5693 lines
268 KiB
Plaintext
5693 lines
268 KiB
Plaintext
The Project Gutenberg Etext of Clotelle; or The Colored Heroine
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Clotelle; or The Colored Heroine
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by William Wells Brown
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April, 1995 [Etext #241]
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of Clotelle; or The Colored Heroine
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CLOTELLE; OR, THE COLORED HEROINE. A TALE OF THE SOUTHERN STATES.
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By William Wells Brown
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CLOTELLE
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CHAPTER I
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THE SOUTHERN SOCIAL CIRCLE
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FOR many years the South has been noted for its beautiful Quadroon women.
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Bottles of ink, and reams of paper, have been used to portray the
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"finely-cut and well-moulded features," the "silken curls," the "dark
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and brilliant eyes," the "splendid forms," the "fascinating smiles,"
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and "accomplished manners" of these impassioned and voluptuous daughters
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of the two races,--the unlawful product of the crime of human bondage.
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When we take into consideration the fact that no safeguard was ever
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thrown around virtue, and no inducement held out to slave-women to be
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pure and chaste, we will not be surprised when told that immorality
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pervades the domestic circle in the cities and towns of the South
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to an extent unknown in the Northern States. Many a planter's wife
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has dragged out a miserable existence, with an aching heart, at seeing
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her place in the husband's affections usurped by the unadorned beauty
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and captivating smiles of her waiting-maid. Indeed, the greater portion
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of the colored women, in the days of slavery, had no greater aspiration
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than that of becoming the finely-dressed mistress of some white man.
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At the negro balls and parties, that used to be so frequently given,
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this class of women generally made the most splendid appearance.
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A few years ago, among the many slave-women of Richmond,
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Va., who hired their time of their masters, was Agnes,
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a mulatto owned by John Graves, Esq., and who might be heard
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boasting that she was the daughter of an American Senator.
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Although nearly forty years of age at the time of
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which we write, Agnes was still exceedingly handsome.
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More than half white, with long black hair and deep blue eyes,
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no one felt like disputing with her when she urged her claim
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to her relationship with the Anglo-Saxon. In her younger days,
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Agnes had been a housekeeper for a young slave-holder, and in
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sustaining this relation had become the mother of two daughters.
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After being cast aside by this young man, the slave-woman betook
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herself to the business of a laundress, and was considered
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to be the most tasteful woman in Richmond at her vocation.
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Isabella and Marion, the two daughters of Agnes, resided with
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their mother, and gave her what aid they could in her business.
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The mother, however, was very choice of her daughters,
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and would allow them to perform no labor that would militate
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against their lady-like appearance. Agnes early resolved
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to bring up her daughters as ladies, as she termed it.
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As the girls grew older, the mother had to pay a stipulated price for them
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per month. Her notoriety as a laundress of the first class enabled her to put
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an extra charge upon the linen that passed through her hands; and although
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she imposed little or no work upon her daughters, she was enabled to live
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in comparative luxury and have her daughters dressed to attract attention,
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especially at the negro balls and parties.
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Although the term "negro ball" is applied to these gatherings,
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yet a large portion of the men who attend them are whites.
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Negro balls and parties in the Southern States, especially in
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the cities and towns, are usually made up of quadroon women,
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a few negro men, and any number of white gentlemen.
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These are gatherings of the most democratic character.
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Bankers, merchants, lawyers, doctors, and their clerks
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and students, all take part in these social assemblies upon
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terms of perfect equality. The father and son not unfrequently
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meet and dance *vis a vis* at a negro ball.
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It was at one of these parties that Henry Linwood, the son of a wealthy
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and retired gentleman of Richmond, was first introduced to Isabella,
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the oldest daughter of Agnes. The young man had just returned
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from Harvard College, where he had spent the previous five years.
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Isabella was in her eighteenth year, and was admitted by all who knew
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her to be the handsomest girl, colored or white, in the city.
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On this occasion, she was attired in a sky-blue silk dress,
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with deep black lace flounces, and bertha of the same.
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On her well-moulded arms she wore massive gold bracelets, while her
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rich black hair was arranged at the back in broad basket plaits,
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ornamented with pearls, and the front in the French style
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(*a la Imperatrice*), which suited her classic face to perfection.
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Marion was scarcely less richly dressed than her sister.
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Henry Linwood paid great attention to Isabella, which was
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looked upon with gratification by her mother, and became
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a matter of general conversation with all present. Of course,
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the young man escorted the beautiful quadroon home that evening,
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and became the favorite visitor at the house of Agnes.
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It was on a beautiful moonlight night in the month of August,
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when all who reside in tropical climates are eagerly gasping
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for a breath of fresh air, that Henry Linwood was in the garden
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which surrounded Agnes' cottage, with the young quadroon at his side.
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He drew from his pocket a newspaper wet from the press, and read
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the following advertisement:--
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NOTICE.--Seventy-nine negroes will be offered for sale
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on Monday, September 10, at 12 o'clock, being the entire
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stock of the late John Graves. The negroes are in excellent
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condition, and all warranted against the common vices.
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Among them are several mechanics, able-bodied field-hands,
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plough-boys, and women with children, some of them very prolific,
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affording a rare opportunity for any one who wishes to raise
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a strong and healthy lot of servants for their own use.
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Also several mulatto girls of rare personal qualities,--
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two of these very superior.
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Among the above slaves advertised for sale were Agnes and her two daughters.
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Ere young Linwood left the quadroon that evening, he promised her that
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he would become her purchaser, and make her free and her own mistress.
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Mr. Graves had long been considered not only an excellent
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and upright citizen of the first standing among the whites,
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but even the slaves regarded him as one of the kindest of masters.
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Having inherited his slaves with the rest of his property,
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he became possessed of them without any consultation
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or wish of his own. He would neither buy not sell slaves,
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and was exceedingly careful, in letting them out,
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that they did not find oppressive and tyrannical masters.
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No slave speculator ever dared to cross the threshold of this
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planter of the Old Dominion. He was a constant attendant upon
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religious worship, and was noted for his general benevolence.
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The American Bible Society, the American Tract Society, and the
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cause of the Foreign Missions, found in him a liberal friend.
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He was always anxious that his slaves should appear well on
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the Sabbath, and have an opportunity of hearing the word of God.
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CHAPTER II
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THE NEGRO SALE
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AS might have been expected, the day of sale brought an unusually
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large number together to compete for the property to be sold.
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Farmers, who make a business of raising slaves for the market,
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were there, and slave-traders, who make a business of buying human
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beings in the slave-raising States and taking them to the far South,
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were also in attendance. Men and women, too, who wished to purchase
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for their own use, had found their way to the slave sale.
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In the midst of the throng was one who felt a deeper interest
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in the result of the sale than any other of the bystanders.
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This was young Linwood. True to his promise, he was there
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with a blank bank-check in his pocket, awaiting with impatience
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to enter the list as a bidder for the beautiful slave.
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It was indeed a heart-rending scene to witness the lamentations
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of these slaves, all of whom had grown up together on
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the old homestead of Mr. Graves, and who had been treated
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with great kindness by that gentleman, during his life.
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Now they were to be separated, and form new relations
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and companions. Such is the precarious condition of the slave.
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Even when with a good master, there is not certainty of his
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happiness in the future.
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The less valuable slaves were first placed upon the auction-block,
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one after another, and sold to the highest bidder.
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Husbands and wives were separated with a degree of
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indifference that is unknown in any other relation in life.
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Brothers and sisters were torn from each other, and mothers
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saw their children for the last time on earth.
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It was late in the day, and when the greatest number of persons
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were thought to be present, when Agnes and her daughters were
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brought out to the place of sale. The mother was first put upon
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the auction-block, and sold to a noted negro trader named Jennings.
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Marion was next ordered to ascend the stand, which she did with a
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trembling step, and was sold for $1200.
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All eyes were now turned on Isabella, as she was led forward
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by the auctioneer. The appearance of the handsome quadroon
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caused a deep sensation among the crowd. There she stood,
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with a skin as fair as most white women, her features as
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beautifully regular as any of her sex of pure Anglo-Saxon blood,
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her long black hair done up in the neatest manner, her form
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tall and graceful, and her whole appearance indicating one
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superior to her condition.
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The auctioneer commenced by saying that Miss Isabella was fit to deck
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the drawing-room of the finest mansion in Virginia.
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"How much, gentlemen, for this real Albino!--fit fancy-girl for any one!
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She enjoys good health, and has a sweet temper. How much do you say?"
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"Five hundred dollars."
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"Only five hundred for such a girl as this? Gentlemen, she is worth a deal
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more than that sum. You certainly do not know the value of the article
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you are bidding on. Here, gentlemen, I hold in my hand a paper certifying
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that she has a good moral character."
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"Seven hundred."
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"Ah, gentlemen, that is something life. This paper also states
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that she is very intelligent."
|
|
|
|
"Eight hundred."
|
|
|
|
"She was first sprinkled, then immersed, and is now warranted
|
|
to be a devoted Christian, and perfectly trustworthy."
|
|
|
|
"Nine hundred dollars."
|
|
|
|
"Nine hundred and fifty."
|
|
|
|
"One thousand."
|
|
|
|
"Eleven hundred."
|
|
|
|
Here the bidding came to a dead stand. The auctioneer stopped, looked around,
|
|
and began in a rough manner to relate some anecdote connected with the sale
|
|
of slaves, which he said had come under his own observation.
|
|
|
|
At this juncture the scene was indeed a most striking one.
|
|
The laughing, joking, swearing, smoking, spitting, and talking,
|
|
kept up a continual hum and confusion among the crowd,
|
|
while the slave-girl stood with tearful eyes, looking alternately
|
|
at her mother and sister and toward the young man whom she
|
|
hoped would become her purchaser.
|
|
|
|
"The chastity of this girl," now continued the auctioneer,
|
|
"is pure. She has never been from under her mother's care.
|
|
She is virtuous, and as gentle as a dove."
|
|
|
|
The bids here took a fresh start, and went on until $1800 was reached.
|
|
The auctioneer once more resorted to his jokes, and concluded by assuring
|
|
the company that Isabella was not only pious, but that she could make
|
|
an excellent prayer.
|
|
|
|
"Nineteen hundred dollars."
|
|
|
|
"Two thousand."
|
|
|
|
This was the last big, and the quadroon girl was struck off,
|
|
and became the property of Henry Linwood.
|
|
|
|
This was a Virginia slave-auction, at which the bones, sinews, blood,
|
|
and nerves of a young girl of eighteen were sold for $500; her moral
|
|
character for $200; her superior intellect for $100; the benefits
|
|
supposed to accrue from her having been sprinkled and immersed,
|
|
together with a warranty of her devoted Christianity, for $300;
|
|
her ability to make a good prayer for $200; and her chastity
|
|
for $700 more. This, too, in a city thronged with churches,
|
|
whose tall spires look like so many signals pointing to heaven,
|
|
but whose ministers preach that slavery is a God-ordained institution!
|
|
|
|
The slaves were speedily separated, and taken along by their
|
|
respective masters. Jennings, the slave-speculator, who
|
|
had purchased Agnes and her daughter Marion, with several
|
|
of the other slaves, took them to the county prison,
|
|
where he usually kept his human cattle after purchasing them,
|
|
previous to starting for the New Orleans market.
|
|
|
|
Linwood had already provided a place for Isabella, to which she was taken.
|
|
The most trying moment for her was when she took leave of her mother
|
|
and sister. The "Good-by" of the slave is unlike that of any
|
|
other class in the community. It is indeed a farewell forever.
|
|
With tears streaming down their cheeks, they embraced and commended
|
|
each other to God, who is no respecter of persons, and before whom
|
|
master and slave must one day appear.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
|
|
THE SLAVE-SPECULATOR
|
|
|
|
|
|
DICK JENNINGS the slave-speculator, was one of the few Northern men,
|
|
who go to the South and throw aside their honest mode of
|
|
obtaining a living and resort to trading in human beings.
|
|
A more repulsive-looking person could scarcely be found
|
|
in any community of bad looking men. Tall, lean and lank,
|
|
with high cheek-bones, face much pitted with the small-pox,
|
|
gray eyes with red eyebrows, and sandy whiskers, he indeed
|
|
stood alone without mate or fellow in looks. Jennings prided
|
|
himself upon what he called his goodness of heat, and was always
|
|
speaking of his humanity. As many of the slaves whom he intended
|
|
taking to the New Orleans market had been raised in Richmond,
|
|
and had relations there, he determined to leave the city
|
|
early in the morning, so as not to witness any of the scenes
|
|
so common on the departure of a slave-gang to the far South.
|
|
In this, he was most successful; for not even Isabella,
|
|
who had called at the prison several times to see her mother
|
|
and sister, was aware of the time that they were to leave.
|
|
|
|
The slave-trader started at early dawn, and was beyond the confines
|
|
of the city long before the citizens were out of their beds.
|
|
As a slave regards a life on the sugar, cotton, or rice plantation as even
|
|
worse than death, they are ever on the watch for an opportunity to escape.
|
|
The trader, aware of this, secures his victims in chains before he sets out
|
|
on his journey. On this occasion, Jennings had the men chained in pairs,
|
|
while the women were allowed to go unfastened, but were closely watched.
|
|
|
|
After a march of eight days, the company arrived on the banks of the
|
|
Ohio River, where they took a steamer for the place of their destination.
|
|
Jennings had already advertised in the New Orleans papers,
|
|
that he would be there with a prime lot of able-bodied slaves,
|
|
men and women, fit for field-service, with a few extra ones calculated
|
|
for house-servants,--all between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five years;
|
|
but like most men who make a business of speculating in human beings,
|
|
he often bought many who were far advanced in years, and would try
|
|
to pass them off for five or six years younger than they were.
|
|
Few persons can arrive at anything approaching the real age of the negro,
|
|
by mere observation, unless they are well acquainted with the race.
|
|
Therefore, the slave-trader frequently carried out the deception
|
|
with perfect impunity.
|
|
|
|
After the steamer had left the wharf and was fairly out on the bosom
|
|
of the broad Mississippi, the speculator called his servant Pompey to him;
|
|
and instructed him as to getting the negroes ready for market.
|
|
Among the forty slaves that the trader had on this occasion, were some whose
|
|
appearance indicated that they had seen some years and had gone through
|
|
considerable service. Their gray hair and whiskers at once pronounced
|
|
them to be above the ages set down in the trader's advertisement.
|
|
Pompey had long been with Jennings, and understood his business well,
|
|
and if he did not take delight in the discharge of his duty, he did it at
|
|
least with a degree of alacrity, so that he might receive the approbation
|
|
of his master.
|
|
|
|
Pomp, as he was usually called by the trader, was of real
|
|
negro blood, and would often say, when alluding to himself,
|
|
"Dis nigger am no counterfeit, he is de ginuine artikle.
|
|
Dis chile is none of your haf-and-haf, dere is no bogus about him."
|
|
|
|
Pompey was of low stature, round face, and, like most of his race,
|
|
had a set of teeth, which, for whiteness and beauty, could not be surpassed;
|
|
his eyes were large, lips thick, and hair short and woolly.
|
|
Pompey had been with Jennings so long, and had seen so much of buying
|
|
and selling of his fellow-creatures, that he appeared perfectly indifferent
|
|
to the heart-rending scenes which daily occurred in his presence.
|
|
Such is the force of habit:--
|
|
|
|
"Vice is a monster of such frightful mien,
|
|
That to be hated, needs but to be seen;
|
|
But seen too oft, familiar with its face,
|
|
We first endure, then pity, then embrace."
|
|
|
|
It was on the second day of the steamer's voyage, that Pompey selected
|
|
five of the oldest slaves, took them into a room by themselves,
|
|
and commenced preparing them for the market.
|
|
|
|
"Now," said he, addressing himself to the company, "I is de chap dat is to get
|
|
you ready for de Orleans market, so dat you will bring marser a good price.
|
|
How old is you?" addressing himself to a man not less than forty.
|
|
|
|
"If I live to see next sweet-potato-digging time, I shall be either
|
|
forty or forty-five, I don't know which."
|
|
|
|
"Dat may be," replied Pompey; "but now you is only thirty years old,--
|
|
dat's what marser says you is to be."
|
|
|
|
"I know I is more den dat," responded the man.
|
|
|
|
"I can't help nuffin' about dat," returned Pompey; "but when you get
|
|
into de market and any one ax you how old you is, and you tell um you
|
|
is forty or forty-five, marser will tie you up and cut you all to pieces.
|
|
But if you tell um dat you is only thirty, den he won't. Now remember
|
|
dat you is thirty years old and no more."
|
|
|
|
"Well den, I guess I will only be thirty when dey ax me."
|
|
|
|
"What's your name?" said Pompey, addressing himself to another.
|
|
|
|
"Jeems."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! Uncle Jim, is it?" "Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Den you must have all them gray whiskers shaved off,
|
|
and all dem gray hairs plucked out of your head."
|
|
This was all said by Pompey in a manner which showed that he knew
|
|
what he was about.
|
|
|
|
"How old is you?" asked Pompey of a tall, strong-looking man.
|
|
"What's your name?"
|
|
|
|
"I am twenty-nine years old, and my name is Tobias, but they
|
|
calls me Toby."
|
|
|
|
"Well, Toby, or Mr. Tobias, if dat will suit you better, you are
|
|
now twenty-three years old; dat's all,--do you understand dat?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Toby.
|
|
|
|
Pompey now gave them all to understand how old they were
|
|
to be when asked by persons who were likely to purchase,
|
|
and then went and reported to his master that the old boys
|
|
were all right.
|
|
|
|
"Be sure," said Jennings, "that the niggers don't forget what you have taught
|
|
them, for our luck this time in the market depends upon their appearance.
|
|
If any of them have so many gray hairs that you cannot pluck them out,
|
|
take the blacking and brush, and go at them."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
|
|
THE BOAT-RACE
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT eight o'clock, on the evening of the third day of the passage,
|
|
the lights of another steamer were seen in the distance, and apparently
|
|
coming up very fast. This was the signal for a general commotion on board
|
|
the Patriot, and everything indicated that a steamboat-race was at hand.
|
|
Nothing can exceed the excitement attendant upon the racing of steamers
|
|
on the Mississippi.
|
|
|
|
By the time the boats had reached Memphis they were side by side,
|
|
and each exerting itself to get in advance of the other.
|
|
The night was clear, the moon shining brightly, and the boats so near
|
|
to each other that the passengers were within speaking distance.
|
|
On board the Patriot the firemen were using oil, lard, butter, and even bacon,
|
|
with wood, for the purpose of raising the steam to its highest pitch.
|
|
The blaze mingled with the black smoke that issued from the pipes
|
|
of the other boat, which showed that she also was burning something
|
|
more combustible than wood.
|
|
|
|
The firemen of both boats, who were slaves, were singing
|
|
songs such as can only be heard on board a Southern steamer.
|
|
The boats now came abreast of each other, and nearer and nearer,
|
|
until they were locked so that men could pass from one to the other.
|
|
The wildest excitement prevailed among the men employed on the steamers,
|
|
in which the passengers freely participated.
|
|
|
|
The Patriot now stopped to take in passengers, but still
|
|
no steam was permitted to escape. On the starting
|
|
of the boat again, cold water was forced into the boilers
|
|
by the feed-pumps, and, as might have been expected,
|
|
one of the boilers exploded with terrific force, carrying away
|
|
the boiler-deck and tearing to pieces much of the machinery.
|
|
One dense fog of steam filled every part of the vessel,
|
|
while shrieks, groans, and cries were heard on every side.
|
|
Men were running hither and thither looking for their wives,
|
|
and women were flying about in the wildest confusion seeking
|
|
for their husbands. Dismay appeared on every countenance.
|
|
|
|
The saloons and cabins soon looked more like hospitals than anything else;
|
|
but by this time the Patriot had drifted to the shore, and the other
|
|
steamer had come alongside to render assistance to the disabled boat.
|
|
The killed and wounded (nineteen in number) were put on shore,
|
|
and the Patriot, taken in tow by the Washington, was once more
|
|
on her journey.
|
|
|
|
It was half-past twelve, and the passengers, instead of retiring
|
|
to their berths, once more assembled at the gambling-tables. The
|
|
practice of gambling on the western waters has long been a source
|
|
of annoyance to the more moral persons who travel on our great rivers.
|
|
Thousands of dollars often change owners during a passage from
|
|
St. Louis or Louisville to New Orleans, on a Mississippi steamer.
|
|
Many men are completely ruined on such occasions, and duels are
|
|
often the consequence.
|
|
|
|
"Go call my boy, steward," said Mr. Jones, as he took his cards
|
|
one by one from the table.
|
|
|
|
In a few minutes a fine-looking, bright-eyed mulatto boy,
|
|
apparently about sixteen years of age, was standing by his
|
|
master's side at the table.
|
|
|
|
"I am broke, all but my boy," said Jones, as he ran his fingers
|
|
through his cards; "but he is worth a thousand dollars,
|
|
and I will bet the half of him."
|
|
|
|
"I will call you," said Thompson, as he laid five hundred dollars at the feet
|
|
of the boy, who was standing on the table, and at the same time throwing
|
|
down his cards before his adversary.
|
|
|
|
"You have beaten me," said Jones; and a roar of laughter followed
|
|
from the other gentleman as poor Joe stepped down from the table.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I suppose I owe you half the nigger," said Thompson,
|
|
as he took hold of Joe and began examining his limbs.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Jones, "he is half yours. Let me have five hundred dollars,
|
|
and I will give you a bill of sale of the boy."
|
|
|
|
"Go back to your bed," said Thompson to his chattel, "and remember that you
|
|
now belong to me."
|
|
|
|
The poor slave wiped the tears from his eyes, as, in obedience,
|
|
he turned to leave the table.
|
|
|
|
"My father gave me that boy," said Jones, as he took the money, "and I hope,
|
|
Mr. Thompson, that you will allow me to redeem him."
|
|
|
|
"Most certainly, sir," replied Thompson. "Whenever you hand
|
|
over the cool thousand the negro is yours."
|
|
|
|
Next morning, as the passengers were assembling in the cabin and on deck,
|
|
and while the slaves were running about waiting on or looking for
|
|
their masters, poor Joe was seen entering his new master's stateroom,
|
|
boots in hand.
|
|
|
|
"Who do you belong to?" inquired a gentleman of an old negro, who passed
|
|
along leading a fine Newfoundland dog which he had been feeding.
|
|
|
|
"When I went to sleep las' night," replied the slave, "I 'longed
|
|
to Massa Carr; but he bin gamblin' all night, an' I don't know
|
|
who I 'longs to dis mornin'."
|
|
|
|
Such is the uncertainty of a slave's life. He goes to bed
|
|
at night the pampered servant of his young master, with whom
|
|
he has played in childhood, and who would not see his slave
|
|
abused under any consideration, and gets up in the morning
|
|
the property of a man whom he has never before seen.
|
|
|
|
To behold five or six tables in the saloon of a steamer,
|
|
with half a dozen men playing cards at each, with money, pistols,
|
|
and bowie-knives spread in splendid confusion before them,
|
|
is an ordinary thing on the Mississippi River.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
|
|
THE YOUNG MOTHER
|
|
|
|
|
|
ON the fourth morning, the Patriot landed at Grand Gulf,
|
|
a beautiful town on the left bank of the Mississippi.
|
|
Among the numerous passengers who came on board
|
|
at Rodney was another slave-trader, with nine human
|
|
chattels which he was conveying to the Southern market.
|
|
The passengers, both ladies and gentlemen, were startled
|
|
at seeing among the new lot of slaves a woman so white as not
|
|
to be distinguishable from the other white women on board.
|
|
She had in her arms a child so white that no one would suppose
|
|
a drop of African blood flowed through its blue veins.
|
|
|
|
No one could behold that mother with her helpless babe,
|
|
without feeling that God would punish the oppressor.
|
|
There she sat, with an expressive and intellectual forehead,
|
|
and a countenance full of dignity and heroism, her dark
|
|
golden locks rolled back from her almost snow-white forehead
|
|
and floating over her swelling bosom. The tears that stood
|
|
in her mild blue eyes showed that she was brooding over sorrows
|
|
and wrongs that filled her bleeding heart.
|
|
|
|
The hearts of the passers-by grew softer, while gazing upon
|
|
that young mother as she pressed sweet kisses on the sad,
|
|
smiling lips of the infant that lay in her lap.
|
|
The small, dimpled hands of the innocent creature were slyly
|
|
hid in the warm bosom on which the little one nestled.
|
|
The blood of some proud Southerner, no doubt, flowed through
|
|
the veins of that child.
|
|
|
|
When the boat arrived at Natches, a rather good-looking,
|
|
genteel-appearing man came on board to purchase a servant.
|
|
This individual introduced himself to Jennings as the Rev. James Wilson.
|
|
The slave-trader conducted the preacher to the deck-cabin, where he kept
|
|
his slaves, and the man of God, after having some questions answered,
|
|
selected Agnes as the one best suited to his service.
|
|
|
|
It seemed as if poor Marion's heart would break when she
|
|
found that she was to be separated from her mother.
|
|
The preacher, however, appeared to be but little moved by
|
|
their sorrow, and took his newly-purchased victim on shore.
|
|
Agnes begged him to buy her daughter, but he refused,
|
|
on the ground that he had no use for her.
|
|
|
|
During the remainder of the passage, Marion wept bitterly.
|
|
|
|
After a run of a few hours, the boat stopped at Baton Rouge, where an
|
|
additional number of passengers were taken on board, among whom were
|
|
a number of persons who had been attending the races at that place.
|
|
Gambling and drinking were now the order of the day.
|
|
|
|
The next morning, at ten o'clock, the boat arrived at new Orleans,
|
|
where the passengers went to their hotels and homes, and the negroes
|
|
to the slave-pens.
|
|
|
|
Lizzie, the white slave-mother, of whom we have already spoken, created as
|
|
much of a sensation by the fairness of her complexion and the alabaster
|
|
whiteness of her child, when being conveyed on shore at New Orleans,
|
|
as she had done when brought on board at Grand Gulf. Every one that saw
|
|
her felt that slavery in the Southern States was not confined to the negro.
|
|
Many had been taught to think that slavery was a benefit rather than
|
|
an injury, and those who were not opposed to the institution before,
|
|
now felt that if whites were to become its victims, it was time at least
|
|
that some security should be thrown around the Anglo-Saxon to save him
|
|
from this servile and degraded position.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
|
|
THE SLAVE-MARKET.
|
|
|
|
NOT far from Canal Street, in the city of New Orleans,
|
|
stands a large two-story, flat building, surrounded by a stone
|
|
wall some twelve feet high, the top of which is covered with bits
|
|
of glass, and so constructed as to prevent even the possibility
|
|
of any one's passing over it without sustaining great injury.
|
|
Many of the rooms in this building resemble the cells of a prison,
|
|
and in a small apartment near the "office" are to be seen
|
|
any number of iron collars, hobbles, handcuffs, thumbscrews,
|
|
cowhides, chains, gags, and yokes.
|
|
|
|
A back-yard, enclosed by a high wall, looks something like
|
|
the playground attached to one of our large New England schools,
|
|
in which are rows of benches and swings. Attached to the back premises
|
|
is a good-sized kitchen, where, at the time of which we write,
|
|
two old negresses were at work, stewing, boiling, and baking,
|
|
and occasionally wiping the perspiration from their furrowed
|
|
and swarthy brows.
|
|
|
|
The slave-trader, Jennings, on his arrival at New Orleans,
|
|
took up his quarters here with his gang of human cattle,
|
|
and the morning after, at 10 o'clock, they were exhibited for sale.
|
|
First of all came the beautiful Marion, whose pale countenance
|
|
and dejected look told how many sad hours she had passed
|
|
since parting with her mother at Natchez. There, too,
|
|
was a poor woman who had been separated from her husband;
|
|
and another woman, whose looks and manners were expressive
|
|
of deep anguish, sat by her side. There was "Uncle Jeems,"
|
|
with his whiskers off, his face shaven clean, and the gray hairs
|
|
plucked out, ready to be sold for ten years younger than he was.
|
|
Toby was also there, with his face shaven and greased,
|
|
ready for inspection.
|
|
|
|
The examination commenced, and was carried on in such a manner as to shock
|
|
the feelings of any one not entirely devoid of the milk of human kindness.
|
|
|
|
"What are you wiping your eyes for?" inquired a far, red-faced man,
|
|
with a white hat set on one side of his head and a cigar in his mouth,
|
|
of a woman who sat on one of the benches.
|
|
|
|
"Because I left my man behind."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, if I buy you, I will furnish you with a better man than you left.
|
|
I've got lots of young bucks on my farm."
|
|
|
|
"I don't want and never will have another man," replied the woman.
|
|
|
|
"What's you name?" asked a man in a straw hat of a tall negro who stood
|
|
with his arms folded across his breast, leaning against the wall.
|
|
|
|
"My name is Aaron, sar."
|
|
|
|
"How old are you?"
|
|
|
|
"Twenty-five."
|
|
|
|
"Where were you raised?"
|
|
|
|
"In old Virginny, sar."
|
|
|
|
"How many men have owned you?"
|
|
|
|
"Four."
|
|
|
|
"Do you enjoy good health?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sar."
|
|
|
|
"How long did you live with your first owner?"
|
|
|
|
"Twenty years."
|
|
|
|
"Did you ever run away?"
|
|
|
|
"No, sar."
|
|
|
|
"Did you ever strike your master?"
|
|
|
|
"No, sar."
|
|
|
|
"Were you ever whipped much?"
|
|
|
|
"No, sar; I s'pose I didn't desarve it, sar."
|
|
|
|
"How long did you live with your second master?"
|
|
|
|
"Ten years, sar."
|
|
|
|
"Have you a good appetite?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sar."
|
|
|
|
"Can you eat your allowance?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sar,--when I can get it."
|
|
|
|
"Where were you employed in Virginia?"
|
|
|
|
"I worked de tobacker fiel'."
|
|
|
|
"In the tobacco field, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sar."
|
|
|
|
"How old did you say you was?"
|
|
|
|
"Twenty-five, sar, nex' sweet-'tater-diggin' time."
|
|
|
|
"I am a cotton-planter, and if I buy you, you will have to
|
|
work in the cotton-field. My men pick one hundred and fifty
|
|
pounds a day, and the women one hundred and forty pounds;
|
|
and those who fail to perform their task receive five stripes
|
|
for each pound that is wanting. Now, do you think you could
|
|
keep up with the rest of the hands?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, sar, but I 'specs I'd have to."
|
|
|
|
"How long did you live with your third master?"
|
|
|
|
"Three years, sar."
|
|
|
|
"Why, that makes you thirty-three. I thought you told me you
|
|
were only twenty-five?"
|
|
|
|
Aaron now looked first at the planter, then at the trader,
|
|
and seemed perfectly bewildered. He had forgotten the lesson
|
|
given him by Pompey relative to his age; and the planter's
|
|
circuitous questions--doubtless to find out the slave's real age--
|
|
had thrown the negro off his guard.
|
|
|
|
"I must see you back, so as to know how much you have been whipped,
|
|
before I think of buying."
|
|
|
|
Pompey, who had been standing by during the examination,
|
|
thought that his services were now required, and, stepping forth
|
|
with a degree of officiousness, said to Aaron,--
|
|
|
|
"Don't you hear de gemman tell you he wants to 'zamin you.
|
|
Cum, unharness yo'seff, ole boy, and don't be standin' dar."
|
|
|
|
Aaron was soon examined, and pronounced "sound;" yet the conflicting
|
|
statement about his age was not satisfactory.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately for Marion, she was spared the pain of undergoing
|
|
such an examination. Mr. Cardney, a teller in one of the banks,
|
|
had just been married, and wanted a maid-servant for his wife,
|
|
and, passing through the market in the early part of the day,
|
|
was pleased with the young slave's appearance, and his dwelling
|
|
the quadroon found a much better home than often falls to the lot
|
|
of a slave sold in the New Orleans market.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
THE SLAVE-HOLDING PARSON
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE Rev. James Wilson was a native of the State of Connecticut,
|
|
where he was educated for the ministry in the Methodist persuasion.
|
|
His father was a strict follower of John Wesley, and spared
|
|
no pains in his son's education, with the hope that he would
|
|
one day be as renowned as the leader of his sect.
