VOLUME I
CHAPTER I - In Which the Reader
Is Introduced to a Man of Humanity
Late in the afternoon of a chilly
day in February, two gentlemen were sitting alone over their wine,
in a well-furnished dining parlor, in the town of P
, in
Kentucky. There were no servants
present, and the gentlemen, with chairs closely approaching, seemed
to be discussing some subject with great earnestness.
For convenience sake, we have
said, hitherto, two gentlemen. One of the parties, however, when
critically examined, did not seem, strictly speaking, to come under
the species. He was a short, thick-set man, with coarse,
commonplace features, and that swaggering air of pretension which
marks a low man who is trying to elbow his way upward in t
he world. He was much
over-dressed, in a gaudy vest of many colors, a blue neckerchief,
bedropped gayly with yellow spots, and arranged with a flaunting
tie, quite in keeping with the general air of the man. His
hands, large and coarse, were plentifully bedecked with rings;
and he wore a heavy gold watch-chain, with a bundle of seals of
portentous size, and a great variety of colors, attached to it,--
which, in the ardor of conversation, he was in the habit of
flourishing and jingling with evident satisfaction. His
conversation was in free and easy defiance of Murray's Grammar,*
and was garnished at convenient intervals with various profane
expressions, which not even the desire to be graphic in our account
shall induce us to transcribe.
* English Grammar (1795), by
Lindley Murray (1745-1826), the
most authoritative
American grammarian of his day.
His companion, Mr. Shelby, had
the appearance of a gentleman; and the arrangements of the house,
and the general air of the housekeeping, indicated easy, and even
opulent circumstances. As we before stated, the two were in the
midst of an earnest conversation.
"That is the way I should arrange
the matter," said Mr. Shelby.
"I can't make trade that way--I
positively can't, Mr. Shelby," said the other, holding up a glass
of wine between his eye and the light.
"Why, the fact is, Haley, Tom is
an uncommon fellow; he is certainly worth that sum
anywhere,--steady, honest, capable, manages my whole farm like a
clock."
"You mean honest, as niggers go,"
said Haley, helping himself to a glass of brandy.
"No; I mean, really, Tom is a
good, steady, sensible, pious fellow. He got religion at a
camp-meeting, four years ago; and I believe he really did get it.
I've trusted him, since then, with everything I have,--money,
house, horses,--and let him come and go round the country; and I
always found him true and square in everything."
"Some folks don't believe there
is pious niggers Shelby," said Haley, with a candid flourish of his
hand, "but I do. I had a fellow, now, in this yer last lot I took
to Orleans--'t was as good as a meetin, now, really, to hear that
critter pray; and he was quite gentle and quiet like. He fetched me
a good sum, too, for I bought him cheap of a man that was 'bliged
to sell out; so I realized six hundred on him. Yes, I consider
religion a valeyable thing in a nigger, when it's the genuine
article, and no mistake."
"Well, Tom's got the real
article, if ever a fellow had," rejoined the other. "Why, last
fall, I let him go to Cincinnati alone, to do business for me, and
bring home five hundred dollars. 'Tom,' says I to him, 'I trust
you, because I think you're a Christian--I know you wouldn't
cheat.' Tom comes back, sure enough; I knew he would. Some low
fellows, they say, said to him--Tom, why don't you make tracks for
Canada?' 'Ah, master trusted me, and I couldn't,'--they told me
about it. I am sorry to part with Tom, I must say. You ought to let
him cover the whole balance of the debt; and you would, Haley, if
you had any conscience."
"Well, I've got just as much
conscience as any man in business can afford to keep,--just a
little, you know, to swear by, as 't were," said the trader,
jocularly; "and, then, I'm ready to do anything in reason to 'blige
friends; but this yer, you see, is a leetle too hard on a fellow--a
leetle too hard." The trader sighed contemplatively, and poured out
some more brandy.
"Well, then, Haley, how will you
trade?" said Mr. Shelby, after an uneasy interval of
silence.
"Well, haven't you a boy or gal
that you could throw in with Tom?"
"Hum!--none that I could well
spare; to tell the truth, it's only hard necessity makes me willing
to sell at all. I don't like parting with any of my hands, that's a
fact."
Here the door opened, and a small
quadroon boy, between four and five years of age, entered the room.
There was something in his appearance remarkably beautiful and
engaging. His black hair, fine as floss silk, hung in glossy
curls about his round, dimpled face, while a pair of large dark
eyes, full of fire and softness, looked out from beneath the rich,
long lashes, as he peered curiously into the apartment. A gay robe
of scarlet and yellow plaid, carefully made and neatly fitted, set
off to advantage the dark and rich style of his beauty; and a
certain comic air of assurance, blended with bashfulness, showed
that he had been not unused to being petted and noticed by his
master.
"Hulloa, Jim Crow!" said Mr.
Shelby, whistling, and snapping a bunch of raisins towards him,
"pick that up, now!"
The child scampered, with all his
little strength, after the prize, while his master laughed.
"Come here, Jim Crow," said he.
The child came up, and the master patted the curly head, and
chucked him under the chin.
"Now, Jim, show this gentleman
how you can dance and sing." The boy commenced one of those wild,
grotesque songs common among the negroes, in a rich, clear voice,
accompanying his singing with many comic evolutions of the hands,
feet, and whole body, all in perfect time to the music.
"Bravo!" said Haley, throwing him
a quarter of an orange.
"Now, Jim, walk like old Uncle
Cudjoe, when he has the rheumatism," said his master.
Instantly the flexible limbs of
the child assumed the appearance of deformity and distortion, as,
with his back humped up, and his master's stick in his hand, he
hobbled about the room, his childish face drawn into a doleful
pucker, and spitting from right to left, in imitation of an old
man.
Both gentlemen laughed
uproariously.
"Now, Jim," said his master,
"show us how old Elder Robbins leads the psalm." The boy drew his
chubby face down to a formidable length, and commenced toning a
psalm tune through his nose, with imperturbable gravity.
"Hurrah! bravo! what a young
'un!" said Haley; "that chap's a case, I'll promise. Tell you
what," said he, suddenly clapping his hand on Mr. Shelby's
shoulder, "fling in that chap, and I'll settle the business--I
will. Come, now, if that ain't doing the thing up about the
rightest!"
At this moment, the door was
pushed gently open, and a young quadroon woman, apparently about
twenty-five, entered the room.
There needed only a glance from
the child to her, to identify her as its mother. There was the same
rich, full, dark eye, with its long lashes; the same ripples of
silky black hair. The brown of her complexion gave way on the cheek
to a perceptible flush, which deepened as she saw the gaze of the
strange man fixed upon her in bold and undisguised admiration. Her
dress was of the neatest possible fit, and set off to advantage
her finely moulded shape;--a delicately formed hand and a trim
foot and ankle were items of appearance that did not escape the
quick eye of the trader, well used to run up at a glance the points
of a fine female article.
"Well, Eliza?" said her master,
as she stopped and looked hesitatingly at him. "I was looking for
Harry, please, sir;" and the boy bounded toward her, showing
his spoils, which he had gathered
in the skirt of his robe.
