a n n, [-l , ' u . “J ‘ .. . ,' ' ‘ . _ ,. M . V, , - .w . r... ......‘m,.. “Hwy,“ r’fzim “Hut-AM . .‘ u... 4 ..-.~. . ABBEOKUTA ; OB, SUNRISE WITHIN THE TROPICS: AN OUTLINE OF THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE YOBUBA MISSION. BY MISS TUCKER, Inn-um; or "scum 1mm: snucuns," up " run Buwuow ”I THE HOME." FOURTH EDITION. LONDON: JAMES NISBET AND 00., BERNERS STREET. 1854. 1 I w 24:, Ta / f"; w 1 i 6 39 <4 ANlHRLX. new! PREFACE. THE writer of this little volume hopes that more will not be expected from it than its title- page professes it to be,—namely, an “ outline ” of the origin and progress of the Missions in Yoruba. The many interesting details which she has omitted will be found in the periodicals mentioned below.* There are some pages which it will be painful for others to read, as they have been to herself to transcribe, particularly those relating to the slave-trade. They could not be wholly omitted without altering the character of the book; but the dark deeds have been dwelt on as sparingly as was consistent with the main objects in View -—the quickening her own and others’ gratitude to God for what He has already done, and the stirring up of every heart to more earnest, * “The Church Missionary Intelligencer,” “The Gleaner,” “The Juvenile Instructor,” and “The Children’s Missionary Magazine.” 548 . I ”‘ 3 ML, , iv PREFACE. strenuous, and prayerful efforts, to rescue these i nations from the grasp of Satan; to work whih'; it is day, lest the night should again come upon g them, (though the writer trusts it never mayfl' when no man can work. For the View of Abbeokuta, and the portrait; of the public, crier, she is indebted to the kind-i» ness of Edward Irving, Esq., M.D., of Here Majesty’s Navy, who visited Abbeokuta inzé December last with Capt. Foote, R.N., by the?» directions of Commodore Admiral Bruce. WEST HENDRED, April, 1853. >. 7 7 i A ‘4 ~ _i“_"‘*‘l*:; flu“? ugfmomonho 4‘]. :t A A: I E 'o-Jiluu 49!" DJ“ Ila.“- " ‘ ' Iiiflidfibu. Alb-m I ‘ m 4,. ‘ 1595“,”. 0". E mg. B A 3. . I 1 V ( ; ”ML-”:3 . F; . beokifla , 5%: W, am: , ”3m" ~ __. 3193"»! V“ {{ij 'EIIM q“ .> E J ‘r‘u ; 3' ..N IJEB ’ Q Aboneyo > | ”"9" .‘ ' lining». i P I fignhgv '31 5-5;}; a . K». ../ 2.... 'fiundu .Sz‘nlari.‘ 1 don / ' ‘ rt 1...;1‘. / , >1, 95%;: :.' \ " @X@R@BA* Kind/fin? {agent ff} 3 Eycoiiuyt’iltsf —%—~»~-r~~i — ~-- x,‘ P_/+\j EBOE out? I In.“ H I ,,—,_.—. t —— ~ ‘ Mn 3 i I J .1._ ¢“'i an) I. U‘P’zr'u: Lam" V" “ ' 4-. «mum» ' . or" nun CONTENTS. Chap. I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X . XII. H ’iXIII. ZXIV. Introduction—the Slave Trade . . . The Fellatahs . Yoruba and its People Foundation of Abbeokuta—Sierra Leone Emi- grants The Niger Expedition . . The Niger Expedition ‘ . . . . Rev. E. Townsend’s Visit to Abbeokuta . Badagry . . . . . Arrival at Abbeokuta —— Commencement of Work there—Mr. Crowther‘s Re-union with his Mother and Sisters Progress of the Work—Baptism of first Converts The Rev. J. C. Miiller Progress of the work—the Queen’s and Prince Albert’s presents to the Chiefs Persecution The Rev. D. Hinderer—Extension of Mission Page 21 39 55 84 94 104 123 139 153 169 186 vi CONTENTS. Chap. Page XV. The Dahomian Attack . . . . . 203 XVI. John Baptist Dasalu . . . . . 220 XVII. Ibadan . . . . . . . . 230 XVIII. Abbeokuta. Schoo’ls— Messages from distant Chiefs—Visit of Commander Forbes . . 242 XIX. Badagry and Lagos . . . . . 253 XX. conclusion 0 o o a o o n 268 The following remhrks will assist in the pro- nunciation of the proper names. The sound of a is like the a in bath, bat. a ,, vowel in 7; n n 0 7, 77 u n n e is almost like (112 in o is like a in an? ,, i in 0i ,, oi in g is always hard, as in f is pronounced sh. bait, bet. beat, bit. boat. boot, full. bait. law, water. mile. voice. gate. . ABBEOKUTA. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION—THE SLAVE-TRADE. “ From heaven did the LORD behold the earth, to hear the groaning of the prisoner, to loose those that are appointed to death.”———Ps. cii. 19, 20. ON Friday, the last day of October, 1851, an in- terview took place, between two individuals, at the Church Missionary House, Salisbury Square, which will not soon be forgotten by those who happened to be present. One of the two was an English gentleman, of middle age, whose calm and dignified look and manner well accorded with the fact of his being a Christian sailor, long accustomed to com- mand. The other was a younger man, one of the sable sons of Africa, in whose intelligent counten- ance, and manly yet gentle bearing, might have been read a tale of wonder and of mercy, at which angels had rejoiced. This last was the Rev. Samuel Crowther, a native of Yoruba, once a slave boy, but now an ordained minister of the Church of England. The other was Sir Henry Leeke, a captain in the B 2 CHAPTER I. British navy. The pause of sudden feeling, the ‘ eager grasp of the hand, the inquiring look of glad 3 recognition, and the hasty question and reply, “ Do 3' you remember me ?” “Oh! indeed I do,” told of some 1 previous meeting, of no common character, and of - no very recent date. And so it was. In the year 1822, Sir Henry Leeke, then in command of H.M.S. “Myrmidon,” was cruising in the Gulf of Guinea, when he fell in with and captured a Portuguese slaver, in which Mr. Crowther, then a lad, had just been embarked to be borne across the Atlantic. He took him, , together with some other boys, on board his own ship, and after a two months’ further cruise, landed , him in freedom at Sierra Leone. Mr. Crowther \ was, at that time, thirteen years old, and since then ' they had never met, but twenty-nine years had not efi'aced from the recollections of the grateful African " the lineaments of his deliverer. Often, when musing Q on the past, had he recalled them to his memory, ii and when, in 1841, he accompanied the expedition _ up the Niger, he delighted to trace, or to fancy he i could trace, a likeness in one of the officers on board the Soudan, to him to whom he owed so much. And now, when he met him once more, hand to hand, and ' eye to eye, and recognised the same warm manner and kindly look that had won his heart on board the Myrmidon, the events, of the intervening years INTRODUCTION——SLAVE-TRADE. 3 crowded fast upon his memory, and a flood of mingled feelings passed across his soul, that well-nigh over- whelmed him. The interview was necessarily brief, and again they parted—the one to take the command of the Indian navy, the other to return to the work of an evangelist in his native land. We have placed this little incident thus early in our narrative, that we might at once introduce our readers to the name of Crowther, which will very frequently occur in the following pages, and we will now proceed to a more connected history. ‘ It would be beyond our purpose were we to enter ‘ into any history of the slave-trade—of its abandonment on the part of our own country in the year 1807, or [of the endeavours made to prevent its continuance by other nations. The names of Clarkson and Wilberforce are still too dear to the memory of Englishmen to need our mention of them; and the details of their persevering zeal, and of the success "with which it was crowned, may be read elsewhere. We will only glance at the state of things since that , period, in order to make our succeeding pages more 3 intelligible. Even the youngest of our readers will remember the form of the western coast of Africa; how, when beyond Cape Verde, it follows a south-eastern direc- 4 CHAPTER 1. tion for four or five degrees, how the encroachments of the Gulf of Guinea then force it into a course due east, for several hundred miles, till, after yielding to two smaller sweeps of the sea, the Bight of Benin and the Eight of Biafra, it turns abruptly to the south, and scarcely varies its direction till it reaches the equator. Along the whole of this coast, an extent of nearly 2,600 miles, the Spaniards and Portuguese, notwithstanding their treaties with Great Britain, continued to pursue the hateful trafiic with unremitting activity. Nearly seventy ports were open to their slave-ships, and tens and tens of thousands were annually shipped off to supply the markets of Cuba and Brazil. Oh! could the walls of those dismal factories and barracoons relate the scenes of sorrow and sufi'ering, of cruelty and des- pair that have taken place Within them, we believe we should find that in the annals of the whole world no page more dark with crime and misery has ever been looked upon by God’s All-seeing Eye. Africa had indeed become “one universal den of desolation, misery,* and crime.” A fearful waste of , i " “ When we look on Africa, does not the scene that we behold approve itself to our sympathising hearts as more L deeply needing, than any other region under heaven; that . message which can light the eye with the beaming smile of ’v joy? Joy, of all blessings, is the least known in Africa. To _' bid the African go on his way rejoicing is a task too little i tried ; for ages and for centuries sorrow has been the heritage ; INTRODUCTION—SLAVE-TRADE. 5 human life was incurred in the seizure of the slaves for the market,—in the hurried march through the desert to the coast, under a blazing sun, with a very scanty supply of water,—in the detention at the ports, where hunger, disease, and despair carried ofi' their many victims. Those who survived these accumulated sufferings, pressed down for weeks between the decks of the slave-ship, had to endure torments that cannot be described. Scarcely eVen can the mind realise the horrors of that voyage—the sea-sickness—the suffocation—the terrible thirst—~— the living chained to the dead—the agony of despair. Many perished on the voyage, and the remnant were sold as slaves, to endure the frightful cruelties of their Spanish and Portuguese masters.* and portion of the sons and daughters of Ham.”—Sermon by the Bishop of Sierra Leone, at Carfax Church, Oxford, Oct. 31, 1852. * That this is no exaggerated or overcharged picture, we have unhappily abundant evidence ; and as late as 1839 Lord John Russell, in his letter to the Lords of the Treasury, proposing the Niger Expedition, says—“ I find it impossible to avoid the conclusion that the average number of slaves {introduced into America and the West Indies from the western coast of Africa annually exceeds one hwndrcd thousa/nd, land this estimate affords but a very imperfect indication of the real extent of the calamities which this traffic inflicts uponlits victims. No record exists of the multitudes who . perish in the overland journey to the African coast, or in the jpassage across the Atlantic, or of the still greater number who :fall a sacrifice to the warfare, pillage, and cruelties by which 6 CHAPTER I. Thus did this hateful trade continue for more than 30 years after its abolition by Great Britain, depo- pulating the countries, and demoralising both the captors and the enslaved. Sierra Leone indeed was a haven of refuge to those who were Ire—captured by our cruisers ; but the hundreds, or even thousandsf“ that were thus annually rescued bore a very small proportion to the mass of sufferers. The whole of this part of Africa, with the exception of Liberia, was in apparently hopeless darkness; liberty, whe- ther bodily, mental, or spiritual, was unknown, and the eye of pity sought in vain for any gleam of better things. But in the year 1839 the faint streaks of a brighter morning appeared; and, since that time, thanks to the unconquerable spirit of a few British and Christian philanthropists ;—thanks to the far-sighted benevolence of our rulers in entering into treaties with the more friendly tribes, and to their steady firmness in maintaining the cruising squadron to check the trade where it could not be eradicated ;— above all, thanks to Him who not only thus guided the slave~trade is fed. The whole involves a waste of human life and a state of human misery, proceeding from year to year without respite or intermission, to such an extent, as to render the subject the most painful of any which, in the survey of the condition of mankind, it is possible to contemplate.” * In the three years preceding 1838, 13,000 recaptured negroes were brought into Sierra Leone and set free. can“; we --__ INTRODUCTION—SLAVE-TRADE. 7 the minds of his servants, but ordered the events of his Providence to the same end—the slave-trade has gradually diminished. In 1851, the nearly seventy slave ports were reduced to three : Lagos, Porto Novo, and Whydah, all in the Bight of Benin ; and now, in 1853, Lagos is taken—Porto Novo and Whydah are no longer able to continue the traffic—- Brazil itself has denounced the trade, and the slave- trade is, we hope and believe, extinct on the western coast of Africa, north of the equator. CHAPTER II. THE FELLATAHS. “The spoiler shall come upon every city, and no city shall escape : the valley also shall perish, and the plain shall be destroyed. Give wings unto Moab, that it may flee and get away: for the cities thereof shall be deso- late, without any to dwell therein.”—J er. xlviii. 8, 9. WHEN we read of tens, and even hundreds, of thousands annually falling victims to the slave-trade, we naturally ask, “ How and whence could these multitudes have been procured ?” and the answer to this question must be sought for in the very heart of Western Africa. It is true that a small portion of these unhappy people were prisoners taken in the continual warfare carried on among the smaller states along the shore, but the chief supply was from the interior, where the love of gain tempted the more powerful chiefs to make war upon their weaker neighbours,for the express purpose of procuring slaves for the markets on the coast. Here they were eagerly purchased by Spanish and Portuguese dealers, who, in return, supplied the native chiefs with rum, gunpowder, fire-arms, and a few other articles of European manufacture.* ' It is, indeed, melancholy to find how all the kindlier feel- 'rnn FELLATAIIS. 9 The heathen kings of Dahomey stand out conspi- cuously in this barbarous warfare; but even they must yield in this disgraceful pre-eminence to the Mohammedan Fellatah-s.* This singular people, who have exercised so extra- ordinary an influence over the destinies of Western Africa, seem to have been originally a nomadic nation, in the fertile tracts along the shores of the Mediterranean; but being driven thence by the Saracens, they retired across the Great Desert, and established themselves to the south and west of it, in a tract of country called Fooladoo. In this land of refuge they lived for centuries as a pastoral and inoffensive people, moving about with their flocks and herds, as the various spots supplied them with pasturage and water. Their numbers rapidly increased, and spreading eastward, they gra- dually occupied the greatest part of Soudan, while small parties even made their way across the Niger into' the countries of Boossa, Borgoo, and the northern part of Yoruba. They are spoken of as of ings of even a. Mohammedan or a heathen heart could be so deadened, but what shall we say to those, who, bearing the name of Christians, were the instigators to such cruel and unholy deeds? How true it is, as the natives themselves ex- press it: “The root of the slave-trade is in white man’s coun- try, not in black man’s—for if white man did not buy, black man would not sell.” “ Called also Foulahs and Fellam'a. 10 CHAPTER II. quite a distinct race from the Negro, with oval faces, small features, and long hair, and their complexion varying from a dark copper colour to that of our English gipsy. They were Mohammedans, yet nothing seems to have occurred to bring out the peculiar features of that stern and cruel faith, till about a century ago, when a sudden impulse was given to their latent love of war and conquest by one of themselves, the Sheikh Othman, or, as he is oftener called, Danfodio.* “ This ambitious man began by building a town in his native woods of Ader, and persuading many of his countrymen to settle there. His next step was to establish a regular military system; he ranged the people under different chiefs, to each of whom he delivered a white flag as a token of future victory, desiring them to go forward in the name of “Allah, and of his Prophet,” assuring them that God had given them all the lands and riches of the “ Infidels,” and declaring that all who fell in battle would be sure of Paradise. The army, fired by the exhorta- tions and example of their leader, rushed on to deeds of valour; and the career of conquest was rapid and extensive. Ere long the whole of Haussa, Cubbi, and Yaouri, were conquered; gradually the country of Nufi was brought into subjection, and even the powerful * See Appendix; I. THE FELLATAHS. ' 11 kingdom of Bournu, although Mohammedan like themselves, was for a time obliged to yield. From that time to the present the Fellatahs* have been the unceasing scourge of all that portion of the continent of Africa. Their armies have been conti- nually in motion, overrunning the country, putting the chiefs under tribute, destroying towns and villages, and carrying away the inhabitants to be sold as slaves. The highest authority among them is vested in the Sultan of Sokatoo, the “Emir e1 Mumenin,” as he is called, or “ Commander of the Faithfu ;” and it is, generally speaking, from him that the inferior "‘ The Fellatahs must not be confounded with some people whom the Haussas call “ Bature, ”—White men, or “ strangers, ” who occasionally come from the east as far as the banks of the Niger for purposes of trade, and who are supposed to be either Egyptians or Abyssinians. The probability of their being the latter is greatly strengthened by information given by Bishop Gobat during his late visit to England. He mentioned that ‘ when he was in Abyssinia he found there were persons from lDarmoot and Gengira, in the south-west part of the country, ‘who traded across the continent, and who reported that after lthree months’ journey they arrived within a fortnight‘s dis- ‘Itance of the salt sea, with large ships. They gave a curious rstatement as to a country called Sidarna, two months from .Abyssinia, where they affirmed the people were Christians, .:and that they had the Gospels and churches, and where the .lmen wore long hair and braided. There were two Sidama lboys in Abyssinia, whom the Bishop met with, but they had ,lleft their country at too early an age to be able to give much . iinformation. 12 CHAPTER, II. Sultans receive their investiture as governors of the different provinces. The present Emir is Ali ben Bello, son of the Sultan Bello visited by Clapperton, and the direct descendant of the founder of this vast empire, Danfodio. The great boast of the Fellatahs has been, that their power will soon extend to the sea; and, from Dr. Barth’s account, we find that their boast has so far been accomplished, as that the Sultan of Tchamba, near the {Tchadda, about three years ago, succeeded in a “razzia” on the country between himself and the Bight of Biafra, reached the Iboe country near the mouth of the Niger, plundered the whole neighbourhood, and laid it under a tribute of “slaves, salt, and cowries.””’ But, notwithstanding this and other partial suc- cesses, there is reason to hope and believe that the power of the Fellatahs is on the wane. We learn from Dr. Earth that the whole land is so impoverished, that the Emir can only maintain the expenses of his government by the large tribute he receives from the caravans that pass through his territories ; While Lander, as long ago as 1830, speaks of their losing one town after another in the country of Haussa; and later accounts tell us of the Nufi people having in a great degree recovered their independence. But we must go back to the palmy days of their “ See Mission to Central Africa, in Journal of Royal Geo- graphical Society for 1851. THE FELLATAHS. 13 greatest power, when all the nations on the north and eastern side of the Niger were subjected to them, and only a few on its western banks had been able to resist their inroads. The most important of these was the heathen kingdom of Yoruba, a country lying inland from the Bight of Benin, and stretching from two to three hundred miles in length, and nearly the same in breadth. Its northern and north-eastern bounda- ‘ ries are the kingdom of Borgoo, the Niger, and part n of the Nufi country ; the territories of Kakanda and 1' Benin skirt it on the east and south-eastern quarters; lithe fierce Dahomians border on its western limit; vwhile on the south it is only separated from the sea by a strip of land belonging to the Popos. Divided 'étfrom the Fellatahs .by the broad streams of the Iiifriendly Niger, and powerful enough to check “aggression from any less formidable enemy, Yoruba. menjoyed a comparative peace and prosperity unknown mto most of the neighbouring states. The towns were numerous and populous (the flargcr ones containing sometimes 60,000 or 70,000 xiiinhabitants), and were generally surrounded by triple .uwalls of wood or mud, and an outside ditch. Vil- rlages of 3,000 or 4,000 were thickly scattered over lithe country, and many persons resided on their own eseparate farms. _ The soil was productive, the climate healthy, the 14 CHAPTER II. people industrious, honest,* and affectionate, and in their own simple way they lived in external ease and J comfort. The nation was composed of several different ; tribes, all owing allegiance and paying tribute to: the king of Yoruba, Whose residence was at Oyo, or ', Eyeo, near the Niger; and though feuds and jea—- lousies among the tribes occasionally led to afirays-l- : between them, yet nothing had occurred sufficiently ‘! serious to afi'ect the integrity of the kingdom. But about forty years ago a disastrous changei took place in the social condition of Yoruba, broughtl about by a combination of circumstances. In the southern part of the kingdom very serious disputes had broken out, not only among the dif-f ferent tribes, but also between the smaller subdi- visions; and a quarrel in the market of the little town of Aponi, as to the value of a trifling quantity of'pepper, was the spark to kindle a flame that had nearly depopulated the surrounding country. The * The unusual honesty of the Yoruba people is particularly noticed by Capt. Clapperton. ’ 'l' The captives taken on such occasions were condemned to domestic slavery, but it was of the mildest kind. The slave was then, and still is, considered as part of the family, is often called “my son,” and a stranger would scarcely discern the difference between the freeman and the bond-’ slave. THE FELLATAHS. 15 towns of Ifé, Ikija, Kesi, the Ijebbus, Owus, and many others, were in arms against each other, and now for the first time* did they learn from their barbarous neighbours to send their unfortunate pri~ soners to the slave-markets on the coast. In the north the disasters were from a different source, and commenced in the ambition of a young man named Afonja, the chief of Illorin. He had heard the fame of the Fellatah war-towns beyond the Niger, and was filled with a passionate desire to emulate them. Intent only on the accomplishment of his own will, and regardless of the consequences to his country, he invited a Fellatah chief named Alimi from Sokatoo, and another called Ali‘r from Haussa, to share the government with him. The offer was eagerly accepted; the door which had been so long closed was now opened, and the Fellatah scourge began to be felt in Yoruba. The two chiefs invited their countrymen to join 'them; many of the Yorubans were prevailed on to embrace their religion; and open hostilities and "‘ There were few or no Yorubans brought to Sierra Leone till the year 1822, so that the internal slave-wars could not have begun much earlier. The labours and the blessed suc- ‘cesses of Mr. Johnson and the earlier missionaries in the «colony were among the less hopeful tribes. 