|
|
James had scarcely finished his education at New Haven,
|
|
when he was invited by an uncle, then on a visit to his father,
|
|
to spend a few months at Natchez in Mississippi. Young Wilson
|
|
accepted his uncle's invitation, and accompanied him to the South.
|
|
Few young men, and especially clergymen, going fresh from college
|
|
to the South, but are looked upon as geniuses in a small way,
|
|
and who are not invited to all the parties in the neighborhood.
|
|
Mr. Wilson was not an exception to this rule.
|
|
The society into which he was thrown, on his arrival at Natchez,
|
|
was too brilliant for him not to be captivated by it, and,
|
|
as might have been expected, he succeeded in captivating
|
|
a plantation with seventy slaves if not the heart of the lady
|
|
to whom it belonged.
|
|
|
|
Added to this, he became a popular preacher, and had a large
|
|
congregation with a snug salary. Like other planters,
|
|
Mr. Wilson confided the care of his farm to Ned Huckelby,
|
|
an overseer of high reputation in his way.
|
|
|
|
The Poplar Farm, as it was called, was situated in a beautiful valley,
|
|
nine miles from Natchez, and near the Mississippi River.
|
|
The once unshorn face of nature had given way, and the farm now
|
|
blossomed with a splendid harvest. The neat cottage stood in a grove,
|
|
where Lombardy poplars lift their tops almost to prop the skies,
|
|
where the willow, locust, and horse-chestnut trees spread forth
|
|
their branches, and flowers never ceased to blossom.
|
|
|
|
This was the parson's country residence, where the family spent only
|
|
two months during the year. His town residence was a fine villa,
|
|
seated on the brow of a hill, at the edge of the city.
|
|
|
|
It was in the kitchen of this house that Agnes found her new home.
|
|
Mr. Wilson was every inch a democrat, and early resolved that "his people,"
|
|
as he called his slaves, should be well-fed and not over-worked, and therefore
|
|
laid down the law and gospel to the overseer as well as to the slaves.
|
|
"It is my wish," said he to Mr. Carlingham, an old school-fellow
|
|
who was spending a few days with him,--"It is my wish that a new system
|
|
be adopted on the plantations in this State. I believe that the sons
|
|
of Ham should have the gospel, and I intend that mine shall have it.
|
|
The gospel is calculated to make mankind better and none should
|
|
be without it."
|
|
|
|
"What say you," said Carlingham, "about the right of man to his liberty?"
|
|
|
|
"Now, Carlingham, you have begun to harp again about men's rights.
|
|
I really wish that you could see this matter as I do."
|
|
|
|
"I regret that I cannot see eye to eye with you," said Carlingham.
|
|
"I am a disciple of Rousseau, and have for years made the rights
|
|
of man my study, and I must confess to you that I see no difference
|
|
between white and black, as it regards liberty."
|
|
|
|
"Now, my dear Carlingham, would you really have the negroes enjoy
|
|
the same rights as ourselves?"
|
|
|
|
"I would most certainly. Look at our great Declaration
|
|
of Independence! look even at the Constitution of our
|
|
own Connecticut, and see what is said in these about liberty."
|
|
"I regard all this talk about rights as mere humbug.
|
|
The Bible is older than the Declaration of Independence,
|
|
and there I take my stand."
|
|
|
|
A long discussion followed, in which both gentlemen put forth
|
|
their peculiar ideas with much warmth of feeling.
|
|
|
|
During this conversation, there was another person in the room,
|
|
seated by the window, who, although at work, embroidering a
|
|
fine collar, paid minute attention to what was said.
|
|
This was Georgiana, the only daughter of the parson, who had but just
|
|
returned from Connecticut, where she had finished her education.
|
|
She had had the opportunity of contrasting the spirit of Christianity
|
|
and liberty in New England with that of slavery in her native State,
|
|
and had learned to feel deeply for the injured negro.
|
|
|
|
Georgiana was in her nineteenth year, and had been much
|
|
benefited by her residence of five years at the North.
|
|
Her form was tall and graceful, her features regular and
|
|
well-defined, and her complexion was illuminated by the freshness
|
|
of youth, beauty, and health.
|
|
|
|
The daughter differed from both the father and visitor upon
|
|
the subject which they had been discussing; and as soon
|
|
as an opportunity offered, she gave it as her opinion that
|
|
the Bible was both the bulwark of Christianity and of liberty.
|
|
With a smile she said,--
|
|
|
|
"Of course, papa will overlook my difference with him,
|
|
for although I am a native of the South, I am by education
|
|
and sympathy a Northerner."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wilson laughed, appearing rather pleased than otherwise
|
|
at the manner in which his daughter had expressed herself.
|
|
From this Georgiana took courage and continued,--
|
|
|
|
"'Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.' This single passage of
|
|
Scripture should cause us to have respect for the rights of the slave.
|
|
True Christian love is of an enlarged and disinterested nature.
|
|
It loves all who love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity, without regard
|
|
to color or condition."
|
|
|
|
"Georgiana, my dear, you are an abolitionist,--your talk is fanaticism!"
|
|
said Mr. Wilson, in rather a sharp tone; but the subdued look of the girl
|
|
and the presence of Carlingham caused him to soften his language.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wilson having lost his wife by consumption, and Georgiana
|
|
being his only child, he loved her too dearly to say more,
|
|
even if he felt disposed. A silence followed this exhortation
|
|
from the young Christian, but her remarks had done a noble work.
|
|
The father's heart was touched, and the sceptic, for the first time,
|
|
was viewing Christianity in its true light.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
|
|
|
A NIGHT IN THE PARSON'S KITCHEN
|
|
|
|
|
|
BESIDES Agnes, whom Mr. Wilson had purchased from the slave-trader,
|
|
Jennings, he kept a number of house-servants. The chief one of these
|
|
was Sam, who must be regarded as second only to the parson himself.
|
|
If a dinner-party was in contemplation, or any company was to be invited,
|
|
after all the arrangements had been talked over by the minister
|
|
and his daughter, Sam was sure to be consulted on the subject
|
|
by "Miss Georgy," as Miss Wilson was called by all the servants.
|
|
If furniture, crockery, or anything was to be purchased,
|
|
Sam felt that he had been slighted if his opinion was not asked.
|
|
As to the marketing, he did it all. He sat at the head of the servants'
|
|
table in the kitchen, and was master of the ceremonies.
|
|
A single look from him was enough to silence any conversation
|
|
or noise among the servants in the kitchen or in any other part
|
|
of the premises.
|
|
|
|
There is in the Southern States a great amount of prejudice
|
|
in regard to color, even among the negroes themselves.
|
|
The nearer the negro or mulatto approaches to the white, the more
|
|
he seems to feel his superiority over those of a darker hue.
|
|
This is no doubt the result of the prejudice that exists on
|
|
the part of the whites against both the mulattoes and the blacks.
|
|
|
|
Sam was originally from Kentucky, and through the instrumentality
|
|
of one of his young masters, whom he had to take to school,
|
|
he had learned to read so as to be well understood, and, owing to
|
|
that fact, was considered a prodigy, not only among his own
|
|
master's slaves, but also among those of the town who knew him.
|
|
Sam had a great wish to follow in the footsteps of his master
|
|
and be a poet, and was therefore often heard singing doggerels
|
|
of his own composition.
|
|
|
|
But there was one drawback to Sam, and that was his color.
|
|
He was one of the blackest of his race. This he evidently regarded
|
|
as a great misfortune; but he endeavored to make up for it in dress.
|
|
Mr. Wilson kept his house-servants well dressed, and as for Sam,
|
|
he was seldom seen except in a ruffled shirt. Indeed, the washerwoman
|
|
feared him more than any one else in the house.
|
|
|
|
Agnes had been inaugurated chief of the kitchen department,
|
|
and had a general supervision of the household affairs.
|
|
Alfred, the coachman, Peter, and Hetty made up the remainder
|
|
of the house-servants. Besides these, Mr. Wilson owned
|
|
eight slaves who were masons. These worked in the city.
|
|
Being mechanics, they were let out to greater advantage than
|
|
to keep them on the farm.
|
|
|
|
Every Sunday evening, Mr. Wilson's servants, including the brick-layers,
|
|
assembled in the kitchen, where the events of the week were fully discussed
|
|
and commented upon. It was on a Sunday evening, in the month of June,
|
|
that there was a party at Mr. Wilson's house, and, according to custom
|
|
in the Southern States, the ladies had their maid-servants with them.
|
|
Tea had been served in "the house," and the servants, including the strangers,
|
|
had taken their seats at the table in the kitchen. Sam, being a
|
|
"single gentleman," was unusually attentive to the "ladies" on this occasion.
|
|
He seldom let a day pass without spending an hour or two in combing
|
|
and brushing his "har." He had an idea that fresh butter was better
|
|
for his hair than any other kind of grease, and therefore on churning days
|
|
half a pound of butter had always to be taken out before it was salted.
|
|
When he wished to appear to great advantage, he would grease his
|
|
face to make it "shiny." Therefore, on the evening of the party,
|
|
when all the servants were at the table, Sam cut a big figure.
|
|
There he sat, with his wool well combed and buttered, face nicely greased,
|
|
and his ruffles extending five or six inches from his bosom.
|
|
The parson in his drawing-room did not make a more imposing appearance
|
|
than did his servant on this occasion.
|
|
|
|
"I jis bin had my fortune tole last Sunday night," said Sam,
|
|
while helping one of the girls.
|
|
|
|
"Indeed!" cried half a dozen voices.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," continued he; "Aunt Winny tole me I's to hab de prettiest yallah gal
|
|
in de town, and dat I's to be free!"
|
|
|
|
All eyes were immediately turned toward Sally Johnson,
|
|
who was seated near Sam.
|
|
|
|
"I 'specs I see somebody blush at dat remark," said Alfred.
|
|
|
|
"Pass dem pancakes an' 'lasses up dis way, Mr. Alf., and none ob
|
|
your 'sinuwashuns here," rejoined Sam.
|
|
|
|
"Dat reminds me," said Agnes, "dat Dorcas Simpson is gwine to git married."
|
|
|
|
"Who to, I want to know?" inquired Peter.
|
|
|
|
"To one of Mr. Darby's field-hands," answered Agnes.
|
|
|
|
"I should tink dat gal wouldn't frow herseff away in dat ar way," said Sally.
|
|
"She's good lookin' 'nough to git a house-servant, and not hab to put up
|
|
wid a field-nigger.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Sam, "dat's a werry unsensible remark ob yourn,
|
|
Miss Sally. I admires your judgment werry much, I 'sures you.
|
|
Dar's plenty ob susceptible an' well-dressed house-serbants dat a gal
|
|
ob her looks can git widout takin' up wid dem common darkies."
|
|
|
|
The evening's entertainment concluded by Sam's relating a little
|
|
of his own experience while with his first master, in old Kentucky.
|
|
This master was a doctor, and had a large practice among his neighbors,
|
|
doctoring both masters and slaves. When Sam was about fifteen years old,
|
|
his master set him to grinding up ointment and making pills.
|
|
As the young student grew older and became more practised in his profession,
|
|
his services were of more importance to the doctor. The physician having
|
|
a good business, and a large number of his patients being slaves,--
|
|
the most of whom had to call on the doctor when ill,--he put Sam
|
|
to bleeding, pulling teeth, and administering medicine to the slaves.
|
|
Sam soon acquired the name among the slaves of the "Black Doctor."
|
|
With this appellation he was delighted; and no regular physician could have
|
|
put on more airs than did the black doctor when his services were required.
|
|
In bleeding, he must have more bandages, and would rub and smack the arm
|
|
more than the doctor would have thought of.
|
|
|
|
Sam was once seen taking out a tooth for one of his patients,
|
|
and nothing appeared more amusing. He got the poor fellow down
|
|
on his back, and then getting astride of his chest, he applied
|
|
the turnkeys and pulled away for dear life. Unfortunately, he had
|
|
got hold of the wrong tooth, and the poor man screamed as loud
|
|
as he could; but it was to no purpose, for Sam had him fast,
|
|
and after a pretty severe tussle out came the sound grinder.
|
|
The young doctor now saw his mistake, but consoled himself
|
|
with the thought that as the wrong tooth was out of the way,
|
|
there was more room to get at the right one.
|
|
|
|
Bleeding and a dose of calomel were always considered
|
|
indispensable by the "old boss," and as a matter of course,
|
|
Sam followed in his footsteps.
|
|
|
|
On one occasion the old doctor was ill himself, so as to be unable to attend
|
|
to his patients. A slave, with pass in hand, called to receive medical
|
|
advice, and the master told Sam to examine him and see what he wanted.
|
|
This delighted him beyond measure, for although he had been acting
|
|
his part in the way of giving out medicine as the master ordered it,
|
|
he had never been called upon by the latter to examine a patient,
|
|
and this seemed to convince him after all that he was no sham doctor.
|
|
As might have been expected, he cut a rare figure in his first examination.
|
|
Placing himself directly opposite his patient, and folding his arms
|
|
across his breast, looking very knowingly, he began,--
|
|
|
|
"What's de matter wid you?"
|
|
|
|
"I is sick."
|
|
|
|
"Where is you sick?"
|
|
|
|
"Here," replied the man, putting his hand upon his stomach.
|
|
|
|
"Put out your tongue," continued the doctor.
|
|
|
|
The man ran out his tongue at full length.
|
|
|
|
"Let me feel your pulse;" at the same time taking his patient's hand in his,
|
|
and placing his fingers upon his pulse, he said,--
|
|
|
|
"Ah! your case is a bad one; ef I don't do something for you,
|
|
and dat pretty quick, you'll be a gone coon, and dat's sartin."
|
|
At this the man appeared frightened, and inquired what was the matter
|
|
with him, in answer to which Sam said,--
|
|
|
|
"I done told dat your case is a bad one, and dat's enuff."
|
|
|
|
On Sam's returning to his master's bedside, the latter said,--
|
|
|
|
"Well, Sam, what do you think is the matter with him?"
|
|
|
|
"His stomach is out ob order, sar," he replied.
|
|
|
|
"What do you think had better be done for him?"
|
|
|
|
"I tink I'd better bleed him and gib him a dose ob calomel," returned Sam.
|
|
|
|
So, to the latter's gratification, the master let him have his own way.
|
|
|
|
On one occasion, when making pills and ointment, Sam made
|
|
a great mistake. He got the preparations for both mixed together,
|
|
so that he could not legitimately make either. But fearing
|
|
that if he threw the stuff away, his master would flog him,
|
|
and being afraid to inform his superior of the mistake, he resolved
|
|
to make the whole batch of pill and ointment stuff into pills.
|
|
He well knew that the powder over the pills would hide the inside,
|
|
and the fact that most persons shut their eyes when taking such medicine
|
|
led the young doctor to feel that all would be right in the end.
|
|
Therefore Sam made his pills, boxed them up, put on the labels,
|
|
and placed them in a conspicuous position on one of the shelves.
|
|
|
|
Sam felt a degree of anxiety about his pills, however.
|
|
It was a strange mixture, and he was not certain whether it
|
|
would kill or cure; but he was willing that it should be tried.
|
|
At last the young doctor had his vanity gratified.
|
|
Col. Tallen, one of Dr. Saxondale's patients, drove up one morning,
|
|
and Sam as usual ran out to the gate to hold the colonel's horse.
|
|
|
|
"Call your master," said the colonel; "I will not get out."
|
|
|
|
The doctor was soon beside the carriage, and inquired about
|
|
the health of his patient. After a little consultation,
|
|
the doctor returned to his office, took down a box of Sam's
|
|
new pills, and returned to the carriage.
|
|
|
|
"Take two of these every morning and night," said the doctor,
|
|
"and if you don't feel relieved, double the dose."
|
|
|
|
"Good gracious," exclaimed Sam in an undertone, when he heard
|
|
his master tell the colonel how to take the pills.
|
|
|
|
It was several days before Sam could learn the result of his new medicine.
|
|
One afternoon, about a fortnight after the colonel's visit,
|
|
Sam saw his master's patient riding up to the gate on horseback.
|
|
The doctor happened to be in the yard, and met the colonel and said,--
|
|
|
|
"How are you now?"
|
|
|
|
"I am entirely recovered," replied the patient.
|
|
"Those pills of yours put me on my feet the next day."
|
|
|
|
"I knew they would," rejoined the doctor.
|
|
|
|
Sam was near enough to hear the conversation, and was delighted
|
|
beyond description. The negro immediately ran into the kitchen,
|
|
amongst his companions, and commenced dancing.
|
|
|
|
"What de matter wid you?" inquired the cook.
|
|
|
|
"I is de greatest doctor in his country," replied Sam.
|
|
"Ef you ever get sick, call on me. No matter what ails you,
|
|
I is de man dat can cure you in no time. If you do hab de backache,
|
|
de rheumatics, de headache, de coller morbus, fits, er any ting else,
|
|
Sam is de gentleman dat can put you on your feet wid his pills."
|
|
|
|
For a long time after, Sam did little else than boast of his skill
|
|
as a doctor.
|
|
|
|
We have said that the "black doctor" was full of wit and good sense.
|
|
Indeed, in that respect, he had scarcely an equal in the neighborhood.
|
|
Although his master resided some little distance out of the city,
|
|
Sam was always the first man in all the negro balls and parties in town.
|
|
When his master could give him a pass, he went, and when he did
|
|
not give him one, he would steal away after his master had retired,
|
|
and run the risk of being taken up by the night-watch. Of course,
|
|
the master never knew anything of the absence of the servant at night
|
|
without permission. As the negroes at these parties tried to excel each
|
|
other in the way of dress, Sam was often at a loss to make that appearance
|
|
that his heart desired, but his ready wit ever helped him in this.
|
|
When his master had retired to bed at night, it was the duty of Sam to put
|
|
out the lights, and take out with him his master's clothes and boots,
|
|
and leave them in the office until morning, and then black the boots,
|
|
brush the clothes, and return them to his master's room.
|
|
|
|
Having resolved to attend a dress-ball one night, without his master's
|
|
permission, and being perplexed for suitable garments, Sam determined
|
|
to take his master's. So, dressing himself in the doctor's clothes,
|
|
even to his boots and hat, off the negro started for the city.
|
|
Being well acquainted with the usual walk of the patrols he found no
|
|
difficulty in keeping out of their way. As might have been expected,
|
|
Sam was the great gun with the ladies that night.
|
|
|
|
The next morning, Sam was back home long before his master's time
|
|
for rising, and the clothes were put in their accustomed place.
|
|
For a long time Sam had no difficulty in attiring himself
|
|
for parties; but the old proverb that "It is a long lane
|
|
that has no turning," was verified in the negro's case.
|
|
One stormy night, when the rain was descending in torrents,
|
|
the doctor heard a rap at his door. It was customary with him,
|
|
when called up at night to visit a patient, to ring for Sam.
|
|
But this time, the servant was nowhere to be found.
|
|
The doctor struck a light and looked for clothes; they, too,
|
|
were gone. It was twelve o'clock, and the doctor's clothes,
|
|
hat, boots, and even his watch, were nowhere to be found.
|
|
Here was a pretty dilemma for a doctor to be in. It was some time
|
|
before the physician could fit himself out so as to make the visit.
|
|
At last, however, he started with one of the farm-horses, for Sam
|
|
had taken the doctor's best saddle-horse. The doctor felt sure
|
|
that the negro had robbed him, and was on his way to Canada;
|
|
but in this he was mistaken. Sam had gone to the city to attend
|
|
a ball, and had decked himself out in his master's best suit.
|
|
The physician returned before morning, and again retired
|
|
to bed but with little hope of sleep, for his thoughts were
|
|
with his servant and horse. At six o'clock, in walked Sam
|
|
with his master's clothes, and the boots neatly blacked.
|
|
The watch was placed on the shelf, and the hat in its place.
|
|
Sam had not met any of the servants, and was therefore entirely
|
|
ignorant of what had occurred during his absence.
|
|
|
|
"What have you been about, sir, and where was you last night
|
|
when I was called?" asked the doctor.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, sir. I 'spose I was asleep," replied Sam.
|
|
|
|
But the doctor was not to be so easily satisfied, after having
|
|
been put to so much trouble in hunting up another suit without
|
|
the aid of Sam. After breakfast, Sam was taken into the barn,
|
|
tied up, and severely flogged with the cat, which brought
|
|
from him the truth concerning his absence the previous night.
|
|
This forever put an end to his fine appearance at the negro parties.
|
|
Had not the doctor been one of the most indulgent of masters,
|
|
he would not have escaped with merely a severe whipping.
|
|
|
|
As a matter of course, Sam had to relate to his companions
|
|
that evening in Mr. Wilson's kitchen all his adventures
|
|
as a physician while with his old master.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
|
|
THE MAN OF HONOR
|
|
|
|
|
|
AUGUSTINE CARDINAY, the purchaser of Marion, was from the Green Mountains
|
|
of Vermont, and his feelings were opposed to the holding of slaves;
|
|
but his young wife persuaded him into the idea that it was no worse
|
|
to own a slave than to hire one and pay the money to another.
|
|
Hence it was that he had been induced to purchase Marion.
|
|
|
|
Adolphus Morton, a young physician from the same State,
|
|
and who had just commenced the practice of his profession
|
|
in New Orleans, was boarding with Cardinay when Marion was
|
|
brought home. The young physician had been in New Orleans
|
|
but a very few weeks, and had seen but little of slavery.
|
|
In his own mountain-home, he had been taught that the slaves
|
|
of the Southern States were negroes, and if not from the coast
|
|
of Africa, the descendants of those who had been imported.
|
|
He was unprepared to behold with composure a beautiful white
|
|
girl of sixteen in the degraded position of a chattel slave.
|
|
|
|
The blood chilled in his young heart as he heard Cardinay tell how,
|
|
by bantering with the trader, he had bought her two hundred dollars less
|
|
than he first asked. His very looks showed that she had the deepest
|
|
sympathies of his heart.
|
|
|
|
Marion had been brought up by her mother to look
|
|
after the domestic concerns of her cottage in Virginia,
|
|
and well knew how to perform the duties imposed upon her.
|
|
Mrs. Cardinay was much pleased with her new servant, and often
|
|
mentioned her good qualities in the presence of Mr. Morton.
|
|
|
|
After eight months acquaintance with Marion, Morton's sympathies
|
|
ripened into love, which was most cordially reciprocated
|
|
by the friendless and injured child of sorrow. There was
|
|
but one course which the young man could honorably pursue,
|
|
and that was to purchase Marion and make her his lawful wife;
|
|
and this he did immediately, for he found Mr. and Mrs. Cardinay
|
|
willing to second his liberal intentions.
|
|
|
|
The young man, after purchasing Marion from Cardinay,
|
|
and marrying her, took lodgings in another part of the city.
|
|
A private teacher was called in, and the young wife was taught
|
|
some of those accomplishments so necessary for one taking
|
|
a high position in good society.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Morton soon obtained a large and influential practice in his profession,
|
|
and with it increased in wealth; but with all his wealth he never
|
|
owned a slave. Probably the fact that he had raised his wife from
|
|
that condition kept the hydra-headed system continually before him.
|
|
To the credit of Marion be it said, she used every means to obtain
|
|
the freedom of her mother, who had been sold to Parson Wilson, at Natchez.
|
|
Her efforts, however, had come too late; for Agnes had died of a fever
|
|
before the arrival of Dr. Morton's agent.
|
|
|
|
Marion found in Adolphus Morton a kind and affectionate husband;
|
|
and his wish to purchase her mother, although unsuccessful,
|
|
had doubly endeared him to her. Ere a year had elapsed from the time
|
|
of their marriage, Mrs. Morton presented her husband with a lovely
|
|
daughter, who seemed to knit their hearts still closer together.
|
|
This child they named Jane; and before the expiration of the second year,
|
|
they were blessed with another daughter, whom they named Adrika.
|
|
|
|
These children grew up to the ages of ten and eleven,
|
|
and were then sent to the North to finish their education,
|
|
and receive that refinement which young ladies cannot obtain
|
|
in the Slave States.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
|
|
THE QUADROON'S HOME
|
|
|
|
|
|
A FEW miles out of Richmond is a pleasant place, with here and there
|
|
a beautiful cottage surrounded by trees so as scarcely to be seen.
|
|
Among these was one far retired from the public roads,
|
|
and almost hidden among the trees. This was the spot that Henry
|
|
Linwood had selected for Isabella, the eldest daughter of Agnes.
|
|
The young man hired the house, furnished it, and placed his
|
|
mistress there, and for many months no one in his father's family
|
|
knew where he spent his leisure hours.
|
|
|
|
When Henry was not with her, Isabella employed herself in looking after
|
|
her little garden and the flowers that grew in front of her cottage.
|
|
The passion-flower, peony, dahlia, laburnum, and other plants,
|
|
so abundant in warm climates, under the tasteful hand of Isabella,
|
|
lavished their beauty upon this retired spot, and miniature paradise.
|
|
|
|
Although Isabella had been assured by Henry that she should be free
|
|
and that he would always consider her as his wife, she nevertheless
|
|
felt that she ought to be married and acknowledged by him.
|
|
But this was an impossibility under the State laws, even had
|
|
the young man been disposed to do what was right in the matter.
|
|
Related as he was, however, to one of the first families in Virginia,
|
|
he would not have dared to marry a woman of so low an origin,
|
|
even had the laws been favorable.
|
|
|
|
Here, in this secluded grove, unvisited by any other except
|
|
her lover, Isabella lived for years. She had become the mother
|
|
of a lovely daughter, which its father named Clotelle.
|
|
The complexion of the child was still fairer than that of
|
|
its mother. Indeed, she was not darker than other white children,
|
|
and as she grew older she more and more resembled her father.
|
|
|
|
As time passed away, Henry became negligent of Isabella and his child,
|
|
so much so, that days and even weeks passed without their seeing him,
|
|
or knowing where he was. Becoming more acquainted with the world,
|
|
and moving continually in the society of young women of his
|
|
own station, the young man felt that Isabella was a burden to him,
|
|
and having as some would say, "outgrown his love," he longed to free
|
|
himself of the responsibility; yet every time he saw the child,
|
|
he felt that he owed it his fatherly care.
|
|
|
|
Henry had now entered into political life, and been elected to a seat
|
|
in the legislature of his native State; and in his intercourse
|
|
with his friends had become acquainted with Gertrude Miller,
|
|
the daughter of a wealthy gentleman living near Richmond.
|
|
Both Henry and Gertrude were very good-looking, and a mutual
|
|
attachment sprang up between them.
|
|
|
|
Instead of finding fault with the unfrequent visits of Henry,
|
|
Isabella always met him with a smile, and tried to make both him
|
|
and herself believe that business was the cause of his negligence.
|
|
When he was with her, she devoted every moment of her time
|
|
to him, and never failed to speak of the growth and increasing
|
|
intelligence of Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
The child had grown so large as to be able to follow its father
|
|
on his departure out to the road. But the impression made on
|
|
Henry's feelings by the devoted woman and her child was momentary.
|
|
His heart had grown hard, and his acts were guided by no fixed principle.
|
|
Henry and Gertrude had been married nearly two years before Isabella
|
|
knew anything of the event, and it was merely by accident that she
|
|
became acquainted with the facts.
|
|
|
|
One beautiful afternoon, when Isabella and Clotelle were picking
|
|
wild strawberries some two miles from their home, and near
|
|
the road-side, they observed a one-horse chaise driving past.
|
|
The mother turned her face from the carriage not wishing to be
|
|
seen by strangers, little dreaming that the chaise contained
|
|
Henry and his wife. The child, however, watched the chaise,
|
|
and startled her mother by screaming out at the top of her voice,
|
|
"Papa! papa!" and clapped her little hands for joy.
|
|
The mother turned in haste to look at the strangers, and her eyes
|
|
encountered those of Henry's pale and dejected countenance.
|
|
Gertrude's eyes were on the child. The swiftness with which Henry
|
|
drove by could not hide from his wife the striking resemblance
|
|
of the child to himself. The young wife had heard the child
|
|
exclaim "Papa! papa!" and she immediately saw by the quivering
|
|
of his lips and the agitation depicted in his countenance,
|
|
that all was not right.
|
|
|
|
"Who is that woman? and why did that child call you papa?"
|
|
she inquired, with a trembling voice.
|
|
|
|
Henry was silent; he knew not what to say, and without another word passing
|
|
between them, they drove home.
|
|
|
|
On reaching her room, Gertrude buried her face in her handkerchief and wept.
|
|
She loved Henry, and when she had heard from the lips of her companions
|
|
how their husbands had proved false, she felt that he was an exception,
|
|
and fervently thanked God that she had been so blessed.
|
|
|
|
When Gertrude retired to her bed that night, the sad scene of the day
|
|
followed her. The beauty of Isabella, with her flowing curls, and the look
|
|
of the child, so much resembling the man whom she so dearly loved,
|
|
could not be forgotten; and little Clotelle's exclamation of "Papa! papa!"
|
|
rang in her ears during the whole night.
|
|
|
|
The return of Henry at twelve o'clock did not increase her happiness.
|
|
Feeling his guilt, he had absented himself from the house since his return
|
|
from the ride.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI
|
|
|
|
TO-DAY A MISTRESS, TO-MORROW A SLAVE
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE night was dark, the rain descended in torrents from the black
|
|
and overhanging clouds, and the thunder, accompanied with vivid
|
|
flashes of lightning, resounded fearfully, as Henry Linwood stepped
|
|
from his chaise and entered Isabella's cottage.
|
|
|
|
More than a fortnight had elapsed since the accidental meeting,
|
|
and Isabella was in doubt as to who the lady was that Henry was with in
|
|
the carriage. Little, however, did she think that it was his wife.
|
|
With a smile, Isabella met the young man as he entered her little dwelling.
|
|
Clotelle had already gone to bed, but her father's voice aroused her
|
|
from her sleep, and she was soon sitting on his knee.
|
|
|
|
The pale and agitated countenance of Henry betrayed his uneasiness,
|
|
but Isabella's mild and laughing allusion to the incident of their
|
|
meeting him on the day of his pleasure-drive, and her saying,
|
|
"I presume, dear Henry, that the lady was one of your relatives,"
|
|
led him to believe that she was still in ignorance of his marriage.
|
|
She was, in fact, ignorant who the lady was who accompanied
|
|
the man she loved on that eventful day. He, aware of this,
|
|
now acted more like himself, and passed the thing off as a joke.
|
|
At heart, however, Isabella felt uneasy, and this uneasiness
|
|
would at times show itself to the young man. At last, and with a
|
|
great effort, she said,--
|
|
|
|
"Now, hear Henry, if I am in the way of your future happiness, say so, and I
|
|
will release you from any promises that you have made me. I know there is
|
|
no law by which I can hold you, and if there was, I would not resort to it.
|
|
You are as dear to me as ever, and my thoughts shall always be devoted
|
|
to you. It would be a great sacrifice for me to give you up to another,
|
|
but if it be your desire, as great as the sacrifice is, I will make it.
|
|
Send me and your child into a Free State if we are in your way."
|
|
|
|
Again and again Linwood assured her that no woman possessed his love but her.
|
|
Oh, what falsehood and deceit man can put on when dealing with woman's love!
|
|
|
|
The unabated storm kept Henry from returning home until
|
|
after the clock had struck two, and as he drew near
|
|
his residence he saw his wife standing at the window.
|
|
Giving his horse in charge of the servant who was waiting,
|
|
he entered the house, and found his wife in tears.
|
|
Although he had never satisfied Gertrude as to who the quadroon
|
|
woman and child were, he had kept her comparatively easy
|
|
by his close attention to her, and by telling her that she
|
|
was mistaken in regard to the child's calling him "papa."
|
|
His absence that night, however, without any apparent cause,
|
|
had again aroused the jealousy of Gertrude; but Henry told her
|
|
that he had been caught in the rain while out, which prevented
|
|
his sooner returning, and she, anxious to believe him,
|
|
received the story as satisfactory.
|
|
|
|
Somewhat heated with brandy, and wearied with much loss of sleep,
|
|
Linwood fell into a sound slumber as soon as he retired.
|
|
Not so with Gertrude. That faithfulness which has ever
|
|
distinguished her sex, and the anxiety with which she watched
|
|
all his movements, kept the wife awake while the husband slept.