"Well, take him away then," said
Mr. Shelby; and hastily she withdrew, carrying the child on her
arm.
"By Jupiter," said the trader,
turning to him in admiration, "there's an article, now! You
might make your fortune on that ar gal in Orleans, any day. I've
seen over a thousand, in my day, paid down for gals not a bit
handsomer."
"I don't want to make my fortune
on her," said Mr. Shelby, dryly; and, seeking to turn the
conversation, he uncorked a bottle of fresh wine, and asked his
companion's opinion of it.
"Capital, sir,--first chop!" said
the trader; then turning, and slapping his hand familiarly on
Shelby's shoulder, he added--
"Come, how will you trade about
the gal?--what shall I say for her--what'll you take?"
"Mr. Haley, she is not to be
sold," said Shelby. "My wife would not part with her for her weight
in gold."
"Ay, ay! women always say such
things, cause they ha'nt no sort of calculation. Just show 'em how
many watches, feathers, and trinkets, one's weight in gold would
buy, and that alters the case, I reckon."
"I tell you, Haley, this must not
be spoken of; I say no, and I mean no," said Shelby,
decidedly.
"Well, you'll let me have the
boy, though," said the trader; "you must own I've come down pretty
handsomely for him."
"What on earth can you want with
the child?" said Shelby.
"Why, I've got a friend that's
going into this yer branch of the business--wants to buy up
handsome boys to raise for the market. Fancy articles
entirely--sell for waiters, and so on, to rich 'uns, that can pay
for handsome 'uns. It sets off one of yer great places--a real
handsome boy to open door, wait, and tend. They fetch a good sum;
and this little devil is such a comical, musical concern, he's just
the article!'
"I would rather not sell him,"
said Mr. Shelby, thoughtfully; "the fact is, sir, I'm a humane man,
and I hate to take the boy from his mother, sir."
"O, you do?--La! yes--something
of that ar natur. I understand, perfectly. It is mighty onpleasant
getting on with women, sometimes, I al'ays hates these yer
screechin,' screamin' times. They are mighty onpleasant; but, as I
manages business, I generally avoids 'em, sir. Now, what if you get
the girl off for a day, or a week, or so; then the thing's done
quietly,--all over before she comes home.
Your wife might get her some
ear-rings, or a new gown, or some such truck, to make up with
her."
"I'm afraid not."
"Lor bless ye, yes! These
critters ain't like white folks, you know; they gets over things,
only manage right. Now, they say," said Haley, assuming a candid
and confidential air, "that this kind o' trade is hardening to the
feelings; but I never found it so. Fact is, I never could do things
up the way some fellers manage the business. I've seen 'em as would
pull a woman's child out of her arms, and set him up to sell, and
she screechin' like mad all the time;--very bad policy--
damages the article--makes 'em quite unfit for service sometimes. I
knew a real handsome gal once, in Orleans, as was entirely ruined
by this sort o' handling. The fellow that was trading for her
didn't want her baby; and she was one of your real high sort, when
her blood was up. I tell you, she squeezed up her child in her
arms, and talked, and went on real awful. It kinder makes my blood
run cold to think of 't; and when they carried off the child, and
locked her up, she jest went ravin' mad, and died in a week. Clear
waste, sir, of a thousand dollars, just for want of
management,--there's where 't is. It's always best to do the
humane thing, sir; that's been my experience." And the trader
leaned back in his chair, and folded his arm, with an air of
virtuous decision, apparently considering himself a second
Wilberforce.
The subject appeared to interest
the gentleman deeply; for while Mr. Shelby was thoughtfully peeling
an orange, Haley broke out afresh, with becoming diffidence, but as
if actually driven by the force of truth to say a few words
more.
"It don't look well, now, for a
feller to be praisin' himself; but I say it jest because it's the
truth. I believe I'm reckoned to bring in about the finest droves
of niggers that is brought in,--at least, I've been told so; if I
have once, I reckon I have a hundred times,--all in good case,--fat
and likely, and I lose as few as any man in the business. And I
lays it all to my management, sir; and humanity, sir, I may say, is
the great pillar of my management."
Mr. Shelby did not know what to
say, and so he said, "Indeed!"
"Now, I've been laughed at for my
notions, sir, and I've been talked to. They an't
pop'lar, and they an't common;
but I stuck to 'em, sir; I've stuck to 'em, and realized well on
'em; yes, sir, they have paid their passage, I may say," and the
trader laughed at his joke.
There was something so piquant
and original in these elucidations of humanity, that Mr. Shelby
could not help laughing in company. Perhaps you laugh too, dear
reader; but you know humanity comes out in a variety of strange
forms now-a- days, and there is no end to the odd things that
humane people will say and do.
Mr. Shelby's laugh encouraged the
trader to proceed.
"It's strange, now, but I never
could beat this into people's heads. Now, there was Tom Loker, my
old partner, down in Natchez; he was a clever fellow, Tom was, only
the very devil with niggers,--on principle 't was, you see, for a
better hearted feller never broke bread; 't was his system, sir. I
used to talk to Tom. 'Why, Tom,' I used to say, 'when your gals
takes on and cry, what's the use o' crackin on' em over the head,
and knockin' on 'em round? It's ridiculous,' says I, 'and don't do
no sort o' good. Why, I don't see no harm in their cryin',' says I;
'it's natur,' says I, 'and if natur can't blow off one way, it will
another. Besides, Tom,' says I, 'it jest spiles your gals; they get
sickly, and down in the mouth; and sometimes they gets
ugly,--particular yallow gals do,--and it's the devil and all
gettin' on 'em broke in. Now,' says I, 'why can't you kinder coax
'em up, and speak 'em fair? Depend on it, Tom, a little humanity,
thrown in along, goes a heap further than all your jawin' and
crackin'; and it pays better,' says I, 'depend on 't.' But Tom
couldn't get the hang on 't; and he spiled so many for me, that I
had to break off with him, though he was a good-hearted fellow, and
as fair a business hand as is goin'."
"And do you find your ways of
managing do the business better than Tom's?" said Mr. Shelby.
"Why, yes, sir, I may say so. You
see, when I any ways can, I takes a leetle care about the
onpleasant parts, like selling young uns and that,--get the
gals out of the way--out of sight, out of mind, you know,--and
when it's clean done, and can't be helped, they naturally gets
used to it. 'Tan't, you know, as if it was white folks, that's
brought up in the way of 'spectin' to keep their children and
wives, and all that. Niggers, you know, that's fetched up properly,
ha'n't no kind of 'spectations of no kind; so all these things
comes easier."
"I'm afraid mine are not properly
brought up, then," said Mr. Shelby.
"S'pose not; you Kentucky folks
spile your niggers. You mean well by 'em, but 'tan't no real
kindness, arter all. Now, a nigger, you see, what's got to be
hacked and tumbled round the world, and sold to Tom, and Dick, and
the Lord knows
who, 'tan't no kindness to be
givin' on him notions and expectations, and bringin' on him up too
well, for the rough and tumble comes all the harder on him arter.