1' We may judge somewhat of the character of Ali, when 'we are told that he had at one time 20,000 slaves working iin chains upon his farm. 16 CHAPTER 11. secret artifices were but too successfully employed against this unhappy people. It is calculated that there were not less than twenty thousand men in Yoruba whose sole occupation was rapine and slave- hunting. ‘ Atyfirst single farms were attacked, then villages were destroyed, till, emboldened by success, large towns fell before them, and massacre, fire, and misery marked their progress. One of these towns was Oshogfin, situated in the western part of the country, beyond the Kong mountains; its wooden walls were nearly four miles in circuit, and it num- bered 12,000 as its population. The people dwelt secure, they were far from the lands that had hitherto suffered from Fellatah avarice and cruelty;* they anticipated no attack, and should an unexpected enemy arrive, their walls were strong, their men were brave, and what cause had they to fear? They were soon fatally undeceived. One morning in the early spring of 1821 the people had * The progress of the Fellatahs was far less rapid here than it had been on the further shore of the Niger, for as late as 1825, Capt. Clapperton speaks of that part of the country through which he travelled as being well cultivated, peaceful, and prosperous; and Lander, in 1830, only heard of their distant ravages. It appears too that the early settlers in the country (see p. 9) did not join their warlike countrymen; for the same traveller frequently fell in with Fellatah villages where the inhabitants were living peacefully and quietly, and engaged in tending their flocks and herds. THE FELLATAHS 17 risen as usual in peace and security, the women were busy preparing the morning meal, the men were following their various avocations, when suddenly the cry was heard, “ The Mohammedans are coming!” The men rushed to the walls, bidding their wives and children flee into the bush. It was too late! So well had the enemy laid his plans, that the gates were already secured, and escape was impossible. The men fought as those who were fighting for their all, but in vain; they were overpowered by numbers ; the troops entered the town, set fire to the houses, chained together all who would bring them profit, and massacred the rest. The same sun that had risen in tropical splendour on the busy flourishing town of Oshogfin, shed its setting rays on a mass of burning ruins, where many a blackened corpse told of desperate and unavailing struggles. But what human tongue shall tell of the cries, the groans, the wailings of suffering and despair that throughout that weary night entered into the ears of the “ Lord of Sabaoth” from the multitude of widows and orphans that were led like sheep from 0- shogfin! One of these was a boy of twelve years old, of the name of Adjai, who, with his mother and sisters, was bound in chains and sold into slavery. We shall not enter into the particulars of this boy’s suf- C 18 CHAPTER II. ferings; they are already before the public ;* we shall only state that, after having been several times sold and resold, dragged from place to place, and en- during almost intolerable hardships and sorrows, he was, early in 1822, with one hundred and eighty- seven unfortunate companions, shipped on board a Portuguese slaver at Lagos, where the treatment he met with corresponded but too well with the fright- ful accounts detailed in the Parliamentary Papers. Happily it was but of short duration, for on the very next evening, by God’s good Providence, the slaver fell in with two English cruisers, and was captured by them. The poor captives were now in greater des- pair than before, for the Portuguese had succeeded in making these simple-hearted people believe that the English thus watched for and seized the slave-ships, that they might use the blood of the negroes to dye their scarlet cloth, and their flesh as baits for 00w ries! Adjai and a few other boys were taken or. board one of the English ships; but here their terror was wound up to its highest pitch by seeing a number of cannon-balls piled upon the deck, which they took for the heads of some of their com- panions, while they concluded that some joints of pork hanging up to dry were their limbs. They were soon, however, re-assured; and when we tell * “Adjai, or Good out of Evil,” Nisbet and 00.; “The African Slave Boy,” VVertheim ; and C. M. Record for 1837. THE FELLATAHS. 19 our readers that the ship on board which our young friend was now taken was the “ Myrmidon,” and the commander was Captain Leeke, they will have no difficulty in recognising the heathen Adjai under the Christian name of Samuel Crowther. But our object is history, not biography; we shall not follow Adjai in the events of his next few years, except to say that, on his arrival at Sierra Leone, he was placed under the care of an European catechist and his wife, who showed him every kindness; that he grew in grace as in years, was baptised, and be— came first a student, and then a teacher in the Fourah Bay Institution for the education of young men as teachers and catechists. Years rolled on in Yoruba, but brought with them no return of peace or prosperity; the Fellatahs still gained ground; the slave-wars were still carried on, and the king, driven from his capital, was forced to take up his abode in the town of Aggo—Oja. The whole country was disorganised, and the inferior chiefs, throwing off their allegiance to their sove- reign, left him in possession of but a small part of his former dominions.”" Adjai’s town was rebuilt, and again destroyed; "‘ Now called Yoruba Proper. 20 CHAPTER II. and not a vestige now remains of what has twice been Oshogfin. Large districts were depopulated,* the land in consequence was left untilled, fields of waving corn were supplanted by the tangled wood and impenetrable jungle; the chatter of the monkey, and the shrill scream of the parrot, took the place of the busy hum of active human life; while the roar of the lion proclaimed that he had re- asserted his ancient rights, and was once more the monarch of the forest. ‘ Judges v. 6, 7. CHAPTER III. YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. “Who maketh thee to differ; and what hast thou, that thou didst not receive {’"I—l Cor. iv. 7. THERE was mercy in store for Yoruba, though she knew it not; and while she appeared to be sinking lower and lower in darkness and in misery, the God of all grace was, by his Providence, preparing the way by which the day-spring from on high should visit her, and guide the feet of many of her children into the paths .of peace. But it will make the succeeding history more intelligible, if we devote a few pages to a description of the land, and of its people. For many miles from the coast, the country, though fertile, is low and swampy; but as you jour- ney on towards the interior, it becomes diversified with hill and plain; and, from the descriptions given of it by the Landers, as well as by our own mission- aries, it must be very picturesque and beautiful. Deep and fertile valleys lie among the hills; granite rocks, some lofty, bold, and bare, others clothed with trees or verdure to their summits; and 22 CHAPTER III. clear streams, tumbling over their rocky bed, add to the beauty of the scenery. The appearance of the towns, from a distance, is often imposing; the walls enclose a large extent of land, and fields and trees are interspersed among the thatched roofs of the lowly dwellings. It is strange, that in a tropical climate the natives should take such pains to exclude the air; but the African hut,’ like that of the Hindoo, is without windows or any opening but the low door, while the roof projects so far beyond the walls, that but little air can find its way even here. The houses of the better classes are built round a quadrangle, into which the separate dwellings open, and a rude piazza runs along the Whole interior. The head of the family occupies the largest of these dwellings, and round him are gathered children and grandchildren, and any other members of his family for whom a separate habitation can be found. The court in the centre is often planted, and is the common place of resort for all the inmates, where, shut in among themselves, they can, without fear of interruption, talk over any subject of family interest ; and where, on the bright moonlight nights of that southern clime, the whole party are frequently collected. Here they will remain for hours, seated on the ground, and listening with fixed attention, while one and another relates some passing incident, or amuses his hearers with some legend or YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 23 fairy tale, of which these people are passionately fond.* It is the hour of calm enjoyment, and the eye of even a Christian Yoruban will glisten at the thought of these moonlight scenes, though now his conversation would be of a. higher and holier tone. * We cannot refrain from inserting one of these for the amusement of our younger readers—it will remind them of the Arabian Nights; but we must preface it by mentioning that the character of cunning which we attribute to the fox is by the Yorubans ascribed to the land tortoise. The tale runs thus, and is rehearsed in parts, some of it being sung, and the rest in recitative. There was once a town that was harassed by the frequent visits of a monstrous and mischievous bird, with a very large and strong bill, with which he seized on any living being that struck his fancy. When they had reason to expect his approach, the people would shut them- selves up in their houses, and not stir out till the danger was over. But they seldom had any warning, and the visits of their Winged enemy became so frequent and so fatal, that many consultations were held as to the best mode of averting the evil. No effectual means could be devised till the tortoise came forward and proposed a scheme. which he assured them would be infallible. “Get,” said he, “three large brass mortars, and set them upside down, one upon the other, in the market place; shut yourselves up in your houses, and leave the rest to me, only do not stir out till I call you.” The people adopted the advice of the tortoise, procured the largest V mortars the town afforded, placed them according to the direc- tions, and retired to their own dwellings, while the tortoise quietly crept under the lowest mortar of the three. Presently the well-known sound of wings was heard, the bird came, and was surprised at the unusual appearance of the market, in which nothing was to be seen but the three brass mortars. There is some trick in this, thought he, and I doubt not the 24 CHAPTER III. The people are industrious, and the soil freely yields them yams, cassada, and the various other grains that are in use among them. Cotton, too, is grown in con- siderable quantities, and the women spin, and men and women weave it into the cloth which is worn by all. They are generally well clothed in this their native manufacture; the colour is often blue, dyed with indigo, and checked with red cotton pro- cured from Haussa, and which, it is said, is naturally of that colouro There is a great taste for dress among them, and independently of any religious motive, some of the gay young men affect the Moham- tortoise is at the bottom of it. So he began to sing, “I am the great bird, I am the bird of birds, what have I to do with that ugly tortoise?” As soon as he had ceased, the tortoise began to imitate him, singing the same tune, only in a squeak- ing voice, and travestying the words, “ I am the great tor- toise, I am the tortoise of tortoises, what have I to do with that ugly bird 2” The bird, enraged at the audacity of the tortoise, dashed down upon the mortars, and striking the upper one with his beak, shattered it into atoms ; then soar- ing aloft repeated his song, but in a tone of increasing anger. The tortoise answered as before, but in a trembling voice, as if very much alarmed. Again the bird darted down, shattered the second mortar, and again rose high in the air to repeat the strain for the third time. The tortoise again responded, but in a still more trembling voice. The fury of the bird now knew no bounds ; darting down With greater vehemence than before, he struck his bill into the remaining mortar with such force that it stuck fast in it, and while endeavouring to extri- cate himself the tortoise crept out, and calling the people round, they soon demolished their long-dreaded enemy. YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 25 medan costume, and wear wide sack-like trowsers, much embroidered, and confined close round the ankle, with a loose upper garment, and turban; or if unable to procure this last appendage, they roll a long piece of cotton round the head. Some of them are beginning to adopt the English dress; but all this is to be regretted, as- any change of national costume necessarily involves some degree of change in the national character, and their present dress is very becoming. Knives, axes, and implements of husbandry are made from the iron ore which is very abundant, and which they have learnt to smelt. Osier baskets and .3 grass mats are also among their native manufactures. The red earthenware in common use is made by r women, and burnt by being stacked together, with 1 layers of wood between the rows, as bricks are baked it in England. One of their most useful domestic utensils 1] has been provided for them by nature; this is the u calabash, a kind of pumpkin. When the fruit begins alto ripen, a hole is cut in the small end to admit the air, and thus'the pulp decays without injuring the wind. Sometimes the incision is made round the ilfruit, at about one-third from the smaller end, and us. vessel with a neatly fitting lid is produced without ifurther trouble. These calabashes are of various seizes, some are smaller than a tea-cup, while others will hold three or four gallons. 26 CHAPTER III. A good deal of internal traffic is carried on among them; markets are held morning and evening in every town and village, and in the towns there is a larger one every fifth day, which is attended by all the, neighbourhood. Their only current money is the white cowryf" forty of which are of the value of an English penny. They are strung, and tied up in “heads,” as they are called, each head containing 2,000 shells, equal to 43. 2d.; and at this rate of reckoning, we shall not be surprised at £2 or £3 worth being as much as a man can carry, nor wonder at the expense and difficulty of conveying money from Badagry to Abbeokuta. One of their domestic habits is, we believe, pecu- liar to themselves. None of the people take their first morning meal in their own houses, but all, both men and women, about seven o’clock in the morning, pay a visit to a cook’s shop, and make their first breakfast on a bowl of gruel of Indian corn. le women then proceed to the market to purchase ma- terials for a more substantial repast, which is taken about ten o’clock. This consists of balls of Indian corn, called “denge‘,” served up in a kind of strong; sauce made of beef, mutton, fish, or fowl, with various‘ vegetables, and seasoned with salt procured froml ’ The Cyprwa moneta of Linnaeus. These shells are not found on the neighbouring coasts, but are brought from India or the Eastern coast of Africa. YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 27 the Popes, and with Cayenne pepper, which grows in the country; the whole forming a very nutritious and palatable food. The family do not generally collect together for this meal, but each one takes it i when so inclined. In cases, however, where there is ionly one wife, she and her children usually join the l husband and any friends he may have invited. Ii'When about to partake of the food, a large earthen I"bowl is placed on the ground, containing the denge rand the sauce; and the party sit down round it. The llballs of Indian corn are taken out of the bowl, \Jlbroken and distributed to the different persons, each :uof whom dips his portion into the sauce as he eats it. liThere is a good deal of animal food consumed in this away, but it is never eaten solid. One of their chief ”articles of food is also the yam. With regard to the mental and moral character of {lithe people, the concurring testimony of those Who ulhave had the best means of judging is, that, as a (:nation, the Yorubans are far above the generality of gazheir neighbours.* The missionaries at Sierra Leone speak of the greater degree of intelligence and energy apparent xziin the people there since the year 1822, before which tittime, as we have already stated there were scarcely ’ Lander speaks of the people of Boossa and Kiami, to the unorth 0f Yoruba, as in some respects superior to them, but “these districts are small and comparatively unimportant. 28 CHAPTER 111. any Yorubans in the colony, though afterwards they; were brought in in such numbers, that at present! more than half the population is Yoruban. And? on the other side of the Atlantic, Lord Harris, the: present governor of Trinidad, has spoken of the; superiority of the Yorubans in that island over the: other emancipated negroes. Their minds are in-- genious and acute, and many of their common pro-- verbs, with which Mr. Crowther has enriched hiss Vocabulary,* show a quickness of observation, and al knowledge of human nature, which even their friends in this country were not prepared to expect. Their natural disposition is very lively; the children are full of mirth and play, and are particularly fond of‘ riddles. You may often hear their merry laugh as, sitting on a shady bank, they endeavour to puzzle each other with questions such as these : “What is that little steep hill that nobody can climb?” or, “What is it that any one can divide, but no one can see where it has been divided?” 1- Sometimes these riddles are the current ones of the neighbourhood, but they often seem to be impromptu. Considering the mental gifts with which the Yorubans are evidently endowed, we cannot account * Some of these will be found in the Appendix. 1' Perhaps our young readers will find out, without our help, that the answer to the first of these is an egg, and to the second, water. YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 29 for the small progress they have made in the arts of civilized life. Many are the accurate and bright opinions and ideas you may often hear from them ’in conversation, yet they have never invented any written mode of conveying or recordng them; :and some of the simplest mechanical powers have lbeen till lately entirely unknown in the country.* There is a spirit of independence and generosity :zamong the Yorubans that, if sanctified by Christian igprinciple, will make them a fine and noble nation. iflt is a remarkable circumstance, that whereas at iEBadagry, and generally on the coast, the people J ntinually ask the missionaries to give them money or coming to listen to them, or for sending their hildren to school, at Abbeokuta the missionaries ften find it difficult to resist being paid for their preaching. There are very frequent instances of [this in their journals. A missionary will have been preaching to an attentive and eager crowd in a harket, or under a spreading tree, and at the con- ‘tlusion one of the party, generally a woman, will ‘ “ A few years ago, Mr. Crowther procured a cart from vriierra Leone ; the body or it was unfortunately too heavy to e carried through the swamps and forests, and was left at itadagry ; but the wheels and shafts were conveyed to atbbeokuta, and excited the utmost astonishment among all masses. Not only children, but grown-up people, crowded into 35 compound, and were delighted with drawing one another mmd and round, seated upon planks laid across the shafts. 30 CHAPTER III. beg him to wait a few minutes, when she will return with a handful of cowries and some Kola* nuts, and insist on his accepting them. The cowries of course are positively refused, but the missionary generally accepts some of the Kola nuts, and shares them with those who may happen to be standing next him. Mr. Smith has told us of a striking instance of this that occurred to himself. While spending a few days at Osielle, he visited Malaka, a consider- able town eight or ten miles to the north. Mr, Smith here preached the way of salvation through Jesus Christ alone to a large party assembled under the fine Aka tree in the middle of the town, and was; listened to with the greatest attention. No European? had been there before, and Mr. Smith, to prevent: any misconception, took an opportunity of telling them, in the course of his address, that he could not‘ receive any presents. But notwithstanding this; warning, no sooner had he ceased, than the people brought him a goat and some Kola nuts, pressing him most earnestly to accept them. When he re; fused, they said they could not consider him as their friend, if he would not accept their presents, and h . * The Kola nuts are in size and appearance very like on English horse-chesnut; the flavour is a. pleasant bitter, an. they are slightly tonic. Few, if any, grow in that part of t country, which makes them expensive, and the offering the is considered a. special token of respect. YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 31 was obliged to compromise the matter by taking the nuts. And it is pleasant to know that these presents are made without any expectation of a return. “It is,” said the generous Ogubonna upon one occasion, “the custom of our country.” We will not here omit an instance of noble and generous daring, tinctured perhaps with something of wild enthusiasm, that was mentioned by Mr. Hin- derer when lately in England. A young man of £Ibadan heard that a chief named Pimi, of Ede, a town at some little distance, had imitated the cruelty of the Haussa Alif“ in obliging his farm servants to work in chains. Filled with indignation at this de- siparture from the usual conduct of the Yorubans 5 towards their domestic slaves,-l- he resolved to [trescue them, and calling together some of his com- mpanions, so passionately urged their accompanying illhim, that they readily consented. They set off for liiEde; none dared to oppose their bold and deter- mmined bearing; and the mind of the cruel and ucowardly chief was filled with terror at their ap- (fproach. Proceeding to the farm, they knocked off mvith their own hands the chains from the astonished “and grateful slaves, and bade them return in peace do their own homes. This story has a melancholy asequel, for not long after this exploit, this young ' Page 15. f Page 14, Note. 32 CHAPTER III. man’s undisguised hatred of tyranny drew down upon him the suspicion of some of the chiefs, and he was secretly put to death. And now we must turn to a darker side of the picture of Yoruba and its people; one in which no ray of hope could be discovered to lessen the dismal gloom —we mean its state as to spiritual things; and as if to give another proof that the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, we find that not- withstanding their superiority in lower things to those around them, they were as far from the true knowledge of God as any of their neighbours. They have, indeed, an idea of one Supreme Being, whom they call Olorfin, and who, as they believe, is the Creator of all things; and will often express their good wishes by “ God bless you,” or “ I praise God for your health,” &c. ; but they virtually deny him, by believing that he takes little or no cogni- 3. zance of things on earth. They offer him, there- fore no sacrifices, and pay him no homage; all their 3- worship is reserved for those divinities of their own 5 invention, to whom they imagine he has delegated 'Y his power, and to whom alone they look for help.