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 giving a place in the to the ensuing narrative, it is deemed proper to accompany it with some remarks. The reader will be desirous to know how far it is entitled to his belief, and the editors of the Cabinet are equally desirous that he should not be misled. They have been furnished with the following certificate:

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“We, the undersigned, certify that we have read the book called ‘’—that we know the black man whose narra ivenarrative [sic] is given in this book, and have heard him relate the principal matters contained in the book concerning himself, long before the book was published.

This certificate establishes the fact, that the subject of the narrative is not a fictitious personage. Mr. Fisher, (the author) intimates in his preface, what is, indeed, sufficiently obvious from the felicity of his style, that the language of the book is not