|
|
His sleep, though apparently sound, was nevertheless uneasy.
|
|
Again and again she heard him pronounce the name of Isabella,
|
|
and more than once she heard him say, "I am not married;
|
|
I will never marry while you live." Then he would speak
|
|
the name of Clotelle and say, "My dear child, how I love you!"
|
|
|
|
After a sleepless night, Gertrude arose from her couch,
|
|
resolved that she would reveal the whole matter to her mother.
|
|
Mrs. Miller was a woman of little or no feeling, proud, peevish,
|
|
and passionate, thus making everybody miserable that came near her;
|
|
and when she disliked any one, her hatred knew no bounds.
|
|
This Gertrude knew; and had she not considered it her duty,
|
|
she would have kept the secret locked in her own heart.
|
|
|
|
During the day, Mrs. Linwood visited her mother and told her all
|
|
that had happened. The mother scolded the daughter for not having
|
|
informed her sooner, and immediately determined to find out who the
|
|
woman and child were that Gertrude had met on the day of her ride.
|
|
Three days were spent by Mrs. Miller in this endeavor,
|
|
but without success.
|
|
|
|
Four weeks had elapsed, and the storm of the old lady's
|
|
temper had somewhat subsided, when, one evening, as she was
|
|
approaching her daughter's residence, she saw Henry walking
|
|
in the direction of where the quadroon was supposed to reside.
|
|
Being satisfied that the young man had not seen her, the old
|
|
woman at once resolved to follow him. Linwood's boots squeaked
|
|
so loudly that Mrs. Miller had no difficulty in following him
|
|
without being herself observed.
|
|
|
|
After a walk of about two miles, the young man turned into a narrow
|
|
and unfrequented road, and soon entered the cottage occupied by Isabella.
|
|
It was a fine starlight night, and the moon was just rising when they
|
|
got to their journey's end. As usual, Isabella met Henry with a smile,
|
|
and expressed her fears regarding his health.
|
|
|
|
Hours passed, and still old Mrs. Miller remained near the house,
|
|
determined to know who lived there. When she undertook
|
|
to ferret out anything, she bent her whole energies to it.
|
|
As Michael Angelo, who subjected all things to his pursuit
|
|
and the idea he had formed of it, painted the crucifixion
|
|
by the side of a writhing slave and would have broken up
|
|
the true cross for pencils, so Mrs. Miller would have entered
|
|
the sepulchre, if she could have done it, in search of an object
|
|
she wished to find.
|
|
|
|
The full moon had risen, and was pouring its beams upon
|
|
surrounding objects as Henry stepped from Isabella's door,
|
|
and looking at his watch, said,--
|
|
|
|
"I must go, dear; it is now half-past ten."
|
|
|
|
Had little Clotelle been awake, she too would have been at the door.
|
|
As Henry walked to the gate, Isabella followed with her left hand locked
|
|
in his. Again he looked at his watch, and said,--
|
|
|
|
"I must go."
|
|
|
|
"It is more than a year since you staid all night,"
|
|
murmured Isabella, as he folded her convulsively in his arms,
|
|
and pressed upon her beautiful lips a parting kiss.
|
|
|
|
He was nearly out of sight when, with bitter sobs,
|
|
the quadroon retraced her steps to the door of the cottage.
|
|
Clotelle had in the mean time awoke, and now inquired
|
|
of her mother how long her father had been gone.
|
|
At that instant, a knock was heard at the door, and supposing
|
|
that it was Henry returning for something he had forgotten,
|
|
as he frequently did, Isabella flew to let him in.
|
|
To her amazement, however, a strange woman stood in the door.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you that comes here at this late hour?"
|
|
demanded the half-frightened Isabella.
|
|
|
|
Without making any reply, Mrs. Miller pushed the quadroon aside,
|
|
and entered the house.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want here?" again demanded Isabella.
|
|
|
|
"I am in search of you," thundered the maddened Mrs. Miller;
|
|
but thinking that her object would be better served by seeming
|
|
to be kind, she assumed a different tone of voice, and began
|
|
talking in a pleasing manner.
|
|
|
|
In this way, she succeeded in finding out that connection existing
|
|
between Linwood and Isabella, and after getting all she could
|
|
out of the unsuspecting woman, she informed her that the man
|
|
she so fondly loved had been married for more than two years.
|
|
Seized with dizziness, the poor, heart-broken woman fainted
|
|
and fell upon the floor. How long she remained there she could
|
|
not tell; but when she returned to consciousness, the strange
|
|
woman was gone, and her child was standing by her side.
|
|
When she was so far recovered as to regain her feet,
|
|
Isabella went to the door, and even into the yard, to see
|
|
if the old woman was no somewhere about.
|
|
|
|
As she stood there, the full moon cast its bright rays
|
|
over her whole person, giving her an angelic appearance
|
|
and imparting to her flowing hair a still more golden hue.
|
|
Suddenly another change came over her features, and her
|
|
full red kips trembled as with suppressed emotion.
|
|
The muscles around her faultless mouth became convulsed,
|
|
she gasped for breath, and exclaiming, "Is it possible that man
|
|
can be so false!" again fainted.
|
|
|
|
Clotelle stood and bathed her mother's temples with cold water until
|
|
she once more revived.
|
|
|
|
Although the laws of Virginia forbid the education of slaves,
|
|
Agnes had nevertheless employed an old free negro to teach
|
|
her two daughters to read and write. After being separated
|
|
from her mother and sister, Isabella turned her attention
|
|
to the subject of Christianity, and received that consolation
|
|
from the Bible which is never denied to the children of God.
|
|
This was now her last hope, for her heart was torn with grief
|
|
and filled with all the bitterness of disappointment.
|
|
|
|
The night passed away, but without sleep to poor Isabella.
|
|
At the dawn of day, she tried to make herself believe
|
|
that the whole of the past night was a dream, and determined
|
|
to be satisfied with the explanation which Henry should give
|
|
on his next visit.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
|
|
|
THE MOTHER-IN-LAW
|
|
|
|
|
|
WHEN Harry returned home, he found his wife seated at the window,
|
|
awaiting his approach. Secret grief was gnawing at her heart.
|
|
Her sad, pale cheeks and swollen eyes showed too well that agony,
|
|
far deeper than her speech portrayed, filled her heart.
|
|
A dull and death-like silence prevailed on his entrance.
|
|
His pale face and brow, dishevelled hair, and the feeling
|
|
that he manifested on finding Gertrude still up, told Henry
|
|
in plainer words than she could have used that his wife
|
|
was aware that her love had never been held sacred by him.
|
|
The window-blinds were still unclosed, and the full-orbed moon
|
|
shed her soft refulgence over the unrivalled scene, and gave
|
|
it a silvery lustre which sweetly harmonized with the silence
|
|
of the night. The clock's iron tongue, in a neighboring belfry,
|
|
proclaimed the hour of twelve, as the truant and unfaithful
|
|
husband seated himself by the side of his devoted and loving wife,
|
|
and inquired if she was not well.
|
|
|
|
"I am, dear Henry," replied Gertrude; "but I feat *you* are not.
|
|
If well in body, I fear you are not at peace in mind."
|
|
|
|
"Why?" inquired he.
|
|
|
|
"Because," she replied, "you are so pale and have such a wild look
|
|
in your eyes."
|
|
|
|
Again he protested his innocence, and vowed she was the only woman
|
|
who had any claim upon his heart. To behold one thus playing upon
|
|
the feelings of two lovely women is enough to make us feel that evil
|
|
must at last bring its own punishment.
|
|
|
|
Henry and Gertrude had scarcely risen from the breakfast-table next
|
|
morning ere old Mrs. Miller made her appearance. She immediately took
|
|
her daughter aside, and informed her of her previous night's experience,
|
|
telling her how she had followed Henry to Isabella's cottage,
|
|
detailing the interview with the quadroon, and her late return home alone.
|
|
The old woman urged her daughter to demand that the quadroon and her child
|
|
be at once sold to the negro speculators and taken out of the State,
|
|
or that Gertrude herself should separate from Henry.
|
|
|
|
"Assert your rights, my dear. Let no one share a heart that justly
|
|
belongs to you," said Mrs. Miller, with her eyes flashing fire.
|
|
"Don't sleep this night, my child, until that wench has been removed
|
|
from that cottage; and as for the child, hand that over to me,--
|
|
I saw at once that it was Henry's."
|
|
|
|
During these remarks, the old lady was walking up and down the room
|
|
like a caged lioness. She had learned from Isabella that she had
|
|
been purchased by Henry, and the innocence of the injured quadroon
|
|
caused her to acknowledge that he was the father of her child.
|
|
Few women could have taken such a matter in hand and carried it
|
|
through with more determination and success than old Mrs. Miller.
|
|
Completely inured in all the crimes and atrocities connected
|
|
with the institution of slavery, she was also aware that,
|
|
to a greater or less extent, the slave women shared with their
|
|
mistress the affections of their master. This caused her to look
|
|
with a suspicious eye on every good-looking negro woman that she saw.
|
|
|
|
While the old woman was thus lecturing her daughter upon her
|
|
rights and duties, Henry, unaware of what was transpiring,
|
|
had left the house and gone to his office. As soon as the old
|
|
woman found that he was gone, she said,--
|
|
|
|
"I will venture anything that he is on his way to see that wench again.
|
|
I'll lay my life on it."
|
|
|
|
The entrance, however, of little Marcus, or Mark, as he was
|
|
familiarly called, asking for Massa Linwood's blue bag,
|
|
satisfied her that her son-in-law was at his office.
|
|
Before the old lady returned home, it was agreed that
|
|
Gertrude should come to her mother's to tea that evening,
|
|
and Henry with her, and that Mrs. Miller should there charge
|
|
the young husband with inconstancy to her daughter, and demand
|
|
the removal of Isabella.
|
|
|
|
With this understanding, the old woman retraced her steps
|
|
to her own dwelling.
|
|
|
|
Had Mrs. Miller been of a different character and not surrounded
|
|
by slavery, she could scarcely have been unhappy in such a home
|
|
as hers. Just at the edge of the city, and sheltered by large
|
|
poplar-trees was the old homestead in which she resided.
|
|
There was a splendid orchard in the rear of the house,
|
|
and the old weather-beaten sweep, with "the moss-covered bucket"
|
|
at its end, swung majestically over the deep well.
|
|
The garden was scarcely to be equalled. Its grounds were laid
|
|
out in excellent taste, and rare exotics in the greenhouse
|
|
made it still more lovely.
|
|
|
|
It was a sweet autumn evening, when the air breathed through
|
|
the fragrant sheaves of grain, and the setting sun, with his
|
|
golden kisses, burnished the rich clusters of purple grapes,
|
|
that Henry and Gertrude were seen approaching the house on foot;
|
|
it was nothing more than a pleasant walk. Oh, how Gertrude's
|
|
heart beat as she seated herself, on their arrival!
|
|
|
|
The beautiful parlor, surrounded on all sides with luxury
|
|
and taste, with the sun creeping through the damask curtains,
|
|
added a charm to the scene. It was in this room that Gertrude
|
|
had been introduced to Henry, and the pleasant hours that she
|
|
had spent there with him rushed unbidden on her memory.
|
|
It was here that, in former days, her beautiful countenance
|
|
had made her appearance as fascinating and as lovely as that
|
|
of Cleopatra's. Her sweet, musical voice might have been
|
|
heard in every part of the house, occasionally thrilling
|
|
you with an unexpected touch. How changed the scene!
|
|
Her pale and wasted features could not be lighted up by any
|
|
thoughts of the past, and she was sorrowful at heart.
|
|
|
|
As usual, the servants in the kitchen were in ecstasies at the announcement
|
|
that "Miss Gerty," as they called their young mistress, was in the house,
|
|
for they loved her sincerely. Gertrude had saved them from many
|
|
a flogging, by interceding for them, when her mother was in one of her
|
|
uncontrollable passions. Dinah, the cook, always expected Miss Gerty
|
|
to visit the kitchen as soon as she came, and was not a little displeased,
|
|
on this occasion, at what she considered her young mistress's neglect.
|
|
Uncle Tony, too, looked regularly for Miss Gerty to visit the green house,
|
|
and congratulate him on his superiority as a gardener.
|
|
|
|
When tea was over, Mrs. Miller dismissed the servants from the room,
|
|
then told her son-in-law what she had witnessed the previous night,
|
|
and demanded for her daughter that Isabella should be immediately
|
|
sent out of the State, and to be sure that the thing would be done,
|
|
she wanted him to give her the power to make such disposition
|
|
of the woman and child as she should think best. Gertrude was
|
|
Mrs. Miller's only child, and Henry felt little like displeasing
|
|
a family upon whose friendship he so much depended, and, no doubt,
|
|
long wishing to free himself from Isabella, he at once yielded
|
|
to the demands of his mother-in-law. Mr. Miller was a mere cipher
|
|
about his premises. If any one came on business connected with
|
|
the farm, he would invariably say, "Wait till I see my wife,"
|
|
and the wife's opinion was sure to be law in every case.
|
|
Bankrupt in character, and debauched in body and mind,
|
|
with seven mulatto children who claimed him as their father,
|
|
he was badly prepared to find fault with his son-in-law. It was
|
|
settled that Mrs. Miller should use her own discretion in removing
|
|
Isabella from her little cottage, and her future disposition.
|
|
With this understanding Henry and Gertrude returned home.
|
|
In the deep recesses of his heart the young man felt that he would
|
|
like to see his child and its mother once more; but fearing the wrath
|
|
of his mother-in-law, he did not dare to gratify his inclination.
|
|
He had not the slightest idea of what would become of them;
|
|
but he well knew that the old woman would have no mercy on them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
|
|
A HARD-HEARTED WOMAN
|
|
|
|
|
|
WITH no one but her dear little Clotelle, Isabella passed
|
|
her weary hours without partaking of either food or drink,
|
|
hoping that Henry would soon return, and that the strange
|
|
meeting with the old woman would be cleared up.
|
|
|
|
While seated in her neat little bedroom with her fevered
|
|
face buried in her handkerchief, the child ran in and told
|
|
its mother that a carriage had stopped in front of the house.
|
|
With a palpitating heart she arose from her seat and went to the door,
|
|
hoping that it was Henry; but, to her great consternation,
|
|
the old lady who had paid her such an unceremonious visit
|
|
on the evening that she had last seen Henry, stepped out
|
|
of the carriage, accompanied by the slave-trader, Jennings.
|
|
|
|
Isabella had seen the trader when he purchased her mother and sister,
|
|
and immediately recognized him. What could these persons want there?
|
|
thought she. Without any parleying or word of explanation, the two
|
|
entered the house, leaving the carriage in charge of a servant.
|
|
|
|
Clotelle ran to her mother, and clung to her dress as if frightened
|
|
by the strangers.
|
|
|
|
"She's a fine-looking wench," said the speculator,
|
|
as he seated himself, unasked, in the rocking-chair;
|
|
"yet I don't think she is worth the money you ask for her."
|
|
|
|
"What do you want here?" inquired Isabella, with a quivering voice.
|
|
|
|
"None of your insolence to me," bawled out the old woman,
|
|
at the top of her voice; "if you do, I will give you what you
|
|
deserve so much, my lady,--a good whipping."
|
|
|
|
In an agony of grief, pale, trembling, and ready to sink
|
|
to the floor, Isabella was only sustained by the hope that she
|
|
would be able to save her child. At last, regaining her
|
|
self-possession, she ordered them both to leave the house.
|
|
Feeling herself insulted, the old woman seized the tongs
|
|
that stood by the fire-place, and raised them to strike
|
|
the quadroon down; but the slave-trader immediately jumped
|
|
between the women, exclaiming,--
|
|
|
|
"I won't buy her, Mrs. Miller, if you injure her."
|
|
|
|
Poor little Clotelle screamed as she saw the strange woman raise
|
|
the tongs at her mother. With the exception of old Aunt Nancy,
|
|
a free colored woman, whom Isabella sometimes employed to work for her,
|
|
the child had never before seen a strange face in her mother's dwelling.
|
|
Fearing that Isabella would offer some resistance, Mrs. Miller had
|
|
ordered the overseer of her own farm to follow her; and, just as
|
|
Jennings had stepped between the two women, Mull, the negro-driver,
|
|
walked into the room.
|
|
|
|
"Seize that impudent hussy," said Mrs. Miller to the overseer,
|
|
"and tie her up this minute, that I may teach her a lesson
|
|
she won't forget in a hurry."
|
|
|
|
As she spoke, the old woman's eyes rolled, her lips quivered,
|
|
and she looked like a very fury.
|
|
|
|
"I will have nothing to do with her, if you whip her, Mrs. Miller,"
|
|
said the slave-trader. "Niggers ain't worth half so much in the market
|
|
with their backs newly scarred," continued he, as the overseer commenced
|
|
his preparations for executing Mrs. Miller's orders.
|
|
|
|
Clotelle here took her father's walking-stick, which was lying on the back
|
|
of the sofa where he had left it, and, raising it, said,--
|
|
|
|
"If you bad people touch my mother, I will strike you."
|
|
|
|
They looked at the child with astonishment; and her extreme you,
|
|
wonderful beauty, and uncommon courage, seemed for a moment to shake
|
|
their purpose. The manner and language of this child were alike
|
|
beyond her years, and under other circumstances would have gained
|
|
for her the approbation of those present.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Henry, Henry!" exclaimed Isabella, wringing her hands.
|
|
|
|
"You need not call on him, hussy; you will never see him again,"
|
|
said Mrs. Miller.
|
|
|
|
"What! is he dead?" inquired the heart-stricken woman.
|
|
|
|
It was then that she forgot her own situation, thinking only
|
|
of the man she loved. Never having been called to endure any
|
|
kind of abusive treatment, Isabella was not fitted to sustain
|
|
herself against the brutality of Mrs. Miller, much less
|
|
the combined ferociousness of the old woman and the overseer too.
|
|
Suffice it to say, that instead of whipping Isabella, Mrs. Miller
|
|
transferred her to the negro-speculator, who took her immediately
|
|
to his slave-pen. The unfeeling old woman would not permit
|
|
Isabella to take more than a single change of her clothing,
|
|
remarking to Jennings,--
|
|
|
|
"I sold you the wench, you know,--not her clothes."
|
|
|
|
The injured, friendless, and unprotected Isabella fainted as she saw
|
|
her child struggling to release herself from the arms of old Mrs. Miller,
|
|
and as the wretch boxed the poor child's ears.
|
|
|
|
After leaving directions as to how Isabella's furniture and
|
|
other effects should be disposed of, Mrs. Miller took Clotelle
|
|
into her carriage and drove home. There was not even color
|
|
enough about the child to make it appear that a single drop
|
|
of African blood flowed through its blue veins.
|
|
|
|
Considerable sensation was created in the kitchen among the servants
|
|
when the carriage drove up, and Clotelle entered the house.
|
|
|
|
"Jes' like Massa Henry fur all de worl'," said Dinah, as she
|
|
caught a glimpse of the child through the window.
|
|
|
|
"Wondah whose brat dat ar' dat missis bringin' home wid her?"
|
|
said Jane, as she put the ice in the pitchers for dinner.
|
|
"I warrant it's some poor white nigger somebody bin givin' her."
|
|
|
|
The child was white. What should be done to make it look like
|
|
other negroes, was the question which Mrs. Miller asked herself.
|
|
The callous-hearted old woman bit her nether lip, as she viewed
|
|
that child, standing before her, with her long, dark ringlets
|
|
clustering over her alabaster brow and neck.
|
|
|
|
"Take this little nigger and cut her hair close to her head,"
|
|
said the mistress to Jane, as the latter answered the bell.
|
|
|
|
Clotelle screamed, as she felt the scissors grating over her head,
|
|
and saw those curls that her mother thought so much of falling
|
|
upon the floor.
|
|
|
|
A roar of laughter burst from the servants, as Jane led the child
|
|
through the kitchen, with the hair cut so short that the naked
|
|
scalp could be plainly seen.
|
|
|
|
"'Gins to look like nigger, now," said Dinah, with her mouth
|
|
upon a grin.
|
|
|
|
The mistress smiled, as the shorn child reentered the room;
|
|
but there was something more needed. The child was white,
|
|
and that was a great objection. However, she hit upon a plan to
|
|
remedy this which seemed feasible. The day was excessively warm.
|
|
Not a single cloud floated over the blue vault of heaven; not a breath
|
|
of wind seemed moving, and the earth was parched by the broiling sun.
|
|
Even the bees had stopped humming, and the butterflies
|
|
had hid themselves under the broad leaves of the burdock.
|
|
Without a morsel of dinner, the poor child was put in the garden,
|
|
and set to weeding it, her arms, neck, and head completely bare.
|
|
Unaccustomed to toil, Clotelle wept as she exerted herself in pulling
|
|
up the weeds. Old Dinah, the cook, was a unfeeling as her mistress,
|
|
and she was pleased to see the child made to work in the hot sun.
|
|
|
|
"Dat white nigger'll soon be brack enuff if missis keeps her workin'
|
|
out dar," she said, as she wiped the perspiration from her sooty brow.
|
|
|
|
Dinah was the mother of thirteen children, all of whom bad been taken
|
|
from her when young; and this, no doubt, did much to harden her feelings,
|
|
and make her hate all white persons.
|
|
|
|
The burning sun poured its rays on the face of the friendless
|
|
child until she sank down in the corner of the garden,
|
|
and was actually broiled to sleep.
|
|
|
|
"Dat little nigger ain't workin' a bit, missus," said Dinah to Mrs. Miller,
|
|
as the latter entered the kitchen.
|
|
|
|
"She's lying in the sun seasoning; she will work the better by and by,"
|
|
replied the mistress.
|
|
|
|
"Dese white niggers always tink dey seff good as white folks,"
|
|
said the cook.
|
|
|
|
"Yes; but we will teach them better, won't we, Dinah?" rejoined Mrs. Miller.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, missus," replied Dinah; "I don't like dese merlatter niggers,
|
|
no how. Dey always want to set dey seff up for sumfin' big."
|
|
With this remark the old cook gave one of her coarse laughs,
|
|
and continued: "Missis understands human nature, don't she?
|
|
Ah! if she ain't a whole team and de ole gray mare to boot,
|
|
den Dinah don't know nuffin'."
|
|
|
|
Of course, the mistress was out of the kitchen before these last
|
|
remarks were made.
|
|
|
|
It was with the deepest humiliation that Henry learned from one of his
|
|
own slaves the treatment which his child was receiving at the hands
|
|
of his relentless mother-in-law.
|
|
|
|
The scorching sun had the desired effect; for in less than a fortnight,
|
|
Clotelle could scarcely have been recognized as the same child.
|
|
Often was she seen to weep, and heard to call on her mother.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Miller, when at church on Sabbath, usually,
|
|
on warm days, took Nancy, one of her servants, in her pew,
|
|
and this girl had to fan her mistress during service.
|
|
Unaccustomed to such a soft and pleasant seat, the servant
|
|
would very soon become sleepy and begin to nod. Sometimes she
|
|
would go fast asleep, which annoyed the mistress exceedingly.
|
|
But Mrs. Miller had nimble fingers, and on them sharp nails, and,
|
|
with an energetic pinch upon the bare arms of the poor girl,
|
|
she would arouse the daughter of Africa from her pleasant dreams.
|
|
But there was no one of Mrs. Miller's servants who received
|
|
so much punishment as old Uncle Tony.
|
|
|
|
Fond of her greenhouse, and often in the garden, she was ever at the old
|
|
gardener's heels. Uncle Tony was very religious, and, whenever his
|
|
mistress flogged him, he invariably gave her a religious exhortation.
|
|
Although unable to read, he, nevertheless, had on his tongue's
|
|
end portions of Scripture which he could use at any moment.
|
|
In one end of the greenhouse was Uncle Tony's sleeping room,
|
|
and those who happened in that vicinity, between nine and ten at night,
|
|
could hear the old man offering up his thanksgiving to God for his
|
|
protection during the day. Uncle Tony, however, took great pride,
|
|
when he thought that any of the whites were within hearing, to dwell,
|
|
in his prayer, on his own goodness and the unfitness of others to die.
|
|
Often was he heard to say, "O Lord, thou knowest that the white folks
|
|
are not Christians, but the black people are God's own children."
|
|
But if Tony thought that his old mistress was within the sound
|
|
of his voice, he launched out into deeper water.
|
|
|
|
It was, therefore, on a sweet night, when the bright stars were looking
|
|
out with a joyous sheen, that Mark and two of the other boys passed
|
|
the greenhouse, and heard Uncle Tony in his devotions.
|
|
|
|
"Let's have a little fun," said the mischievous Marcus to his
|
|
young companions. "I will make Uncle Tony believe that I am
|
|
old mistress, and he'll give us an extra touch in his prayer."
|
|
Mark immediately commenced talking in a strain of voice resembling,
|
|
as well as he could, Mrs. Miller, and at once Tony was heard to say
|
|
in a loud voice, "O Lord, thou knowest that the white people are not fit
|
|
to die; but, as for old Tony, whenever the angel of the Lord comes,
|
|
he's ready." At that moment, Mark tapped lightly on the door.
|
|
"Who's dar?" thundered old Tony. Mark made no reply.
|
|
The old man commenced and went through with the same remarks
|
|
addressed to the Lord, when Mark again knocked at the door.
|
|
"Who dat dar?" asked Uncle Tony, with a somewhat agitated
|
|
countenance and trembling voice. Still Mark would not reply.
|
|
Again Tony took up the thread of his discourse, and said, "O Lord,
|
|
thou knowest as well as I do that dese white folks are not prepared
|
|
to die, but here is old Tony, when de angel of de Lord comes,
|
|
he's ready to go to heaven." Mark once more knocked on the door.
|
|
"Who dat dar?" thundered Tony at the top of his voice.
|
|
|
|
"De angel of de Lord," replied Mark, in a somewhat suppressed
|
|
and sepulchral voice.
|
|
|
|
"What de angel of de Lord want here?" inquired Tony, as if much frightened.
|
|
|
|
"He's come for poor old Tony, to take him out of the world,"
|
|
replied Mark, in the same strange voice.
|
|
|
|
"Dat nigger ain't here; he die tree weeks ago," responded Tony,
|
|
in a still more agitated and frightened tone. Mark and his companions
|
|
made the welkin ring with their shouts at the old man's answer.
|
|
Uncle Tony hearing them, and finding that he had been imposed upon,
|
|
opened his door, came out with stick in hand, and said, "Is dat you,
|
|
Mr. Mark? you imp, if I can get to you I'll larn you how to come
|
|
here wid your nonsense."
|
|
|
|
Mark and his companions left the garden, feeling satisfied
|
|
that Uncle Tony was not as ready to go with "de angel of de Lord"
|
|
as he would have others believe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
|
|
THE PRISON
|
|
|
|
|
|
WHILE poor little Clotelle was being kicked about by Mrs. Miller,
|
|
on account of her relationship to her son-in-law, Isabella was passing
|
|
lonely hours in the county jail, the place to which Jennings had
|
|
removed her for safe-keeping, after purchasing her from Mrs. Miller.
|
|
Incarcerated in one of the iron-barred rooms of that dismal place,
|
|
those dark, glowing eyes, lofty brow, and graceful form wilted down
|
|
like a plucked rose under a noonday sun, while deep in her heart's
|
|
ambrosial cells was the most anguishing distress.
|
|
|
|
Vulgar curiosity is always in search of its victims, and Jennings'
|
|
boast that he had such a ladylike and beautiful woman
|
|
in his possession brought numbers to the prison who begged
|
|
of the jailer the privilege of seeing the slave-trader's prize.
|
|
Many who saw her were melted to tears at the pitiful sight,
|
|
and were struck with admiration at her intelligence; and, when she
|
|
spoke of her child, they must have been convinced that a
|
|
mother's sorrow can be conceived by none but a mother's heart.
|
|
The warbling of birds in the green bowers of bliss, which she
|
|
occasionally heard, brought no tidings of gladness to her.
|
|
Their joy fell cold upon her heart, and seemed like bitter mockery.
|
|
They reminded her of her own cottage, where, with her beloved child,
|
|
she had spent so many happy days.
|
|
|
|
The speculator had kept close watch over his valuable piece of property,
|
|
for fear that it might damage itself. This, however, there was no danger of,
|
|
for Isabella still hoped and believed that Henry would come to her rescue.
|
|
She could not bring herself to believe that he would allow her to be sent
|
|
away without at least seeing her, and the trader did all he could to keep
|
|
this idea alive in her.
|
|
|
|
While Isabella, with a weary heart, was passing sleepless nights
|
|
thinking only of her daughter and Henry, the latter was seeking relief
|
|
in that insidious enemy of the human race, the intoxicating cup.
|
|
His wife did all in her power to make his life a pleasant and a happy one,
|
|
for Gertrude was devotedly attached to him; but a weary heart gets
|
|
no gladness out of sunshine. The secret remorse that rankled in his
|
|
bosom caused him to see all the world blood-shot. He had not visited
|
|
his mother-in-law since the evening he had given her liberty to use her
|
|
own discretion as to how Isabella and her child should be disposed of.
|
|
He feared even to go near the house, for he did not wish to see his child.
|
|
Gertrude felt this every time he declined accompanying her to her mother's.
|
|
Possessed of a tender and confiding heart, entirely unlike her mother,
|
|
she sympathized deeply with her husband. She well knew that all young
|
|
men in the South, to a greater or less extent, became enamored of
|
|
the slave-women, and she fancied that his case was only one of the many,
|
|
and if he had now forsaken all others for her she did not wish to be punished;
|
|
but she dared not let her mother know that such were her feelings.
|
|
Again and again had she noticed the great resemblance between Clotelle
|
|
and Henry, and she wished the child in better hands than those of
|
|
her cruel mother.
|
|
|
|
At last Gertrude determined to mention the matter to her husband.
|
|
Consequently, the next morning, when they were seated on the back piazza,
|
|
and the sun was pouring its splendid rays upon everything around,
|
|
changing the red tints on the lofty hills in the distance into
|
|
streaks of purest gold, and nature seeming by her smiles to favor
|
|
the object, she said,--
|
|
|
|
"What, dear Henry, do you intend to do with Clotelle?" A paleness
|
|
that overspread his countenance, the tears that trickled down his cheeks,
|
|
the deep emotion that was visible in his face, and the trembling
|
|
of his voice, showed at once that she had touched a tender chord.
|
|
Without a single word, he buried his face in his handkerchief,
|
|
and burst into tears.
|
|
|
|
This made Gertrude still more unhappy, for she feared that he had
|
|
misunderstood her; and she immediately expressed her regret
|
|
that she had mentioned the subject. Becoming satisfied from this
|
|
that his wife sympathized with him in his unhappy situation,
|
|
Henry told her of the agony that filled his soul, and Gertrude
|
|
agreed to intercede for him with her mother for the removal
|
|
of the child to a boarding-school in one of the Free States.
|
|
|
|
In the afternoon, when Henry returned from his office, his wife met him
|
|
with tearful eyes, and informed him that her mother was filled with rage
|
|
at the mention of the removal of Clotelle from her premises.
|
|
|
|
In the mean time, the slave-trader, Jennings, had started for
|
|
the South with his gang of human cattle, of whom Isabella was one.
|
|
Most quadroon women who are taken to the South are either sold to gentlemen
|
|
for their own use or disposed of as house-servants or waiting-maids.
|
|
Fortunately for Isabella, she was sold for the latter purpose.
|
|
Jennings found a purchaser for her in the person of Mr. James French.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. French was a severe mistress. All who lived with her,
|
|
though well-dressed, were scantily fed and over-worked. Isabella
|
|
found her new situation far different from her Virginia
|
|
cottage-life. She had frequently heard Vicksburg spoken
|
|
of as a cruel place for slaves, and now she was in a position
|
|
to test the truthfulness of the assertion.
|
|
|
|
A few weeks after her arrival, Mrs. French began to show to Isabella that she
|
|
was anything but a pleasant and agreeable mistress. What social virtues
|
|
are possible in a society of which injustice is a primary characteristic,--
|
|
in a society which is divided into two classes, masters and slaves?
|
|
Every married woman at the South looks upon her husband as unfaithful,
|
|
and regards every negro woman as a rival.