Now, I venture to say, your niggers would be quite chop-fallen in a
place where some of your plantation niggers would be singing and
whooping like all possessed. Every man, you know, Mr. Shelby,
naturally thinks well of his own ways; and I think I treat
niggers just about as well as it's ever worth while to treat
'em."
"It's a happy thing to be
satisfied," said Mr. Shelby, with a slight shrug, and some
perceptible feelings of a disagreeable nature.
"Well," said Haley, after they
had both silently picked their nuts for a season, "what do you
say?"
"I'll think the matter over, and
talk with my wife," said Mr. Shelby. "Meantime, Haley, if you want
the matter carried on in the quiet way you speak of, you'd best not
let your business in this neighborhood be known. It will get out
among my boys, and it will not be a particularly quiet business
getting away any of my fellows, if they know it, I'll promise
you."
"O! certainly, by all means, mum!
of course. But I'll tell you. I'm in a devil of a hurry, and shall
want to know, as soon as possible, what I may depend on," said he,
rising and putting on his overcoat.
"Well, call up this evening,
between six and seven, and you shall have my answer," said Mr.
Shelby, and the trader bowed himself out of the apartment.
"I'd like to have been able to
kick the fellow down the steps," said he to himself, as he saw the
door fairly closed, "with his impudent assurance; but he knows how
much he has me at advantage. If anybody had ever said to me that I
should sell Tom down south to one of those rascally traders, I
should have said, 'Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this
thing?' And now it must come, for aught I see. And Eliza's child,
too! I know that I shall have some fuss with wife about that; and,
for that matter, about Tom, too. So much for being in
debt,--heigho!
The fellow sees his advantage,
and means to push it."
Perhaps the mildest form of the
system of slavery is to be seen in the State of Kentucky. The
general prevalence of agricultural pursuits of a quiet and gradual
nature, not requiring those periodic seasons of hurry and pressure
that are called for in the business of more southern districts,
makes the task of the negro a more healthful and reasonable one;
while the master, content with a more gradual style of acquisition,
has not those temptations to hardheartedness which always overcome
frail human nature when the prospect of sudden and rapid gain
is
weighed in the balance, with no
heavier counterpoise than the interests of the helpless and
unprotected.
Whoever visits some estates
there, and witnesses the good-humored indulgence of some masters
and mistresses, and the affectionate loyalty of some slaves, might
be tempted to dream the oft-fabled poetic legend of a patriarchal
institution, and all that; but over and above the scene there
broods a portentous shadow--the shadow of law. So long as the law
considers all these human beings, with beating hearts and living
affections, only as so many things belonging to a master,--so
long as the failure, or misfortune, or imprudence, or death of the
kindest owner, may cause them any day to exchange a life of kind
protection and indulgence for one of hopeless misery and toil,--so
long it is impossible to make anything beautiful or desirable in
the best regulated administration of slavery.
Mr. Shelby was a fair average
kind of man, good-natured and kindly, and disposed to easy
indulgence of those around him, and there had never been a
lack of anything which might contribute to the physical comfort of
the negroes on his estate. He had, however, speculated largely and
quite loosely; had involved himself deeply, and his notes to a
large amount had come into the hands of Haley; and this small
piece of information is the key to the preceding
conversation.
Now, it had so happened that, in
approaching the door, Eliza had caught enough of the conversation
to know that a trader was making offers to her master for
somebody.
She would gladly have stopped at
the door to listen, as she came out; but her mistress just then
calling, she was obliged to hasten away.
Still she thought she heard the
trader make an offer for her boy;--could she be mistaken? Her heart
swelled and throbbed, and she involuntarily strained him so tight
that the little fellow looked up into her face in
astonishment.
"Eliza, girl, what ails you
today?" said her mistress, when Eliza had upset the wash-pitcher,
knocked down the workstand, and finally was abstractedly offering
her mistress a long nightgown in place of the silk dress she had
ordered her to bring from the wardrobe.
Eliza started. "O, missis!" she
said, raising her eyes; then, bursting into tears, she sat down in
a chair, and began sobbing.
"Why, Eliza child, what ails
you?" said her mistress.
"O! missis, missis," said Eliza,
"there's been a trader talking with master in the parlor! I heard
him."
"Well, silly child, suppose there
has."
"O, missis, do you suppose mas'r
would sell my Harry?" And the poor creature threw herself into a
chair, and sobbed convulsively.
"Sell him! No, you foolish girl!
You know your master never deals with those southern traders, and
never means to sell any of his servants, as long as they behave
well. Why, you silly child, who do you think would want to buy your
Harry? Do you think all the world are set on him as you are, you
goosie? Come, cheer up, and hook my dress. There now, put my back
hair up in that pretty braid you learnt the other day, and don't go
listening at doors any more."
"Well, but, missis, you never
would give your consent--to--to--"
"Nonsense, child! to be sure, I
shouldn't. What do you talk so for? I would as soon have one of my
own children sold. But really, Eliza, you are getting altogether
too proud of that little fellow. A man can't put his nose into the
door, but you think he must be coming to buy him."
Reassured by her mistress'
confident tone, Eliza proceeded nimbly and adroitly with her
toilet, laughing at her own fears, as she proceeded.
Mrs. Shelby was a woman of high
class, both intellectually and morally. To that natural magnanimity
and generosity of mind which one often marks as characteristic of
the women of Kentucky, she added high moral and religious
sensibility and principle, carried out with great energy and
ability into practical results. Her husband, who made no
professions to any particular religious character, nevertheless
reverenced and respected the consistency of hers, and stood,
perhaps, a little in awe of her opinion. Certain it was that he
gave her unlimited scope in all her benevolent efforts for the
comfort, instruction, and improvement of her servants, though he
never took any decided part in them himself. In fact, if not
exactly a believer in the doctrine of the efficiency of the extra
good works of saints, he really seemed somehow or other to fancy
that his wife had piety and benevolence enough for two--to indulge
a shadowy expectation of getting into heaven through her
superabundance of qualities to which he made no particular
pretension.
The heaviest load on his mind,
after his conversation with the trader, lay in the foreseen
necessity of breaking to his wife the arrangement contemplated,--
meeting the importunities and opposition which he knew he should
have reason
to encounter.
Mrs. Shelby, being entirely
ignorant of her husband's embarrassments, and knowing only the
general kindliness of his temper, had been quite sincere in the
entire incredulity with which she had met Eliza's suspicions. In
fact, she dismissed the matter from her mind, without a second
thought; and being occupied in preparations for an evening visit,
it passed out of her thoughts entirely.
CHAPTER II - The Mother
Eliza had been brought up by her
mistress, from girlhood, as a petted and indulged favorite.
The traveller in the south must
often have remarked that peculiar air of refinement, that softness
of voice and manner, which seems in many cases to be a particular
gift to the quadroon and mulatto women. These natural graces in the
quadroon are often united with beauty of the most dazzling kind,
and in almost every case with a personal appearance prepossessing
and agreeable. Eliza, such as we have described her, is not a fancy
sketch, but taken from remembrance, as we saw her, years ago, in
Kentucky. Safe under the protecting care of her mistress, Eliza
had reached maturity without those temptations which make beauty
so fatal an inheritance to a slave. She had been married to a
bright and talented young mulatto man, who was a slave on a
neighboring estate, and bore the name of George Harris.
