Read Sugar in the Blood Online
Authors: Andrea Stuart
21
“agreeable, and not repugnant unto reason”:
Phillips 1990: 423.
22
“the twentieth part of all profits”:
Phillips 1990: 423.
23
“a drunken, vindictive tyrant”:
Gragg 1996–97: 4.
24
“such great drunkards”:
Thomas Verney, quoted in Gragg 2003: 71.
25
“They settle their differences by fist fighting”:
Biet, quoted in Handler 1967: 68.
26
“tough guys”:
Pares 1960: 15.
27
“This Island is the Dunghill”:
Henry Whistler, quoted in Firth 1900: 146.
28
“it is enough to believe that there is a God”:
Captain Holdip, quoted in Gragg 2003: 80.
29
“who live in pride, drunkenesse”:
Rous 1656: 1–8.
30
“The hard labour and want of victuals”:
Ligon 1657: 60.
31
“new men, for few or none of them that first set foot there”:
Ligon 1657: 54.
32
“girls for sale”:
Pares 1960: 6.
33
“The soldiers of the London garrison visited various brothels”:
Gragg 2003: 167.
34
“a Baud brought ouer puts on a demur comportment”:
Whistler 1900: 146.
35
“roofs so low, as for the most part”:
Ligon 1657: 59.
36
“ill dyet they keep, and drinking”:
Ligon 1657: 31.
37
“We have felt his heavy hand in wrath”:
Richard Vines, quoted in Puckrein 1984: 192.
38
“Their sufferings being grown to a great height”:
Ligon 1657: 66.
1
“the production of sugar is immense in this province”:
Marco Polo, quoted in Aykroyd 1967: 11.
2
“They died like fish in a bucket”:
Aykroyd 1967: 20.
3
“People the colour of the very night”:
Schwartz 2004: 37.
4
“At the time we landed on this island”:
This and the following extract from Ligon 1657: 119–20.
5
“tyrant and murderer; and a public and implacable enemy”:
This and the following extracts from
historylearningsite.co.uk/CharlesI_execution.htm
.
6
with cries of “God and the Cause!”:
Davis 1887: 113.
7
“They did not see why they should not repair their fortunes”:
Davis 1887: 150.
8
“that devout Zealot of the deeds of the devil”:
Davis 1887: 147.
9
“the profits of the said Estates to be disposed of by his Lordship”:
Davis 1887: 150.
10
“There must have been mounting in hot haste”:
Davis 1887: 209.
11
“Despite those Loose and scandalous papers with much Industry”:
Davis 1887: 147.
1
“wee shall be soe thinned of Christian people”:
Parker 2011: 147.
2
“If any Africans were carried away”:
Aykroyd 1967: 18.
3
“the men are very well timbered”:
This and the next extract from Ligon 1657: 73.
4
“intrinsically treacherous”:
These extracts from Ligon 1657: 75.
5
“go onto the next life without its head”:
Ligon 1657: 73.
6
“a new scale and intensity”:
Eltis, quoted in Beckles 2002: 13.
7
“the most magnificent drama”:
DuBois, quoted in Rediker 1997: 5.
8
“In the meanwhile, a burning Iron”:
William Bosman, quoted in Hartman 2007: 80.
9
“hold anything good in store for them”:
Paul Isert, quoted in Hartman 2007: 114.
10
“instruments of woe”:
Rediker 1997: 154.
11
“all the while oppressed and weighed down by grief”:
This and the following extracts from Equiano 1797: 53–54.
12
“carried to these white people’s country”:
Equiano 1797: 57.
1
“the most important surviving piece of legislation”:
Dunn 1972: 239.
2
“a heathenish, brutish, uncertain and dangerous”:
Marshall 2009.
3
“liberal Code”:
Franklin Knight, quoted in Beckles 2002: 64.
4
“Whereas the Plantations and Estates of this Island”:
Phillips 1990: 427.
5
“many enormities were committed”:
Marshall 2009.
6
“straight from the ship like horses at a market”:
Ligon 1657: 68.