* * These gods are not emanations from or personifications of the attributes of the one God, as Apollo, Minerva, &c.. , among the ancients, but distinct beings acting as mediators. , When the Yorubans are reproved for idolatry, they will mam- ; tain that they worship God (Olorfin), but that they worship YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. .33 One of the principal of these is Ifa, the god of palm-nuts, to whom they ascribe the power of heal- ing, and to whose priests they apply in times of sickness. On these occasions the friends of the sufferer procure a. sheep or a goat for sacrifice, and send for the babbalawo or priest, who begins the cere- mony by tracing a number of uncouth devices with chalk upon the wall. Then taking a calabash, he puts into it some cowries or some palm-nuts, and placing it in front of the figures he has made, per- forms his incantations, which are supposed to pre— vail on the god to enter the palm—nuts or the cowries. The sacrifice is then brought in, its throat is cut, and the priest sprinkles some of the blood on the cala- bash and on the wall. He then smears it across the sick man’s forehead—thus, as they imagine, conveying the life of the creature into the patient. The priest and family afterwards feast on the flesh of the sacrifice, only reserving a portion to be ex- posed on the outside of the house for the buzzards; him through Orisha, who will pray to God for them, and obtain the blessmgs they desire. W'ell may Mr. Townsend compare their religion with that of the Roman Catholics, and :add, “These sin only against the light of nature-R0me :against that revelation which tells of the one only Mediator. 'One evil spirit rules over the darkness of the Whole world. 'Who can be surprised that the white slave-dealers at Lagos ((Roman Catholics), consult Ifa before sending their ships to isea, ? It is all the same godl” D 34 CHAPTER III. and if this is quickly devoured by them, the omen is considered favourable. Should the sacrifice prove unavailing, and no signs of recovery appear, it is repeated again and again, according to the means of the family, or their affec- tion for the sufferer; and not unfrequently, among the poorer classes, heaVy debts are incurred in the purchase of animals for the purpose. If all prove to be in vain, the patient is left to himself; he is not actually neglected, for food is given him in the morning and evening, but during the day the family pursue their usual avocations, and he is left to pass through the last sorrowful days of his earthly exist- ence, without one kind hand to minister to his necessities, with no tender parent or affectionate child to sympathise in his bodily sufferings, far less to speak words of comfort to his soul. They worship, also, the god of thunder and light- ning; and it is afiecting to see how men, women, and children will, in their mistaken zeal, brave the fury of the elements, and in the most tremendous storm, by day or by night, will rush out of their dwellings, regardless of the pealing thunder, the vivid lightning, or the pelting rain. Shango is offended, sacrifices must be offered, and woe to the ‘ individual who should dare to be absent! They, also, like most other heathen nations, adore the , manes of their ancestors, whom they call “Egun- l i A 4 YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 35 gun,” and once in the year offer sacrifices, and hold a. feast in their honour; but it is remarkable that no trace of serpent-worship has been found among them; and this is the more curious, as two or three species of large snakes receive the peculiar adoration of their neighbours, the Popos. They have a singular idea relating to the souls of their children, believing them to be inhabited and influenced by the spirit of some one of their ancestors. When a child is born, a priest is sent for, and inquiry is made of the favourite deity of the family, as to which of the deceased forefathers intends to dwell in the present infant, and a name is given to it accordingly. This does not seem to be at all the metempsychosis of Eastern nations, for the spirit of the departed may at the same time dwell in many of his descendants, and is evidently considered as accompanying, not superseding the individual . soul.‘ The Yorubans are not wholly free from the addi-v tional guilt of human sacrifices. They are far less frequent in Yoruba than at Badagry; but even here they are occasionally offered in cases of emergency. In a time, for instance, of continual drought some poor slave will be seized, adorned as for a festival, and thrown into the river, to propitiate the goddess of the waters, and to serve as food to her attendants, the alligators and crocodiles. And our missionaries 36 CHAPTER 111. record more than one instance in Abbeokuta itself, where the unhappy, unconscious victim, after being paraded through the streets, has been strangled in the fatal Orisha grove. They have many other objects of worship in addi- tion to those we have enumerated; indeed, anything that can either assist or injure them receives some kind of adoration. Large trees, red-sandstone, iron, cowries, the hills of the bug-bugs, or African ant, (in which they imagine some superior being to reside), all receive their share, and sometimes they will worship parts of their own body, their forehead,* "‘ Mr. Hinderer mentioned, that when he was at Ibadan, he was visited by a man who had just returned from Abbeo- kuta, whither he had been sent on business by his master. He had, it seems, been to our schools there, had seen boys and girls learning their “,book,” and came to tell Mr. Hinderer that if he would “sit down" at Ibadan and establish a school, he would be the first to attend it. It was Saturday, and Mr. Hinderer invited him to come to him on the following day and join a few Sunday scholars he had collected round him. The man excused himself, as he should be busy. “What have you so much to do to-morrow 2” inquired our missionary. “I must worship my forehead.” “How do you mean ?” “ As I came out of Abbeokuta,” replied the man, “the soldiers at the custom-house ill-treated me, broke a calabash of rum be- longing to my master, and would have killed me had it not been for my forehead, so now I must Worship it.” “ HOW can this be 2" inquired Mr. Hinderer, “ I thought you before said that God always preserved you.” “Do you white men,” was the indignant reply, “think us so foolish as to suppose our forehead itself can save us i N 0, but God made my forehead, YORUBA AND ITS PEOPLE. 37 or their foot, especially before they set out upon a. journey. Every fifth day is reserved by the priests and devotees for a special worship of their several deities, but the mass of the people do not seem to take any part in it. One of the ceremonies that is gone through upon these sacred days, is the fetching water for the gods from some neighbouring holy fountain; and on these occasions long lines of priests and priestesses, and their immediate followers, are seen walking in procession With their calabashes on their heads, and often preserving the most pro- found silence.* Some of the water is poured out as a lihation to the idol, and the remainder reserved for use. Their idols are of clay, or wood, or metal, and several are generally placed in one particular room in the house, Where they receive some kind of adoration morning and evening. It can, of course, i and he saved me through my forehead, and so I worship it.” We find from Mr. Smith that this worship of the forehead con- :sists in slaying some animal, a goat, or a sheep, the blood of 'Which is sprinkled on the idols in the house, and streaked 2across the forehead of the ofi'erer. The sacrifice is cut into :gypieces, and distributed among the friends, a suflicient portion ;.lbeing reserved for a feast for the family themselves. * These days are called Osse days, from a word signifying iasilence, and in Sierra Leone theYorubans have very naturally :ttransferred the term to the Christian Sabbath, which they mall Osse. 38 CHAPTER 111. be no spiritual worship that is offered to their imaginary deities; no confession of sin, no prayer for pardon, no supplication for the Holy Spirit, and no thanksgiving for redemption can come from their hearts or lips, for of these things they have never heard. “Make me rich,” “Make me healthy,” “Give me children,” “Avenge me of my enemies,” are the only petitions that a poor Yoruhan ever ofi'ers to his god. Lord, What is man when left to himself, that thou shouldst ever be mindful of him, or the son of man that thou shouldst ever visit him! And may we not add, “Who maketh thee, O believer, to differ id” CHAPTER IV. FOUNDATION or ABBEOKUTA—SIERRA LEONE EMIGRANTS. “ 0 ye that dwell in Moab, leave the cities, and dwell in the rock, and Ibe like the dove that maketh her nest in the sides of the hole's mouth."-—— :Jer. xlviii. 28. WHEN we look back on our own personal history, [or on that of the church of Christ, how continually ‘do we find that our heavenly Father, in his provi- ldential dealings with us, has brought about some :important result by indirect, and, perhaps, unlikely means. It has been so in the case of Yoruba; the circumstances that have worked together for her good appeared at the time to have no connection "with each other, though now we see they were all llinked together by the golden chain of God’s Isovereign will and determinate counsel. Part of this determinate counsel of God was to 'bring together people of rival tribes and jarring :‘interests into close connection and mutual depen- dence ; and as none but Infinite Wisdom could have accomplished this, so it is profitable for us to trace tout the mode of its accomplishment. V In the south-western part of the kingdom of 40 CHAPTER rv. Yoruba, amidst rocks and hills of primitive forma- tion, there stands near the eastern ‘margin of the river Ogfin, a huge porphyritic rock called Olumo, or the hiding-place, from the concealment it used to afford to a band of robbers. The summit is com- posed of large rounded masses of stone; and at one spot the intervening space forms a kind of deep, but low cavern, capable of giving shelter to a considerable number of persons. It was deserted by these robbers some short time before the year 1825 ; and in that year became the refuge of a few poor people, who had fled from the merciless hands of the slave-hunters,“ and knew not where else they could be so secure. The party who first took possession of the cavern was soon joined by others, who, like themselves, had been driven from their homes and friends ; and here they dwelt secure, though exposed to many hard- ships; often in want of food, and still oftener obliged to subsist on the leaves of the pepper plant, wild roots, or any animals that came within their reach. At length a few, more courageous than the rest, ventured to cross the river that lay beneath them, to purchase a little seed-corn at the nearest village, and cultivation now began among the rocky hills. Meanwhile the desolation we spoke of in a preceding chapter" was rapidly spreading in all the surround- ing country; town after town was destroyed, and ‘ Page 20. Ikija Slution / lla'ju Igbein Wesleyan 0 31gbein Station Slafionx . Rorén SKA-”Tm _ Grimm] 3H“: mammwa YRQ“ “E“0\‘(‘ 4 hng‘hsn Mxle ‘1 Mi 3 M I'axliu UL?“ rdm' FOUNDATION or ABBEOKUTA. 41 the inhabitants captured; while the comparatively few that escaped Wandered about the country in search of a resting-place.- The attention of some of these was attracted, after-a time, to Olumo, and by degrees many a small and feeble band established themselves among the hills, and the forest gave way to human habitations. The different parties settled themselves down in small, but separate, communities; each under its own laws; each with its own chief and judge, and war-captain, and with its own council-house; and each fondly giving to this new-found home the name of the town or village from which it had been drivenfi To the whole they gave the name of Abbeohuta, or Understone, partly in memory of the original cavern, and referring also to the rocks on which most of it was built. Fresh parties continued to join them, till the remnant of one hundred and thirty towns had found refuge in Abbeokuta; and the spot in which, thirty years ago, a robber’s cave was the only human habitation, now, in 1853, numbers eighty thousand—l- .as its population. * These townships are still entirely distinct from each :other; but there is no visible separation or boundary, either Inatural or artificial. The whole is surrounded by a common iwall, the circuit of which is not less than fifteen miles. 1' This is the lowest computation. Several English gentle- :imen, who have visited it, speak of 100,000 as nearer the real izainount. 4‘). CHAPTER N. All belonged to the Egba tribe of Yorubans ;' andl for a time the joy of a common deliverance, and the: sense of a common danger, were sufficient to keep :7 down any heart-burnings and disputes between the: different townships. It is more than probable, how- - ever, that as a feeling of security returned, the old? jealousies would have revived and led to disastrous; consequences, had they not in 1829 been joined by as chief named Shodeke, of the town of Aké, who by; his judicious conduct succeeded in consolidating thea hitherto heterogeneous mass. Shodeke was a man of a superior mind; wise in: council, and brave in war, he gradually gained an". ascendancy over all the other chiefs, which, instead: of using for his own aggrandisement, he employed for: the advantage of the Whole community. Each town—- ship still retained its own local government; but all :. matters of general interest were discussed and settled: in a public council, composed of the civil governors; of each town, called Ogbom's, and the war-chiefs, or: Baloguns. This general council was always held in: Shodeke’s township of Aké; and it proves the respect!- with which his memory is even now cherished, thatt there it is still holden, though Sagbua, who is thea senior chief, belongs to another town. Thus have discordant interests been knit to- - gether; and the people of Owu, and of Kesi, and of k Ikija, and of many other towns, have learnt to forgets n FOUNDATION OF ABBEOKUTA. 4") their former animosities, and to live side by side in peace and friendship. Their union has been their strength; they have more than once been attacked, first by Ijebbus, then by Yorubans, and lately by the king of Dahomey; but they have proved themselves strong enough to repulse them all; or rather, He who had designs of mercy for Abbeokuta, has thrown around her the shield of his Almighty strength. How little did the Egbas know or think by whom it was that their steps had been thus directed, and their hearts turned to each other! The cave of Olumo had not revealed to them that better “ hiding- place” from a still greater danger to which they were unconsciously exposed. The granite hills con— veyed to them no thought of the “ Rock of Ages ;” nor did the river Ogfin, as its bright streams danced over their rocky bed, bring them tidings of that “River of Life,” of which they would hereafter be invited to partake. God “hides his bright designs” in the unfathomable depths of Infinite Wisdom and Love; and leads the blind in a way that they know not. And now, leaving Abbeokuta in peace and se- curity, let us pass on to another of those means which God was pleased to employ for its lasting benefit, and turn to Sierra Leone. We would that some able pen would trace the 44 CHAPTER 1v. entire history of this remarkable colony, in which the records of bare realities are more romantic than the day-dreams “that float in soft visions round thee poet’s head,” but it would be beside our purposes were we even to attempt it, and we shall therefore: only briefly allude to it in its relation to our present: subject. The devoted missionaries had laboured long and! anxiously in Sierra Leone, many of them even: unto death, among 'the thousands rescued from the‘ slave-ships; and abundantly had God blessed their labours. Education and civilisation had changed numbers of the enslaved and degraded negroes into men of enterprise and intelligence; the preaching of the Gospel had turned them from idols to serve the living God,* and, by His grace, the missionaries could thankfully rejoice over many of these as fellow-heirs with themselves of the kingdom of their Lord. This progress was the most rapid among the natives of Yoruba, many of whom by degrees ac- quired a little independent property; and in the year 1839 we find a few of them actually embarking their small capital in the establishment of a trade with those very shores from which they had been sold as slaves. They purchased from the Government * Some still remained enslaved to former habits of in- dolence, recklessness, and heathenism, but those were com- paratively a. small proportion. SIERRA LEONE EMIGRANTS. 45 a small captured slave vessel; freighted her with European and Sierra Leone productions; selected for the crew African freedmen like themselves;* and, encouraged by the presence of British cruisers in the Rights, (for they had become British subjects,) :set sail for Badagry. What a picture for us to Icontemplate with feelings of adoring gratitude! A ‘vessel, whose only cargo had hitherto been human ilbeings led forth to perpetual misery, now laden i'with articles of lawful commerce, and manned by. iesome of those very people whose souls and bodies ilhad once been its only freight! Praised be God who put it into the hearts of his servants to esta- iltblish the colony of Sierra Leone! . These spirited adventurers succeeded admirably; itthey were well received at Badagry, easily disposed aof their goods, and returned with palm-oil and other narrative produce. Others of their countrymen were raencouraged to follow their example; two more con- Jlldemned slave-ships were purchased, manned, and iifieighted like the first; and it was not long before a rassmall but brisk trade commenced between Sierra .Leone and Badagry. And now the thought arose among the colonists, “whether it would be possible to return abidingly to iitheir native lands, and be again united to friends * The only white mamon board was the master, who was ameeded to navigate the ship. 46 CHAPTER W. from whom they had been, as they had believed, separated for ever. There were serious obstacles to their attempting this; the difficulties of the journey inland, and the great danger of being again enslaved, might have deterred less sanguine spirits; but the heathen at Sierra Leone longed to escape from the presence of true religion; and many unestablished Christians could not resist the temptation of return~ ing to their fatherland, for they thought not of the danger to which they would be exposed by ven- turing among their heathen. relations without any outward means of grace.* Various parties thus emigrated back into their own lands; and between the years 1839 and 1842 no less than five hundred had left the colony for this purpose. We may imagine the excitement and interest which these departures would occasion, and the eager pre— parations made by the people themselves. They were for the most. part Yorubans, and bound for Abbeokuta, of which some vague uncertain rumours had reached them through the traders. They could know but little of what they should find there, but they were well assured that European manufactures could seldom reach that distant market. They must * The more established Christians felt this to be an insuu perable impediment; and no love of kindred or of country‘ could induce them to quit the colony, unless accompanied by * one of their present ministers ‘ SIERRA LVEONE EMIGRANTS. 47 therefore take with them clothing for themselves and their children, for they had adopted the European dress; they must carry the implements of their various trades, for these would probably be unknown there; and to these they added various little articles as presents and curiosities for their friends in the interior. All this, added to the passage-money, which was something considerable, made the undertaking an expensive one, and prevented many from joining them who would otherwise have rejoiced to go. Some of these parties landed at Lagos, at the mouth of the river Ogfin, as being the easiest and most direct route to Abbeokuta, but they soon had treason sorely to repent of the course they had taken. Lagos was in great measure inhabited by Popes, rwhose naturally ferocious dispositions had been ren- itdered still more cruel by constant intercourse with isslave-dealers. One would have supposed that the ‘n-sight of these people, rescued as they all had been ":by a far-distant and independent nation, and now “returning home after years of exile, would have :Jssoftened even their obdurate hearts. But cherished ..sin, of whatever kind, gradually chokes every kind- iailier feeling, and leaves the heart wrapped up in its «town selfishness. The various articles of property the emigrants had thought with them roused the cupidity of the chiefs {and people; and as each different party reached 48 CHAPTER 1v. Lagos, they seized and robbed them of all they had, save the clothes they wore, and sent them away a four days’ journey into the interior, Without money or provisions, tauntingly bidding them rejoice that they had not again been seized and sold. It fared far better with those who had taken the safer, though more difficult route, by Badagry. Though a slave-port, like Lagos, and chiefly belong- ing to the Popos, part of the town is occupied by Yorubans, and they, as well as the chief of this quarter, Wawu (who, though a Popo, is good-natured and friendly) welcomed this return of their country- men, prevailed on some few to settle among them, and helped the others forward on their journey. Before the end of 1842, nearly 300 of these liberated negroes, from Sierra Leone, had thus arrived at Badagry, most of whom proceeded on to Abbe- okuta ; and it may be well to follow, in imagination, some of these people, as they landed from the trading vessels, in parties of fifty or sixty, and took their course to the interior. There would be young, and old, and middle-aged in the company—some Christ- ians, some still heathen, but all with hearts beating high with hope and expectation. All probably were strangers to the actual road by which they travelled, for the slaves were generally brought down to thei coast by very circuitous routes, but the general[ aspect of the country, the birds, the flowers, the veryj w‘fit , SIERRA LEONE EMIGRANTS. 