This young man had been hired out
by his master to work in a bagging factory, where his adroitness
and ingenuity caused him to be considered the first hand in the
place. He had invented a machine for the cleaning of the hemp,
which, considering the education and circumstances of the inventor,
displayed quite as much mechanical genius as Whitney's
cotton-gin.*
* A machine of this description
was really the invention of
a young colored man in
Kentucky. [Mrs. Stowe's note.]
He was possessed of a handsome
person and pleasing manners, and was a general favorite in the
factory. Nevertheless, as this young man was in the eye of the law
not a man, but a thing, all these superior qualifications were
subject to the control of a vulgar, narrow-minded, tyrannical
master. This same gentleman, having heard of the fame of George's
invention, took a ride over to the factory, to see what this
intelligent chattel had been about. He was received with great
enthusiasm by the employer, who congratulated him on possessing so
valuable a slave.
He was waited upon over the
factory, shown the machinery by George, who, in high spirits,
talked so fluently, held himself so erect, looked so handsome and
manly, that his master began to feel an uneasy consciousness of
inferiority. What business had his slave to be marching round the
country, inventing machines, and holding up his head among
gentlemen? He'd soon put a stop to it. He'd take him back, and put
him to hoeing and digging, and "see if he'd step about so
smart." Accordingly, the
manufacturer and all hands concerned were astounded when he
suddenly demanded George's wages, and announced his intention of
taking him home.
"But, Mr. Harris," remonstrated
the manufacturer, "isn't this rather sudden?" "What if it
is?--isn't the man mine?"
"We would be willing, sir, to
increase the rate of compensation."
"No object at all, sir. I don't
need to hire any of my hands out, unless I've a mind to."
"But, sir, he seems peculiarly
adapted to this business."
"Dare say he may be; never was
much adapted to anything that I set him about, I'll be
bound."
"But only think of his inventing
this machine," interposed one of the workmen, rather
unluckily.
"O yes! a machine for saving
work, is it? He'd invent that, I'll be bound; let a nigger alone
for that, any time. They are all labor-saving machines themselves,
every one of 'em. No, he shall tramp!"
George had stood like one
transfixed, at hearing his doom thus suddenly pronounced by a power
that he knew was irresistible. He folded his arms, tightly pressed
in his lips, but a whole volcano of bitter feelings burned in his
bosom, and sent streams of fire through his veins. He breathed
short, and his large dark eyes flashed like live coals; and he
might have broken out into some dangerous ebullition, had not the
kindly manufacturer touched him on the arm, and said, in a low
tone,
"Give way, George; go with him
for the present. We'll try to help you, yet."
The tyrant observed the whisper,
and conjectured its import, though he could not hear what was said;
and he inwardly strengthened himself in his determination to keep
the power he possessed over his victim.
George was taken home, and put to
the meanest drudgery of the farm. He had been able to repress every
disrespectful word; but the flashing eye, the gloomy and troubled
brow, were part of a natural language that could not be
repressed,-- indubitable signs, which showed too plainly that the
man could not become a
thing.
It was during the happy period of
his employment in the factory that George had seen and married his
wife. During that period,--being much trusted and favored by his
employer,--he had free liberty to come and go at discretion. The
marriage was highly approved of by Mrs. Shelby, who, with a
little womanly complacency in match-making, felt pleased to unite
her handsome favorite with one of her own class who seemed in every
way suited to her; and so they were married in her mistress' great
parlor, and her mistress herself adorned the bride's beautiful hair
with orange-blossoms, and threw over it the bridal veil, which
certainly could scarce have rested on a fairer head; and there was
no lack of white gloves, and cake and wine,--of admiring guests to
praise the bride's beauty, and her mistress' indulgence and
liberality. For a year or two Eliza saw her husband frequently, and
there was nothing to interrupt their happiness, except the loss of
two infant children, to whom she was passionately attached, and
whom she mourned with a grief so intense as to call for gentle
remonstrance from her mistress, who sought, with maternal anxiety,
to direct her naturally passionate feelings within the bounds of
reason and religion.
After the birth of little Harry,
however, she had gradually become tranquillized and settled; and
every bleeding tie and throbbing nerve, once more entwined with
that little life, seemed to become sound and healthful, and Eliza
was a happy woman up to the time that her husband was rudely torn
from his kind employer, and brought under the iron sway of his
legal owner.
The manufacturer, true to his
word, visited Mr. Harris a week or two after George had been taken
away, when, as he hoped, the heat of the occasion had passed away,
and tried every possible inducement to lead him to restore him to
his former employment.
"You needn't trouble yourself to
talk any longer," said he, doggedly; "I know my own business,
sir."
"I did not presume to interfere
with it, sir. I only thought that you might think it for your
interest to let your man to us on the terms proposed."
"O, I understand the matter well
enough. I saw your winking and whispering, the day I took him out
of the factory; but you don't come it over me that way. It's a free
country, sir; the man's mine, and I do what I please with
him,--that's it!"
And so fell George's last
hope;--nothing before him but a life of toil and drudgery, rendered
more bitter by every little smarting vexation and indignity which
tyrannical ingenuity could devise.
A very humane jurist once said,
The worst use you can put a man to is to hang him. No; there is
another use that a man can be put to that is WORSE!
CHAPTER III - The Husband and
Father
Mrs. Shelby had gone on her
visit, and Eliza stood in the verandah, rather dejectedly looking
after the retreating carriage, when a hand was laid on her
shoulder. She turned, and a bright smile lighted up her fine
eyes.
"George, is it you? How you
frightened me! Well; I am so glad you 's come! Missis is gone to
spend the afternoon; so come into my little room, and we'll have
the time all to ourselves."
Saying this, she drew him into a
neat little apartment opening on the verandah, where she generally
sat at her sewing, within call of her mistress.
"How glad I am!--why don't you
smile?--and look at Harry--how he grows." The boy stood shyly
regarding his father through his curls, holding close to the
skirts of his mother's dress. "Isn't he beautiful?" said Eliza,
lifting his long curls and kissing him.
"I wish he'd never been born!"
said George, bitterly. "I wish I'd never been born myself!"
Surprised and frightened, Eliza
sat down, leaned her head on her husband's shoulder, and burst into
tears.
"There now, Eliza, it's too bad
for me to make you feel so, poor girl!" said he, fondly; "it's too
bad: O, how I wish you never had seen me--you might have been
happy!"
"George! George! how can you talk
so? What dreadful thing has happened, or is going to happen? I'm
sure we've been very happy, till lately."
"So we have, dear," said George.
Then drawing his child on his knee, he gazed intently on his
glorious dark eyes, and passed his hands through his long
curls.
"Just like you, Eliza; and you
are the handsomest woman I ever saw, and the best one I ever wish
to see; but, oh, I wish I'd never seen you, nor you me!"
"O, George, how can you!"
