether it would not bemore to the interest of all the European Nations concerned in the Trade to Africa, rather to endeavour to cultivate a friendly and humane Commerce with these people, into the very centure of their extended country, than to content themselves only with skimming a trifling portion of Trade upon the Coast of Africa?

5th. "Whether the greatest hinderance and obstruction to the European's cultiva-ting