LONDON, U.K. -- Edward Colston has a new resting place: Sleeping with the fishes at the bottom of Bristol Harbor.

It was a turbulent journey for the former deputy-governor of the Royal African Company. Oh, the disgrace of it.

To be bound up like a slave, ropes looped around your torso, and then ripped from the glorious plinth where you鈥檝e stood for 125 years.

Alas, there was more indignity. Dragged through the streets of Bristol like a common criminal. Mocked and jeered as you were dumped into the very waters where your slave ships once moored.

And the height of dishonour鈥攖o have a bended knee pressed against your throat.

Goodbye Edward Colston.

It is said that ships under your control transported 84,000 slaves across the Atlantic to the plantations of the new world. And of that number, 19,000 perished.

Some of those who pulled down your bronze statue over the weekend were descendants of the very African 鈥渃argo鈥 your men shackled into the bellies of your ships.

We know that you did good things with all the money you amassed. Slave trading must have been lucrative. Bristol is full of Colston reminders. Colston School. Colston Hill. There鈥檚 even a pastry called the Colston bun.

Okay, it was an ugly way to go, but your statue was despised by a lot of people for a long time. Maybe it was better this way鈥攖o be swept away in a movement as just and proper as Black Lives Matter.

The police decided鈥攚isely perhaps鈥攏ot to intervene.

Ah, but there was an outcry on your bronze behalf by some very important people.

Raise your sanitized hands if you know who said the anti-racism protests were 鈥渟ubverted by thuggery?鈥

That would be Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

And who decried the statue鈥檚 demise as 鈥渦tterly disgraceful?鈥

That would be Priti Patel, the very powerful U.K. Home Secretary.

The mayor of Bristol, Marvin Rees, calmly suggested none of that was very helpful. As a Black man, he more than understood why so many people found the statue offensive.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 pretend, as the son of a Jamaican migrant myself, that the presence of that statue鈥n the middle of the city was anything other than a personal affront to me and people like me.鈥

So what鈥檚 to become of poor old Edward Colston now?

The mayor says he will likely be retrieved from the harbour at some point and probably stuck in a local museum. He鈥檚 quite philosophical about it.

What happened is now part of the city鈥檚 history, he says, 鈥渁nd part of that statue鈥檚 story.鈥

A little alone time, sleeping with the fishes.