"Yes, Eliza, it's all misery,
misery, misery! My life is bitter as wormwood; the very life is
burning out of me. I'm a poor, miserable, forlorn drudge; I shall
only drag
you down with me, that's all.
What's the use of our trying to do anything, trying to know
anything, trying to be anything? What's the use of living? I wish I
was dead!"
"O, now, dear George, that is
really wicked! I know how you feel about losing your place in the
factory, and you have a hard master; but pray be patient, and
perhaps something--"
"Patient!" said he, interrupting
her; "haven't I been patient? Did I say a word when he came and
took me away, for no earthly reason, from the place where everybody
was kind to me? I'd paid him truly every cent of my earnings,--and
they all say I worked well."
"Well, it is dreadful," said
Eliza; "but, after all, he is your master, you know."
"My master! and who made him my
master? That's what I think of--what right has he to me? I'm a man
as much as he is. I'm a better man than he is. I know more about
business than he does; I am a better manager than he is; I can read
better than he can; I can write a better hand,--and I've learned it
all myself, and no thanks to him,--I've learned it in spite of him;
and now what right has he to make a dray-horse of me?--to take me
from things I can do, and do better than he can, and put me to work
that any horse can do? He tries to do it; he says he'll bring me
down and humble me, and he puts me to just the hardest, meanest and
dirtiest work, on purpose!"
"O, George! George! you frighten
me! Why, I never heard you talk so; I'm afraid you'll do something
dreadful. I don't wonder at your feelings, at all; but oh, do be
careful--do, do--for my sake--for Harry's!"
"I have been careful, and I have
been patient, but it's growing worse and worse; flesh and blood
can't bear it any longer;--every chance he can get to insult and
torment me, he takes. I thought I could do my work well, and keep
on quiet, and have some time to read and learn out of work hours;
but the more he see I can do, the more he loads on. He says that
though I don't say anything, he sees I've got the devil in me,
and he means to bring it out; and one of these days it will come
out in a way that he won't like, or I'm mistaken!"
"O dear! what shall we do?" said
Eliza, mournfully.
"It was only yesterday," said
George, "as I was busy loading stones into a cart, that young Mas'r
Tom stood there, slashing his whip so near the horse that the
creature was frightened. I asked him to stop, as pleasant as I
could,--he just kept right on. I begged him again, and then he
turned on me, and began striking me. I
held his hand, and then he
screamed and kicked and ran to his father, and told him that I was
fighting him. He came in a rage, and said he'd teach me who was my
master; and he tied me to a tree, and cut switches for young
master, and told him that he might whip me till he was tired;--and
he did do it! If I don't make him remember it, some time!" and the
brow of the young man grew dark, and his eyes burned with an
expression that made his young wife tremble. "Who made this man
my master? That's what I want to know!" he said.
"Well," said Eliza, mournfully,
"I always thought that I must obey my master and mistress, or I
couldn't be a Christian."
"There is some sense in it, in
your case; they have brought you up like a child, fed you, clothed
you, indulged you, and taught you, so that you have a good
education; that is some reason why they should claim you. But
I have been kicked and cuffed and sworn at, and at the best only
let alone; and what do I owe? I've paid for all my keeping a
hundred times over. I won't bear it. No, I won't!" he said,
clenching his hand with a fierce frown.
Eliza trembled, and was silent.
She had never seen her husband in this mood before; and her gentle
system of ethics seemed to bend like a reed in the surges of such
passions.
"You know poor little Carlo, that
you gave me," added George; "the creature has been about all the
comfort that I've had. He has slept with me nights, and
followed me around days, and kind o' looked at me as if he
understood how I felt. Well, the other day I was just feeding him
with a few old scraps I picked up by the kitchen door, and Mas'r
came along, and said I was feeding him up at his expense,
and that he couldn't afford to have every nigger keeping his dog,
and ordered me to tie a stone to his neck and throw him in the
pond."
"O, George, you didn't do
it!"
"Do it? not I!--but he did. Mas'r
and Tom pelted the poor drowning creature with stones. Poor thing!
he looked at me so mournful, as if he wondered why I didn't save
him. I had to take a flogging because I wouldn't do it myself. I
don't care.
Mas'r will find out that I'm one
that whipping won't tame. My day will come yet, if he don't look
out."
"What are you going to do? O,
George, don't do anything wicked; if you only trust in God, and try
to do right, he'll deliver you."
"I an't a Christian like you,
Eliza; my heart's full of bitterness; I can't trust in God. Why
does he let things be so?"
"O, George, we must have faith.
Mistress says that when all things go wrong to us, we must believe
that God is doing the very best."
"That's easy to say for people
that are sitting on their sofas and riding in their carriages; but
let 'em be where I am, I guess it would come some harder. I wish I
could be good; but my heart burns, and can't be reconciled, anyhow.
You couldn't in my place,--you can't now, if I tell you all I've
got to say. You don't know the whole yet."
"What can be coming now?"
"Well, lately Mas'r has been
saying that he was a fool to let me marry off the place; that he
hates Mr. Shelby and all his tribe, because they are proud,
and hold their heads up above him, and that I've got proud notions
from you; and he says he won't let me come here any more, and that
I shall take a wife and settle down on his place. At first he only
scolded and grumbled these things; but yesterday he told me that I
should take Mina for a wife, and settle down in a cabin with her,
or he would sell me down river."
"Why--but you were married to me,
by the minister, as much as if you'd been a white man!" said Eliza,
simply.
"Don't you know a slave can't be
married? There is no law in this country for that; I can't hold you
for my wife, if he chooses to part us. That's why I wish I'd never
seen you,--why I wish I'd never been born; it would have been
better for us both,-
-it would have been better for
this poor child if he had never been born. All this may happen to
him yet!"
"O, but master is so kind!"
"Yes, but who knows?--he may
die--and then he may be sold to nobody knows who. What pleasure is
it that he is handsome, and smart, and bright? I tell you, Eliza,
that a sword will pierce through your soul for every good and
pleasant thing your child is or has; it will make him worth too
much for you to keep."
The words smote heavily on
Eliza's heart; the vision of the trader came before her eyes, and,
as if some one had struck her a deadly blow, she turned pale and
gasped for breath. She looked nervously out on the verandah, where
the boy, tired of the grave conversation, had retired, and where he
was riding triumphantly up and down on Mr. Shelby's walking-stick.
She would have spoken to tell her husband her fears, but checked
herself.
"No, no,--he has enough to bear,
poor fellow!" she thought. "No, I won't tell him; besides, it an't
true; Missis never deceives us."
"So, Eliza, my girl," said the
husband, mournfully, "bear up, now; and good-by, for I'm
going."
"Going, George! Going
where?"
"To Canada," said he,
straightening himself up; "and when I'm there, I'll buy you; that's
all the hope that's left us. You have a kind master, that won't
refuse to sell you. I'll buy you and the boy;--God helping me, I
will!"
"O, dreadful! if you should be
taken?"
"I won't be taken, Eliza; I'll
die first! I'll be free, or I'll die!" "You won't kill
yourself!"