49 air they breathed, would be to them instinct with life of other days, and would bring back, with increasing force, the associations of their childhood. For many miles, they would travel through a flat, alluvial country, where no stone of any size is to be seen, but the ground is sometimes swampy, and at others covered with almost impenetrable jungle. On leaving this level land, they would enter on an undulating and picturesque country, Where the plains shone bright with buddhleas and hibiscus of various colours, While beautiful groves of palm and other trees invited the weary traveller to rest beneath their shade, and here and there a sparkling stream supplied them with delicious water. But the hand of the spoiler had been here, and had marred the pleasant prospect; the untilled ground, and the ruined villages, told of depopulating slave-wars;* and the beautiful cocoa-nut, banana, and other trees, laden with fruit, that lingered among the ruins, stood in mournful contrast with the scene “around. As our travellers advanced into the more hilly yucountry, and came Within eight or ten miles of ..Abbeokuta, the aspect of things greatly improved; lithe land was well cultivated; fields of Guinea and * Mr. King, at a later period, mentions, that in the course ((of one day’s journey, between Badagz'y and Abbeokuta, he :[passed not less than twenty ruined towns and villages. E 50 CHAPTER Iv. Indian corn were interspersed with pastures in which cattle, sheep, and goats were feeding; farm-villages were scattered here and there, where pigeons and poultry were seen round almost every dwelling, the people were busy at their various occupations, and all were the appearance of cheerful industry. As they still proceeded, the narrow path widened into somewhat of a road; the number of passers to and fro told of their approach to Abbeokuta; already they discerned the picturesque rocks that surmount its eastern quarter, and could trace the river Ogun by the luxuriant foliage that marks its course; and how must everyheart have throbbed and every eye been strained to catch the first glimpse of the longed-for spot! At last it burst upon them in all its beauty of situation, and with all the bold romantic scenery that has called forth such admiration from even the ‘ passing visitor.* The town of Abbeokuta, more than three miles in length, and nearly as much in breadth, stands, as we have said, amidst a group of granite rocks on the eastern bank of the river Ogun, and its native dwell- ings have a singularly picturesque effect as they are seen rising one above another on the rocky heights, or ; clustering in the intervening hollows, and every- * See Journal of Rev. T. B. Freeman, in “Missionary i I Register” for 1843. Later English travellers speak of it in the 5 same terms. \ Mammalian _ SIERRA LEONE EMIGRANTS. 51 where interspersed with trees of various forms and hues. Here the lowly roofs are half concealed by the orange, the lime, the plantain, and the banana, with their pleasant fruits; there the broad umbrella-tree spreads its grateful shade; and there are seen the tall and handsome cotton-trees overtopping all the rest. Huge blocks of uncovered granite are tower- ing higher still, and in the midst of all, the eye rests with peculiar interest on that broad flat rock that covers the cave of Olumo. Our minds involuntarily turn to Tasso’s descrip- tion of the army’s approach to Jerusalem, and their first sight of the desired city, where he says :— “ Ali ha ciascuno al core, ed ali a1 piede, Ni del suo ratto andar perb s’accorge ; Ma quando i1 sol gli aridi campi fiede Con raggi assai ferventi, ed in alto serge, Ecco apparir Gerusalern si vide, Ecco additar Gerusalem si scorge, Ecco da mille voci unitamente, Gerusalemme salutar si sente.”* Far different thoughts, however, from those of the heroic but mistaken Crusaders, occupied the minds ‘ “ One would have thought each heart and foot had wings, For now, unconscious how the gushing springs Of nearer hope unwonted strength supply, Swift and more swift o’er hill and plain they fly. When 10 ! Jerusalem before them stands,— Jerusalem ! they pause—a thousand hands Are raised on high,—a thousand tongues proclaim Jerusalem! J erusaleml thy hallowed name 1” 52 CHAPTER IV. of our pilgrims. No dreams of earthly conquest were theirs, but every heart swelled with the hope of again embracing the beloved ones who had so long been lost to them, and with the joy of being once more the denizens of their own cherished land. Doubtless, thoughts of future victory arose in some of those hearts, but it was a victory not over Saracens and earthly enemies, but over idolatry and sin; they cared not to regain the long-forsaken tomb of Him they loved, but to lead others to know and love Him as the Resurrection and‘ the Life. Many a heart-stirring recognition, and many a joy- ful re-union awaited their arrival in the town; and the people heard with wonder the tale .they had to tell. Hitherto all that the tribes in the interior had ' known of Europeans was from the Portuguese, who had spared no pains in endeavouring to persuade them that God created the black man to be slave to the white; and so entirely had these simple-minded people believed the assertion of their betrayers, that they actually invented a fable to account for it. But now, when their friends and countrymen related their strange adventures, and they listened to the history of their sufferings at the barracoon, and in the slave ship; of their rescue by the English; of their settlement at Sierra Leone as free men; and of all the kindness shown them there, the truth broke in upon them, and their astonishment and admiration ....«._,___._n~n A U u SIERRA LEONE EMIGRANTS. 53 of the English nation were unbounded. And'when their Christian brethren told them, not only of the love of English Christians, but of the source from which it flowed, the conviction forced itself on some of their hearts that the English religion must be the right one. The emigrants, on their part, must have been agreeably surprised at the prosperity and compara- tive civilisation of Abbeokuta. The houses, though of clay and thatched, were better built and more commodious than is usual in Africa. The people were well clad, industrious, cheerful, and contented, the markets were numerous and well supplied. Indian and Guinea corn, beans of various kinds, sugar- canes, yams cooked and uncooked, fresh meat, beef, pork, and mutton; fish, fowls, pigeons, and dried rats (of which the people are very fond), were all to be purchased there. Pepper, ginger, pine-apples, oranges, plantains, and bananas, apples, papaws, limes, ground-nuts, ready—made soup, palm-wine, beer made from Guinea corn or from maize, and palm-oil, were in abundance ; while various articles of domestic use—such as cotton, raw or in reels, cloths, some of rich texture and woven with the red cotton from Haussa, Moorish caps, sandals, leather bags and embroidered leather cushions, saddles, stirrups and bits of native manufacture, bill-hooks, and hoes, knives and cutlasses, earthen bowls and dishes, cala- 54 CHAPTER Iv. bashes, ropes and lines, are all enumerated as among 5 the articles for sale. All, or most of these were of home manufacture, and one sighs to observe, that the only articles that Europe furnished were tobacco and gunpowder. But many of those Christian emigrants, Who, while enjoying the means of grace at Sierra Leone, had thought they could do Without them here, soon dis- ‘ covered their mistake, and how important it was to _‘ them to have a regular ministry, and stated times for public worship. Their former indifference was changed into anxiety, and they seized on every I opportunity of intercourse with Sierra Leone, to send the most urgent intreaties to their friends and former ministers to use all the means in their power, that missionaries might be sent to Abbeokuta. The child-like confidence of these simple-hearted people in the love of English Christians, is very touching, for they felt so sure of an answer to their appeal, : that they did not hesitate to assure Shodeke, the king, « that “White man would soon come.” We shall only speak of one more of ‘the many means that God made use of for the deliverance of Yoruba; and this, though less direct in its effects, I has not been less important in its bearing on the I destinies, not only of Yoruba, but of nations,far beyond it; we mean the Niger Expedition, which we . shall reserve for the following chapter. CHAPTER V. THE NIGER EXPEDITION. “ Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others."—Phil. ii. 4. THE Niger! How strange the mystery that hung for centuries over this celebrated river! Its source, its termination, and even the direction in which it flowed, were all unknown! Herodotus mentioned it between two and three thousand years ago, and he, as well as succeeding geographers of the ancient world, spoke of it as flowing from west to east; though, while some considered it as a tributary of the Nile, others supposed that it lost itself in a lake or deep morass in the centre of the continent. The Arab writers of the middle ages, and the European geographers down to the middle of the last century (with scarcely an exception *) main- tained that it rose near the sources of the Nile, and, after flowing across the continent in a westerly direction, emptied itself into the Atlantic; asserting that there was no river that ran towards the east. It was not to be wondered at that amidst all these ‘ We believe only D’Anville and Rennell. 56 CHAPTER v. conflicting opinions the very existence of the river of Herodotus began to be considered as a fable, but towards the end of the century a spirit of inquiry was again aroused, and in 1788 the African Association was formed, one of the first attempts of which was to trace the Niger from its source to its termination, and its ultimate object was to introduce Christianity and civilisation into the heart of Africa. We shall pass over its earlier proceedings and disappointments, and only refer to the discoveries made by Mungo Park. How, as we write his name, do the recollec~ tions from early years come vividly before us! the eagerness with which we read his journal; our sym- pathy with all his hardships and sufl'erings;* our admiration of his unflinching courage, his gentleness, and patience; how we rejoiced with him when he attained the object of his search, and found himself standing on the brink of that river which had for so many ages eluded the researches and perplexed the * Especially were we moved by the touching incident of the iece of moss near Kooma, and Park’s own description of it. “ I saw myself,” he says, “in the midst of a. vast wilder- ness, in the depth of the rainy season, naked and alone, surrounded by savage animals and men still more savage. I was five hundred miles from any European settlement. My spirits began to fail me, and I thought I had no alternative but to lie down and perish. The influence of religion, how- ever, supported me, for I was still under the protecting eye of God. At this moment, painful as my reflections were, the extraordinary beauty of a small moss in fi'uctification caught THE NIGER EXPEDITION. 57 minds of all the learned—“ the long-sought majestic Niger, glittering in the morning sun, as broad as 1 the Thames at Westminster, and flowing slowly to 1 the eastward. I hastened,” he goes on to say, “to the brink, and having drunk of the water, lifted up my fervent thanks to the Great Ruler of all things, for having thus far crowned my endeavours with success.” Sickness, suffering, and want soon com- j pelled the traveller to retrace his steps, but one great '{ point had been gained, and the direction of the river l was placed beyond a doubt. Then came his second journey, his attempt to fol- low the river throughout its course till it should vureach the sea, and the melancholy event of his death rat Boossa. Conflicting opinions again arose as to lits termination, some reviving the old opinion of its libeing lost in the interior; others, among whom was 1 1er. Park himself, supposing that it joined the Congo; 1imhile a very few adopted the idea that perhaps it :rmight flow into the Gulf of Guinea. Among the umy eye. The whole plant was not larger than the tip of one 1on my fingers, but I could not contemplate the delicate con— . ,éformation of its roots, leaves, and capsule without admiration. I‘J‘Dan He, thought I, who planted, watered, and brought to ,rperfection, in this obscure part of the world, a thing which mppears of so small importance, look with unconcem on the , :ézituation and sufferings of creatures formed after His own . Image? Surely not. I could no longer despair. I started up, .. :and disregarding both hunger and fatigue, travelled forwards, n Isssured that relief was at hand, and I was not disappointed.” 58 CHAPTER V. last was the lamented Captain Clapperton, who had,§ however, no means of confirming his belief. Butt we shall not stop to cross the river with him in 1825,? or to accompany the intrepid Landers, in 1830, in' their adventurous passage down its stream from ‘ Yaoorie to the sea; we shall only remind our readersr that the discoveries of the latter set the question at: rest for ever, as they found that it did really flowr into the Gulf of Guinea; but that, long ere it reached 5 the sea, it was, like its Northern sister, divided into :' a number of smaller streams, forming what is nowr called the Delta of the Niger.* Thus far had the objects of science been attained ;; and it remained to apply the discovery to a higher end, : and to make it subservient to the cause of religion andl humanity. We need not recall to our readers theé origin of the Niger Expedition; how the convictionl by degrees forced itself on the minds of the friendsi of Africa, and especially on that of Sir Fowelll Buxton, that, important and even necessary as our‘ cruisers were to check the slave-trade on the coast, yet the remedy, to be efl'ectual, must be applied to the source of the evil; and that Christianity and civilisation, carried into the heart of Africa, would * The existence of this Delta removed the chief difficulty in the supposition of the river taking this course, for there was no single stream along this well—known coast that could at all correspond in size with the upper portion of the Niger, where it is occasionally five or six miles across. TIIE NIGER EXPEDITIONA 59 3alone avail for its deliverance.* Nor need we tell 3 them of these convictions resulting in the plan of :sending an exploring expedition up this mighty river l'to obtain accurate information of its hitherto almost {[unknown shores, and to make any arrangements that limight be practicable. ' The scheme was taken up by persons of all ranks land parties; the Prince Consort strongly favoured it; 3:and the Government, with Lord John Russell at its lthead, consented to make it a national undertaking. llBold and hazardous as was the enterprise, from the flmown unhealthiness of the climate, and the very .lidoubtful disposition of the natives, it commended llitself to many British and Christian hearts; and :3zthere was no want of either officers or men to enter .3on this service. ! Captains Trotter, William Allen, and Bird Allen, .iwere placed in command of the three new steam . wessels, the Albert, the Wilberforce, and the Soudan ; .rand, in conjunction with Captain Cook,-|- were , appointed Her Majesty’s Commissioners for the .mnanagement of the whole undertaking. The com- .miSSioners, and most, if not all, the officers, were men nof decided Christian piety ; many of the crew partook of their views and feelings; a valuable chaplain ac- “ See Sir T. F. Buxton’s Memoirs. T Well known as commanding the Cambria, when, in 1825, i the so gallantly and generously rescued the passengers and ' 'crew of the Kent. 60 CHAPTER v. companied the vessels, and a general union for prayer {i was entered into for a blessing on the enterprise. I The vessels sailed in April, 1841, and never surely did any expedition leave the shores of Britain I" with a more single-minded aim, or with brighter ‘ prospects. Its object was not one of public or of ' private aggrandizement ; no love of lucre was min- gled in this generous effort to rescue Africa from '“ degradation, misery, and bloodshed, and to intro- ' duce Christianity, civilisation, and peace; while the . character of those to whom .it was entrusted gave an ' earnest of the manner in which all would be con- ducted. The language of many a heart was :— “ Heaven speed the canvass, gallantly unfurled To rescue and to renovate a. world ; Soft airs and gentle heavings of the wave Impel the fleet whose errand is to save. Let nothing adverse, nothing unforeseen, Impede the bark that ploughs the deep serene, Charged with a freight, transcending in its worth The gems of India, nature’s rarest birth ; That flies like Gabriel at his Lord’s commands, A herald of God’s love to pagan lands !”* On June 24, the vessels entered the harbour of 1 Sierra Leone, where, as might be expected, their r. arrival awakened the liveliest interest. “ The whole I: colony,” we are told, “was in a state of excitemen ;; nothing else was talked of among either Europeansa or natives; the latter of whom began eagerly to; speculate on the facilities it might open to them of l i “ Cowper’s Poems. .. . _. «swag NIGER EXPEDITION. 61 :returning to their own land, if only they could be :accompanied by an European missionary. I Twelve young Christian natives were taken as interpreters to the various tribes with whom the .[party might come into contact—such as the Brass, .Ithe Iboe, the Egarra, Kakanda, Yoruba, Haussa, IFellatah, Nufi, and Bournou people. Mr. Thomas .iKing, a Yoruban, went as schoolmaster and cate- lichist. The Rev. J. F. Schon, one of the mission- ;aries of the Church Missionary Society, was received :on board the Albert, and Mr. Samuel Crowther, who :at this time was a teacher in the Fourah Bay Insti- tution, sailed in the Soudan. During the week of their stay at Free Town, much prayer for the safety and success of the expe- ldition was offered up by Christians of various deno- minations; and on one occasion, at the invitation of 'the chaplain of the colony, the Rev. D. F. Morgan, no less than 1,500 Negroes assembled for Divine service in the Free Town church l On the 2nd of July, the ships again set forward, “stand the prayers and blessings that had risen from so .; lmany British hearts on their departure from England, .xlwere now repeated again and again from the min- ,rigled tribes of Africans at Sierra Leone—God speed lithe vessels, and their noble-minded crews! 1 We shall pass over the incidents of the voyage to ”Rape Palmas, and along the coast of the Gulf of 62 CHAPTER v. Guinea; we will not even dwell upon the landing at Cape Coast of the two converted Ashantee princes, who had been brought to England by a Wesleyan missionary, and were now returning with the hope of benefiting their native land But we shall take the opportunity of giving our! readers a more definite idea of the principal objects! aimed at in this expedition, and which the Com-f- missioners were to further as far as possible. The; most simple of these was to obtain a knowledge of l the climate, soil, and inhabitants of the countries! bordering the Niger, and to inspire the people with! confidence in our friendly intentions towards them.. The more important object was to prevail on'thez native chiefs to enter into a treaty with Great Bri-- tain to suppress the slave-trade in their own domi-- nions, and discourage it in others; to abolish human! sacrifices; to enter into commercial relations with! us, and to allow missionaries and merchants tor reside among them. And there would be the less; difficulty, it was hoped, in forming these treaties, as& it would only be necessary to conclude them with the a three principal chiefs—the kings of Iboe, on the: western bank, of Egarra on the east, and of Rabba, . 500 miles from the sea, which it was intended! should be their final point of destination. The two 4 first of these were heathen, but the last was a Fella- - tab; and if our readers remember what we said of 5 ; NIGER EXPEDITION. 63 ithe Fellatahs in our second chapter, they will be ‘ aware that more difficulty in making these arrange— iments was to be expected from him than from the luothers. And, if it should be found practicable, land {was to be purchased on some convenient spot for the {establishment of a model farm. The ships were safely brought to the mouth of JIthe river Nun, and on August the 13th, they crossed lithe dangerous Bar. Steaming rapidly up the river, ilthey soon left behind them the swamps and man- .gggroves of the Delta; and on entering the main aisstream found themselves in a better peopled and .ilbetter cultivated country. The period of the annual rising of the river had :ibeen chosen as likely to be less unfavourable to the ,eggconstitutions of the Europeans, but it added much to .zthe difficulty of intercourse with the people, as many :mf the villages were inundated, and the inhabitants .xlhad removed for a time to higher ground. The .‘communication among themselves was not, however, ,at all suspended; boats were continually passing and re—passing; and it was curious to see tl.e Jsaurprise awakened by the sight of the steamers. They had evidently, in this part of the river, been )accustomed to the sight of white men, though their ,: :constant inquiry for “rum” showed too plainly what and been the character of their intercourse.* But * Capt. Cook. in a kind communication lately made by him, warm.” m .54 64 CHAPTER v. a steamer they had never seen; and they stared with astonishment as the apparently self-moving monster floated on against the stream, and in some cases they expressed their delight by dancing to the movement of the paddles. One of the chiefs, higher up the river, gravely inquired whether the English always lived on the water, or whether they had lands and houses like other people. Yams, and the few other vegetables this part of the country produced, were readily brought to the ships to barter for trifles of European manufacture; and a little incident occurred on one of these occa- , sions which we will not pass over. It was soon? after they entered the river, and a number of canoes i had crowded round the “Albert,” when the Brass‘ interpreter was struck with the countenance of ag man in one of them, whose features he thought he recognised. Many years had passed since the inter- ‘ preter had been an exile from his native country; f all recollections of the scenery around had been; effaced from his memory, and the man he thusi singled out had passed from middle life to declining ' says, “ We found the character of the natives improve as 1 we advanced into the interior; they were more straight- - forward, simple and honest in their dealings, and careless I about rum or tobacco, for which the natives near the coast: ‘ were incessantly asking, —an ewdent proof how much the: moral character of the people near the sea- -coast had been i deteriorated by their intercourse with Europeafns NIGER EXPEDITION. 65 age; yet his heart beat truly when it suggested to him that he knew him. The village on the bank was Anya, Where the ir terpreter had passed the first years of his cap- tivity; and this man had been his faithful nurse and doctor through a long and suffering illness. We may imagine the astonishment of the man at being thus recognised; he knew that his young friend had been taken to the coast and sold to the white men, by whom he believed he had been killed and eaten, and now to see him standing before him in European dress, and with much of European manner and in- telligence, and to hear his narrative of all that had befallen him, was almost too much for the old man to bear. “ If God himself,” said he, “had told me this, I could not have believed it, but now I see it with my own eyes."-{- The first place of any importance that they came ‘ to was Abohg the capital of the Iboe country, on the I'western bank; and a deputation was sent to the thing, Obi, explaining to him the objects of the expe- rdition, and inviting him to come on board the assteamer the following day. Simon Jonas was the Iboe interpreter, and when * See page 32. 4- Several incidents of this kind occurred during the passage rip the river, and must have left a favourable impression on the minds of the natives. F D 66 CHAPTER v. he explained to him that one of the articles of the treaty would be the suppression of the slave-trade, Obi hesitated, saying, “ That is a hard thing to do.