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[“Help! oh, help! thou God of Christians]
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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217

[“Help! oh, help! thou God of Christians]

From the New-Haven Gazette, and Connecticut Magazine, for 1788.

TO THE PRINTER.

THE distress which the inhabitants of Guinea experience at the loss of their children, which are stolen from them by the persons employed in the barbarous traffic of human flesh, is, perhaps, more thoroughly felt than described. But, as it is a subject to which every person has not attended, the Author of the following lines hopes that, possibly, he may excite some attention, (while he obtains indulgence) to an attempt to represent the anguish of a mother, whose son and daughter were taken from her by a Ship's Crew, belonging to a Country where the God of Justice and Mercy is owned and worshipped.

Help! oh, help! thou God of Christians!
“Save a mother from despair!
“Cruel white-men steal my children!
God of Christians, hear my prayer!
“From my arms by force they're rended,
“Sailors drag them to the sea;
“Yonder ship, at anchor riding,
“Swift will carry them away.

218

“There my son lies, stripp'd, and bleeding;
“Fast, with thongs, his hands are bound.
“See, the tyrants, how they scourge him!
“See his sides a reeking wound!
“See his little sister by him;
“Quaking, trembling, how she lies!
“Drops of blood her face besprinkle;
“Tears of anguish fill her eyes.
“Now they tear her brother from her;
“Down, below the deck, he's thrown;
“Stiff with beating, thro' fear silent,
“Save a single, death-like, groan.
“Hear the little creature begging!”—
‘Take me, white-men, for your own!
‘Spare! oh, spare my darling brother!
‘He's my mother's only son.
‘See, upon the shore she's raving:
‘Down she falls upon the sands:
‘Now, she tears her flesh with madness;
‘Now, she prays with lifted hands.
‘I am young, and strong, and hardy;
‘He's a sick, and feeble boy;
‘Take me, whip me, chain me, starve me,
‘All my life I'll toil with joy.
‘Christians! who's the God you worship?
“Is he cruel, fierce, or good?
‘Does he take delight in mercy?
‘Or in spilling human blood?

219

‘Ah! my poor distracted mother!
‘Hear her scream upon the shore.’—
Down the savage Captain struck her,
Lifeless on the vessel's floor.
Up his sails he quickly hoisted,
To the ocean bent his way;
Headlong plunged the raving mother,
From a high rock, in the sea.
 

This Poem was originally printed in the above-mentioned Paper, February 21st, 1788, in rather an incorrect manner. It is now offered to the public, with the amendment of the errors reprehensible at its first appearance.