The Diligent:
A Voyage Through the Worlds of the Slave Trade
By Robert Harms
A Review by Robin Blackburn
28 April 2002
Los Angeles Times Book Review
Page R-10 © 2002 Los Angeles Times
Eyewitness to the Middle Passage
The Atlantic trade in slaves and slave produce in the 18th century is
sometimes wrongly associated with the state-organized world of colonial
mercantilism rather than with the birth of free trade. The Spanish trade
in silver did furnish the basis for a well-organized colonial system. In
the early days, royal monopolies played some role in the slave traffic
but, before long, "interlopers" proved better able to supply the planters
with the captive labor force they craved and Europe with the sugar,
tobacco and coffee of the plantations.
The Diligent was a vessel engaged for slave-trading purposes by two French
interlopers, the Billy brothers of Vannes. As an independent venture, it
illustrates the waning ability of the chartered slave-trading companies to
engross the traffic. The Billy brothers were grain merchants who aimed to
break into a profitable traffic, one that had already been sanctioned by
royal authorities and, on the grounds that it would foster conversion,
even by the church.
Robert Harms' account of the voyage is based on the journal of a French
mariner, Robert Durand, who took part as first lieutenant aboard the
Diligent's first voyage in 1731-32. There are scores of firsthand
narratives of slave trading voyages, and Durand's is not particularly
vivid. Yet, in the hands of Harms, the laconic entries, the evocative
drawings and the records of a court case brought against the captain by
the ship's owners furnish a compelling and illuminating narrative.
Harms supplies a context to the voyage and supplements journal entries
that carry the story forward and help to explain the workings of the
largest and most sustained forced migration in history. The result is an
indispensable work of history. Yale University had asked Harms to assess
the authenticity of Durand's manuscript. Not only was it genuine but it
also concerned a major branch of the slave traffic and many of the issues
that it poses. The author's ability to bring out the significance of the
story stems, however, from his impressive command of the trade's Atlantic
history and skill at opening up the narrative.
None of those directly concerned in this expedition recorded any qualm or
doubt. Yet, as Harms explains, the status of slaves in France had recently
been tested by Pauline Villeneuve, a young woman who had been taken as a
slave servant from the French West Indies by her mistress, then left in a
convent in Nantes. Before her mistress could reclaim her, Villeneuve
requested acceptance in the order. The nuns and abbot helped her to win
the subsequent court case, arguing that though slavery was legal in the
colonies, it was incompatible with the free air of France. Freedom suits
set limits to the system but didn't give pause to the planters or slave
traders.
The Diligent arrived on the West African coast at a time when King Agaja
of the kingdom of Dahomey was establishing control of the major slave
trading outlets at Whydah and Jakin. The European forts there offered
scant protection, so the traders are shown as supplicants, dependent on
the favor of intermediaries and monarchs.
Agaja had an English slave, Bullfinche Lambe, whom he had acquired as a
captive from another ruler and refused to ransom. Agaja is sometimes seen
as an opponent of the slave trade because the effect of his military moves
was to interrupt the traffic from Whydah, source of more than half of all
the captives carried from West Africa.
From Harms' account, it seems that Agaja was attempting to cut out
mercantile middlemen and had framed the plan of establishing sugar
plantations in Dahomey. He sent Lambe with a letter to the English king
proposing that the Royal Africa Co. join him in setting up plantations and
marketing their produce in Europe. The British authorities declined but
sought to remain on good terms with the increasingly powerful monarch.
The power behind the throne of Whydah, we learn, was an African commander
known as Captain Assou, who successfully imposed a peace agreement on the
European forts and traders based in this coastal state. According to this
agreement, the Europeans were bound to remain at peace with one another on
the African coast at all times. The African rulers were also loath to
award special privileges to particular nations or companies. John Konny,
the African ruler of Fort Friederichsburg, wished his territory to be a
"free port where all nations could trade." The activities of Assou and
Agaja showed that free commerce, especially a commerce in captives,
required good order and mutual trust. Once they fell out, the trade
suffered.
Harms' account shows Africans not simply as victims but also as
protagonists of the drama. But the responsibility for what befell the
captives once they left Africa lies with the Europeans. At the book's
outset, Harms made clear that the impulse to trade slaves was rooted in
Europe's consuming passion for exotic plantation goods. Thus Harms
supplies a vignette of adventurer John Law's famous attempt to reorganize
French finances on the basis of a colonial monopoly. The failure of Law's
system was one more proof that pure monopoly did not work. Around this
time Legendre, a financier, coined the term "laissez faire" in pleading
with authorities to relax the colonial system.
The Diligent with difficulty purchased 256 slaves and lost nine in the
course of the "middle passage"—slave deaths were usually much higher. But
because of high prices paid on the African coast and low prices received
in Martinique at a time of commercial depression, the voyage did not make
money for its backers. Harms mentions another voyage involving Durand that
made a profit despite eventual loss of the vessel. Slave traffic was
highly competitive. To be sure of a profit, a merchant needed to spread
his investment over many voyages, a circumstance favoring the larger
traders.
Harms has no difficulty establishing the atrocious conditions facing the
captives, and Durand sparely records a signal act of resistance on board
the Diligent leading to a bloody and ceremonial execution. Harms also
mentions several shipboard uprisings that might have been known to Durand,
all of which were suppressed with great ferocity. He cautiously speculates
about the captives' fears and hopes but there is little to go on. And
because of the matter-of-fact nature of Durand's journal, little is known
of the inner life even of the protagonist.
Yet the book successfully transports us to another epoch with assumptions
we find, by turns, strange and familiar as the ancient institution of
human bondage is refashioned to serve modern-seeming entrepreneurs
responding to modern-seeming consumers. Harms is not the first to convey
the cruelty of the slave traffic, but his vivid re-creation of this period
is a remarkable achievement. By all means, read Barry Unsworth's
well-researched novel "Sacred Hunger" or Hugh Thomas' compendious history
"The Slave Trade." But for a sense of what the trade involved and how it
was made possible, Harms' story is unrivaled.
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