Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho, an AfricanPenguin, 1998 - 336 oldal Born on a slave ship enroute to the West Indies, orphaned by the age of two and taken to England by his owner, Ignatius Sancho rose from servitude to include among his friends noted artists, writers, actors, and prominent politicians. Sancho first gained celebrity when one of his letters appeared in the novelist Laurence Sterne's Letters (1775) and, inspired by the editor's desire to show "that an untutored African may possess abilities equal to a European", two volumes of Sancho's letters were published shortly after his death. The literary quality and the historical importance of the letters endure, revealing a man of sensitivity, intellect, and charm, while also presenting an unusual chronicle of the times. Sancho offers young men fatherly advice on their futures; writes flirtatiously to young women; relates the joys and sorrows of family life; swaps literary jokes; and comments perceptively on the issues of the day. His thoughts on race and politics -- including his criticism of British imperialism in India, the complicity of Africans in the slave trade, and the blatant racism that flourishes in his adopted homeland -- will be of particular interest to twentieth-century readers. While some letters may have been abridged because of the original editor's concerns about public sensitivities, they remain a powerful testament to the injustices of racial discrimination. |
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... humanity and literary abilities of people of African descent . Sancho's accomplishments include a number of Afro - British firsts : the first published correspondence ; the earliest recorded autobiographical ac- count of domestic family ...
... human life , in all its varieties , from the Prince to the Beggar ; and no one . . . ever made a better use than he did , of the knowledge resulting from his observations . " The great range of his social circle is reflected in the ...
... human race . To those who wish to degrade the species , and to set limits to the kindness of the Deity , these letters will be no welcome repast ; for they will shew them the error of that ill opinion . . . . These letters may bear to ...
... human nature , that Negers , as they are vulgarly called , are inferior to any white nation in mental abilities . . . . We must not neglect to inform the connoisseurs , that a bust of the Author is given as a frontispiece to the first ...
... humanity . " The literary quality of Sancho's Letters , usually in combination with that of Wheatley's poetry , was frequently cited by oppo- nents of slavery as evidence of the humanity and inherent xviii INTRODUCTION.