“ With great readiness, Jonas acknowledged that it was a hard thing to give it up, but asserted that it: was harder still to continue it. He drew a vividl picture of the misery it was even then causing, in the Iboe country itself—the desolating wars, the, separation of parents and children, the ruined vil-§ lages, the uncultivated fields, the want of confidence between man and man; then referring to his own, experience, he described the sufferings of himself and? two hundred other boys on their way from the inte-é rior to the coast; told of many that had died fromé hunger and fatigue, of others that had been offered; up as sacrifices by the king of Bonny, and of some) among these poor lads who had committed suicidal He spoke of the slave- ship in which he had been: embarked, of the bad provisions, the want of water,f the crowded hold, the deaths of many, and thel throwing overboard of some still alive, who werei considered past recovery; and wound up his fright-1 ful narrative with the thrilling question, “ Is it noti harder to continue it than to give it up ?” ; During all this time Obi listened with the deepest; attention, and when the interpreter went on to speaki; of his liberation, of Sierra Leone, of the English; and of the love of Christians towards the Africans) 1‘ i 1 { "é 3—11?le WAY TO THE COAST, SLAYER ()N l" ». 3.9.» .:,{,.,.m.mam , “73,. .4 2», .T . ,V \ S . . , t . u , NIGER EXPEDITION. 67 he appeared much moved; he rose up and shook hands with all the Europeans present, as if to tell them how much he felt their kindness to his people. He readily agreed to go on board the Albert on the following morning, when the Commissioners entered fully into the objects of the expedition, and the terms of the proposed treaty. When it was about to be signed, Obi was told that it was the custom of Christians to ask the blessing of God before they proceeded to any important undertaking; and the whole party present knelt down, while the chaplain oflered up a suitable prayer. They were quite unpre— pared, however, for the eiTect this had on the Chief; he had knelt down with the rest, but hearing a prayer . inastrange tongue offered up with earnestness and de- ‘1 votion, he became dreadfully alarmed, imagining that "they were using some incantations against himself nor his people. When they rose from their knees, uthey found him trembling like an aspen leaf, and nwith the perspiration rolling down his cheeks from [agony of mind;* he called out loudly for his “ arrisi,” ror charm; and his head-man, who was on deck, .ihearing his cry, hastened down to his succour, and vnvas about to commence the performance of some :wounteracting heathen rites in the cabin. He was " Mr. Schon, in relating this, mentions it as not an unfre- "fluent occurrence at Sierra Leone, when a newly arrived lmfrican enters a place of worship for the first time. 68 , CHAPTER v however stopped, and the interpreter with some difiiculty succeeded in quieting his mind. By degrees Obi quite recovered his serenity, entered into friendly conversation with the party present, and finally signed the treaty with evident sincerity. Captain Trotter, whose views rose far above even the most important temporal advantages, lost 110 fitting opportunity of bringing forward the subject of Christianity. Obi, with great simplicity, confessed his utter ignorance of God, and expressed a strong desire that teachers should be sent to himself and his people. No promise could be made to him that any white men could be sent, but a hope was held out that he might perhaps be visited by some black people from Sierra Leone, who had learnt to know and love God. ' Mr. Schén then desired Jonas to read a few verses from the English Bible, and translate them into Iboe.) The portion selected was the beginning of ‘ the fifth chapter of St. Matthew’s Gospel, and Mr. Sehbn adds: “Obi was uncommonly taken with this. That a white man should read and write was a matter of course, but that a black man, an Iboe man, one who had been a slave in times past, should know these wonderful things, was more than he‘- could have anticipated. He seized J onas’s hand, squeezed it most heartily, saying, ‘You must stop V with me; you must teach me and my people; the : NIGER EXPEDITION. 69 white people can go up the river without you, they must leave you here till they come back, or till other people come.’ ” Jonas could not be left behind just then, but a few days afterwards, when his services as interpreter were no longer needed, he went back to Aboh, and remained there till the expedition returned down the river. This request of Obi’s was doubly satisfactory, as it not only proved the sincerity with which he had promised to proclaim the abolition of the slave-trade throughout all his dominions, but as it showed that Negroes are not unwilling to receive instruction from their own people, as has sometimes been sup- posed. The next important place they arrived at was Iddah on the eastern bank, the capital of Egarm, (or Igalla,) and the residence of the Attah, (or king,) whose dominions extend northward to the confluence of the Tchadda and Niger, and who claims also the country of Kakanda, on the opposite side of the river. The Attah of Egarra showed the same friendly disposition as Obi had done, the same willingness to enter into the treaty, and the same desire for reli- gious teachers to be sent to him. He had, however, V a much higher sense of his own importance; for f, when the deputation waited upon him as they had 70 CHAPTER v. done upon Obi, and invited him on board the steamer to receive a message from the Queen of England, he peremptorily refused, as being beneath his dignity. “I am a king,” he exclaimed, “ and the king never puts his foot into a canoe. If the captain of the canoe wishes to see me, he must come on shore, or not see me at all; the king follows nobody. God made the king to be like himself, and it was never known that the king went into a canoe.” He com- plained of the presents not being good enough, for as “he was like God, the present ought to be worthy of him and of God!” &c. And this from a man who could neither read nor write, who appeared in state with bells round his legs, a quantity of glass beads round his neck, and “ a pair of carpet slippers large enough for an elephant,” and whose only really good article of clothing was a red velvet tobe that had been given him by some previous traveller! But pride is never at a loss for materials on which to build a temple to itself! Captain Trotter and his friends did not think it worth their while to contend this matter with the great man; they went on shore, and this homage ‘ being paid to his dignity, he signed the treaty as readily as Obi had done. The Attah also very readily agreed to the pur- " chase of land on which to form an English settle- ment, and to commence a model farm; and a tract of : NIGER EXPEDITION. 71 twenty miles along the banks was formally taken possession of for these purposes in the name of the Queen. A few Europeans and several Africans, with Mr. T. King from Sierra Leone, were landed as ‘ quickly as possible with provisions and implements of various kinds, and it was very encouraging to see with what joy the inhabitants of the newly-purchased land welcomed the prospect of having white men for their neighbours and protectors.* * They had sufl’ered much from the inroads of the Fellatahs, and within the limits of the newly-purchased land there still remained the ruins of what had evidently not long before been a large and populous town—Addu Kuddu CHAPTER VI. THE NIGER EXPEDITION. "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints."—Psulm cxvi. 15. SEPTEMBER had now arrived, and as its earlier days passed on, they left our party near the con- fluence of the rivers, full of hope, and thankfully encouraged by the success that had hitherto attended them. Satisfactory treaties had been concluded with the only two native chiefs with whom they had yet communicated; wherever they had landed, the chiefs and people had expressed a wish for English to settle among them; and the attah had permitted them to purchase the land they desired for the pro- posed model farm near Addu Kuddu. The unhealthy portions of the river had now been passed, and no sickness had appeared among them; and they were entering a country with hills and fantastic rocks that reminded Mr. Schon of the ruined castles on the Rhine, and Where there was every prospect of an increase of health and vigour. There was no reason to doubt their reaching Rabbah before the river began to fall; and if they could NIGER Exrsnrrrox. 73 prevail upon its king also to sign the treaty, the principal objects of the expedition would be effected. But God, whose thoughts are not our thoughts, had willed it otherwise ; dark clouds gathered round, and overcast their bright prospects; and there are feW\ narratives more touchingly painful than the subsequent history of this expedition, especially when we consider its object and its aims. We must only glance at it. A malignant fever broke out in one of the ships, bathing the skill of the medical oflicers to arrest its progress, till, on Sept. 17, we read of fifty-five on the sick-list, some of whom were oflicers, and almost all were Europeans. Six 'of these died in the course of the next two days, and were buried in the ground just purchased for a model farm; and thus a ceme- tery was formed where it had been hoped to lay the foundation of a living temple.* The sickness increased; Captain W. Allen and Captain Cook were both taken ill; and as there ap- peared no hope of amendment while they remained in that part of the river, it was decided that the VVilberforce-l- and Soudan should take the invalids * See Dr. Krapfl’s letter in Church Missionary Intelli- I gencer for February, 1852, page 29. . + Speaking of the Wilberforce at this time, Mr. Schiin says, ' “It is more like an hospital than a man-of‘war. Quarter- tdeck, forecastle, and cabins full of patients. The sight is (enough to melt a heart of stone.” 7t CHAPTER v1. on board and return immediately to the sea; while Captain Trotter and Captain B. Allen should still prosecute the original design, and, if possible, get up to Rabbah in the Albert. The ships parted com- pany on the 21st of September; and as the Albert ascended the river, the spirits of all revived, the air felt fresh and clear, and they hoped they had left all malaria behind them. This was a delusive hope. Before night Captain B. Allen was laid low; and as they proceeded, another and another was added to the melancholy list. Nor was the aspect of the country through which they were passing calculated to raise their spirits. It was inhabited by the Nufi people, whose capital had formerly been Rabbah, but the Fellatahs had taken Rabbah and overrun the country, and Sumo Sariki, the present Fellatah king, was frequently sending his soldiers to the towns and villages to exact money or to seize the people. There were some Nufi people from Sierra Leone on board the Albert, and their hearts ached at the sad condition of their countrymen; they spoke to them of the English, of Sierra Leone, and of Chris- tianity; and the oppressed people anxiously intreated to be taken under British protection. In a few days the party reached the Nufi town of Egga, containing 7000 inhabitants. It was the best built and largest place they had yet seen, and as it had hitherto been NIGER EXPEDITION. 75 comparatively free from Fellatah exactions, the people were industrious and thriving. Rogcmg, the chief, was an intelligent and well- disposed man, and professed himself willing to join in the treaty, were it not that he feared the dis- pleasure of his master at Rabbah, who claimed from him allegiance and tribute. He had not himself embraced the religion of his oppressors, but many of his people had done so, and its baneful influence was very visible among them. The Albert was now 320 miles from the coast, the river was beginning to fall, the sickness continued, and Captain Trotter had begun to doubt whether it would not be necessary to give up Rabbah, and return at once to the sea. But at this juncture all doubt was removed, for he was himself seized with the fever, and only one ofl‘icer remained who was able to take any duty But though he felt it impossible to proceed, yet neither illness of body nor prostration of mental power could divert Capt. Trotter from the great objects he had in view; and before he would give the order to return, he arranged a communication with the king of Rabbah through the friendly chief of Egga. Rogang readily undertook to convey to his master a friendly message from the Commis- sioners, stating the objects of the expedition, and their hope of reaching his capital in the course of the following year. The message was accompanied 76 CHAPTER VI. by the present of a rich velvet tobe and a hand- somely bound Arabic Bible. We wish we could tell our readers what had become of this Bible. We know that it reached the king, and was, with the other present, graciously received by him. We know too that, a few years later, the Nufi tribes combined against their oppres- sor, made war on Rabbah, and destroyed it; and drove Sumo Seriki to take refuge in Sokatu. Beyond this we know nothing; but we can scarcely think that this solitary copy of God’s Holy Word was sufl'ered to perish in the flames that consumed the capital. Perhaps the conqueror seized it, and now in the new capital of Ladi, on the opposite bank of the Niger, the ear of Dasaba, the present Nufi king, may sometimes catch a word of truth from its sacred pages. Or perhaps it was carried away by the van- quished ; and is it not possible that it may have fallen into the hands of some poor pilgrim bound for Mecca, and may even now, as he journeys through the burning desert, be refreshing his soul with its life-giving streams, and gradually leading his heart from Mahomet to Christ? One thing we do know—that Jehovah himself has said, “ My Word shall not return unto me void,” and we trust he may have granted that this blessed volume, sent by a Christian heart from the couch of NIGER EXPEDITIOIT. 7 7 sickness, sorrow, and anxiety, shall have prospered “in the thing whercunto it was sent,” and have led some perishing sinner to Him who came to seek and to save that which is lost. It was on the 4th of October that the unwelcome order passed along the ship : “ Draw up the anchor, and return quickly to the sea.” The anchor was duly heaved, and the ship’s head turned round, but the latter part of the order was not so easily com- plied with. The engineers had fallen sick ; for two anxious days and nights no steam could be got up ; and the only progress the vessel made was slowly drifting with the stream. What would have become of them we cannot think, had not Dr. Stanger, who had accompanied the expedition for scientific pur- poses, made a determined effort, and by means of a treatise on engineering, and with the feeble help of one of the engineers who was beginning to recover, succeeded at last in getting the engines to work‘. It was still, however, a time of intense anxiety, :for the navigation became every day more difficult :as the waters fell, and discovered shoals and sand- lbanks over which they, had passed safely on their iupward course. The greatest watchfulness was meeded to prevent the vessel from running aground; ffor had she done so, there was not strength left among the whole crew to get her off again. Death continued 'to thin their numbers; the two 78 CHAPTER vr. commanders were still dangerously ill, and now Mr. Willie, who had for some days been the only eflicient officer on board, was seized with what proved to be his last illness. We cannot wonder to find Mr. Schb'n at this time, October the 8th, writing thus: “ I have endured personal sufl'erings, family afflic- tions sore and grievous, and have witnessed and shared in the calamities of others during my eight years’ residence at Sierra Leone; but nothing that I have hitherto seen or felt can be compared with our present condition. Pain of body, distress of mind, ‘weakness, scrrow, sobbing and crying, surround us on all sides. The healthy, if so they can be called, are more like walking shadows than men of enter— prise. All human skill is baffled, all human means fall short. Forgive us, 0 God, if on them we have too much depended, and been forgetful of thee; and let the light of thy countenance again shine upon us that we may be healed.” But these “walking shadows” had hearts of British strength and Christian energy; and it was owing, under God, to their unflinching exertions, that the ‘Albert’ and any of those on board were saved. . Mr. Willie’s illness left no one to navigate the ship along its dangerous course; but this important oflice was undertaken by Dr. MacWilliam, in addi- tion to the constant attention required by his now NIGER EXPEDITION. 79 twenty-six patients; while Dr. Stanger, whose days were still devoted to working the engines, gave up part of every night to the assisting Dr. MacWilliam in his medical duties. Mr. Schon and Mr. Crowther watched by the beds of the sick and dying, and found ample employment in ministering to their bodily and spiritual necessities And yet how brightly in those dark days shone out the lustre of Divine grace! Some who had thought but little on salvation, were now led to cry in earnest, “What must I do to be saved ?” while in those who had already given their hearts to God, this fiery trial served but to purify “the fine gold.” Captain Trotter, in the prospect of a speedy dissolu- tion, was calm and collected; his mind indeed set on heavenly things, but alive to all that was going on around him; and, as far as strength would allow, aiding by his valuable counsel and advice. Mr. Schon had to rejoice, though with weeping, over the dying beds of several; of Captain Bird Allen in particular, he says: “ All the Christian graces shine out in him. He feels with the Apostle, ‘To me to live is Christ, to die is gain ;’ and if there be a pre- vailing desire in his mind, it is to be absent from the body and present with the Lord.” It is consoling, too, to find Mr. Schon afterwards adding: “There has not been one whom I have at- tended in their sickness and at their death, who did v 80 CHAPTER vr. not know perfectly well that the climate was dan- gerous in the extreme, and had counted the cost, before engaging in the hazardous undertaking. And, to their honour be it spoken, no expressions of dis- appointment or regret did I ever hear; on the con- trary, they appeared in general to derive no small consolation from the conscious purity of their Ino- tives, and the goodness of the cause in which they had voluntarily embarked.” In a few days they again reached the model farm, but to their grief, found that all the Euro- peans who had been left there were ill also, and that it was necessary to take them on board. The pros- pects of the farm itself were most encouraging, but as it was found necessary to relinquish the under- taking altogether in the course of the next year, we shall not enter into any particulars. As they pursued their melancholy voyage down the river, they felt it was a token for good to them, that on their anchoring again ofi‘ the town of Aboh they received, notwithstanding their altered cir- cumstances, the same ready kindness from Obi and his people as they had experienced before. They did all in their power to help them, bringing wood, goats, fowls, yarns and plantains. “Ohi’s prompt assist- ance,” says Dr. MacWilliam, “was of the highest importance. He is a fine character, and assuredly did not discredit the high opinion we had formed of NIGER EXPEDITION. 81 him. He was melted into pity when he saw the two captains sick in their cabins.am At this time only one white sailor remained to assist Dr. MacWilliam in the navigation of the ship; Dr. Stanger’s hard work and constant exposure had considerably affected his health; they were still 100 miles from the mouth of the river, and when they should reach it there would be the bar to be passed, which in their disabled state seemed scarcely pos- sible; and we may imagine what gloomy forebodings must have filled the minds of all, when suddenly the unexpected and joyful cry was heard— “A steamer in sight!” It proved to be the Ethiope, commanded by Mr. Beecroft, ever active and ever 1 ready to give assistance wherever assistance is l needed. He came on board with his own engineer, : and now the Albert passed so swiftly down the stream1 * At Aboh they took again on board Simon Jonas, who had, it will be remembered, been sent back at the desire of ‘ the chief (page 69). He gave a very encouraging account u of all that had passed during the three weeks he had risojourned there. The treaty had been faithfully adhered to \iin Aboh itself, and had been proclaimed in all the distant ntowns. Jonas had been most kindly treated by Obi ; had tsspoken of Christianity to willing listeners among old and young, and had begun to teach English to the children, who :iflocked-to him every day in great numbers. He was quite .:delighted with all that occurred, and would willingly have tyremained there. Obi again and again repeated his wish for {:teachers, and for a regular trade with England. Alas! his wishes are not yet complied with. G 82 CHAPTER VI. that on the evening of October the 14th, she reached the sea, and was safely carried across the dreaded bar. “ On Mr. Beecroft,” says Mr. Schon, “and on his exertions, our safety and the safety of the Albert, under God, depended." The Albert re- - mained at Fernando Po some little time, and many of the invalids regained their health and strength, but Captain Bird Allen, and several other officers and men died soon after their arrival: out of the 190 Europeans who embarked in this service, 41 fell victims to the fever.* Thus ended the Niger Expedition. By some it was spoken of as a failure; and to those who look only on the surface of things, it might possibly at the time have appeared so; but those who love to trace the developments of God’s purposes of mercy will look on it as the germ of spiritual and tem- poral blessings to Central Africasl- In the Yoruba mission, the Christian sees with thankfulness one plant of vigorous growth that promises to spread its branches far and wide over the lands on the western border of the river; and "‘ There were, besides the Europeans, 108 Africans on board, and not one of these suffered severely. T The immediate advantages of the expedition were also very important; it brought us into friendly intercourse with the people of three hundred miles of country, inspired them with confidence in the English, and showed them practically the fruits of Christianity. NIGER EXPEDITION. 8 3 surely we may believe that it will not be long before, on its eastern side, another slip shall be planted of that “Tree of Life,” whose leaves are for the healing of the nations, beneath whose shadow not only the kings of Iboe and Egarra* may find a “sure resting place,” but whose boughs may stretch over those populous nations of whose existence we are only be- ginning to be acquainted-[- The banks of the Niger have, as it were, already been taken possession of for Christ by the bodies of his faithful people who sleep beneath them; while the record of all who lost their lives in this noble enterprise is with Him in whose sight the death and sufferings of His saints are “precious.” And we would praise His name that He is permitting the survivors to see, even in this life, His acceptance and blessing of their labour of disinterested love for His name’s sake. * Pages 68, 69. 1 Through Drs. Barth, Overweg, &c. CHAPTER VII. REV. H. TOWNSEND’S VISIT T0 ABBEOKUTA. Get you up, and see the land what it is, and the people that dwellcth therein—and be ye of good courage, and bring of the fruit of the 1and.”——- Num. xiii. 17—20. “ Let us go up at once and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it.”