|
|
|
|
Isabella had been with her new mistress but a short time
|
|
when she was ordered to cut off her long and beautiful hair.
|
|
The negro is naturally fond of dress and outward display.
|
|
He who has short woolly hair combs and oils it to death;
|
|
he who has long hair would sooner have his teeth drawn than
|
|
to part with it. But, however painful it was to Isabella,
|
|
she was soon seen with her hair cut short, and the sleeves of her
|
|
dress altered to fit tight to her arms. Even with her hair short
|
|
and with her ill-looking dress, Isabella was still handsome.
|
|
Her life had been a secluded one, and though now twenty-eight
|
|
years of age, her beauty had only assumed a quieter tone.
|
|
The other servants only laughed at Isabella's misfortune
|
|
in losing her beautiful hair.
|
|
|
|
"Miss 'Bell needn't strut so big; she got short nappy har's well's I,"
|
|
said Nell, with a broad grin that showed her teeth.
|
|
|
|
"She tink she white when she cum here, wid dat long har
|
|
ob hers," replied Mill.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," continued Nell, "missus make her take down her wool,
|
|
so she no put it up to-day."
|
|
|
|
The fairness of Isabella's complexion was regarded with envy
|
|
by the servants as well as by the mistress herself.
|
|
This is one of the hard features of slavery. To-day a woman
|
|
is mistress of her own cottage; tomorrow she is sold to one
|
|
who aims to make her life as intolerable as possible.
|
|
And let it be remembered that the house-servant has the best
|
|
situation a slave can occupy.
|
|
|
|
But the degradation and harsh treatment Isabella experienced in her new
|
|
home was nothing compared to the grief she underwent at being separated
|
|
from her dear child. Taken from her with scarcely a moment's warning,
|
|
she knew not what had become of her.
|
|
|
|
This deep and heartfelt grief of Isabella was soon perceived
|
|
by her owners, and fearing that her refusal to take proper food
|
|
would cause her death, they resolved to sell her. Mr. French found
|
|
no difficulty in securing a purchaser for the quadroon woman,
|
|
for such are usually the most marketable kind of property.
|
|
Isabella was sold at private sale to a young man for a housekeeper;
|
|
but even he had missed his aim.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Gordon, the new master, was a man of pleasure. He was the owner of a
|
|
large sugar plantation, which he had left under the charge of an overseer,
|
|
and was now giving himself up to the pleasures of a city life.
|
|
At first Mr. Gordon sought to win Isabella's favor by flattery and presents,
|
|
knowing that whatever he gave her he could take from her again.
|
|
The poor innocent creature dreaded every moment lest the scene should change.
|
|
At every interview with Gordon she stoutly maintained that she had
|
|
left a husband in Virginia, and could never think of taking another.
|
|
In this she considered that she was truthful, for she had ever regarded
|
|
Henry as her husband. The gold watch and chain and other glittering
|
|
presents which Gordon gave to her were all kept unused.
|
|
|
|
In the same house with Isabella was a man-servant who had from time
|
|
to time hired himself from his master. His name was William.
|
|
He could feel for Isabella, for he, like her, had been separated from
|
|
near and dear relatives, and he often tried to console the poor woman.
|
|
One day Isabella observed to him that her hair was growing out again.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied William; "you look a good deal like a man
|
|
with your short hair."
|
|
|
|
"Oh," rejoined she, "I have often been told that I would make a better
|
|
looking man than woman, and if I had the money I might avail myself
|
|
of it to big farewell to this place."
|
|
|
|
In a moment afterwards, Isabella feared that she had said too much,
|
|
and laughingly observed, "I am always talking some nonsense;
|
|
you must not heed me."
|
|
|
|
William was a tall, full-blooded African, whose countenance beamed
|
|
with intelligence. Being a mechanic, he had by industry earned more money
|
|
than he had paid to his owner for his time, and this he had laid aside,
|
|
with the hope that he might some day get enough to purchase his freedom.
|
|
He had in his chest about a hundred and fifty dollars. His was a heart
|
|
that felt for others, and he had again and again wiped the tears from
|
|
his eyes while listening to Isabella's story.
|
|
|
|
"If she can get free with a little money, why not give her what I have?"
|
|
thought he, and then resolved to do it.
|
|
|
|
An hour after, he entered the quadroon's room, and, laying the money
|
|
in her lap, said,--
|
|
|
|
"There, Miss Isabella, you said just now that if you
|
|
had the means you would leave this place. There is money
|
|
enough to take you to England, where you will be free.
|
|
You are much fairer than many of the white women of the South,
|
|
and can easily pass for a free white woman."
|
|
|
|
At first Isabella thought it was a plan by which the negro wished
|
|
to try her fidelity to her owner; but she was soon convinced,
|
|
by his earnest manner and the deep feeling he manifested,
|
|
that he was entirely sincere.
|
|
|
|
"I will take the money," said she, "only on one condition,
|
|
and that is that I effect your escape, as well as my own."
|
|
|
|
"How can that be done?" he inquired, eagerly.
|
|
|
|
"I will assume the disguise of a gentleman, and you that of a servant,
|
|
and we will thus take passage in a steamer to Cincinnati, and from
|
|
thence to Canada."
|
|
|
|
With full confidence in Isabella's judgment, William consented
|
|
at once to the proposition. The clothes were purchased;
|
|
everything was arranged, and the next night, while Mr. Gordon
|
|
was on one of his sprees, Isabella, under the assumed name
|
|
of Mr. Smith, with William in attendance as a servant,
|
|
took passage for Cincinnati in the steamer Heroine.
|
|
|
|
With a pair of green glasses over her eyes, in addition to her
|
|
other disguise, Isabella made quite a gentlemanly appearance.
|
|
To avoid conversation, however, she kept closely to her state-room,
|
|
under the plea of illness.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, William was playing his part well with the servants.
|
|
He was loudly talking of his master's wealth, and nothing on the boat
|
|
appeared so good as in his master's fine mansion.
|
|
|
|
"I don't like dese steamboats, no how," said he; "I hope when massa
|
|
goes on anoder journey, he take de carriage and de hosses."
|
|
|
|
After a nine-days' passage, the Heroine landed at Cincinnati,
|
|
and Mr. Smith and his servant walked on shore.
|
|
|
|
"William, you are now a free man, and can go on to Canada," said Isabella;
|
|
"I shall go to Virginia, in search of my daughter."
|
|
|
|
This sudden announcement fell heavily upon William's ears,
|
|
and with tears he besought her not to jeopardize her liberty
|
|
in such a manner; but Isabella had made up her mind to rescue
|
|
her child if possible.
|
|
|
|
Taking a boat for Wheeling, Isabella was soon on her way to her
|
|
native State. Several months had elapsed since she left Richmond,
|
|
and all her thoughts were centred on the fate of her dear Clotelle.
|
|
It was with a palpitating heart that this injured woman entered
|
|
the stage-coach at Wheeling and set out for Richmond.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
|
|
THE ARREST
|
|
|
|
|
|
IT was late in the evening when the coach arrived at Richmond, and Isabella
|
|
once more alighted in her native city. She had intended to seek lodgings
|
|
somewhere in the outskirts of the town, but the lateness of the hour
|
|
compelled her to stop at one of the principal hotels for the night.
|
|
She had scarcely entered the inn before she recognized among
|
|
the numerous black servants one to whom she was well known, and her
|
|
only hope was that her disguise would keep her from being discovered.
|
|
The imperturbable calm and entire forgetfulness of self which induced
|
|
Isabella to visit a place from which she could scarcely hope to escape,
|
|
to attempt the rescue of a beloved child, demonstrate that over-willingness
|
|
of woman to carry out the promptings of the finer feelings of the heart.
|
|
True to woman's nature, she had risked her own liberty for another's.
|
|
She remained in the hotel during the night, and the next morning,
|
|
under the plea of illness, took her breakfast alone.
|
|
|
|
That day the fugitive slave paid a visit to the suburbs of the town, and
|
|
once more beheld the cottage in which she had spent so many happy hours.
|
|
It was winter, and the clematis and passion-flower were not there;
|
|
but there were the same walks her feet had so often pressed,
|
|
and the same trees which had so often shaded her as she passed
|
|
through the garden at the back of the house. Old remembrances
|
|
rushed upon her memory and caused her to shed tears freely.
|
|
Isabella was now in her native town, and near her daughter;
|
|
but how could she communicate with her? how could she see her?
|
|
To have made herself known would have been a suicidal act;
|
|
betrayal would have followed, and she arrested. Three days passed away,
|
|
and still she remained in the hotel at which she had first put up,
|
|
and yet she got no tidings of her child.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately for Isabella, a disturbance had just broken
|
|
out among the slave population in the State of Virginia,
|
|
and all strangers were treated with suspicion.
|
|
|
|
The insurrection to which we now refer was headed by a full-blooded negro,
|
|
who had been born and brought up a slave. He had heard the crack of the
|
|
driver's whip, and seen the warm blood streaming from the negro's body.
|
|
He had witnessed the separation of parents from children, and was
|
|
made aware, by too many proofs, that the slave could expect no justice
|
|
from the hands of the slave-owner. The name of this man was Nat Turner.
|
|
He was a preacher amongst the negroes, distinguished for his eloquence,
|
|
respected by the whites, loved and venerated by the negroes.
|
|
On the discovery of the plan for the outbreak, Turner fled to the swamps,
|
|
followed by those who had joined in the insurrection.
|
|
|
|
Here the revolted negroes numbered some hundreds, and for a
|
|
time bade defiance to their oppressors. The Dismal Swamps
|
|
cover many thousand acres of wild land, and a dense forest,
|
|
with wild animals and insects such as are unknown in any
|
|
other part of Virginia. Here runaway negroes usually seek
|
|
a hiding-place, and some have been known to reside here for years.
|
|
The revolters were joined by one of these. He was a large,
|
|
tall, full-blooded negro, with a stern and savage countenance;
|
|
the marks on his face showed that he was from one of the barbarous
|
|
tribes in Africa, and claimed that country as his native land.
|
|
His only covering was a girdle around his loins, made of
|
|
skins of wild beasts which he had killed. His only token
|
|
of authority among those that he led was a pair of epaulettes,
|
|
made of the tail of a fox, and tied to his shoulder by a cord.
|
|
Brought from the coast of Africa, when only fifteen years of age,
|
|
to the island of Cuba, he was smuggled from thence into Virginia.
|
|
He had been two years in the swamps, and considered it
|
|
his future home. He had met a negro woman, who was also
|
|
a runaway, and, after the fashion of his native land, had gone
|
|
through the process of oiling her, as the marriage ceremony.
|
|
They had built a cave on a rising mound in the swamp,
|
|
and this was their home. This man's name was Picquilo.
|
|
His only weapon was a sword made from a scythe which he had
|
|
stolen from a neighboring plantation. His dress, his character,
|
|
his manners, and his mode of fighting were all in keeping with
|
|
the early training he had received in the land of his birth.
|
|
He moved about with the activity of a cat, and neither the thickness
|
|
of the trees nor the depth of the water could stop him.
|
|
He was a bold, turbulent spirit; and, from motives of revenge,
|
|
he imbrued his hands in the blood of all the whites he could meet.
|
|
Hunger, thirst, and loss of sleep, he seemed made to endure,
|
|
as if by peculiarity of constitution. His air was fierce,
|
|
his step oblique, his look sanguinary.
|
|
|
|
Such was the character of one of the negroes in the Southampton Insurrection.
|
|
All negroes were arrested who were found beyond their master's threshold,
|
|
and all white strangers were looked upon with suspicion.
|
|
|
|
Such was the position in which Isabella found affairs
|
|
when she returned to Virginia in search of her child.
|
|
Had not the slave-owners been watchful of strangers,
|
|
owing to the outbreak, the fugitive could not have escaped
|
|
the vigilance of the police; for advertisements announcing
|
|
her escape, and offering a large reward for her arrest,
|
|
had been received in the city previous to her arrival,
|
|
and officers were therefore on the lookout for her.
|
|
|
|
It was on the third day after her arrival in Richmond, as the quadroon
|
|
was seated in her room at the hotel, still in the disguise of a gentleman,
|
|
that two of the city officers entered the apartment and informed her that they
|
|
were authorized to examine all strangers, to assure the authorities that they
|
|
were not in league with the revolted negroes.
|
|
|
|
With trembling heart the fugitive handed the key of her trunk
|
|
to the officers. To their surprise they found nothing but female
|
|
apparel in the trunk, which raised their curiosity, and caused
|
|
a further investigation that resulted in the arrest of Isabella
|
|
as a fugitive slave. She was immediately conveyed to prison,
|
|
there to await the orders of her master.
|
|
|
|
For many days, uncheered by the voice of kindness, alone, hopeless, desolate,
|
|
she waited for the time to arrive when the chains should be placed on
|
|
her limbs, and she returned to her inhuman and unfeeling owner.
|
|
|
|
The arrest of the fugitive was announced in all the newspapers,
|
|
but created little or no sensation. The inhabitants were too much
|
|
engaged in putting down the revolt among the slaves; and, although all
|
|
the odds were against the insurgents, the whites found it no easy matter,
|
|
with all their caution. Every day brought news of fresh outbreaks.
|
|
Without scruple and without pity, the whites massacred all blacks found beyond
|
|
the limits of their owners' plantations. The negroes, in return, set fire
|
|
to houses, and put to death those who attempted to escape from the flames.
|
|
Thus carnage was added to carnage, and the blood of the whites flowed
|
|
to avenge the blood of the blacks.
|
|
|
|
These were the ravages of slavery. No graves were dug for
|
|
the negroes, but their bodies became food for dogs and vultures;
|
|
and their bones, partly calcined by the sun, remained scattered about,
|
|
as if to mark the mournful fury of servitude and lust of power.
|
|
When the slaves were subdued, except a few in the swamps,
|
|
bloodhounds were employed to hunt out the remaining revolters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
|
|
DEATH IS FREEDOM
|
|
|
|
|
|
ON receiving intelligence of the arrest of Isabella, Mr. Gordon
|
|
authorized the sheriff to sell her to the highest bidder.
|
|
She was, therefore, sold; the purchaser being the noted
|
|
negro-trader, Hope H. Slater, who at once placed her in prison.
|
|
Here the fugitive saw none but slaves like herself, brought in
|
|
and taken out to be placed in ships, and sent away to some part
|
|
of the country to which she herself would soon be compelled to go.
|
|
She had seen or heard nothing of her daughter while in Richmond,
|
|
and all hopes of seeing her had now fled.
|
|
|
|
At the dusk of the evening previous to the day when she was to
|
|
be sent off, as the old prison was being closed for the night,
|
|
Isabella suddenly dated past the keeper, and ran for her life.
|
|
It was not a great distance from the prison to the long bridge
|
|
which passes from the lower part of the city across the Potomac
|
|
to the extensive forests and woodlands of the celebrated
|
|
Arlington Heights, then occupied by that distinguished
|
|
relative and descendant of the immortal Washington, Mr. Geo.
|
|
W. Custis. Thither the poor fugitive directed her flight.
|
|
So unexpected was her escape that she had gained several rods
|
|
the start before the keeper had secured the other prisoners,
|
|
and rallied his assistants to aid in the pursuit.
|
|
It was at an hour, and in a part of the city where horses
|
|
could not easily be obtained for the chase; no bloodhounds
|
|
were at hand to run down the flying woman, and for once it
|
|
seemed as if there was to be a fair trial of speed and endurance
|
|
between the slave and the slave-catchers.
|
|
|
|
The keeper and his force raised the hue-and-cry on her path
|
|
as they followed close behind; but so rapid was the flight
|
|
along the wide avenue that the astonished citizens, as they
|
|
poured forth from their dwellings to learn the cause of alarm,
|
|
were only able to comprehend the nature of the case in time
|
|
to fall in with the motley throng in pursuit, or raise an anxious
|
|
prayer to heaven as they refused to join in the chase (as many
|
|
a one did that night) that the panting fugitive might escape,
|
|
and the merciless soul-dealer for once be disappointed of his prey.
|
|
And now, with the speed of an arrow, having passed the avenue,
|
|
with the distance between her and her pursuers constantly
|
|
increasing, this poor, hunted female gained the "Long Bridge,"
|
|
as it is called, where interruption seemed improbably.
|
|
Already her heart began to beat high with the hope of success.
|
|
She had only to pass three-quarters of a mile across the bridge,
|
|
when she could bury herself in a vast forest, just as the time
|
|
when the curtain of night would close around her, and protect
|
|
her from the pursuit of her enemies.
|
|
|
|
But God, by his providence, had otherwise determined.
|
|
He had ordained that an appalling tragedy should be enacted
|
|
that night within plain sight of the President's house,
|
|
and the Capitol of the Union, which would be an evidence
|
|
wherever it should be known of the unconquerable love of liberty
|
|
which the human heart may inherit, as well as a fresh admonition
|
|
to the slave-dealer of the cruelty and enormity of his crimes.
|
|
|
|
Just as the pursuers passed the high draw, soon after entering upon
|
|
the bridge, they beheld three men slowly approaching from the Virginia side.
|
|
They immediately called to them to arrest the fugitive, proclaiming her
|
|
a runaway slave. True to their Virginia instincts, as she came near,
|
|
they formed a line across the narrow bridge to intercept her.
|
|
Seeing the escape was impossible in that quarter, she stopped suddenly,
|
|
and turned upon her pursuers.
|
|
|
|
On came the profane and ribald crew faster than ever, already exulting
|
|
in her capture, and threatening punishment for her flight.
|
|
For a moment she looked wildly and anxiously around to see
|
|
if there was no hope of escape. On either hand, far down below,
|
|
rolled the deep, foaming waters of the Potomac, and before and behind
|
|
were the rapidly approaching steps and noisy voices of her pursuers.
|
|
Seeing how vain would be any further effort to escape, her resolution
|
|
was instantly taken. She clasped her hands convulsively together,
|
|
raised her tearful and imploring eyes toward heaven, and begged
|
|
for the mercy and compassion there which was unjustly denied her
|
|
on earth; then, exclaiming, "Henry, Clotelle, I die for thee!"
|
|
with a single bound, vaulted over the railing of the bridge,
|
|
and sank forever beneath the angry and foaming waters of the river!
|
|
|
|
Such was the life, and such the death, of a woman whose virtues
|
|
and goodness of heart would have done honor to one in a higher
|
|
station of life, and who, had she been born in any other land
|
|
but that of slavery, would have been respected and beloved.
|
|
What would have been her feelings if she could have known
|
|
that the child for whose rescue she had sacrificed herself
|
|
would one day be free, honored, and loved in another land?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
|
|
CLOTELLE
|
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|
|
|
|
THE curtain rises seven years after the death of Isabella.
|
|
During that interval, Henry, finding that nothing could induce
|
|
his mother-in-law to relinquish her hold on poor little Clotelle,
|
|
and not liking to contend with one on whom a future fortune depended,
|
|
gradually lost all interest in the child, and left her to her fate.
|
|
|
|
Although Mrs. Miller treated Clotelle with a degree of harshness
|
|
scarcely equalled, when applied to one so tender in years,
|
|
still the child grew every day more beautiful, and her hair,
|
|
though kept closely cut, seemed to have improved in its soft,
|
|
silk-like appearance. Now twelve years of age, and more than
|
|
usually well-developed, her harsh old mistress began to view
|
|
her with a jealous eye.
|
|
|
|
Henry and Gertrude had just returned from Washington,
|
|
where the husband had been on his duties as a member of Congress,
|
|
and where he had remained during the preceding three years
|
|
without returning home. It was on a beautiful evening,
|
|
just at twilight, while seated at his parlor window,
|
|
that Henry saw a young woman pass by and go into the kitchen.
|
|
Not aware of ever having seen the person before, he made
|
|
an errand into the cook's department to see who the girl was.
|
|
He, however, met her in the hall, as she was about going out.
|
|
|
|
"Whom did you wish to see?" he inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Gertrude," was the reply.
|
|
|
|
"What did you want to see her for?" he again asked.
|
|
|
|
"My mistress told me to give her and Master Henry her compliments,
|
|
and ask them to come over and spend the evening."
|
|
|
|
"Who is your mistress?" he eagerly inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Mrs. Miller, sir," responded the girl.
|
|
|
|
"And what's your name?" asked Henry, with a trembling voice.
|
|
|
|
"Clotelle, sir," was the reply.
|
|
|
|
The astonished father stood completely amazed, looking at
|
|
the now womanly form of her who, in his happier days,
|
|
he had taken on his knee with so much fondness and alacrity.
|
|
It was then that he saw his own and Isabella's features
|
|
combined in the beautiful face that he was then beholding.
|
|
It was then that he was carried back to the days when with
|
|
a woman's devotion, poor Isabella hung about his neck
|
|
and told him how lonely were the hours in his absence.
|
|
He could stand it no longer. Tears rushed to his eyes,
|
|
and turning upon his heel, he went back to his own room.
|
|
It was then that Isabella was revenged; and she no doubt
|
|
looked smilingly down from her home in the spirit-land on
|
|
the scene below.
|
|
|
|
On Gertrude's return from her shopping tour, she found
|
|
Henry in a melancholy mood, and soon learned its cause.
|
|
As Gertrude had borne him no children, it was but natural,
|
|
that he should now feel his love centering in Clotelle,
|
|
and he now intimated to his wife his determination to remove
|
|
his daughter from the hands of his mother-in-law.
|
|
|
|
When this news reached Mrs. Miller, through her daughter, she became furious
|
|
with rage, and calling Clotelle into her room, stripped her shoulders bare
|
|
and flogged her in the presence of Gertrude.
|
|
|
|
It was nearly a week after the poor girl had been so severely whipped
|
|
and for no cause whatever, that her father learned on the circumstance
|
|
through one of the servants. With a degree of boldness unusual for him,
|
|
he immediately went to his mother-in-law and demanded his child.
|
|
But it was too late,--she was gone. To what place she had been sent
|
|
no one could tell, and Mrs. Miller refused to give any information
|
|
whatever relative to the girl.
|
|
|
|
It was then that Linwood felt deepest the evil of the institution
|
|
under which he was living; for he knew that his daughter would
|
|
be exposed to all the vices prevalent in that part of the country
|
|
where marriage is not recognized in connection with that class.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
|
|
|
A SLAVE-HUNTING PARSON
|
|
|
|
|
|
IT was a delightful evening after a cloudless day, with the setting sun
|
|
reflecting his golden rays on the surrounding hills which were covered
|
|
with a beautiful greensward, and the luxuriant verdure that forms
|
|
the constant garb of the tropics, that the steamer Columbia ran
|
|
into the dock at Natchez, and began unloading the cargo, taking in
|
|
passengers and making ready to proceed on her voyage to New Orleans.
|
|
The plank connecting the boat with the shore had scarcely been secured
|
|
in its place, when a good-looking man about fifty years of age,
|
|
with a white neck-tie, and a pair of gold-rimmed glasses on,
|
|
was seen hurrying on board the vessel. Just at that moment could
|
|
be seen a stout man with his face fitted with the small-pox, making
|
|
his way up to the above-mentioned gentleman.
|
|
|
|
"How do you do, my dear sir? this is Mr. Wilson, I believe,"
|
|
said the short man, at the same time taking from his mouth a large
|
|
chew of tobacco, and throwing it down on the ship's deck.
|
|
|
|
"You have the advantage of me, sir," replied the tall man.
|
|
|
|
"Why, don't you know me? My name is Jennings; I sold you a splendid negro
|
|
woman some years ago."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes," answered the Natchez man. "I remember you now,
|
|
for the woman died in a few months, and I never got the worth
|
|
of my money out of her."
|
|
|
|
"I could not help that," returned the slave-trader; "she was as sound
|
|
as a roach when I sold her to you."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes," replied the parson, "I know she was; but now I want a young girl,
|
|
fit for house use,--one that will do to wait on a lady."
|
|
|
|
"I am your man," said Jennings, "just follow me," continued he,
|
|
"and I will show you the fairest little critter you ever saw."
|
|
And the two passed to the stern of the boat to where the trader had
|
|
between fifty and sixty slaves, the greater portion being women.
|
|
|
|
"There," said Jennings, as a beautiful young woman shrunk back with modesty.
|
|
"There, sir, is the very gal that was made for you. If she had been made
|
|
to your order, she could not have suited you better."
|
|
|
|
"Indeed, sir, is not that young woman white?" inquired the parson.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no, sir; she is no whiter than you see!"
|
|
|
|
"But is she a slave?" asked the preacher.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said the trader, "I bought her in Richmond, and she comes
|
|
from an excellent family. She was raised by Squire Miller, and her
|
|
mistress was one of the most pious ladies in that city, I may say;
|
|
she was the salt of the earth, as the ministers say."
|
|
|
|
"But she resembles in some respect Agnes, the woman I bought from you,"
|
|
said Mr. Wilson. As he said the name of Agnes, the young woman started
|
|
as if she had been struck. Her pulse seemed to quicken, but her face
|
|
alternately flushed and turned pale, and tears trembled upon her eyelids.
|
|
It was a name she had heard her mother mention, and it brought to her
|
|
memory those days,--those happy days, when she was so loved and caressed.
|
|
This young woman was Clotelle, the granddaughter of Agnes.
|
|
The preacher, on learning the fact, purchased her, and took her home,
|
|
feeling that his daughter Georgiana would prize her very highly.
|
|
Clotelle found in Georgiana more a sister than a mistress, who,
|
|
unknown to her father, taught the slave-girl how to read, and did much
|
|
toward improving and refining Clotelle's manners, for her own sake.
|
|
Like her mother fond of flowers, the "Virginia Maid," as she was
|
|
sometimes called, spent many of her leisure hours in the garden.
|
|
Beside the flowers which sprang up from the fertility of soil unplanted
|
|
and unattended, there was the heliotrope, sweet-pea, and cup-rose,
|
|
transplanted from the island of Cuba. In her new home Clotelle found
|
|
herself saluted on all sides by the fragrance of the magnolia.
|
|
When she went with her young mistress to the Poplar Farm, as she
|
|
sometimes did, nature's wild luxuriance greeted her, wherever she
|
|
cast her eyes.
|
|
|
|
The rustling citron, lime, and orange, shady mango with its fruits
|
|
of gold, and the palmetto's umbrageous beauty, all welcomed the child
|
|
of sorrow. When at the farm, Huckelby, the overseer, kept his eye
|
|
on Clotelle if within sight of her, for he knew she was a slave,
|
|
and no doubt hoped that she might some day fall into his hands.
|
|
But she shrank from his looks as she would have done from the charm
|
|
of the rattlesnake. The negro-driver always tried to insinuate himself
|
|
into the good opinion of Georgiana and the company that she brought.
|
|
Knowing that Miss Wilson at heart hated slavery, he was ever trying
|
|
to show that the slaves under his charge were happy and contented.
|
|
One day, when Georgiana and some of her Connecticut friends were there,
|
|
the overseer called all the slaves up to the "great house," and set
|
|
some of the young ones to dancing. After awhile whiskey was brought
|
|
in and a dram given to each slave, in return for which they were
|
|
expected to give a toast, or sing a short piece of his own composition;
|
|
when it came to Jack's turn he said,--
|
|
|
|
"The big bee flies high, the little bee makes the honey:
|
|
the black folks make the cotton, and the white folks
|
|
gets the money."
|
|
|
|
Of course, the overseer was not at all elated with the sentiment
|
|
contained in Jack's toast. Mr. Wilson had lately purchased a young
|
|
man to assist about the house and to act as coachman. This slave,
|
|
whose name was Jerome, was of pure African origin, was perfectly black,
|
|
very fine-looking, tall, slim, and erect as any one could possibly be.
|
|
His features were not bad, lips thin, nose prominent, hands and feet small.
|
|
His brilliant black eyes lighted up his whole countenance.
|
|
His hair, which was nearly straight, hung in curls upon his lofty brow.
|
|
George Combe or Fowler would have selected his head for a model.
|
|
He was brave and daring, strong in person, fiery in spirit,
|
|
yet kind and true in his affections, earnest in his doctrines.
|
|
Clotelle had been at the parson's but a few weeks when it was
|
|
observed that a mutual feeling had grown up between her and Jerome.
|
|
As time rolled on, they became more and more attached to each other.
|
|
After satisfying herself that these two really loved, Georgiana advised
|
|
their marriage. But Jerome contemplated his escape at some future day,
|
|
and therefore feared that if married it might militate against it.
|
|
He hoped, also, to be able to get Clotelle away too, and it was this hope
|
|
that kept him from trying to escape by himself. Dante did not more love
|
|
his Beatrice, Swift his Stella, Waller his Saccharissa, Goldsmith his
|
|
Jessamy bride, or Burns his Mary, than did Jerome his Clotelle.
|
|
Unknown to her father, Miss Wilson could permit these two slaves to enjoy
|
|
more privileges than any of the other servants. The young mistress
|
|
taught Clotelle, and the latter imparted her instructions to her lover,
|
|
until both could read so as to be well understood. Jerome felt
|
|
his superiority, and always declared that no master should ever flog him.
|
|
Aware of his high spirit and determination, Clotelle was in constant
|
|
fear lest some difficulty might arise between her lover and his master.
|
|
|
|
One day Mr. Wilson, being somewhat out of temper and
|
|
irritated at what he was pleased to call Jerome's insolence,
|
|
ordered him to follow him to the barn to be flogged.
|
|
The young slave obeyed his master, but those who saw him
|
|
at the moment felt that he would not submit to be whipped.
|
|
|
|
"No, sir," replied Jerome, as his master told him to take off his coat:
|
|
"I will serve you, Master Wilson, I will labor for you day and night,
|
|
if you demand it, but I will not be whipped."
|
|
|
|
This was too much for a white man to stand from a negro, and the
|
|
preacher seized his slave by the throat, intending to choke him.
|
|
But for once he found his match. Jerome knocked him down,
|
|
and then escaped through the back-yard to the street,
|
|
and from thence to the woods.
|
|
|
|
Recovering somewhat from the effect of his fall, the parson
|
|
regained his feet and started in pursuit of the fugitive.
|
|
Finding, however, that the slave was beyond his reach, he at once
|
|
resolved to put the dogs on his track. Tabor, the negro-catcher,
|
|
was sent for, and in less than an hour, eight or ten men, including
|
|
the parson, were in the woods with hounds, trying the trails.
|
|
These dogs will attack a negro at their master's bidding;
|
|
and cling to him as the bull-dog will cling to a beast.
|
|
Many are the speculations as to whether the negro will be
|
|
secured alive or dead, when these dogs once get on his track.
|
|
Whenever there is to be a negro hunt, there is no lack
|
|
of participants. Many go to enjoy the fun which it is said
|
|
they derive from these scenes.
|
|
|
|
The company had been in the woods but a short time ere they
|
|
go on the track of two fugitives, once of whom was Jerome.
|
|
The slaves immediately bent their steps toward the swamp,
|
|
with the hope that the dogs, when put upon their scent would
|
|
be unable to follow them through the water.
|
|
|
|
The slaves then took a straight course for the Baton Rouge
|
|
and Bayou Sara road, about four miles distant. Nearer and nearer
|
|
the whimpering pack pressed; their delusion begins to dispel.
|
|
All at once the truth flashes upon the minds of the fugitives
|
|
like a glare of light,--'tis Tabor with his dogs!
|
|
|
|
The scent becomes warmer and warmer, and what was at first an irregular
|
|
cry now deepens into one ceaseless roar, as the relentless pack presses
|
|
on after its human prey.
|
|
|
|
They at last reach the river, and in the negroes plunge, followed by
|
|
the catch-dog. Jerome is caught and is once more in the hands
|
|
of his master, while the other poor fellow finds a watery grave.
|
|
They return, and the preacher sends his slave to jail.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
|
|
|
THE TRUE HEROINE
|
|
|
|
|
|
IN vain did Georgiana try to console Clotelle, when the latter heard,
|
|
through one of the other slaves, that Mr. Wilson had started
|
|
with the dogs in pursuit of Jerome. The poor girl well knew
|
|
that he would be caught, and that severe punishment, if not death,
|
|
would be the result of his capture. It was therefore with a
|
|
heart filled with the deepest grief that the slave-girl heard
|
|
the footsteps of her master on his return from the chase.
