i 
28 TRAVELS IN THE 
tuation, greater precision has been found necessary ; and at this 
time, the current value of a single bar of any kind is fixed by 
the whites at two shillings sterling. Thus a slave, whose price 
is £15- is said to be worth 150 bars. 
In transactions of this nature, it is obvious that the white tra- 
der has infinitely the advantage over the African, whom, there- 
fore, it is difficult to satisfy ; for, conscious of his own ignorance, 
he naturally becomes exceedingly suspicious and wavering; 
and indeed so very unsettled and jealous are the Negroes in 
their dealings with the whites, that a bargain is never considered 
by the European as concluded, until the purchase money is 
paid, and the party has taken leave. 
Having now brought together, such general observations on 
the country, and its inhabitants, as occurred to me during my 
residence in the vicinage of the Gambia, I shall detain the rea- 
der no longer with introductory matter, but proceed, in the 
next Chapter, to a regular detail of the incidents which hap- 
pened, and the reflections which arose in my mind, in the course 
of my painful and perilous journey, from its commencement 
until my return to the Gambia. 
