[The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4 by American Anti-Slavery Society]@TWC D-Link bookThe Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4 CHAPTER IV 22/34
It is the prevailing impression among whites, colored, and blacks, that open licentiousness cannot long survive slavery. _Prejudice_ was another of the concomitants of slavery.
Barbadoes was proverbial for it.
As far as was practicable, the colored people were excluded from all business connections; though merchants were compelled to make clerks of them for want of better, that is, _whiter_, ones. Colored merchants of wealth were shut out of the merchants' exchange, though possessed of untarnished integrity, while white men were admitted as subscribers without regard to character.
It was not a little remarkable that the rooms occupied as the merchants' exchange were rented from a colored gentleman, or more properly, a _negro_;[A] who, though himself a merchant of extensive business at home and abroad, and occupying the floor below with a store, was not suffered to set his foot within them.
This merchant, it will be remembered, is educating a son for a learned profession at the university of Edinburgh.
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