|
|
The dogged and stern manner of the preacher forbade even
|
|
his daughter inquiring as to the success of his pursuit.
|
|
Georgiana secretly hoped that the fugitive had not bee caught;
|
|
she wished it for the sake of the slave, and more especially
|
|
for her maid-servant, whom she regarded more as a companion
|
|
than a menial. But the news of the capture of Jerome soon
|
|
spread through the parson's household, and found its way
|
|
to the ears of the weeping and heart-stricken Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
The reverend gentleman had not been home more than an hour ere
|
|
some of his parishioners called to know if they should not take
|
|
the negro from the prison and execute *Lynch law* upon him.
|
|
|
|
"No negro should be permitted to live after striking a white man;
|
|
let us take him and hang him at once," remarked an elderly-looking man,
|
|
whose gray hairs thinly covered the crown of his head.
|
|
|
|
"I think the deacon is right," said another of the company;
|
|
"if our slaves are allowed to set the will of their masters
|
|
at defiance, there will be no getting along with them,--
|
|
an insurrection will be the next thing we hear of."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," said the preacher; "I am willing to let the law take its course,
|
|
as it provides for the punishment of a slave with death if he strikes
|
|
his master. We had better let the court decide the question.
|
|
Moreover, as a Christian and God-fearing people, we ought to submit
|
|
to the dictates of justice. Should we take this man's life by force,
|
|
an Allwise Providence would hold us responsible for the act."
|
|
|
|
The company then quietly withdrew, showing that the preacher
|
|
had some influence with his people.
|
|
|
|
"This," said Mr. Wilson, when left alone with his daughter,--
|
|
"this, my dear Georgiana, is the result of your kindness
|
|
to the negroes. You have spoiled every one about the house.
|
|
I can't whip one of them, without being in danger of having
|
|
my life taken."
|
|
|
|
"I am sure, papa," replied the young lady,--"I am sure I never did any thing
|
|
intentionally to induce any of the servants to disobey your orders."
|
|
|
|
"No, my dear," said Mr. Wilson, "but you are too kind to them.
|
|
Now, there is Clotelle,--that girl is completely spoiled.
|
|
She walks about the house with as dignified an air as if she
|
|
was mistress of the premises. By and by you will be sorry
|
|
for this foolishness of yours."
|
|
|
|
"But," answered Georgiana, "Clotelle has a superior mind,
|
|
and God intended her to hold a higher position in life than
|
|
that of a servant."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my dear, and it was your letting her know that she was
|
|
intended for a better station in society that is spoiling her.
|
|
Always keep a negro in ignorance of what you conceive to be
|
|
his abilities," returned the parson.
|
|
|
|
It was late on the Saturday afternoon, following the capture
|
|
of Jerome that, while Mr. Wilson was seated in his study preparing
|
|
his sermon for the next day, Georgiana entered the room and asked
|
|
in an excited tone if it were true that Jerome was to hanged on
|
|
the following Thursday.
|
|
|
|
The minister informed her that such was the decision of the court.
|
|
|
|
"Then," said she, "Clotelle will die of grief."
|
|
|
|
"What business has she to die of grief?" returned the father,
|
|
his eyes at the moment flashing fire.
|
|
|
|
"She has neither eaten nor slept since he was captured," replied Georgiana;
|
|
"and I am certain that she will not live through this."
|
|
|
|
"I cannot be disturbed now," said the parson; "I must get my sermon
|
|
ready for to-morrow. I expect to have some strangers to preach to,
|
|
and must, therefore, prepare a sermon that will do me credit."
|
|
|
|
While the man of God spoke, he seemed to say to himself,--
|
|
|
|
"With devotion's visage, and pious actions,
|
|
We do sugar over the devil himself."
|
|
|
|
Georgiana did all in her power to soothe the feelings
|
|
of Clotelle, and to induce her to put her trust in God.
|
|
Unknown to her father, she allowed the poor girl to go every
|
|
evening to the jail to see Jerome, and during these visits,
|
|
despite her own grief, Clotelle would try to comfort her
|
|
lover with the hope that justice would be meted out to him
|
|
in the spirit-land.
|
|
|
|
Thus the time passed on, and the day was fast approaching
|
|
when the slave was to die. Having heard that some secret
|
|
meeting had been held by the negroes, previous to the attempt
|
|
of Mr. Wilson to flog his slave, it occurred to a magistrate
|
|
that Jerome might know something of the intended revolt.
|
|
He accordingly visited the prison to see if he could learn
|
|
anything from him, but all to no purpose. Having given up all
|
|
hopes of escape, Jerome had resolved to die like a brave man.
|
|
When questioned as to whether he knew anything of a conspiracy
|
|
among the slaves against their masters, he replied,--
|
|
|
|
"Do you suppose that I would tell you if I did?"
|
|
|
|
"But if you know anything," remarked the magistrate, "and will tell us,
|
|
you may possibly have your life spared."
|
|
|
|
"Life," answered the doomed man, "is worth nought to a slave.
|
|
What right has a slave to himself, his wife, or his children?
|
|
We are kept in heathenish darkness, by laws especially enacted
|
|
to make our instruction a criminal offence; and our bones,
|
|
sinews, blood, and nerves are exposed in the market for sale.
|
|
|
|
"My liberty is of as much consequence to me as Mr. Wilson's is
|
|
to him. I am as sensitive to feeling as he. If I mistake not,
|
|
the day will come when the negro will learn that he can get
|
|
his freedom by fighting for it; and should that time arrive,
|
|
the whites will be sorry that they have hated us so shamefully.
|
|
I am free to say that, could I live my life over again,
|
|
I would use all the energies which God has given me to get
|
|
up an insurrection."
|
|
|
|
Every one present seemed startled and amazed at the intelligence
|
|
with which this descendant of Africa spoke.
|
|
|
|
"He's a very dangerous man," remarked one.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said another, "he got some book-learning somewhere,
|
|
and that has spoiled him."
|
|
|
|
An effort was then made to learn from Jerome where he had learned to read,
|
|
but the black refused to give any information on the subject.
|
|
|
|
The sun was just going down behind the trees as Clotelle
|
|
entered the prison to see Jerome for the last time.
|
|
He was to die on the next day. Her face was bent upon her hands,
|
|
and the gushing tears were forcing their way through her fingers.
|
|
With beating heart and trembling hands, evincing the deepest emotion,
|
|
she threw her arms around her lover's neck and embraced him.
|
|
But, prompted by her heart's unchanging love, she had in her
|
|
own mind a plan by which she hoped to effect the escape
|
|
of him to whom she had pledged her heart and hand.
|
|
While the overcharged clouds which had hung over the city during
|
|
the day broke, and the rain fell in torrents, amid the most
|
|
terrific thunder and lightning, Clotelle revealed to Jerome
|
|
her plan for his escape.
|
|
|
|
"Dress yourself in my clothes," said she, "and you can easily
|
|
pass the jailer."
|
|
|
|
This Jerome at first declined doing. He did not wish to place
|
|
a confiding girl in a position where, in all probability,
|
|
she would have to suffer; but being assured by the young girl that
|
|
her life would not be in danger, he resolved to make the attempt.
|
|
Clotelle being very tall, it was not probably that the jailer would
|
|
discover any difference in them.
|
|
|
|
At this moment, she took from her pocket a bunch of keys and unfastened
|
|
the padlock, and freed him from the floor.
|
|
|
|
"Come, girl, it is time for you to go," said the jailer,
|
|
as Jerome was holding the almost fainting girl by the hand.
|
|
|
|
Being already attired in Clotelle's clothes, the disguised man
|
|
embraced the weeping girl, put his handkerchief to his face,
|
|
and passed out of the jail, without the keeper's knowing
|
|
that his prisoner was escaping in a disguise and under cover
|
|
of the night.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XX
|
|
|
|
THE HERO OF MANY ADVENTURES
|
|
|
|
|
|
JEROME had scarcely passed the prison-gates, ere he reproached
|
|
himself for having taken such a step. There seemed to him no hope
|
|
of escape out of the State, and what was a few hours or days at most,
|
|
of life to him, when, by obtaining it, another had been sacrificed.
|
|
He was on the eve of returning, when he thought of the last words uttered
|
|
by Clotelle. "Be brave and determined, and you will still be free."
|
|
The words sounded like a charm in his ears and he went boldly forward.
|
|
|
|
Clotelle had provided a suit of men's clothes and had placed
|
|
them where her lover could get them, if he should succeed
|
|
in getting out.
|
|
|
|
Returning to Mr. Wilson's barn, the fugitive changed his apparel,
|
|
and again retraced his steps into the street. To reach the Free States
|
|
by travelling by night and lying by during the day, from a State so far south
|
|
as Mississippi, no one would think for a moment of attempting to escape.
|
|
To remain in the city would be a suicidal step. The deep sound of the escape
|
|
of steam from a boat, which was at that moment ascending the river,
|
|
broke upon the ears of the slave. "If that boat is going up the river,"
|
|
said he, "why not I conceal myself on board, and try to escape?"
|
|
He went at once to the steamboat landing, where the boat was just coming in.
|
|
"Bound for Louisville," said the captain, to one who was making inquiries.
|
|
As the passengers were rushing on board, Jerome followed them,
|
|
and proceeding to where some of the hands were stowing away bales of goods,
|
|
he took hold and aided them.
|
|
|
|
"Jump down into the hold, there, and help the men," said the mate
|
|
to the fugitive, supposing that, like many persons, he was
|
|
working his way up the river. Once in the hull among the boxes,
|
|
the slave concealed himself. Weary hours, and at last days,
|
|
passed without either water or food with the hidden slave.
|
|
More than once did he resolve to let his case be known; but the knowledge
|
|
that he would be sent back to Natchez kept him from doing so.
|
|
At last, with lips parched and fevered to a crisp, the poor man
|
|
crawled out into the freight-room, and began wandering about.
|
|
The hatches were on, and the room dark. There happened to be
|
|
on board a wedding party, and a box, containing some ofthe
|
|
bridal cake, with several bottles of port wine, was near Jerome.
|
|
He found the box, opened it, and helped himself. In eight days,
|
|
the boat tied up at the wharf at the place of her destination.
|
|
It was late at night; the boat's crew, with the single exception
|
|
of the man on watch, were on shore. The hatches were off,
|
|
and the fugitive quietly made his way on deck and jumped on shore.
|
|
The man saw the fugitive, but too late to seize him.
|
|
|
|
Still in a Slave State, Jerome was at a loss to know
|
|
how he should proceed. He had with him a few dollars,
|
|
enough to pay his way to Canada, if he could find a conveyance.
|
|
The fugitive procured such food as he wanted from one of the many
|
|
eating-houses, and then, following the direction of the North Star,
|
|
he passed out of the city, and took the road leading to Covington.
|
|
Keeping near the Ohio River, Jerome soon found an opportunity to
|
|
cross over into the State of Indiana. But liberty was a mere name
|
|
in the latter State, and the fugitive learned, from some colored
|
|
persons that he met, that it was not safe to travel by daylight.
|
|
While making his way one night, with nothing to cheer him
|
|
but the prospect of freedom in the future, he was pounced upon
|
|
by three men who were lying in wait for another fugitive,
|
|
an advertisement of whom they had received through the mail.
|
|
In vain did Jerome tell them that he was not a slave.
|
|
True, they had not caught the man they expected; but, if they could
|
|
make this slave tell from what place he had escaped, they knew
|
|
that a good price would be paid them for the negro's arrest.
|
|
|
|
Tortured by the slave-catchers, to make him reveal the name
|
|
of his master and the place from whence he had escaped,
|
|
Jerome gave them a fictitious name in Virginia, and said that his
|
|
master would give a large reward, and manifested a willingness
|
|
to return to his "old boss." By this misrepresentation,
|
|
the fugitive hoped to have another chance of getting away.
|
|
Allured with the prospect of a large sum of the needful,
|
|
the slave-catchers started back with their victim.
|
|
Stopping on the second night at an inn, on the banks of
|
|
the Ohio River, the kidnappers, in lieu of a suitable place
|
|
in which to confine their prize during the night, chained him
|
|
to the bed-post of their sleeping-chamber. The white men were
|
|
late in retiring to rest, after an evening spent in drinking.
|
|
At dead of night, when all was still, the slave arose
|
|
from the floor, upon which he had been lying, looked around
|
|
and saw that Morpheus had possession of his captors.
|
|
For once, thought he, the brandy bottle has done a noble work.
|
|
With palpitating heart and trembling limbs, he viewed his position.
|
|
The door was fast, but the warm weather had compelled them
|
|
to leave the window open. If he could but get his chains off,
|
|
he might escape through the window to the piazza.
|
|
The sleepers' clothes hung upon chairs by the bedside.
|
|
The slave thought of the padlock-key, examined the pockets,
|
|
and found it. The chains were soon off, and the negro stealthily
|
|
making his way to the window. He stopped, and said to himself,
|
|
"These men are villains; they are enemies to all who, like me,
|
|
are trying to be free. Then why not I teach them a lesson?"
|
|
He then dressed himself in the best suit, hung his own worn-out
|
|
and tattered garments on the same chair, and silently passed
|
|
through the window to the piazza, and let himself down by one
|
|
of the pillars, and started once more for the North.
|
|
|
|
Daylight came upon the fugitive before he had selected
|
|
a hiding-place for the day, and he was walking at a rapid rate,
|
|
in hopes of soon reaching some woodland or forest. The sun
|
|
had just begun to show itself, when the fugitive was astounded
|
|
at seeing behind him, in the distance, two men upon horseback.
|
|
Taking a road to the right, the slave saw before him a farmhouse,
|
|
and so near was he to it that he observed two men in front
|
|
of it looking at him. It was too late to turn back.
|
|
The kidnappers were behind him--strange men before him.
|
|
Those in the rear he knew to be enemies, while he had no idea
|
|
of what principles were the farmers. The latter also saw the white
|
|
men coming, and called to the fugitive to come that way.
|
|
The broad-brimmed hats that the farmers wore told the slave
|
|
that they were Quakers.
|
|
|
|
Jerome had seen some of these people passing up and down the river,
|
|
when employed on a steamer between Natchez and New Orleans,
|
|
and had heard that they disliked slavery. He, therefore,
|
|
hastened toward the drab-coated men, who, on his approach,
|
|
opened the barn-door, and told him to "run in."
|
|
|
|
When Jerome entered the barn, the two farmers closed the door,
|
|
remaining outside themselves, to confront the slave-catchers,
|
|
who now came up and demanded admission, feeling that they
|
|
had their prey secure.
|
|
|
|
"The can't enter my premises," said one of the Friends,
|
|
in rather a musical voice.
|
|
|
|
The negro-catchers urged their claim to the slave, and intimated that,
|
|
unless they were allowed to secure him, they would force their way in.
|
|
By this time, several other Quakers had gathered around the barn-door.
|
|
Unfortunately for the kidnappers, and most fortunately for the fugitive,
|
|
the Friends had just been holding a quarterly meeting in the neighborhood,
|
|
and a number of them had not yet returned to their homes.
|
|
After some talk, the men in drab promised to admit the hunters, provided they
|
|
procured an officer and a search-warrant from a justice of the peace.
|
|
One of the slave-catchers was left to see that the fugitive did
|
|
not get away, while the others went in pursuit of an officer.
|
|
In the mean time, the owner of the barn sent for a hammer and nails,
|
|
and began nailing up the barn-door.
|
|
|
|
After an hour in search of the man of the law, they returned with an officer
|
|
and a warrant. The Quaker demanded to see the paper, and, after looking
|
|
at it for some time, called to his son to go into the house for his glasses.
|
|
It was a long time before Aunt Ruth found the leather case, and when she did,
|
|
the glasses wanted wiping before they could be used. After comfortably
|
|
adjusting them on his nose, he read the warrant over leisurely.
|
|
|
|
"Come, Mr. Dugdale, we can't wait all day," said the officer.
|
|
|
|
"Well, will thee read it for me?" returned the Quaker.
|
|
|
|
The officer complied, and the man in drab said,--
|
|
|
|
"Yes, thee may go in, now. I am inclined to throw no obstacles in the way
|
|
of the execution of the law of the land."
|
|
|
|
On approaching the door, the men found some forty or fifty nails in it,
|
|
in the way of their progress.
|
|
|
|
"Lend me your hammer and a chisel, if you please, Mr. Dugdale,"
|
|
said the officer.
|
|
|
|
"Please read that paper over again, will thee?" asked the Quaker.
|
|
|
|
The officer once more read the warrant.
|
|
|
|
"I see nothing there which says I must furnish thee with tools to open
|
|
my door. If thee wants a hammer, thee must go elsewhere for it;
|
|
I tell thee plainly, thee can't have mine."
|
|
|
|
The implements for opening the door are at length obtained, and,
|
|
after another half-hour, the slave-catchers are in the barn.
|
|
Three hours is a long time for a slave to be in the hands of Quakers.
|
|
The hay is turned over, and the barn is visited in every part;
|
|
but still the runaway is not found. Uncle Joseph has a glow
|
|
upon his countenance; Ephraim shakes his head knowingly;
|
|
little Elijah is a perfect know-nothing, and, if you look
|
|
toward the house, you will see Aunt Ruth's smiling face,
|
|
ready to announce that breakfast is ready.
|
|
|
|
"The nigger is not in this barn," said the officer.
|
|
|
|
"I know he is not," quietly answered the Quaker.
|
|
|
|
"What were you nailing up your door for, then, as if you were afraid we
|
|
would enter?" inquired one of the kidnappers.
|
|
|
|
"I can do what I please with my own door, can't I," said the Quaker.
|
|
|
|
The secret was out; the fugitive had gone in at the front
|
|
door and out at the back; and the reading of the warrant,
|
|
nailing up of the door, and other preliminaries of the Quaker,
|
|
was to give the fugitive time and opportunity to escape.
|
|
|
|
It was now late in the morning, and the slave-catchers were a long way
|
|
from home, and the horses were jaded by the rapid manner in which they
|
|
had travelled. The Friends, in high glee, returned to the house
|
|
for breakfast; the man of the law, after taking his fee, went home,
|
|
and the kidnappers turned back, muttering, "Better luck next time."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXI
|
|
|
|
SELF-SACRIFICE
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOW in her seventeenth year, Clotelle's personal appearance presented
|
|
a great contrast to the time when she lived with old Mrs. Miller.
|
|
Her tall and well-developed figure; her long, silky black hair,
|
|
falling in curls down her swan-like neck; her bright, black eyes
|
|
lighting up her olive-tinted face, and a set of teeth that a Tuscarora
|
|
might envy, she was a picture of tropical-ripened beauty. At times,
|
|
there was a heavenly smile upon her countenance, which would have warmed
|
|
the heart of an anchorite. Such was the personal appearance of the girl
|
|
who was now in prison by her own act to save the life of another.
|
|
Would she be hanged in his stead, or would she receive a different
|
|
kind of punishment? These questions Clotelle did not ask herself.
|
|
Open, frank, free, and generous to a fault, she always thought of others,
|
|
never of her own welfare.
|
|
|
|
The long stay of Clotelle caused some uneasiness to Miss Wilson;
|
|
yet she dared not tell her father, for he had forbidden
|
|
the slave-girl's going to the prison to see her lover.
|
|
While the clock on the church near by was striking eleven,
|
|
Georgiana called Sam, and sent him to the prison in
|
|
search of Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
"The girl went away from here at eight o'clock," was the jailer's
|
|
answer to the servant's inquiries.
|
|
|
|
The return of Sam without having found the girl saddened
|
|
the heart of the young mistress. "Sure, then," said she,
|
|
"the poor, heartbroken thing has made way with herself."
|
|
|
|
Still, she waited till morning before breaking the news of Clotelle's
|
|
absence to her father.
|
|
|
|
The jailer discovered, the next morning, to his utter astonishment,
|
|
that his prisoner was white instead of black, and his first impression
|
|
was that the change of complexion had taken place during the night,
|
|
through fear of death. But this conjecture was soon dissipated;
|
|
for the dark, glowing eyes, the sable curls upon the lofty brow,
|
|
and the mild, sweet voice that answered his questions, informed him
|
|
that the prisoner before him was another being.
|
|
|
|
On learning, in the morning, that Clotelle was in jail dressed in male attire,
|
|
Miss Wilson immediately sent clothes to her to make a change in her attire.
|
|
News of the heroic and daring act of the slave-girl spread through the city
|
|
with electric speed.
|
|
|
|
"I will sell every nigger on the place," said the parson,
|
|
at the breakfast-table,--"I will sell them all, and get a new lot,
|
|
and whip them every day."
|
|
|
|
Poor Georgiana wept for the safety of Clotelle, while she felt
|
|
glad that Jerome had escaped. In vain did they try to extort
|
|
from the girl the whereabouts of the man whose escape she
|
|
had effected. She was not aware that he had fled on a steamer,
|
|
and when questioned, she replied,--
|
|
|
|
"I don't know; and if I did I would not tell you.
|
|
I care not what you do with me, if Jerome but escapes."
|
|
|
|
The smile with which she uttered these words finely illustrated
|
|
the poet's meaning, when he says,--
|
|
|
|
"A fearful gift upon they heart is laid,
|
|
Woman--the power to suffer and to love."
|
|
|
|
Her sweet simplicity seemed to dare them to lay their rough hands
|
|
amid her trembling curls.
|
|
|
|
Three days did the heroic young woman remain in prison, to be
|
|
gazed at by an unfeeling crowd, drawn there out of curiosity.
|
|
The intelligence came to her at last that the court had decided
|
|
to spare her life, on condition that she should be whipped,
|
|
sold, and sent out of the State within twenty-four hours.
|
|
|
|
This order of the court she would have cared but little for,
|
|
had she not been sincerely attached to her young mistress.
|
|
|
|
"Do try and sell her to some one who will use her well,"
|
|
said Georgiana to her father, as he was about taking his hat
|
|
to leave the house.
|
|
|
|
"I shall not trouble myself to do any such thing,"
|
|
replied the hard-hearted parson. "I leave the finding of a
|
|
master for her with the slave-dealer."
|
|
|
|
Bathed in tears, Miss Wilson paced her room in the absence
|
|
of her father. For many months Georgiana had been in a decline,
|
|
and any little trouble would lay her on a sick bed for days.
|
|
She was, therefore, poorly able to bear the loss of this companion,
|
|
whom she so dearly loved.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wilson had informed his daughter that Clotelle was to be flogged;
|
|
and when Felice came in and informed her mistress that the poor
|
|
girl had just received fifty lashes on her bare person,
|
|
the young lady fainted and fell on the floor. The servants placed
|
|
their mistress on the sofa, and went in pursuit of their master.
|
|
Little did the preacher think, on returning to his daughter,
|
|
that he should soon be bereft of her; yet such was to be his lot.
|
|
A blood-vessel had been ruptured, and the three physicians who were
|
|
called in told the father that he must prepare to lose his child.
|
|
That moral courage and calmness, which was her great characteristic,
|
|
did not forsake Georgiana in her hour of death. She had ever been kind
|
|
to the slaves under her charge, and they loved and respected her.
|
|
At her request, the servants were all brought into her room,
|
|
and took a last farewell of their mistress. Seldom, if ever,
|
|
was there witnessed a more touching scene than this.
|
|
There lay the young woman, pale and feeble, with death stamped upon
|
|
her countenance, surrounded by the sons and daughters of Africa,
|
|
some of whom had been separated from every earthly tie, and the most
|
|
of whose persons had been torn and gashed by the negro-whip. Some
|
|
were upon their knees at the bedside, others standing around,
|
|
and all weeping.
|
|
|
|
Death is a leveler; and neither age, sex, wealth, nor condition,
|
|
can avert when he is permitted to strike. The most beautiful
|
|
flowers must soon fade and droop and die. So, also, with man;
|
|
his days are as uncertain as the passing breeze. This hour
|
|
he glows in the blush of health and vigor, but the next, he may
|
|
be counted with the number no more known on earth. Oh, what a
|
|
silence pervaded the house when this young flower was gone!
|
|
In the midst of the buoyancy of youth, this cherished one had
|
|
dropped and died. Deep were the sounds of grief and mourning
|
|
heard in that stately dwelling when the stricken friends,
|
|
whose office it had been to nurse and soothe the weary sufferer,
|
|
beheld her pale and motionless in the sleep of death.
|
|
|
|
Who can imagine the feeling with which poor Clotelle received
|
|
the intelligence of her kind friend's death? The deep gashes
|
|
of the cruel whip had prostrated the lovely form of the quadroon,
|
|
and she lay upon her bed of straw in the dark cell. The speculator
|
|
had brought her, but had postponed her removal till she should recover.
|
|
Her benefactress was dead, and--
|
|
|
|
"Hope withering fled, and mercy sighed farewell."
|
|
|
|
"Is Jerome safe?" she would ask herself continually.
|
|
If her lover could have but known of the sufferings of that sweet
|
|
flower,- -that polyanthus over which he had so often been
|
|
in his dreams,--he would then have learned that she was worthy
|
|
of his love.
|
|
|
|
It was more than a fortnight before the slave-trader could take his prize
|
|
to more comfortable quarters. Like Alcibiades, who defaced the images
|
|
of the gods and expected to be pardoned on the ground of eccentricity,
|
|
so men who abuse God's image hope to escape the vengeance of his wrath
|
|
under the plea that the law sanctions their atrocious deeds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXII
|
|
|
|
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT AND WHAT FOLLOWED
|
|
|
|
|
|
IT was a beautiful Sunday in September, with a cloudless sky,
|
|
and the rays of the sun parching the already thirsty earth,
|
|
that Clotelle stood at an upper window in Slater's slave-pen
|
|
in New Orleans, gasping for a breath of fresh air.
|
|
The bells of thirty churches were calling the people to
|
|
the different places of worship. Crowds were seen wending
|
|
their way to the houses of God; one followed by a negro boy
|
|
carrying his master's Bible; another followed by her maid-servant
|
|
holding the mistress' fan; a third supporting an umbrella
|
|
over his master's head to shield him from the burning sun.
|
|
Baptists immersed, Presbyterians sprinkled, Methodists shouted,
|
|
and Episcopalians read their prayers, while ministers
|
|
of the various sects preached that Christ died for all.
|
|
The chiming of the bells seemed to mock the sighs and deep groans
|
|
of the forty human beings then incarcerated in the slave-pen.
|
|
These imprisoned children of God were many of them Methodists,
|
|
some Baptists, and others claiming to believe in the faith
|
|
of the Presbyterians and Episcopalians.
|
|
|
|
Oh, with what anxiety did these creatures await the close of that Sabbath,
|
|
and the dawn of another day, that should deliver them from those dismal
|
|
and close cells. Slowly the day passed away, and once more the evening
|
|
breeze found its way through the barred windows of the prison that contained
|
|
these injured sons and daughters of America.
|
|
|
|
The clock on the calaboose had just struck nine on Monday morning,
|
|
when hundreds of persons were seen threading the gates and doors
|
|
of the negro-pen. It was the same gang that had the day previous been
|
|
stepping to the tune and keeping time with the musical church bells.
|
|
Their Bibles were not with them, their prayer-books were left at home,
|
|
and even their long and solemn faces had been laid aside for the week.
|
|
They had come to the man-market to make their purchases.
|
|
Methodists were in search of their brethren. Baptists were
|
|
looking for those that had been immersed, while Presbyterians
|
|
were willing to buy fellow-Christians, whether sprinkled or not.
|
|
The crowd was soon gazing at and feasting their eyes upon the lovely
|
|
features of Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
"She is handsomer," muttered one to himself, "than the lady
|
|
that sat in the pew next to me yesterday."
|
|
|
|
"I would that my daughter was half so pretty," thinks a second.
|
|
|
|
Groups are seen talking in every part of the vast building,
|
|
and the topic on 'Change, is the "beautiful quadroon."
|
|
By and by, a tall young man with a foreign face, the curling
|
|
mustache protruding from under a finely-chiseled nose,
|
|
and having the air of a gentleman, passes by.
|
|
His dark hazel eye is fastened on the maid, and he stops
|
|
for a moment; the stranger walks away, but soon returns--
|
|
he looks, he sees the young woman wipe away the silent tear
|
|
that steals down her alabaster cheek; he feels ashamed that
|
|
he should gaze so unmanly on the blushing face of the woman.
|
|
As he turns upon his heel he takes out his white handkerchief
|
|
and wipes his eyes. It may be that he has lost a sister,
|
|
a mother, or some dear one to whom he was betrothed.
|
|
Again he comes, and the quadroon hides her face.
|
|
She has heard that foreigners make bad masters, and she shuns
|
|
his piercing gaze. Again he goes away and then returns.
|
|
He takes a last look and then walks hurriedly off.
|
|
|
|
The day wears away, but long before the time of closing the sale the tall
|
|
young man once more enters the slave-pen. He looks in every direction
|
|
for the beautiful slave, but she is not there--she has been sold!
|
|
He goes to the trader and inquires, but he is too late, and he therefore
|
|
returns to his hotel.
|
|
|
|
Having entered a military school in Paris when quite young,
|
|
and soon after been sent with the French army to India,
|
|
Antoine Devenant had never dabbled in matters of love.
|
|
He viewed all women from the same stand-point--respected them
|
|
for their virtues, and often spoke of the goodness of heart
|
|
of the sex, but never dreamed of taking to himself a wife.
|
|
The unequalled beauty of Clotelle had dazzled his eyes,
|
|
and every look that she gave was a dagger that went to his heart.
|
|
He felt a shortness of breath, his heart palpitated, his head
|
|
grew dizzy, and his limbs trembled; but he knew not its cause.
|
|
This was the first stage of "love at first sight."
|
|
|
|
He who bows to the shrine of beauty when beckoned by this
|
|
mysterious agent seldom regrets it. Devenant reproached
|
|
himself for not having made inquiries concerning the girl
|
|
before he left the market in the morning. His stay in
|
|
the city was to be short, and the yellow fever was raging,
|
|
which caused him to feel like making a still earlier departure.
|
|
The disease appeared in a form unusually severe and repulsive.
|
|
It seized its victims from amongst the most healthy of the citizens.
|
|
The disorder began in the brain by oppressive pain accompanied
|
|
or followed by fever. Fiery veins streaked the eye,
|
|
the face was inflamed and dyed of a dark dull red color;
|
|
the ears from time to time rang painfully. Now mucous secretions
|
|
surcharged the tongue and took away the power of speech;
|
|
now the sick one spoke, but in speaking had foresight of death.
|
|
When the violence of the disease approached the heart, the gums
|
|
were blackened. The sleep broken, troubled by convulsions,
|
|
or by frightful visions, was worse than the waking hours;
|
|
and when the reason sank under a delirium which had its seat
|
|
in the brain, repose utterly forsook the patient's couch.
|
|
The progress of the fever within was marked by yellowish spots,
|
|
which spread over the surface of the body. If then,
|
|
a happy crisis came not, all hope was gone. Soon the breath
|
|
infected the air with a fetid odor, the lips were glazed,
|
|
despair painted itself in the eyes, and sobs, with long
|
|
intervals of silence, formed the only language. From each side
|
|
of the mouth, spread foam tinged with black and burnt blood.
|
|
Blue streaks mingled with the yellow all over the frame.
|
|
All remedies were useless. This was the yellow fever.
|
|
The disorder spread alarm and confusion throughout the city.
|
|
On an average more than four hundred died daily.
|
|
In the midst of disorder and confusion, death heaped victims
|
|
on victims. Friend followed friend in quick succession.
|
|
The sick were avoided from the fear of contagion,
|
|
and for the same reason the dead were left unburied.
|
|
Nearly two thousand dead bodies lay uncovered in the burial-ground,
|
|
with only here and there a little lime thrown over them,
|
|
to prevent the air becoming infected. The negro, whose home
|
|
is in a hot climate, was not proof against the disease.
|
|
Many plantations had to suspend their work for want of slaves
|
|
to take the places of those who had been taken off by the fever.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII
|
|
|
|
MEETING OF THE COUSINS
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE clock in the hall had scarcely finished striking three when
|
|
Mr. Taylor entered his own dwelling, a fine residence in Camp Street,
|
|
New Orleans, followed by the slave-girl whom he had just purchased
|
|
at the negro-pen. Clotelle looked around wildly as she passed
|
|
through the hall into the presence of her new mistress.