"No need of that. They will kill
me, fast enough; they never will get me down the river
alive!"
"O, George, for my sake, do be
careful! Don't do anything wicked; don't lay hands on yourself, or
anybody else! You are tempted too much--too much; but don't--go you
must--but go carefully, prudently; pray God to help you."
"Well, then, Eliza, hear my plan.
Mas'r took it into his head to send me right by here, with a note
to Mr. Symmes, that lives a mile past. I believe he expected I
should come here to tell you what I have. It would please him, if
he thought it would aggravate 'Shelby's folks,' as he calls 'em.
I'm going home quite resigned, you understand, as if all was over.
I've got some preparations made,--and there are those that will
help me; and, in the course of a week or so, I shall be among the
missing, some day. Pray for me, Eliza; perhaps the good Lord will
hear you."
"O, pray yourself, George, and go
trusting in him; then you won't do anything wicked."
"Well, now, good-by," said
George, holding Eliza's hands, and gazing into her eyes, without
moving. They stood silent; then there were last words, and sobs,
and bitter weeping,--such parting as those may make whose hope to
meet again is as the spider's web,--and the husband and wife were
parted.
CHAPTER IV - An Evening in Uncle
Tom's Cabin
The cabin of Uncle Tom was a
small log building, close adjoining to "the house," as the negro
par excellence designates his master's dwelling. In front it had a
neat garden-patch, where, every summer, strawberries, raspberries,
and a variety of fruits and vegetables, flourished under careful
tending. The whole front of it was covered by a large scarlet
bignonia and a native multiflora rose, which, entwisting and
interlacing, left scarce a vestige of the rough logs to be seen.
Here, also, in summer, various brilliant annuals, such as
marigolds, petunias, four-o'clocks, found an indulgent corner in
which to unfold their splendors, and were the delight and
pride of Aunt Chloe's heart.
Let us enter the dwelling. The
evening meal at the house is over, and Aunt Chloe, who presided
over its preparation as head cook, has left to inferior officers in
the kitchen the business of clearing away and washing dishes, and
come out into her own snug territories, to "get her ole man's
supper"; therefore, doubt not that it is her you see by the fire,
presiding with anxious interest over certain frizzling items in a
stew-pan, and anon with grave consideration lifting the cover of
a bake- kettle, from whence steam forth indubitable intimations of
"something good." A round, black, shining face is hers, so glossy
as to suggest the idea that she might have been washed over with
white of eggs, like one of her own tea rusks. Her whole plump
countenance beams with satisfaction and contentment from under her
well-starched checked turban, bearing on it, however, if we must
confess it, a little of that tinge of self-consciousness which
becomes the first cook of the neighborhood, as Aunt Chloe was
universally held and acknowledged to be.
A cook she certainly was, in the
very bone and centre of her soul. Not a chicken or turkey or duck
in the barn-yard but looked grave when they saw her approaching,
and seemed evidently to be reflecting on their latter end; and
certain it was that she was always meditating on trussing, stuffing
and roasting, to a degree that was calculated to inspire terror in
any reflecting fowl living. Her corn-cake, in all its varieties of
hoe-cake, dodgers, muffins, and other species too numerous to
mention, was a sublime mystery to all less practised compounders;
and she would shake her fat sides with honest pride and
merriment, as she would narrate the fruitless efforts that one
and another of her compeers had made to attain to her
elevation.
The arrival of company at the
house, the arranging of dinners and suppers "in style," awoke all
the energies of her soul; and no sight was more welcome to her than
a pile of travelling trunks launched on the verandah, for then she
foresaw fresh efforts and fresh triumphs.
Just at present, however, Aunt
Chloe is looking into the bake-pan; in which congenial operation we
shall leave her till we finish our picture of the cottage.
In one corner of it stood a bed,
covered neatly with a snowy spread; and by the side of it was a
piece of carpeting, of some considerable size. On this piece of
carpeting Aunt Chloe took her stand, as being decidedly in the
upper walks of life; and it and the bed by which it lay, and the
whole corner, in fact, were treated with distinguished
consideration, and made, so far as possible, sacred from the
marauding inroads and desecrations of little folks. In fact, that
corner was the drawing-room of the establishment. In the other
corner was a bed of much humbler pretensions, and evidently
designed for use. The wall over the fireplace was adorned with some
very brilliant scriptural prints, and a portrait of General
Washington, drawn and colored in a manner which would certainly
have astonished that hero, if ever he happened to meet with its
like.
On a rough bench in the corner, a
couple of woolly-headed boys, with glistening black eyes and fat
shining cheeks, were busy in superintending the first walking
operations of the baby, which, as is usually the case, consisted in
getting up on its feet, balancing a moment, and then tumbling
down,--each successive failure being violently cheered, as
something decidedly clever.
A table, somewhat rheumatic in
its limbs, was drawn out in front of the fire, and covered with a
cloth, displaying cups and saucers of a decidedly brilliant
pattern, with other symptoms of an approaching meal. At this
table was seated Uncle Tom, Mr. Shelby's best hand, who, as he
is to be the hero of our story, we must daguerreotype for our
readers. He was a large, broad-chested, powerfully-made man, of a
full glossy black, and a face whose truly African features were
characterized by an expression of grave and steady good sense,
united with much kindliness and benevolence. There was something
about his whole air self- respecting and dignified, yet united with
a confiding and humble simplicity.
He was very busily intent at this
moment on a slate lying before him, on which he was carefully and
slowly endeavoring to accomplish a copy of some letters, in which
operation he was overlooked by young Mas'r George, a smart, bright
boy of thirteen, who appeared fully to realize the dignity of his
position as instructor.
"Not that way, Uncle Tom,--not
that way," said he, briskly, as Uncle Tom laboriously brought up
the tail of his g the wrong side out; "that makes a q, you
see."
"La sakes, now, does it?" said
Uncle Tom, looking with a respectful, admiring air, as his young
teacher flourishingly scrawled q's and g's innumerable for
his
edification; and then, taking the
pencil in his big, heavy fingers, he patiently recommenced.
"How easy white folks al'us does
things!" said Aunt Chloe, pausing while she was greasing a griddle
with a scrap of bacon on her fork, and regarding young Master
George with pride. "The way he can write, now! and read, too! and
then to come out here evenings and read his lessons to us,--it's
mighty interestin'!"
"But, Aunt Chloe, I'm getting
mighty hungry," said George. "Isn't that cake in the skillet almost
done?"
"Mose done, Mas'r George," said
Aunt Chloe, lifting the lid and peeping in,-- "browning
beautiful--a real lovely brown. Ah! let me alone for dat. Missis
let Sally try to make some cake, t' other day, jes to larn her, she
said. 'O, go way, Missis,' said I; 'it really hurts my feelin's,
now, to see good vittles spilt dat ar way! Cake ris all to one
side--no shape at all; no more than my shoe; go way!"
And with this final expression of
contempt for Sally's greenness, Aunt Chloe whipped the cover off
the bake-kettle, and disclosed to view a neatly-baked pound-cake,
of which no city confectioner need to have been ashamed. This being
evidently the central point of the entertainment, Aunt Chloe began
now to bustle about earnestly in the supper department.
