CONTENTS.

PAGE
African Servant, The[88]
African Prince, The[212]
African Schools in New York[242]
Africans, The Injured[245]
Ancass[74]
Anecdote[101]
Anecdote[205]
An Incident[62]
Banneker, Benjamin[60]
Bayley, Solomon[133]
Bell, Let me Ring the[53]
Benezet, Anthony[230]
Bible, Love for the[272]
Billy and Jenny[182]
Bowen, William[229]
Boyd, Henry[251]
Buccan, Quamino[257]
Carey, Lott[191]
Christian, An Aged[45]
Christian Kindness[48]
Clarinda, a Pious Colored Woman[143]
Coffin[210]
Coston, Ezekiel[203]
Cuffee, Captain Paul[216]
Christmas Hymn at St. Helena's Island[273]
Daddy Davy[37]
Derham, James[211]
Emancipation in New York[263]
Faith of a Poor Blind Woman[241]
Ferguson, Katy[69]
Foundling, The Colored[206]
Freedmen of America[264]
Good Master and His Faithful Slave, The[200]
Gratitude in a Liberated Slave[225]
Ham, Fallacies Respecting the Race of[14]
Hardy, George[186]
Hospitable Negro Woman[222]
Hymn Sung at St. Helena's Island[272]
Indian, The Good Old[238]
Kindness, A Little Act of[102]
Letters from a Lady in Richmond, Va.[270]
Liberty, Extraordinary Exertions to Obtain[228]
Lie, He Never Told a[37]
Lion, Deliverance from[9]
Little Wa[83]
Lucas, Belinda[164]
Liberty to the Captive[276]
Missionary Box, The[35]
Montjoy, Zilpah[160]
Morris, Agnes[226]
Munificence, Extraordinary[234]
Naimbanna[150]
Negro, The Generous[123]
Negro, The Grateful[208]
No-Account Johnny[18]
Nurse, The Faithful[209]
Old Dinah[16]
Old Susan[103]
Poor Pompey[74]
Poor Sarah[111]
Prayer, Answer to[12]
Prayer, The African Servant's[100]
Providence, Trust in[23]
Repentance and Amendment in a Colored School[62]
Saat[30]
Sacrifice, The Living[27]
Slave, The Blind, in the Mines[97]
Slave, Flight of a[55]
Slave, The Psalm of the[34]
Slave Shoemaker, The[51]
Slaves, Gratitude of[50]
Storm at Sea, A[81]
Teachers, A Hottentot's Love for Her[26]
Temptation Resisted and Honesty Rewarded[236]
Truth, Sojourner[65]
Temperance Meeting in Africa[274]
Uncle Harry[213]
Uncle Jack[46]
Vassa, Gustavus[169]
Wheatley, Phillis[5]
Wife, The[24]
Zachary and the Boy[21]

PHILLIS WHEATLEY.

In 1761 John Wheatley's wife went to the slave market in Boston, for a girl whom she might train to wait upon her in her old age. At that time ships were sent from Boston to Africa after cargoes of slaves, which were sold to the people of Massachusetts. Among a group of more robust and healthy children just imported from Africa, the lady observed one of slender form, suffering from change of climate and the miseries of the voyage. She was interested in the poor little girl, bought her, and took her home. The child, who was named Phillis, was almost naked, her only covering being a strip of dirty carpet; but in a short time the effects of comfortable clothing and food were visible in her returning health.

Phillis at the time of her purchase was between seven and eight years of age, and the intention of her mistress was to train her as a servant; but the intelligence which the young girl soon exhibited, induced her mistress's daughter to teach her to read. Such was the rapidity with which she learned, that in sixteen months from the time of her arriving in the family, the African child had so mastered the English language, to which she was an utter stranger before, that she could read with ease the most difficult parts of the Bible. Her uncommon intellect altered the intentions of the family regarding Phillis, and she was kept about the person of her mistress, whose affection she won by her amiable disposition and pleasing manners. All her knowledge was obtained without any instruction, except what was given her in the family; and in four years from the time she was stolen from Africa, and when only twelve years of age, she was capable of writing letters to her friends on various subjects.

The young colored girl became an object of very general attention and astonishment; and in a few years she corresponded with several persons in high stations. As she grew up to womanhood, her attainments kept pace with the promise of her earlier years; the literary people of Boston supplied her with books and encouraged her intellectual powers. This was greatly assisted by her mistress, who treated her like a child of the family, admitted her to her own table, and introduced her as an equal to the best society; but Phillis never departed from the humble and unassuming deportment which distinguished her when she stood a little trembling child for sale in the slave market. She respected the prejudice against her color, and, when invited to the tables of the great or wealthy, she chose a place apart for herself, that none might be offended at a thing so unusual as sitting at table with a woman of color.