|
|
Mrs. Taylor was much pleased with her servant's appearance,
|
|
and congratulated her husband on his judicious choice.
|
|
|
|
"But," said Mrs. Taylor, after Clotelle had gone into the kitchen,
|
|
"how much she looks like Miss Jane Morton."
|
|
|
|
"Indeed," replied the husband, "I thought, the moment I saw
|
|
her that she looked like the Mortons."
|
|
|
|
"I am sure I never saw two faces more alike in my life,
|
|
than that girl's and Jane Morton's," continued Mrs. Taylor.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Morton, the purchaser of Marion, the youngest daughter
|
|
of Agnes, and sister to Isabella, had resided in Camp Street,
|
|
near the Taylors, for more than eight years, and the families
|
|
were on very intimate terms, and visited each other frequently.
|
|
Every one spoke of Clotelle's close resemblance to the Mortons,
|
|
and especially to the eldest daughter. Indeed, two sisters
|
|
could hardly have been more alike. The large, dark eyes, black,
|
|
silk-like hair, tall, graceful figure, and mould of the face,
|
|
were the same.
|
|
|
|
The morning following Clotelle's arrival in her new home,
|
|
Mrs. Taylor was conversing in a low tone with her husband,
|
|
and both with their eyes following Clotelle as she passed
|
|
through the room.
|
|
|
|
"She is far above the station of a slave," remarked the lady.
|
|
"I saw her, last night, when removing some books, open on and stand
|
|
over it a moment as if she was reading; and she is as white as I am.
|
|
I am almost sorry you bought her."
|
|
|
|
At this juncture the front door-bell rang, and Clotelle hurried
|
|
through the room to answer it.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Morton," said the servant as she returned to the mistress' room.
|
|
|
|
"Ask her to walk in," responded the mistress.
|
|
|
|
"Now, my dear," said Mrs. Taylor to her husband, "just look and see
|
|
if you do not notice a marked resemblance between the countenances
|
|
of Jane and Clotelle."
|
|
|
|
Miss Morton entered the room just as Mrs. Taylor ceased speaking.
|
|
|
|
"Have you heard that the Jamisons are down with the fever?"
|
|
inquired the young lady, after asking about the health
|
|
of the Taylors.
|
|
|
|
"No, I had not; I was in hopes it would not get into our street,"
|
|
replied Mrs. Taylor.
|
|
|
|
All this while Mr. and Mrs. Taylor were keenly scrutinizing
|
|
their visitor and Clotelle and even the two young women seemed to be conscious
|
|
that they were in some way the objects of more than usual attention.
|
|
|
|
Miss Morton had scarcely departed before Mrs. Taylor began
|
|
questioning Clotelle concerning her early childhood, and became
|
|
more than ever satisfied that the slave-girl was in some way
|
|
connected with the Mortons.
|
|
|
|
Every hour brought fresh news of the ravages of the fever,
|
|
and the Taylors commenced preparing to leave town.
|
|
As Mr. Taylor could not go at once, it was determined that his wife
|
|
should leave without him, accompanied by her new maid-servant.
|
|
Just as Mrs. Taylor and Clotelle were stepping into the carriage,
|
|
they were informed that Dr. Morton was down with the epidemic.
|
|
|
|
It was a beautiful day, with a fine breeze for the time of year,
|
|
that Mrs. Taylor and her servant found themselves in the cabin of the splendid
|
|
new steamer "Walk-in-the-Water," bound from New Orleans to Mobile.
|
|
Every berth in the boat was occupied by persons fleeing from the fearful
|
|
contagion that was carrying off its hundreds daily.
|
|
|
|
Late in the day, as Clotelle was standing at one of the windows
|
|
of the ladies' saloon, she was astonished to see near her,
|
|
and with eyes fixed intently upon her, the tall young stranger
|
|
whom she had observed in the slave-market a few days before.
|
|
She turned hastily away, but the heated cabin and the want
|
|
of fresh air soon drove her again to the window.
|
|
The young gentleman again appeared, and coming to the end
|
|
of the saloon, spoke to the slave-girl in broken English.
|
|
This confirmed her in her previous opinion that he was a foreigner,
|
|
and she rejoiced that she had not fallen into his hands.
|
|
|
|
"I want to talk with you," said the stranger.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want with me?" she inquired. "I am your friend," he answered.
|
|
"I saw you in the slave-market last week, and regretted that I did not speak
|
|
to you then. I returned in the evening, but you was gone."
|
|
|
|
Clotelle looked indignantly at the stranger, and was about leaving
|
|
the window again when the quivering of his lips and the trembling
|
|
of his voice struck her attention and caused her to remain.
|
|
|
|
"I intended to buy you and make you free and happy, but I
|
|
was too late," continued he.
|
|
|
|
"Why do you wish to make me free?" inquired the girl.
|
|
|
|
"Because I once had an only and lovely sister, who died three years
|
|
ago in France, and you are so much like her that had I not known
|
|
of her death I should certainly have taken you for her."
|
|
|
|
"However much I may resemble your sister, you are aware that I
|
|
am not she; why, then, take so much interest in one whom you
|
|
have never seen before and may never see again?"
|
|
|
|
"The love," said he, "which I had for my sister is transferred to you."
|
|
|
|
Clotelle had all along suspected that the man was a knave,
|
|
and this profession of love at once confirmed her in that belief.
|
|
She therefore immediately turned away and left him.
|
|
|
|
Hours elapsed. Twilight was just "letting down her curtain and pinning it
|
|
with a star," as the slave-girl seated herself on a sofa by the window,
|
|
and began meditating upon her eventful history, meanwhile watching the white
|
|
waves as they seemed to sport with each other in the wake of the noble vessel,
|
|
with the rising moon reflecting its silver rays upon the splendid scene,
|
|
when the foreigner once more appeared near the window. Although agitated
|
|
for fear her mistress would see her talking to a stranger, and be angry,
|
|
Clotelle still thought she saw something in the countenance of the young man
|
|
that told her he was sincere, and she did not wish to hurt his feelings.
|
|
|
|
"Why persist in your wish to talk with me?" she said, as he again
|
|
advanced and spoke to her.
|
|
|
|
"I wish to purchase you and make you happy," returned he.
|
|
|
|
"But I am not for sale now," she replied. "My present mistress
|
|
will not sell me, and if you wished to do so ever so much
|
|
you could not."
|
|
|
|
"Then," said he, "if I cannot buy you, when the steamer reaches Mobile,
|
|
fly with me, and you shall be free."
|
|
|
|
"I cannot do it," said Clotelle; and she was just leaving
|
|
the stranger when he took from his pocket a piece of paper
|
|
and thrust it into her hand.
|
|
|
|
After returning to her room, she unfolded the paper, and found,
|
|
to her utter astonishment that it contained a one hundred dollar note
|
|
on the Bank of the United States. The first impulse of the girl
|
|
was to return the paper and its contents immediately to the giver,
|
|
but examining the paper more closely, she saw in faint pencil-marks,
|
|
"Remember this is from one who loves you." Another thought was to give
|
|
it to her mistress, and she returned to the saloon for that purpose;
|
|
but on finding Mrs. Taylor engaged in conversation with some ladies,
|
|
she did not deem it proper to interrupt her.
|
|
|
|
Again, therefore, Clotelle seated herself by the window,
|
|
and again the stranger presented himself. She immediately
|
|
took the paper from her pocket, and handed it to him;
|
|
but he declined taking it, saying,--
|
|
|
|
"No, keep it; it may be of some service to you when I am far away."
|
|
|
|
"Would that I could understand you," said the slave.
|
|
|
|
"Believe that I am sincere, and then you will understand me,"
|
|
returned the young man. "Would you rather be a slave than be free?"
|
|
inquired he, with tears that glistened in the rays of the moon.
|
|
|
|
"No," said she, "I want my freedom, but I must live a virtuous life."
|
|
|
|
"Then, if you would be free and happy, go with me. We shall be in Mobile
|
|
in two hours, and when the passengers are going on shore, you take my arm.
|
|
Have your face covered with a veil, and you will not be observed.
|
|
We will take passage immediately for France; you can pass as my sister,
|
|
and I pledge you my honor that I will marry you as soon as we
|
|
arrive in France."
|
|
|
|
This solemn promise, coupled with what had previously been said,
|
|
gave Clotelle confidence in the man, and she instantly determined to go
|
|
with him. "But then," thought she, "what if I should be detected?
|
|
I would be forever ruined, for I would be sold, and in all probability
|
|
have to end my days on a cotton, rice, or sugar plantation."
|
|
However, the thought of freedom in the future outweighed this danger,
|
|
and her resolve was taken.
|
|
|
|
Dressing herself in some of her best clothes, and placing her veiled
|
|
bonnet where she could get it without the knowledge of her mistress,
|
|
Clotelle awaited with a heart filled with the deepest emotions and
|
|
anxiety the moment when she was to take a step which seemed so rash,
|
|
and which would either make or ruin her forever.
|
|
|
|
The ships which Mobile for Europe lie about thirty miles down the bay,
|
|
and passengers are taken down from the city in small vessels.
|
|
The "Walk-in-the-Water" had just made her lines fast, and the
|
|
passengers were hurrying on shore, when a tall gentleman with a lady
|
|
at his side descended the stage-plank, and stepped on the wharf.
|
|
This was Antoine Devenant and Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIV
|
|
|
|
THE LAW AND ITS VICTIM
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE death of Dr. Morton, on the third day of his illness,
|
|
came like a shock upon his wife and daughters.
|
|
The corpse had scarcely been committed to its mother earth
|
|
before new and unforeseen difficulties appeared to them.
|
|
By the laws of the Slave States, the children follow
|
|
the condition of their mother. If the mother is free,
|
|
the children are free; if a slave, the children are slaves.
|
|
Being unacquainted with the Southern code, and no one
|
|
presuming that Marion had any negro blood in her veins,
|
|
Dr. Morton had not given the subject a single thought.
|
|
The woman whom he loved and regarded as his wife was,
|
|
after all, nothing more than a slave by the laws of the State.
|
|
What would have been his feelings had he known that at his death
|
|
his wife and children would be considered as his property?
|
|
Yet such was the case. Like most men of means at that time,
|
|
Dr. Morton was deeply engaged in speculation, and though
|
|
generally considered wealthy, was very much involved in
|
|
his business affairs.
|
|
|
|
After the disease with which Dr. Morton had so suddenly died
|
|
had to some extent subsided, Mr. James Morton, a brother
|
|
of the deceased, went to New Orleans to settle up the estate.
|
|
On his arrival there, he was pleased with and felt proud
|
|
of his nieces, and invited them to return with him to Vermont,
|
|
little dreaming that his brother had married a slave,
|
|
and that his widow and daughters would be claimed as such.
|
|
The girls themselves had never heard that their mother had been
|
|
a slave, and therefore knew nothing of the danger hanging
|
|
over their heads.
|
|
|
|
An inventory of the property of the deceased was made out by Mr. Morton,
|
|
and placed in the hands of the creditors. These preliminaries
|
|
being arranged, the ladies, with their relative, concluded to leave
|
|
the city and reside for a few days on the banks of Lake Ponchartrain,
|
|
where they could enjoy a fresh air that the city did not afford.
|
|
As they were about taking the cars, however, an officer arrested
|
|
the whole party--the ladies as slaves, and the gentleman upon the charge
|
|
of attempting to conceal the property of his deceased brother.
|
|
Mr. Morton was overwhelmed with horror at the idea of his nieces being
|
|
claimed as slaves, and asked for time, that he might save them from
|
|
such a fate. He even offered to mortgage his little farm in Vermont
|
|
for the amount which young slave-women of their ages would fetch.
|
|
But the creditors pleaded that they were an "extra article,"
|
|
and would sell for more than common slaves, and must therefore
|
|
be sold at auction.
|
|
|
|
The uncle was therefore compelled to give them up to the officers of the law,
|
|
and they were separated from him. Jane, the oldest of the girls, as we
|
|
have before mentioned, was very handsome, bearing a close resemblance
|
|
to her cousin Clotelle. Alreka, though not as handsome as her sister,
|
|
was nevertheless a beautiful girl, and both had all the accomplishments
|
|
that wealth and station could procure.
|
|
|
|
Though only in her fifteen year, Alreka had become strongly attached
|
|
to Volney Lapie, a young Frenchman, a student in her father's office.
|
|
This attachment was reciprocated, although the poverty of the young man
|
|
and the extreme youth of the girl had caused their feelings to be kept
|
|
from the young lady's parents.
|
|
|
|
The day of sale came, and Mr. Morton attended, with the hope
|
|
that either the magnanimity of the creditors or his own little farm
|
|
in Vermont might save his nieces from the fate that awaited them.
|
|
His hope, however, was in vain. The feelings of all present
|
|
seemed to be lost in the general wish to become the possessor
|
|
of the young ladies, who stood trembling, blushing, and weeping
|
|
as the numerous throng gazed at them, or as the intended purchaser
|
|
examined the graceful proportions of their fair and beautiful frames.
|
|
Neither the presence of the uncle nor young Lapie could at all
|
|
lessen the gross language of the officers, or stay the rude hands
|
|
of those who wishes to examine the property thus offered for sale.
|
|
After a fierce contest between the bidders, the girls were sold,
|
|
one for two thousand three hundred, and the other for two thousand
|
|
three hundred and fifty dollars. Had these girls been bought
|
|
for servants only, they would in all probability have brought
|
|
not more than nine hundred or a thousand dollars each. Here were
|
|
two beautiful young girls, accustomed to the fondest indulgence,
|
|
surrounded by all the refinements of life, and with the timidity
|
|
and gentleness which such a life would naturally produce,
|
|
bartered away like cattle in the markets of Smithfield or New York.
|
|
|
|
The mother, who was also to have been sold, happily followed her husband
|
|
to the grave, and was spared the pangs of a broken heart.
|
|
|
|
The purchaser of the young ladies left the market in triumph,
|
|
and the uncle, with a heavy heart, started for his New England home,
|
|
with no earthly prospect of ever beholding his nieces again.
|
|
|
|
The seizure of the young ladies as slaves was the result
|
|
of the administrator's having found among Dr. Morton's papers
|
|
the bill-of-sale of Marion which he had taken when he purchased her.
|
|
He had doubtless intended to liberate her when he married her,
|
|
but had neglected from time to time to have the proper papers made out.
|
|
Sad was the result of this negligence.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXV
|
|
|
|
THE FLIGHT
|
|
|
|
|
|
ON once gaining the wharf, Devenant and Clotelle found
|
|
no difficulty in securing an immediate passage to France.
|
|
The fine packet-ship Utica lay down the bay, and only
|
|
awaited the return of the lighter that night to complete
|
|
her cargo and list of passengers, ere she departed.
|
|
The young Frenchman therefore took his prize on board,
|
|
and started for the ship.
|
|
|
|
Daylight was just making its appearance the next morning when
|
|
the Utica weighed anchor and turned her prow toward the sea.
|
|
In the course of three hours, the vessel, with outspread sails,
|
|
was rapidly flying from land. Everything appeared to be auspicious.
|
|
The skies were beautifully clear, and the sea calm, with a sun
|
|
that dazzled the whole scene. But clouds soon began to chase
|
|
each other through the heavens, and the sea became rough.
|
|
It was then that Clotelle felt that there was hoped of escaping.
|
|
She had hitherto kept in the cabin, but now she expressed a wish
|
|
to come on deck. The hanging clouds were narrowing the horizon
|
|
to a span, and gloomily mingling with the rising surges.
|
|
The old and grave-looking seamen shook their weather-wise
|
|
heads as if foretelling a storm.
|
|
|
|
As Clotelle came on deck, she strained her eyes in vain to catch
|
|
a farewell view of her native land. With a smile on her countenance,
|
|
but with her eyes filled with tears, she said,--
|
|
|
|
"Farewell, farewell to the land of my birth, and welcome, welcome, ye dark
|
|
blue waves. I care not where I go, so it is
|
|
|
|
'Where a tyrant never trod,
|
|
Where a slave was never known,
|
|
But where nature worships God,
|
|
If in the wilderness alone.'"
|
|
|
|
Devenant stood by her side, seeming proud of his future wife,
|
|
with his face in a glow at his success, while over his noble brow
|
|
clustering locks of glossy black hair were hanging in careless ringlets.
|
|
His finely-cut, classic features wore the aspect of one possessed
|
|
with a large and noble heart.
|
|
|
|
Once more the beautiful Clotelle whispered in the ear of her lover,--
|
|
|
|
"Away, away, o'er land and sea,
|
|
America is now no home for me."
|
|
|
|
The winds increased with nightfall, and impenetrable gloom surrounded
|
|
the ship. The prospect was too uncheering, even to persons in love.
|
|
The attention which Devenant paid to Clotelle, although she had been
|
|
registered on the ship's passenger list as his sister, caused more
|
|
than one to look upon his as an agreeable travelling companion.
|
|
His tall, slender figure and fine countenance bespoke for him
|
|
at first sight one's confidence. That he was sincerely and deeply
|
|
enamored of Clotelle all could see.
|
|
|
|
The weather became still more squally. The wind rushed through the white,
|
|
foaming waves, and the ship groaned with its own wild and ungovernable
|
|
labors, while nothing could be seen but the wild waste of waters.
|
|
The scene was indeed one of fearful sublimity.
|
|
|
|
Day came and went without any abatement of the storm.
|
|
Despair was now on every countenance. Occasionally a vivid
|
|
flash of lightning would break forth and illuminate the black
|
|
and boiling surges that surrounded the vessel, which was now
|
|
scudding before the blast under bare poles.
|
|
|
|
After five days of most intensely stormy weather, the sea settled
|
|
down into a dead calm, and the passengers flocked on deck.
|
|
During the last three days of the storm, Clotelle had been
|
|
so unwell as to be unable to raise her head. Her pale face and
|
|
quivering lips and languid appearance made her look as if every
|
|
pulsation had ceased. Her magnificent large and soft eyes,
|
|
fringed with lashes as dark as night, gave her an angelic appearance.
|
|
The unreserved attention of Devenant, even when sea-sick himself,
|
|
did much to increase the little love that the at first distrustful
|
|
girl had placed in him. The heart must always have some object
|
|
on which to centre its affections, and Clotelle having lost all hope
|
|
of ever again seeing Jerome, it was but natural that she should
|
|
now transfer her love to one who was so greatly befriending her.
|
|
At first she respected Devenant for the love he manifested for her,
|
|
and for his apparent willingness to make any sacrifice for her welfare.
|
|
True, this was an adventure upon which she had risked her all,
|
|
and should her heart be foiled in this search for hidden treasures,
|
|
her affections would be shipwrecked forever. She felt under
|
|
great obligations to the man who had thus effected her escape,
|
|
and that noble act alone would entitle him to her love.
|
|
|
|
Each day became more pleasant as the noble ship sped onward amid the
|
|
rippled spray. The whistling of the breeze through the rigging was music
|
|
to the ear, and brought gladness to the heart of every one on board.
|
|
At last, the long suspense was broken by the appearance of land,
|
|
at which all hearts leaped for joy. It was a beautiful morning in October.
|
|
The sun had just risen, and sky and earth were still bathed in his soft,
|
|
rosy glow, when the Utica hauled into the dock at Bordeaux.
|
|
The splendid streets, beautiful bridges, glittering equipages,
|
|
and smiling countenances of the people, gave everything a happy appearance,
|
|
after a voyage of twenty-nine days on the deep, deep sea.
|
|
|
|
After getting their baggage cleared from the custom-house and going
|
|
to a hotel, Devenant made immediate arrangements for the marriage.
|
|
Clotelle, on arriving at the church where the ceremony was
|
|
to take place, was completely overwhelmed at the spectacle.
|
|
She had never beheld a scene so gorgeous as this. The magnificent
|
|
dresses of the priests and choristers, the deep and solemn voices,
|
|
the elevated crucifix, the burning tapers, the splendidly decorated altar,
|
|
the sweet-smelling incense, made the occasion truly an imposing one.
|
|
At the conclusion of the ceremony, the loud and solemn peals of
|
|
the organ's swelling anthem were lost to all in the contemplation
|
|
of the interesting scene.
|
|
|
|
The happy couple set out at once for Dunkirk, the residence
|
|
of the bridegroom's parents. But their stay there was short,
|
|
for they had scarcely commenced visiting the numerous friends
|
|
of the husband ere orders came for him to proceed to India
|
|
to join that portion of the French army then stationed there.
|
|
|
|
In due course of time they left for India, passing through Paris and Lyons,
|
|
taking ship at Marseilles. In the metropolis of France, they spent a week,
|
|
where the husband took delight in introducing his wife to his brother officers
|
|
in the French army, and where the newly-married couple were introduced
|
|
to Louis Philippe, then King of France. In all of these positions,
|
|
Clotelle sustained herself in a most ladylike manner.
|
|
|
|
At Lyons, they visited the vast factories and other public works,
|
|
and all was pleasure with them. The voyage from Marseilles to
|
|
Calcutta was very pleasant, as the weather was exceedingly fine.
|
|
On arriving in India, Captain Devenant and lady were received
|
|
with honors--the former for his heroic bravery in more than
|
|
one battle, and the latter for her fascinating beauty and
|
|
pleasing manners, and the fact that she was connected with one
|
|
who was a general favorite with all who had his acquaintance.
|
|
This was indeed a great change for Clotelle. Six months had not
|
|
elapsed since her exposure in the slave-market of New Orleans.
|
|
This life is a stage, and we are indeed all actors.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVI
|
|
|
|
THE HERO OF A NIGHT
|
|
|
|
|
|
MOUNTED on a fast horse, with the Quaker's son for a guide,
|
|
Jerome pressed forward while Uncle Joseph was detaining
|
|
the slave-catchers at the barn-door, through which the fugitive
|
|
had just escaped. When out of present danger, fearing that
|
|
suspicion might be aroused if he continued on the road in open day,
|
|
Jerome buried himself in a thick, dark forest until nightfall.
|
|
With a yearning heart, he saw the splendor of the setting sun
|
|
lingering on the hills, as if loath to fade away and be lost
|
|
in the more sombre hues of twilight, which, rising from the east,
|
|
was slowly stealing over the expanse of heaven, bearing silence
|
|
and repose, which should cover his flight from a neighborhood
|
|
to him so full of dangers.
|
|
|
|
Wearily and alone, with nothing but the hope of safety
|
|
before him to cheer him on his way, the poor fugitive urged
|
|
his tired and trembling limbs forward for several nights.
|
|
The new suit of clothes with which he had provided himself
|
|
when he made his escape from his captors, and the twenty
|
|
dollars which the young Quaker had slipped into his hand,
|
|
when bidding him "Fare thee well," would enable him to appear
|
|
genteelly as soon as he dared to travel by daylight, and would
|
|
thus facilitate his progress toward freedom.
|
|
|
|
It was late in the evening when the fugitive slave arrived at a small
|
|
town on the banks of Lake Erie, where he was to remain over night.
|
|
How strange were his feelings! While his heart throbbed for that freedom
|
|
and safety which Canada alone could furnish to the whip-scarred slave,
|
|
on the American continent, his thoughts were with Clotelle.
|
|
Was she still in prison, and if so, what would be her punishment
|
|
for aiding him to escape from prison? Would he ever behold her again?
|
|
These were the thoughts that followed him to his pillow, haunted him
|
|
in his dreams, and awakened him from his slumbers.
|
|
|
|
The alarm of fire aroused the inmates of the hotel in which Jerome had sought
|
|
shelter for the night from the deep sleep into which they had fallen.
|
|
The whole village was buried in slumber, and the building was half consumed
|
|
before the frightened inhabitants had reached the scene of the conflagration.
|
|
The wind was high, and the burning embers were wafted like so many
|
|
rockets through the sky. The whole town was lighted up, and the cries
|
|
of women and children in the streets made the scene a terrific one.
|
|
Jerome heard the alarm, and hastily dressing himself, he went forth
|
|
and hastened toward the burning building.
|
|
|
|
"There,--there in that room in the second story, is my child!"
|
|
exclaimed a woman, wringing her hands, and imploring some one to go
|
|
to the rescue of her little one.
|
|
|
|
The broad sheets of fire were flying in the direction of the chamber in
|
|
which the child was sleeping, and all hope of its being saved seemed gone.
|
|
Occasionally the wind would life the pall of smoke, and show that the work
|
|
of destruction was not yet complete. At last a long ladder was brought,
|
|
and one end placed under the window of the room. A moment more and
|
|
a bystander mounted the ladder and ascended in haste to the window.
|
|
The smoke met him as he raised the sash, and he cried out, "All is lost!"
|
|
and returned to the ground without entering the room.
|
|
|
|
Another sweep of the wind showed that the destroying element had
|
|
not yet made its final visit to that part of the doomed building.
|
|
The mother, seeing that all hope of again meeting her child in this
|
|
world was gone, wrung her hands and seemed inconsolable with grief.
|
|
|
|
At this juncture, a man was seen to mount the ladder,
|
|
and ascend with great rapidity. All eyes were instantly
|
|
turned to the figure of this unknown individual as it
|
|
disappeared in the cloud of smoke escaping from the window.
|
|
Those who a moment before had been removing furniture, as well
|
|
as the idlers who had congregated at the ringing of the bells,
|
|
assembled at the foot of the ladder, and awaited with breathless
|
|
silence the reappearance of the stranger, who, regardless of his
|
|
own safety, had thus risked his life to save another's. Three
|
|
cheers broke the stillness that had fallen on the company,
|
|
as the brave man was seen coming through the window and slowly
|
|
descending to the ground holding under one arm the inanimate
|
|
form of the child. Another cheer and then another,
|
|
made the welkin ring, as the stranger, with hair burned and
|
|
eyebrows closely singed, fainted at the foot of the ladder.
|
|
But the child was saved.
|
|
|
|
The stranger was Jerome. As soon as he revived, he shrunk from every eye,
|
|
as if he feared they would take from him the freedom which he had gone
|
|
through so much to obtain.
|
|
|
|
The next day, the fugitive took a vessel, and the following
|
|
morning found himself standing on the free soil of Canada.
|
|
As his foot pressed the shore, he threw himself upon his face,
|
|
kissed the earth, and exclaimed, "O God! I thank thee that I
|
|
am a free man."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVII
|
|
|
|
TRUE FREEDOM
|
|
|
|
THE history of the African race is God's illuminated clock,
|
|
set in the dark steeple of time. The negro has been made the hewer
|
|
of wood and the drawer of water for nearly all other nations.
|
|
The people of the United States, however, will have an account
|
|
to settle with God, owing to their treatment of the negro,
|
|
which will far surpass the rest of mankind.
|
|
|
|
Jerome, on reaching Canada, felt for the first time that
|
|
personal freedom which God intended that all who bore his image
|
|
should enjoy. That same forgetfulness of self which had
|
|
always characterized him now caused him to think of others.
|
|
The thoughts of dear ones in slavery were continually in his mind,
|
|
and above all others, Clotelle occupied his thoughts.
|
|
Now that he was free, he could better appreciate her condition
|
|
as a slave. Although Jerome met, on his arrival in Canada,
|
|
numbers who had escaped from the Southern States, he nevertheless
|
|
shrank from all society, particularly that of females.
|
|
The soft, silver-gray tints on the leaves of the trees,
|
|
with their snow-spotted trunks, and a biting air,
|
|
warned the new-born freeman that he was in another climate.
|
|
Jerome sought work, and soon found it; and arranged with his employer
|
|
that the latter should go to Natchez in search of Clotelle.
|
|
The good Scotchman, for whom the fugitive was laboring,
|
|
freely offered to go down and purchase the girl,
|
|
if she could be bought, and let Jerome pay him in work.
|
|
With such a prospect of future happiness in view,
|
|
this injured descendent of outraged and bleeding Africa went
|
|
daily to his toil with an energy hitherto unknown to him.
|
|
But oh, how vain are the hopes of man!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVIII
|
|
|
|
FAREWELL TO AMERICA
|
|
|
|
|
|
THREE months had elapsed, from the time the fugitive commenced work
|
|
for Mr. Streeter, when that gentleman returned from his Southern research,
|
|
and informed Jerome that Parson Wilson had sold Clotelle, and that she
|
|
had been sent to the New Orleans slave-market.
|
|
|
|
This intelligence fell with crushing weight upon the heart of Jerome,
|
|
and he now felt that the last chain which bound him to his native
|
|
land was severed. He therefore determined to leave America forever.
|
|
His nearest and dearest friends had often been flogged in his very presence,
|
|
and he had seen his mother sold to the negro-trader. An only sister had been
|
|
torn from him by the soul-driver; he had himself been sold and resold,
|
|
and been compelled to submit to the most degrading and humiliating insults;
|
|
and now that the woman upon whom his heart doted, and without whom
|
|
life was a burden, had been taken away forever, he felt it a duty
|
|
to hate all mankind.
|
|
|
|
If there is one thing more than another calculated to make one hate and
|
|
detest American slavery, it is to witness the meetings between fugitives
|
|
and their friends in Canada. Jerome had beheld some of these scenes.
|
|
The wife who, after years of separation, had escaped from her
|
|
prison-house and followed her husband had told her story to him.
|
|
He had seen the newly-arrived wife rush into the arms of the husband,
|
|
whose dark face she had not looked upon for long, weary years.
|
|
Some told of how a sister had been ill-used by the overseer; others of a
|
|
husband's being whipped to death for having attempted to protect his wife.
|
|
He had sat in the little log-hut, by the fireside, and heard tales that
|
|
caused his heart to bleed; and his bosom swelled with just indignation
|
|
when he though that there was no remedy for such atrocious acts.
|
|
It was with such feelings that he informed his employer that he should
|
|
leave him at the expiration of a month.
|
|
|
|
In vain did Mr. Streeter try to persuade Jerome to remain with him; and late
|
|
in the month of February, the latter found himself on board a small vessel
|
|
loaded with pine-lumber, descending the St. Lawrence, bound for Liverpool.
|
|
The bark, though an old one, was, nevertheless, considered seaworthy,
|
|
and the fugitive was working his way out. As the vessel left the river
|
|
and gained the open sea, the black man appeared to rejoice at the prospect
|
|
of leaving a country in which his right to manhood had been denied him,
|
|
and his happiness destroyed.
|
|
|
|
The wind was proudly swelling the white sails, and the little
|
|
craft plunging into the foaming waves, with the land fast
|
|
receding in the distance, when Jerome mounted a pile
|
|
of lumber to take a last farewell of his native land.
|
|
With tears glistening in his eyes, and with quivering lips,
|
|
he turned his gaze toward the shores that were fast fading
|
|
in the dim distance, and said,--
|
|
|
|
"Though forced from my native land by the tyrants of the South,
|
|
I hope I shall some day be able to return. With all her faults,
|
|
I love my country still."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIX
|
|
|
|
A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE rain was falling on the dirty pavements of Liverpool as Jerome left
|
|
the vessel after her arrival. Passing the custom-house, he took a cab,
|
|
and proceeded to Brown's Hotel, Clayton Square.
|
|
|
|
Finding no employment in Liverpool, Jerome determined to go into
|
|
the interior and seek for work. He, therefore, called for his bill,
|
|
and made ready for his departure. Although but four days at
|
|
the Albion, he found the hotel charges larger than he expected;
|
|
but a stranger generally counts on being "fleeced" in travelling
|
|
through the Old World, and especially in Great Britain.
|
|
After paying his bill, he was about leaving the room, when one
|
|
of the servants presented himself with a low bow, and said,--
|
|
|
|
"Something for the waiter, sir?"
|
|
|
|
"I thought I had paid my bill," replied the man, somewhat surprised
|
|
at this polite dun.
|
|
|
|
"I am the waiter, sir, and gets only what strangers see fit to give me."
|
|
|
|
Taking from his pocket his nearly empty purse, Jerome handed
|
|
the man a half-crown; but he had hardly restored it to his pocket,
|
|
before his eye fell on another man in the waiting costume.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
"Whatever your honor sees fit to give me, sir. I am the tother waiter."
|
|
|
|
The purse was again taken from the pocket, and another half-crown handed out.
|
|
Stepping out into the hall, he saw standing there a good-looking woman,
|
|
in a white apron, who made a very pretty courtesy.
|
|
|
|
"What's your business?" he inquired.