7
“moment of rupture”:
Rediker 1997: 153.
8
“One dreadful shriek assaults”:
James Field Stanfield, quoted in Rediker 1997: 153.
9
“I can assure you”:
John Pinney, quoted in Pares 1950: 121.
10
“It is unnecessary I flatter myself”:
John Pinney, quoted in Pares 1950: 121.
11
“Slaves differed from other human beings”:
Patterson 1982: 5.
12
“were cannibals who were capturing them”:
Equiano 1791: 54.
13
“apt to die out of pure grief”:
This and the following extract from Davies 1666: 20.
14
“The English take very little care of their slaves”:
Labat 1957: 168.
1
“was accompanied to his ship”:
Handler 1967: 69.
2
“seasoned with sweet Herbs finely minc’d”:
Ligon 1657: 56.
3
“the richest and most splendid of all early West Indian Grandees”:
Craton 1991: 330.
4
“excellent Juice is of much more importance”:
Tryon 2009: 94.
5
“the more inconsiderable of the Inhabitants”:
Davies 1666: 198.
6
“the nursery for planting other places”:
Bridenbaugh 1968: 101.
7
“They are a perfect medley or hotch potch”:
Quoted in Watson 1997: 91.
8
“Carolina opened possibilities”:
Dunn 1972: 114.
9
“Barbados played a unique role”:
Hottens 1982: iv.
1
“a notably lethal crossroads”:
D. Phillip Morgan in Nussbaum 2003: 58.
2
“A few hours’ command of the sea”:
Pares 1950: 45.
3
“Suerly the Deuill”:
Colt 1925: 73.
4
“international cockpit”:
Arciniegas 2004: 216.
5
the Foreign Legion of the Caribbean:
Arciniegas 2004: 178.
6
they created a style of fighting that had not been seen before:
Arciniegas 2004: 194.
7
“When a buccaneer is going to sea”:
Exquemelin, quoted in Lewis 2006: 83.
8
“hang them from their genitals”:
Exquemelin, quoted in Lewis 2006: 65.
9
“not to call on him in the manner”:
Exquemelin, quoted in Lewis 2006: 56.
10
“They are very bad subjects”:
Jean Baptiste Ducasse, quoted in Latimer 2009: 109.
11
“If you roast me today”:
Beckles 1990: 49.
12
George Ashby’s will:
B. Arch. RB6:13, 3 Oct. 1672, proved 1676.
13
“Almost certainly the exports to England”:
Dunn 1969: 58.
14
“Like the terraced cane fields”:
Dunn 1969: 77.
15
“The houses on the plantations are much better built”:
Labat 1957: 171.
16
“splendid Planters, who for Sumptuous Houses”:
Dunn 1969: 58.
17
“the largest trade in the New World”:
Labat 1957: 163.
18
Barbados received between 2,000 and 3,000 negroes:
Davies, cited in Dunn 1969: 72.
19
“One of the great Burdens of our Lives”:
Littleton, quoted in Dunn 1969: 73.
20
“Thus sunny Barbados”:
Dunn 1969: 75.
1
“Barbadian character”:
Watson, quoted in Jemmott and Carter 1993: 37.
2
“perfectly ravished”:
Warren 2001: 6.
3
“The Earth in parts is extremely rich”:
Warren 2001: 8.
4
“were the principal cause of the rapid movement”:
Abbé Raynal, quoted in Aykroyd 1967: 31.
5
“Sugar, sugar, eh!”:
Aykroyd 1967: 44.
6
“seemed to be much in a desponding way”:
Ragatz 1928: 113.
7
“without any question”:
Schama 1989: 57.
8
“The strongest colours could not paint”:
Kippis 1784: 5.
9
“The whole face of the country”:
Admiral Rodney, quoted in Ludlum 1963: 140–42.
10
“the economic position of Barbados was still poor”:
Ragatz 1928: 21.
11
“Children, in these West-India islands”:
Greene 2001: 143.
12
“high theatre”:
Hochschild 2005: 50.