—-Ibid. xiii. 30. THE return of Mr. Sch'on, Mr. Crowther,.and their companions from their expedition up the Niger, was hailed with delight at Sierra Leone; and the report they brought of the friendly disposition of the people they had met with, and their anxiety for intercourse with the English, quickened the intense desire already felt by the Christian Negroes of various tribes that missionaries should be sent to their own different countries. This, however, was impossible, and the Church Missionary Society was obliged to refuse even the pressing intreaties of the Nufi people, who, though few in number in the colony, had been so distressed at the account their brethren gave of the misery and degradation of their country,* that they held meet- ings among themselves, subscribed to the amount of * Page 74. REV. H. TOWNSEND’S vrsrr TO ABBEOKUTA. 85 £10, and sent the money with an urgent appeal to the Society that they would not delay to send a missionary to Rabbah, which, though then in the hands of the Fellatahsf they still considered the capital of their own land. But the more the Committee heard of the Yoruba country, the more encouraged they were as to the prac- ticability and desirableness of establishing a mission within its limits; and as the circumstances we have mentioned seemed to point out Abbeokuta as the most eligible spot, it was decided that Mr. Town- send, one of the Society’s catechists at Sierra Leone, should immediately proceed thither to obtain the necessary information. We may conceive the joy with which the Christian Yorubans heard of this decision. It seemed to them now beyond a doubt that a mission would be formed; they knew the de- light it would give to their brethren already returned thither, and they anticipated the time when all spiri- tual hindrances being removed, they might them— selves return to their fatherland without risk to their ‘own souls. It had been arranged that Andrew Wilhelm and John M‘Cormack,1‘ both of them of the Egba tribe * Page 74. + An interesting circumstance is related of M‘Cormack. "When taken captive he had been torn from a wife and two I ‘ children, and of course never expected to see either of them “again. He had been many years in Sierra Leone, when, walk- 86 CHAPTER VII. of Yorubans, and both valuable members of Mr. Graf’s congregation at Hastings, should accompany Mr. Townsend, and many hearts and hands were at work to provide some little article of use or comfort for the travellers. , Afree passage to Badagry was given by three native young men who had lately purchased a small slaver, and were about to make their first trading voyage, and who thus, as it were, consecrated the first fruits of their labour to the good of their country. Often, as Mr. Townsend passed along the streets, he saw ‘the people pointing him out as—“ There is the 7 white man going to our country ;’ and when he and his party embarked on November 14, 1842, it was amidst many a hearty “ God bless you, Massa, and go with you l” They landed at Badagry on December 19, and found that they had already been preceded by other messengers of peace. The earliest emigrants from Sierra Leone to Badagry, in 1839—40, had been so ing one day with a friend from Hastings to Waterloo, they met a young woman of whom the friend happened to remark, “She is from your country.” M‘Cormack doubted it, and merely to satisfy his 13 end, went after her, and began to ask her some questions, when to his inexpressible delight and astonishment, he found she was one of his own daughters, who had, like himself, been captured and recaptured and brought to Sierra Leone some years later than her father. She had em- braced Christianity and had married, and was actually living close to her father without their having recognised each other. REV. H. TOVVNSEND’S VISIT TO ABBEOKUTA. 87 kindly received by Wawu, chief of part of the town called the English Town, that some of them de- termined to remain there instead of going on into the interior.* A few of these were Christians belong- ing to the Wesleyan congregation at Sierra Leone, and their intreaties for spiritual help had led to a visit from the Rev. ’1‘. B. Freeman, so well known as the active Wesleyan missionary among the Asbantees. When Mr. Townsend arrived at Badagry, Mr. Freeman had just returned from a visit to Abbeo- kuta, and the account he gave of his reception was of the most encouraging description. Wonderfully, indeed, had God disposed the hearts of Shodeke-l‘ and his people towards the English, and as Mr. Freeman drew near to, Abbeokuta, he received a very unexpected proof of respect by the appearance of a party of horsemen sent to escort him into the town. Some of these were Sierra Leone Christians, and “I shall never,” writes Mr. Freeman, “forget the joy that beamed in their countenances as they seized me by the hand and bade me welcome. ‘ Ah!’ said they, ‘ we told our king that the English people loved us, and that missionaries would be sure to follow us to Abbeokuta; but he would hardly believe that any one would come so very far to do us good. Now What we told our king is really come to pass! 0 Massa, you are welcome, welcome, welcome I’ ” * Page 48. i 1’ Page 42. 88 CHAPTER VI. His entrance into the town was as gratifying as his welcome from these Christians had been. This was the first time an European had ever been seen there ; the narrow streets were lined with crowds 01 natives, shouting out “ Aku, Aku l”* as he passed along, recognising in him the representative of a nation and of a religion, to which they owed so many of their long-lost relatives. Shodeke’s reception of him was as cordial as that of his people; he seemed overjoyed at his arrival, showed him every attention; and on one occasion, as they were walking together, clasped him in his arms in a transport of delight. Mr. Townsend visited Abbeokuta very soon after Mr. Freeman’s return to Badagry, and his welcome was as hearty and as warm as that of his predecessor had been. The same friendly escort came to meet him, there were the same eager salutations from the crowded streets, only that some among the mass had taught their tongues to give him an English greeting, and shouted aloud as he passed along, “ How do you do, white man ? how do you do, you that are coming ?” Mr. Townsend found Shodeke a man of an evi- dently superior mind, and able to appreciate in no ordinary degree the benefits of civilisation and Christianity. He warmly expressed his sense ct gratitude to the British Government for all it had “ A native salutation, meaning, “ How do you do? How do you do T’ REV. H. TOWNSEND’S VISIT TO ABBEOKUTA. 89 done for his people, declared his determination to suppress slave-dealing in his own dominions, and to use his influence with surrounding tribes, and spoke of the earnest desire he had for English missionaries and merchants to settle at Abbeokuta. He even offered to give Mr. Townsend any site that he thought most eligible for future mission-premises, but this offer Mr. Townsend did not feel himself at that time at liberty to accept. Several touching instances of the re-union of ': relations occurred during Mr. Townsend’s short stay there. Andrew Wilhelm discovered several members nof his own family, although it was twenty years issince he had been enslaved. John M‘Cormack one day went into the market to make some purchases, :zand fancying he could recognise the features of the "woman who was serving him, ventured to address ”her by the name of a sister from whom he had been rsso long separated. She replied to it, wondering to ”hear the sound from the lips of a stranger, when an aexplanation took place, and she proved to be indeed the beloved one from whom he had been torn. She introduced him to many others of his family; he Walked to them of CHRIST and of his Gospel, and itthey promised to attend the instruction of the mis- mionary should one be sent to them.* * Another of Mr. Townsend’s companions came to him one liday in great delight, bringing with him a woman whom [the introduced with the exclamation, “ I done find my wife!” 90 CHAPTER v11. One visitor gave Mr. Townsend great pain, it was an aged woman, who had heard a rumour of her son being among the rescued ones at Sierra Leone, and who came to inquire about him. But she knew only his country heathen name, and neither Mr. Townsend nor any one with him could trace him out by that. Day after day did she thus come, with what she hoped might prove some fresh clue, and every day was she obliged to return unsatisfied; The report of Mr. Townsend, after his return to Sierra Leone, was so favourable, that the Parent Committee of the Church Missionary Society deter- mined to establish a mission at Abbeokuta with as little delay as possible. Mr. Townsend was invited home to be presented for ordination, and it was arranged that he should afterwards proceed to his destination in company with the Rev. C. A. Gollmer, and Mr. Crowther, who had already been to England for the same purpose, and had been, what the people called, “crowned a minister,” in June of this same year, 1843. During Mr. Townsend’s absence, the tide of emigration continued to flow towards Abbeokuta, and, in the prospect of a mission being soon estab- lished there, Mr. Graf was again induced to part with Andrew Wilhelm, that he might act as cate- chist till a regular ministry could be established. The letters of the Sierra Leone missionaries, about REV. H. TOWNSEND’S vrsrr T0 ABBEOKUTA. 91 . l itthis time, contain some very pleasing instances of lithe gratitude felt by some of these emigrants towards Ithe Church Missionary Society; but the only one we :shall mention, was the following, as related by one of lithem :——“ This morning, one of my school-boys, an iiinteresting little fellow, called to see me. On my tasking him what he wanted, he replied, that he only Izcame to take leave of me, as he was going with his iffather to the Yoruba country. I asked him if he was glad to go. He answered, ‘I should have been ‘rmore glad if you were going too, for there are plenty Ii’Of people who would be too much glad to see you .rthere.’ I said, ‘the people do not know me, and how His it that they would be glad to see me ?’ To which the answered, ‘Sir, you know the plenty of people 'Ewho have left for that country, and they all prayed [:much before they went, that white missionary may :zcome and teach them God’s Book.’ I told him that CHI believed God would very soon send black and wwhite ministers, who would teach them the way of "salvation. The little fellow was very pleased to hear i;this, and when I asked him what he intended to do “:till they should arrive there, answered, ‘I will teach [the children to read and to sew, and will do all I can JitO make them good.’ I desired him never to forget lithe lessons he had himself learnt in the school and in «church, which he promised not to do, and on taking {leave he said, ‘Sir, will you please to take this for A , meshes“ 92 CHAPTER VII. the Church Missionary Society? it is all I have got,’ ‘ holding out to me a penny, while the large tears were i rolling down his jet black cheeks.” While waiting for Mr. Townsend’s return from England, Mr. Crowther was engaged in ministering to his own countrymen in Free Town; it is in- teresting to see what were his feelings of joy and thankfulness, and deep self~abasement, when in J a- nuary 1844, he stood forth the first ordained native minister of Western Africa, to proclaim the Gospel of salvation, in their own tongue, to the hundreds around him, rescued like himself from slavery of body and soul, and invited them to enter into the glorious liberty of the sons of God. Yorubans, Iboes and Calabars, were among his congregation; often had they listened to the glad tidings in the language of their deliverers, and the English tongue was dear to them from many associations; but hi- therto the Gospel had never been declared to them in the beloved accents of their own Yoruba,* and we do not wonder at the emotions of which Mr. Crow- ther speaks. “ Although,” he says, “ the language was my own native one, with which I am well ac- quainted, yet on this occasion, it appeared as if I were a babe just learning to utter my mother- tongue. The work in which I was engaged, the * The neighbouring countries generally can speak Yoruba, though it is not their native language. REV. H. TOWNSEND’S VISIT TO ABBEOKUTA. 93 i l l l l i l l l i l 3“place where I stood, and the congregation before lime, were altogether so new and strange, the Whole “seemed to me like a dream. But the Lord helped :1me.” Some of the prayers were not yet translated, and ilthose he read in English; the rest of the service, and ‘Ithe sermon, which was from Luke i. 35, were in Yoruba, and after the blessing, the Whole church Varang with “ Ke oh sheh, Ke oh sheh!” “So let it be, so let it be l” Mr. Townsend arrived at Sierra Leone in De— cember 1844, and now the day arrived, so long looked for and prayed for by the Christian Yoru- lbans, when missionaries should be sent to their be- }loved country. On the 18th of the same month the {party sailed, consisting of Mr. Gollmer, Mr. Towns- .end, and Mr. Crowther, with their wives and :children ;/ William Marsh and Edward Philips, na- ttive catechists; Mark Willoughby, interpreter; and several carpenters and labourers. Crowds were as- ssembled on the beach to take leave of them, and the farewells on both sides were very affecting. The {emigrants scarcely, when the moment came, knew :how to tear themselves from their long-tried friends send their adopted country, and they were at last [hurried into the boats amidst the benedictions and :Lthe prayers of thousands. CHAPTER VIII. BADAGRY. “ It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps.” ALONG the northern coast of the Gulf of Guinea there runs a kind of “backwater,” called by Euro- peans the Lagoon, and by the natives the river Ossa. It begins near Cape St. Paul on the west”: and after receiving a few tributary streams from thel north, falls into the river ngin at Lagos. It variesl very much in breadth, now spreading out into a lake, ‘1 and now contracted to half a mile across, but always l so gentle, smooth, and clear, and so adorned on l either side with trees of luxuriant foliage, that “the 1 beautiful Ossa” has become its frequent epithet, even ‘ among the European residents. The space between the Lagoon and the sea is of 3 various breadths, and in some parts thickly studded with towns and villages, and adorned with trees. Opposite Badagry it is a strip of sandy soil, with grass and bushes, about a mile across, against which the sea dashes with such impetuous fury that the landing is generally dangerous, and at some seasons ‘ of the year scarcely practicable. BADAGRY. 95 Like the surf 0n the Coromandel coast of India, it rolls towards the shore in three successive ridges, separated from each other by deep troughs. Flat- bottomed canoes take the place of the massouli boat of Madras, and as the little vessel shoots up the watery ascent, its prow may sometimes be seen several feet beyond and above the summit of the wave before it dashes down into the channel below, again and again to rise and fall with the same impe- tuosity. Should it unhappily not have reached the crest of the wave before it begins to arch, its doom is certain; it is instantly filled with water or upset, and if the cargo is saved at all, it generally is severely injured.* But not so the canoe-men them- selves; they care little for the accident; flinging their paddles from them, they may be seen floating, like some inhabitant of the ocean, amid the foam of the broken surf, till they can reach the boat, and, clinging tightly to it, are carried by succeeding waves safe to shore. Here our missionary party, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Gollmer, Mr. and Mrs. Townsend, Mr. and Mrs. Crowther, and their com- panions, landed in safety in January 1845, and were kindly welcomed by Mr. and Mrs. Annear, of the 'Wesleyan Missionary Society. “ The readers of the Children's Missionary Magazine will idoubtless remember that it was here that the Abbeokuta bell, ssent out by Miss Barber's youthful contributors, was lost. 96 CHAPTER VIII. They were full of hope and energy; and their first 2‘ business was to send off a messenger to Abbeokuta E to inform Shodeke of their arrival, and their inten- : tion of proceeding thither in a few days. But God’s I ways are not our ways; and in a moment their. plans were disconcerted and their spirits damped by the news of the death of Shodeke. The authority which this chief held over the others, the superiority of his mind, the steadfast desire he had always manifested to have a mission established among his people, and Mr. Townsend’s previous acquaintance with him,* had all combined to give them a confi- dence in him which they could not feel towards the other chiefs till they should have the opportunity 01 becoming better acquainted with them, and they feared that this event would prove a severe blow to the proposed mission. They found too that the roads from Badagry to Abbeokuta were very unsafe in consequence of disputes with the people of Adu, a town nearly in the direct route, and who were continually lying in wait for travellers either to plunder or to kidnap them; and this helped to per- plex their plans. When their messenger returned from Abbeokuta, he brought very friendly messages from the chiefs, with assurances that their desire for them to reside among them continued as stedfast as in the life-time of Shodeke, but urging them strongly * Page 88. Mama; . ,. . BADAGRY. 97 to delay coming for the present, till they should hear from them that it was advisable. The fresh accounts their messenger brought of the danger of the roads, and of the unsettled state of things in Abbeokuta itself, confirmed the message of the chiefs, and plainly showed the missionaries that they had no alternative but to remain for the present where they were. Badagry is a good-sized town, standing on the northern shore of the Lagoon, and numbering about 11,000 inhabitants. These are almost all Popos,* and are in a fear-fully demoralized state; but there are a few Yorubans, and among them some Sierra emigrants, who, as we have said, have settled in the eastern quarter of the town,-{- and are much less degraded than the rest of the population. The English factory is in this part, and also the Wes- Ileyan mission-premises; and here our missionaries determined likewise to take up their abode. There were several circumstances that concurred ‘Ito make Badagry appear a desirable place for a gpermanent mission—station—not only on account of its own population, but as being the resort of westrangers from all quarters, and as affording, by :means of the Lagoon, ready access to the numerous Hand well-peopled towns and villages in its neighbour- :f’hood. It would also facilitate the transmission of " The same tribe as the Dahomians. 1' Page 87. 98 CHAPTER vm. stores to the interior. It was finally settled, there- - fore, that Mr. Gollmer should take up his abode I there, and that Mr. Townsend and Mr. Crowther 1 should proceed to Abbeokuta as soon as the way ‘ should be again open. Badagry was anything but a pleasant or a pro- 3 mising station. The slave-trade, and the unlimited indulgence in rum supplied to them by the European ,. slave-ships, had led the people far deeper into bru- ‘ tality and vice, than those of the surrounding smaller ‘ towns. They seemed swallowed up in sensual en- joyments, and their selfish avarice rendered it very difficult for the missionary to obtain an intelligent listener. The idolatry of the Popes is of the most debasing character. They have Ifa and Sango, and the other deities of the Yorubans, but have added others to them; their national deity is a black, venomous snake, to whom they pay great respect, and they avowedly worship the evil spirit himself. Human sacrifices are not unfrequent, and the bones scattered round the fetish-houses, tell of many such deeds of darkness. These sacrifices are gener- ally carefully concealed from the eyes of Europeans; but on one occasion Mr. Smith* suddenly came upon ’one that had been lately ofi'ered up. It was in a. beautiful grove at Ajido, on the banks of the Ossa, “ The Rev. Isaac Smith, who joined the mission in 1848. BADAGRY. 99 and the contrast of the loveliness of the scene, as God had made it, with the deep depravity of man, that was now defiling it, increased the painfulness of the sight. The people of Badagry are slaves to superstitious fear, and not even their sordid love of money hinders them from lavishing it on swarms of priests and priestesses, who have little difficulty in turning the fears and credulity of their neighbours to their own advantage. Like many other barbarous people, the Badagrians have a great dread of witchcraft, and many a poor, helpless, aged woman fell a victim to this fear while our missionaries were residing there. N o sooner is a. suspicion imagined against any one, than she is seized and dragged by the feet through the streets, :amidst the cries and invcctives of an excited mob, ttill death terminates her sufferings, and the body iis then thrown into the fetish-grove. The feeling of personal insecurity added much to :tthe trials of the missionaries. Soon after their arri- nval at Badagry, Akitoye, the chief (or, as he is called, liking) of Lagos, was conspired against by his nephew llKosoko, and obliged to flee, first taking refuge at li‘Abbeokuta, and then at Badagry. Kosoko was a lldetermined slave-dealer, of fierce ungoverned pas— hnions, and little scrupulous as to the means he took )u‘o gratify them. The burning down of great part 100 CHAPTER VIII. of Lagos, and the wholesale massacres, by his order, at the time of his uncle’s expulsion, showed the cruelty of his disposition; and no sooner had he obtained the authority at Lagos, than he endeavoured to gain dominion over the whole of the Ossa, that the slave-trade might be carried on with less hindrance from the cruisers. To accomplish this, he formed alliances with the king of Dahomey, the Porto Novians, and some of the Badagry chiefs, against the Abbeokutans and Akitoye, and the town was kept in continued alarm. But neither the sense of personal danger, nor the unpromising nature of the soil on, which they were working, could lead Mr, Gollmer or his fellow-labourers to quit the spot as a long as it seemed the will of God that they should remain there. 4 It was only three months after their arrival thati the small band sustained a heavy loss in the death of Mrs. Gollmer, who fell asleep in Jesus in April 1845 ;j and this blow made the detention of Mr. Townsend and Mr. Crowther additionally welcome to the heart. of her bereaved husband. , Their detention was not without its use in other; respects. It afl'orded Mr. Townsend the opportunitf of becoming in some degree acquainted with the- Yoruban language, with its accents and intonations,’ which are so difficult for a foreigner to acquire, and; yet are of so much importance; and it gave Mr. BADAGRY. 101 Crowther time to continue his translations, and to commence a vocabulary, which would, it was hoped, assist in reducing the language to a more systematic order. The work of the mission, too, was carried on far more efficiently than it could otherwise have been. A church and dwelling—house were built ; a day and boarding-school for boys and a. Sunday school for adults were established, and the streets, the markets, the palm-wine sheds, all heard the glad tidings of salvation through a crucified Redeemer. Visits too were paid to the chiefs at their own houses, and no means were left untried to awaken the people from their sleep of death. One of the most constant resorts of the missionaries was a large umbrella tree in the town, where a number of listeners often col- lected; but here, as indeed was generally the case, the cry, “We are hungry, we are hungry!” at the Iclose of some searching appeal to their consciences, [or of some touching declaration of the love of Christ, 'would painfully discourage the messenger of glad ‘tidings, and show how the seed had only fallen on the way-side.