|
|
|
|
"I am the chambermaid, sir, and looks after the gentlemen's beds."
|
|
|
|
Out came the purse again, and was relieved of another half-crown;
|
|
whereupon another girl, with a fascinating smile, took the place
|
|
of the one who had just received her fee.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want?" demanded the now half-angry Jerome.
|
|
|
|
"Please, sir, I am the tother chambermaid."
|
|
|
|
Finding it easier to give shillings than half-crowns, Jerome handed
|
|
the woman a shilling, and again restored his purse to his pocket,
|
|
glad that another woman was not to be seen.
|
|
|
|
Scarcely had he commenced congratulating himself, however, before three men
|
|
made their appearance, one after another.
|
|
|
|
"What have *you* done for me?" he asked of the first.
|
|
|
|
"I am the boots, sir."
|
|
|
|
The purse came out once more, and a shilling was deposited
|
|
in the servant's hand.
|
|
|
|
"What do I owe you?" he inquired of the second.
|
|
|
|
"I took your honor's letter to the post, yesterday, sir."
|
|
|
|
Another shilling left the purse.
|
|
|
|
"In the name of the Lord, what am I indebted to you for?" demanded Jerome,
|
|
now entirely out of patience, turning to the last of the trio.
|
|
|
|
"I told yer vership vot time it vas, this morning."
|
|
|
|
"Well!" exclaimed the indignant man, "ask here who o'clock it is,
|
|
and you have got to pay for it."
|
|
|
|
He paid this last demand with a sixpence, regretting that he had not commenced
|
|
with sixpences instead of half-crowns.
|
|
|
|
Having cleared off all demands in the house, he started
|
|
for the railway station; but had scarcely reached the street,
|
|
before he was accosted by an old man with a broom in his hand,
|
|
who, with an exceedingly low bow, said,--
|
|
|
|
"I is here, yer lordship."
|
|
|
|
"I did not send for you; what is your business?" demanded Jerome.
|
|
|
|
"I is the man what opened your lordship's cab-door, when your lordship
|
|
came to the house on Monday last, and I know your honor won't allow
|
|
a poor man to starve."
|
|
|
|
Putting a sixpence in the old man's hand, Jerome once more started
|
|
for the depot. Having obtained letters of introduction to persons
|
|
in Manchester, he found no difficulty in getting a situation in a
|
|
large manufacturing house there. Although the salary was small,
|
|
yet the situation was a much better one than he had hoped to obtain.
|
|
His compensation as out-door clerk enabled him to employ a man to teach
|
|
him at night, and, by continued study and attention to business,
|
|
he was soon promoted.
|
|
|
|
After three years in his new home, Jerome was placed in a still higher
|
|
position, where his salary amounted to fifteen hundred dollars a year.
|
|
The drinking, smoking, and other expensive habits, which the clerks
|
|
usually indulged in, he carefully avoided.
|
|
|
|
Being fond of poetry, he turned his attention to literature.
|
|
Johnson's "Lives of the Poets," the writings of Dryden, Addison, Pope,
|
|
Clarendon, and other authors of celebrity, he read with attention.
|
|
The knowledge which he thus picked up during his leisure hours gave
|
|
him a great advantage over the other clerks, and caused his employers
|
|
to respect him far more than any other in their establishment.
|
|
So eager was he to improve the time that he determined to see how much
|
|
he could read during the unemployed time of night and morning,
|
|
and his success was beyond his expectations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXX
|
|
|
|
NEW FRIENDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
BROKEN down in health, after ten years of close confinement in his situation,
|
|
Jerome resolved to give it up, and thereby release himself from an employment
|
|
which seemed calculated to send him to a premature grave.
|
|
|
|
It was on a beautiful morning in summer that he started
|
|
for Scotland, having made up his mind to travel for his health.
|
|
After visiting Edinburgh and Glasgow, he concluded to spend
|
|
a few days in the old town of Perth, with a friend whose
|
|
acquaintance he had made in Manchester. During the second
|
|
day of his stay in Perth, while crossing the main street,
|
|
Jerome saw a pony-chaise coming toward him with great speed.
|
|
A lady, who appeared to be the only occupant of the vehicle,
|
|
was using her utmost strength to stop the frightened horses.
|
|
The footman, in his fright, had leaped from behind the carriage,
|
|
and was following with the crowd. With that self-forgetfulness
|
|
which was one of his chief characteristics, Jerome threw himself
|
|
before the horses to stop them; and, seizing the high-spirited
|
|
animals by the bit, as they dashed by him, he was dragged
|
|
several rods before their speed was checked, which was not
|
|
accomplished until one of the horses had fallen to the ground,
|
|
with the heroic man struggling beneath him.
|
|
|
|
All present were satisfied that this daring act alone had saved the
|
|
lady's life, for the chaise must inevitably have been dashed in pieces,
|
|
had the horses not been thus suddenly checked in their mad career.
|
|
|
|
On the morning following this perilous adventure, Col. G--
|
|
called at Jerome's temporary residence, and, after expressing
|
|
his admiration for his noble daring, and thanking him for having
|
|
saved his daughter's life, invited him to visit him at his
|
|
country residence. This invitation was promptly accepted
|
|
in the spirit in which it was given; and three days after,
|
|
Jerome found himself at the princely residence of the father
|
|
of the lady for whose safety he had risked his own life.
|
|
The house was surrounded by fine trees, and a sweet little
|
|
stream ran murmuring at the foot, while beds of flowers
|
|
on every hand shed their odors on the summer air.
|
|
It was, indeed, a pleasant place to spend the warm weather,
|
|
and the colonel and his family gave Jerome a most cordial welcome.
|
|
Miss G. showed especial attention to the stranger.
|
|
He had not intended remaining longer than the following day:
|
|
but the family insisted on his taking part in a fox-hunt
|
|
that was to come off on the morning of the third day.
|
|
Wishing to witness a scene as interesting as the chase usually
|
|
proves to be, he decided to remain.
|
|
|
|
Fifteen persons, five of whom were ladies, were on the ground
|
|
at the appointed hour. Miss G. was, of course, one of the party.
|
|
In vain Jerome endeavored to excuse himself from joining in the chase.
|
|
His plea of ill-health was only met by smiles from the young ladies,
|
|
and the reply that a ride would effect a cure.
|
|
|
|
Dressed in a scarlet coat and high boots, with the low,
|
|
round cap worn in the chase, Jerome mounted a high-spirited
|
|
horse, whip in hand, and made himself one of the party.
|
|
In America, riding is a necessity; in England, it is a pleasure.
|
|
Young men and women attend riding-school in our fatherland,
|
|
and consider that they are studying a science. Jerome was no rider.
|
|
He had not been on horseback for more than ten years,
|
|
and as soon as he mounted, every one saw that he was a novice,
|
|
and a smile was on the countenance of each member of the company.
|
|
|
|
The blowing of the horn, and assembling of the hounds, and finally the release
|
|
of the fox from his close prison, were the signals for the chase to commence.
|
|
The first half-mile the little animal took his course over a beautiful field
|
|
where there was neither hedge nor ditch. Thus far the chase was enjoyed
|
|
by all, even by the American rider, who was better fitted to witness the scene
|
|
than to take part in it.
|
|
|
|
We left Jerome in our last reluctantly engaged in the chase;
|
|
and though the first mile or so of the pursuit, which was over
|
|
smooth meadow-land, had had an exhilarating effect upon his mind,
|
|
and tended somewhat to relieve him of the embarrassment consequent upon
|
|
his position, he nevertheless still felt that he was far from being
|
|
in his proper element. Besides, the fox had now made for a dense
|
|
forest which lay before, and he saw difficulties in that direction
|
|
which to him appeared insurmountable.
|
|
|
|
Away went the huntsmen, over stone walls, high fences, and deep ditches.
|
|
Jerome saw the ladies even leading the gentlemen, but this could
|
|
not inspire him. They cleared the fences, four and five feet high
|
|
with perfect ease, showing they were quite at home in the saddle.
|
|
But alas for the poor American! As his fine steed came up to
|
|
the first fence, and was about to make the leap, Jerome pulled at
|
|
the bridle, and cried at the top of his voice, "Whoa! whoa! whoa!"
|
|
the horse at the same time capering about, and appearing determined
|
|
to keep up with the other animals.
|
|
|
|
Away dashed the huntsmen, following the hounds, and all
|
|
were soon lost to the view of their colored companion.
|
|
Jerome rode up and down the field looking for a gate or bars,
|
|
that he might get through without risking his neck.
|
|
Finding, however, that all hope of again catching up with the party
|
|
was out of the question, he determined to return to the house,
|
|
under a plea of sudden illness, and back he accordingly went.
|
|
|
|
"I hope no accident has happened to your honor," said the groom,
|
|
as he met our hero at the gate.
|
|
|
|
"A slight dizziness," was the answer.
|
|
|
|
One of the servants, without being ordered, went at once for
|
|
the family physician. Ashamed to own that his return was owing
|
|
to his inability to ride, Jerome resolved to feign sickness.
|
|
The doctor came, felt his pulse, examined his tongue,
|
|
and pronounced him a sick man. He immediately ordered a tepid bath,
|
|
and sent for a couple of leeches.
|
|
|
|
Seeing things taking such a serious turn, the American began
|
|
to regret the part he was playing; for there was no fun
|
|
in being rubbed and leeched when one was in perfect health.
|
|
He had gone too far to recede, however, and so submitted
|
|
quietly to the directions of the doctor; and, after following
|
|
the injunctions given by that learned Esculapius, was put to bed.
|
|
|
|
Shortly after, the sound of the horns and the yelp of the hounds announced
|
|
that the poor fox had taken the back track, and was repassing near the house.
|
|
Even the pleasure of witnessing the beautiful sight from the window was denied
|
|
our hero; for the physician had ordered that he must be kept in perfect quiet.
|
|
|
|
The chase was at last over, and the huntsmen all in, sympathizing with their
|
|
lost companion. After nine days of sweating, blistering, and leeching,
|
|
Jerome left his bed convalescent, but much reduced in flesh and strength.
|
|
This was his first and last attempt to follow the fox and hounds.
|
|
|
|
During his fortnight's stay at Colonel G.', Jerome spent most of his time
|
|
in the magnificent library. Claude did not watch with more interest every
|
|
color of the skies, the trees, the grass, and the water, to learn from nature,
|
|
than did this son of a despised race search books to obtain that knowledge
|
|
which his early life as a slave had denied him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXI
|
|
|
|
THE MYSTERIOUS MEETING
|
|
|
|
|
|
AFTER more than a fortnight spent in the highlands of Scotland,
|
|
Jerome passed hastily through London on his way to the continent.
|
|
|
|
It was toward sunset, on a warm day in October, shortly after
|
|
his arrival in France, that, after strolling some distance from
|
|
the Hotel de Leon, in the old and picturesque town of Dunkirk,
|
|
he entered a burial-ground--such places being always favorite
|
|
walks with him--and wandered around among the silent dead.
|
|
All nature around was hushed in silence, and seemed to partake
|
|
of the general melancholy that hung over the quiet resting-place
|
|
of the departed. Even the birds seemed imbued with the spirit
|
|
of the place, for they were silent, either flying noiselessly
|
|
over the graves, or jumping about in the tall grass.
|
|
After tracing the various inscriptions that told the characters
|
|
and conditions of the deceased, and viewing the mounds
|
|
beneath which the dust of mortality slumbered, he arrived
|
|
at a secluded spot near where an aged weeping willow bowed
|
|
its thick foliage to the ground, as though anxious to hide
|
|
from the scrutinizing gaze of curiosity the grave beneath it.
|
|
Jerome seated himself on a marble tombstone, and commenced
|
|
reading from a book which he had carried under his arm.
|
|
It was now twilight, and he had read but a few minutes when
|
|
he observed a lady, attired in deep black, and leading a boy,
|
|
apparently some five or six years old, coming up one of the beautiful,
|
|
winding paths. As the lady's veil was drawn closely over
|
|
her face, he felt somewhat at liberty to eye her more closely.
|
|
While thus engaged, the lady gave a slight scream,
|
|
and seemed suddenly to have fallen into a fainting condition.
|
|
Jerome sprang from his seat, and caught her in time to save
|
|
her from falling to the ground.
|
|
|
|
At this moment an elderly gentleman, also dressed in black,
|
|
was seen approaching with a hurried step, which seemed
|
|
to indicate that he was in some way connected with the lady.
|
|
The old man came up, and in rather a confused manner inquired
|
|
what had happened, and Jerome explained matters as well
|
|
as he was able to do so. After taking up the vinaigrette,
|
|
which had fallen from her hand, and holding the bottle
|
|
a short time to her face, the lady began to revive.
|
|
During all this time, the veil had still partly covered
|
|
the face of the fair one, so that Jerome had scarcely seen it.
|
|
When she had so far recovered as to be able to look around her,
|
|
she raised herself slightly, and again screamed and swooned.
|
|
The old man now feeling satisfied that Jerome's dark
|
|
complexion was the immediate cause of the catastrophe,
|
|
said in a somewhat petulant tone,--
|
|
|
|
"I will be glad, sir, if you will leave us alone."
|
|
|
|
The little boy at this juncture set up a loud cry, and amid
|
|
the general confusion, Jerome left the ground and returned
|
|
to his hotel.
|
|
|
|
While seated at the window of his room looking out upon the crowded street,
|
|
with every now and then the strange scene in the graveyard vividly before him,
|
|
Jerome suddenly thought of the book he had been reading, and, remembering that
|
|
he had left it on the tombstone, where he dropped it when called to the
|
|
lady's assistance, he determined to return for it at once.
|
|
|
|
After a walk of some twenty minutes, he found himself again in
|
|
the burial-ground and on the spot where he had been an hour before.
|
|
The pensive moon was already up, and its soft light was sleeping
|
|
on the little pond at the back of the grounds, while the stars seemed
|
|
smiling at their own sparkling rays gleaming up from the beautiful
|
|
sheet of water.
|
|
|
|
Jerome searched in vain for his book; it was nowhere to be found.
|
|
Nothing, save the bouquet that the lady had dropped, and which
|
|
lay half-buried in the grass, from having been trodden upon,
|
|
indicated that any one had been there that evening.
|
|
The stillness of death reigned over the place; even the little birds,
|
|
that had before been twittering and flying about, had retired
|
|
for the night.
|
|
|
|
Taking up the bunch of flowers, Jerome returned to his hotel. "What can
|
|
this mean?" he would ask himself; "and why should they take my book?"
|
|
These questions he put to himself again and again during his walk.
|
|
His sleep was broken more than once that night, and he welcomed the early
|
|
dawn as it made its appearance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXII
|
|
|
|
THE HAPPY MEETING
|
|
|
|
|
|
AFTER passing a sleepless night, and hearing the clock strike six, Jerome took
|
|
from his table a book, and thus endeavored to pass away the hours before
|
|
breakfast-time. While thus engaged, a servant entered and handed him a note.
|
|
Hastily tearing it open, Jerome read as follows:--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"SIR,--I owe you an apology for the abrupt manner in which I addressed
|
|
you last evening, and the inconvenience to which you were subjected
|
|
by some of my household. If you will honor us with your presence to-day
|
|
at four o'clock, I will be most happy to give you due satisfaction.
|
|
My servant will be waiting with the carriage at half-past three.
|
|
|
|
I am, sir, yours, &c., J. DEVENANT
|
|
JEROME FLETCHER, Esq.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Who this gentleman was, and how he had found out his name
|
|
and the hotel at which he was stopping, were alike mysteries
|
|
to Jerome. And this note seemed to his puzzled brain like
|
|
a challenge. "Satisfaction?" He had not asked for satisfaction.
|
|
However, he resolved to accept the invitation, and, if need be,
|
|
meet the worst. At any rate, this most mysterious and complicated
|
|
affair would be explained.
|
|
|
|
The clock on a neighboring church had scarcely finished striking three
|
|
when a servant announced to Jerome that a carriage had called for him.
|
|
In a few minutes, he was seated in a sumptuous barouche, drawn by a pair
|
|
of beautiful iron-grays, and rolling over a splendid gravel road
|
|
entirely shaded by trees, which appeared to have been the accumulated
|
|
growth of many centuries. The carriage soon stopped at a low villa,
|
|
which was completely embowered in trees.
|
|
|
|
Jerome alighted, and was shown into a superb room, with the walls
|
|
finely decorated with splendid tapestry, and the ceilings
|
|
exquisitely frescoed. The walls were hung with fine specimens
|
|
from the hands of the great Italian masters, and one by a
|
|
German artist, representing a beautiful monkish legend connected
|
|
with the "Holy Catharine," an illustrious lady of Alexandria.
|
|
High-backed chairs stood around the room, rich curtains
|
|
of crimson damask hung in folds on either side of the window,
|
|
and a beautiful, rick, Turkey carpet covered the floor.
|
|
In the centre of the room stood a table covered with books,
|
|
in the midst of which was a vase of fresh flowers, loading the
|
|
atmosphere with their odors. A faint light, together with the quiet
|
|
of the hour, gave beauty beyond description to the whole scene.
|
|
A half-open door showed a fine marble floor to an adjoining room,
|
|
with pictures, statues, and antiquated sofas, and flower-pots
|
|
filled with rare plants of every kind and description.
|
|
|
|
Jerome had scarcely run his eyes over the beauties of the room when the
|
|
elderly gentleman whom he had met on the previous evening made his appearance,
|
|
followed by the little boy, and introduced himself as Mr. Devenant.
|
|
A moment more and a lady, a beautiful brunette, dressed in black,
|
|
with long black curls hanging over her shoulders, entered the room.
|
|
Her dark, bright eyes flashed as she caught the first sight of Jerome.
|
|
The gentleman immediately arose on the entrance of the lady, and Mr. Devenant
|
|
was in the act of introducing the stranger when he observed that Jerome
|
|
had sunk back upon the sofa, in a faint voice exclaiming,--
|
|
|
|
"It is she!"
|
|
|
|
After this, all was dark and dreary. How long he remained in this condition,
|
|
it was for others to tell. The lady knelt by his side and wept;
|
|
and when he came to, he found himself stretched upon the sofa with
|
|
his boots off and his head resting upon a pillow. By his side sat
|
|
the old man, with the smelling-bottle in one hand and a glass of water
|
|
in the other, while the little boy stood at the foot of the sofa.
|
|
As soon as Jerome had so far recovered as to be able to speak, he said,--
|
|
|
|
"Where am I, and what does all this mean?"
|
|
|
|
"Wait awhile," replied the old man, "and I will tell you all."
|
|
|
|
After the lapse of some ten minutes, Jerome arose from the sofa,
|
|
adjusted his apparel, and said,--
|
|
|
|
"I am now ready to hear anything you have to say."
|
|
|
|
"You were born in America?" said the old man.
|
|
|
|
"I was," he replied.
|
|
|
|
"And you knew a girl named Clotelle," continued the old man.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, and I loved her as I can love none other."
|
|
|
|
"The lady whom you met so mysteriously last evening was she,"
|
|
said Mr. Devenant.
|
|
|
|
Jerome was silent, but the fountain of mingled grief and joy
|
|
stole out from beneath his eyelashes, and glistened like pearls
|
|
upon his ebony cheeks.
|
|
|
|
At this juncture, the lady again entered the room.
|
|
With an enthusiasm that can be better imagined than described,
|
|
Jerome sprang from the sofa, and they rushed into each other's arms,
|
|
to the great surprise of the old gentleman and little Antoine,
|
|
and to the amusement of the servants who had crept up, one by
|
|
one and were hid behind the doors or loitering in the hall.
|
|
When they had given vent to their feelings and sufficiently
|
|
recovered their presence of mind, they resumed their seats.
|
|
|
|
"How did you find out my name and address?" inquired Jerome.
|
|
|
|
"After you had left the grave-yard," replied Clotelle,
|
|
"our little boy said, 'Oh, mamma! if there ain't a book!'
|
|
I opened the book, and saw your name written in it, and also found
|
|
a card of the Hotel de Leon. Papa wished to leave the book,
|
|
and said it was only a fancy of mine that I had ever seen
|
|
you before; but I was perfectly convinced that you were my
|
|
own dear Jerome."
|
|
|
|
As she uttered the last words, tears--the sweet bright tears that love
|
|
alone can bring forth--bedewed her cheeks.
|
|
|
|
"Are you married?" now inquired Clotelle, with a palpitating
|
|
heart and trembling voice.
|
|
|
|
"No, I am not, and never have been," was Jerome's reply.
|
|
|
|
"Then, thank God!" she exclaimed, in broken accents.
|
|
|
|
It was then that hope gleamed up amid the crushed and broken flowers
|
|
of her heart, and a bright flash darted forth like a sunbeam.
|
|
|
|
"Are you single now?" asked Jerome.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I am," was the answer.
|
|
|
|
"Then you will be mine after all?" said he with a smile.
|
|
|
|
Her dark, rich hair had partly come down, and hung still
|
|
more loosely over her shoulders than when she first appeared;
|
|
and her eyes, now full of animation and vivacity,
|
|
and her sweet, harmonious, and well-modulated voice,
|
|
together with her modesty, self-possession, and engaging
|
|
manners, made Clotelle appear lovely beyond description.
|
|
Although past the age when men ought to think of matrimony,
|
|
yet the scene before Mr. Devenant brought vividly to his mind
|
|
the time when he was young and had a loving bosom companion living,
|
|
and tears were wiped from the old man's eyes. A new world
|
|
seemed to unfold itself before the eyes of the happy lovers,
|
|
and they were completely absorbed in contemplating the future.
|
|
Furnished by nature with a disposition to study, and a memory
|
|
so retentive that all who knew her were surprised at the ease
|
|
with which she acquired her education and general information,
|
|
Clotelle might now be termed a most accomplished lady.
|
|
After her marriage with young Devenant, they proceeded to India,
|
|
where the husband's regiment was stationed. Soomn after
|
|
their arrival, however, a battle was fought with the natives,
|
|
in which several officers fell, among whom was Captain Devenant.
|
|
The father of the young captain being there at the time,
|
|
took his daughter-in-law and brought her back to France,
|
|
where they took up their abode at the old homestead.
|
|
Old Mr. Devenant was possessed of a large fortune, all of which
|
|
he intended for his daughter-in-law and her only child.
|
|
|
|
Although Clotelle had married young Devenant, she had not
|
|
forgotten her first love, and her father-in-law now willingly
|
|
gave his consent to her marriage with Jerome. Jerome felt
|
|
that to possess the woman of his love, even at that late hour,
|
|
was compensation enough for the years that he had been separated
|
|
from her, and Clotelle wanted no better evidence of his love
|
|
for her than the fact of his having remained so long unmarried.
|
|
It was indeed a rare instance of devotion and constancy in a man,
|
|
and the young widow gratefully appreciated it.
|
|
|
|
It was late in the evening when Jerome led his intended bride
|
|
to the window, and the magnificent moonlight illuminated
|
|
the countenance of the lovely Clotelle, while inward sunshine,
|
|
emanating from a mind at ease, and her own virtuous thoughts,
|
|
gave brightness to her eyes and made her appear a very angel.
|
|
This was the first evening that Jerome had been in her company
|
|
since the night when, to effect his escape from prison,
|
|
she disguised herself in male attire. How different the scene now.
|
|
Free instead of slaves, wealthy instead of poor, and on
|
|
the eve of an event that seemed likely to result in a life
|
|
of happiness to both.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIII
|
|
|
|
THE HAPPY DAY
|
|
|
|
|
|
IT was a bright day in the latter part of October that Jerome and Clotelle
|
|
set out for the church, where the marriage ceremony was to be performed.
|
|
The clear, bracing air added buoyancy to every movement, and the sun
|
|
poured its brilliant rays through the deeply-stained windows, as the happy
|
|
couple entered the sanctuary, followed by old Mr. Devenant, whose form,
|
|
bowed down with age, attracted almost as much attention from the assembly
|
|
as did the couple more particularly interested.
|
|
|
|
As the ceremonies were finished and the priest pronounced the benediction
|
|
on the newly-married pair, Clotelle whispered in the ear of Jerome,--
|
|
|
|
"'No power in death shall tear our names apart,
|
|
As none in life could rend thee from my heart.'"
|
|
|
|
A smile beamed on every face as the wedding-party left the church
|
|
and entered their carriage. What a happy day, after ten years'
|
|
separation, when, both hearts having been blighted for a time,
|
|
they are brought together by the hand of a beneficent and kind Providence,
|
|
and united in holy wedlock.
|
|
|
|
Everything being arranged for a wedding tour extending up
|
|
the Rhine, the party set out the same day for Antwerp.
|
|
There are many rivers of greater length and width than the Rhine.
|
|
Our Mississippi would swallow up half a dozen Rhines.
|
|
The Hudson is grander, the Tiber, the Po, and the Mincio
|
|
more classic; the Thames and Seine bear upon their waters
|
|
greater amounts of wealth and commerce; the Nile and the
|
|
Euphrates have a greater antiquity; but for a combination
|
|
of interesting historical incidents and natural scenery,
|
|
the Rhine surpasses them all. Nature has so ordained it
|
|
that those who travel in the valley of the Rhine shall see
|
|
the river, for there never will be a railroad upon its banks.
|
|
So mountainous is the land that it would have to be one series
|
|
of tunnels. Every three or four miles from the time you enter
|
|
this glorious river, hills, dales, castles, and crags present
|
|
themselves as the steamer glides onward.
|
|
|
|
Their first resting-place for any length of time was at Coblentz, at the mouth
|
|
of the "Blue Moselle," the most interesting place on the river. From Coblentz
|
|
they went to Brussels, where they had the greatest attention paid them.
|
|
Besides being provided with letters of introduction, Jerome's complexion
|
|
secured for him more deference than is usually awarded to travellers.
|
|
|
|
Having letters of introduction to M. Deceptiax, the great lace manufacturer,
|
|
that gentleman received them with distinguished honors, and gave them
|
|
a splendid <soiree,> at which the <elite> of the city were assembled.
|
|
The sumptuously-furnished mansion was lavishly decorated for the occasion,
|
|
and every preparation made that could add to the novelty or interest
|
|
of the event.
|
|
|
|
Jerome, with his beautiful bride, next visited Cologne,
|
|
the largest and wealthiest city on the banks of the Rhine.
|
|
The Cathedral of Cologne is the most splendid structure
|
|
of the kind in Europe, and Jerome and Clotelle viewed
|
|
with interest the beautiful arches and columns of this
|
|
stupendous building, which strikes with awe the beholder,
|
|
as he gazes at its unequalled splendor, surrounded, as it is,
|
|
by villas, cottages, and palace-like mansions, with the enchanting
|
|
Rhine winding through the vine-covered hills.
|
|
|
|
After strolling over miles and miles of classic ground,
|
|
and visiting castles, whose legends and traditions have given them
|
|
an enduring fame, our delighted travellers started for Geneva,
|
|
bidding the picturesque banks of the Rhine a regretful farewell.
|
|
Being much interested in literature, and aware that Geneva was noted
|
|
for having been the city of refuge to the victims of religious and
|
|
political persecution, Jerome arranged to stay here for some days.
|
|
He was provided with a letter of introduction to M. de Stee,
|
|
who had been a fellow-soldier of Mr. Devenant in the East India wars,
|
|
and they were invited to make his house their home during their sojourn.
|
|
On the side of a noble mountain, whose base is kissed by the waves
|
|
of Lake Geneva, and whose slopes are decked with verdure to
|
|
the utmost peak of its rocky crown, is situated the delightful
|
|
country-residence of this wealthy, retired French officer.
|
|
A winding road, with frequent climbs and brakes, leads from the valley
|
|
to this enchanting spot, the air and scenery of which cannot be
|
|
surpassed in the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIV
|
|
|
|
CLOTELLE MEETS HER FATHER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE clouds that had skirted the sky during the day broke at last,
|
|
and the rain fell in torrents, as Jerome and Clotelle retired for
|
|
the night, in the little town of Ferney, on the borders of Lake Leman.
|
|
The peals of thunder, and flashes of vivid lightening, which seemed
|
|
to leap from mountain to mountain and from crag to crag,
|
|
reverberating among the surrounding hills, foretold a heavy storm.
|
|
|
|
"I would we were back at Geneva," said Clotelle, as she heard groans issuing
|
|
from an adjoining room. The sounds, at first faint, grew louder and louder,
|
|
plainly indicating that some person was suffering extreme pain.
|
|
|
|
"I did not like this hotel, much, when we came in," said Jerome,
|
|
relighting the lamp, which had been accidentally extinguished.
|
|
|
|
"Nor I," returned Clotelle.
|
|
|
|
The shrieks increased, and an occasional "she's dead!"
|
|
"I killed her!" "No, she is not dead!" and such-like expressions,
|
|
would be heard from the person, who seemed to be deranged.
|
|
|
|
The thunder grew louder, and the flashes of lightening more vivid,
|
|
while the noise from the sick-room seemed to increase.
|
|
|
|
As Jerome opened the door, to learn, if possible, the cause
|
|
of the cries and groans, he could distinguish the words,
|
|
"She's dead! yes, she's dead! but I did not kill her.
|
|
She was my child! my own daughter. I loved her, and yet I
|
|
did not protect her."
|
|
|
|
"Whoever he is," said Jerome, "he's crack-brained;
|
|
some robber, probably, from the mountains."
|
|
|
|
The storm continued to rage, and the loud peals of thunder and
|
|
sharp flashes of lightening, together with the shrieks and moans
|
|
of the maniac in the adjoining room, made the night a fearful one.
|
|
The long hours wore slowly away, but neither Jerome nor his wife
|
|
could sleep, and they arose at an early hour in the morning,
|
|
ordered breakfast, and resolved to return to Geneva.
|
|
|
|
"I am sorry, sir, that you were so much disturbed by the sick man
|
|
last night," said the landlord, as he handed Jerome his bill.
|
|
"I should be glad if he would get able to go away, or die,
|
|
for he's a deal of trouble to me. Several persons have left
|
|
my house on his account."
|
|
|
|
"Where is he from?" inquired Jerome. "He's from the United States,
|
|
and has been here a week to-day, and has been crazy ever since."
|
|
|
|
"Has he no friends with him?" asked the guest.
|
|
|
|
"No, he is alone," was the reply.
|
|
|
|
Jerome related to his wife what he had learned from the landlord,
|
|
respecting the sick man, and the intelligence impressed her so strongly,
|
|
that she requested him to make further inquiries concerning the stranger.
|
|
|
|
He therefore consulted the book in which guests usually register
|
|
their names, and, to his great surprise, found that the American's
|
|
name was Henry Linwood, and that he was from Richmond, Va.
|
|
|
|
It was with feelings of trepidation that Clotelle heard these particulars
|
|
from the lips of her husband.
|
|
|
|
"We must see this poor man, whoever he is," said she, as Jerome
|
|
finished the sentence.
|
|
|
|
The landlord was glad to hear that his guests felt some interest
|
|
in the sick man, and promised that the invalid's room should be got
|
|
ready for their reception.
|
|
|
|
The clock in the hall was just striking ten, as Jerome passed
|
|
through and entered the sick man's chamber. Stretched upon
|
|
a mattress, with both hands tightly bound to the bedstead,
|
|
the friendless stranger was indeed a pitiful sight.
|
|
His dark, dishevelled hair prematurely gray, his long,
|
|
unshaven beard, and the wildness of the eyes which glanced upon
|
|
them as they opened the door and entered, caused the faint
|
|
hope which had so suddenly risen in Clotelle's heart, to sink,
|
|
and she felt that this man could claim no kindred with her.
|
|
Certainly, he bore no resemblance to the man whom she had
|
|
called her father, and who had fondly dandled her on his knee
|
|
in those happy days of childhood.
|
|
|
|
"Help!" cried the poor man, as Jerome and his wife walked into the room.
|
|
His eyes glared, and shriek after shriek broke forth from his parched
|
|
and fevered lips.
|
|
|
|
"No, I did not kill my daughter!--I did not! she is not dead!
|
|
Yes, she is dead! but I did not kill her--poor girl!
|
|
Look! that is she! No, it cannot be! she cannot come here!
|
|
it cannot be my poor Clotelle."
|
|
|
|
At the sound of her own name, coming from the maniac's lips,
|
|
Clotelle gasped for breath, and her husband saw that she had
|
|
grown deadly pale. It seemed evident to him that the man was
|
|
either guilty of some terrible act, or imagined himself to be.