"Here you, Mose and Pete! get out
de way, you niggers! Get away, Polly, honey,-- mammy'll give her
baby some fin, by and by. Now, Mas'r George, you jest take off dem
books, and set down now with my old man, and I'll take up de
sausages, and have de first griddle full of cakes on your plates in
less dan no time."
"They wanted me to come to supper
in the house," said George; "but I knew what was what too well for
that, Aunt Chloe."
"So you did--so you did, honey,"
said Aunt Chloe, heaping the smoking batter- cakes on his plate;
"you know'd your old aunty'd keep the best for you. O, let you
alone for dat! Go way!" And, with that, aunty gave George a nudge
with her finger, designed to be immensely facetious, and turned
again to her griddle with great briskness.
"Now for the cake," said Mas'r
George, when the activity of the griddle department had somewhat
subsided; and, with that, the youngster flourished a large
knife over the article in question.
"La bless you, Mas'r George!"
said Aunt Chloe, with earnestness, catching his arm, "you wouldn't
be for cuttin' it wid dat ar great heavy knife! Smash all
down--
spile all de pretty rise of it.
Here, I've got a thin old knife, I keeps sharp a purpose. Dar now,
see! comes apart light as a feather! Now eat away--you won't get
anything to beat dat ar."
"Tom Lincon says," said George,
speaking with his mouth full, "that their Jinny is a better cook
than you."
"Dem Lincons an't much count, no
way!" said Aunt Chloe, contemptuously; "I mean, set along side
our folks. They 's 'spectable folks enough in a kinder plain way;
but, as to gettin' up anything in style, they don't begin to have a
notion on 't. Set Mas'r Lincon, now, alongside Mas'r Shelby! Good
Lor! and Missis Lincon,--can she kinder sweep it into a room like
my missis,--so kinder splendid, yer know! O, go way! don't tell me
nothin' of dem Lincons!"--and Aunt Chloe tossed her head as one who
hoped she did know something of the world.
"Well, though, I've heard you
say," said George, "that Jinny was a pretty fair cook."
"So I did," said Aunt Chloe,--"I
may say dat. Good, plain, common cookin', Jinny'll do;--make a good
pone o' bread,--bile her taters far,--her corn cakes isn't extra,
not extra now, Jinny's corn cakes isn't, but then they's far,--but,
Lor, come to de higher branches, and what can she do? Why, she
makes pies--sartin she does; but what kinder crust? Can she make
your real flecky paste, as melts in your mouth, and lies all up
like a puff? Now, I went over thar when Miss Mary was gwine to be
married, and Jinny she jest showed me de weddin' pies. Jinny and I
is good friends, ye know. I never said nothin'; but go 'long, Mas'r
George! Why, I shouldn't sleep a wink for a week, if I had a batch
of pies like dem ar. Why, dey wan't no 'count 't all."
"I suppose Jinny thought they
were ever so nice," said George.
"Thought so!--didn't she? Thar
she was, showing em, as innocent--ye see, it's jest here, Jinny
don't know. Lor, the family an't nothing! She can't be spected
to know! 'Ta'nt no fault o' hem. Ah, Mas'r George, you doesn't know
half 'your privileges in yer family and bringin' up!" Here Aunt
Chloe sighed, and rolled up her eyes with emotion.
"I'm sure, Aunt Chloe, I
understand my pie and pudding privileges," said George. "Ask Tom
Lincon if I don't crow over him, every time I meet him."
Aunt Chloe sat back in her chair,
and indulged in a hearty guffaw of laughter, at this witticism of
young Mas'r's, laughing till the tears rolled down her black,
shining cheeks, and varying the exercise with playfully slapping
and poking Mas'r
Georgey, and telling him to go
way, and that he was a case--that he was fit to kill her, and that
he sartin would kill her, one of these days; and, between each of
these sanguinary predictions, going off into a laugh, each longer
and stronger than the other, till George really began to think
that he was a very dangerously witty fellow, and that it became him
to be careful how he talked "as funny as he could."
"And so ye telled Tom, did ye? O,
Lor! what young uns will be up ter! Ye crowed over Tom? O, Lor!
Mas'r George, if ye wouldn't make a hornbug laugh!"
"Yes," said George, "I says to
him, 'Tom, you ought to see some of Aunt Chloe's pies; they're the
right sort,' says I."
"Pity, now, Tom couldn't," said
Aunt Chloe, on whose benevolent heart the idea of Tom's benighted
condition seemed to make a strong impression. "Ye oughter just ask
him here to dinner, some o' these times, Mas'r George," she added;
"it would look quite pretty of ye. Ye know, Mas'r George, ye
oughtenter feel 'bove nobody, on 'count yer privileges, 'cause all
our privileges is gi'n to us; we ought al'ays to 'member that,"
said Aunt Chloe, looking quite serious.
"Well, I mean to ask Tom here,
some day next week," said George; "and you do your prettiest, Aunt
Chloe, and we'll make him stare. Won't we make him eat so he won't
get over it for a fortnight?"
"Yes, yes--sartin," said Aunt
Chloe, delighted; "you'll see. Lor! to think of some of our
dinners! Yer mind dat ar great chicken pie I made when we guv de
dinner to General Knox? I and Missis, we come pretty near
quarrelling about dat ar crust. What does get into ladies
sometimes, I don't know; but, sometimes, when a body has de
heaviest kind o' 'sponsibility on 'em, as ye may say, and is all
kinder 'seris' and taken up, dey takes dat ar time to be hangin'
round and kinder interferin'!
Now, Missis, she wanted me to do
dis way, and she wanted me to do dat way; and, finally, I got
kinder sarcy, and, says I, 'Now, Missis, do jist look at dem
beautiful white hands o' yourn with long fingers, and all a
sparkling with rings, like my white lilies when de dew 's on 'em;
and look at my great black stumpin hands. Now, don't ye think dat
de Lord must have meant me to make de pie- crust, and you to stay
in de parlor? Dar! I was jist so sarcy, Mas'r George."
"And what did mother say?" said
George.
"Say?--why, she kinder larfed in
her eyes--dem great handsome eyes o' hern; and, says she, 'Well,
Aunt Chloe, I think you are about in the right on 't,' says she;
and she went off in de parlor. She oughter cracked me over de head
for bein' so sarcy; but dar's whar 't is--I can't do nothin' with
ladies in de kitchen!"
"Well, you made out well with
that dinner,--I remember everybody said so," said George.
"Didn't I? And wan't I behind de
dinin'-room door dat bery day? and didn't I see de General pass his
plate three times for some more dat bery pie?--and, says he, 'You
must have an uncommon cook, Mrs. Shelby.' Lor! I was fit to split
myself.
"And de Gineral, he knows what
cookin' is," said Aunt Chloe, drawing herself up with an air. "Bery
nice man, de Gineral! He comes of one of de bery fustest
families in Old Virginny! He knows what's what, now, as well as I
do--de Gineral. Ye see, there's pints in all pies, Mas'r George;
but tan't everybody knows what they is, or as orter be. But the
Gineral, he knows; I knew by his 'marks he made. Yes, he knows what
de pints is!"
