No Notice,
However, Was Taken By Any Of These Of The Information Which Had Been
Thus Sent Them."
Another incident of the Middle Passage suggested to James Montgomery
a poem called "The Voyage of the Blind."
"It was that fatal and perfidious bark,
Built in the eclipse, and rigged with curses dark."
MILTON'S Lycidas.
The ship Le Rodeur, Captain B., of 200 tons burthen, left Havre on
the 24th of January, 1819, for the coast of Africa, and reached her
destination on the 14th of March following, anchoring at Bonny, on
the river Calabar. The crew, consisting of twenty-two men, enjoyed
good health during the outward voyage and during their stay at
Bonny, where they continued till the 6th of April. They had
observed no trace of ophthalmia among the natives; and it was not
until fifteen days after they had set sail on the return voyage, and
the vessel was near the equator, that they perceived the first
symptoms of this frightful malady. It was then remarked that the
negroes, who to the number of 160 were crowded together in the hold
and between the decks, had contracted a considerable redness of the
eyes, which spread with singular rapidity. No great attention was
at first paid to these symptoms, which were thought to be caused
only by the want of air in the hold, and by the scarcity of water,
which had already begun to be felt. At this time they were limited
to eight ounces of water a day for each person, which quantity was
afterwards reduced to the half of a wine-glass. By the advice of M.
Maugnan, the surgeon of the ship, the negroes, who had hitherto
remained shut up in the hold, were brought upon deck in succession,
in order that they might breathe a purer air. But it became
necessary to abandon this expedient, salutary as it was, because
many of the negroes, affected with nostalgia (a passionate longing
to return to their native land), threw themselves into the sea,
locked in each other's arms.
The disease, which had spread itself so rapidly and frightfully
among the Africans, soon began to infect all on board. The danger
also was greatly increased by a malignant dysentery which prevailed
at the time. The first of the crew who caught it was a sailor who
slept under the deck near the grated hatch which communicated with
the hold. The next day a landsman was seized with ophthalmia; and
in three days more the captain and the whole ship's company, except
one sailor, who remained at the helm, were blinded by the disorder.
All means of cure which the surgeon employed, while he was able to
act, proved ineffectual. The sufferings of the crew, which were
otherwise intense, were aggravated by apprehension of revolt among
the negroes, and the dread of not being able to reach the West
Indies, if the only sailor who had hitherto escaped the contagion,
and on whom their whole hope rested, should lose his sight, like the
rest.
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