13
“the first great political book tour”:
Hochschild 2005: 169.
14
“the prejudices which had been hastily taken up”:
The Rev. John Duke, quoted in Handler 2005: 59.
15
“new temper and ideas”:
Gaspar and Geggus 1997: 31.
16
“In few other societies can the ideals of liberty”:
Gaspar and Geggus 1997: 3.
17
“Have they not hung men”:
James 1980: 132.
18
“The white slaves in France”:
Gaspar and Geggus 1997: 12.
19
“The God who creates the sun”:
Boukman, quoted in James 1980: 87.
20
“in drinking, gaming and wenching”:
Ragatz 1928: 22.
21
“the most simple forms of life”:
Edward Long, quoted in Buckley 1997: 230.
22
“the only issue which seemed to have a unifying effect”:
Watson 1998: 18.
23
“cultural action”:
Edward Brathwaite, quoted in Buckley 1997: 236.
24
“When I first came into this Country”:
Thomas Howard, quoted in Buckley 1997: 236.
1
“to guard their daughters against dapper braids wearers”:
Ragatz 1928: 97.
2
“stuffed to the gills with romantic nonsense”:
Moreau de Saint-Méry, quoted in Girod 1959: 31.
3
“I went one day to a sale of Negroes”:
Wyville 1975: 24.
4
“Instructions … offered to the Consideration of Proprietors”:
Quoted in Beckles 1998: 15.
5
“You belong no massa”:
Lewis 2005: 69.
6
“Your negroes are giving in to despair”:
Desalles 1996: 15.
7
“the flower of all field battalions”:
Walvin 1993: 94.
8
“It has often occurred to me that a gang of Negroes”:
Walvin 1993: 94.
9
“as if they had never eaten before”:
Nugent 1966: 57.
10
“I was one evening”:
Wyville 1975: 26.
11
“Caribbean slavery was, by every measure”:
Hochschild 2005: 65.
12
“If a stiller slips into a rum cistern”:
Pitman 1926: 48.
13
“Managing a sugar estate”:
Trevor Burnard, quoted in Walvin 2007: 126.
14
“submission to the state, in which”:
Rolph 2009: 165.
15
“after the greatest Captain that the world could produce”:
Lewis 2005: 123.
16
“The ceremony was performed with perfect gravity”:
Lewis 2005: 124.
17
“the slaves would probably have been better off”:
Kenneth Kiple, quoted in Handler and Jacoby 1993: 75.
18
“It was his constant practice”:
Lewis 2005: 323.
19
“Two of our sergeants came and informed me”:
Wyville 1975: 25.
20
“To be sold a mulatto man”:
Wyville 1975: 24.
21
“nowhere does time pass more slowly”:
Stuart 2004: 20.
22
“It is a sad society”:
Stuart 2004: 56.
1
“like a vessel traversing the ocean”:
Lieutenant Howard, quoted in Hochschild 2005: 274.
2
“Black, white, brown, all de same!”:
Gaspar and Geggus 1997: 14.
3
“attempts to get another Man into his Absolute Power”:
John Locke, quoted in Ball 1999: 31.
4
“every year we had eight, ten, twelve, and fourteen pregnancies”:
Desalles 1996: 71.
5
“Barbados contains fewer hiding places”:
Handler 1997: 190.
6
“Lydia Ann, aged 13 or 14 was suspected to be harboured”:
Handler 1997: 193.
7
“nobody had done anything”:
This and the following quotes from Desalles 1996: 143.
8
“They are fully persuaded they will return to Guinea”:
Senhouse 1988: 179.
9
“In his very first days on the island”:
Walvin 2007: 113.
10
“Had him well flogged and pickled”:
This and the following quotes from Hall 1989: 72.
11
“The whip is the soul of the colonies”:
Victor Schoelcher, quoted in
Vivre, survivre et être libre
(Fort de France, Martinique), 22 May–22 July 1998: 33.
12
“I was broken in body soul and spirit”:
Douglass 2003: 160.
13
“I lay down at night and rose up in the morning”:
Prince 2004: 16.