* Mr. Gollmer was also set at liberty to visit some :of the neighbouring towns. One of these was Poka, mine miles from Badagry, with a population of 4,000. i "‘ They frequently asked to be paid for coming to church, (and sometimes for sending their children to school. 102 CHAPTER vm. Here Mr. Gollmer and Mr. Crowther were courte- ously received; the chief, wrapped in a red cotton cloth, covered with beads of all colours, and with a crown and sceptre, came out of his house, and seated himself in the piazza to receive them. Having heard the purport of their visit, he exclaimed, “I praise you,” and his words of welcome were echoed in a. kind of chorus by a number of his wives and all the people present. The missionaries had a very in- teresting interview with the twelve elders of the town. They had more than once been deceived by white men, and were therefore at first very shy of entering into conversation; but when they found that the object of the missionaries was to declare to them the way of salvation, they replied that God himself must have sent them that message, and how could they do otherwise than attend to it. They did not care for presents, but begged for another visit, and hoped the travellers would proceed to the towns beyond them. Another of the towns visited by Mr. Gollmer was Ajido, on the Ossa, towards Lagos. The chief here also was very friendly, and promised to send one of his sons to a boarding-school, which Mr. Gollmer had lately established in the mission-premises. Mr. Gollmer was accompanied in this visit by a Sierra Leone Christian, who with unspeakable thankful- ness pointed out to him the barracoon in which he BADAGRY. 103 had eighteen years before been confined for three months, and from which he had been shipped by his Portuguese purchasers. But these recognitions of places and of persons, deeply affecting as each case was, individually consi- dered, were of such frequent occurrence that we shall not attempt to record them, except in any special instance that may throw light on the general subject. We do not intend to enter with any degree of fulness into the details of the missionary work at Badagry: the Popos have neglected their opportuni- ties, and the station is now removed. We shall only return to it in a future chapter, to lay before our readers some few particulars which will enable them to have a clearer view of the whole. CHAPTER IX. ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA.-——COMMENCEMENT or worn: THERE—MR. GROWTHER’S REUNION WITH HIS MOTHER AND SISTERS. “ Commit thy way unto the Lord, trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass.”—Psnlm xxxvii; 5. SEVENTEEN months had now passed since our missionaries landed at Badagry, in the full persuasion that in not more than as many days they should be on their road to Abbeokuta. But days, and weeks, and months, had come and gone, and still they could not move. They had from time to time received very friendly messages from the chiefs there, ex- pressing their unchanged desire to see them, but still assuring them that it was not yet safe to ven- ture; and “hope deferred” was beginning to sadden the hearts of our friends, when it pleased God to open a way for them through a very unlikely chan- nel, and to make the slave-trade itself the means of introducing the Gospel to the interior. Domingo, the great slave-dealer at Porto Novo, found that the continued warfare between the Ab- beokutans and the people of Adu injured his trade, by making the conveyance of slaves to the coast ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 105 ‘more difficult and insecure than formerly, and he set about to efi'ect a reconciliation. By means of some of his agents at Badagry, he succeeded in ac- complishing this; peace was once more restored between Abbeokuta, Adu, and Badagry, and the road was again open. The missionaries had taken advantage of the final embassy from Badagry to send with it one of their own people, charged with a message to the Abbeoku- tan chiefs, stating their unabated wish to settle among them, and their readiness to set out without delay. Domingo, well aware that the introduction of Christianity and civilisation would interfere with his traffic, would gladly have prevented this mes- usage from being sent, but not being able to do this, “he instructed his Badagrian friends to give so evil Ha report of the missionaries, as would, he hoped, “effectually prevent their being invited to Abbeokuta. But his scheme turned to his own discomfiture; lithe chiefs had too much discernment to be so easily .(deceived, and their reply must have grated harshly «on the ears of the Badagrian messengers. “We can nourselves,” said they, “ tell who are our best friends— tthose who rescue our children from captivity and mend them freely to us again, or those who bring g:{goods to purchase them for perpetual slavery and mnisery. The English are our friends; and you, zipeople of Badagry, take care; for if any wrong is 106 CHAPTER.- 11:. done to them in your town, you must answer to us for it.” After this spirited reply, they summoned the missionaries’ messenger, told him what had passed, and sent by him a cordial invitation that the mission- aries themselves would come as soon as they could. It was the middle of the rainy season, when tra- velling is scarcely possible in that African wilder- ness; yet they feared to delay, lest some fresh in~ trigue of Domingo or Kosoko should again impede their progress, and they started late in the day on July 27th, 1846. That night they passed at Mo,* a small town eight miles from Badagry, where they received a kind and hearty welcome from the chief Mewu, their unvarying friend, and whence they set out the next morning in good earnest upon their jour- ney: Mr. and Mrs. Townsend and Mr. Crowther on ponies, Mrs. Crowther in a kind of litter borne by men, and the children on the backs of some of the attendants. At first their spirits flagged; the rain fell fast, the- road was a pool of water up to the horses’ knees, so * Some of the principal towns in this part of Africa have established a sort of out-stations on the most frequented roads, to serve as rendezvous for the departing, and halting- places for the approaching caravans; and every traveller is expected to wait here till he has sent notice of his arrival. They are generally eight or ten miles from the town itself. M0 is in this way an outstation to Badagry. Abbeokuta has Awoyade on the Badagry road, and Atade on that to Ibadan for the same purpose. ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 107 slippery that both men and horses could hardly keep their footing, and so narrow as to be scarcely passable on horseback. First one foot and then the other was entangled in a briar; then the bough of a tree caught the head or sometimes the neck of the rider; their clothes were torn, and themselves were bruised. We may suppose how glad they were to reach the halting-place for the night, to pitch their tent, though on the cold wet ground, and light a fire and dry their dripping clothes; for the path had been too narrow for an umbrella to be carried, and they were wet to the skin. Mrs. Townsend had with difficulty kept her seat, as her horse stumbled over roots and trunks of trees, or sunk deep into a swamp. But Mrs. Crowther fared still worse—there was no firm treading for her bearers, and she was obliged to walk nearly all the way. But far beyond these outward discouragements, the solemn feeling weighed upon their minds of the importance and yet the danger of their present undertaking. They were journeying farther and ffarther from all civilized society, from all European :influence; they were going to settle in a land of istrangers, friendly indeed at present, but of whose iconstancy they had had no proof; their very purpose 'was to assault the dominions of the prince of dark- :mess, who had, through unnumbered ages, exercised lundisputed sovereignty over this people. Would he 108 CHAPTER 1x. tamely yield to their aggressions? would he not stir up the native chiefs against them? and if so, Where could they look for help ? Thoughts such as these hung upon their minds, and we do not wonder at the depression we are told they felt at first. Soon, however, their faith and courage rose again ; they believed and felt that their covenant God was guiding them; and, confiding in his loving-kindness and tender mercies, their spirits revived, and they set out again with hope and alacrity. They had spent the night on the bank of the Mojuba, generally a little stream, forded without difficulty, but now so swollen with the rains as to have been impassable, but for the kind forethought of Mr. Gollmer, who had provided them with a large tub to serve as a boat, and in which they safely crossed.* They knew that they should meet with no human * The circumstances that attended the conveyance of this tub, gave them a specimen of the difficulty they would here- after find in procuring supplies of any kind from Badagry. Mr. Gollmer had had some difiiculty in finding carriers for their goods, but at last supposed he had succeeded; just as they were starting, the men who were to have carried the tub, changed their minds, and would not stir, and the tub was left behind. Their indefatigable friend would not, how- ever, be so easily daunted; With much trouble be procured other carriers, sent them by another road, and to the agreeable surprise of the travellers, they found their newly- invented boat ready for them. ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 109 habitation for three days,* and that probably they would not see a human face; but to their great delight, soon after crossing the Mojuba, they saw a friendly party approaching, and found it was Andrew Wilhelm,’l‘ and some messengers from the Abbeoku— tan chiefs to welcome them. The rain still fell fast, and the road grew worse and worse, but they cheerfully went on; again they halted in the bush, and again proceeded on their journey, till on the third night after their leaving Mo, they reached a farm, where they were hospit- ably received, and on the Saturday, fatigued and exhausted, arrived at Awoyade, about eight miles from Abbeokuta. Here they passed their Sunday, and on the next day were ferried across the Ogfin, which the rain had swollen into a deep and rapid stream, navigable for large canoes. At the river they were met by a number of Sierra Leone emi- grants, well mounted and dressed in English clothes, and we can imagine how hearty were the mutual greetings, and how numerous the mutual inquiries. Thusattendcd,theyenteredAbbeokuta; andthough it was raining heavily, they found they must yield ' Two busy and thriving towns through which Mr. Town- send passed in 1842, were now in wins ;in one of them, which only affords shelter to a solitary hunter, he had then spent the Sabbath, and bad preached a crucified Saviour to two hundred attentive hearers. May it not have been a Word of life to some among them? + See page 90. 110 CHAPTER 1x. to the desire of the people, and be led about the: town“ before they visited the chief. ' The warmthl of their reception soon made them forget the toils 1 and discouragements of the journey; the people had A learnt to love the English; and the chiefs were 3 especially proud of the honour of Abbeokuta being the first town in which white people intended to reside, and exclaimed that the news of their arrival “would fly from Lagos to Illorin, and excite the envy of all the chiefs!” It appeared that the public crier-l- had been sent round the town to make proclamation . that no one was to rob or insult the expected tra- vellers, and they found too that the preceding day had been spent in warmly discussing who should have the honour of receiving them as guests. This was at last awarded to Sagbua, the senior chief, and who, though not possessed of the talents of Shodeke, has ever proved himself a constant * Mrs. Townsend and her side-saddle were the chief objects of attention, no white lady having been there before. + We have been kindly favoured with a sketch of this man taken from the life, and are thus enabled to give our readers some idea of his wild yet not unpicturesqne appearance. He is tall and large, and the peculiarity of his costume is increased by a head-dress of black monkey’s skin, ornamented with metal rings and a coin. The cloths that are folded round him are of native manufacture, and striped with various colours. In one hand he holds his bell and the stick with which he strikes it, and in the other is a very suspicious-looking axe. /4H/‘ /,/~ ’ WI» /« 7 DWI-J ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. ‘111 and true friend to the white man; and the mission- aries were accordingly lodged in the house of Oso Ligregere, one of his relatives and his most confi— dential-adviser. Sagbua, on this occasion, showed a degree of tact and good sense, and freedom from covetousness, very rare among these nations; for on being presented by the missionaries with a large mirror they had brought with them for the purpose, he made it over to the public council-room, to pre- vent any feeling of jealousy in the other chiefs at his possessing so great a treasure. V A public meeting of the chiefs was summoned, at which the missionaries entered into an explanation of their motives and intentions; and all present united in one common expression of satisfaction and "I delight. They promised to send their children to I' learn, and perhaps would come themselves; they "Would' throwr no hindrance in the way of their ;; preaching to the people; and would assist them in llbuilding their houses. When the missionaries with- drew, the expressions of approbation and gratitude «were repeated among themselves; “and no wonder,” eeadds Mr. Crowther, “ some of the chiefs had liberated '{relatives of their own sitting by them at the very 4ttime!” A piece of land, about three acres in extent, was, "without delay, presented to them on which to build ; .and to prevent dissatisfaction, the town of Aké had 112 CHAPTER Ix. been fixed upon, as being the “royal town,” Lem. that in which Shodeke had resided, and in which, at; we have said, the general councils are still held. The missionaries lost no time in beginning their; operations. The walls of their houses were to be)‘ like all the rest in Abbeokuta, of clay, and they). expected they should have to seek for labourers." But no sooner was their wish known, than the women came forward to fetch the material from the: pit. The first day there were thirty of these willing people, to whom they gave at the rate of three pence each; but finding, towards evening, that they were , likely to have more hands than they should need» they lowered the future pay to two pence. Instead: : however, of losing any of their labourers, the num-vi ber on the second day increased to between 300 and 400. Again they reduced their wages to a penny: but in vain, for on the third day, to their dismay, no less than 670 presented themselves for employment in They then tried to lessen the number, by sending. away any that loitered at their work, but all was 0:) no avail, the number still increased, and they were) at last obliged to apply to the chiefs to disperser them. They complied, but full of astonishment at; the unw0nted industry and diligence of the womenp exclaimed, “God is great, white men have sense I": : ——probably thinking that they had exercised 5011161 magical power over their minds. The water to mix}: ~ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 113 the clay was procured by the same ready hands, and the house progressed as fast as could be expected. Chiefs and people would spend hours in looking on; —the walls were mud like their own, the roofs too were thatched like theirs, with grass, but the doors, :seven feet high, and the glass windows, were strange :sights in Abbeokuta. The boards were from the Ineighbouring woods, sawn by Sierra Leone men; the mails were of native iron, smelted in the town; and :the people could but feel that the inferiority of their ,own dwellings arose solely from their own want of skill. The pickaxes in particular delighted them, :and they wondered they had not themselves thought of inventing such things, often crying out, “Ah! «white men foresee something.” Nor did the missionaries lose any time in entering [upon the special work that had brought them to ihbbeokuta. They found that many of the Christian unmigrants, who had so earnestly desired that mission- mries might be sent there, and who had received (ihem with such unfeigned delight, had, notwith- ‘satanding, more or less fallen from their stedfastness. octome had yielded to the solicitations of their friends, .n adding the worship of idols to that of the true :y’n‘rod; 'while others, following the evil custom of the :mountry, had a plurality of wives. Some, how- wwer, had stood firm and faithful, and these were srrreatly strengthened by the example and oxhortations I 114 CHAPTER IX. of Andrew Wilhelm, who, as it will be remembered, had arrived here in 1843, and had throughout main- tained an upright and consistent conduct, which had won for him the esteem and respect of all. He held Divine service regularly on the Sundays, and on week-days took every opportunity of drawing sinners from the evil of their ways. He had had much to contend with, and met with many discouragements, but he persevered. A few gathered round him, like- minded with himself, and to others he was made the means of awakening their consciences and preparing them for further progress. Two of those who had remained firm and faithful to their God, notwithstanding the opposition and ill- treatment of their relations, were called to their rest soon after the arrival of the missionaries; and it almost seems as if their departure had been delayed that they might have the comfort of their ministry on their dying beds. They died, declaring their entire dependence on the blood of Christ, and their peace in the prospect of approaching death. Mr. Townsend and Mr. Crowther began their public ministry immediately on their arrival. The ‘1 only available place for their regular Sunday ser- , vice was a rude piazza; but here the people assem- f bled, some under shelter, and some in the open air, and listened attentively while Mr. Crowther spoke to. them in their native tongue, or while Mr. Townsend ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 115 preached, and Andrew Wilhelm translated to them the words of eternal life. The number of hearers increased every Sabbath-day; and the chiefs Ogu- bonna and Shumoi were among the listeners. On the afternoons of Sunday, and on week-days, the missionaries often addressed the people in the streets, or in the markets, and sometimes in the houses of the chiefs, and were everywhere received with interest and attention. On one occasion, Ogubonna having given them permission to preach in his district of Ikija, not only attended himself, but col- lected together all the principal men of the neigh- bourhood, who, with the rest of the people, made up a congregation of between four and five hundred. And here we ‘shall interrupt our recital of missionary proceedings, and give our readers, somewhat in de- tail, an account of one of those affecting re-unions, which were continually occurring in Abbeokuta, but of so few of which we know anything more than the bare facts. As we have already said, Mr. Crowther (or Adjai, as was then his name,)‘ was kidnapped in 1821, together with his mother and two sisters. Though sold to different masters, they had for some months occasional opportunities of intercourse, till, early in 1,822, Adjai was again sold, and sent down to the coast, and put on board the slaver. From that time he heard nothing of his family; but we need not 116 CHAPTER IX. attempt to describe the yearnings of his heart towards them. How often, when a captured slave-vessel was brought into Sierra Leone, he had hurried down to the landing-place, in the hope that among the rescued ones, he might see some well-remembered face,* or catch the sound of some familiar voice, or might at least hear tidings of those he loved. But it had been in vain, and for twenty-five years no rumour of them had reached his ears, till he had given them up as lost-{— We are not told what his feelings were when appointed to be a missionary in his native land, but doubtless hope again revived, though mixed with fear and misgiving; and his detention on the coast must have been additionally trying to him on this account. But, even while at Badagry, God was ordering events to his future happiness. One day, a Sierra Leone man came to Mr. Gollmer, to tell him that some slaves had just been brought from the interior, in order to be sold to Domingo, among whom there was one who said he was a relation of Mr. Crowther’s. * This was very frequently the case ; and parents and chil- dren, brothers and sisters, were thus unexpectedly restored to' each other. '1' In a letter written some time afterwards, he says, “When I was a boy at Sierra Leone, the history of Joseph was my favourite reading. I had no thoughts of ever returning to my native land, nor of seeing my relations, but it led me to lie passive in God’s hands, and to follow the leadings of Provi- dence as my safest guide. ” ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 117 Mr. Gollmer requested the man might be brought to him, in order to ascertain the truth of the statement; but the poor captive, who had never before seen white men, and had only known of them by the bar- barities of the slave-traders, was so alarmed, that it was difficult to obtain any coherent account of him- self. By degrees, however, it appeared certain that he was an uncle of Mr. Crowther’s, of the name of Shane, and that having escaped from the destruction of Oshogfin, he had fled far into the interior, where he had resided till now. By some means he had heard of his nephew’s return to the country, and, in company with six others, had set of in search of him; but when within two days of reaching Abbeokuta, a band of men-stealers rushed out upon them, and, after a severe struggle, succeeded in securing them all. He was again sold and resold several times, and at last had been brought hither. Forty-one heads of cowries (or £10, 5s.) were demanded for his ransom; and the liberality of the emigrants left not more than one-third of this sum to be paid by Mr. Crowther and his brother missionaries. What joy for the uncle and nephew thus to recognise each other, and to the latter, to hear that his mother and sisters had been alive, and in freedom, five years before! Twenty years were thus in a moment swept away from the long interval of dreary dark- ness; and though five still remained of doubt and 118 CHAPTER IX. uncertainty, yet oh! how short they seemed, com- pared with the whole amount! His uncle would have had later intelligence to give him, but the country had been so unsettled, he had not ventured to go so far from home. As soon as Mr. Crowther arrived at Abbeokuta, he followed up the clue his uncle had given him, and soon found that his mother and sisters were residing in the neighbouring town of Abaka. He sent to tell them of his arrival, but the news seemed impossible, ind they could not believe the messengers.* The mother’s heart, however, could not rest, and in company with a half-brother of Mr. Crowther’s, she set out at once for Abbeokuta. The account of the visit we shall give in Mr. Crowther’s own words :— “Aug. 21. The text for to-day in the Christian almanac is, ‘Thou art the helper of the fatherless.’ l have never felt the force of this text more than I did this day, as I have to relate that my mother, from whom I was torn away about five-and-twenty years ago, came, with my brother, in quest of me. When she saw me she trembled. She could not believe her own eyes. We grasped one another, looking at each other in silence and great astonish- ment, While the big tears rolled down her emaciated cheeks. She trembled as she held me by the hand, ' “ Gen. xlv. 26. ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 119 and called me by the familiar names, which I well remembered I used to be called by my grandmother, Who has since died in slavery. We could not say much, but sat still, casting many an affectionate look towards each other ;* a look which violence and oppression had long checked; an affection which twenty-five years had not extinguished. My two sisters who were captured with me, and their chil- dren, are all residing with my mother. I cannot describe my feelings; I had given up all hope ; and now, after a separation of twenty—five years, without any plan or device of mine, we are brought together again 1” . It appears, that some time after Mr. Crowther was taken down to the coast, his mother and sisters regained their liberty by the exertions of the above- mentioned half-brother, who was very kind to them, and brought them to Abaka to reside with him. A fruitless search was made in every direction for the missing Adjai, and after two or three years the hope of finding him was given up. The sisters married, - * “ Un tacer havvi, Figlio d’amor, che tutte esprime ; e dice Pin che lingua non puote,” &c. A gamenmone~Tragedia del Conte Alficri. There is a silence, Offspring of fondest love, that does more strongly speak, Than words can do, the full heart’s deep emotion. 120 CHAPTER IX. and all lived for some years in peace and comfort. But one day, as the mother and elder sister were going to a market in the neighbourhood, they were kidnapped and again separated. The sister was soon discovered and ransomed by her husband ; but , the poor mother was taken about from place to place, exposed for sale in the market, and as, on account of her advancing age, no purchaser was found for her, she was made a domestic slave. Her mistress having sent her on some business to Abbeokuta, she was, for the third time, captured on the road, and brought into the town. Here she was in hard bon- dage for several years, till her daughters at last, hearing of her fate, collected together all the cowries they possessed, and purchased her for 18 heads, or about £4, 10s. of our money. “Thus,” adds Mr. Crowther, “has my poor mother been suffering since I left the country; and this is only one case among thousands of similar ones. Could the friends of the Africans witness the happy meetings of those who have by their means been restored to each other; could they hear, at this moment, how many thanks are given to them by parents, whose declining years are now cheered by the return of their children from Sierra Leone, they would thank God, and take courage to go on in that work which God has so signally blessed, and the effect of which is being felt far in the interior.” ARRIVAL AT ABBEOKUTA. 121 The sisters with their children soon paid Mr. Crowther a visit, and returned to Abaka; but his mother, unable to tear herself from the son who had thus been lost and was found again, consented to take up her residence With him.* In the course of a few weeks, Mr. Crowther’s anxiety for the safety of his sisters was again awakened. Sufi'ering and danger had indeed united the people of Abbeokuta among themselves, but they had not yet learnt sympathy or consideration for others. Mohammedan slave-dealers had gained great in- fluence over some of the principal men; the slave- trade was carried on by individuals among them, and too often some of the chiefs were instigated by the love of gain to join them, and to take advantage of a real or imagined ofl'ence to make war on one or other of the neighbouring towns. Abaka was now their object; a strong party sud- denly attacked it, hoping to find it an easy prey, but the inhabitants were prepared for resistance, and repulsed the enemy. Provoked by their disappoint— :ment, the Abbeokutans, assisted by Porto N ovians, " Mr. Marsh, a liberated African, now at Badagry, had, Iduring a visit to Abbeokuta some months befoie, also found Ihis mother ; and now these two happy parents were seen ‘“ sitting together, talking over past sorrows and captivities, {and present joys.” As yet, however, they knew not to whom tthey owed these joys. “ May God open their eyes 1” exclaims Ier. Crowther, “ but they must be led like little children.” 122 CHAPTER IX. surrounded the town so as to prevent the possibility of escape; and, after bravely defending themselves for four months, famine and the poisoned arrows of the enemies obliged the people of Abaka to surrender themselves. They were all brought as prisoners to Abbeokuta, and how did the hearts of our missionaries mourn over this melancholy proof of the misery of slave-wars! Mr. Townsend writes, “Another town is swept off from the face of the earth! it was full of life and activity; now all is silent and desolate. And wherefore? That a few Brazilian merchants may more quickly fill their coffers ; that the luxuries of civilized nations may be a little cheaper, and that war-chiefs with their rabble train may gratify their love of display and applause. This whole country is filled with the sighs and groans of the helpless, and the soil is moistened with the blood of the slain.” We may imagine the anxiety of Mr. Crowther; he sent persons to watch the trains of captives as they were led into the town; and to his great joy found his brother, his two sisters, and their children among the number, all of whom he gladly ransomed at the expense of 150 dollars. They were all nearly starved, and his brother was wounded and very ill, but covered all over with some charmed mixture that was to preserve him against musket balls of poisoned arrows! CHAPTER X. PROGRESS OF THE VVORK—“BAPTISM OF FIRST CONVERTS. “ The Lord ndded to the church daily such as should be saved."— Acts ii. 47. IT was with no small satisfaction that the mis- sionaries took possession of their own dwellings* in December of this same year (1846); for the hos- pitable Oso Ligregere had it not in his power to afford them much accommodation; and a single room, 13 feet by 6, for each of the two families, was all they had for every purpose. This new home was soon made good use of. Divine service was regu- ilarly held there, an adult Sunday school was opened, :and a weekly meeting was established for prayer :and reading the Scriptures with the Sierra Leone ]people. * The kind-hearted Sagbua was much distressed at their :: removing into their new premises before the accustomed )oceremonies had been performed, as he was persuaded some ll harm would happen to them. According to the notions of :tthe country, the demon of the soil ought to have been pro- ;lpitiated by a sacrifice; and two slaves ought to have pre- "viously slept on the ground, lest any hurtful charm should rlhave been buried there by an enemy. 124 CHAPTER 1:. In the mean time, the interest excited by the i intention of Mr. Townsend and Mr. Crowther to take up their abode at Abbeokuta, had spread beyond its immediate neighbourhood. Messengers arrived from Ketu, a large town, three days’ jour- ney to the west, and on the confines of Dahomey, to inquire about them; and the chiefs of Ijaye“ and Aggo-Oja+ had sent privately to one of the Abbeokuta chiefs, for they had heard an extra- ordinary report, through some Sierra Leone emi- grants. This was no other than that a white man and his Wife had come to live at Abbeokuta! but this seemed so incredible, that the messenger was charged to see them with his own eyes, that, if true, it might be placed beyond the possibility of doubt. The year 1847 was one of quiet steady progress in the Abbeokuta mission. On March 21st, 3. church was opened for Divine service in the Aké district, near the mission compound, and humble and unpretending as it was in its material frame, with its walls, its floor, and its seats of mud, and its roof of thatch, yet within it were gathered together, from week to week, from 150 to 200 immortal souls, to whom the word of life was regularly preached, and to some of whom it gradually became the savour of life unto life. Inferior also as it was to our sim- * Another large town two days north of Abbeokuta. 1' The residence of the king, three days to the north-east. PROGRESS on THE worm. 125 plest English churches, it excited the admiration of the people around, who frequently visited it, though, as they knew it was intended for the worship of God, they were extremely surprised at finding no idol or symbol to which adoration was to be paid. The Sierra Leone people were delighted, “Who,” ‘ they exclaimec, “would ever have expected to see a church-house in our own land ! ” Application was soon after made to different 1 chiefs for permission to erect some kind of building if in their respective districts, that would afford the :zmissionaries and their hearers shelter during the ”heavy rains that so often fall; and would secure ”more regular services, and, as it was hoped, a more Llregular attendance. The request was readily com- Eiplied with, and before Christmas-day 1847, four of authese sheds had been erected, and thus, in addition into the church at Aké, the banner of the cross was Liunfurled on Sundays, and on week-days, in the dis- ‘tricts of Igbein in the south, of Own in the south- 'Nvestern quarter, of Itoku near the centre, and of iflkija in the north-west. Oguhonna, the chief of Ithe last—mentioned town, was particularly kind and iffriendly; the spot fixed upon was in front of his own ithouse, of which he offered to pull down a part if rmore space was required for the chapel. He with thS own hands assisted in measuring the ground, and gupon being reminded, while so employed, that a 126 CHAPTER x. fetish-house had formerly stood there, he angrily reproved the man who spoke, saying, that if any wished to rebuild the fetish-house, they must do so somewhere else. The 12th of August was appointed for opening it, and though much perplexed just at the time with some political affairs, he did not forget either the day or hour; he was the first to enter, bringing with him two little boys, one of them his own child, and the other a little captive from Abaka, , both dressed in new cotton cloths in honour of the occasion. Ogubonna showed also a great desire for the general improvement of his people, and proposed to the missionaries to send a young relation of his own, ‘ Madarikanf‘ to Sierra Leone, to learn English car-e * A very interesting circumstance occurred to Madarikan ‘ after his arrival at Sierra Leone. He had made his passage: in a native trading vessel, manned by liberated Africans; Many months after his arrival one of the crew came to him, ' and told him that he was persuaded that among some boys lately captured, and now at the barracks, enlisted for soldiers, was a brother of his. Madarikan, who had been placed in the grammar school at Freetown, seized the first opportunity that presented itself, of going to the barracks at the time of parade, and, anxiously watching the recruits, was not long in’ recognising his brother, though in so different a costume. We may imagine the overflowing of mutual joy on the occasion; It appeared that some months after Madarikan had quitte Abbeokuta, this lad had been sent by his father to pay hi _' respects to the chief of Aji, a neighbouring town, who, i , revenge for some injury he had received from some other A ; PROGRESS or THE WORK. 127 pentering. His proposal was accepted, and the young man soon after sailed for the colony, accom- panied by a youth from Mr. Gollmer’s school at Badagry. The confidence thus reposed by Ogu- bonna in his English friends was shared by most of the chiefs; “ and if,” says Mr. Townsend, “a suspi- cion of our good intentions, suggested by the design- ing agents of Domingo, at any time arises in their minds, the very sight of at Sierra Leone emigrant suffices to remove it, and their conduct towards us is marked by kindness and confidence.’ ’ Another very hopeful sign of the influence that Divine truth was silently gaining among the people was, that their former idolatry was evidently losing its hold upon their minds. Many were convinced of its folly and vanity, and would have thrown away their “ Ifas,” had it not been from fear of their own families. One striking instance of this insensible influence is beokutan, detained him and sold him as a slave. He was, as usual, sold and resold, and shipped on board a Brazilian slaver, then happily captured by a British cruiser and brought to Sierra Leone. It was feared that as he was regularly en< listed there would be some difficulty in procuring his discharge, but as soon as the circumstances were known at home, Major Straith (the lay secretary of the Church Missionary Society) wrote an official letter to the adjutant-general of the army, requesting him to submit the case to the Commander-in-chief, the Duke of Wellington; he did so, and the Duke imme- diately gave authority for the discharge of the young man from the regiment. 128 CHAPTER 1:. mentioned by Mr. Crowther, in his journal of Nov. 17, 1847. It seems that on the preceding night a. large party had gone as usual into the bush to make 0ro, as it is called, that is, to call up some of their deceased relatives from the world of spirits. When all was ready, the men looked at each other to see who would begin the incantation. There was no response, all seemed conscience-stricken, when one i t t; L: (j i, . r r, i of the party broke silence by referring to a lecture of ‘ Mr. Crowther’s a few Sundays before at Itoku chapel, at which many of the party had been present. The subject had been Judges vi. 25—27: they remembered how the preacher had spoken of the conduct of Gideon, how he had appealed to their own consciousness of truth and error; and the thought pressed upon their minds, “ \Vill not these words rise up in judgment against us?” They could no longer remain in what they had hitherto considered the sacred grove; but, though it was midnight, went to the house of a lay helper in the mission, called him up, opened their minds to him, and talked with him till break of day. “May the Sun of Righteous- ness, indeed,” Mr. Crowther adds, “rise upon their souls!” The chiefs were not slow to acknowledge the in- fluence the missionaries had over them. One day Mr. Townsend was talking to Sagbua about the [chief of Ijaye, who had lately kidnapped some Sierra 7 PROGRESS OF THE worm. 129 Leone men. Sagbua made excuses for him : “ Ikumi has not heard from white man the words we have; we did so in Abbeokuta before wevknew better, but now we dare not. Softly, softly,” added he, “ when Ikumi hears, he too will forsake these ways.” Ogu- bonna afterwards used nearly the same expressions. And it was an encouraging proof of.the truth of this assertion, that as early as April 1847, a public meeting was held, at which above a thousand per- sons were present, when a law was passed against kidnapping, under pain of death from Oro.* The adult Sunday school had fifty-two scholars, all making more or less progress in the art of read- ing, though the want of an elementary book in their own language added greatly to their difficulties. They were taught in an English primer, and had thus to acquire a new language as well as a new art. * The supreme authority of the town seems to be vested in this mysterious and undefined power. When any public business is to be considered, a meeting is convened in the name of “Oro ;’ and sentences against criminals are pro— nounced under the same sanction. He is often supposed to perambulate the town for hours or even days together, and during his visits no woman is suffered to appear in the streets, J or to be seen at the door of a house. Upon the present occa- sion Oro had convened the meeting for Sunday, but at Mr. Townsend’s request the day was changed to Saturday, that the women of the congregation might not be prevented from attending public worship. The same thing occurred some time afterwards; Oro was again put off, nor has he been called out since, on a Sunday. K 130 CHAPTER 1:. The average attendance at each of the four new places of worship was about one hundred and fifty on Sunday, and from forty to fifty on the week-day; and often would the people wait after the service to ask the missionaries questions on the truths that had been brought before them. A new centre of light and influence was also formed by the removal of Mr. Crowther and his family to the Igbein district, in November of this same year, and it was pleasant to hear the regret expressed by Shomolu, a man of influence in Aké, at thus losing him from his town, 1 and his fears lest Mr. Townsend should also leave him. Sagbua and himself, he said, had narrowly ‘ watched them for the last twelve months, and now that they were beginning to feel entire confidence in them, they were going to leave them. Mr. Town- send, however, soon reassured him as to any inten- tions of his own to remove. The close of the year found the missionaries with thirty-two communicants from among the Sierra Leone people, so greatly had God blessed their la- bours among this portion of their flock. The con- gregations continued to increase, not only at the .church but at the chapels, Where Andrew Wilhelm and William Goodwill assisted by taking the ser- vices in turn, and the missionaries thanked God who had given them such devoted'and efiicient helpers. PROGRESS or THE WORK. 131 A schoolmaster, Charles Philipsf" had arrived from Sierra, Leone, and the desire for instruction seemed increasing. There were no less than forty candi- dates for baptism, of whom six or seven were Sierra Leone people, and the rest were natives-l- Could the individual history of these candidates be laid open before us, what cause should we find to adore ‘ the God of all grace in the means he had used for their conversion! We know, however, but little of them, but we will not withhold that little from our readers. One of the first applicants was a woman of the name of lie, formerly a priestess, but now having received the message of God into her heart, she had thrown away her country gods and sought for salvation through Christ alone. Mr. Crowther’s attention had first been drawn towards her in November, 1846, * The arrival of Charles Philips gave Ogubonna a fresh opportunity of showing his kindness and anxiety to promote the happiness of others. Mr. Townsend had taken Philips with him on the week-day evening to lkijz‘t chapel. Oguhonna saw him there, sent for him, and inquired carefully of him as to the connections he had left behind when taken captive. He set his people to work in all directions, and in a few days found an aged woman who might, he thought, be his mother. He sent her to the mission-house, the conjecture proved to be right, and mother and son were restored to each other after a hopeless absence of twenty-one years. 1' The missionaries often use the word “ native” in contra- distinetion to the emigrants from Sierra Leone, to denote those who had never left the country. 132 CHAPTER 1:. when he accidentally overheard part of a conversa- tion between her and a man who was at work on the Aké church. The poor woman was telling the man of her troubles, her poverty, her ill-health, her want of children, of the number of sacrifices she had made, and of the inefficiency of them all, adding, that she had heard of this new religion, and wondered if it would do her any good. Her companion answered her that he was very much in the same case himself; he was dissatisfied with the old reli- gion, and knew very little of the new; but he was determined to learn it, and advised her to do the same. He then urged her to attend regularly the Sunday services, where she would “hear wonderful things such as their forefathers had never known,” and exhorted her on no account to be unstable, or to go back to her former ways, but to go straight on till she found the right path. She followed his advice, and was soon observed as one of the most regular and attentive listeners to the word of God. After this she had two serious illnesses, from one of which she was not expected to recover; and her friends, concluding that she was suffering from the displeasure of the deity she had forsaken, pressed her, with the greatest earnestness, to return to her ‘ “ country fashion.” Her faith, though of such recent ‘V date, was firm and unwavering; no superstitious- fears hung upon her mind, and she steadfastly refused,- PROGRESS or THE WORK. 133 to comply, resolved, if it should be the will of God, that she would die in Christ, if she were not permitted to live for him. She recovered, and soon after joined the class of candidates, employing herself more strenuously than ever in bringing others to the truth she had her- self embraced. But the most interesting of the early candidates for baptism was Afala, the aged mother of Mr. Crowther. When she was first restored to him his heart had been deeply, though not unexpectedly, pained by her ascribing his return to the influence of his deceased father in the unseen world; but by degrees her mind became enlightened, and she also joined Mr. Townsend’s class of candidates. Soon rafter this she was very ill, but instead of returning into her old customs, she quietly told her son, “Had ILI been left alone I should have attributed my sick- :mess to this or that deity, and should have made ”sacrifices accordingly, but now I have seen the folly «:of so doing; all my hopes are in the Lord Jesus (Christ, whom now I serve.” We may easily suppose with what joyful anxiety ‘ )Mr. Crowther watched the progress of divine truth 1m his mother’s heart, and with what overflowing rithankfulness he witnessed her baptism by Mr. 'Townsend on February 5, 1848, after above a arear’s instruction. 134 CHAPTER X. The ceremony was a deeply affecting one.* Two other women and two men had been selected as the most advanced among the candidates; and as these, the first fruits of the mission, surrounded by their heathen friends and relations, boldly confessed their faith in Christ crucified, and received the sign and seal of their adoption, must not the feeling of every Christian heart then present have been, “What hath God wrought !” One of these newly baptised was ljé, whose little history we have just given, and who now received the Christian name of Susan,- and the other woman, now Sarah I bilrotcm, was the wife of 050 Ligregere, under whose hospitable roof the missionaries had been sheltered for the first five months of their resi- dence in Abbeokuta. lbikotan was a woman of an eager and inquiring mind; and the words of Divine truth from the lips of her husband’s guests fell upon her heart as good seed sown in good soil. When Mr. Crowther’s mother came to reside with him, her affections were strongly drawn out towards her; and often might she be seen sitting with her aged friend, talking of the new world which was beginning to open before them both. One of the men was Bankole, who had been awakened to a concern for his soul by a relation * The baptismal service had been translated into the Yoruban language expressly for this occasion. - PROGRESS or THE worm. 135 of his, one of the earliest emigrants from Sierra Leone, and who had, before the arrival of the mis- sionaries, been under the instruction of Andrew Wilhelm. He was, probably, the very first inquirer among the native population. The other was Aina, who had suffered much from domestic persecution. His wife and his mother- in