|
|
His eyeballs rolled in their sockets, and his features showed
|
|
that he was undergoing "the tortures of that inward hell,"
|
|
which seemed to set his whole brain on fire. After recovering
|
|
her self-possession and strength, Clotelle approached the bedside,
|
|
and laid her soft hand upon the stranger's hot and fevered brow.
|
|
|
|
One long, loud shriek rang out on the air, and a piercing cry,
|
|
"It is she!--Yes, it is she! I see, I see! Ah! no, it is not my daughter!
|
|
She would not come to me if she could!" broke forth from him.
|
|
|
|
"I am your daughter," said Clotelle, as she pressed her handkerchief
|
|
to her face, and sobbed aloud.
|
|
|
|
Like balls of fire, the poor man's eyes rolled and glared upon the company,
|
|
while large drops of perspiration ran down his pale and emaciated face.
|
|
Strange as the scene appeared, all present saw that it was
|
|
indeed a meeting between a father and his long-lost daughter.
|
|
Jerome now ordered all present to leave the room, except the nurse,
|
|
and every effort was at once made to quiet the sufferer.
|
|
When calm, a joyous smile would illuminate the sick man's face,
|
|
and a strange light beam in his eyes, as he seemed to realize
|
|
that she who stood before him was indeed his child.
|
|
|
|
For two long days and nights did Clotelle watch at the bedside
|
|
of her father before he could speak to her intelligently.
|
|
Sometimes, in his insane fits, he would rave in the most frightful manner,
|
|
and then, in a few moments, would be as easily governed as a child.
|
|
At last, however, after a long and apparently refreshing sleep,
|
|
he awoke suddenly to a full consciousness that it was indeed his
|
|
daughter who was watching so patiently by his side.
|
|
|
|
The presence of his long absent child had a soothing effect
|
|
upon Mr. Linwood, and he now recovered rapidly from the sad
|
|
and almost hopeless condition in which she had found him.
|
|
When able to converse, without danger of a relapse, he told Clotelle
|
|
of his fruitless efforts to obtain a clew to her whereabouts
|
|
after old Mrs. Miller had sold her to the slave-trader. In
|
|
answer to his daughter's inquiries about his family affairs
|
|
up to the time that he left America, he said,--
|
|
|
|
"I blamed my wife for your being sold and sent away,
|
|
for I thought she and her mother were acting in collusion;
|
|
But I afterwards found that I had blamed her wrongfully.
|
|
Poor woman! she knew that I loved your mother, and feeling
|
|
herself forsaken, she grew melancholy and died in a decline
|
|
three years ago."
|
|
|
|
Here both father and daughter wept at the thought of other days.
|
|
When they had recovered their composure, Mr. Linwood went on again:
|
|
|
|
"Old Mrs. Miller," said he, "after the death of Gertrude, aware that she
|
|
had contributed much toward her unhappiness, took to the free use of
|
|
intoxicating drinks, and became the most brutal creature that ever lived.
|
|
She whipped her slaves without the slightest provocation, and seemed
|
|
to take delight in inventing new tortures with which to punish them.
|
|
One night last winter, after having flogged one of her slaves nearly
|
|
to death, she returned to her room, and by some means the bedding
|
|
took fire, and the house was in flames before any one was awakened.
|
|
There was no one in the building at the time but the old woman and
|
|
the slaves, and although the latter might have saved their mistress,
|
|
they made no attempt to do so. Thus, after a frightful career
|
|
of many years, this hard-hearted woman died a most miserable death,
|
|
unlamented by a single person."
|
|
|
|
Clotelle wiped the tears from her eyes, as her father finished
|
|
this story, for, although Mrs. Miller had been her greatest enemy,
|
|
she regretted to learn that her end had been such a sad one.
|
|
|
|
"My peace of mind destroyed," resumed the father, "and broken down in health,
|
|
my physician advised me to travel, with the hope of recruiting myself,
|
|
and I sailed from New York two months ago."
|
|
|
|
Being brought up in America, and having all the prejudice against color
|
|
which characterizes his white fellow-countrymen, Mr. Linwood very much
|
|
regretted that his daughter, although herself tinctured with African blood,
|
|
should have married a black man, and he did not fail to express to her
|
|
his dislike of her husband's complexion.
|
|
|
|
"I married him," said Clotelle, "because I loved him.
|
|
Why should the white man be esteemed as better than the black?
|
|
I find no difference in men on account of their complexion.
|
|
One of the cardinal principles of Christianity and freedom
|
|
is the equality and brotherhood of man."
|
|
|
|
Every day Mr. Linwood became more and more familiar with Jerome,
|
|
and eventually they were on the most intimate terms.
|
|
|
|
Fifteen days from the time that Clotelle was introduced
|
|
into her father's room, they left Ferney for Geneva.
|
|
Many were the excursions Clotelle made under the shadows
|
|
of Mont Blanc, and with her husband and father for companions;
|
|
she was now in the enjoyment of pleasures hitherto unknown.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXV
|
|
|
|
THE FATHER'S RESOLVE
|
|
|
|
|
|
AWARE that her father was still a slave-owner, Clotelle determined
|
|
to use all her persuasive power to induce him to set them free,
|
|
and in this effort she found a substantial supporter in her husband.
|
|
|
|
"I have always treated my slaves well," said Mr. Linwood to Jerome,
|
|
as the latter expressed his abhorrence of the system; "and my neighbors,
|
|
too, are generally good men; for slavery in Virginia is not like slavery
|
|
in the other States," continued the proud son of the Old Dominion.
|
|
"Their right to be free, Mr. Linwood," said Jerome, "is taken from them,
|
|
and they have no security for their comfort, but the humanity and
|
|
generosity of men, who have been trained to regard them not as brethren,
|
|
but as mere property. Humanity and generosity are, at best, but poor
|
|
guaranties for the protection of those who cannot assert their rights,
|
|
and over whom law throws no protection."
|
|
|
|
It was with pleasure that Clotelle obtained from her father a promise
|
|
that he would liberate all his slaves on his return to Richmond.
|
|
In a beautiful little villa, situated in a pleasant spot,
|
|
fringed with hoary rocks and thick dark woods, within sight
|
|
of the deep blue waters of Lake Leman, Mr. Linwood, his daughter,
|
|
and her husband, took up their residence for a short time.
|
|
For more than three weeks, this little party spent their time in
|
|
visiting the birth-place of Rousseau, and the former abodes of Byron,
|
|
Gibbon, Voltaire, De Stael, Shelley, and other literary characters.
|
|
|
|
We can scarcely contemplate a visit to a more historic and interesting
|
|
place than Geneva and its vicinity. Here, Calvin, that great luminary
|
|
in the Church, lived and ruled for years; here, Voltaire, the mighty genius,
|
|
who laid the foundation of the French Revolution, and who boasted,
|
|
"When I shake my wig, I powder the whole republic," governed in the higher
|
|
walks of life.
|
|
|
|
Fame is generally the recompense, not of the living, but of the dead,--
|
|
not always do they reap and gather in the harvest who sow the seed;
|
|
the flame of its altar is too often kindled from the ashes of the great.
|
|
A distinguished critic has beautifully said, "The sound which the stream
|
|
of high thought, carried down to future ages, makes, as it flows--
|
|
deep, distant, murmuring ever more, like the waters of the mighty ocean."
|
|
No reputation can be called great that will no endure this test.
|
|
The distinguished men who had lived in Geneva transfused their spirit,
|
|
by their writings, into the spirit of other lovers of literature and
|
|
everything that treated of great authors. Jerome and Clotelle lingered
|
|
long in and about the haunts of Geneva and Lake Leman.
|
|
|
|
An autumn sun sent down her bright rays, and bathed every object
|
|
in her glorious light, as Clotelle, accompanied by her husband
|
|
and father set out one fine morning on her return home to France.
|
|
Throughout the whole route, Mr. Linwood saw by the deference paid to Jerome,
|
|
whose black complexion excited astonishment in those who met him,
|
|
that there was no hatred to the man in Europe, on account of his color;
|
|
that what is called prejudice against color is the offspring of
|
|
the institution of slavery; and he felt ashamed of his own countrymen,
|
|
when he thought of the complexion as distinctions, made in the United States,
|
|
and resolved to dedicate the remainder of his life to the eradication
|
|
of this unrepublican and unchristian feeling from the land of his birth,
|
|
on his return home.
|
|
|
|
After a stay of four weeks at Dunkirk, the home of the Fletchers, Mr. Linwood
|
|
set out for America, with the full determination of freeing his slaves,
|
|
and settling them in one of the Northern States, and then to return to France
|
|
to end his days in the society of his beloved daughter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVI
|
|
|
|
THE RETURN HOME
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE first gun fired at the American Flag, on the 12th
|
|
of April, 1861, at Fort Sumter, reverberated all over Europe,
|
|
and was hailed with joy by the crowned heads of the Old World,
|
|
who hated republican institutions, and who thought they saw, in this
|
|
act of treason, the downfall of the great American experiment.
|
|
Most citizens, however, of the United States, who were then
|
|
sojourning abroad, hastened home to take part in the struggle,--
|
|
some to side with the rebels, others to take their stand
|
|
with the friends of liberty. Among the latter, none came with
|
|
swifter steps or more zeal than Jerome and Clotelle Fletcher.
|
|
They arrived in New Orleans a week after the capture of that city
|
|
by the expedition under the command of Major-Gen. B. F. Butler.
|
|
But how changed was society since Clotelle had last set
|
|
feet in the Crescent City! Twenty-two years had passed;
|
|
her own chequered life had been through many shifting scenes;
|
|
her old acquaintances in New Orleans had all disappeared;
|
|
and with the exception of the black faces which she
|
|
beheld at every turn, and which in her younger days were
|
|
her associates, she felt herself in the midst of strangers;
|
|
and these were arrayed against each other in mortal combat.
|
|
Possessed with ample means, Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher set about
|
|
the work of assisting those whom the rebellion had placed
|
|
in a state of starvation and sickness.
|
|
|
|
With a heart overflowing with the milk of human kindness,
|
|
and a tear for every sufferer, no matter of what color or sect,
|
|
Clotelle was soon known as the "Angel of Mercy."
|
|
|
|
The "General Order No. 63," issued on the 22nd of August, 1862,
|
|
by Gen. Butler, recognizing, and calling into the service of the Federal
|
|
Government, the battalion of colored men known as the "Native Guard,"
|
|
at once gave full scope to Jerome's military enthusiasm; and he made
|
|
haste to enlist in the organization.
|
|
|
|
The "Native Guard" did good service in New Orleans and vicinity,
|
|
till ordered to take part in the siege of Port Hudson,
|
|
where they appeared under the name of the "First Louisiana,"
|
|
and under the immediate command of Lieut.-Col. Bassett.
|
|
The heroic attack of this regiment, made on the 27th
|
|
of May, 1863, its unsurpassed "charge," its great loss,
|
|
and its severe endurance on the field of battle, are incidents
|
|
which have passed into history. The noble daring of the First
|
|
Louisiana gained for the black soldiers in our army the praise
|
|
of all Americans who value Republican institutions.
|
|
|
|
There was, however, one scene, the closing one in the first
|
|
day's attack on Port Hudson, which, while it reflects undying
|
|
credit upon the bravery of the negro, pays but a sorry tribute
|
|
to the humanity of the white general who brought the scene
|
|
into existence. The field was strewn with the dead, the dying,
|
|
and the wounded; and as the jaded regiments were leaving
|
|
the ground, after their unsuccessful attack, it was found
|
|
that Capt. Payne, of the Third Louisiana, had been killed;
|
|
and his body, which was easily distinguished by the uniform,
|
|
was still on the battle-field. The colonel of the regiment,
|
|
pointing to where the body lay, asked, "Are there four men
|
|
here who will fetch the body of Capt. Payne from the field?"
|
|
Four men stepped out, and at once started. But, as the body lay
|
|
directly under the range of the rebel batteries, they were all
|
|
swept down by the grape, canister, and shell which were let loose
|
|
by the enemy. The question was again repeated, "Are there four
|
|
men who will go for the body?" The required number came forth,
|
|
and started upon a run; but, ere they could reach the spot,
|
|
they were cut down. "Are there four more who will try?"
|
|
The third call was answered in the affirmative, and the men started
|
|
upon the double-quick. They, however, fell before getting as far
|
|
as the preceding four. Twelve men had been killed in the effort
|
|
to obtain the body of the brave Payne, but to no purpose.
|
|
Humanity forbade another trial, and yet it was made.
|
|
"Are there four more men in the regiment who will volunteer
|
|
to go for Capt. Payne's body?" shouted the officer.
|
|
Four men sprang forward, as if fearful that they would miss
|
|
the opportunity of these last: one was Jerome Fletcher, the hero
|
|
of our story. They started upon the run; and, strange to tell,
|
|
all of them reached the body, and had nearly borne it from
|
|
the field, when two of the number were cut down. Of these,
|
|
one was Jerome. His head was entirely torn off by a shell.
|
|
The body of the deceased officer having been rescued, an end
|
|
was put t the human sacrifice.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVII
|
|
|
|
THE ANGEL OF MERCY
|
|
|
|
|
|
The sad intelligence of Jerome's death was brought to Clotelle
|
|
while she was giving her personal attention to the sick and
|
|
wounded that filled the hospitals of New Orleans. For a time she
|
|
withdrew from the gaze of mankind, and gave herself up to grief.
|
|
Few unions had been productive of more harmonious feelings than hers.
|
|
And this blow, so unexpected and at a time when she was experiencing
|
|
such a degree of excitement caused by the rebellion, made her,
|
|
indeed, feel the affliction severely.
|
|
|
|
But the newspaper accounts of the intense suffering of the Union prisoners
|
|
in the rebel States aroused her, and caused her to leave her retirement.
|
|
In the month of October, 1863, Clotelle resolved to visit Andersonville,
|
|
Ga., for the purpose of alleviating the hardships of our sick and
|
|
imprisoned soldiers, and at once put her resolution into effect by going
|
|
immediately to that place. After crossing the lines, she passed as a
|
|
rebel lady, to enable her the more successfully to carry out her object.
|
|
On her arrival at Andersonville, Clotelle took up her abode with a
|
|
private family, of Union proclivities, and commenced her work of mercy.
|
|
She first visited the hospitals, the buildings of which were merest
|
|
excuses for hospitals.
|
|
|
|
It was the beginning of November; and, even in that southern latitude,
|
|
the cold made these miserable abodes uncomfortable nights and mornings.
|
|
The dirty, unventilated rooms, with nothing but straw upon the cold,
|
|
damp floor, for beds, upon which lay the ragged, emaciated Union prisoners,
|
|
worn down to skin and bone with disease and starvation, with their
|
|
sunken eyes and wild looks, made them appear hideous in the extreme.
|
|
The repulsive scenes, that showed the suffering, neglect, and cruelty
|
|
which these poor creatures had experienced, made her heart sink within her.
|
|
|
|
Having paid considerable attention to hospital life in Europe,
|
|
and so recently from amongst the sick at New Orleans,
|
|
Clotelle's experience, suggestions, and liberal expenditure
|
|
of money, would have added greatly to the comfort of these
|
|
helpless men, if the rebel authorities had been so disposed.
|
|
But their hatred to Union prisoners was so apparent, that the
|
|
interest which this angel of humanity took in the condition
|
|
of the rebel sick could not shield her from the indignation of
|
|
the secession officials for her good feeling for the Union men.
|
|
However, with a determination to do all in her power for the needy,
|
|
she labored in season and out.
|
|
|
|
The brutal treatment and daily murders committed upon our soldiers
|
|
in the Andersonville prisons caused Clotelle to secretly aid
|
|
prisoners in their escape. In the latter work, she brought
|
|
to her assistance the services of a negro man named Pete.
|
|
This individual was employed about the prison, and, having the entire
|
|
confidence of the commandant, was in a position to do much
|
|
good without being suspected. Pete was an original character,
|
|
of a jovial nature, and, when intending some serious adventure,
|
|
would appear very solemn, and usually singing a doleful ditty,
|
|
often the following, which was a favorite with him:--
|
|
|
|
"Come listen, all you darkies, come listen to my song:
|
|
It am about old Massa, who use me bery wrong.
|
|
In de cole, frosty mornin', it an't so bery nice,
|
|
Wid de water to de middle, to hoe among de rice;
|
|
|
|
When I neber hab forgotten
|
|
How I used to hoe de cotton,
|
|
How I used to hoe de cotton,
|
|
On de old Virginny shore;
|
|
But I'll neber hoe de cotton,
|
|
Oh! neber hoe de cotton
|
|
Any more.
|
|
|
|
"If I feel de drefful hunger, he tink it am a vice,
|
|
And he gib me for my dinner a little broken rice,--
|
|
A little broken rice and a bery little fat,
|
|
And he grumble like de debbil if I eat too much of dat;
|
|
|
|
When I neber hab forgotten, etc.
|
|
|
|
"He tore me from my Dinah; I tought my heart would burst:
|
|
He made me lub anoder when my lub was wid de first;
|
|
He sole my picanninnies becase he got dar price,
|
|
And shut me in de marsh-field to hoe among de rice;
|
|
|
|
When I neber hab forgotten, etc.
|
|
|
|
"And all de day I hoe dar, in all de heat and rain;
|
|
And, as I hoe away dar, my heart go back again,--
|
|
Back to de little cabin dat stood among de corn,
|
|
And to de ole plantation where she and I war born!
|
|
|
|
Oh! I wish I had forgotten, etc.
|
|
|
|
"Den Dinah am beside me, de chil'ren on my knee,
|
|
And dough I am a slave dar, it 'pears to me I'm free,
|
|
Till I wake up from my dreaming, and wife and chil'ren gone,
|
|
I hoe away and weep dar, and weep dar all alone!
|
|
|
|
Oh! I wish I had forgotten, etc.
|
|
|
|
"But soon a day am comin', a day I long to see,
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When dis darky in de cole ground, foreber will be free,
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When wife and chil'ren wid me, I'll sing in Paradise,
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How He, de blessed Jesus, hab bought me wid a price;
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How de Lord hab not forgotten
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How well I hoed de cotton,
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How well I hoed de cotton
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On de old Virginny shore;
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Dar I'll neber hoe de cotton,
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Oh! I'll neber hoe de cotton
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Any more."
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When away from the whites, and among his own class, Pete could often
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be heard in the following strains:--
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"A storm am brewin' in de Souf,
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A storm am brewin' now.
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Oh! hearken den, and shut your mouf,
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And I will tell you how:
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And I will tell you how, ole boy,
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De storm of fire will pour,
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And make de darkies dance for joy,
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As dey neber danced afore;
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So shut your mouf as close as deafh,
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And all you niggas hole your breafh,
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And I will tell you how.
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"De darkies at de Norf am ris,
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And dey am comin' down--
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Am comin' down, I know dey is,
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To do de white folks brown!
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Dey'll turn ole Massa out to grass,
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And set de niggas free,
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And when dat day am come to pass
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We'll all be dar to see!
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So shut your mouf as close as deafh,
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And all you niggas hole your breafh,
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And do de white folks brown!
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"Den all de week will be as gay
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As am de Chris'mas time;
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We'll dance all night and all de day,
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And make de banjo chime--
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And make de banjo chime, I tink,
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And pass de time away,
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Wid 'nuf to eat and nuf to drink,
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And not a bit to pay!
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So shut your mouf as close as deafh,
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And all you niggas hole your breafh,
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And make de banjo chime."
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How to escape from prison was ever the thoughts by day and
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dreams by night of the incarcerated. Plans were concocted,
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partly put into execution, and then proved failures.
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Some of these caused increased suffering to the prisoners after
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their discovery; for, where the real parties could not be found,
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the whole were ill-treated as a punishment to the guilty.
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Tunnelling was generally the mode for escape; and tunnelling
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became the order of the day, or, rather, the work for the night.
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In the latter part of November, 1863, the unusual gaiety
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of the prisoners showed that some plan of exit from the prison
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was soon to be exhibited.
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CHAPTER XXXVIII
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THE GREAT TUNNEL AND THE MISTAKE
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FOR several weeks, some ten or fifteen of the most
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able-bodied of the prisoners had been nightly at work;
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and the great tunnel, the <largest> ever projected by men
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for their escape from prison, was thought to be finished,
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with the exception of the tapping outside of the prison wall.
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The digging of a tunnel is not an easy job, and, consequently,
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is of slow progress. The Andersonville prisoners had to dig
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ten feet down into the earth, after cutting through the floor,
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and then went a distance of fifty feet to get beyond the wall.
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The digging was done in the following way: As soon as the
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operator was below the surface, and had a place large enough
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to admit the body, he laid down upon his face, at full length,
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and with his knife, spoon, piece of earthenware, or old iron,
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dug away with all his energies, throwing the dirt behind him,
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which was gathered up by a confederate, carried off, and hi.
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This mode of operating was carried on night after night,
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and the flooring replaced during the day, to prevent suspicion.
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The want of fresh air in the tunnel, as it progressed to completion,
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often drove the men from their work, and caused a delay,
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which proved fatal to their successful escape.
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The long-looked for day arrived. More than three hundred
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had prepared to leave this hated abode, by the tunnel.
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All they waited for was the tapping and the signal. The time came,
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the place of egress was tapped, and the leader had scarcely put
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his head out of the hole, ere he was fired upon by the sentinels,
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which soon alarmed and drew the entire guard to the spot.
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Great was the commotion throughout the prison, and all who were
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caught in the tunnel were severely punished.
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This failure seemed to depress the spirits of the men more than any
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previous attempt. Heavy irons were placed upon the limbs of many of
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the prisoners, and their lot was made otherwise harder by the keepers.
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Clotelle, though often permitted to see the prisoners and contribute
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to their wants, and, though knowing much of their designs, knew nothing
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of the intended escape, and therefore was more bold in her intercessions
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in their behalf when failure came upon them.
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The cruelty which followed this mishap, induced Clotelle to interest herself
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in another mode of escape for the men thus so heavily ironed.
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Pete, the man of all work, whose sympathies were with the Union prisoners,
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was easily gained over to a promise of securing the keys of the prison
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and letting the men escape, especially when Clotelle offered him money
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to enable him to make good his own way to the North.
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The night of the exodus came. It was favored with darkness;
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and it so happened that the officials were on a spree,
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|
owing to the arrival of Confederate officers with news
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of a rebel victory.
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Before getting the keys, Pete supplied the sentinels
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on duty with enough whiskey, which he had stolen
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from the keepers' store-room, to make them all drunk.
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At the chosen moment, the keys were obtained by Pete,
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the doors and gates were opened, and ninety-three prisoners,
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including the tunnel workers, whose irons were taken off,
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made their escape, allowing the faithful negro to accompany them.
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Nothing was known of the exit of the men till breakfast hour
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on the next morning. On examination of the store-room, it
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|
was found, that, in addition to the whiskey Pete had taken
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a large supply of stores for the accommodation of the party.
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|
Added to this, a good number of arms with ammunition had been
|
|
furnished the men by the African.
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|
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The rebels were not prepared to successfully pursue the fleeing
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prisoners, although armed men were sent in different directions.
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Nothing, however, was heard of them till they reached the Union lines.
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Long suspected of too freely aiding Union prisoners, Clotelle was
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now openly charged with a knowledge of the escape of these men,
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and was compelled to leave Andersonville.
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CHAPTER XXXIX
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CONCLUSION
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THE fiendish and heartless conduct of a large number of the people
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of the South towards Union men during the war, and especially
|
|
the unlady-like demeanor of rebel women at New Orleans
|
|
and other points, is a matter that has passed into history.
|
|
In few places were the women more abusive to those of Union
|
|
proclivities than the female portion of the inhabitants
|
|
of Greenville, Alabama. While passing through this town,
|
|
on her return from Andersonville to New Orleans, Clotelle had
|
|
to encounter the fierce ill-treatment of these chivalrous
|
|
daughters of the South. There were, during the rebellion,
|
|
many brave and generous women, who, in the mountains and lowlands
|
|
of Alabama, gave aid to Federals,--soldiers and civilians,--
|
|
in their wanderings and escape from the cruelties of the traitors.
|
|
One of these patriotic women was arrested while on a visit
|
|
to Greenville for the purpose of procuring medicine and other
|
|
necessaries for sick Union men then hid away in the woods.
|
|
This large-hearted woman--Eunice Hastings--had her horse
|
|
taken from her, robbed of the goods she had purchased, and,
|
|
after experiencing almost death at the hands of the rebel women,
|
|
was released and turned out penniless, and without the means
|
|
of reaching her home in the country; when Clotelle,
|
|
who had just arrived at the dilapidated and poorly kept hotel,
|
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met her, and, learning the particulars of her case,
|
|
offered assistance to the injured woman, which brought down
|
|
upon her own head the condemnation of the secesh population
|
|
of the place. However, Clotelle purchased a fine horse from
|
|
the landlord, gave it to Miss Hastings, who, after securing
|
|
some articles for which she had come to Greenville, left town
|
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under cover of night, and escaped further molestation.
|
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This act of kindness to a helpless sister at once stirred up
|
|
the vilest feelings of the people.
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"The worst of slaves is he whom passion rules."
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As has already been said, there was nothing in the appearance
|
|
of Clotelle to indicate that a drop of African blood coursed
|
|
through her veins, except, perhaps, the slight wave in the hair,
|
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and the scarcely perceptible brunettish tinge upon the countenance.
|
|
She passed as a rebel lady; yet the inhabitants of Greenville could
|
|
not permit sympathy with, and aid to, a Union woman to pass unnoticed,
|
|
and therefore resolved on revenge.
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|
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"Revenge, at first though sweet, Bitter ere long, back on itself recoils."
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|
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Clotelle's person, trunks, and letters were all searched
|
|
with the hope and expectation of finding evidences of a spy.
|
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Nothing of the kind being found, she was then rigorously
|
|
interrogated as to her sympathies with the two contending armies.
|
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With no wish whatever to conceal her opinions, she openly avowed
|
|
that she was a Union woman. This was enough. After being persecuted
|
|
during the day, she was put in charge of a committee of rebel women
|
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for the night, with a promise of more violent treatment on the morrow.
|
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The loyalty of the negroes of the South, during the severest
|
|
hours of the rebellion, reflects the greatest possible credit
|
|
on the race. Through their assistance, hundreds of Union men
|
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were enabled to make their escape from prisons, and thousands
|
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kept from starvation when on their way to the Federal lines,
|
|
or while keeping out of the way of rebel recruiting gangs.
|
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They seldom, if ever, hesitated to do the white Unionists a service,
|
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at the risk even of life, and, under the most trying circumstances,
|
|
revealed a devotion and a spirit of self-sacrifice that were heroic.
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No one ever made an appeal to them they did not answer.
|
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They were degraded and ignorant, which was attributable to the cruel
|
|
laws and equally unchristian practices of the people of the South;
|
|
but their hearts were always open, and the slightest demand upon
|
|
their sympathies brought forth their tears. They never shunned
|
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a man or woman who sought food or shelter on their way to freedom.
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The goodness of heart and the guileless spirit of the blacks was not
|
|
better understood by any one than Clotelle; and she felt a secret
|
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joy at seeing all the servants in the Greenville hotel negroes.
|
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She saw from their very looks that she had their undivided sympathies.
|
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One of the servants overheard the rebels in a conversation,
|
|
in which it was determined to send Clotelle to the county town,
|
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for safe keeping in the jail, the following day; and this fact was
|
|
communicated to the unfortunate woman. The slave woman who gave
|
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the information told her that she could escape if she desired.
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|
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Having already been robbed of every thing except the apparel upon her
|
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person and some money she had concealed about her, she at once signified
|
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to the black woman her wish to get out of the reach of her persecutors.
|
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The old worn-out clock in the narrow dining hall had struck one;
|
|
a cold rain was patting upon the roof, and the women watchers,
|
|
one after another, had fallen asleep; and even the snuff-dippers, whose
|
|
dirty practice creates a nervousness that keeps them awake longer than
|
|
any other class, had yielded to the demands of Morpheus, when Aggy,
|
|
the colored servant, stealthily entered the room, beckoned to Clotelle,
|
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and both left in silence.
|
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|
|
Cautiously and softly the black woman led the way, followed by the "Angel
|
|
of Mercy," till, after passing down through the cellar with the water covering
|
|
the floor, they emerged into the back yard. Two horses had been provided.
|
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Clotelle mounted one, and a black man the other; the latter leading
|
|
the way. Both dashed off at a rapid pace, through a drenching storm,
|
|
with such a pall-like darkness that they could not see each other.
|
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After an hour's ride the negro halted, and informed Clotelle that he must
|
|
leave her, and return with the horses, but that she was with friends.
|
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He then gave a whistle, and for a moment held his breath.
|
|
Just as the faithful black was about to repeat the signal, he heard
|
|
the response; and in a moment the lady alighted, and with dripping garments,
|
|
limbs chilled to numbness, followed her new guide to a place of concealment,
|
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near the village of Taitsville.
|
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|
|
"You is jes as wet as a drownded rat," said the mulatto woman,
|
|
who met Clotelle as she entered the negro's cabin.
|
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|
|
"Yes," replied the latter, "this is a stormy night for one to be out."
|
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|
|
"Yes mam, dese is hard times for eberybody dat 'bleves in de Union.
|
|
I 'spose deys cotched your husband, an' put him in de army, ain't dey?"
|
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|
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"No: my husband died at Port Hudson, fighting for the Union," said Clotelle.
|
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|
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"Oh, mam, dats de place whar de black people fight de rebels so, wasn't it?"
|
|
remarked Dinah, for such was her name.
|
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|
|
"Yes, that was the place," replied the former.
|
|
"I see that your husband has lost one of his hands:
|
|
did he lose it in the war?"
|
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|
|
"Oh no, missus," said Dinah. "When dey was taken all de men, black an white,
|
|
to put in de army, dey cotched my ole man too, and took him long wid 'em.
|
|
So you see, he said he'd die afore he'd shoot at de Yanks.
|
|
So you see, missus, Jimmy jes took and lay his left han' on a log, and chop
|
|
it off wid de hatchet. Den, you see, dey let him go, an' he come home.
|
|
You see, missus, my Jimmy is a free man: he was born free, an'
|
|
he bought me, an' pay fifteen hundred dollars for me."
|
|
|
|
It was true that Jim had purchased his wife; nor had he forgotten the fact,
|
|
as was shown a day or two after, while in conversation with her.
|
|
The woman, like many of her sex, was an inveterate scold, and Jim had but one
|
|
way to govern her tongue. "Shet your mouf, madam, an' hole your tongue,"
|
|
said Jim, after his wife had scolded and sputtered away for some minutes.
|
|
"Shet your mouf dis minit, I say: you shan't stan' dar, an' talk ter
|
|
me in dat way. I bought you, an' paid my money fer you, an" I ain't
|
|
a gwine ter let you sase me in dat way. Shet your mouf dis minit:
|
|
ef you don't I'll sell you; 'fore God I will. Shet up, I say, or I'll
|
|
sell you." This had the desired effect, and settled Dinah for the day.
|
|
|
|
After a week spent in this place of concealment, Jim conveyed
|
|
Clotelle to Leaksville, Mississippi, through the Federal lines,
|
|
and from thence she proceeded to New Orleans.
|
|
|
|
The Rebellion was now drawing to a close. The valley of the
|
|
Mississippi was in full possession of the Federal government.
|
|
Sherman was on his raid, and Grant was hemming in Lee.
|
|
Everywhere the condition of the freedmen attracted the attention
|
|
of the friends of humanity, and no one felt more keenly their
|
|
wants than Clotelle; and to their education and welfare she
|
|
resolved to devote the remainder of her life, and for this
|
|
purpose went to the State of Mississippi, and opened a school
|
|
for the freedmen; hired teachers, paying them out of her own purse.
|
|
In the summer of 1866, the Poplar Farm, on which she had once
|
|
lived as a slave, was confiscated and sold by Government
|
|
authority, and was purchased by Clotelle, upon which she
|
|
established a Freedmen's School, and where at this writing,--
|
|
now June, 1867,--resides the "Angel of Mercy."
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End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of Clotelle, or, The Colored Heroine
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