By this time, Master George had
arrived at that pass to which even a boy can come (under uncommon
circumstances, when he really could not eat another morsel), and,
therefore, he was at leisure to notice the pile of woolly heads and
glistening eyes which were regarding their operations hungrily from
the opposite corner.
"Here, you Mose, Pete," he said,
breaking off liberal bits, and throwing it at them; "you want some,
don't you? Come, Aunt Chloe, bake them some cakes."
And George and Tom moved to a
comfortable seat in the chimney-corner, while Aunte Chloe, after
baking a goodly pile of cakes, took her baby on her lap, and began
alternately filling its mouth and her own, and distributing to Mose
and Pete, who seemed rather to prefer eating theirs as they rolled
about on the floor under the table, tickling each other, and
occasionally pulling the baby's toes.
"O! go long, will ye?" said the
mother, giving now and then a kick, in a kind of general way, under
the table, when the movement became too obstreperous. "Can't ye be
decent when white folks comes to see ye? Stop dat ar, now, will ye?
Better mind yerselves, or I'll take ye down a button-hole lower,
when Mas'r George is gone!"
What meaning was couched under
this terrible threat, it is difficult to say; but certain it is
that its awful indistinctness seemed to produce very little
impression on the young sinners addressed.
"La, now!" said Uncle Tom, "they
are so full of tickle all the while, they can't behave
theirselves."
Here the boys emerged from under
the table, and, with hands and faces well plastered with molasses,
began a vigorous kissing of the baby.
"Get along wid ye!" said the
mother, pushing away their woolly heads. "Ye'll all stick together,
and never get clar, if ye do dat fashion. Go long to de spring and
wash yerselves!" she said, seconding her exhortations by a slap,
which resounded very formidably, but which seemed only to knock out
so much more laugh from the young ones, as they tumbled
precipitately over each other out of doors, where they fairly
screamed with merriment.
"Did ye ever see such aggravating
young uns?" said Aunt Chloe, rather complacently, as, producing an
old towel, kept for such emergencies, she poured a little water out
of the cracked tea-pot on it, and began rubbing off the molasses
from the baby's face and hands; and, having polished her till she
shone, she set her down in Tom's lap, while she busied herself in
clearing away supper. The baby employed the intervals in pulling
Tom's nose, scratching his face, and burying her fat hands in
his woolly hair, which last operation seemed to afford her
special content.
"Aint she a peart young un?" said
Tom, holding her from him to take a full-length view; then, getting
up, he set her on his broad shoulder, and began capering and
dancing with her, while Mas'r George snapped at her with his
pocket- handkerchief, and Mose and Pete, now returned again, roared
after her like bears, till Aunt Chloe declared that they "fairly
took her head off" with their noise. As, according to her own
statement, this surgical operation was a matter of daily occurrence
in the cabin, the declaration no whit abated the merriment, till
every one had roared and tumbled and danced themselves down to a
state of composure.
"Well, now, I hopes you're done,"
said Aunt Chloe, who had been busy in pulling out a rude box of a
trundle-bed; "and now, you Mose and you Pete, get into thar; for
we's goin' to have the meetin'."
"O mother, we don't wanter. We
wants to sit up to meetin',--meetin's is so curis. We likes
'em."
"La, Aunt Chloe, shove it under,
and let 'em sit up," said Mas'r George, decisively, giving a push
to the rude machine.
Aunt Chloe, having thus saved
appearances, seemed highly delighted to push the thing under,
saying, as she did so, "Well, mebbe 't will do 'em some
good."
The house now resolved itself
into a committee of the whole, to consider the
accommodations and arrangements
for the meeting.
"What we's to do for cheers, now,
I declar I don't know," said Aunt Chloe. As the meeting had been
held at Uncle Tom's weekly, for an indefinite length of time,
without any more "cheers," there seemed some encouragement to hope
that a way would be discovered at present.
"Old Uncle Peter sung both de
legs out of dat oldest cheer, last week," suggested Mose.
"You go long! I'll boun' you
pulled 'em out; some o' your shines," said Aunt Chloe. "Well, it'll
stand, if it only keeps jam up agin de wall!" said Mose.
"Den Uncle Peter mus'n't sit in
it, cause he al'ays hitches when he gets a singing. He hitched
pretty nigh across de room, t' other night," said Pete.
"Good Lor! get him in it, then,"
said Mose, "and den he'd begin, 'Come saints--and sinners, hear me
tell,' and den down he'd go,"--and Mose imitated precisely the
nasal tones of the old man, tumbling on the floor, to illustrate
the supposed catastrophe.
"Come now, be decent, can't ye?"
said Aunt Chloe; "an't yer shamed?"
Mas'r George, however, joined the
offender in the laugh, and declared decidedly that Mose was a
"buster." So the maternal admonition seemed rather to fail of
effect.
"Well, ole man," said Aunt Chloe,
"you'll have to tote in them ar bar'ls."
"Mother's bar'ls is like dat ar
widder's, Mas'r George was reading 'bout, in de good book,--dey
never fails," said Mose, aside to Peter.
"I'm sure one on 'em caved in
last week," said Pete, "and let 'em all down in de middle of de
singin'; dat ar was failin', warnt it?"
During this aside between Mose
and Pete, two empty casks had been rolled into the cabin, and being
secured from rolling, by stones on each side, boards were laid
across them, which arrangement, together with the turning down of
certain tubs and pails, and the disposing of the rickety chairs, at
last completed the preparation.
"Mas'r George is such a beautiful
reader, now, I know he'll stay to read for us,"
said Aunt Chloe; "'pears like 't
will be so much more interestin'."
George very readily consented,
for your boy is always ready for anything that makes him of
importance.
The room was soon filled with a
motley assemblage, from the old gray-headed patriarch of eighty, to
the young girl and lad of fifteen. A little harmless gossip ensued
on various themes, such as where old Aunt Sally got her new red
headkerchief, and how "Missis was a going to give Lizzy that
spotted muslin gown, when she'd got her new berage made up;" and
how Mas'r Shelby was thinking of buying a new sorrel colt, that was
going to prove an addition to the glories of the place. A few of
the worshippers belonged to families hard by, who had got
permission to attend, and who brought in various choice scraps of
information, about the sayings and doings at the house and on the
place, which circulated as freely as the same sort of small change
does in higher circles.
After a while the singing
commenced, to the evident delight of all present. Not even all the
disadvantage of nasal intonation could prevent the effect of the
naturally fine voices, in airs at once wild and spirited. The words
were sometimes the well-known and common hymns sung in the churches
about, and sometimes of a wilder, more indefinite character, picked
up at camp-meetings.
The chorus of one of them, which
ran as follows, was sung with great energy and unction:
"Die on the field of battle,
Die on the field of
battle,
Glory in my soul."
Another special favorite had oft repeated the words--
"O, I'm going to glory,--won't
you come along with me?
Don't you see the angels
beck'ning, and a calling me away?