DEDICATORY ADDRESS
Dear Bishop and Friend: Having the honor to avail myself of the patronage of your name in presenting The Rape of Florida to the public, I have deemed it proper to add a word by way of preface.
To begin: I have elected to place your name in front of these lines because I have found you to be in active sympathy with the progressive negro. In this our minds are akin. I have yielded to the firm belief that the negro has a future. I abhor the doctrine that he is but a cipher in the sum of the world's greatness —a captive in the meshes of dominating influences. I abhor it because it is arrogantly asserted on the one side while it is too often tacitly admitted on the other. Yet I confess that living instances of real merit only will correct the world's judgment and force its respect. To this end I have laid out my life. Modest enough to be patient, I am not too tame to assert that I have some hope of ultimately reaching the ears of my countrymen.
I am a negro, and as such, I accept the situation, and enter the lists with poised lance. I disdain to whine over my "previous condition." I despise the doctrine of the slave's allowance. Petition and complaint are the language of imbecility and cowardice —the evidences