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                170   Chapter 8 ‘Race’, racism and representation

                          in the course of a few centuries they will over-run this country with a race of men
                          of the very worst sort under heaven. . . . London abounds with an incredible num-
                          ber of these black men . . . and [in] every country town, nay in almost every village
                          are to be seen a little race of mulattoes, mischievous as monkeys and infinitely
                          more dangerous. ...A mixture of negro blood with the natives of this country is
                          big with great and mighty mischief (162).

                         Linking this concern directly to the abolition of slavery, John Scattergood, writing in
                      1792, argued that if slavery is allowed to end, ‘the Negroes from all parts of the world
                      will flock hither, mix with the natives, spoil the breed of our common people, increase
                      the number of crimes and criminals, and make Britain the sink of all the earth, for
                      mongrels, vagrants, and vagabonds’ (164).
                         A letter published in the London Chronicle in 1764, which finds an insidious echo in
                      contemporary debates on immigration, is concerned that too many black servants are
                      coming into Britain:

                          As they fill the places of so many of our own people, we are by this means depriv-
                          ing so many of them of the means of getting their bread, and thereby decreasing
                          our native population in favour of a race, whose mixture with us is disgraceful, and
                          whose use cannot be so various and essential as those of white people ...They
                          never can be considered as a part of the people, and therefore their introduction
                          into the community can only serve to elbow as many out of it who are genuine
                          subjects, and in every point preferable. . . . It is . . . high time that some remedy be
                          applied for the cure of so great an evil, which may be done by totally prohibiting
                          the importation of any more of them (155).

                         Given that slavery and the slave trade were of economic benefit to many people not
                      directly involved with its practice, the new ideology of racism spread quickly among
                      those  without  a  direct  economic  interest  in  slavery  and  the  slave  trade.  Scottish
                      philosopher David Hulme, for example, was quite clear about the difference between
                      whites and non-whites. Writing in 1753, he observed,

                          I am apt to suspect the negroes, and in general all the other species of men (for
                          there are four or five different kinds) to be naturally inferior to the whites. There
                          never was a civilised nation of any other complexion than white. . . . Such a uni-
                          form and constant difference could not happen, in so many countries and ages, if
                          nature had not made an original distinction betwixt these breeds of men. ...In
                          Jamaica indeed they talk of one negroe 38  as a man of parts and learning; but ’tis
                          likely he is admired for very slender accomplishments, like a parrot, who speaks a
                          few words plainly (152).

                         By the nineteenth-century, it was widely taken for granted that the human race was
                      divided into superior whites and inferior others. With such natural gifts, it would seem
                      only right that white Europeans should establish colonies across the globe. Moreover,
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